
Related: Jen Psaki crushed male conservative journalist who wanted to debate abortion with her Precedent, defined by the Oxford Dictionary as “an earlier event or action that is regarded as an example or guide to be considered in subsequent similar circumstances,” has an important role in the judicial system because it ensures that judges make consistent decisions and usually don’t make rulings that are incompatible or confusing with previous ones. The word precedent is one that has been thrown around a lot during the coverage of Dobbs. Wade back in 1973, could be overturned after almost 50 years of protecting people’s rights and being used as precedent. The outcome, which we’ll know by June next year, could determine whether or not the right to an abortion, which was originally secured by the Supreme Court in their ruling on Roe v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a case which was just argued in front of the U.S. The news this past week was largely dominated by one big political story: Dobbs v. This show definitely needs to be brought back, even if it's just to re-introduce Stan and Ollie to a newer generation.Pro-choice and anti-abortion demonstrators outside the Supreme Court in 1989, Washington DC 9 from NYC (Sunday mornings at 8 am), and I have some on tape from Comedy Central's airings. AMC aired The Boys' work Saturday afternoons for about a year in 1993, but they only aired a few shorts and showed the same ones over and over. Since then this great show has been off the air. They showed, however, Hal Roach's own colorized versions of their work (he experimented himself with these about 10 years prior, but they weren't well-accepted by classic film enthusiasts and therefore weren't aired until Comedy Central decided to do so).

It aired in syndication throughout the late 80s, and in 1991 until 1993 Comedy Central broadcast it. He gave them an opening credits montage, as well as ending every show with a dedication to someone who worked for The Hal Roach Stock Company. It was a success, and all he had to do was put their shorts and/or films into an hour block known as "The Laurel and Hardy Show". In the late 80s, Hal Roach attempted to revitalize an interest in the brilliant work of the greatest comedy team of all time - Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.
