A few weeks ago the actor James Caan asked a simple question on Twitter: "Is it possible to watch too much Columbo?" It's a simple question, because it has a simple answer: No. I believe this truly and deeply. However, I'm also aware that enthusiasms of this sort can tend to fall into that regrettable domain often instantiated by dogs and babies: their owners and parents seem able to do nothing but coo about their adorableness, thrusting them aggressively into the faces and laps and homes of their acquaintances and demanding that the amazingness of said small warm object be acknowledged, as if they've been rendered constitutionally incapable of remembering that not everyone's worldview has been captured by this little bag of cuddly cuteness.
Finding the Plot: "Columbo"
Finding the Plot: "Columbo"
Finding the Plot: "Columbo"
A few weeks ago the actor James Caan asked a simple question on Twitter: "Is it possible to watch too much Columbo?" It's a simple question, because it has a simple answer: No. I believe this truly and deeply. However, I'm also aware that enthusiasms of this sort can tend to fall into that regrettable domain often instantiated by dogs and babies: their owners and parents seem able to do nothing but coo about their adorableness, thrusting them aggressively into the faces and laps and homes of their acquaintances and demanding that the amazingness of said small warm object be acknowledged, as if they've been rendered constitutionally incapable of remembering that not everyone's worldview has been captured by this little bag of cuddly cuteness.