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An 80s flick synonymous with perhaps the most popular action genre of the eighties: the buddy-cop movie. In the wake of Lethal Weapon, there were many variations of the formula. Perhaps the most testosterone-fuelled was this 1989 cult classic that paired Sylvester Stallone and Kurt Russell as Los Angeles cops framed by Jack Palance's evil drug lord. With generous helpings of style, odd-couple quips, and tons of action, the movie was a box office hit. But behind the scenes, it was a mess, with the producers going through (at least) two directors and two cinematographers with a fast-approaching release date and pressure from the studio. So check your stock portfolios, brush up on your English lessons, and keep the mice out of the maze as Tim Williams and guest co-host, JB Huffman from "Manly Movies" Podcast discuss “Tango & Cash” from 1989 on this episode of the 80s Flick Flashback Podcast. Here are some additional behind-the-scenes trivia we were unable to cover in this episode: When Tango and Cash escape from prison, Cash turns to Tango and asks if he stopped "for coffee and a Danish." Tango responds, "I hate Danish," an in-joke referencing Sylvester Stallone's recent divorce from Danish actress Brigitte Nielson. At the quarry scene towards the end, one of the monster trucks is the famous Bigfoot truck. Although it's painted in different colors than its trademark blue and does not feature any Bigfoot decals, it was confirmed by Bob Chandler, the owner of the original monster truck, that it is indeed Bigfoot. Sources: Wikipedia, IMDB, Rotten Tomatoes, BoxOfficeMojo https://www.joblo.com/tango-and-cash-1989-sylvester-stallone-revisited/ https://www.eightieskids.com/20-surprising-facts-you-probably-didnt-know-about-tango-and-cash/ Some sections were composed by ChatGPT We'd love to hear your thoughts on our podcast! You can share your feedback with us via email or social media. Your opinions are incredibly valuable to us, and we'd be so grateful to know what you enjoyed about our show. If we missed anything or if you have any suggestions for 80s movies, we'd love to hear them too! If you're feeling extra supportive, you can even become a subscription member through "Buy Me A Coffee". For more details and other fun extensions of our podcast, check out this link. Thank you for your support! https://linktr.ee/80sFlickFlashback
Bigfoot: Start with the origins of Bigfoot, which is considered the first monster truck. It was created in the late 1970s by Bob Chandler. Discuss the unique features of Bigfoot, such as its massive size, oversized tires, and powerful engine. Highlight some of the most famous stunts and events involving Bigfoot, like crushing cars or jumping over obstacles. Explore the cultural impact of Bigfoot, including its appearances in movies, TV shows, and other media. Mention any controversies or myths surrounding Bigfoot, such as alleged sightings or hoaxes. Grave Digger: Introduce Grave Digger, one of the most iconic and recognizable monster trucks in the world. Talk about its creator, Dennis Anderson, and how he built the first Grave Digger in the early 1980s. Describe Grave Digger's distinctive design, including its spooky theme and signature green and black paint job. Discuss Grave Digger's numerous victories and achievements in Monster Jam competitions over the years. Share interesting anecdotes or stories about Grave Digger's performances and its impact on fans of all ages. History of Monster Jam: Provide an overview of Monster Jam, the premier monster truck racing and freestyle competition. Trace the evolution of Monster Jam from its beginnings to its current status as a global phenomenon. Highlight key milestones in Monster Jam's history, such as the introduction of new events, venues, and truck designs. Discuss the rules and format of Monster Jam competitions, including racing, freestyle, and skill challenges. Explore the role of Monster Jam in popular culture and its influence on other forms of motorsport and entertainment. Impact and Legacy: Reflect on the enduring popularity of Bigfoot, Grave Digger, and Monster Jam as a whole. Discuss how these iconic trucks and events have inspired generations of fans and influenced the development of the monster truck industry. Share personal experiences or memories of attending Monster Jam events or watching Bigfoot and Grave Digger in action. Consider the future of Monster Jam and how it continues to innovate and captivate audiences around the world. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/willie-jackerson/message
Abel Xavier Unsinn und Janny Imhoff in "Zwei Podcasthanseln stürzen Büchsen".Zur Vorweihnachtszeit wird es laut, stinkig und prollig und das ist nur der eine von beiden! Wir sprechen über Kryptiden und insbesondere, wie der Sasquach zum Namen Big Foot kam.Dann sprechen wir über Bob Chandlers 1974er Ford F-250 Pick Up Truck und wie dieser zu Bigfoot, dem ersten Monster Truck wurde.„Trotz oberflächlichen Klamauks und einiger Längen eine unterhaltsame Folge, die Kritik an der modernen Gesellschaft übt und auf Möglichkeiten solidarischen Handelns verweist.“– Lexikon des internationalen PodcastQuellenauswahl:Das Monster Truck Sumo Match https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_Fs0pk3bjkThey're pushing and pushing and pushingMeet the Man Behind the First Bigfoot Monster TruckBigfoot vs. USA-1: The Birth of Monster Truck MadnessTake this Job and shove it - FilmtrailerSupport the show
Week two of the Greater Buffalo Sports Hall of Fame Spotlight Show features three inductees, former Canisius Women's Basketball player Kara Haun-Rehbaum, 3x paralympic gold metalist sled hockey player Adam Page, multi-sport athlete and coach for Erie Community College Santo DeSain, and Marissa Chandler, daughter of late Buffalo Bills wide receiver Bob Chandler, hosted by Howard Simon.
Brazillian fart porn. Mini skirts. Sexual dances in a Wal-Mart dressing room. The loss of a legend. Chris Chan and Barb Chan are arrested and catch felonies. Welcome to The Chris Chan Saga, Part 11.Supplemental video on Youtube: Chris Chan Episode 11, supplemental videos. ***The audio is a little bit mechanical-sounding in this episode. It will be fixed with the next episode------------------------------------------------------------Email us and share your personal story: info@wesawthedevil.comWebsite: http://www.wesawthedevil.com Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/wesawthedevil Discord: https://discord.gg/X2qYXdB4Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/WeSawtheDevil Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/wesawthedevilpodcastThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4433638/advertisement
Sometime phenomenons can begin as a hobby. The craze around Monster Trucks began with a man here in the St. Louis who just enjoyed Souping up his truck for extreme off roading. It, however, became big business over time, and his truck named "Big Foot" became an icon. Just press play to hear the whole story. Click on search links to see if there are episodes with related content: Adam Kloppe, Arts, Entertainment, and Culture, Pastimes and Leisure, Transportation, Business, Podcast Transcript: I'm Adam Kloppe, public historian with the Missouri Historical Society, and Here's History on eighty-eight one, KDHX. ——— My nephew loves monster trucks. I know that probably isn't the thing you were expecting to hear in a two minute history segment, but I promise I'll bring it around. Anyway, he loves those trucks. He loves watching the highlights of the trucks doing stunts or driving over cars with their oversized tires. He has a bunch of the toys, and he convinces his parents (and sometimes his aunt and uncle) to take him to monster truck events. And he's hardly the only kid who goes wild for monster trucks—they are big business, and between the toys, live events, video games, and everything else, the industry brings in over a billion dollars a year. ——— But it turns out that none of us may have heard of monster trucks if not for one St. Louis area man named Bob Chandler. In the 1970s and 80s, Chandler owned an auto shop outside of the city, and whenever he had free time he liked to soup up his truck for extreme off-roading. He was constantly improving on it, eventually outfitting it with tall tires from a piece of agricultural equipment so that it could go to even more outlandish places. The truck was turning heads, and Chandler decided to give it a name—Bigfoot. ——— In 1981, Chandler had an idea. He created a tape of Bigfoot as he drove the truck over some old, junked-out cars. The tape started a sensation. It was passed around among enthusiasts—no one had ever seen a truck do what Bigfoot could. Soon Chandler was getting requests to bring Bigfoot to drag races, tractor pulls, and other events. Bigfoot was often the star of the show, with fans rushing the truck to learn more about it. Other enthusiasts began building monster trucks of their own. Events were scheduled where monster trucks competed against one another in races and stunt competitions, and drivers and mechanics innovated the trucks to perform even wilder stunts. A new industry was born, and it hasn't slowed down in the decades since. ——— Today, Bob Chandler is still involved with monster truck events, and a new version of Bigfoot still makes appearances at monster truck events all over the country. And if you want to visit Bigfoot, you can—the shop is located in nearby Pacific, Missouri. I guess I'll have to take my nephew out there so he can see the truck for himself. ——— Here's History is a joint production of KDHX and the Missouri Historical Society. I'm Adam Kloppe, and this is eighty eight one, KDHX St. Louis. ———
Marcus M. Mauldin started his career on stage in Musical Theater and then moved to more dramatic plays and roles, winning awards for Best Lead Actor, Best Supporting Actor, which include a Dallas Area Critic's Award and an Irma P. Hall Black Excellence Theater Award. Marcus then moved on to television where he landed recurring and co-star roles on such shows as The Good Guys, Dallas,Walker Texas Ranger, Breaking Bad, American Crime,Chase, and Queen Sugar. Next came Film where Marcus M. Mauldin landed roles Teddy a psychopath in All Roads To Perla, A loving brother Seth Collins in Gallows Road, Officer Benson in Carter High, Country music producer Bob Chandler in A Cowgirl's Song, Treacherous Mississippi Blue in Jo And The Reaper, Big Boss Roderick in Never Goin' Back, the loving Wayman in Miss Juneteenth, the Tormented Samson in the Steps Of Faith film series, and his first leading role on film as the first African Pope in The Pope Drops In to be released later his year. Voice work in commercials from McDonalds to Scholtsky's eventually lead to several video games such as Dues Ex, Terminator: Dawn of Fate, Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Tenkaichi, Daikatana – and then Paladins offered Marcus the role of Mal' Damba...Yeeeeesssss. Anime came calling next with Appare Runman and Kuma,Kuma,Kuma Bear. Next on the horizon in One Piece is the character Bonham. but the character that is beloved all over the world is in Borderlands, Borderlands game of the year, Borderlands 2, Borderlands 3, Borderlands The Pre-SeQuel, Tales from the Borderlands, Tiny Tina's Wedding, The Award winning game Borderlands Science, Tiny Tina's Assault on Dragons Keep and the recently released Tiny Tina's Wonderlands. So please welcome The Doorman, The Meat Slab, Evil Genius Crusher, Berserk Merc, Prettiest Siren of them all, The Slab King himself…BRICK!!!
Heath Padgett grew up around Monster Trucks and was able to work with Bob Chandler the creator for the original BIGFOOT. Heath has built his own Monster Truck in the image of the heavier, slower original trucks that first hit the scene in the 80s.
*EXPLICIT CONTENT WARNING* In this episode we say hello to Michael Snyder and “Jackie” and goodbye to the internet lumberjack, Bob Chandler. Chris Chan also dips his toes into the trans world while still being vehemently anti-trans, because intolerance knows no boundaries. If you'd like to help keep Unethical Podcast at the top of your feeds, please join us on Patreon or donate to us on Ko-fi! Thanks in advance for your support. Get 20% OFF @manscaped + Free Shipping with promo code UNETHICAL20 at MANSCAPED.com! #ad #manscapedpod JOIN THE UNETHICULT FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM BUY UNETHICAL MERCH DONATE ON KO-FI Music by: Chandler Edom Thomas
*EXPLICIT CONTENT WARNING* In this episode we say hello to Michael Snyder and "Jackie" and goodbye to the internet lumberjack, Bob Chandler. Chris Chan also dips his toes into the trans world while still being vehemently anti-trans, because intolerance knows no boundaries. If you'd like to help keep Unethical Podcast at the top of your feeds, please join us on Patreon or donate to us on Ko-fi! Thanks in advance for your support. Get 20% OFF @manscaped + Free Shipping with promo code UNETHICAL20 at MANSCAPED.com! #ad #manscapedpod JOIN THE UNETHICULT FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM BUY UNETHICAL MERCH DONATE ON KO-FI Music by: Chandler Edom Thomas
Former Padres broadcaster Bob Chandler joins Coach Kentera to remember the late Tony Gwynn.
Bob Chandler and Bill Center join Coach to give their thoughts on the current state of the Padres. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Opening It's time for… Lombardi Memories. A show that takes you back in time, into January or February, to the greatest one-day spectacle in all of sports. This is the every-other-Tuesday podcast that looks back at each and every one of the 50-plus Super Bowls and tells the story of who won and why. For the fan who needs more than a boxscore, this podcast goes drive-by-drive, play-by-play through the most dramatic games in history. I'm your host, Tommy A. Phillips, and you can visit my website at tommyaphillips.com where you can find all of my books. Those include Great Eighties, a book that covers this Super Bowl and the next nine of them as well. Today we have Super Bowl XV, which was held on January 25, 1981, between the third-time AFC champion Oakland Raiders, and the first-time NFC champions. Philadelphia Eagles. If you're looking for the full story of this 1980 season, pick up my Great Eighties book and you'll learn more than you ever wanted to know about that year and the rest of the eighties. As always, we have a pop quiz, and then homework at the end of the episode. The pop quiz question for today is: what individual record in this game still stands today? The answer will come near the end of the podcast. Prelude to Super Bowl XV The Philadelphia Eagles got off to a roaring start in 1980. They won 11 of their first 12 games, beating the Dallas Cowboys once along the way. They then stumbled down the stretch to three losses in their final four games, including a season-ending loss to Dallas that made the Eagles and Cowboys finish with the same record. Philadelphia had the tiebreaker, so the Eagles won the division, and the Cowboys were one of the wild cards. The Eagles breezed by the Minnesota Vikings 31-16 in the divisional round. For the NFC Championship Game, they'd have to play a “threematch” – the third game against the Cowboys on the season. Using the legs of running back Wilbert Montgomery, the Eagles ran all over Dallas and beat them 20-7 at Veterans Stadium to clinch a spot in the 15th Super Bowl, their first one. Montgomery ran for 778 yards and eight touchdowns, which weren't entirely impressive numbers, but still very solid. Quarterback Ron Jaworski threw for over 3,500 yards and 27 touchdowns, with just 12 interceptions all season. His most-thrown-to receiver was Montgomery, who had 50 catches. The deep threats came from Harold Carmichael and Charlie Smith, who both went over 800 yards and 45 catches. The Oakland Raiders, meanwhile, did things the hard way. They lost five regular-season games, including a 10-7 loss to the Eagles in Week 12. The Raiders finished at 11-5, which tied them for the best record in the conference. It wasn't enough to win the division, though, as the 11-5 Chargers held the tiebreaker over them. The Raiders' only way to the Super Bowl was through the wild card game. The Raiders won easily at home against Houston in the wild card game, before one of the most famous games in NFL history. It was “Red Right 88,” the fateful call by the Browns where NFL MVP quarterback Brian Sipe threw an interception in the final minutes of the game when all Cleveland needed was a field goal. The Raiders held on to win, 14-12. They then won a shootout in San Diego to claim their third ticket to the Super Bowl. Quarterback Dan Pastorini started the season as starter, but he got hurt, and Jim Plunkett had to come in. He was serviceable, throwing for just shy of 2,300 yards and 18 touchdowns, but also 16 interceptions. The leading Oakland receivers were Bob Chandler with 49 grabs for 786 yards and ten touchdowns, and Cliff Branch, with 44 catches for 858 yards and seven touchdowns. Running backs Mark van Eeghen and Kenny King combined for just short of 1,600 rushing yards and nine touchdowns. Of course, the biggest storyline with the Raiders was that owner Al Davis was in a fight with the league to move the Raiders to Los Angeles. That decision would go to court, but for now, everyone looked...
Bob Chandler of MacVantage discusses ‘Apple” Products
Jason Rouna joins me this week to discuss the USHRA event held at the Pontiac Silverdome in 1989. The story behind this show is simple, Jim Kramer and Bigfoot was upset the year before in round 1 by the Hot Stuff jeep driven by Jeff Bainter. Kramer is back in 89, and Bigfoot is looking for some revenge! On the other side of things, we get the Monster Tank battle where the man himself Mr. Bob Chandler is in the field with some of the most unique vehicles in competition at the time! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/retro-monster-truck-review/support
This week the guys talk all things Padres with local broadcasting legend Bob Chandler.
Bob Chandler from Mac Vantage talks Apple Products and Technology
Bob Chandler from Mac Vantage talks Apple Products and Technology
Legendary Padres broadcaster Bob Chandler joins us at 7 for MLB Talk. Former All-Pro Kicker Jeff Jaeger joins us for some NFL Talk at 8 pm.
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler joins Coach Kentera to talk about how impressed he is with the San Diego Padres roster, why he believes they will compete for a playoff spot, what he expects out of this team this season & more!
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple products
As North Carolina recovers from Hurricane Florence, state government leaders are happy to have access to a $2 billion “rainy-day fund.” The Republican-led General Assembly made a concerted effort to rebuild that fund in recent years. Joseph Coletti, John Locke Foundation senior fellow, explains why. Coletti also explains how the fund could help state government move more quickly to address issues arising from Florence’s damage. Amid recent controversies involving Facebook, some critics have called for increased regulation of the social media giant. Computer expert Bob Chandler, president of Macvantage, discusses Facebook’s recent woes. Chandler examines pros and cons related to government involvement in Facebook’s operations. The U.S. Supreme Court nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh has taken recent twists and turns. North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis recently chided Democratic colleagues and left-of-center partisan activists for refusing to engage Kavanaugh on substantive legal issues. President Trump recently traveled to Charlotte to unveil a new program designed to help more small business employees save money for retirement. U.S. Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta, Linda McMahon of the Small Business Administration, and other national and local business leaders joined the president to tout the new program. The arrival of Hurricane Florence prompted N.C. officials to trigger the state’s price-gouging law. It allows people to complain to government when they believe vendors are charging prices that are too high. Roy Cordato, John Locke Foundation senior economist, says the law creates serious negative unintended consequences. Among them: empty store shelves and dried-up gas pumps. Cordato explains why higher prices make sense during an emergency.
Bob Chandler of MacVantage deals with inquiries regarding Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage deals with inquiries regarding Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage answers questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage visits to answer questions about Apple Products
Bob Chandler of MacVantage visits to answer questions about Apple Products