Unfortunately, McDonough has been down this road before. When she worked for NBC 10 in Philly and dated a Delaware state trooper, McDonough had a few close calls after some nights of heavy drinking, according to several eyewitnesses
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Unfortunately, McDonough has been down this road before. When she worked for NBC 10 in Philly and dated a Delaware state trooper, McDonough had a few close calls after some nights of heavy drinking, according to several eyewitnesses
I can't confirm or deny rumors, but I will ask you this: Did you really think I was going away?
We could still have arbitrated it, but we have a great relationship with John and he's done some wonderful work for us, so once our movie moved, we felt we could accommodate his film
It's a very different situation ... One is a current title, the other is a library title. There was an enormously important principle at stake in terms of a threat to the permanent protection of library titles. It's the same reason you wouldn't let someone call their movie 'Close Encounters of the Fourth Kind.' You have to protect your library value. It's an important principle, and it's why we won the case.
I have to admit I don't have a real fall-back position ... I have a list of other titles in my office and they're all terrible. 'I Love You, Man' is so good because it's a phrase that's in the culture. It symbolizes the way men talk to each other, especially the 'comma' and the 'man.' And the whole subtext of the phrase really plays out in the movie. I dunno--isn't 'I love you' a pretty common phrase? It seems like I've heard it in movie titles before.