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Come join the dream parade, folks - we're talking about Paprika! Mother of the Blankies Emily Yoshida is with us to chat about Satoshi Kon's final film - a film that FEELS like a swan song especially in hindsight. In this episode, we address the elephant in the room (those Inception comparisons), dive into the serialized story Paprika was based on, and Griffin makes the important connection between Paprika's “DC mini” device and this being a “BC mini” (series). Plus, we establish 2024 as “The Year of Dreams” (Kon and Lynch on Blank Check!!), and Emily, Ben, and Griffin discuss their experience attending a special screening of Clifford with Martin Short himself. Check out Shogun on FX and listen to Shogun: The Official Podcast hosted by Emily Read Emily's writing on Paprika Please follow Hollywood Entertainment (the organizers of the Clifford screening mentioned on the episode)for upcoming screenings in LA (including a new residency at Heavy Manners Library), regular streaming programs (accessible everywhere), and a to-be-announced return to New York this fall. https://www.instagram.com/hollyw00dentertainment https://www.hollywood-entertainment.com/ This episode is sponsored by: Storyblocks (storyblocks.com/check) Bombas (bombas.com/check CODE: CHECK) Join our Patreon at patreon.com/blankcheck Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter and Instagram!
Joanna is first joined by ‘Shogun' cocreator Rachel Kondo and writer Caillin Puente to discuss writing the penultimate episode, Mariko's fate, making Ochiba a more layered character than her book counterpart, why they decided to cut out the heir's parentage as a plot point for the story, how Nagakado's death came to fruition, and much more. Next, ‘Shogun' writers Emily Yoshida and Maegan Houang talk to Jo about penning the script for the finale, the elderly Blackthorne sequences, what the final interaction between Toranaga and Yabushige says about the former, why the book's ending was one of the toughest parts to adapt, and much more. Host: Joanna Robinson Guests: Rachel Kondo, Caillin Puente, Emily Yoshida, and Maegan Houang Producer: Kai Grady Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Derek and John close out their coverage with the finale of Shogun Chapter 10 "A Dream of A Dream". This is an epilogue for the season which closes out the stories of all the major players from the series.Shogun Chapter 10 A Dream of A Dream DetailsBased on the 1975 novel Shogun by James ClavellHead Writers: Rachel Kondo & Justin MarksChapter 10 Written by: Emily Yoshida & Maegan HouangChapter 10 Directed by: Frederick ToyeIn the wake of a tragic death, Blackthorne finally considers the true nature of Toranaga's plan.Shogun Cast and charactersCosmo Jarvis as Pilot Major John BlackthorneHiroyuki Sanada as Lord Yoshii ToranagaAnna Sawai as Toda MarikoTadanobu Asano as Kashigi YabushigeFumi Nikaido as Ochiba No KataTokuma Nishioka as Toda "Iron Fist" HiromatsuTakehiro Hira as Lord Ishido KazunariAko as Daiyoin Lady IyoShinnosuke Abe as Toda BuntaroYasunari Takeshima as MurajiHiroto Kanai as Kashigi OmiToshi Toda as SugiyamaHiro Kanagawa as IgurashiNéstor Carbonell as Vasco RodriguesYuki Kura as Yoshii NagakadoTommy Bastow as Father Martin AlvitoMoeka Hoshi as Usami FujiNobuya Shimamoto as Nebara JozenYoriko Dōguchi as Kiri No KataYuka Kouri as KikuYuki Kedoin as TakemaruMako Fujimoto as Shizu No KataHaruno Niiyama as Natsu No KataWith Eita Okuno as Saeki NobutatsuWhere can you send Feedback for Shogun?Once you've watched the chapters you can email us to feedback@tvpodcastindustries.com, you can message us https://www.threads.net/@tvpodcastindustries on Threads as we make Twitter our X or join our Facebook group at https://facebook.com/groups/tvpodcastindustries and share your thoughts in our spoiler posts for each episode.Follow us and Subscribe to the PodcastIf you want to keep up with us and all of our podcasts, please subscribe to the podcast over at https://tvpodcastindustries.com. Where we will continue to podcast about multiple TV shows we hope you'll love.Next time on TV Podcast IndustriesThanks for joining us for our Shogun Podcast on TV Podcast Industries. We hope you'll follow along with us again for another great TV show in the future.Until then, Keep Watching and Keep Listening.Derek and JohnTV Podcast IndustriesAll images and audio clips are copyright of Disney, Hulu, FX and their respective copyright owners and are used only for promotional purposes.The music for this episode is Samurai Showdown - Sir Cubworth.
My guest this week is writer Emily Yoshida.Emily is one of my favorite people in the entertainment industry. She was previously a writer for Vulture and New York magazine and joins us to chat about the new series, SHOGUN (a show she's also a writer on), eBay finds, getting into Grand Seiko, and more!SHOGUN Podcast*Sponsored by Bezel - the trusted marketplace for buying and selling your next luxury watch
Emily Yoshida (@emilyyoshida, Shōgun) joins the 'boys to talk favorite months, Iowa chains, and Amazon before a review of Whole Foods. Plus, a new segment, The Price is Ripe.Watch this episode at youtube.com/doughboysmediaGet ad-free episodes at patreon.com/doughboysGet Doughboys merch at doughboys.kinshipgoods.comAdvertise on Doughboys via Gumball.fmSources for this week's intro:https://www.soyinfocenter.com/books/224https://www.businessinsider.com/whole-foods-timeline-from-start-to-amazon-2017-9https://www.austintexas.gov/article/austin-remembers-1981-memorial-day-floodhttps://www.kvue.com/article/news/austin-remembers-lives-lost-in-1981-memorial-day-flood/269-411617278https://www.flickr.com/photos/austintexasgov/albums/72157626196677382/with/5510040331https://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/company-infoSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
We couldn't be more excited to talk about the film we consider to be Park's masterpiece - the gorgeous, twisty, and ultimately moving THE HANDMAIDEN. “Mother of the Blankies” Emily Yoshida joins us to unpack this puzzlebox of an erotic thriller, a brilliant adaptation of Sarah Waters' Fingersmith. Come for the coining of a new Blank Check phrase (thanks, researcher JJ!), stay for a very crucial “touch of the Tucc” tangent. By the way - what does that octopus actually do?? This episode is sponsored by: Babbel (babbel.com/check) Bombas (bombas.com/check CODE: CHECK) Factor (factormeals.com/check50 CODE: CHECK50) Join our Patreon at patreon.com/blankcheck Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter and Instagram! Buy some real nerdy merch at shopblankcheckpod.myshopify.com or at teepublic.com/stores/blank-check
Mother is back, and she's taking us all to THE BEACH! Emily Yoshida makes her long-awaited return to the pod to speak about her experience in the writer's room of the still-unproduced TV version of Alex Garland's titular novel. We're asking all the big questions - when did Leonardo DiCaprio stop being “baby” and become a big boy on screen? Why is no one practicing ethical non-monogamy or doing heroin on this island? Is it cool to like Moby again after that weird Natalie Portman thing? How would starring in this movie have affected Ewan McGregor's career? Why stay in a commune with a bunch of dirty European hippies when you could just go to a resort with real bathrooms? This episode is sponsored by: Indeed (indeed.com/check) The Black Tux (theblacktux.com/check CODE: CHECK) MUBI (mubi.com/check) Join our Patreon at patreon.com/blankcheck Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter and Instagram! Buy some real nerdy merch at shopblankcheckpod.myshopify.com or at teepublic.com/stores/blank-check
Dean follows through on his longstanding threat to make Ciara watch a Harmony Korine film, the 2012 black comedy (?) crime drama (?) Spring Breakers. They talk about its grotesque visual excess, James Franco's repulsive performance and whether the whole film is just a big joke. Visit The Sundae: https://thesundae.net/ Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/sundaeblog/ Avicii and EDM's Promise of Post-Recessional Excess by Emily Yoshida: https://www.vulture.com/2018/04/avicii-and-edms-promise-of-post-recessional-excess.html Roger Ebert's review of Joe Versus the Volcano: https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/joe-versus-the-volcano-1990 Make It, Don't Fake It: https://thesundae.net/2020/11/17/make-it-dont-fake-it/
Dean follows through on his longstanding threat to make Ciara watch a Harmony Korine film, the 2012 black comedy (?) crime drama (?) Spring Breakers. They talk about its grotesque visual excess, James Franco's repulsive performance and whether the whole film is just a big joke. Visit The Sundae: https://thesundae.net/ Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/sundaeblog/ Avicii and EDM's Promise of Post-Recessional Excess by Emily Yoshida: https://www.vulture.com/2018/04/avicii-and-edms-promise-of-post-recessional-excess.html Roger Ebert's review of Joe Versus the Volcano: https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/joe-versus-the-volcano-1990 Make It, Don't Fake It: https://thesundae.net/2020/11/17/make-it-dont-fake-it/
Nearly ten years in the making, Hideaki Anno's final entry in the Neon Genesis Evangelion franchise is Evangelion: 3.0+ 1.0 Thrice Upon a Time, a prolonged exercise in extreme emotional catharsis. The Human Instrumentality Podcast ends its season on Eva by contrasting its Miyazaki-ish first half with its End of Evangelion-remixing climax. We go deep on the lasting occult and philosophical themes that keep drawing fans old and new into its heart-rending jaws. Other excursions include a long disucssion on the purpose of art and fantasy, with a little environmentalist melancholia along the way. Joining us is filmmaker, screenwriter, critic and podcaster extraordinaire Emily Yoshida, whose work at websites like Grantland, The Vulture and others is among the best anime criticism (and film criticism in general) out there. Yoshida tells the story of how she got into Eva, and in return the hosts discuss how her podcast It's Cool to Like Anime (R.I.P.) became a foundational influence on the Human Instrumentality Podcast. Together we discuss the complicated experience of loving anime as a leftist, and draw paralells between Eva and Phillip Pullman's seminal His Dark Materials books. Yoshida's It's Cool to Like Anime is no longer online, but below is a selected heavy-hitters list ofher published work. Look out for her writing as part of FX's series Shogun in the future. ‘Sailor Moon': The Explainer (https://grantland.com/hollywood-prospectus/sailor-moon-the-explainer/) Ghost in the Shell and anime's troubled history with representation (https://www.theverge.com/2016/5/9/11612530/ghost-in-the-shell-anime-asian-representation-hollywood) An Introduction to Japan's Most Idiosyncratic and Exciting Animation Director, Masaaki Yuasa (https://www.vulture.com/2018/03/an-intro-to-japans-most-idiosyncratic-animation-director.html)
Our long-awaited John Carpenter series kicks off with his ultra-low budget oddity debut DARK STAR. Ben goes Hollywood (actually, “Hosleywood”) to record with Emily Yoshida - the Mother of Blankies herself - *in person* in Los Angeles, and the gang debates possible names for the series. We landed on “They Podcast” - which is a departure from Griffin's far sweatier suggestions. Join us as we set the table for Carpenter's filmography, and go deep on this film, which could also just be called “Space Dirtbags,” per Emily. This episode is sponsored by: Indeed (indeed.com/check) Brooklinen (CODE: BLANKCHECK) IPVanish (ipvanish.com/check) Join our Patreon at patreon.com/blankcheck Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter and Instagram! Buy some real nerdy merch at shopblankcheckpod.myshopify.com
Emily Yoshida is back to welcome you to Marwen! This episode is sponsored by: Noom (https://www.noom.com/check) Bombas (https://bombas.com/check) Purple (https://purple.com/check10) Join our Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/blankcheck Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter (https://twitter.com/blankcheckpod) and Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/blankcheckpod/) ! Buy some real nerdy merch at shopblankcheckpod.myshopify.com (https://shopblankcheckpod.myshopify.com/)
Writer and filmmaker Emily Yoshida competes to cheer Josh up. Emily plays a game of The Prestige, creating the ultimate Oscar-bait movie. Then, she contributes her $100 grand prize to Mutual Aid Los Angeles. Plus, pep talks for background actors and people who are bad at taking care of plants. Follow Emily on Twitter (even though she might not be there): www.twitter.com/emilyyoshida Check out this cool music video Emily made for Sad13: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f76rghmg1jI&feature=emb_title Donate to Mutual Aid LA: https://www.mutualaidla.org/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to the 9th episode of the Wes Anderson series. We are talking Isle of Dogs, the last film in Wes Anderson's filmography (that has been released, COME TO US FRENCH DISPATCH). In this episode, Ethan has a mini poetry slam of his own with some creative haikus, Sidney provides an update about train engines with faces, and we make a few pleas to Wes himself.The article that Ethan references written by Emily Yoshida: https://www.vulture.com/2018/03/what-its-like-to-watch-isle-of-dogs-as-a-japanese-speaker.htmlThank you to Michael Thompson at LEVEL UP Agent Services for our logo.Be sure to follow us on Twitter @DDirectorPod or shoot us an email at discoveringdirectorspodcast@gmail.com .
What if Big Little Lies, but in New York City and with no point? That's kind of how Emily and the regulars all felt about The Undoing, the latest Nicole Kidman-David E. Kelley collaboration for HBO; we admired the workmanship, while not really understanding what sets it apart from BLL (besides the quality of the wigs), or buying Kidman and Hugh Grant's chemistry. Will any of us be successfully cliff-hung into watching all six episodes? Later, we investigated Around The Dial with stops at Archer, the new Supermarket Sweep, Revolutionary Girl Utena, The Morning Show, City So Real, and The Queen's Gambit, before location-scouting "Domestic Survivor" for Don's Extra Credit. Emily hoped the signal-to-noise ratio of a fourth-season Halt And Catch Fire episode would be good enough to connect it to the Canon. Stath Lets Flats won, Quibi lost, and Game Time proved a severe insult to the brain (and other things). Quick, look hunted! It's an all-new Extra Hot Great. GUESTS
In a world where rational, scientific explanations are more available than ever, belief in the unprovable and irrational–in fringe–is on the rise: from Atlantis to aliens, from Flat Earth to the Loch Ness monster, the list goes on. It seems the more our maps of the known world get filled in, the more we crave mysterious locations full of strange creatures.Enter Colin Dickey, Cultural Historian and Tour Guide of the Weird. With the same curiosity and insight that made Ghostland a hit with readers and critics, Colin looks at what all fringe beliefs have in common, explaining that today’s Illuminati is yesterday’s Flat Earth: the attempt to find meaning in a world stripped of wonder. Dickey visits the wacky sites of America’s wildest fringe beliefs–from the famed Mount Shasta where the ancient race (or extra-terrestrials, or possibly both, depending on who you ask) called Lemurians are said to roam, to the museum containing the last remaining “evidence” of the great Kentucky Meat Shower–investigating how these theories come about, why they take hold, and why as Americans we keep inventing and re-inventing them decade after decade. The Unidentified is Colin Dickey at his best: curious, wry, brilliant in his analysis, yet eminently readable. Dickey is joined in conversation by writers Molly Lambert, Tess Lynch, and Emily Yoshida. _______________________________________________ Produced by Maddie Gobbo & Michael Kowaleski Theme: "I Love All My Friends," a new, unreleased demo by Fragile Gang. Visit https://www.skylightbooks.com/event for future offerings from the Skylight Books Events team.
Emily Yoshida (Night Call podcast (https://www.iheart.com/podcast/270-night-call-28893044/) ) joins #thetwofriends to discuss George Miller's magnum opus Mad Max: Fury Road. Together they examine the masterful world building, the flawed leadership of Immortan Joe, lumps, the performances of Charlize Theron, Tom Hardy, Nicholas Hoult and so much more! This episode is sponsored by: Purple (https://purple.com/check) (CODE: Check) SFX: "VVZ-A#3-2.wav (https://freesound.org/people/sorohanro/sounds/102633/) " by sorohanro; "Vuvuzela-04.wav (https://freesound.org/people/theTone/sounds/101223/) " by theTone; "horror ambience 07.wav (https://freesound.org/people/klankbeeld/sounds/128905/) " by klankbeeld. Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) .
Crime-fighting superheroes Caitlin and Jamie join forces with special guest Emily Yoshida to talk about Birds of Prey: And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn. (This episode contains spoilers) For Bechdel bonuses, sign up for our Patreon at patreon.com/bechdelcast. Follow @emilyyoshida from @nightcallpod on Twitter. While you're there, you should also follow @BechdelCast, @caitlindurante and @jamieloftusHELP Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Molly Lambert (writer, Night Call) scoops up one of the most prestigious blocks in an election year: the Public Affairs Agency that represents Joe Biden and many others, after she discovers one of their prime tactics for “managing crisis” (it’s dumb and bad). It’s some serious political talk, but we manage to temper that with our usual silliness, as the Blocked Boys get into elementary school Sports Day, creating weird beverage combos as kids, and a brand-new Patreon tier: John drinks the Ben Bartch chaos smoothie. We also tackle Canadian television, Megan McArdle’s insane coronavirus theory, and John ends the show with another one of his classic “bad food opinions”. If you want more bad opinions (but great content), you can donate to the show at https://patreon.com/blockedparty, where $5/month gets you access to three bonus episodes every single month! Plus our whole back catalogue! By the time you listen to it all, we’ll be licking each other’s ice creams again! After a long wait, we finally have the video episode up where Stefan teaches John how to play Hearthstone, and this month, we’ll have the Will Weldon video bonus episode from last Friday where we watch a bunch of strange internet stuff together, a mailbag, and much more. You also get access to our Discord for the $5, a great and fun server with a wonderful community. Join today! Molly Lambert is a writer and podcaster who hosts the very popular Night Call podcast with Tess Lynch and Emily Yoshida. She can be found on Twitter at @mollylambert.
In episode 603, Jack and Miles are joined by Night Call podcast's Emily Yoshida to discuss a White House trade advisor making claims about coronavirus, the 5G coronavirus conspiracy theory, a possible new Tiger King episode, how coronavirus is hitting teens especially hard, and more ! FOOTNOTES: WH Trade Adviser Claims He’s Qualified To Speak On COVID-19 Treatment Because He’s A ‘Social Scientist’ Top WH trade adviser feuded with others on whether hydroxychloroquine can treat coronavirus, sources say. A Conspiracy Theory That 5G Is Causing The Coronavirus Is Spreading Alongside The Pandemic Woody Harrelson among stars sharing coronavirus conspiracy theories tied to 5G Mast fire probe amid 5G coronavirus claims Coronavirus: Scientists brand 5G claims 'complete rubbish' New ‘Tiger King’ Episode Coming to Netflix, Says Jeff Lowe The Reality of Covid-19 Is Hitting Teens Especially Hard WATCH: The Frightnrs "Till Then" Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Molly is a writer and iconic Valley Girl. You can read her in tons of magazines like Elle, InStyle, the New York Times Magazine and The New Yorker. She also wrote the introduction to the newest collection of Eve Babitz essays, “I Used To Be Charming: The Rest Of Eve Babitz.” We talk about Comrade Britney, Mimi Zhu, Lana Del Rey, Rihanna, Grace Jones, Madonna, Eve Babitz, Joan Didion, Susan Sontag and “The Murder of Laci Peterson.” We also talk about interviewing celebrities for magazines, clearing our heads at LA malls and pining for clothes at the old Betsey Johnson store in Sherman Oaks. Molly tells us about organizing Angelenos around housing inequality and describes how hosting the Olympics causes cities to fast track gentrification, escalate policing and further criminalize homelessness. She also shares the history of her grandmother’s own experiences as a Jewish-German Olympic athlete in pre-WWII Germany. Follow @NOlympics LA for more on that and @mollylambert on IG and Twitter
Björk's sophomore album Post marked a significant change in the singer/songwriter's career. For one, it was heavy; the growl of her voice, the grittiness of the instrumentation on songs like Army of Me, the music videos directed by Michel Gondry. Post was also much more unpredictable that her first solo album Debut. Björk collaborated with a ton of different producers like Tricky, Graham Massey, Howie B, and Nellee Hooper, who all brought in their unique flavor to this eclectic album.Writer and critic Emily Yoshida joins us to discuss Post, the truly wild videos released for this album, and the many characters of Björk's voice.More on Emily Emily's work on VultureThe Night Call podcast with Emily, Molly Lambert, and Tess LynchTwitter | InstagramMore on PostPitchfork's retrospective review of PostBjork's video for Army of MeShow Tracklisting (all songs from Post unless otherwise indicated):Possibly MaybeHyperballadEnjoyArmy of MeIt's Oh So QuietBjörk: Litli Tonlistarmadurinn Betty Hutton: It's Oh So QuietIt's Oh So QuietPossibly MaybeDJ Shadow: Mutual SlumpHyperballadMartin White: Army of MeIsobelIt's Oh So QuietI Miss YouHyperballadRufus Wainwright: Greek SongFKA twigs: mary magdaleneHere is the Spotify playlist of as many songs as we can find on thereIf you're not already subscribed to Heat Rocks in Apple Podcasts, do it here!
Ok, Nicole and Lauren are fully ON BOARD! They loved this film and can't wait to get into it. Film critic/writer Emily Yoshida (Vulture, AVClub, The Verge, & host of the Night Call podcast) joins them to discuss their love for Ewoks, Carrie Fisher's visible coke nail, and all the surprising deaths in this film. Plus, the girls start writing ideas for their own Star Wars fan fiction.Emily Yoshida's Star Wars articles:All the CGI Characters in the Star Wars Prequels, Ranked From Tolerable to InexcusableWhy Rogue One Gets the “Dark Reboot” RightThe Star Wars Holiday SpecialSources for this episode:Star Wars: Episode VI Return of the Jedi WookieepediaRoger Ebert reviewNew York Times review
Today on the show, HAPPY NEW FEAR! Let’s discover fears you didn’t even know you had with some horrifying creatures! Take a one way trip to decapitation station, check out some very creepy babies, and endure the existential crisis after finding out when a butt is NOT a butt. Discover this and more as we answer the age-old question, is 80 worms too many worms to have inside of you? With special guests Tess Lynch, Molly Lambert, and Emily Yoshida of the Night Call Podcast. CONTENT WARNING: the trypophobia section starts at 00:42:55 and ends at 00:55:47 Footnotes: The ant-head bursting fly, Euryplatea nanaknihali Another fly that decapitates ants Ants who decorate their homes with the heads of their enemies Ant who pretends to be a butt Study on Antman & Spiderman helping phobias Margays imitate baby tamarins Cats mimic the cry of babies WARNING: CATERPILLAR BODY HORROR. Glyptapanteles wasp larvae bursting from a parasitized caterpillar. Audubon Society's "When Is a Bird a ‘Birb’? An Extremely Important Guide" Creature FEET pod twitter Margay used in episode image Pied tamarin used in episode image Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Today on the show, HAPPY NEW FEAR! Let’s discover fears you didn’t even know you had with some horrifying creatures! Take a one way trip to decapitation station, check out some very creepy babies, and endure the existential crisis after finding out when a butt is NOT a butt. Discover this and more as we answer the age-old question, is 80 worms too many worms to have inside of you? With special guests Tess Lynch, Molly Lambert, and Emily Yoshida of the Night Call Podcast. CONTENT WARNING: the trypophobia section starts at 00:42:55 and ends at 00:55:47 Footnotes: The ant-head bursting fly, Euryplatea nanaknihali Another fly that decapitates ants Ants who decorate their homes with the heads of their enemies Ant who pretends to be a butt Study on Antman & Spiderman helping phobias Margays imitate baby tamarins Cats mimic the cry of babies WARNING: CATERPILLAR BODY HORROR. Glyptapanteles wasp larvae bursting from a parasitized caterpillar. Audubon Society's "When Is a Bird a ‘Birb’? An Extremely Important Guide" Creature FEET pod twitter Margay used in episode image Pied tamarin used in episode image Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
In this special bonus episode, the girls are joined by Night Call podcast's Emily Yoshida! We talk about her upbringing with her mother, moving around the US, her work as a film critic, coming back to LA after going to New York for a few years, and more! We have a lot of out of context quotable in this episodes! Don't ruin us by clipping them out! Whoops! Check out the Night Call podcast and follow Emily on Twitter and Instagram at @EmilyYoshida. YAY, WE LOVE EMILY! Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
We love horror movies and horror stories, but when it comes to pure blood-curdling terror, there’s no competing with mother nature. We’ll compare some classic horror tropes to their real-life counterparts, and let me tell ya: when it comes to evolution, the director’s cut holds nothing back. Parasites that contort your body and mind to their will, evil flowers and even more evil worms! With special guest Emily Yoshida of the Night Call Podcast. FOOTNOTES: Video of leucochloridium paradoxum Our DNA stealing friend, the delloid rotifer Carrion beetles staying calm and carrion Everyone welcome onto the U.S.S carrion beetle A hot, young David Attenborough explains the corpse lily A parasitic hairworm noodling its way out of a cricket (warning: gross) Russian nesting worms Eyebleach: cat discovering its own ears Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
We love horror movies and horror stories, but when it comes to pure blood-curdling terror, there’s no competing with mother nature. We’ll compare some classic horror tropes to their real-life counterparts, and let me tell ya: when it comes to evolution, the director’s cut holds nothing back. Parasites that contort your body and mind to their will, evil flowers and even more evil worms! With special guest Emily Yoshida of the Night Call Podcast. FOOTNOTES: Video of leucochloridium paradoxum Our DNA stealing friend, the delloid rotifer Carrion beetles staying calm and carrion Everyone welcome onto the U.S.S carrion beetle A hot, young David Attenborough explains the corpse lily A parasitic hairworm noodling its way out of a cricket (warning: gross) Russian nesting worms Eyebleach: cat discovering its own ears Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
In episode 495, Jack and Miles are joined by writer and Night Call podcast co-host Emily Yoshida to discuss Bernie Sanders coming for Elizabeth Warren, Mike Bloomberg considering running in 2020 election, the disturbing propaganda video of Trump killing his opponents, Gordon Sondland testifying, PG&E's power outages, police departments in Pennsylvania being concerned about THC-laced candy being handed out on Halloween, and more! FOOTNOTES: 1. Bernie Sanders Takes Aim at Wealth—and Warren 2. Mike Bloomberg keeps talking to allies about running for president as Joe Biden struggles against Elizabeth Warren 3. Imagine a Conference Full of Conspiracy Theorists. Sponsored by a Prison Company. At a Trump Resort. 4. Trump’s envoy to testify that ‘no quid pro quo’ came from Trump 5. Hello everyone who's mystified by all the blackout posts coming from California's #Powerpocalypse, here's an explainer thread 6. Parents, are you sufficiently paranoid about THC-laced Halloween candy? 7. Dolittle Trailer: Robert Downey Jr. Is Not Your Mother’s Dr. Dolittle 8. WATCH: potsu - im closing my eyes (feat. shiloh) Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Emily Yoshida returns to discuss 1986's Castle in the Sky! But what is the appeal of a Miyazaki film? Is 'chaotic good' a Miyazaki character type? A kind moss robot we stan? Together with the #thetwofriends they examine large adult sky pirate sons, going ham and eggs, Angus the movie, the Studio Ghibli theme park and more! This episode is sponsored by Liquid Death (https://liquiddeath.com/check) , Stamps.com (https://www.stamps.com/) CODE: CHECK and Scentbird (https://www.scentbird.com/check) CODE: CHECK. Music selection by: "Digital Mk. 2" by Tri-Tachyon (http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Tri-Tachyon/) . Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
Welcome back to the second installment in our monthly series covering new releases. This week, Film Comment Editor-in-Chief Nicolas Rapold is joined by critic Emily Yoshida, who has written for Vulture and Vanity Fair, and frequent FC contributor Devika Girish. The three sat down to discuss Lulu Wong's The Farewell, which has already received a fair amount of attention for its sweet story about a family reacting to the illness of a beloved grandmother in China. They also talk about two lesser known films that recreate vivid moments from the past in Argentina and England, Benjamín Naishtat's Rojo and Richard Billingham's Ray & Liz, before wrapping up with The Art of Self-Defense, starring Jesse Eisenberg.
The Ankler is joined by film critic Emily Yoshida (@emilyyoshida) and The Ankler’s own Editor-at-Large Jim Gibson to talk about how the latest Spider-Man overcame sequelitis to conquer the world. We also look at the fate of mid-range films like Midsommar and account for its success, and how box office reporting became wound up in […]Join the conversation and comment on this podcast episode: https://ricochet.com/podcast/ankler-richard-rushfield/spider-house-rules/.Now become a Ricochet member for only $5.00 a month! Join and see what you’ve been missing: https://ricochet.com/membership/.Subscribe to Ankler on the Air in Apple Podcasts (and leave a 5-star review, please!), or by RSS feed. For all our podcasts in one place, subscribe to the Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed in Apple Podcasts or by RSS feed.
Emily Yoshida and Amy S. Choi join Negin to discuss Trump’s upcoming 2020 run, New York’s proposed decriminalization of sex work, and the pros and cons of the wellness industry.This episode is sponsored by Green Chef (www.greenchef.us/fake75) and PaintYourLife (text FAKE to 48-48-48).
The Ankler is joined again by Emily Yoshida (@emilyyoshida) to talk through the weekend’s crazy box office pictures which included a disappointing monster and a over-performing Rocketman. Is counter-programming back? And then we talk about the WGA action against the agencies. What do writers today want anyway?Join the conversation and comment on this podcast episode: https://ricochet.com/podcast/ankler-richard-rushfield/godzilla-king-of-the-misses/.Now become a Ricochet member for only $5.00 a month! Join and see what you’ve been missing: https://ricochet.com/membership/.Subscribe to Ankler on the Air in Apple Podcasts (and leave a 5-star review, please!), or by RSS feed. For all our podcasts in one place, subscribe to the Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed in Apple Podcasts or by RSS feed.
Ankler Editor Richard Rushfield and co-host Emily Yoshida talk about the tragedy or non-tragedy of the coming-of-age movie Booksmart. Corners of social media are in shock that the indie comedy fell behind the Disney spectacle Aladdin. Is there injustice at work or did the hidden hand of Twitter secretly sabotage its own cause celebre? And […]Join the conversation and comment on this podcast episode: https://ricochet.com/podcast/ankler-richard-rushfield/what-happened-to-booksmart/.Now become a Ricochet member for only $5.00 a month! Join and see what you’ve been missing: https://ricochet.com/membership/.Subscribe to Ankler on the Air in Apple Podcasts (and leave a 5-star review, please!), or by RSS feed. For all our podcasts in one place, subscribe to the Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed in Apple Podcasts or by RSS feed.
On this week’s episode, Ankler Editor Richard Rushfield and film maven Emily Yoshida discuss the just debuting Cannes Film Festival. Who is it for? How much fun is it to visit on someone else’s dime? Would the tens of millions spent by studios catering to this media gala be better off being set on fire? […]Join the conversation and comment on this podcast episode: https://ricochet.com/podcast/ankler-richard-rushfield/the-wrath-of-cannes/.Now become a Ricochet member for only $5.00 a month! Join and see what you’ve been missing: https://ricochet.com/membership/.Subscribe to Ankler on the Air in Apple Podcasts (and leave a 5-star review, please!), or by RSS feed. For all our podcasts in one place, subscribe to the Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed in Apple Podcasts or by RSS feed.
Netflix tries to court the teens with The Society, in which a bunch of high schoolers return to their town to find it emptied of everyone who wasn't in their class; Emily Yoshida joins us to discuss whether Christopher "Party Of Five Keyser" still knows how to write for the youth. Around The Dial clicks through the comedy special My Dad Wrote A Porno, Klepper, Terrace House, Sneaky Pete, and The Good Fight (now we're up to Season 3!). Tara presents Season 1, Episode 4 of Rosehaven to The Canon, and then after naming the week's Winner and Loser, we roll up our sleeves for a game about jobs. Take a break from inventorying all the food in town and join us! GUESTS
Netflix tries to court the teens with The Society, in which a bunch of high schoolers return to their town to find it emptied of everyone who wasn't in their class; Emily Yoshida joins us to discuss whether Christopher "Party Of Five Keyser" still knows how to write for the youth. Around The Dial clicks through the comedy special My Dad Wrote A Porno, Klepper, Terrace House, Sneaky Pete, and The Good Fight (now we're up to Season 3!). Tara presents Season 1, Episode 4 of Rosehaven to The Canon, and then after naming the week's Winner and Loser, we roll up our sleeves for a game about jobs. Take a break from inventorying all the food in town and join us!SHOW TOPICSLead TopicThe SocietyAround The DialMy Dad Wrote A PornoKlepperTerrace HouseSneaky PeteThe Good FightThe CanonRosehaven S01.E04Winner and Loser of the WeekJ.J. Abrams and Jordan PeeleConstance WuGame TimeWhat's My Job?SHOW NOTESEmily Yoshida on TwitterThe Night Call podcastNight Call on PatreonTara's Haley Lu Richardson post at PrimetimerSarah's Bosch post at PrimetimerDISCUSSIONTalk about this episode on its dedicated page on ExtraHotGreat.comSUPPORT EHG ON PATREONThe EHG gang have been recording this podcast for almost a decade now. In podcasting terms, that makes us positively Methuselahian. Since the start of EHG, our listeners have asked if we had a tip jar or donation system and we'd look at each other and say surely that is a joke, people don't pay other people to do podcasts. We'd email them back "Ha ha ha, good one, Chet" and go about our business. Now we are told this is a real thing that real nice people do. Value for value? In today's topsy turvy world? It's madness but that good kind of madness, like when you wake up a 3:15am and clean your house. Or something. In all seriousness, we are humbled by your continued prodding to get a Patreon page up for EHG and here it is! Extra Hot Great on Patreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Emily Yoshida [Night Call podcast](https://audioboom.com/channel/night-call) is back to discuss 1992's demented superhero sequel, Batman Returns. But was this the first movie to notice Christopher Walken talks kind of funny? Is The Penguin's black mouth ooze attractive? Who are your favorite cloud villains? Together they examine the iconic performances from Danny DeVito and Michelle Pfeiffer, Batman as the love interest, parental backlash, and chubby digits. This episode is sponsored by [Brooklinen](https://www.brooklinen.com/) CODE: CHECK; [Joybird](https://joybird.com/blank) and [Stamps.com](https://www.stamps.com/) CODE: CHECK. Check out Emily Yoshida's recent articles for [Vulture](https://www.vulture.com/author/emily-yoshida/)
Episode 19 : Through A Different Lens (2/2) with Emily Yoshida, Sean Corcoran and Donald Albrecht. Production Credits : Hosted by Jason Furlong / Written by Stephen Rigg and Jason Furlong / Theme and original music written and performed by Jason Furlong / Produced and edited by Stephen Rigg
Jessa is joined by Emily Yoshida to discuss Paul Verhoeven's 1987 film RoboCop, the masculinity of the hyper-80s action movie, and the TV dads that followed.---SUBSCRIBE to the #PublicIntellectual #Patreon page to access BONUS CONTENT, EARLY EPISODE RELEASES, SHOW NOTES, MERCH and more: www.Patreon.com/PublicIntellectualPLEASE SUBSCRIBE AND RATE US on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts.PUBLIC INTELLECTUAL IS A FOREVER DOG PODCASThttp://foreverdogproductions.com/fdpn/podcasts/public-intellectual/
Awards Season madness is kicking up dust. This week, Ankler on the Air wades through the smoke with two fearless industry observers: New York Magazine film critic Emily Yoshida and the Ankler’s own Editor-at-Large Jim Gibson. We talk about the madness of the Oscar race, how these decisions go down and what surprises lie ahead […]Join the conversation and comment on this podcast episode: https://ricochet.com/podcast/ankler-richard-rushfield/the-seven-circles-of-awards-season-hell/.Now become a Ricochet member for only $5.00 a month! Join and see what you’ve been missing: https://ricochet.com/membership/.Subscribe to Ankler on the Air in Apple Podcasts (and leave a 5-star review, please!), or by RSS feed. For all our podcasts in one place, subscribe to the Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed in Apple Podcasts or by RSS feed.
Anonymous Trump officials write op-eds for the Times and tell Bob Woodward everything. Kavanaugh perjures himself before the Senate. Cory Booker and Kamala Harris go hard in the hearings. And huge shocker: Fox & Friends doesn't like Colin Kaepernick's Nike ads. Plus Trump officials sound a lot like Real Housewives, Republicans scare voters about socialism, and a lovely, innovative woman dips her chicken fingers in Diet Coke. We are joined by an all-star panel with Kara Brown, Josh Barro, and Emily Yoshida to break down a ton of huge news. WHAT A WEEK.
Emily Yoshida (Night Call podcast) returns to discuss 1997’s bleak drama, The Ice Storm. But what drew Ang Lee to this project? Is ‘HU’ a good shorthand for hook up? Is this one of the top films to portray the winter in the Northeast? Together they discuss key parties, being passed out in a bathroom, reminisce about the nineties and Griffin shares a Elliott Gould tale. This episode is sponsored by [RXBAR](https://www.rxbar.com/check) PROMO: CHECK and [Who? Weekly podcast](https://www.whoweekly.us/). And check out [Blank Check’s wiki!](http://blank-check.wikia.com/wiki/Blank_Check_with_Griffin_and_David_Wiki)
This week and next, we’re doing something different. After witnessing an awful instance of anti-Asian racism at a movie theater, we couldn’t stop thinking about how this type of racism is rampant in American culture, both on the screen and off. At first, we wanted to talk about it. But then, we realized that we needed to listen.For the next two episodes, we hand the microphones over to our Asian-American colleagues, friends and listeners to hear about their experiences with racism. From Pablo Torre (of ESPN) to Emily Yoshida (of Vulture) to Parul Sehgal (of The Times) and more, we hear about childhood traumas, politicization, pop culture and hierarchies of oppression as they relate to Asian-American identity. The ideas are varied and complicated, conflicting and nuanced — which makes sense for a hugely diverse community that makes up almost 6 percent of the American population. We’ll bring you the second part of this two-part series next week.
L'ultimo film di Wes Anderson non convince appieno: Aldo e Federica ne analizzano i motivi. Un articolo per Vulture di Emily Yoshida sull'esperienza di visione del film da parte di spettatori e spettatrici giapponesi: http://www.vulture.com/2018/03/what-its-like-to-watch-isle-of-dogs-as-a-japanese-speaker.html
L'ultimo film di Wes Anderson non convince appieno: Aldo e Federica ne analizzano i motivi.Un articolo per Vulture di Emily Yoshida sull'esperienza di visione del film da parte di spettatori e spettatrici giapponesi: http://www.vulture.com/2018/03/what-its-like-to-watch-isle-of-dogs-as-a-japanese-speaker.html
L'ultimo film di Wes Anderson non convince appieno: Aldo e Federica ne analizzano i motivi.Un articolo per Vulture di Emily Yoshida sull'esperienza di visione del film da parte di spettatori e spettatrici giapponesi: http://www.vulture.com/2018/03/what-its-like-to-watch-isle-of-dogs-as-a-japanese-speaker.html
Join the squad as we journey deep into Area X for our long-awaited discussion of ANNIHILATION! In this episode, we tackle Alex Garland’s trippy adaptation of the Jeff VanderMeer novel, and we ask all of the important questions: What is this film “about”? How does it compare to the book? Does Alex Garland think all relationships take place primarily in bed? Was Oscar Isaac’s accent switch intentional, or is this a Nic Cage in “Con Air” situation? The answers you crave and more lie ahead… just try not to get any Shimmer in your ears.1:23 – What would your job be in Area X?5:47 – Summary and intro 11:58 – Kane and Lena’s relationship13:36 – Is “Annihilation” really just Sailor Moon??24:09 – What is up with Area X? 29:30 – What happens to Josie 33:55 – THE TAPE and weird things happening to people in Area X38:44 – The Bear - Article about the visual effects: https://www.theverge.com/2018/2/28/17059970/annihilation-visual-effects-interview-andrew-whitehurst-bear45:10 – THE END. What does it mean? Emily Yoshida’s article:https://www.vulture.com/2018/02/annihilation-review.html59:58 – Transition to book talk 1:08:20 – The whitewashing controversy 1:14:58 – Ratings and reviews1:24:45 – What’s on the blog?! What’s up next?? Next time on #BSG: A discussion of “No One Is Coming to Save Us” by Stephanie Powell Watts!
Join the squad as we journey deep into Area X for our long-awaited discussion of ANNIHILATION! In this episode, we tackle Alex Garland’s trippy adaptation of the Jeff VanderMeer novel, and we ask all of the important questions: What is this film “about”? How does it compare to the book? Does Alex Garland think all relationships take place primarily in bed? Was Oscar Isaac’s accent switch intentional, or is this a Nic Cage in “Con Air” situation? The answers you crave and more lie ahead… just try not to get any Shimmer in your ears.1:23 – What would your job be in Area X?5:47 – Summary and intro 11:58 – Kane and Lena’s relationship13:36 – Is “Annihilation” really just Sailor Moon??24:09 – What is up with Area X? 29:30 – What happens to Josie 33:55 – THE TAPE and weird things happening to people in Area X38:44 – The Bear - Article about the visual effects: https://www.theverge.com/2018/2/28/17059970/annihilation-visual-effects-interview-andrew-whitehurst-bear45:10 – THE END. What does it mean? Emily Yoshida’s article:https://www.vulture.com/2018/02/annihilation-review.html59:58 – Transition to book talk 1:08:20 – The whitewashing controversy 1:14:58 – Ratings and reviews1:24:45 – What’s on the blog?! What’s up next?? Next time on #BSG: A discussion of “No One Is Coming to Save Us” by Stephanie Powell Watts!
In the final installment of our ‘Paul Verhoeven in Hollywood’ mini series, Emily Yoshida (Night Call Podcast) returns for a special bonus episode on 2016’s pitch black French dramedy, Elle. But what other actresses were considered for the lead role even though Isabelle Huppert is clearly the perfect casting choice? Is this a successful satire of French erotic thrillers according to Griffin’s Mom? Can the video game being designed in the movie be at all entertaining? Together they discuss a connection to 90’s sitcom Friends, the goofy male characters, French sighing and present their Verhoeven filmography rankings. This episode is sponsored by Blue Apron, Stamps.com and HowStuffWorks’ Movie Crush.
On a very sexy edition of #BookSquadGoals, the squad breaks down the new film "Fifty Shades Freed," the so-called "climax" of the Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy. Join us as we discuss the strange plot, the use of ice cream during sex, pop sensation Rita Ora, and the utter lack of chemistry between the film's leads. We take a look at what this franchise gets wrong about BDSM and answer the most important question: Is this movie sexy? Plus, hear what's on the #BookSquadBlog (there's LOTS of great stuff right now!) and learn about our next book for the upcoming full episode, "American War" by Omar El Akkad.0:30 – Intros and why we are now doing 'Othersodes'2:12 – Elizabeth is here—and ratings 11:07 – This is not how publishing works14:20 – Susan’s experience—more reviews!17:00 – Plot (?) summary, and then our much better plot summary24:28 – Pop sensation Rita Ora and how the Grey family seems unrelated 26:07 – What’s a good heist outfit?28:50 – When Mary said WHAT in the theater35:50 - But the acting tho, and the lack of chemistry38:15 – Elizabeth’s filmmaking takes41:33 – Is this movie sexy? Is it interesting?44:00 – Sex and emotional manipulation and BDSM48:20 – Kelli’s least fave parts53:03 – Dream casting57: 20 – Review time!59:35 – Emily Yoshida’s article - http://www.vulture.com/2018/02/fifty-shades-freed-review.html1:10:00 – Shout out to 3 Parks Wineeeee - http://www.3parkswine.com1:12:30 – What’s on the blog? What’s next?Next time on Book Squad Goals: A discussion of Omar El Akkad's "American War."
On a very sexy edition of #BookSquadGoals, the squad breaks down the new film "Fifty Shades Freed," the so-called "climax" of the Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy. Join us as we discuss the strange plot, the use of ice cream during sex, pop sensation Rita Ora, and the utter lack of chemistry between the film's leads. We take a look at what this franchise gets wrong about BDSM and answer the most important question: Is this movie sexy? Plus, hear what's on the #BookSquadBlog (there's LOTS of great stuff right now!) and learn about our next book for the upcoming full episode, "American War" by Omar El Akkad.0:30 – Intros and why we are now doing 'Othersodes'2:12 – Elizabeth is here—and ratings 11:07 – This is not how publishing works14:20 – Susan’s experience—more reviews!17:00 – Plot (?) summary, and then our much better plot summary24:28 – Pop sensation Rita Ora and how the Grey family seems unrelated 26:07 – What’s a good heist outfit?28:50 – When Mary said WHAT in the theater35:50 - But the acting tho, and the lack of chemistry38:15 – Elizabeth’s filmmaking takes41:33 – Is this movie sexy? Is it interesting?44:00 – Sex and emotional manipulation and BDSM48:20 – Kelli’s least fave parts53:03 – Dream casting57: 20 – Review time!59:35 – Emily Yoshida’s article - http://www.vulture.com/2018/02/fifty-shades-freed-review.html1:10:00 – Shout out to 3 Parks Wineeeee - http://www.3parkswine.com1:12:30 – What’s on the blog? What’s next?Next time on Book Squad Goals: A discussion of Omar El Akkad's "American War."
To celebrate the launch of our new podcast Night Call, my February guests are my fellow Night Callers Emily Yoshida and Tess Lynch. Satanism! Antarctic volcanoes! Tess vs. The Northern Lights! Happy Valentine's Day from my sleazy friends to yours.
Because (we imagine) the fans (maybe?) demanded it (really?)... It's an episode focused on Usagi's mother, Ikoku Tsukino! And this is one Mom I'd Like to Find-out-about-the-dreams-of, wouldn't you? We go into this mother along with help from our new friend Emily Yoshida! Your mother should know she can find us on twitter @SailorBusiness or through email at sailorbusinesspodcast@gmail.com! And, as always--thanks for supporting the Sailor Business Patreon... it makes all this possible!
Happy New Years, Trashpiles! What better way to ring it in than keeping your M on some SB? And how about horses? Was you 2017 lacking in horses? This episode is gonna have all the horses you need for the year! We're joined by Emily Yoshida to horse around with Sailor Moon SuperS! Let us know your Sailor Moon horse thoughts on twitter @SailorBusiness or through email at sailorbusinesspodcast@gmail.com! And, as always--thanks for supporting the Sailor Business Patreon... it makes all this possible!
For several generations of rock fans, Weezer's "Blue Album" and its follow-up, "Pinkerton", are foundational albums of adolescence. What is it about Rivers Cuomo's socially awkward anthems that connects with so many misfits? In the wake of a new Weezer album, "Pacific Daydream", Steve called up Vulture movie critic Emily Yoshida to discuss their mutual Weezer phases, and they wound up delving deep into the band's catalogue as well as the intensely emotional highs and lows of teenagerdom. Other topics include: the sorta-Weezer tribute band Ozma, the embarrassing video for "Beverly Hills," and the best Weezer songs to sing at karaoke. This episode, like that bottle of Steven's, is guaranteed to awaken ancient feelings. Support from: ZipRecruiter
Emily Yoshida (Vulture) returns this week to discuss 1995’s neo-noir, Strange Days. But why is Kathryn Bigelow so hardcore? Was Bono a potential candidate for a role in this film? When was Emily’s mother on Wheel of Fortune? Together they discuss Ray Fiennes, Angela Bassett and Juliette Lewis careers, the future of reality television, cage raves and SQUID discs. This episode is sponsored by Mack Weldon.
Matteo, Aldo e Federica hanno visto "Wonder Woman" e ognuno di loro ha un'opinione diversa sulla riuscita o no del film. E avviso ai naviganti: nessuno si faccia ingannare dal fatto che all'inizio si dica “la puntata non ha spoiler” perché gli spoiler iniziano a cadere dopo più o meno tre minuti, senza preavviso. Quindi alzate lo scudo e difendetevi. Federica cita l'articolo di Emily Yoshida su un nuovo (possibile) modo di concepire la struttura di un blockbuster: http://www.vulture.com/2017/06/wonder-woman-what-would-a-feminist-blockbuster-look-like.html E sempre Federica consiglia l'episodio del podcast "How Did This Get Made?" su "Punisher: War Zone" con una lunga intervista alla regista Lexi Alexander, che racconta la genesi e i problemi produttivi del film: http://www.earwolf.com/episode/punisher-war-zone/
Matteo, Aldo e Federica hanno visto "Wonder Woman" e ognuno di loro ha un'opinione diversa sulla riuscita o no del film. E avviso ai naviganti: nessuno si faccia ingannare dal fatto che all'inizio si dica “la puntata non ha spoiler” perché gli spoiler iniziano a cadere dopo più o meno tre minuti, senza preavviso. Quindi alzate lo scudo e difendetevi.Federica cita l'articolo di Emily Yoshida su un nuovo (possibile) modo di concepire la struttura di un blockbuster:http://www.vulture.com/2017/06/wonder-woman-what-would-a-feminist-blockbuster-look-like.htmlE sempre Federica consiglia l'episodio del podcast "How Did This Get Made?" su "Punisher: War Zone" con una lunga intervista alla regista Lexi Alexander, che racconta la genesi e i problemi produttivi del film:http://www.earwolf.com/episode/punisher-war-zone/
Aldo e Federica parlano male di un film del quale si può quasi esclusivamente parlare male, a parte alcuni felici dettagli. Matteo nel frattempo cucina. Durante la puntata abbiamo citato un paio di articoli, come quello in cui Ridley Scott ammette che «Prometheus» è stato un errore: http://www.alien-covenant.com/news/ridley-scott-says-prometheus-was-mistake L'analisi di Emily Yoshida su quei film sull'amicizia femminile “tipo «Persona» di Bergman” http://www.vulture.com/2017/05/persona-and-the-persistent-horror-of-women-alone-together.html I film e le serie tv citate da Federica in puntata sono: "Ex Machina" di Alex Garland (2015) "Queen of Earth" di Alex Ross Perry (2015) "The Girlfriend Experience" di Amy Seimetz e Lodge Kerrigan (serie tv 2016-) "Upstream Color" di Shane Carruth (2013) "Primer" di Shane Carruth (2003) "Eastbound & Down" di Danny McBride/Jody Hill/Ben Best (serie tv 2009-2013) "Vice Principals" di Danny McBride/Jody Hill (serie tv 2016-2017) "The Foot Fist Way" di Jody Hill (2006)
Aldo e Federica parlano male di un film del quale si può quasi esclusivamente parlare male, a parte alcuni felici dettagli. Matteo nel frattempo cucina.Durante la puntata abbiamo citato un paio di articoli, come quello in cui Ridley Scott ammette che «Prometheus» è stato un errore: http://www.alien-covenant.com/news/ridley-scott-says-prometheus-was-mistakeL'analisi di Emily Yoshida su quei film sull'amicizia femminile “tipo «Persona» di Bergman”http://www.vulture.com/2017/05/persona-and-the-persistent-horror-of-women-alone-together.htmlI film e le serie tv citate da Federica in puntata sono:"Ex Machina" di Alex Garland (2015)"Queen of Earth" di Alex Ross Perry (2015)"The Girlfriend Experience" di Amy Seimetz e Lodge Kerrigan (serie tv 2016-)"Upstream Color" di Shane Carruth (2013)"Primer" di Shane Carruth (2003)"Eastbound & Down" di Danny McBride/Jody Hill/Ben Best (serie tv 2009-2013)"Vice Principals" di Danny McBride/Jody Hill (serie tv 2016-2017)"The Foot Fist Way" di Jody Hill (2006)
Il film in live-action del manga di Masamune Shirow, che non regge il confronto con il film di Mamoru Oshii del '95 (e però forse neanche ha senso farlo, questo confronto). È un film altamente dimenticabile, per tutti e tre, che però offre spunti di ragionamento (anche se Matteo avrebbe preferito farli con film migliori).Il pezzo di Emily Yoshida per The Verge citato da Federica:http://www.theverge.com/2016/5/9/11612530/ghost-in-the-shell-anime-asian-representation-hollywood
Molly and Alex welcome Tess Lynch and Emily Yoshida to reassemble Molly's old podcast the Girls In Hoodies for an emergency summit on the state of things.
Griffin and David continue their discussion of Titanic with Emily Yoshida (Spin Magazine) and Katey Rich (Vanity Fair). But are Cameron’s drawings basic? Why is Neil deGrasse Tyson such a star bummer? Could a car really get THAT steamy? Together, they examine Paul Rudd as Jack, the STDs of 1912, CD-rom game Titanic: Adventure Out of Time and theorize why this is a mall movie.
Emily Yoshida (Spin Magazine) and Katey Rich (Vanity Fair) return to discuss 1997’s epic romance Titanic with special guest Charlie “the baby” Rich! Thats right, Blank Check has brought IN the women and children to our podboat to dive deep into some ice-cold analysis. But how important is water in Cameron’s life? What about Bill Paxton’s huge earring? Whats the artist’s name something Picasso? Together they examine Leo mania, the performances of Kate Winslet, Billy Zane, Victor Garber and the panel’s first time seeing this film including a diary entry and private planetarium date.
Ghost in the Shell was groundbreaking, visually and thematically. The 1995 Japanese animated film (or anime) was unapologetically for adults. The story focuses on a cyborg cop whose body is synthetic but her brain is organic. As she chases down a mysterious hacker, Major Motoko Kusanagi grapples with what it means to be alive. When Scarlett Johansson was cast as The Major in the live-action remake, there was an outcry over whitewashing. But the reaction in Japan has been different. Roland Kelts (author of "Japanamerica"), journalist Emily Yoshida and Tufts University professor Susan Napier discuss the racial politics of anime. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Guests Emily Yoshida (The Verge) and J.D. Amato (The Chris Gethard Show) make their return to Blank Check to examine 2008’s Speed Racer. But why does everyone on the panel love this movie and disagree with the criticism it received? How was this film ahead of its time? Should racing involve the financial world? Together, they discuss Spritle and Chim-Chim antics, watching sunday morning cartoons, irony, the amazing special effects and so much more!
Another week of Vergecast and we have SO much to talk about so we extended the episode to 90 minutes…and then some.Mobile World Congress just wrapped up so Nilay, Dieter, and news editor Jake Kastrenakes are here to analyze the coverage. Also, the Oscars are this Sunday so our entertainment section is taking over Vergecast during halftime! Entertainment editor Emily Yoshida leads the discussion with entertainment editor Jamieson Cox, and senior reporter Bryan Bishop. Nicola Fumo commands the hype matrix once again for this show-within-a-show episode of Vergecast! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week on The Vergecast, Dieter Bohn is joined by Emily Yoshida, Nicola Fumo, and Sean O'Kane as the panel checks in for the first time since CES 2016. The topics of discussion include the 2016 Detroit Auto Show, Oscar nominations, and bad tech fashion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Emily Yoshida (The Verge, A/V Club) joins Griffin and David to revisit Episode VII: The Force Awakens. Together, they discuss Emily’s childhood Star Wars fan fiction, an origin story based around a shared love of Beetlejuice, address the Mary Sue controversy and officially announce the podcast renaming! Also, Griffin’s merchandise corner looks at a newly issued Monopoly and presenting Producer Ben’s Sno-corner.
This week on a very special Vergecast, we discuss all things Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Emily Yoshida and Ross Miller will be joined by Bryan Bishop and Tasha Robinson to have a critic's discussion of the new film. Kaitlyn Tiffany will be occupying the hypeseat and will likely interject Hamilton into the discussion. Be warned: there will be spoilers. This is an episode that should be listened to after you see the movie. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
"There's too much television," said FX CEO John Landgraf at the Television Critics Association Summer Press Tour. Landgraf, whose in part responsible for the success of shows like Fargo, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Archer, and The Americans, painted a landscape in which a mountain of good programs impede a wandering audience from discovering the truly great shows. Landgraf has firsthand experience: FX alone produces the aforementioned critical hits, along with The Strain, American Horrors Story, Louie, the upcoming American Crime Story, and plenty of other shows. And that's just one cable channel. Today, Landgraf and his peers compete in battle royal of network, cable, premium, and streaming series, along with additional media like video games and YouTube videos. To break down what TV has become, I invited The Verge's entertainment editor Emily Yoshida to the show. I've been following her reporting on television long before we began working together, and she does an excellent job of keeping Landgraf's claim and the changing world of television in perspective. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We're taking this week off because Chris is deep in the throes of E3. We'll be back with a brand new episode next Tuesday/ But today, we have a special bonus! Verge ESP is a brand new podcast from the Verge where Emily Yoshida and Elizabeth Lopatto find the place where entertainment and science meet. Every two weeks, they discuss the news and interview important people from the worlds of science and entertainment. If you want to hear more of Verge ESP, be sure to subscribe. iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/verge-esp/id999108706 SoundCloud: http://www.soundcloud.com/vergeesp RSS: http://feeds.podtrac.com/0v0iJdmvtGTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week we have a special Google I/O edition of the Vergecast, guest hosted by Ross Miller, Emily Yoshida, Dan Seifert, and Sam Sheffer. They discuss the announcements out of the keynote, including Now on Tap, Photos, Android M, Cardboard, and the fact that Dan cannot tell his own children apart. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The music industry is (and has been) undergoing significant changes. Join Nilay Patel, Micah Singleton, Emily Yoshida, and Sam Sheffer as they discuss Spotify’s expansion, Sony Music’s no-to-secret contract with Spotify, Apple’s upcoming music service, iTunes, and more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's a veritable who's who of podcasting today, as Dieter Bohn takes the Vergecast reigns, and invites Chris Ziegler, Sam Sheffer, Emily Yoshida, and Kwame Opam to The Vergecast. We've got the gold MacBook, the Surface 3, the new Star Wars trailer, and Ryan Gosling's rumored presence in a Blade Runner sequel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Emily Yoshida, Dieter Bohn, Kwame Opam, and Casey Newton are on the ground in Austin, TX for SXSW 2015. They're here to talk about movies, Meerkat, brand activations, and waiting in lines. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Verge's Casey Newton, Emily Yoshida and Bryan Bishop chat about the films of the Sundance Film Festival, the huge steps Oculus is making in the narrative film world, and the unstoppable force of nature that is James Franco. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's a very special episode of The Vergecast. This is David Pierce's final day at The Verge, and as such, we have dressed him as a pirate and forced him to discuss technology, film, and the merits of Snapchat. Nilay Patel wrangles the troops, Sam Sheffer brings the swag, and Emily Yoshida is back from Park City to reflect on Sundance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Verge's Casey Newton, Emily Yoshida and Bryan Bishop chat about the films of the Sundance Film Festival, the huge steps Oculus is making in the narrative film world, and the unstoppable force of nature that is James Franco. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
They said it wasn't possible. They said the show couldn't go on. And yet, here we are, at the fourth and final Vergecast of CES 2015. Send the week off with your friends Nilay Patel, Casey Newton, Nitasha Tiku, and Emily Yoshida. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices