Alot of Alliteration for an Anxious Anchorman

Once again I am watching Thomas the Tank Engine. They are playing a little memory game where it says something like "Percy puffs proudly out of the station carrying" and it starts with passengers and then adds on pineapples, a piano and presents. So at this point I am so starved for any sort of intellectual stimulation that I start trying to come up with alliterative adjectives for each item. So I start with passengers: "Percy puffs proudly out of the station carrying . . . placid, plainitve passengers . . . and continue with . . . a precariously placed piano . . . preposterously prodigious pineapples . . and pompous, protruding presents." It's nice to know that you can still use your brain AND take care of children.Broadcast News is one of my favorite films. The writing is brilliant. If you haven't seen it in awhile give it a second look. The best line in the film is when Albert Brooks is watching William Hurt on television in his first stint as the network's anchor and says "That's a lot of alliteration for an anxious anchorman."