trollthumper--disqus
trollthumper
trollthumper--disqus

Ah, you put in as well? I requested Southland Tales, a movie I'm surprised none of the usual three bad movie podcasts covered here (WHM, HDTGM, Flop House) have touched yet. Then again, it might either result in a four-hour episode or the hosts' faces melting like they opened the Ark of the Covenant, so there's that.

On WHM, Steve Sadjak's brother Mark drops in to help the others discuss Dragonheart. Not a movie I would have pegged for the podcast, but hearing them talk about it really put it into light. I'm not sure how many movies have gone the route of, "Our hero engaged in a misguided campaign of genocide because of rash

HDTGM also went a bit outside this time. I mean, I expect WHM to toss up a bad movie that I hadn't heard of or considered, but HDTGM usually sticks close to the "canon" of high-profile flops and infamous disasters. And I'd honestly never heard of Runaway before the podcast - when I saw in the blurb that Gene Simmons

Midnighter is characteristically cocky as fuck. I'm pretty sure, "Let me take a date to somewhere beautiful but homophobic then beat down whoever starts shit" is within his standard ethos.

I think it's more the fact that this movie falls into a general pattern of indie films set in one of the most diverse cities in the world, a place with 12 million people across five boroughs, and sets its sights primarily on the wild whites of Manhattan. Worse, in these movies, if minority characters show up, they are

-Follows a political philosophy that attributes all respect and honor to soldiers at all times
-Photoshops the names of actors willing to appear in this pap into a memorial to war dead

There Goes The Neighborhood (the show where a gay family, a black family, a Korean family, a family where the parents were heavily tattooed, and a bunch of other "not standard" families competed for a home in a white, extremely conservative enclave outside of Austin) was ABC's fuck-up, not CBS's. Weirdly, there were

If I may cosign and add to that:

Yeah, I missed the other thread and realized, too late, that was the likely answer. My mind has been all sorts of fucked today.

Ladies and gentlemen… some new evidence has come to light…

Vin Mariani, favored of Aleister Crowley, amongst others.

As someone who's on the spectrum, I'd argue it can vary from case to case. In my case, it's not just being oblivious to social cues, but then being AWARE that I'm oblivious to social cues and thus trying to constantly diagnose whether I am doing the right thing. This may be comorbid with social anxiety, but I do know

As someone who works in a health adjacent field, I lost in when someone pointed out re: Lloyd's pediatrician love interest, "You're a mandatory reporter. Kiss your career goodbye."

And of course, now a number of the GGers - who spent months before swearing "that wasn't us/unnamed third party troll/it's a FAAAAAKE" re: such harassment - are shitting themselves over John Oliver coming at them… despite the fact that he never mentioned the movement by name, merely pointed out that these women in

Hmm. Doing some digging, Blood and Chocolate hit the screen in 2007, a year before Twilight. Was it trying to beat Twilight out of the gate, or riding the "hey, hot, scary werewolves and forbidden love" wave from Underworld?

Yeah, I remember i bought one of the books in the series after watching the movie and was all, "Wait, this taken place in Britain?"

I remember an interview back on CHUD back in the day where the writer talked to the screenwriter, who basically said, "Did you find all that Celtic mythology crap boring? Well, good, 'cause it's in the trash."

It's interesting to read that bit on Nomi. I feel like that's a thing LGBT individuals often crave and rarely get. A lot of narratives seen in media focus on the hardships faced by queer individuals, which are stories that need to be told - but such stories are often aimed at a straight audience, in an effort to

I could use some Groovy Bears.

"So… how much did Dodge chip in?"
"Not as much as you'd think."