Charlene proceeds to turn Peter’s perfectly ordered life upside down, jeopardizing his attempts to get back with his wife and woo a billion-dollar client. Broadchurch is a beloved British serial crime drama television series that was on the air from 2013 to 2017. A couple of weeks ago, while perusing through Chris Epting’s Marilyn Monroe Dyed Here: More Locations of America’s Pop Culture Landmarks in order to get a little inspiration for my Haunted Hollywood postings, I came across an entry about the home used in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? [3] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade B+ on scale of A to F.[4], Todd McCarthy of Variety magazine wrote: "There are certainly good laughs to be had. “Lawyer-girl,” meanwhile, engages in the kind of extreme online deception more common in the television program Catfish, sending Peter an image that implies she’s thin, young, white, and blonde. In appreciation, Peter sets about solving Charlene’s big problem by attempting to coerce a confession from her ex-boyfriend that will clear her name. 1 in the United States. Charlene tries to blackmail Peter into clearing her name of armed robbery, claiming she is innocent, but he throws her out after several attempts. Released on March 7, 2003. Kate arrives, and she and Peter reconcile as his cell phone rings. She solves his daughter’s romantic problems by dangling a boy who got rough with her sexually off a ledge until he apologizes, and teaches Peter’s son to read by showing him porno magazines. The film begins with divorced tax attorney Peter Sanderson (Steve Martin) flirting blandly with a woman calling herself “lawyer-girl” on a legal message board. And if that black slang is being spoken by a really white guy, then that’s just plain comic gold, which helps explain why the deeply embarrassing sequence where Peter jives his way through the nightclub just seems to go on and on and on, with each successive moment representing a mortal blow to Martin’s perpetually embattled dignity. Released on video in 2003. Brown (Sarah Sanderson), Angus T. Jones (Georgey Sanderson), Missi Pyle (Ashley), Michael Rosenbaum (Todd Gendler), Betty White (Mrs. Kline). Say no means no! This was Steve Martin's ex-wife's (Jean Smart) home. An uptight-looking white man like him has no business in such a place, so Peter puts on a “hood” ensemble of a gold chain, winter hat, and outsized jersey, and begins spouting long streams of gibberish slang. At the office, he discovers Mrs. Arness has notified the FBI, and sneaks out to his car. Of course, no one has themselves photographed being arrested, and if they do, they certainly don’t hold on to that image and use it to attract suitors. When a lonely guy meets a woman on the internet who happens to be in prison, she breaks out to get him to prove her innocence, and proceeds to wreak havoc on his middle-class life. Mike: …was followed by the comedies Bringing Down the House (2003), which Queen Latifah both starred in and produced, Barbershop 2: Back in Business (2004), Beauty Shop (2005), and Last Holiday (2006). Comedy. A look at the people involved with various political campaigns during the 2018 U.S. congressional election. That prejudice extends to Peter, who regularly talks to Charlene in ways that are condescending at best and racist at worst, like when he complains that she obviously got someone to type for her during their online flirtation (because clearly someone who uses Ebonics so extensively is incapable of writing coherent sentences).