(09-21-2010 06:09 PM)Here Am I Wrote: [ -> ]I remember Luke and Laura's wedding.
My favorite on that series was Scorpio. I stopped watching when they 'killed him off'.
Oh, I heard he came back, but by then I'd shed the 'three soaps a day' habit for good and didn't start watching again. 
Hmmm...Scorpio sounds familiar but I can't quite picture him. Was he dark and handsome? Maybe Australian? Your memory for childhood/young adult stuff, books for example, is 1,000 times better than mine.
(09-21-2010 08:08 PM)Here Am I Wrote: [ -> ] (09-21-2010 07:34 PM)Lynne Wrote: [ -> ] (09-21-2010 06:09 PM)Here Am I Wrote: [ -> ]I remember Luke and Laura's wedding.
My favorite on that series was Scorpio. I stopped watching when they 'killed him off'.
Oh, I heard he came back, but by then I'd shed the 'three soaps a day' habit for good and didn't start watching again. 
Hmmm...Scorpio sounds familiar but I can't quite picture him. Was he dark and handsome? Maybe Australian? Your memory for childhood/young adult stuff, books for example, is 1,000 times better than mine.
I loved General Hospital for several years, when I was a stay-at-home mom.
Yes, Scorpio (Tristan Rogers) was dark, handsome and Australian. There's something about that accent.. :wink:
Did you know that Demi Moore was on that soap opera as well? As was Richard Dean Anderson (MacGyver).
Here's a picture of Luke and Scorpio, Luke's best man:
![[Image: tg-triston-rogers-web.jpg]](http://groovyvic.mu.nu/archives/images/tg-triston-rogers-web.jpg)
Oh, the memories! That was a great story line.
I remember Demi Moore on it but not Richard Dean Anderson. Maybe I'd started working a day job by then.
You chicks are absurd. Apart from "Twin Peaks," which was in a class by itself, the only soap opera worth watching, in the history of television, was "Dallas." And even that one became insufferably hokey toward the end. But it was very entertaining in its early years.
Critics argue about who was the greatest villain in movie history: Norman Bates? Marlon Brando in "The Godfather?" HAL-9000 in "2001?" Hannibal Lecter?
But I don't think there can be any argument or debate: the greatest and most delightful villain is television history was Larry Hagman as J.R. Ewing. He
made that program.
I've been trying to figure out why I was Dallas deprived. I was definitely living back in this country by then but I think I was working full time during the day and going to graduate school at night. I was so tired.
Dh just suggested we watch some more "soap opera in neck stocks." Thanks again, Lor.
