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When a film's release gets delayed (e.g. No Time to Die), why is it described as being "pushed back?" Shouldn't it be "pushed forward?"
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When a film's release gets delayed (e.g. No Time to Die), why is it described as being "pushed back?" Shouldn't it be "pushed forward?" Wouldn't "pushed back", as in pushed to the back of a line, or queue, make sense? I suppose so, but I was thinking "pushed forward" as in forward in time. Then too, why are trailers called that? They don't trail a movie's release, they come before!
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Roundtine. (I'm such a Seinfeld fanatic that I didn't need to watch the clip.)
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Posted: |
Mar 20, 2020 - 7:50 AM
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By: |
jackfu
(Member)
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Does anyone think young jackfu "kicked out the jams" and grew out his Rob Tyner "jackfu-fro" back in 1970 when the MC5 were, to use a term of the time, "peaking"? <----------------------------------------------------------------------- Well, actually my dad wouldn't let me have "Hippy-Looking Hair!" back in 1970, but, come 1978, by jingle, it was 'fro time! All natural, too, baby!
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