Please Scroll Down to See Forums Below
napsgear
genezapharmateuticals
domestic-supply US-PHARMACIES UGL OZ
Raptor Labs UGFREAK OxygenPharm
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplyUS-PHARMACIES UGL OZUGFREAKRaptor LabsOxygenPharm

That 70's show actor...turned into a total dog.

cuthroat

Banned
'That 70s Show' Actress Pleads Guilty in Drunk Driving Case - FoxNews.com

LisaRobin.jpg


HOLY SHIT! GROSS!
 
She was really hawt back then. Wasn't she kicked off the show atleast partially because of her drug abuse.
 
Last edited:
70's show is at least 10 years old. Makes sense she is 40 now. She was the older sister who came back from after college or something.

The supposedly 16-18 year olds on glee are played by people who are like 27
 
70's show is at least 10 years old. Makes sense she is 40 now. She was the older sister who came back from after college or something.

The supposedly 16-18 year olds on glee are played by people who are like 27

It started in '98 and she was mostly on early in the show's run. So she would've been 28 to about 30 in most of her appearances.
 
This thread got me interested in how old the oldest actor was who played a teenager. Roddy McDowell was 38 when he played an 18 year old in 'Lord Love a Duck' (a great satire, BTW)

Lost Classics : Lord Love a Duck (1966) :: The Screen Lounge
Lord Love a Duck (1966) is a brilliant and jet-black satire about mid-sixties US culture. It takes pot shots at teenagers, the cult of consumerism, sexual politics, the education system and the takes it all to the tipping point for across-the-board anarchy.

Lord Love a Duck boasts a brilliant cast including Roddy McDowall playing a US high school seniorUS One-Sheet (at the age of 38!), Tuesday Weld as the epitome of jail bait and the beautiful and underrated Lola Albright as a proto-couger. The laser-sharp script and direction come form George Axelrod, who wrote the equally subversive screenplays for films such as Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957), and The Manchurian Candidate (1962), this is a film that truly deserves re-evaluation as a classic.

It’s also a misunderstood film; I remember it being shown on TV for kids in the summer break in a slot that included Batman (1966) and 7 Faces of Dr Lao (1964). A kid’s film this most definitely isn’t. With crisp black and white photography by Douglass Fapp, of-its-time pop-art editing by Wiliam A. Lyon and one of Neal Hefti’s best scores, this really is essential cinema.




Had to throw this clip in because it's a hilarious father/daughter *shopping trip* for cashmere sweaters.
 
Poor girl, you can really see the despair in her eyes. I hope she gets help.
 
Top Bottom