Jan. 29
Clowes Hall
Thank you, Jimmy Fallon … for doing what David Letterman should be doing—broadcasting your late-night show from Indianapolis during Super Bowl week. (Well, from Wednesday-Friday and then on Saturday. A shame you are going to be missing Monday and Tuesday, though, because downtown Indy rocks on Monday and Tuesday evenings.)
Thank you, Clowes Hall … for hosting Fallon for this one-night stand-up show, technically called “Jimmy Fallon and Friends.”
Thank you, Jimmy Fallon’s friends … for the long nights you’ve no doubt spent helping him forget the animated film “Doogal.”
And thank you, Jimmy Fallon writing crew … for creating an ongoing skit as fun as Jimmy Fallon’s thank-you notes. Welcome to Indy.
Details on the stand-up show—and to see a Jimmy Fallon doll visiting Butler U.’s campus on the back of Blue II—click here.

















graham. they are even better w/ roasted marshmallows and melted chocolate
Apparently ticket sales are slow too...mas emails have been sent by the speedway in a last ditch attempt to get place fans to come.
Garden Valley Veggie flavor Wheat Thins Toasted Chips. Don't judge until you try them, haters!
Doc, a few important errors in your statements:
(1) The developer is spending the CITY'S money (the city is paying for the cost of the garage), so the city can damn well insist on a quality design.
(2) The LAW requires the proposed building to comply with design standards, and insisting that people follow the law is not giving anyone the "run-around."
(3) A two-week delay to make some minimal aesthetic improvements is hardly a great imposition being imposed on the developer.
(4) If the developer would rather build a crappy building elsewhere with their own money, then they are welcome to pick up and do so.
(4) Indianapolis is a major city, not some podunk town that needs to spread its legs for any developer that throws the place a sideways glance. Indianapolis should insist on the best, not settle for junk. Accepting anything is not going to make Indianapolis grow any faster (not sure where you got that silly notion from), nor is Indianapolis a slow-growth city compared to similarly sized city's in the Midwest.
Alone. Or with cheese.