Your Day in Pop Culture (Tuesday, March 18, 2013)
This Day in Pop Culture
1918: Congress approves Daylight Saving Time. Blame all those old dead jerks for being so tired last week.
1931: Gambling is legalized in Nevada, giving people the only reason to visit Las Vegas. Unless you're a professional The Hangover re-enacter.
1962: Bob Dylan releases his first album.
Famous People Have Birthdays Too
1935: Burt Metcalfe, writer, producer (M*A*S*H)
1936: Ursula Andress, actress (Dr. No)
1947: Glenn Close, actress (Albert Nobbs, Fatal Attraction, Dangerous Liasions, The Natural)
1952: Harvey Weinstein, Oscar kingmaker
1953: Ricky Wilson, musician (The B-52's)
1955: Bruce Willis, actor (Die Hard, Sin City, Moonlighting, Moonrise Kingdom)
1959: Terry Hall, musician (The Specials)
Who's On What Tonight: Your Guide to Late-Night TV
CONAN: REPEAT
LETTERMAN: Comedy icon Bill Cosby, alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin, music group Garbage
KIMMEL: Olympus Has Fallen's Gerard Butler, Spring Breakers' Vanessa Hudgens
LENO: The Office's Jenna Fischer, Kim Jong Un's best friend Dennis Rodman, music group Black Prairie
FALLON: Spring Breakers' Selena Gomez, comedian David Steinberg, music group Pinback
FERGUSON: Actress Michelle Monoghan
New on Blu-Ray
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey: If you're a huge fan of Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings series, you'll pick this blu-ray up. Then you'll pick up the special edition in a few months. And then the extended edition a few months later.
Zero Dark Thirty: While it would have been interesting, Zero Dark Thirty does not come with an alternate ending.
Your Day in Pop Culture (Tuesday, March 18, 2013)
Reviewed by Popculturology
on
3/19/2013
Rating:
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