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If we put out a YesButNoButYes Greatest Hits collection, there's no question our K.C. Armstrong interview would make the cut. It brought thousands of new readers and some coveted Page Six ink.
So I feel obligated to post the Top 10 moments in Howard History, as voted by the fans:
#1 – Cookie Puss#2 – Artie’s Cocaine in a Pig Suit Story
#3 – Billy West as Marge Schott apologizing during Christmas
#4 - High Pitch Eric and the Fish Show
#5- The Gary Tape
#6 - The Stuttering John vs. Cabbie fight
#7 - Hank the Angry Drunken Dwarf
#8 - Jesus Twins
#9 - DeBella Funeral
#10 – The Fred Norris Bachelor Party
That's airing all weekend on Howard 100, hosted by Donald Trump. My favorite Stern Show moment was a series of moments in the summer of 1998, during The Magic Hour era. For weeks, they'd spend much of the morning playing the previous night's show and providing commentary, leading up to Howard's surreal appearance beside Magic.
But Gary's love tape is right up there, too.

Sound sleeping...I like the ocean with a hint of chimes.

- I've got a few small problems with the 50 greatest high school movies list. But overall, a pretty solid effort.
- At first, Beth Agnew is mildly amusing. But she quickly turns into something quite disturbing...almost evil.
- Is it too soon for a game where Terri Irwin avenges her husband, Steve's death by killing lots of stingrays?
- It's lo-og, it's lo-og. It's big, it's heavy, it's wood. It's lo-og, it's lo-og. It's better than bad, it's good. Yeah!
- And just in time for fashion week, Bill Maher recommends the perfect accessory for this election season.
"Hollywoodland" **1/2 (out of four): Competent but hollow dramatization of the life and suspicious death of actor George Reeves.

I might be too young to have grown up on the George Reeves “Adventures of Superman” series (I’m more of a Christopher Reeve child, personally), but I do remember seeing those quaint 50s episodes in reruns as a kid. Mr. Reeves made an affable enough superhero, in over-sized glasses and a frumpy costume; for those cheaply-produced half-hours, he got the job done. I remember hearing something about the “curse of Superman” and that Mr. Reeves had committed suicide. I had no idea about the details surrounding his death and, after watching “Hollywoodland”, Allen Coulter’s dramatization of Mr. Reeves’ final days, I’m no more the wiser.