POPULARITY
In this episode we sink once again into the disgusting cesspool of corruption and abuse that is Prosperity Gospel. Our conduit into the effluent pipe straight to hell this time is the perpetually persistently pernicious perfidious perennial perpetrator and peddler of pestiferous peccadilloes on a path to perdition, Benny Hinn. Unlike all the other pieces of poo, I mean Prosperity Preacher's we've highlighted in the past, Benny is not your typical southern born Baptist raised narcissist with no conscience. He's an Israeli born Eastern Orthodox raised narcissist with no conscience.This episode will also feature guest appearances from faith healer Kathryn Kuhlman, kidnap faking evangelical preacher Aimee Semple McPherson, James Brown, Lady Ga Ga, Donald Trump and Fidel Castro. Sauceshttps://www.bennyhinn.org/about/https://www.nndb.com/people/605/000022539/He Touched Me: An Autobiography by Benny Hinnhttps://www.equip.org/hank_speaks_out/benny-hinns-false-prophecies/https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2019/september/benny-hinn-renounces-prosperity-gospel.htmlUnmasked Benny Hinn: Mystic, Magician or Miracle Maker by Philip L. Powel, Neil Richardson and Sandy SimpsonThe Confusing World of Benny Hinn by G. Richard Fisher and M. Kurt Goedelmanhttps://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1987/08/29/healing-evangelist-sued/554f081e-bba9-4d6e-b26e-40a50f465e58/ Skeptic (Altadena, CA)(Vol. 14, Issue 4) Author: Ryan Shafferhttps://www.gty.org/library/blog/B170403/did-christ-become-sinful-on-our-behalfhttps://www.apologeticsindex.org/9930-benny-hinn-background-callingBlow me down Jesus: Canada's Benny Hinn may be the next great televangelist, by David Lees, Saturday Night (magazine)https://www.christianpost.com/news/remember-when-benny-hinn-said-adam-could-fly-like-superman-and-christians-are-little-messiahs-cursed-his-critics-and-brought-jesus-on-stage.htmlhttps://www.spokesman.com/stories/1995/may/20/its-a-holy-comeback-for-holyfield-boxer-credits/https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK556001/#:~:text=Narcissistic%20personality%20disorder%20(NPD)%20is%20a%20pattern%20of%20grandiosity%2C,model%20of%20%22Personality%20Disorders.%22
Today in botanical history, we celebrate an English novelist and travel writer who loved the pleasure gardens he created at a cemetery, an English writer and friend of Charlotte Bronte, and a beloved and humorous garden author. We'll hear an excerpt from Ali Smith's Autumn. It's perfect for this time of year. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about a species among the most ancient of Earth's inhabitants. And then we'll wrap things up with the birthday of an American garden writer. Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart To listen to the show while you're at home, just ask Alexa or Google to “Play the latest episode of The Daily Gardener Podcast.” And she will. It's just that easy. The Daily Gardener Friday Newsletter Sign up for the FREE Friday Newsletter featuring: A personal update from me Garden-related items for your calendar The Grow That Garden Library™ featured books for the week Gardener gift ideas Garden-inspired recipes Exclusive updates regarding the show Plus, each week, one lucky subscriber wins a book from the Grow That Garden Library™ bookshelf. Gardener Greetings Send your garden pics, stories, birthday wishes, and so forth to Jennifer@theDailyGardener.org Facebook Group If you'd like to check out my curated news articles and original blog posts for yourself, you're in luck. I share all of it with the Listener Community in the Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener Community. So, there's no need to take notes or search for links. The next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community, where you'd search for a friend... and request to join. I'd love to meet you in the group. Curated News Vegetable Garden Design: DIY Bean Trellis - Gardenista| Gardenista | Michelle Slatalla Important Events September 29, 1760 Birth of William Beckford, English novelist, travel writer, and architect. His family's enormous wealth stemmed from the enslavement of Jamaicans. Reclusive and eccentric, William is best known for his romance novel, The History of the Caliph Vathek (1782). William was fascinated with Italianate gardens. He especially enjoyed the landscape at Lansdown Cemetery after he installed a pleasure garden. He designed a large tower there and hoped to be buried in its shade near one of his favorite dogs. But it was not to be. The ground was considered unconsecrated, and the dog only made the situation even more untenable. And so, William's sarcophagus was moved to Abbey Cemetery in Bath. William once wrote, Flowers are the sweetest things God ever made and forgot to put a soul to. September 29, 1810 Birth of Elizabeth Gaskell, English writer. She married a Unitarian minister named William Gaskell, and his work led them both to help and advocate for the poor. In 1850, she met Charlotte Brontë at the summer home of a mutual acquaintance, and the two became instant friends. Once when Charlotte visited her, her shyness got the best of her, and Charlotte hid behind some curtains rather than meeting other visitors who had stopped by the Gaskell's Manchester home. After Charlotte died in 1855, her father, Patrick, asked Elizabeth to write her biography, which resulted in The Life of Charlotte Brontë (1857). Elizabeth's work included the novels Mary Barton (1848), Cranford (1851–53), and North and South (1854–55). She once told her daughter, Marianne, It is hard work writing a novel all morning, spudding up dandelions all afternoon, and writing again at night. Elizabeth was a gardener, and she loved flowers - especially roses. Gardens, flowers, fragrances, and country life permeate her writing. In Ruth (1853), she wrote, With a bound, the sun of a molten fiery red came above the horizon, and immediately thousands of little birds sang out for joy, and a soft chorus of mysterious, glad murmurs came forth from the earth...waking the flower-buds to the life of another day. In Wives and Daughters (1865), she wrote, I would far rather have two or three lilies of the valley gathered for me by a person I like than the most expensive bouquet that could be bought! September 29, 1920 Birth of Geoffry B. Charlesworth, garden author. Regarding the Devil's Claw or Tufted Horned Rampion (Physoplexis comosa), he wrote, We like people not just because they are good, kind, and pretty but for some indefinable spark, usually called "chemistry," that draws us to them and begs not to be analyzed too closely. Just so with plants. In that case, my favorite has to be Physoplexis comosa. This is not merely because I am writing at the beginning of July when the plant approaches maximum attractiveness. In A Gardener Obsessed (1994), he wrote, A garden is a Gymnasium; an outlet for energy, a place where accidents occur, where muscles develop, and fat is shed. — Uneventful living takes up most of our time. Gardening is part of it, possibly a trivial part to the rest of the world, but by no means less important to the gardener than the big events. In The Opinionated Gardener (1988), he wrote, Every gardener knows this greed. I heard a man looking at a group of plants say, “I have all the plants I need.” Ridiculous. He said it because he was leaving for South America the next day, and he didn't have his checkbook, and it was December, and he didn't have a cold frame. Unearthed Words A minute ago, it was June. Now the weather is September. The crops are high, about to be cut, bright, golden, November? Unimaginable. Just a month away. The days are still warm, the air in the shadows sharper. The nights are sooner, chillier, the light a little less each time. Dark at half-past seven. Dark at quarter past seven, dark at seven. The greens of the trees have been duller since August since July really. But the flowers are still coming. The hedgerows are still humming. The shed is already full of apples, and the tree's still covered in them. The birds are on the powerlines. The swifts left a week ago. They're hundreds of miles from here by now, somewhere over the ocean. ― Ali Smith, Autumn Grow That Garden Library Moths by David Lees and Alberto Zilli This book came out in 2019, and the subtitle is A Complete Guide to Biology and Behavior. In this book, David and Alberto give us an expert reference to the vital insect group of moths. In many cases, moths rely on their ability to camouflage to survive and reproduce. Gardeners are attracted to brightly covered butterflies, but the work of moths in the environment is equally important. Now, of course, you can't have a practical guide to moths without spectacular illustrations, and this book has that in spades. Readers come away with an incredible appreciation for the diversity of these winged insects and their miraculous lifecycle - from egg to larva to cocoon to airborne adult. This book is 208 pages of the marvelous world of moths - and our world would be the lesser without them. You can get a copy of Moths by David Lees and Alberto Zilli and support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for around $20 Today's Botanic Spark Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart September 29, 1902 Birth of Jean Hersey, American garden writer and magazine feature writer. She lived in Westport, Connecticut, with a meadow instead of a front lawn and woodland and stream for a back yard. She wrote over a dozen books. Her first book was called I Like Gardening (1941), which one reviewer said: "makes one fairly itch to start a garden (bugs and insects included)." Jean is probably best known for The Shape of a Year (1967), a year-long almanac of her garden life. In her chapter on September, she wrote, September is a sweep of dusky, purple asters, a sumac branch swinging a fringe of scarlet leaves, and the bittersweet scent of wild grapes when I walk down the lane to the mailbox. September is a golden month of mellow sunlight and still, clear days. The ground grows cool to the touch, but the sun is still warm. A hint of crisp freshness lies in the early hours of these mornings. Small creatures in the grass, as if realizing their days are numbered, cram the night air with sound. Everywhere goldenrod is full out. One of the excitements of the month is the Organic Garden Club show. Bob and I were prowling around the night before, considering what I might enter and studying all our tomatoes. The large ones seemed pretty good, but all had the common scars on the top that don't make a bit of difference in the eating but aren't good for a show. There was a special charm to some smaller ones, volunteers, that grew out of the midst of the chard. Each one was perfect, not a blemish. These were larger than the cherry tomatoes. "They're about the size of ping-pong balls,” Bob said. "They must be a cross between the ordinary large ones and the cherry ones. Say – why not enter them as Ping-pong Tomatoes? So I did, selecting three perfect ones, and they won first prize overall tomatoes. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."
Listen to the complexities of leadership from two executive headteachers. Zoe Griffiths from the Primary sector and David Lees from the Secondary Sector. What are the best leadership styles? Does it depend on circumstances and experience? What was it like leading during the pandemic.
DevOps has not only reached mainframe groups in the enterprise but also to large applications such as SAP. Organizations are moving away from waterfall methods and mega releases that take many months to deliver. What's needed are many more rapid release cycles and deployments that support the accelerating pace necessary to do business. David Lees, CTO of Basis Technologies, joins MediaOps CEO Alan Shimel to explore how organizations implement DevOps into their SAP integration and deployment cycles. Having lived through this transition, David shares his unique perspectives on the necessity to break through bottlenecks and make changes in supply chains, finance and many other business processes needed to support the business.
Epidode 300 Spectacular! O.G. Podcast host David Lees returns to the studio for an epic list epsisode as Tom, Jesse and Dave count down thier favourite films released during the life of this very podcast. That's 2012 to this week. There'll be honourable mentions. There'll be tangents. Jesse will forget films to inlcude, Tom will forget math and Dave will just forget. Our lists will follow for reference. If you don't want spoilers for the episode AVERT YE EYES!! Otherwise, he's the films we talked about: Dave's Honourables: The Spectacular Now 10. Still Alice 9. The Disaster Artist 8. Enemy 7. mother! 6. The Wolf of Wall Street 5. Interstellar 4. The Hateful Eight 3. Amour 2. Nocturnal Animals 1. Manchester by the Sea Jesse's Honourables: Hail Ceasar, The Hateful Eight, La La Land, High Rise, Baby Driver, Interstellar, Get Out, A Futile and Stupid Gesture 10.Boyhood 9. Mad Max: Fury Road 8. Mission: Impossible: Fallout 7. Good Time 6. Dunkirk 5. Everybody Wants Some!! 4. Blade Runner 2049 3. Arrival 2. First Man 1. Killing Them Softly Tom's Honourables: The Raid 2, Zero Dark Thirty, Baby Driver, Midnight Special, La La Land, Get Out, First Man, The Witch, Hereditary, Dunkirk 10. Only God Forgives 9. Jackie 8. Under the Skin 7. It Follows 6. The Act of Killing 5. Edge of Tomorrow 4. Dawson City: Frozen Time 3. Boyhood 2. Gravity 1. Mr. Turner
Rocketman re-invents the music biopic as a jukebox musical fantasy and we look back the life and times of the greatest of them all: Dewey Cox
It's John Wick time again! Tom and Jesse go over the previous chapters of the The Book of John before seeing how many people Keanu can shoot in the face in Chapter 3!
Tom and Jesse talk the lost Salvador Dali/Marx Bros film, the whole Sonic the Hedgehog debacle and the passing of the most handsome walking carpet we'll ever know - Peter Mayhew. We look back to the innovative brilliance of Who Framed Roger Rabbit and try and understand the labyrinthine plotting of Detective Pikachu
Tom and Jesse take in the end of the MCU as we know it with Avengers: Endgame. Also there's some film news
Tom made it safely to the United States but he went and completely forgot to pack Jesse so he's still in Melbourne. Through some voodoo Tom still doesn't completely understand they still made an (albiet late) episode this week. It's all about new horror film Us from writer/director Jordan Peele paired with a complex glass of David Lynch's Lost Highway. It turns out the dopplegangers were the friends we made along the way
Tom and Jesse catch up on the latest installment of the James Gunn/Disney saga : Gunn Returns. 90's adventure classic The Rocketeer gets a reappraisal before we look at the 90's-infused Captain Marvel
Tom, Jesse and Dave take in some news and recap the Academy Awards before Jesse and Tom delve into a double feature of comedy legend biopics. First up, Richard Attenbourgh's Chaplin (1992) starring Robert Downey Jr and then a look at the new Laurel and Hardy flick with Steve Coogan and John C Riely as the eponymous stars in Stan and Ollie
Tom and Jesse discuss Enter the Void, I Am Cuba, Black Panther, Without a Paddle, Cold War, Can You Ever Forgive Me?, Riki Oh: Story of Ricky, Fyre, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, Outlaw King, Happy Death Day 2U, Wayne
Tom and Jesse take on the 2019 Oscar nominations with our Should Wins/Will Wins for every category
Tom and Jesse take a break from the awards season circus to see what Steven Soderberg has been up to. Making films on his iphone it seems as we look at High Flying Bird and go back to Semi-Pro to complete our NBA double feature. We also take a look at the films of Albert Finney
Tom and Dave take in the Academy Award nominations for 2019 and discuss their snubs and surprises before heading back to the 1960's deep south for a retrospective look at In the Heat of the Night. We then consult our motorists guide and take in the Oscar-nominated Green Book
Tom and Dave discuss The Oath, Skate Kitchen, Velvet Buzzsaw, Widows, True Story, The Man Between, Fyre, Solo con Tu Pareja, Bohemian Rhapsody, Winter Sleep, Blue Steel, BlackKklansman, The Big Clock
Tom, Jesse and Dave discuss The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, Wonder Woman, The Old Man and the Gun, Bird box, Assassination Nation, Fahrenheit 11/9, Thor: The Dark World, Charley Varrick, Leave No Trace, Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl, Walkabout, Sorry To Bother You, Bomb City, They Shall Not Grow Old, Venom, Wanted, Loro, Black Mirror: Bandersnatch
Three super-powered (yet grounded) individuals, a trilogy of films and an epic trifecta of podcasters to talk about them! This week it's a M. Night Shyamarathon! On this episode we cover Unbreakable (2000), Split (2016) and the brand new trilogy-capper: Glass. Dave Lees is back in the Snobquarters to help make sense of the Eastrail 177 trilogy. Yep, that's what he wants people to call it. Real catchy. Also some news featuring culture wars, political divides and the Golden Globes results.
Tom and Jesse discuss The Doll, The Innocent Man, The Night Comes for Us, The Belko Experiment, The Devil's Backbone, Logan Lucky, Sunshine on Leith, Icarus, Lisa and the Devil, The Christmas Chronicles, Vice, Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse, Carnival of Souls, The Last Stand, The Favourite, Brothers Justice, Into the Fade, Bad Times at the El Royale
An Entourage joke becomes reality as Aquaman washes over our cinema screens. Everybody's favourite Dothraki trades in his arakh for a totally bitchin' trident and brings his chill dude bro vibes to the Kingdom of Atlantis. Will this be the film that brings Jesse around to the DCEU? Only time, and listening to this podcast, will tell. We compare Aquaman with another mythology-inspired superhero, Thor. Going back to 2011 for Kenneth Branagh's unloved take on the character. Plus there's a bit of what we charitably refer to as news.
We discuss our favourite scenes of the year in this very special "...And the Rest!" We go full spoiler with some scenes, but fear not! Spoiler timecodes are listed below, so you can skip ahead without missing anything or accidentally spoiling yourself. We also cover some out-of-date news coz' that's how we roll. Plus we talk these films: The Great Train Robbery, Puzzle, Roma, Going In Style, A Simple Favour, Love and Anarchy, Bushwick, Dumplin', Blood and Black Lace, Kingsman: The Golden Circle, Juliet Naked, Flower, Overlord, Searching, Cam, and Give 'Em Hell Malone. Spoiler timecodes! Black Panther spoilers end at 1:22:17 First Man spoilers end at 1:27:53 Overlord spoilers end at 1:31:00 Upgrade spoilers end at 1:40:12 Incredibles 2 spoilers end at 1:46:00 3 Billboards spoilers at 1:50:52 Hereditary spoilers end at 1:54:31 Roma spoilers end at 2:03:57 First Man spoilers end at 2:06:55 Mission Impossible: Fallout spoilers end at 2:14:49
It's end of year list time again! Tom and Jesse count down their personal favourite 10 films of the year. There's also a look at some honourable mentions sitting just outside the Top 10's plus we wallow in the dreck with our Bottom 5 films of the year.
Tom and Jesse discuss Performance, Seance on a Wet Afternoon, Spirits of the Dead, Farewell My Lovely, Looker, Capricorn One, Sisters, Jamaica Inn, House on Haunted Hill, I Don't Want to Be a Man, The Finances of the Grand Duke, Zero for Conduct, Foreign Correspondent, The Crimson Kimono, Falstaff (Chimes at Midnight), The Last Waltz, The Decline of Western Civilisation Part II: The Metal Years, The Decline of Western Civilisation Part III, Down with Love, Cosmic Psychos: Blokes You Can Trust.
Back to the ring for a one-two punch of Creed II and its spiritual and literal predecessor Rocky IV. Can those wacky Russians finally catch a break this time? Plus Alfonso Cuaron takes us down memory lane with the autobiographical Roma.
Tom and Jesse discuss Outlaw King, Midnight Mary, The Last Seduction, Chariots of Fire, Ashes and Diamonds, Coma, The Decline of Western Civilization, The Decline of Western Civilization part II: The Metal Years, The Decline of Western Civilization III, Chevalier, Billy Liar, Swept Away, Crazy Rich Asians and Tom Jones.
Warners Media knows what it feels like to be god as they flip the switch and resurrect the bloated corpse of Filmstruck within the patchwork body that shall be known as Criterion Channel! We pay homage to two giants of cinema with a respectful salute to Nicholas Roeg and a look at our favourite William Goldman-scripted films. Then Jesse and Tom Netflix and Chill (I believe I'm using that correctly) and catch up on the sumptuous six course meal that is the Coen Brother's western anthology: The Ballad of Buster Scruggs -but not before getting lost on the Oregon Trail with Meek's Cutoff
Tom and Jesse discuss Daisies, The Shop Around the Corner, The Colour of Pomegranates, The Ascent, The Curse of Frankenstein, Arada, Private Life, He Who Gets Slapped, Dance Girl Dance, The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner, The Mummy (1959), Apostle, Marjorie Prime, Hereditary, Christopher Strong, Mockery, The Ocean Waif, The Merry Widow, Demon Seed, Indiscretion of an American Wife.
A whole mess of sequels and reboots no-one asked for are one the way including Night of the Living Dead 2, the Shrek reboot and a Walter White-less Breaking Bad movie. Plus professional cameo performer Stan Lee passes away and Orson Welles has a new film out, despite the notable handicap of being dead these past 33 years. Tom and Jesse revisit Dario Argento's seminal giallo Suspiria (1977) before enrolling in Luca Guadagnino's spooky dance academy for the 2018 update
Tom and Jesse discuss Gold Diggers of 1933, Number 17, A Star is Born, Smithereens, Raintree County, Halloween III: Season of the Witch, Eighth Grade, The Kid From Spain, Hush, I Am Not a Witch, Let the Sun Shine In, The Purge, The Purge: Anarchy, The Purge: Election Year, Footlight Parade, Three Identical Strangers, Desert Hearts, The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes, Good Time, Hold the Dark, Sorry to Bother You, Dames, Bad Times at the El Royale, George Washington, Leave No Trace, The Seduction of Mimi.
A million film nerd voices cry out in anguish and are suddenly silenced as the Warner Bros death star obliterates Filmstruck. One member of this podcast takes it a little harder than the other. Texan filmmaker Richard Linklater plans to make movie about Texan comedian Bill Hicks and Robb Stark is probably James Bond. Tom and Jesse count down their personal favourite 5 horror films to get into the Halloween spirit before back to back reviews of Halloween (1978) and its franchise continuity-destroying sequel: Halloween (2018)
Tom and Jesse discuss A Wrinkle In Time, Mandy, Beach Rats, 42nd Street, War Machine, The Farmer's Wife, The First Purge, Whitney, The Land of Steady Habits, Reel Injun, To All The Boys I've Loved Before, The Skin Game, Cash On Demand, Action Point, Guy and Madeline On A Park Bench, Rich and Strange, Wings.
James Gunn trolls Disney by accepting a job writing, producing, and possibly directing Suicide Squad 2, the WGA decides that all screenwriters are equal unless you write cartoons in which case - no soup for you, and John Rambo puts an end to the debate over who drew first blood with a shiny new title. Plus we pit all four versions of A Star Is Born against each other in an Extreme Death Match in which there can only be one glorious victor. Then it's off to space with Ryan Gosling on the good ship Apollo with a feature review of Damien Chazelle's First Man, accompanied by Ron Howard's Apollo 13 in which Houston gets some very bad news.
Tom and Jesse discuss Underworld U.S.A, Cargo, Hearts Beat Loud, Jubal, Othello, Summer Interlude, Scandal Sheet, A Lion is in the Streets, The Immortal Story, Innerspace, Angela, The Ballad of Jack and Rose, There's No Business Like Show Business, Downhill, The Heartbreak Kid, The Manxman, Summer 1993.
Bond has a new director, Space has a new Jam and Tarantino has a new Burt Reynolds. Plus we go deep into a Purge-a-ton with the first three Purge films before taking a good hard look at the Phoenix bros’ work with Gus Van Sant. Specifically My Own Private Idaho and the unwieldily-titled Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far On Foot. Also: Next Gen.
Tom and Jesse discuss Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ, The Quatermass Experiment, Quatermass 2, Quatermass and the Pit, Splendour in the Grass, Tender Mercies, To the Devil a Daughter, Support the Girls, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, The Whole Town's Talking, Baby Driver, Where Eagles Dare, Seconds, White Lightning, Won't You Be My Neighbor, Teen Titans Go!: to the Movies, Mikey and Nicky, RBG, The Curse of the Werewolf, The Monster Squad.
Henry Cavill is out as Superman, Burt Reynolds is out in general and it's Pred-fest 2018 over here. Tom and Jesse go through every film that's had the Predator in it before getting to Shane Black's latest movie. Also: Predator, Predator 2, Alien vs Predator, Alien vs Predator: Requiem, Predators.
China might be cooking its books when it comes to the box office, Kevin "Pedo" Spacey's new, ironically titled film makes $126 then Tom and Jesse do a Jaws retrospective before taking on The Meg, Jason Statham and some big, old shark or not-shark or something. Not sure. I didn't see it. I'm dropping the third person thing - my name is Dave, I'm also on this podcast, but I didn't see these movies. Alright. Also: First Reformed, Gregory's Girl, Seven Days in May, The Night of the Iguana, Kanal.
The times they are a-changing. Snobcast Productions is extremely happy to welcome Jesse Boyle as a co-host on the show while Dave takes a back seat. Also, retrospective reviews are back so join Dave, Tom and Jesse as they talk news, Undercover Brother and Spike Lee's latest, BlacKkKlansman. Also: Rampage, Tomb Raider, Them, The Cook The Thief His Wife and Her Lover, Top Hat, Restrepo, The Freshman, Streets of Fire, Body Heat, Swing Time, ...All the Marbles, The Band Wagon.
Rotten Tomatoes has done the research: the more Tom Cruise runs the better his movies do, so Tom and Dave watch Mission: Impossible - Fallout to see if that's true. Also: You Were Never Really Here, Lean On Pete, The Mission, Vengeance.
The Deadwood movie is finally going ahead, James Gunn fired from Guardians of the Galaxy 3 and Dave and Tom review Anton Fuqua's The Equalizer 2. Also: While the City Sleeps, Nazi Agent, The Law, Twentieth Century.
Johnny Depp punches a crew member, RoboCop is returning and Tom and Dave talk Ted Kennedy movie Chappaquiddick and Steven Soderbergh's Unsane. Also: The Fugutive Kind, The Man in the White Suit, Ball of Fire, Bob le Flambeur.
Robots are reading scripts and successfully identifying box office hits, The Sopranos prequel movie is a go and Dave and Tom review Marvel's Ant-Man and the Wasp, starring Paul Rudd and Evangeline Lily. Also: Cooley High, The American Friend, Zouzou, Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice.
Terry Gilliam has his Don Quixote movie back in his hands after an error in translation, the Academy expands its member list to achieve more diversity and Tom and Dave talk Leigh Whannell's sci-fi action film, Upgrade. Also: Love Simon, Circle, Siren of the Tropics.
The producers of Gotti are faking their own audience scores, Disney puts a hold on Star Wars spin-offs and Dave and Tom talk Pixar's Incredibles 2. Also: The Piano.
Paul Hogan and Crocodile Dundee are coming back (for real this time), The Shining is getting a sequel and Tom and Dave talk about the movie everyone is talking about so they talk about it too: Hereditary. Also: Lawrence of Arabia, The Great Escape, The Getaway, My Man Godfrey, Sweetie.
This very late episode is brought to you by Dave and Tom featuring such films as Ocean's 8, Game Night plus a ridiculously huge lightning round and, of course, some news. Also: The Ritual, Sleepless In Seattle, Creep, Creep 2, Mean Streets, A Canterbury Tale, I Know Where I'm Going, The Small Back Room, Thoroughbreds, A Walk In The Woods, The Tales of Hoffman.
Solo: A Star Wars Story isn't going so well, Morgan Freeman may not be the lovable old earring-wearer you thought he was and Tom and Dave discuss the musical sensation that has just hit home release, The Greatest Showman. Also: Revenge, The Iron Giant, Seven Beauties, Le Trou, Street Scene.
Etihad Stadium will be Marvel Stadium but, more importantly, Dave amd Tom talk a lot of Han Solo stuff (in non-spoiler and spoiler sections). Also: The Rachel Divide, Gringo: The Dangerous Life of John McAfee, Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale, The Edge of the World, The Lion Has Wings, The Spy in Black, Contraband, The Adventures of Prince Achmed, En Chambre En Ville.
Netflix is nearing 1,000 original titles, Lando Calrissian is pansexual, Tom reviews quite a few films then Dave and Tom talk Deadpool 2 in spoiler and non-spoiler sections. Also: Kansas City Confidential, The Court Jester, The Lost World, Alphaville, Twelve O'Clock High, Kes, The Last of Sheila, Police Adjective, Sex is Comedy, Bluebeard, The Last Mistress, Fat Girl, The Sleeping Beauty, Abuse of Weakness, Man with a Movie Camera, 12:08 East of Bucharest.