the podcast that murders your dad
Three Steamboat Bills Junior discuss Stand By Me, the award-winning 1986 film starring Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Corey Feldman, and Jerry O'Connell.
Three giant mutant alligators discuss Inside, the award-winning 2007 film starring Beatrice Dalle and Alysson Paradis.
Three boobs discuss Maximum Overdrive, the award-winning 1986 movie starring Emilio Estevez and Yeardley Smith.
Three gummibars discuss Jaws, the award-winning 1975 movie starring Roy Scheider, Richard Dreyfuss, and Robert Shaw.
Three arepas mias discuss Silver Bullet, the award-winning 1985 film starring Gary Busey and Corey Haim.
Three coocooricoos discuss House of the Devil, the award-winning 2009 movie starring Greta Gerwig and Dee Wallace.
Three callipygians discuss Cat's Eye, the award-winning 1985 film starring Drew Barrymore and James Woods.
Three hoes discuss Krampus, the award-winning 2015 film starring Adam Scott and Toni Collette.
Three Bills discuss Firestarter, the award-winning 1984 film starring Drew Barrymore, David Keith, Martin Sheen, and George C. Scott.
Three Cameo stars discuss Firestarter, the award-winning 2018 film starring Tilda Swinton, Tilda Swinton, and Tilda Swinton.
Three young villains discuss Children of the Corn, the award-winning 1984 movie starring Peter Horton and Linda Hamilton.
Three boneys discuss Ex Machina, the award-winning 2015 film starring Oscar Isaac, Domhnall Gleeson, and Alicia Vikander.
Three zosos discuss Christine, the award-winning 1983 film starring Robert Prosky and Harry Dean Stanton.
Three loofahs discuss Invasion of the Body Snatchers, the award-winning 1956, 1978, and 1993 films starring Kevin McCarthy, Donald Sutherland, and Meg Tilly.
Three goobers discuss The Dead Zone, the award-winning 1983 movie starring Ron Walken and Martin Fucking Sheen.
Three emergency landers discuss Bram Stoker's Dracula, the award-winning 1992 film starring Keanu Reeves and Tom Waits
Three passion fruits discuss Cujo, the award-winning 1983 movie starring Dee Wallace and Ed Lauter.
Three fletchers discuss Creepshow, the award-winning 1982 film starring Leslie Nielsen and Stephen King.
Three Totino's Pizza Rolls discuss Oxygen, the award-winning 2021 film starring Melanie Laurent and Mathieu Amalric.
Three absolute zeroes discuss The Shining, the award-winning 1980 film starring Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall.
Three testicules discuss Pitch Black, the award-winning 2000 film starring Vin Diesel and Radha Mitchell.
Three hoodyhoos discuss Salem's Lot, the award-winning 1979 film starring James Mason, Bonnie Bedelia, and Fred Willard.
Three sportsmen discuss Vampire's Kiss, the award-winning 1988 film starring Nicolas Cage, Maria Conchita Alonso, and Jennifer Beals.
Three Babbages discuss Carrie, the award-winning 1976 film starring Sissy Spacek and Piper Laurie.
Three mastodons discuss You're Next, the award-winning 2011 film starring Barbara Crampton and AJ Bowen.
Three johns discuss Slither, the award-winning 2006 film starring TV's Castle and Pam from The Office.
Three gleepglorps discuss Dead Ringers, the award-winning 1988 film starring Jeremy Irons and Jeremy Irons.
Three chromeos discuss Return of the Living Dead, the award-winning 1985 film starring Clu Gulager and Linnea Quigley.
Three steelidans discuss The Invisible Man, the award-winning 2020 film starring Elisabeth Moss and Oliver Jackson-Cohen.
Three soilies discuss Oculus, the award-winning 2013 film starring Nebula and Bo-Katan.
Three embrodaks discuss Leprechaun 5, the award-winning 2000 film starring Warwick Davis and Ice-T.
Three flibbertigibbets discuss Saw IV, the award-winning 2007 film starring Tobin Bell and Donnie Wahlberg.
Three Holloweenies discuss Army of Darkness, the award-winning 1992 film starring Bruce Campbell and Bridget Fonda.
Three jilted lovers discuss Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night 2, the award-winning 1987 film starring Michael Ironside and Wendy Lyon.
Three giant murder hornets discuss The Ring, the award-winning 2002 film starring Naomi Watts and Brian Cox.
Three blitherers discuss Nightmare on Elm Street 4, the award-winning 1988 film starring Robert Englund and Tuesday something.
Three shobalabas discuss Halloween III: Season of the Witch, the award-winning 1982 film starring Tom Atkins and Paul Dano.
Three wedgies discuss Final Destination 2, the award-winning 2003 film starring Ali Larter and Justina Machado.
Three thud butts discuss Sleepaway Camp, the award-winning 1983 film starring Felissa Rose and a young man in a Felissa Rose mask.
Three Strong Sads discuss Mulholland Dr., the award-winning 2001 film starring Naomi Watts and Robert Forster.
Three nudists discuss The Omen, the award-winning 1976 film starring Gregory Peck and Lee Remick.
Three bush leaguers discuss the 1980s award-winning films The Evil Dead and Evil Dead 2, starring Bruce Campbell and Ted Raimi.
Three chicken forkers talk during Jason X, the award-winning 2001ish film starring David Cronenberg. Start the podcast and follow Leez's spoken instructions to sync with your copy of the film.
Three lily-livers discuss this atrocity, the award-winning 2002ish film starring Sylvester Stallone, Tom Berenger, Charles S. Dutton, Kris Kristofferson, Jeffrey Wright, Stephen Lang, Robert Prosky, Robert Patrick, Courtney B. Vance, Dina Meyer, Polly Walker, and Rance Howard.
Three horny toads discuss Candyman, the award-winning 1992 film starring Tony Todd and Virginia Madsen.
Three sweet bois discuss The House That Jack Built, the award-winning 2018 film starring Matt Dillon.
In their record-breaking 20th episode, three instupperables discuss Friday the 13th parts 1 and 2, the award-winning 1980 and 1981 films starring Betsy Palmer, Kevin Bacon, Amy Steel, and Walt Gorney.
Three coprophages discuss The Babadook, the award-winning 2014 film starring Essie Davis and Noah Wiseman.
Three tomato cans discuss The Descent, the award-winning 2005 film starring Shauna Macdonald and Natalie Mendoza.
Three croneburgers discuss The Fly, the award-winning 1986 film starring Jeff Goldblum and Geena Davis.
Three morticians discuss many of the horror films made in the past decade, and describe Kiernan Shipka as "that girl from the Harry Potter movies."