POPULARITY
Scott Lucas of Local H is this weeks guest to talk 20 years of Whatever Happened to P.J. Soles?, the bands fall tour with Radkey, the LIFERS podcast and tons moreLOCAL Hhttp://www.localh.comhttps://localh.bandcamp.comhttps://www.instagram.com/local_hPCHInstagram - www.instagram.com/powerchordhourTwitter - www.twitter.com/powerchordhourFacebook - www.facebook.com/powerchordhourYoutube - www.youtube.com/channel/UC6jTfzjB3-mzmWM-51c8LggSpotify Episode Playlists - https://open.spotify.com/user/kzavhk5ghelpnthfby9o41gnr?si=4WvOdgAmSsKoswf_HTh_MgDonate to help show costs -https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/pchanthonyhttps://cash.app/$anthmerchpowerchordhour@gmail.comCheck out the Power Chord Hour radio show every Friday night at 8 to 11 est/Tuesday Midnight to 3 est on 107.9 WRFA in Jamestown, NY. Stream the station online at wrfalp.com/streaming/ or listen on the WRFA app.Special Thanks to my buddy Jay Vics for the behind the scenes help on this episode!https://www.meettheexpertspodcast.comhttps://www.jvimobile.com
It's the all new show and we kick off the new monthly segment - Film Fever with Anastasia Elfman! We're gonna spend an hour doing a deep dive on one of Anastasia's favorite films. This month it's time to visit old Detroit and watch Robocop bring justice to OCP. Hire a Writer - Explore Geeky Portland - Downtown Fun - Battle Grounds Gaming Cafe
My dad was my hero in so many ways. He went to be with the Lord this past Tuesday. He was an amazing human, father and pilot. His life was centered around "Faith, Family and Flying." He was a role-model to so many people. Today would have been he and my mothers' 63rd wedding anniversary. Thank you all for listening, sharing and following this podcast. I really appreciate it. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jonespeople/support
Hip hurra, vi har fødselsdag, og I er alle sammen inviteret med. Vi har også inviteret Robocop, ED 209, Dick Jones, Clarence Boddicker og alle de andre. Det bliver mægtigt!
How does a legacy rooted in traditional seafood pave the way for innovation in aquaculture? This week's episode features Dick Jones, a veteran in the seafood industry with a rich family history in seafood processing and brokerage. Transitioning from the traditional seafood business to the forefront of aquaculture, Jones shares his journey through the collapse of groundfish stocks that led to his family business's bankruptcy, highlighting the critical need for sustainable fishing practices. At Whole Foods, he played a key role in pioneering sustainable seafood retailing, showcasing the impact of leadership and education in promoting sustainability. Now the CEO of aquaculture with Blue Ocean Mariculture, Jones discusses the challenges and opportunities within the industry, from operational hurdles to regulatory frameworks and workforce development. He underscores the importance of community engagement, transparency, and accountability in aquaculture to ensure public support and sustainable growth, offering listeners insightful perspectives on the evolution of seafood production towards a more sustainable future. Learn more about Blue Ocean Mariculture on their website and check out their career page for new opportunities.
In this episode, we talked to Dick Jones, CEO of Blue Ocean Mariculture, where he answered these questions:What role do you believe mariculture can play in addressing global food security and promoting sustainable practices?"As the CEO of a leading mariculture company, how do you address concerns about the potential ecological impact of fish farming and its implications for marine ecosystems?"In what ways is your company collaborating with governments, conservation organizations, and local communities to foster responsible mariculture practices and promote social and economic benefits in the regions where you operate?Enjoy!
Danny and Pickle return! It's time for the beginning of the end of Dirty Dancing Month. Cousin Bergley - with the aid of Portuguese subtitles - takes us by the hand and guides us through this fever dream of a live production. Rather than adaptation, it's a celebration of the Songs of Dirty Dancing (and some other shit we don't care about). Eric Carmen (Hungry Eyes) plays Clarence Boddicker to Bill Medley (Time of My Life)'s Dick Jones. The Contours steal the show, and we talk about Black Swan a lot for some reason? DANNY: LIFE'S A JOURNEY, DIG IT???????? LIFE'S A GARDEN - THAT'S WHY YOU DIG IT! YOU SHOULD BE EMBARRASSED!
Omni Consumer Products former Senior Vice President, Dick Jones personally picked hosts Charlie and Nate to discuss one of OCPs black eyes in the corporate world...RoboCop. We here at OCP care about you and your listening habits while also looking toward the future of podcasting. Now please take some time and enjoy the latest episode of Give Me Back My Action Movies, the one podcast for all your action needs. Be sure to listen closely for all the fine OCP products and services you need in this special episode. The Future of Tomorrow...Is Today
RE-UPLOAD OF "WE-BOO-LESQUE NO. 3, NO. 4, NO. 5" -- BURLESQUE GHOST STORIES, SPECIAL BONUS SERIES FROM WEBURLESQUE THE PODCAST, HOSTED BY VIKTOR DEVONNE FEATURING NIGHTLIFE PROFESSIONALS TELLING THEIR TRUE ENCOUNTERS WITH... SOMETHING OUT THERE. - Episode No 3 (originally released September 16, 2020) a) Sleep Paralysis at The In-law Apartment A core member of Massachusetts's Slaughterhouse Society, the special effects art monster known as Michael Geary has been raising hairs in the Boston area for years. However, there was a time when he was the one who was spooked. b) That's Just Bucky The glamorous beauty Gwen Ruby has been seen on stages all over Southern California and beyond, knocking them dead as a member of the Hollywood Jane Revue. A longstanding cast member of the Rocky Horror cast Sins o' the Flesh, Gwen--while living in a friend's guest house--she found her involved in different kind of audience participation. c) Before You Go to Bed, You See The Ring Nerdlesque and neoburlesque superstar Georgia O'Queef is a founding member of the Hollywood Jane Revue. Georgia may run Los Angeles' burlesque storytelling show "Loose Lips,” but there was a time when she was scared speechless. - Episode No 4 (originally released September 23, 2020) a) The Living StatueBrooklyn nightlife performer Buona Sara is a burlesque dancer and stage manager. One day, we found herself face to face with what should have been inanimate. b) Haunted at the HauntNew Orleans burlesque performer, producer, and meatball chef Dick Jones found themselves in a city of magic when they moved to The Big Easy. While working in a haunt, they discovered they were sharing a space with someone who wasn't part of the cast. c) Stop That Weird ShitPhiladelphia's own Zsu Zsu Zatanna has experienced much of the otherworld. She tells you a story of some of her most memorable encounters. - Episode No 5 (originally released September 30, 2020) a) Let Me InC'etait BonTemps is Pastel Priestex of Burlesque & Drag who traveled from Orlando to Brooklyn to be known as an emcee and entertainer who specializes in the dark and spooky, going so far as to win the Silver Tusk Award for Strangest Thing. He made one mistake while summoning a guardian angel, however. b) At Least it's Just Uncle BernieMargot Starlux began her career in Philadelphia as a modern dancer who turned to lindy hop & go-go between performances with the Peek-A-Boo Revue and the Looking Glass Revue. Before she was shimmying in fringe, she was in a house with several unnatural occurrences. c) The Many Hauntings of Miss VivianMiss Vivian is a dominatrix, model, and sideshow burlesque performer who has been touched by the supernatural most thoroughly through the years. ... WEBurlesque Podcast Network is the creation of Viktor Devonne. Podcast artwork by Logan Laveau, WEBurlesque the Podcast cover art photography by Atticus Stevenson. Theme song, “On a 45” by This Way to the Egress, used with permission. Incidental music via pixabay.com under fair use. Visit weburlesquepodcast.com for notes on this and every episode. Follow @weburlesque and @viktordevonne on just about every platform, and support the podcast via patreon.com/weburlesque or via Venmo @Viktor-Devonne. Don't got the cash? Please follow, subscribe, and give 5 stars on every platform you can get your hands on. It really does help. All original material is owned by Viktor Devonne and White Elephant Burlesque Corporation; all other materials property of their respective copyright. No infringement, while likely, is intended.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
Rev. Dick Jones
https://archive.org/details/the-range-rider#:~:text=107.2M-,The%20Range%20Rider%20TWO%20FISTED%20JUSTICE,-.mp4 The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
he Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
On the latest Rundown Reviews, watch as corporate America aids criminals and helps incite riots, so they can lower property values and then buy up the city while privatizing the city's police force. Welcome to America 2022... I mean, Robocop from 1987. Twitter: @comicrundown Instagram: @comicbookrundown Email: comicbookrundown@gmail.com Hosted by Joe Janero and Ron Hanes Edited by Joe Janero Theme song provided by the other member of the Sex Turtles (Cam Malidor) Find our t-shirts at Redbubble and TeePublic https://www.redbubble.com/shop/comic+book+rundown?ref=search_box http://tee.pub/lic/vBbIJZ4eLQ0
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
Phil & Jake are joined by dear old pal Chon Travis (from Love Equals Death) to rank cops, strip clubs that serve food, and the activity known as forest bathing on the List of Every Damn Thing.Find Chon on Instagram (@therealchontravis) and Facebook (chon.travis), and check out his band Love Equals Death (follow that link to find out their show dates)!If you have something to add to the list, email it to list@everydamnthing.net (or get at us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook).SHOW NOTES: The Cops television show was a reality TV show in which a camera crew followed police around. The police departments got final approval of what was included in the show but it was educational to see what police thought made them look good. District Attorneys are adjacent to cops, but aren't exactly cops. Training Day is a movie about Denzel Washington as a bad cop. Columbo is TV good cop who is completely non-violent and walks around being an unassuming disheveled genius and catching rich people who do murders. Lethal Weapon is a movie about two cops, one of whom is a "Lethal Weapon" because he's suicidal. Die Hard is a movie about an off-duty cop and an on-duty cop (who shot a child while on duty) learning to trust each other. Beverly Hills Cop a movie about a cop from Detroit who goes to Beverly Hills and puts a banana in the tailpipe of cops there. Movie cops are always good or at least necessary. England is a country where cops don't carry guns. We discuss gun ownership. In the USA, 3 in 10 adults say they own a gun. It's something like 40% of men and 20% of women. RoboCop is another movie about cops in which the police force has been privatized. It's fantastic and Ronny Cox from Beverly Hills Cop is fantastic in it as Dick Jones. The Pinkertons were founded as a sort of private police force to crush labor. Rod Lavers shoes are Adidas sneakers named for the great Australian tennis star Rodney Laver. The Australian Open is played in an arena named for him as well. They're fantastic shoes but the best ones are white and it's hard to keep them clean. Firefighters are people who fight fire. When Phil imagined a fire that hated firefighters he was thinking of a little stinker like this guy. Clowns are people trying to make other people laugh. Commandos are special military units. Theodore Roosevelt was a US President and an extremely colorful character who's personally responsible for a lot of death and pain. The Last Starfighter was a nice little movie that's somehow never been remade. It's about a kid in a trailer park who, by virtue of being good at video games, gets recruited into an interstellar war. Howard the Duck is a movie about a duck who falls in love with Lea Thompson. Capitalism is the system we live in that makes ethical consumption impossible. Middle school is a necessary evil, a place to put young teens. Gambit is a fictional character, a superhero and member of the X-men. He wears a long trench coat and a weird thing on his head. Hoarders is a TV show in which the pain and mental illness of real people is mined for cheap thrills. Steven Seagal is a movie star who's been credibly accused of sexual assault and has incredibly accused himself of being a yogi, a holy man, a secret agent, a Navy SEAL & a martial arts master. The British Royal Family are pretty bad. Jon Voigt had been really good in a lot of films. He's as low as he is almost entirely because he said some stuff Phil & Jake didn't agree with. Phil even liked his accent in Anaconda. Jenny McCarthy is pretty low on the list because she has some trash opinions. 48 Hrs. was followed by a sequel, Another 48 Hours. The second sequel, 127 Hours, is a big departure for the franchise. Flashdance is probably underrated by us. Karina Longworth went into why in a recent episode of You Must Remember This. ALSO DISCUSSED IN THIS EPISODE:Insane Clown Posse * speed limits * Hank Williams, Jr. * jorts * Bell Biv Devoe * mini-trucks * Warner Brothers large-graphic cartoon t-shirts * water parks * “Mambo No. 5 (A Little Bit of…)” by Lou Bega * Spinderella * Bend, OR * Mendocino County * moongazing * meditation * backpacking * Spice Girls * Pee-Wee Herman * Donald Duck * goatsBelow are the Top Ten and Bottom Top items on List of Every Damn Thing as of this episode (for the complete up-to-date list, go here).TOP TEN: Dolly Parton - person interspecies animal friends - idea sex - idea bicycles - tool coffee - beverage Clement Street in San Francisco - location Prince - person It's-It - food Doctor Doom - fictional character Cher - person BOTTOM TEN:283. cops - people284. British Royal Family - institution285. Steven Seagal - person286. McRib - food287. Hoarders - TV show288. death - idea289. war - idea290. cigarettes - drug291. QAnon - idea292. transphobia - ideaTheme song by Jade Puget. Graphic design by Jason Mann. This episode was produced & edited by Jake MacLachlan. Show notes by Jake MacLachlan & Phil Green.Our website is everydamnthing.net and we're also on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.Email us at list@everydamnthing.net.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
In this episode you will hear a lively conversation between our host, Peterson Toscano, and four South African veterinarians. Like many climate advocates, Peterson couldn't help himself, and asked Kristine and Roy Page along with their friends and fellow veterinarians Adrian and Ashleigh Tordiffe about climate change in South Africa and how it is affecting household pets and wild animals. The conversation is rich, informed, and at times hilarious. You will learn about pets in South Africa, and about the many ways animal lovers everywhere can protect their pets from extreme heat, extreme cold, and vector-born illness spread by fleas and ticks. You will hear about the North American ticks that strikes fear in the hearts of all meat-loving South Africans. Adrian is an academic and researches wildlife populations, and tells us about the adorable and very loud bush baby (also known as galago.) It is one of the very few nocturnal primate, and has two completely diets. In the rainy season it eats fruits and insects, and in the dry month it consumes plant gums produced by certain trees. Twice a year it has to completely transform its digestion system to accommodate its diet. In addition to demonstrating the signature shrieking sounds the bush baby makes from high up in the trees, Adrian also tells us about how extreme heat and extended drought is making life harder for these amazing creatures. Join Peterson for a beautiful summer day braai, on the back stoop of Roy and Kristine's home, as their many dogs roam around and the children play nearby. Joining the four veterinarians is Glen Retief, Peterson's husband, who grew up among wildlife in South Africa's Kruger National Park. The Art House Krista Hiser is back with another installment of The Ultimate Cli-Fi Book Club. Every few months Krista Hiser shares with us her thoughts about climate-themed literature. This episode Krista looks at the 2010 satirical novel Solar by Ian McEwan. Michael Beard is a Nobel prize–winning physicist whose best work is behind him. Trading on his reputation, he speaks for enormous fees, lends his name to the letterheads of renowned scientific institutions, and half-heartedly heads a government-backed initiative tackling global warming. While he coasts along in his professional life, Michael's personal life is another matter entirely. His fifth marriage is crumbling under the weight of his infidelities. But this time the tables are turned: His wife is having an affair, and Michael realizes he is still in love with her. When Michael's personal and professional lives begin to intersect in unexpected ways, an opportunity presents itself in the guise of an invitation to travel to New Mexico. Here is a chance for him to extricate himself from his marital problems, reinvigorate his career, and very possibly save the world from environmental disaster. Can a man who has made a mess of his life clean up the messes of humanity? (Goodreads) Krista is also responding to a hard-hitting research paper Through the Eye of a Needle: An Eco-Heterodox Perspective on the Renewable Energy Transition by Megan K. Seibert and William E. Rees. Abstract: This analysis makes clear that the pat notion of “affordable clean energy” views the world through a narrow keyhole that is blind to innumerable economic, ecological, and social costs. These undesirable “externalities” can no longer be ignored. To achieve sustainability and salvage civilization, society must embark on a planned, cooperative descent from an extreme state of overshoot in just a decade or two. While it might be easier for the proverbial camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for global society to succeed in this endeavor, history is replete with stellar achievements that have arisen only from a dogged pursuit of the seemingly impossible This research reveals just how tricky it is to take on climate change. It is a wicked problem with many moving parts we often do not want to see or acknowledge, but Krista encourages us to see the problems in their fullness so we respond with significant and effective solutions. Dr. Krista Hiser is Sustainability Curriculum Coordinator for the University of Hawaii Office of Sustainability, where she facilitates change management, interdisciplinary dialogue, and professional development opportunities for faculty to design, update and transform courses to integrate sustainability across the curriculum. She serves on the advisory board for the Sustainability Curriculum Consortium (SCC) and on the Steering Committee for the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE). You can read a written version of Krista's essay at The Ultimate Cli-Fi Book Club for Sustainability in Higher Education. You can hear standalone versions of The Art House at Artists and Climate Change. Good News Report Our good news report comes from State College, PA, the home of Penn State University. CCL volunteer Dick Jones and the State College CCL chapter is pleased to report that State College Bureau Council unanimously passed a resolution calling on congress to pass Energy and Innovation Act. It is one of over 100 city councils to pass such a resolution including Allentown, Bethlehem, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh, and York, PA.
In this episode you will hear a lively conversation between our host, Peterson Toscano, and four South African veterinarians. Like many climate advocates, Peterson couldn't help himself, and asked Kristine and Roy Page along with their friends and fellow veterinarians Adrian and Ashleigh Tordiffe about climate change in South Africa and how it is affecting household pets and wild animals. The conversation is rich, informed, and at times hilarious. You will learn about pets in South Africa, and about the many ways animal lovers everywhere can protect their pets from extreme heat, extreme cold, and vector-born illness spread by fleas and ticks. You will hear about the North American ticks that strikes fear in the hearts of all meat-loving South Africans. Adrian is an academic and researches wildlife populations, and tells us about the adorable and very loud bush baby (also known as galago.) It is one of the very few nocturnal primate, and has two completely diets. In the rainy season it eats fruits and insects, and in the dry month it consumes plant gums produced by certain trees. Twice a year it has to completely transform its digestion system to accommodate its diet. The Art House Krista Hiser is back with another installment of The Ultimate Cli-Fi Book Club. Every few months Krista Hiser shares with us her thoughts about climate-themed literature. This episode Krista looks at the 2010 satirical novel Solar by Ian McEwan. Krista is also responding to a hard-hitting research paper Through the Eye of a Needle: An Eco-Heterodox Perspective on the Renewable Energy Transition by Megan K. Seibert and William E. Rees. https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/14/15/4508 This research reveals just how tricky it is to take on climate change. It is a wicked problem with many moving parts we often do not want to see or acknowledge, but Krista encourages us to see the problems in their fullness so we respond with significant and effective solutions. Dr. Krista Hiser is Sustainability Curriculum Coordinator for the University of Hawaii Office of Sustainability, where she facilitates change management, interdisciplinary dialogue, and professional development opportunities for faculty to design, update and transform courses to integrate sustainability across the curriculum. She serves on the advisory board for the Sustainability Curriculum Consortium (SCC) and on the Steering Committee for the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE). You can read a written version of Krista's essay at The Ultimate Cli-Fi Book Club for Sustainability in Higher Education. medium.com/the-ultimate-cli-fi…-for-sustainability You can hear standalone versions of The Art House at Artists and Climate Change. Good News Report Our good news report comes from State College, PA, the home of Penn State University. CCL volunteer Dick Jones and the State College CCL chapter is pleased to report that State College Bureau Council unanimously passed a resolution calling on congress to pass Energy and Innovation Act. It is one of over 100 city councils to pass such a resolution including Allentown, Bethlehem, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh, and York, PA. If you have good news you want to share on the show, or if you have an idea for the art house, email Peterson. Radio @ CitizensClimate.org. Or leave a message our NEW listener voicemail (619) 512-9646
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
New Orleans producer and performer Dick Jones returns to WEBurlesque to chat out the music selections that have informed their work, style, and offstage life. Expect to catch feelings. You may listen to this playlist featuring Bob Dylan, Regina Spektor, Rilo Kiley, Alanis Morissette, Bright Eyes, and more at at https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1tVSIBmczcwhNswDWQh3fn?si=48f50584442344e0 WEBurlesque Podcast Nework is the creation of Viktor Devonne. Podcast Network logo artwork by Logan Laveau, WEBurlesque the Podcast cover art photography by Atticus Stevenson. Incidental music via pixabay.com under fair use. Visit weburlesquepodcast.com for notes on this and every episode. Follow @weburlesque and @viktordevonne on just about every platform, and support the podcast via patreon.com/weburlesque or via Venmo @Viktor-Devonne. Don't got the cash? Please follow, subscribe, and give 5 stars on every platform you can get your hands on. It really does help. All original material is owned by Viktor Devonne and White Elephant Burlesque Corporation; all other materials property of their respective copyright. No infringement, while likely, is intended. – The Music That Made WE is a creation of WEBurlesque Podcast Network, produced by Viktor Devonne. Dick Jones on WEBurlesque Dick Jones on IG: @dickjonesburlyq More on Dick: https://linktr.ee/DickJonesNola [Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act in 1976; Allowance is made for “Fair Use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. All rights and credit go directly to its rightful owners. No copyright infringement intended.]
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952).[citation needed] The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
The Range Rider is an American Western television series that was first broadcast in syndication from 1951 to 1953. A single lost episode surfaced and was broadcast in 1959. The Range Rider was also broadcast on British television during the 1960s, and in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1950s. Synopsis. Jock Mahoney, later star of CBS's Yancy Derringer, played the title character in 79 black-and-white half-hour episodes, along with partner Dick West, played by Dick Jones, later star of the syndicated series Buffalo Bill, Jr. The character had no name other than Range Rider. His reputation for fairness, fighting ability, and accuracy with his guns was known far and wide, even by Indians. Mahoney towered over Jones, conveying the idea that Dick West was a youth rather than a full-grown adult. Stanley Andrews, the first host of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, appeared in 17 episodes of The Range Rider in different roles, including "Pack Rat" and "Marked for Death" in 1951 and "Marshal from Madero" in 1953. Gregg Barton similarly guest-starred in 16 episodes. Harry Lauter, later a co-star with Willard Parker on CBS's Tales of the Texas Rangers, appeared 11 times, including the episodes "Ten Thousand Reward" and "Dim Trails" (both in 1951), "Ambush in Coyote Canyon" (1952), and "Convict at Large" and "Marshal from Madero" (both in 1953). William Fawcett, prior to NBC's Fury, guest-starred in 9 episodes, including in "Diablo Posse", as Matt Ryan in "Last of the Pony Express", "Dim Trails" (all 1951), and "Shotgun Stage" (1952). The show was a production of Gene Autry's Flying A Productions, and Autry himself was the executive producer. The theme tune was "Home on the Range", though in later episodes, this was played at a fast tempo without the song. The two main characters were the only consistent ones. Five or six names of other actors were given at the end of each episode, but not the parts they played.
Dick Jones is an eco-warrior who subscribes to the approach of working to deliver sustainable seafood through commercial demonstration and success. With a long history of working on both sides of the sustainability fence, in his current role as CEO of innovative aquaculture company, Blue Ocean Mariculture, Dick is in a unique position to talk about sustainable seafood in action. https://www.bofish.com Follow Fishtales, a Seafood Podcast on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/fishtalesseafoodpodcast/ Follow John Susman https://www.instagram.com/fisheads/?hl=en Follow Rob Locke (Executive Producer) https://www.instagram.com/foodwinedine/ Follow Huck (Executive Producer) https://www.instagram.com/huckstergram/ LISTEN TO OUR OTHER PODCASTS Deep In The Weeds on Instagram https://linktr.ee/DeepintheWeeds Dirty Linen with Dani Valent https://linktr.ee/DirtyLinenPodcast The Crackling with Anthony Huckstep https://linktr.ee/thecrackling
All good things must come to an end… In the final installment of our breakdown of ROBOCOP, we examine the “melting man,” the secret to Johnson's success, the film's Oscar pedigree, and the missed opportunity of Terminator of Endearment. The episode covers 1:16:00 - 1:37:00; newscast #3, Dick Jones frees Boddicker and gives him a mission, Robocop does some self-repair, Robocop dispatches Boddicker and his gang, and Robocop settles the score with Jones.
We're back with the 4th chapter of our look back at ROBOCOP. In this episode, listen as Kevin and John discuss our first CDs, Boddickers fashion sense, ranking alpha moves, and the wisdom of videotaping your own confession. The episode covers 57:48 - 1:16:00; Boddicker takes out Morton, Robocop arrests Boddicker, Boddicker snitches on Dick Jones, and Robocop goes after Jones, who uses ED209 and the police against Robocop.
Charles Skaggs & Xan Sprouse watch RoboCop, the 1987 science fiction action film directed by Paul Verhoeven and featuring Peter Weller as Alex Murphy/RoboCop, Nancy Allen as Anne Lewis, Ronny Cox as Dick Jones, and Kurtwood Smith as Clarence Boddicker! Find us here:Twitter: @DrunkCinemaCast, @CharlesSkaggs, @udanax19 Facebook: @DrunkCinema Email: DrunkCinemaPodcast@gmail.com Listen and subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts and leave us a review!
Viktor Devonne brings in Mone't Ha-Sidi, Dick Jones, and Bella La Blanc for this Pride Month audio commentary experience of Chasing Amy, directed by Kevin Smith, and starring Joey Lauren Adams, Ben Affleck, Jason Lee, and Dwight Ewell. This is a preview audio edition with full length version available at Patreon.com/WEBurlesque at the Pride Month special of $1 pledge. For this edition, we talk about queer gatekeeping, exploitative storytelling, bisexuality, problematic faves, emotionally unavailable men, and all three iconic Alyssa monologues! #Fingercuffs - The Movies That Made WE (Queer) is a creation of WEBurlesque Podcast Network, produced by Viktor Devonne - Sponsored by www.bellastchotchkis.com - use code "murder" at checkout for 10% off all orders over $20. Expires Dec 2021. - Your panel today is... Bella La Blanc, @bella.lablanc on IG @bellalablanc on Twitter Mone't Ha-Sidi,@nizzneyland on IG and on Twitter; interview with WEBurlesque the Podcast Dick Jones; @DickJonesBurlyQ on Twitter and IG; interviews with WEBurlesque the Podcast [Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act in 1976; Allowance is made for "Fair Use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. All rights and credit go directly to its rightful owners. No copyright infringement intended.] - Produced by Viktor Devonne, reigning Mr Hollywood Burlesque, and celebrating15 years in burlesque. White Elephant Burlesque recently closed a five year residency in Manhattan, and continues to produce White Elephant Burlesque virtually. Visit weburlesque.com for details.
Our next installment of MAYbe It's Horror is Paul Verhoeven's masterpiece: Robocop. Verhoeven had passed on this project until the intervention of his wife and Barbara Boyle encouraged him to look past a seemingly silly title. After reading the script, then dozens of Judge Dredd comics, Verhoeven dove into the film so deeply that he even ended up making a cameo (in the night club). On this episode, we feature director and friend, Price James, who will shamelessly admit this is his favorite film. Follow him on Instagram @fisherpricejames to see his upcoming projects, including a Barbie version of his Action Man: Battlefield Casualties ad. During our discussion, we talk about everything from Robocop's photo opportunity with Rudy Guliani (which sadly took place with the Boy Scouts and not in front of a landscaping business) to literary references in the film. If you know Jake, his obsession with Robocop is nearly as old as his fascination with dinosaurs. Well guess what? He even crowbars in a reference to Robocop: The Future of Law Enforcement issue 7 from Marvel, which published in 1990, depicting our favorite chrome-clad cop fighting cloned dinosaurs. The music was by Basil Poledouris. We discuss the nature of his work and how its satirical style almost becomes a character in this film and that of Starship Troopers, which Verhoeven also directed. Also, side note, did you know he did the music for Hot Shots! Part Deux? Stop-motion animation was done by Academy Award Winning effects designer, Phil Tippett. The actors were truly remarkable. Peter Weller plays Alex James Murphy, who is by no means an everyman, rather a what every man aspires to be. His foil, is Kurtwood Smith as Clarence Boddicker. He embodies slime and scum and everything you love to hate on celluloid. Nancy Allen, who many remember from her role in Carrie, is Anne Lewis, a tough, but tremendously lovable cop. Ronny Cox plays Dick Jones, who is just a nasty person. Imagine rubbing your poop hands in someone's hair after the horrors of 2020?! Last there is Miguel Ferrer as Bob Morton, the guy who gets the poop in the hair! Do you want to know how Edward Neumeier and Michael Miner conceived of the film? Details on filing in Texas? Budget? Costuming? Mime coaches?! Well, get in the car, because I usually drive when I'm breaking in a new partner. Oh, and as a lil extra sizzle for each of those seemingly rhetorical questions: on the set of Blade Runner, it was over budget and over 100 degrees, Rob Bottin designed it but was feuding with Verhoeven so badly that he stopped coming to set, and Juliard professor of movement, Moni Yakim (who just had a new documentary published about him: Creating a Character: The Moni Yakim Legacy). This week's "Hidden Track" is Ritual Scars by The Cult Sounds off their new record Death of a Star. https://thecultsounds.bandcamp.com/ https://open.spotify.com/artist/7rZOFb043lVYEmovDuG7dz If you ever have feedback or recommendations on future episodes, please let us know at slasherspod@gmail.com. You can always find us on our social media: Instagram, Twitter, Slasher App: @slasherspod Facebook: /slasherspod Reddit: u/slasherspod https://www.youtube.com/c/slasherspodcast You can find our merch, and links to all our online presence here: linktr.ee/slasherspod Theme song is I wanna Die by Mini Meltdowns. https://open.spotify.com/artist/5ZAk6lUDsaJj8EAhrhzZnh ; https://minimeltdowns.bandcamp.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/slasherspod/support
There are 2 ways for the war on drugs to end. Both have already been attempted in countries across the globe. In Portugal, decriminalization has reduced the amount of heroin-addicted people by 75%. In the Philippians, where up to 25,000 drug users and dealers have been murdered by police and state assassins since 2016, there are new dealers and users every day to replace those gunned down by police.3D molecular printing will change everything, and the war on drugs will suddenly be impossible to fight. When we can all print heroin in our own homes, law enforcement won't have any way to arrest us, and the illegal market will evaporate.
2 Night Stay: Stories from the Gilman... Segment 21: "Troubled" written, edited, and produced by Viktor Devonne (@viktordevonne) | vocal performance by Dick Jones (@dickjonesburlyq) ... please visit https://2nightstaypod.com/ for transcription and information. THIS IS A WORK OF FICTION. NAMES, CHARACTERS, BUSINESSES, PLACES, EVENTS, LOCALES, AND INCIDENTS ARE EITHER THE PRODUCTS OF THE AUTHOR’S IMAGINATION OR USED IN A FICTITIOUS MANNER. ANY RESEMBLANCE TO ACTUAL PERSONS, LIVING OR DEAD, OR ACTUAL EVENTS IS PURELY COINCIDENTAL. UNLESS STATED, ALL CHARACTERS AND MATERIAL IS THE WORK AND PROPERTY OF VIKTOR DEVONNE AND WHITE ELEPHANT BURLESQUE CORP. • THEME: CHERRY BLOOD BY MISS CHERRY DELIGHT (USED WITH PERMISSION)
Well... this one felt a little different when we recorded it. To ring in the New Year, we decided to satisfy one listener's request to watch one of the greatest sci-fi action flicks of all-time. Then, things got crazy and now a satire about how authoritarianism and capitalism go hand-in-hand feels even more frighteningly relevant than it did a few hours ago. We watched RoboCop for They Called This a Movie. Sorry. Despite things going on in the news, RoboCop is a fantastic movie, and we had a great time with it. Join us as we talk about Clarence Boddicker, possibly the greatest villain ever, Dick Jones's flailing arms, and the incredible fake commercials. Buy this one for a dollar. Find us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram @themaindamie. We are a proud member of Geek Vibes Nation and you can find them at gvnation.com ( https://geekvibesnation.com ). Our theme music was written and performed by Dave Katusa. He can be found on Instagram @dkat_productions. #Robocop #Review #TheyCalledThisAMovie Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/geek-vibes-nation/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Well... this one felt a little different when we recorded it. To ring in the New Year, we decided to satisfy one listener's request to watch one of the greatest sci-fi action flicks of all-time. Then, things got crazy and now a satire about how authoritarianism and capitalism go hand-in-hand feels even more frighteningly relevant than it did a few hours ago. We watched RoboCop for They Called This a Movie. Sorry. Despite things going on in the news, RoboCop is a fantastic movie, and we had a great time with it. Join us as we talk about Clarence Boddicker, possibly the greatest villain ever, Dick Jones's flailing arms, and the incredible fake commercials. Buy this one for a dollar. Find us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram @themaindamie. We are a proud member of Geek Vibes Nation and you can find them at gvnation.com. Our theme music was written and performed by Dave Katusa. He can be found on Instagram @dkat_productions.
WEBurlesque the Podcast: Happy New Year's Messages participants: Lewd Alfred Douglas, Anja Keister, Miss AuroraBoobRealis, Betty Brash, Esmerelda May, Lucky Charming, Dick Jones, GoGo Gadget, Petra Fried, Jimmie Swagger, Quorra Vahn Tassels, Raina Sinclair, Nasty Canasta, Tre da Marc, Lux LaCroix, JZ Bich, Stormageddon, Maggie McMuffin, and Vonka song: My Dear Acquaintance by Peggy Lee, used with the anticipation of fair use arguments so don't report or anything, ok? Happy New Year.
Better late than never as the guys are joined by our friend Strider and we talk all things Resident Evil except the reboot movie.(6:43) PS 5 is unleashing a bunch of games and is computer gaming a better option? (20:17) We talk about toxic fans in gaming(50:55) and we wonder why are they making a Robocop spin-off about Dick Jones.(58:48) We go over The Mandalorian season 2 trailer (1:03:30) and are excited about the South Park Pandemic Special.(1:13:15)We rag on the DC CW shows(1:26:00) and DJ Ernie B reviews King of Staten Island.(1:31:15) We end things with some Cobra Kai love.(1:36:00) Listen and subscribe on iTunes, Spotify, SoundCloud, and other podcast apps!
Welcome to the place where I get to let my geek flag fly and talk about all things geek. Basically a fuzzy guide to life, the universe, and everything but mostly geek stuff. This is where I look into the world of geekdom and some geek news, comics, The Simpsons, Star Wars, and whatever randomness finds its way onto the recording. This level of the podcast includes: Trailer for EAs Star Wars Squadrons game Jonathan Majors to play Kang the Conqueror in Ant-Man 3 Netflix rights for Luke Cage and Iron Fist go back to Marvel in October Tatiana Maslany cast as Jennifer Walters Supergirl ending with Season 6 Chadwick Boseman mural at Downtown Disney in Anaheim Xenomorph is a Disney princess? The Boys is getting an R-rated spinoff about supers in college? RoboCop prequel about the rise of Dick Jones with no RoboCop Karl Urban = geek royalty. Ilum connection to Starkiller Base Image of a bunch of Jokers from Batman Day HBOMax orders Taika Waititi pirate series Our Flag Means Death Samuel Jackson is getting a Nick Fury series on Disney+ Star Wars Black Series Holiday Troopers Chewbacca swipe video UberEats commercials with Mark Hamill and Sir Patrick Stewart Trailers: Season 2 of The Mandalorian / WandaVision / Helstrom on Hulu John Cena and James Gunn working on Peacemaker prequel series for HBOMax Gina Carano has pissed off the trans community Chris Evans uses leaked NSFW image to encourage folks to vote Harry Potter RPG and conflict over supporting it because of JKR Rumor of Joaquin Phoenix offer of 50 million to do two more Joker movies All the Disney movies delayed to 2021 because of Rona including Black Widow and MCU pushes Tenet and Disney’s Mulan woes Jason Mamoa backs Ray Fisher in Justice League allegations DCUniverse becoming comic repository called DC Universe Infinite Emmys: Mando wins 7 and Watchmen takes home 11 Netflix cancels The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance James Cameron reports that Avatar 2 has wrapped filming & Avatar 3 95% shot Harley Quinn gets a third season Congrats on completing Level 210 of the podcast! Stay safe, wash your hands, wear a mask, and good luck out there. Feel free to contact me on Twitter and/or Instagram (@wookieeriot). You can also reach the show by e-mail, laughitupfuzzballpodcast@gmail.com., or by joining the Facebook group (https://www.facebook.com/groups/1879505335626093). I'd love to hear from you. Also subscribe to the feed on Apple podcasts, Google podcasts, Stitcher, Breaker, IHeartRadio, RadioPublic, Spotify, or any of the apps which pull from those sources. Go do your thing so I can keep doing mine. If you feel so inclined, drop a positive rating or comment on those apps. Ratings help others find the madness. Tell your friends, geekery is always better with peers. Thank YOU for being a part of this hilarity! There’s a plethora of ways to comment about the show and I look forward to seeing your thoughts, comments, and ideas. May the force be with us all, thanks for stopping by, you stay classy, be excellent to each other and party on dudes… TTFN… Wookiee out! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/laugh-it-up-fuzzball/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/laugh-it-up-fuzzball/support
Burlesque Ghost Stories, a special bonus episode of WEBurlesque the Podcast, hosted by Viktor Devonne In this edition: a) The Living StatueBrooklyn nightlife performer Buona Sara is a burlesque dancer and stage manager. One day, we found herself face to face with what should have been inanimate. b) Haunted at the Haunt New Orleans burlesque performer, producer, and meatball chef Dick Jones found themselves in a city of magic when they moved to The Big Easy. While working in a haunt, they discovered they were sharing a space with someone who wasn't part of the cast. c) Stop That Weird ShitPhiladelphia's own Zsu Zsu Zatanna has experienced much of the otherworld. She tells you a story of some of her most memorable encounters. ...Tip Me on Venmo: @viktordevonne ...Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/weburlesque ...Listen: 2 Night Stay http://www.2nightstaypod.com ...Watch: Covid and the Beast https://youtu.be/cjYHOQo7Kfc ...Previous WEBurlesque episodes: http://www.weburlesquepodcast.com
TABLE OF CONTENT TALKING POINTS S2 E8 9/13/2020(Host Scene)Zazz - Welcome to Table of Content. The round table show where we discuss all the happenings around streaming, gaming and entertainment. I am joined as always by Eminent _Stump. How are you? Stump - This week on Streamer Spotlight we sat down with a friend of the channel and Variety Streamer 1Jacqie1. Let's dive into that footage~Video~(Host scene)Stump - Great getting to know 1jacqie1. If YOU would like to be a part of the spotlight or the round table join our discord or send an email to tocpodmail@gmail.com. We also would like to hear any feedback and hate mail you have for us.Zazz - We are joined tonight by returning guests DaintiestLeader and from way out in the deserts of the southwest first time guest, FullBlump. Ladies and Gents how are you tonight?Streaming News Twitch streamer under fire for telling fans to stop "painful" small talk Twitch streamer ‘Fleeksie' has come under fire after advising viewers on how they should and shouldn't interact with their favorite content creators, leading to backlash from many among the streaming community. With over 30,000 followers on the Amazon-owned platform, Fleeksie labels herself as the “world's most pointless Twitch streamer.” While she dips into a variety of games here and there, she's most often found in the Just Chatting category, watching videos and keeping up with her chat. stop going into people live streams and asking "how are you" we live. we streaming. other people are watching. the room is not on fire. things are ok. just comment on whats happening. ask someone else in the chat how they are doing if you want small talk everytime i say "im good how are you" i feel a little puke in the back of my throat rise up. its actually painful responding to that question while ik other people who been watching for 45 mins heard me say it 36 times to all the people before you came up in here with your small talk Dainty - How are you? https://www.tableoc.com/2020/09/10/ninja-is-back-exclusively-on-twitch/ After a months-long period of “will he or won't he” with two determined suitors, Twitch and YouTube, streaming megastar Tyler “Ninja” Blevins has announced that his post-Mixer streaming return will happen “only” on Twitch. Last year, Blevins signed an exclusive deal with Microsoft-owned streaming platform Mixer. In June, Microsoft abruptly announced that Mixer had reached the end of the line and encouraged streamers and viewers to move over to Facebook instead. Blevins was reportedly offered a Facebook deal that nearly doubled his multi-million dollar Mixer deal, but he turned it down. Now, months later, he's back where he started: on Twitch. Full - Why do you think the change of heart for Ninja?Gaming News Twitch brings custom esports competitions to streamers in closed beta Twitch and esports go together like a dusting of salt on top of a chocolate chip cookie: the sweetness of victory etc., tempered by the saltiness of defeat. Today, Twitch launches Versus — a suite of competitive tools that will let creators on the site organize and manage their own tournaments — which promises to bring those agonies and ecstasies to any streamer who feels like pubstomping their community. While the feature is in closed beta for now, collegiate esports leagues, game devs, and Twitch Rivals competitors (along with some other Twitch streamers) will have access starting today. There is a waitlist you can join if you're interested in trying out Versus for yourself. Dainty - This seems like a great step for both e-sports and Twitch as a whole. What do you think about this move? Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time Remake brings the classic back for Xbox One, PS4, and PC Ubisoft is bringing back one of its most legendary games with Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time Remake, a modern version of the classic action-adventure game set for release on the Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and PC on January 21st, 2021. The company says that the new version of The Sands of Time is emphatically Ubisoft's first full-fledged remake, not a remaster or reboot. Ubisoft Pune & Ubisoft Mumbai rebuilt the original game from the ground up using Ubisoft's modern AnvilNext Engine, complete with new motion capture animation, new assets, and some adjustments to the gameplay for modern audiences. The Sands of Time Remake still strongly resembles the original, though, with the same storyline and gameplay. Don't expect a full-scale reimagining like the recent Final Fantasy 7 Remake. That said, the company is promising that it has enhanced the camera controls and combat system with the aim of improving on those aspects from their 2008 iterations. FullBump - Are you like me? I have never played this series at all and am actually kind of excited to try an older classic.Entertainment News MGM Is Developing a ROBOCOP Prequel Series That Focuses on a Young Dick Jones I've got some exciting news for all you RoboCop fans out there! MGM is developing a prequel series that will focus on the life of a young Dick Jones. I'm sure you all remember the villainous and corrupt Senior Vice President of Omni Consumer Products, who at the end of the original movie, ended up blown away by RoboCop epically shooting him out of a boardroom window! Such an awesomely classic ‘80s movie death. There is also a new sequel for the original film that's in development, which is based on the original plans from RoboCop screenwriters Ed Neumeier and Michael Miner. Neill Blomkamp was originally attached to direct, but after he dropped out he was replaced with Abe Forsythe (Little Monsters). When talking about the ideas that they are playing with, Neumeier goes on to say: “There's the idea of doing things about business and law enforcement in the city of Detroit a minute-and-a-half in the future, it would be a way to do all sorts of stories about business and tech, Silicon Valley, corporations, snakes in suits, cops, all that. It's a wonderful rich tapestry. “So we've been talking about it and I think we have an interesting story. It's fun to work with a younger version of the Dick Jones we meet in RoboCop. He's an actualised corporate predator [in the move] but nobody necessarily starts out being the bad guy. Daintiest - In the wake of the popularity of retro synth music/future retroism this seems like great timing for a show like this. What's your take? THE WALKING DEAD Will End with an Extended Season 11 The Walking Dead's upcoming 11th season will be its last. Season 11 was originally set to air this October in line with the show's normal Fall TV cycle. However, the coronavirus pandemic means fans will only get the season 10 “finale” this year and Season 11 in 2021. Now, the upcoming season will be expanded from the 16-episode norm to a whopping 24 episodes over the course of the next two years. This means the series finale will take place in 2022. It's sad news for a lot of long-term and dedicated viewers. But Daryl Dixon and Carol Peletier fans won't have to say goodbye to their faves forever. The aforementioned Deadline report reveals that actors Norman Reedus and Melissa McBride will go on to star in a Walking Dead spin-off series. The Daryl and Carol adventure will debut sometime in 2023. It would also be a spoiler for their future if it wasn't so obvious that they are basically unkillable at this point. FullBump - It's kind of crazy to think something that has been a TV and nerd culture staple is coming to an end. What are your thoughts and how do you feel about the spin off announcement?BOLD PREDICTIONS - Brought to you by the Tighe UpI cant tell you what the next must watch tv show will be but The mandalorian will have higher ratings than its first season while the Witcher will not. I cant tell you if anything will beat titanic but Wonder Woman 2 will have the top box office numbers of all the current justice league lines. I cant tell you if anything will ever beat super mario but Assassin's creed will get a lot of blowback for leaving its roots. I cant tell you what was crossing Peter Quill's mind at “that” moment butThor will be the first marvel solo with a 5th installment.Plug your stuff.Zazzaboo plug the site, Pod etc Thanks and we will see you next week!★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Welcome to Episode 349. In this episode I’m joined by Handy Greg and Stephanie Chapman. Don't worry, we go over the winners of the Tony Hawk Pro Skater 1 + 2 contest. In Good Pop Bad Pop Brian talks about starting Season 2 of The Boys on Amazon. He also discusses the new war film The Outpost available now on Video on Demand where a small team of U.S. soldiers battle against hundreds of Taliban fighters in Afghanistan. We all discuss the new Hulu series Woke starring Lamorne Morris where he plays Keef an African-American cartoonist on the verge of mainstream success when an unexpected incident changes his life. We discuss a new anime on Netflix The Idhun Chronicles. #Alive is a new South Korean zombie flick on Netflix and we’ve all seen it and we give our thoughts. Brian and Greg watched the new HBO Max original movie Unpregnant which follows a 17-year old Missouri teen named Veronica who discovers she has gotten pregnant. In News, an artificial intelligence programme has given it’s choice as the next James Bond. Tom Cruise is doing an insane stunt for Mission Impossible 7. We also talk about The Walking Dead coming to an end after season 11. Or is it? And a Robocop prequel TV series without Robocop focusing on the character of Dick Jones is being considered. In Marvel News we talk about Chris Hemsworth’s future as Thor as well as Thor: Love and Thunder using technology from The Mandalorian for filming. In DC News Wonder Woman 1984 has been moved to Christmas Day 2020. And we have some rumors about James Gunn’s The Suicide Squad. In Star Wars News Daisy Ridley talks about Rey’s parentage. For more Handy Greg subscribe to him on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjTrQMhon1HJNa9Buav9D1A
On this episode of Mornings with The Outlaw, John Rocha and Alex Shashek discuss Neve Campbell Returning to the Scream Franchise, Netflix buying a Nic Cage Tiger King series, the Robocop prequel to focus on Dick Jones, new Blumhouse trailer for Freaky, and Kate Winslet changing her tune about Woody Allen. PLUS The Outlaw and Alex answer all your Streamlabs and SuperChat questions. Join John Rocha and Alex Shashek every Tuesday and Thursday morning for a fun, unfiltered and interactive discussion about the world of entertainment and beyond. #MorningsWithTheOutlaw #TheMandalorian #Tenet Follow John Rocha: https://twitter.com/TheRochaSays Follow Alex Shashek: https://twitter.com/Real_AlexMac Also, support John Rocha and The Outlaw Nation on his Patreon at: https://www.patreon.com/JohnRocha To listen to THE GEEK BUDDIES podcast, Click Here: https://apple.co/329o35f To listen to The Top 10 podcast, CLICK HERE: https://apple.co/37GssxN To listen to The Cine-Files podcast, CLICK HERE: https://apple.co/38HqfU7
The Sherman & Tingle Show - WDRV-FM Chicago
Part podcast. Part comedy bits. All Plotaholics. This week's Plotaholics adventure sees Shane and Bryan taking a trip back to 1987 to go into the dystopian future of Old Detroit. Yes, the Plotaholics visit Paul Verehoven's sci fi classic RoboCop!Starring Peter Weller (Buckaroo Banzai and Sons of Anarchy), Nancy Allen (Poltergiest 3), and Kurtwood Smith (That 70s Show) in a tale of cop Alex Murphy who becomes a cyborg super cop after having a billion shotguns unload into his body thanks to faulty police procedure. But there's more! Get a hint of some Plotaholics Live and ABC After School Special talk as Shane and Bryan take a walk on the Dystopian Side. Dick Jones.Support the show (https://plotaholics.com)
All good things must come to an end… In the final installment of our breakdown of ROBOCOP, we examine the “melting man,” the secret to Johnson’s success, the film’s Oscar pedigree, and the missed opportunity of Terminator of Endearment. The episode covers 1:16:00 - 1:37:00; newscast #3, Dick Jones frees Boddicker and gives him a mission, Robocop does some self-repair, Robocop dispatches Boddicker and his gang, and Robocop settles the score with Jones.
We’re back with the 4th chapter of our look back at ROBOCOP. In this episode, listen as Kevin and John discuss our first CDs, Boddickers fashion sense, ranking alpha moves, and the wisdom of videotaping your own confession. The episode covers 57:48 - 1:16:00; Boddicker takes out Morton, Robocop arrests Boddicker, Boddicker snitches on Dick Jones, and Robocop goes after Jones, who uses ED209 and the police against Robocop.
Viktor Devonne chats with Grandma Fun, who resides in New Orleans. We candidly talk how she went from "Filipino island farm girl" turned neoburlesque luminary, and the nonsense along the way. ... topics: Sugar Shack, Guitar Hero, emigrating from the Philippines, "What are you?," white people y'all can chill, "my parents are mermaids," exoticism, pineapple queen, developed mysticism, the madam and the landlady, Grandma's grandma, making your own paths, the old Bowery Poetry Club, meeting *BOB*, showing up and doing your thing, growing as a performance artist, producing, Heaux and Housewives, ghetto fabulous, cocktail shrimp, moving to New Orleans, single and not pregnant, JetBlue and $50, spiritual journey, "don't compare yourself to anyone else," Sliding Doors, Tokyo and Marc Jacobs, dryers for your butt, don't break anything, people are watching you, the Manila scene, Asian burlesque queens, New Orleans burlesque scene, stepping up the challenge, cultural appropriation, you choose every day, celebrating life or death, who's the best at New Orleans burlesque, Two Island Girls & a Goth ... shoutouts: Kips Ahoy, World Famous BOB, Fem Appeal, Legs Malone, Runaround Sue, Bella Blue, Donnie Vomit, Albert Cadabra, Southern Comfort, Calamity Chang, Regina Stargazer, Pam Demonium, It's a Little Stormy, Boyfriend, Dame CuchiFrita, Ariana Amour, Lune Noirr, Whiskey and Rhinestones, Trixie Minx, Xena Zeit-Geist, Lefty Lucy, Dick Jones, Roxie le Rouge, Dede Onassis, Nikki LeVillain, the Minneapolois Burlesque Festival ... Support us on Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/weburlesque and get bonus material incl. 50 extra minutes of Broody Valentino from the episode 14 and 15 sessions ... you can see White Elephant Burlesque every Wednesday at Rockbar NYC - see http://www.weburlesquenyc.com for more ... Now on Second Tuesdays: #WEBoylesque at Bizarre Bushwick ... catch Grandma Fun at https://www.instagram.com/grandmafun/ ... recorded: May 1, 2018 ... intro/outro music: "On A 45" This Way to the Egress (http://www.thiswaytotheegress.com) ... used with permission ... download it at: https://www.amazon.com/This-Delicious-Cabaret-Explicit-Egress/dp/B005D1GROO ... interlude music: "Zazie," "Avant Jazz" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ ...
Viktor Devonne chats with Doll Body, a burlesque performer living in Brooklyn... We cover topics including Connecticut, moving to New York, choreography, modern dance, Alvin Ailey, Boardwalk Empire, old Hollywood iconography, punk phases, the New York Burlesque Festival, starting burlesque wrong, Lazy Bones Burlesque, Dolly Dietrich, the 2016 election, Marlene Dietrich, femme androgyny, drag kings, rugged Hunter S. Thompson, ruddy makeup, Action Figure, body analysis, collages, Boomerang, dressing up as a banana, soft sculpture, today's corduroy, the Freezing Tassel Burlesque Festival, Alaska, industry shows, 2014 vs 2018, living with drag queens, queer spaces, the body positive movement, all-white shows, classic tease, flipping the switch, Barbra Streisand, doing the fun numbers, control, cultural shifts, and being sexy and exercised... recorded: Feb 3, 2018... shoutouts: Lewd Alfred Douglas, Delysia La Chatte, Lux LaCroix, Shelley Watson, Minnie Tonka, Beef Show, Lee VaLone, Qualms Galore, Celia Foxglove, Dick Jones, Lillian Bustle, Petite Renard, Dangrrr Doll, Wae Messed, Bunny Buxom, Fancy Feast, Zoe Ziegfeld, Anja Keister, Miss AuroraBOOBrealis, Sweet Lorraine... Doll Body has been performing since 2014, in a modern dance major and choreographer turned burlesque performer and producer. She can be seen all New York City, and joins the Freezing Tassel Burlesque Festival in Alaska this March... music: "On A 45" written and performed by This Way to the Egress (intro and outro music); interludes: "Rocket Power" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
RoboCop er tilbage! Efter han i slutningen af den første film i serien fik ryddet op i den kriminelle underverden og Dick Jones fra OCP fik sig en flyvetur, ånder alt nu fred og ro i gode gamle Detroit. Desværre må RoboCop ha’ hvilet lidt for længe på laurbærene, for der er kommet en ny … Continue reading Afsnit 149: To Be Continued – RoboCop 2
Dead or alive, you're coming with me! Pete and Brian watch one of the highest body count movies, except for Commando, in our list. So much good stuff here. Extra long arms of Dick Jones when he falls out of the window, ED-209, Flat face skin of Peter Weller.... all the good stuff. Red Forman is an awesome bad guy! Let's do this!
In 1987, Paul Verhoevn released Robocop, an ultra-violent action movie that is about as far from a family flick as you can get. Spawning two sequels, a remake, and a television show, Robocop's prime directives were killing bad guys, violence, melting flesh, dismemberment, and surviving in a dystopian future in Detroit, but does the original film hold up? Listen as Jon, Colin and Paul dive into this movie and find it is dead like Dick Jones, or very much alive like Murphy's brain.
Die erste, leider sehr leise Episode, in der Dick Jones seine Auftraggeberin kennenlernt und wir ein wenig über seine bisherige Laufbahn erfahren.
Viktor Devonne chats with Grandma Fun, who resides in New Orleans. We candidly talk how she went from "Filipino island farm girl" turned neoburlesque luminary, and the nonsense along the way. ... topics: Sugar Shack, Guitar Hero, emigrating from the Philippines, "What are you?," white people y'all can chill, "my parents are mermaids," exoticism, pineapple queen, developed mysticism, the madam and the landlady, Grandma's grandma, making your own paths, the old Bowery Poetry Club, meeting *BOB*, showing up and doing your thing, growing as a performance artist, producing, Heaux and Housewives, ghetto fabulous, cocktail shrimp, moving to New Orleans, single and not pregnant, JetBlue and $50, spiritual journey, "don't compare yourself to anyone else," Sliding Doors, Tokyo and Marc Jacobs, dryers for your butt, don't break anything, people are watching you, the Manila scene, Asian burlesque queens, New Orleans burlesque scene, stepping up the challenge, cultural appropriation, you choose every day, celebrating life or death, who's the best at New Orleans burlesque, Two Island Girls & a Goth ... shoutouts: Kips Ahoy, World Famous BOB, Fem Appeal, Legs Malone, Runaround Sue, Bella Blue, Donnie Vomit, Albert Cadabra, Southern Comfort, Calamity Chang, Regina Stargazer, Pam Demonium, It's a Little Stormy, Boyfriend, Dame CuchiFrita, Ariana Amour, Lune Noirr, Whiskey and Rhinestones, Trixie Minx, Xena Zeit-Geist, Lefty Lucy, Dick Jones, Roxie le Rouge, Dede Onassis, Nikki LeVillain, the Minneapolois Burlesque Festival ... Support us on Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/weburlesque and get bonus material incl. 50 extra minutes of Broody Valentino from the episode 14 and 15 sessions ... you can see White Elephant Burlesque every Wednesday at Rockbar NYC - see http://www.weburlesquenyc.com for more ... Now on Second Tuesdays: #WEBoylesque at Bizarre Bushwick ... catch Grandma Fun at https://www.instagram.com/grandmafun/ ... recorded: May 1, 2018 ... intro/outro music: "On A 45" This Way to the Egress (http://www.thiswaytotheegress.com) ... used with permission ... download it at: https://www.amazon.com/This-Delicious-Cabaret-Explicit-Egress/dp/B005D1GROO ... interlude music: "Zazie," "Avant Jazz" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ ...
Dick Jones worked with Viktor Devonne and White Elephant Burlesque while she lived in New York 2 years ago, and then headed to New Orleans. We catch up on the phone and find out what she's been up to! ... topics: David Bowie makeup and pink eye, moving to New York because of Lou Reed, acadamia, The Frankenstein Chronicles, 20greateen, Sexy Meatballs, Mardi Gras all the time and witches everywhere, New Orleans winter, California as an alternate universe, swimming in someone else's mouth, shotgun house, ghost tours, Robocop, Bad Ass Burlesque, Adore Delano, queer NOLA, Katrina, the blue dot in a sea of red, ghost stories, Marie Laveau, Madame LaLaurie, white people's obsession with movie voodoo, leveling up, New Orleans burlesque scenes, ... shoutouts: Velocity Chyladd, Plucky Charms, Fem Appeal, Beelzebabe, Fancy Feast, Miss Cherry Delight, Holly Ween, Lefty Lucy, Mayhem Miller, Sidney's Saloon, Talk Nerdy To Me at the Dragon's Den, Jo Boobs Weldon, Peekaboo Pointe, Jezebel Express, Darlinda Just Darlinda, Delysia La Chatte, Dusty Ray Bottoms, RiDickulous, Hoodoo Hussy, Grandma Fun, The Starlight Lounge, Picolla Tushy and the Blue Stockings, Xena Zeit-Geist and Society of Sin, Honey Tangerine, Trixie Minx, Lux LaCroix, ... recorded: 3-28-2018 ... intro/outro music: "On A 45" This Way to the Egress (http://www.thiswaytotheegress.com) ... used with permission ... download it at: https://www.amazon.com/This-Delicious-Cabaret-Explicit-Egress/dp/B005D1GROO ... interlude music: "Sunday Dub" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ ... Support us on Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/weburlesque
Viktor Devonne chats with Doll Body, a burlesque performer living in Brooklyn... We cover topics including Connecticut, moving to New York, choreography, modern dance, Alvin Ailey, Boardwalk Empire, old Hollywood iconography, punk phases, the New York Burlesque Festival, starting burlesque wrong, Lazy Bones Burlesque, Dolly Dietrich, the 2016 election, Marlene Dietrich, femme androgyny, drag kings, rugged Hunter S. Thompson, ruddy makeup, Action Figure, body analysis, collages, Boomerang, dressing up as a banana, soft sculpture, today's corduroy, the Freezing Tassel Burlesque Festival, Alaska, industry shows, 2014 vs 2018, living with drag queens, queer spaces, the body positive movement, all-white shows, classic tease, flipping the switch, Barbra Streisand, doing the fun numbers, control, cultural shifts, and being sexy and exercised... recorded: Feb 3, 2018... shoutouts: Lewd Alfred Douglas, Delysia La Chatte, Lux LaCroix, Shelley Watson, Minnie Tonka, Beef Show, Lee VaLone, Qualms Galore, Celia Foxglove, Dick Jones, Lillian Bustle, Petite Renard, Dangrrr Doll, Wae Messed, Bunny Buxom, Fancy Feast, Zoe Ziegfeld, Anja Keister, Miss AuroraBOOBrealis, Sweet Lorraine... Doll Body has been performing since 2014, in a modern dance major and choreographer turned burlesque performer and producer. She can be seen all New York City, and joins the Freezing Tassel Burlesque Festival in Alaska this March... music: "On A 45" written and performed by This Way to the Egress (intro and outro music); interludes: "Rocket Power" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Hutch, Adam and Eric do a real time drinking game to Starship Troopers, wrapping up the Paul Verhoeven movie drinking game trilogy. Flip-6 drunk hole refers to Hutch's 6 whiskey drinks he consumed while Adam and Eric drank beer and wine. Special guest Sarah Desjean joins in towards the end. music by stelt Special Guests: Sarah Desjean and Dick Jones
It's Star Wars all the way down. It's in the box office. It's online. It's everywhere. Andy's seen it, but doesn't spoil, promise. We've got a full house of hijack trailers this week and a thoroughly thuggish list of movies with great henchmen! Andy's Trailer: Seven Days in Entebbe Pete's Trailer: The 15:17 to Paris Steve's Trailer: The Public THE LIST! Best Henchmen! Pete's List Igor, played by Marty Feldman, henchman for Gene Wilder's Dr. Frederick Frankenstein Young Frankenstein Karl Vreski, played by Alexander Godunov, henchman to Alan Rickman's Hans Gruber, Die Hard Lurtz the Uruk-hai, played by Lawrence Makoare, henchman to Sauron, Lord of the Rings Steve's List Captain Hadley, played by Clancy Brown, henchman to Bob Gunton's Warden Norton, The Shawshank Redemption Nurse Ratched, played by Louise Fletcher, henchman to the mental health establishment, _One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Dolores Umbridge, played by Imelda Staunton, henchman to Robert Hardy's Cornelius Fudge, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Andy's List Xenia Onatopp, played by Famke Jansen, henchman to Sean Bean's Alec Trevelyan, GoldenEye Count Rugen, played by Christopher Guest, henchman to Chris Sarandon's Prince Humperdink, The Princess Bride Clarence Boddicker, played by Kurtwood Smith, henchman to Ronny Cox's Omni Consumer Products president Dick Jones, Robocop Next Week's List: Great protagonist defendants in trial movies, that are also potentially government conspiracies, not like Erin Brokovich.
It's Star Wars all the way down. It's in the box office. It's online. It's everywhere. Andy's seen it, but doesn't spoil, promise. We've got a full house of hijack trailers this week and a thoroughly thuggish list of movies with great henchmen! Andy's Trailer: Seven Days in Entebbe Pete's Trailer: The 15:17 to Paris Steve's Trailer: The Public THE LIST! Best Henchmen! Pete's List Igor, played by Marty Feldman, henchman for Gene Wilder's Dr. Frederick Frankenstein Young Frankenstein Karl Vreski, played by Alexander Godunov, henchman to Alan Rickman's Hans Gruber, Die Hard Lurtz the Uruk-hai, played by Lawrence Makoare, henchman to Sauron, Lord of the Rings Steve's List Captain Hadley, played by Clancy Brown, henchman to Bob Gunton's Warden Norton, The Shawshank Redemption Nurse Ratched, played by Louise Fletcher, henchman to the mental health establishment, _One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Dolores Umbridge, played by Imelda Staunton, henchman to Robert Hardy's Cornelius Fudge, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Andy's List Xenia Onatopp, played by Famke Jansen, henchman to Sean Bean's Alec Trevelyan, GoldenEye Count Rugen, played by Christopher Guest, henchman to Chris Sarandon's Prince Humperdink, The Princess Bride Clarence Boddicker, played by Kurtwood Smith, henchman to Ronny Cox's Omni Consumer Products president Dick Jones, Robocop Next Week's List: Great protagonist defendants in trial movies, that are also potentially government conspiracies, not like Erin Brokovich.
It’s Star Wars all the way down. It’s in the box office. It’s online. It’s everywhere. Andy’s seen it, but doesn’t spoil, promise. We’ve got a full house of hijack trailers this week and a thoroughly thuggish list of movies with great henchmen! Andy’s Trailer: Seven Days in Entebbe Pete’s Trailer: The 15:17 to Paris Steve's Trailer: The Public THE LIST! Best Henchmen! Pete's List Igor, played by Marty Feldman, henchman for Gene Wilder’s Dr. Frederick Frankenstein Young Frankenstein Karl Vreski, played by Alexander Godunov, henchman to Alan Rickman’s Hans Gruber, Die Hard Lurtz the Uruk-hai, played by Lawrence Makoare, henchman to Sauron, Lord of the Rings Steve's List Captain Hadley, played by Clancy Brown, henchman to Bob Gunton’s Warden Norton, The Shawshank Redemption Nurse Ratched, played by Louise Fletcher, henchman to the mental health establishment, _One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Dolores Umbridge, played by Imelda Staunton, henchman to Robert Hardy’s Cornelius Fudge, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Andy's List Xenia Onatopp, played by Famke Jansen, henchman to Sean Bean’s Alec Trevelyan, GoldenEye Count Rugen, played by Christopher Guest, henchman to Chris Sarandon’s Prince Humperdink, The Princess Bride Clarence Boddicker, played by Kurtwood Smith, henchman to Ronny Cox’s Omni Consumer Products president Dick Jones, Robocop Next Week’s List: Great protagonist defendants in trial movies, that are also potentially government conspiracies, not like Erin Brokovich.
It’s Star Wars all the way down. It’s in the box office. It’s online. It’s everywhere. Andy’s seen it, but doesn’t spoil, promise. We’ve got a full house of hijack trailers this week and a thoroughly thuggish list of movies with great henchmen! Andy’s Trailer: Seven Days in Entebbe Pete’s Trailer: The 15:17 to Paris Steve's Trailer: The Public THE LIST! Best Henchmen! Pete's List Igor, played by Marty Feldman, henchman for Gene Wilder’s Dr. Frederick Frankenstein Young Frankenstein Karl Vreski, played by Alexander Godunov, henchman to Alan Rickman’s Hans Gruber, Die Hard Lurtz the Uruk-hai, played by Lawrence Makoare, henchman to Sauron, Lord of the Rings Steve's List Captain Hadley, played by Clancy Brown, henchman to Bob Gunton’s Warden Norton, The Shawshank Redemption Nurse Ratched, played by Louise Fletcher, henchman to the mental health establishment, _One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Dolores Umbridge, played by Imelda Staunton, henchman to Robert Hardy’s Cornelius Fudge, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Andy's List Xenia Onatopp, played by Famke Jansen, henchman to Sean Bean’s Alec Trevelyan, GoldenEye Count Rugen, played by Christopher Guest, henchman to Chris Sarandon’s Prince Humperdink, The Princess Bride Clarence Boddicker, played by Kurtwood Smith, henchman to Ronny Cox’s Omni Consumer Products president Dick Jones, Robocop Next Week’s List: Great protagonist defendants in trial movies, that are also potentially government conspiracies, not like Erin Brokovich.
Story: Eine Firma mit dem Namen OCP (Omni Consumer Products) will aus Detroit "Delta City" machen. Dazu muß aber zuerst einmal das Verbrechen aus der Stadt entfernt werden, das hier momentan viel Macht besitzt. Dick Jones, die rechte Hand des Chefs von OCP, hat daher einen Roboter entwickelt, der die Polizei der Stadt entlasten und sogar ersetzen soll. Doch schon im ersten Test erweist sich der Cyborg als untauglich, aber Dicks Mitarbeiter Bob Morton hat eine andere Idee: Statt eines reinen Roboters will er einen RoboCop bauen, der ein menschliches Bewußtsein hat. Hierzu brauchen sie einen toten Polizisten, den sie auch schnell haben, als Alex Murphy an seinem ersten Tag im Dienst ermordet wird. Die Synthese aus Mensch und Roboter gelingt, nur hat die Sache einen Haken: RoboCop verbringt mehr Zeit damit, seine Mörder - also die von Alex - zu finden, als die Verbrecher der Stadt zu bekämpfen. DVD/Blu Ray-Release: 31.01.2014 (Twentieth Century Fox of Germany GmbH) RoboCop Science Fiction, Action, Satire, Drama Land: USA 1987 Laufzeit: ca. 103 min. FSK: 18 Regie: Paul Verhoeven Drehbuch: Michael Miner, Edward Neumeier Kamera: Jost Vacano Musik: Basil Poledouris Make-Up: Rob Bottin Mit Kurtwood Smith, Ronny Cox, Ray Wise, Peter Weller, Miguel Ferrer, Nancy Allen, ... Alle weiteren Infos (Vergleich der Fassungen, Facts, Poster, ...) findet ihr unter ... http://wp.me/p4sWAt-4gj https://youtu.be/6tC_5mp3udE
Story: Eine Firma mit dem Namen OCP (Omni Consumer Products) will aus Detroit "Delta City" machen. Dazu muß aber zuerst einmal das Verbrechen aus der Stadt entfernt werden, das hier momentan viel Macht besitzt. Dick Jones, die rechte Hand des Chefs von OCP, hat daher einen Roboter entwickelt, der die Polizei der Stadt entlasten und sogar ersetzen soll. Doch schon im ersten Test erweist sich der Cyborg als untauglich, aber Dicks Mitarbeiter Bob Morton hat eine andere Idee: Statt eines reinen Roboters will er einen RoboCop bauen, der ein menschliches Bewußtsein hat. Hierzu brauchen sie einen toten Polizisten, den sie auch schnell haben, als Alex Murphy an seinem ersten Tag im Dienst ermordet wird. Die Synthese aus Mensch und Roboter gelingt, nur hat die Sache einen Haken: RoboCop verbringt mehr Zeit damit, seine Mörder - also die von Alex - zu finden, als die Verbrecher der Stadt zu bekämpfen. DVD/Blu Ray-Release: 31.01.2014 (Twentieth Century Fox of Germany GmbH) RoboCop Science Fiction, Action, Satire, Drama Land: USA 1987 Laufzeit: ca. 103 min. FSK: 18 Regie: Paul Verhoeven Drehbuch: Michael Miner, Edward Neumeier Kamera: Jost Vacano Musik: Basil Poledouris Make-Up: Rob Bottin Mit Kurtwood Smith, Ronny Cox, Ray Wise, Peter Weller, Miguel Ferrer, Nancy Allen, ... Alle weiteren Infos (Vergleich der Fassungen, Facts, Poster, ...) findet ihr unter ... http://wp.me/p4sWAt-4gj https://youtu.be/6tC_5mp3udE
Steve and Busy discuss sinus infections, brain eating amoebas, placenta, acupuncture, dermatologists, hand foot and mouth disease, Busy’s claustrophobic MRI experience and much more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode Eric welcomes Dave back to the show to discuss some of the ED-209 and Death of Dick Jones scenes from the original "Robocop". This series is made possibly by the generosity of our Patreon supporters. To learn how you can help support all the work we do at NeoZAZ and get access to Patreon exclusive content, please visit our Patreon page at:https://www.patreon.com/neozaz. Get all the latest from NeoZAZ from our social media pages: Follow NeoZAZ on Facebook. Follow Neozaz on Twitter.
Get into it as Legs Malone, Dick Jones & Shelly Watson share their lion hearts & bodacious thoughts on: - Mind Body Connection - Burlesquer to Dog Walker - New Creative Experiences - Nature of Attachment - Big Easy over Big Apple - The Importance of cat vids & gifs - Travel Fever & Soul Food! Welcome to FALLEN WOMAN! Tune in every Thursday at the stroke of midnight to: www.radiofreebrooklyn.com Archive episodes available at: www.fallenwoman.com #radiofreebrooklyn #fallenwomanradio
Get into it as Legs Malone, Shelly Watson & Dick Jones share their lion hearts & bodacious thoughts on: - The Republican National Convention - Compassion & Empathy - Self Care Saves the Planet - and the BEST Sex Toys EVER! Welcome to FALLEN WOMAN! Tune in every Thursday at the stroke of midnight to: www.radiofreebrooklyn.com Archive episodes available at: www.fallenwoman.com #radiofreebrooklyn
Wicked wonder & saucy speech from Dick Jones, Deity Delgado & Adrian Buckmaster include: - The Venus Project - Burlesque Couture - Blue Angel Fireman invasion - The Girls Club - An Embarassment of Riches - Burlesque Teen Mom Super Power - Funemployment - Transcendental Education - and these tunes I croon with Dave Sussman on guitar: - Light As a Breeze - She's Always a Woman - Weepin' Woman Blues - Motherless Child - Manhattan Blues - and Crap Shoot! Welcome to Fallen Woman! #fallenwomanradio #radiofreebrooklyn
Velocity Chyaldd hosts Fallen Woman. A weekly soirée with underground thoughts and voices shared with uncensored abandon and seductive humor. Guests on episode 5 include : Deity Delgado, Dick Jones and Ammo O'Day!
Velocity Chyaldd hosts Fallen Woman. A weekly soirée with underground thoughts and voices shared with uncensored abandon and seductive humor. Guests on episode 4 include : Trixie Little, Jo Weldon, Dick Jones and Eric Schmalenberger!
This week the LPP remembers Dick Jones and discuss Transformers 4, Guardians of the Galaxy, Disneyland's new Alice in Wonderland and Nashville show, Once Upon a Time Frozen casting, Tsum Tsum, ABC Family's new shows and the live-action Dumbo. Plus, Get To Know Your LPP as they discuss their favorite sitcoms of all time. The post LaughingPlace.com Podcast #214: Tsumthing New appeared first on LaughingPlace.com.
https://www.voices.com/podcasts/voxtalk/vox_talk_episode_63/