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k-wame · 10 months
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JACK BLACK & JAMES MARSDEN The D Train (2015) · dir(s). Andrew Mogel · Jarrad Paul
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kidneys-and-custard · 4 months
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hjbirthdaywishes · 3 months
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June 20, 2024
Happy 48 Birthday to Jarrad Paul.
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tctmp · 2 years
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Comedy  Drama
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dailyrugbytoday · 2 years
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Munster take on Connacht in Thomond Park this Saturday 7.35pm
New Post has been published on https://thedailyrugby.com/munster-take-on-connacht-in-thomond-park/
The Daily Rugby
https://thedailyrugby.com/munster-take-on-connacht-in-thomond-park/
Munster take on Connacht in Thomond Park this Saturday 7.35pm
Munster take on Connacht in Thomond Park this Saturday 7.35pm, and it promises to be another interprovincial cracker this weekend.
The sides last met in October when Connacht edged out Munster in a 20-11 win in Galway.
The game will be live on a number of channels this weekend, and to help you with more information here’s a full preview of the game.
Munster vs Connacht
Game Crusaders vs Chiefs | CRU v CHI Venue Orangetheory Stadium, Christchurch Date & time 24 February 2023 Television SKY Sports & Foxtel Now Streaming WATCH HERE
The URC gets back underway this weekend, with the inter-provincial derby between Munster and Connacht the pick of the fixtures.
Neither Munster or Connacht have enjoyed an ideal start to the season, as the southern province find themselves in 14th place after seven rounds, while their western rivals are sitting in 12th.
Munster should be full of confidence after they defeated South Africa A at Páirc Uí Chaoimh during the international break, as they look to kick start their season.
Read More:  Munster rugby game on TV – Fixtures and Stream Today
Munster v Connacht: How can I watch the game live on TV?
The match will be aired live on Saturday, November 26th on TG4, the TG4 Player and Premier Sports 1. Coverage on TG4 starts at 7pm, while coverage on Premier Sports starts at 7.25pm. Kickoff is at 7.35pm.
URC TV is also showing the game, with a range of options available to viewers. Customers can buy a one-off stream of Munster v Connacht for €7.99.
Other options include a monthly access pass for €6.99 per month, which gives customers access to every URC fixture, or a season-long pass for a one-off fee of €41.99.
Did you know?
It will be the first game on the new artificial surface at the Sportsground. Munster have won on three of their last four visits to Galway but Connacht have won two of the last three games between the provinces.
Press Pass | Connacht v Munster
Hear from Attack Coach Mike Prendergast and Keynan Knox ahead of the game.
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Teams
Connacht: Conor Fitzgerald; John Porch, Byron Ralston, David Hawkshaw, Mack Hansen; Jack Carty (C), Kieran Marmion; Denis Buckley, Dave Heffernan, Finlay Bealham; Gavin Thornbury, Oisin Dowling; Shamus Hurley-Langton, Conor Oliver, Jarrad Butler.
Replacements: Grant Stewart, Peter Dooley, Jack Aungier, Niall Murray, Josh Murphy, Colm Reilly, Tom Daly, Paul Boyle.
Munster: Joey Carbery; Conor Phillips, Malakai Fekitoa, Dan Goggin, Patrick Campbell; Ben Healy, Conor Murray; Dave Kilcoyne, Niall Scannell, Keynan Knox; Jean Kleyn, Tadhg Beirne; Jack O’Donoghue, Peter O’Mahony (C), Gavin Coombes.
Replacements: Scott Buckley, Jeremy Loughman, Stephen Archer, Edwin Edogbo, Jack O’Sullivan, Craig Casey, Rory Scannell, Fionn Gibbons.
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i-am-a-stupid-robot · 2 years
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uh-oh, somebody’s misappropriating bracketed verses again...
Legend | “The Gospel According to Legend”
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pagetgram · 3 years
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Paget Brewster with Jarrad Paul in Andy Richter Controls the Universe “Relationship Ripcord" 2.07
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rosalie-starfall · 3 years
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angelstills · 3 years
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40 Days and 40 Nights (2002)
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kwebtv · 3 years
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Michael Brandon, Nicole Eggert, Alice Hirson, Kate Burton and Jarrad Paul in “Home Fires”
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genevieveetguy · 5 years
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- Are you stalking me? - No, I would never do that. Oh, by the way, the new furniture looks great from the yard.
Yes Man, Peyton Reed (2008)
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hjbirthdaywishes · 1 year
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June 20, 2023
Happy 47 Birthday to Jarrad Paul. 
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lifejustgotawkward · 6 years
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365 Day Movie Challenge (2018) - #137: The D Train (2015) - dirs. Andrew Mogel and Jarrad Paul
(Warning: spoilers ahead.)
Every now and then I take a chance on a film streaming via Netflix despite not knowing much, if anything, about the title. Such is the case with The D Train, a dramedy about blurred lines between masculinity, friendship, admiration, lust and fidelity. I only knew about one particular element of the plot - a pretty important event that happens early in the film and which sets a number of second- and third-act conflicts in motion - but it turned out that that was the only interesting part of a movie that can be described overall as a missed opportunity.
The narrative is driven by Dan Landsman (Jack Black), an office drone who married his high school sweetheart, Stacey (Kathryn Hahn), and doesn’t have a whole lot to look forward to except heading the committee organizing his Pittsburgh high school’s twenty-year reunion. Dan never left town, but the coolest guy from his graduating class, Oliver Lawless (James Marsden), has since become an actor living in Los Angeles. Late one night, after spotting Oliver in a Banana Boat commercial on TV, Dan devises a ridiculous and complicated ruse to trick his boss, Bill Shurmur (Jeffrey Tambor), into letting him go to LA on a “business trip,” during which time Dan plans on meeting Oliver and convincing him to attend the reunion. The plan hits a speed bump when Bill insists on accompanying Dan to the “meeting”; things get even weirder when Oliver, who is surprisingly chill about being contacted by Dan for the first time in decades, agrees to pose as the businessman.
But all of that is a MacGuffin. The real conflict arises after Oliver takes Dan out for a night of carousing at nightclubs, a wild ride overflowing with drugs and booze and ending up with Oliver drunkenly kissing Dan, leading to them having sex. This rendezvous seems to barely leave an impression on Oliver, who is openly bisexual, but for Dan, this indiscretion throws everything he thinks he knows about himself, his sexual orientation and the comfort with which he views his stable marriage/family life into question. Immediately, Dan tries to figure out a way to convince Oliver not to fly to Pittsburgh for the reunion, but of course the wheels are already set in motion for the “big Hollywood actor” to return home.
If it were a better movie, The D Train would have explored the complex nature of Dan’s motivations, impulses and the fallout from his one-night stand with Oliver with more nuance. (If you’re looking for a film that seriously considers the implications that naturally arise from the type of situation Dan is involved in, you’ve got the wrong production.) To Jack Black’s credit, he handles his character’s tectonic shifts in emotion with as much skill as the screenplay allows him. Whatever warmth we might feel for Dan by the end, however, is essentially erased by an unbelievably dumb final montage and summarizing voiceover that attempt to wrap up the last remaining loose ends, but instead make his journey and all his stabs at self-reflection into a joke. It’s also hard not to be peeved at a movie for wasting Kathryn Hahn in yet another of the “harried girlfriend/wife” roles in which she is so often stuck. Not even the presence of the delightful Mike White as one of the high school reunion committee members and a cameo by Dermot Mulroney as himself (Dan and Oliver run into him at an LA hot spot) can do much to salvage the film.
To be fair, though, James Marsden does an excellent job of playing an impossibly sexy narcissist. If there is any one scene from The D Train that will stand out in my memory in the future, it’ll probably be the moment at the end of the film when, the day after Dan and Oliver’s fling has been revealed publicly (in an exceptionally humiliating way), Oliver bids farewell to two other old buddies, Randy (Kyle Bornheimer) and Craig (Henry Zebrowski), by pointing out to them that “I could’ve fucked either one of you.” Their speechless reactions and slight nods are agreements; maybe the ultimate moral of the story, the lesson that writers/directors Andrew Mogel and Jarrad Paul hope that their audience will remember, is that everyone - be they man or woman, wherever they operate within the spectrum of human sexuality - would have sex with James Marsden if given the chance.
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badmovieihave · 6 years
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Bad movie I have The Shaggy Dog 2006
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GRYFFINDOR: “The world’s a playground! You know that when you are a kid, but somewhere along the way everyone forgets it.” -Nicholas Stoller + Jarrad Paul + Andrew Mogel (Allison: Yes Man)
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williebeamin · 7 years
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