"Dear Dad... Three" was the first of four episodes to feature home movies in the episode plot. The season three episode "There is Nothing Like a Nurse" featured the main male characters, minus Frank Burns, watching a home movie of Frank's wedding. The season four episode "Mail Call...Again" featured the main characters watching a movie of Radar's family sitting down to Sunday lunch at the family farm in Ottumwa, Iowa. The season nine episode "Oh, How We Danced" featured the main characters throwing a surprise anniversary party for B.J. and showing him a movie his wife Peg made for him based on surreptitiously-made recordings Hawkeye made of B.J. describing a routine day in the life of the Hunnicutt home.
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I certainly appreciate all the time and money you spend to let me play. But sometimes it feels like we are out there playing just to entertain the adults. We just want to play. And we want you to watch if you can do so without yelling at the refs, screaming at other parents, and coaching from the stands.
Cruising down the road, the highway curled before us like a ribbon into the horizon. Cozy road trips are a staple for my husband and me, and we look forward to the time together. Having been married for 37 years the adventure continues! We have loved each other through the ups and downs, and we have learned a lot about relationships. We also made a point of carefully watching successful relationships and surrounding ourselves with those whose marriages flourished. Nowadays, we have many young couples ask us what it takes to keep a marriage vibrant. One of the key ingredients...
To be fair, when I was a kid I used to watch game shows on TV with my sister and cousins all morning during the summer. But we did a lot of other things, too. I think my kids are missing out on some of the simple pleasures of childhood, but maybe the simple pleasures are different now.
Dear Dad: In your youth, the media offerings were slim, and yet you report watching game shows during your summertime mornings. I assume that if there were daylong game show marathons, you would have spent longer periods in front of the set.
The week my father-in-law died, after the grandkids had flown back to their homes and he was getting impatient for the end, we asked if he wanted to listen to any favorite music or watch a movie that he remembered fondly. That led to a welcome revisit with Mel Brooks\u2019 \u201CBlazing Saddles\u201D and a hospice-care nurse assistant genuinely bamboozled by what she saw coming off the screen. And then, out of nowhere, he asked to see a movie starring Joel McCrea, the handsome, likeable star of comedies and westerns and dramas from the 1930s through the 1960s. Any particular one? He had no suggestions; he was already beginning the long fade and maybe this was just the tickle of nostalgia or a bubble of memory from a moviegoing youth. After some consultation, we put on 1942\u2019s \u201CThe More The Merrier,\u201D a screwball comedy set in a crowded wartime Washington D.C., in which McCrea and Jean Arthur and foxy old Charles Coburn share an apartment and McCrea and Arthur fall in love.
Firstly though, I hope you enjoyed my chat with Marianne Power this week and that her recommendations for books starting the year as you mean to go on with good intentions, good habits and positive thinking struck a chord. If you missed it, you can watch our chat here, and don\u2019t forget you can buy all of the books in my online bookshop.
Marianne starts her review in The Times remembering her own grief after her dear dad\u2019s departure a few years ago, and she encapsulates that time as \u2018unpredictable, funny and sad, and YOU ARE NOT ALONE captures this beautifully\u2026. it is a blackly funny, honest, thought-provoking and compassionate book that will be a comfort to all who know loss\u2019
\u2018What to do? Brushing your teeth and getting a flu jab aren\u2019t bad places to start,\u2019 writes Rhys Blakely, reviewing for The Times. \u2018The author also makes a compelling case for watching what you eat. It\u2019s nothing you won\u2019t have heard before: consume mostly plants and not too much, avoid processed junk and saturated fats, eat whole food, consider fasting. But Ravella also explains in detail how researchers came to these conclusions\u2026 Ravella then delves into the science describing how saturated fat decreases microbial diversity in your gut and breeds inflammatory bacteria, and how eating broccoli does roughly the opposite. There\u2019s lots of detail, but the history lessons help the scientific principles to stick in the mind. And if your new year\u2019s resolution involves a promise to take care of yourself, this book might just help it stick too.\u2019 2ff7e9595c
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