Parker Lewis Can’t LoseSource Tags# Lewis# Lose# Parker Share Previous Post Barratt's Toffee Lolly Next Post Jellyfish from Shark Tale (seriously why does it look like a dildo though?) Subscribe Notify of new follow-up commentsnew replies to my comments Label {} [+] Name* Email* Label {} [+] Name* Email* 0 Comments Most Voted Newest Oldest Inline FeedbacksView all comments Load More Comments Related PostsTrey Stone and Matt Parker in China in the 1990sVampires (1998) John Carpenter Shits The Bed – Hey At Least It Isn’t Ghost Of Mars – When & Why Did John Carpenter Lose The Magic He Once Had?Nothing to lose. It’s one of the greatest hidden gems from the 90s. I can still quote it and it’s even funnier as an adult!There was something about this song that had just struck a chord with me when I first saw it and, even though it’s been over 2 decades since, I can still recall loving the video, the music, the design, the lyrics, and of course–Donna Lewis, yes, who I’d never heard of before–and will never again.TV Guide, August 11th 1991. Featuring an ad for the new Fox TV show ‘Parker Lewis Can’t Lose’!Old school Gameboy! Thank you, old gray stash box I totally didn’t lose!Anyone remember Mecc school computer game Lewis and Clark Stayed Home, from 1991?Parker Lewis Can’t Lose – Synchronize Swatches(1993) theater policy trailer for United Artists Theatres featuring Richard Lewis and Don Rickles. This trailer was made to help promote an upcoming TV show called Daddy Dearest, which lasted only 11 episodes.
Vampires (1998) John Carpenter Shits The Bed – Hey At Least It Isn’t Ghost Of Mars – When & Why Did John Carpenter Lose The Magic He Once Had?
Nothing to lose. It’s one of the greatest hidden gems from the 90s. I can still quote it and it’s even funnier as an adult!
There was something about this song that had just struck a chord with me when I first saw it and, even though it’s been over 2 decades since, I can still recall loving the video, the music, the design, the lyrics, and of course–Donna Lewis, yes, who I’d never heard of before–and will never again.
(1993) theater policy trailer for United Artists Theatres featuring Richard Lewis and Don Rickles. This trailer was made to help promote an upcoming TV show called Daddy Dearest, which lasted only 11 episodes.