Speaking of, Joel uses the term “skit” to describe his sketch-within-a-sketch in that episode.
ducks for cover
Speaking of, Joel uses the term “skit” to describe his sketch-within-a-sketch in that episode.
ducks for cover
Skit?
Sketch?
Scotch!
You all heard her! The officially sanctioned MST3K word is skit!
Absolutely not. Joel has been corrected and is currently in time out for this decades-old crime.
I still don’t get it. What’s wrong with the word “skit”? We didn’t steal the word from Robot Chicken, right?
… Right?
Happy cake day!
And since you can find everything explained on the web (sometimes even correctly), I submit:
I mean, hell … he wasn’t allowed on camera for, like, 25 years or whatever. That’s a serious time-out.
Cockroaches skitter. Teenagers sketcher.
Both annoy, but only one can be killed with impunity.
PS - I know the shoe is actually spelled skecher, but hey, comedic license. Also, I wear some of their shoes as well, and I’m no teenager. Not even a teenage caveman.
Which one is that in?
I’ve watched two of the Vault Picks this month (The Giant Gila Monster and Giant Spider Invasion) and there’s a Donna St. Phibes sketch in both, so I’m guessing she makes a brief appearance in all of them.
I hope you’re right. She’s a fantastic character.
I have to wonder: given her dangerous line of work. Does she die and regenerate (off-camera), several times a season. Like TV’s Frank probably did?
I’d post the Hank and Dean clones from Venture Brothers, but honestly they’ve always kind of creeped me out.
Well, she is a xenobiologist, so who knows what strange abilities she’s picked up from her charges!
I’ve got one left to watch, but I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised by even more monster facts.
I was thinking either regeneration or straight-up immortality. I hear monster studies are popular with the eternal lot.
I’ve been rewatching Kids in the Hall front to back over the past couple months, and they say “skit” like a thousand times, so I no longer know what to believe.
… skeet.