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[E248] We hitch a ride with Jake Swinney on a prisoner transport plane in 1997's Con Air, starring Nicolas Cage, John Malkovich, and John Cusack. WBAM! GUEST: Jacob T. Swinney (@jacobtswinney and @firstfinalframe on Twitter and the First and Final Frames Podcast) E-mail us: weboughtamic@gmail.com Follow WBAM: Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter. (@weboughtamic) Subscribe on Apple Podcasts and leave us a review Twitter: @caldernest / @HuntMobley / @DrewDietzen Letterboxd: letterboxd.com/caldernest / letterboxd.com/hearshot / letterboxd.com/drewd --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/weboughtamic/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/weboughtamic/support
The Chick Fil A power move is to not get fries and just get another sandwich or some tendies.
My buddy Jake Swinney (Host of First & Final Frames Podcast) joins us to discuss prank calling Latarian Milton (that 7 year old who took his grandma's car for a joy ride that went viral in 2008), shitting your pants, getting drunk with Adam McKay, and the Happy Madison Cinematic Universe.
Reed DeLisle and Jacob T. Swinney discuss their thoughts on JOKER.
"It should’ve been left up to the scientists! It’s a colossal mistake! Tell the President I said so!" Michael Crichton’s space disease thriller hit the public at the perfect time – when everyone was afraid of the astronauts accidentally bringing back space viruses upon returning to Earth. Crichton wrote the book in a very pseudo-scientific way that made it feel like more of a scientific documentation of a real happening, and it worked gangbusters for his readers. When Robert Wise decided to adapt it, he opted to treat it the same and make it feel like a documentary. For some, it works better than for others. Join us – Pete Wright and Andy Nelson – as we continue our disease series with Wise’s 1971 thriller The Andromeda Strain. We discuss Crichton, Wise and the adaptation by Nelson Gidding, looking at what works and what doesn’t for us. We chat about the non-stars Wise cast in the film, talking about each of their careers then wondering why their careers weren’t as strong as Gregory Peck’s. We look at the production design and the special effects, enjoying everything they brought to the table, even if they weren’t used to their full potentials or, in many cases, often overused. And we chat about the non-score score by Gil Mellé, sharing opposing views as to what a score like this brings to the table to a film like this. It’s an interesting film that is burdened by Wise’s penchant for including too much of the processes these scientists have to go through, but still one worth talking about. Check the movie out then tune in! Film Sundries Watch this film: iTunes • Amazon Original theatrical trailer Original poster artwork Art of the Title The Andromeda Strain by Michael Crichton Flickchart Letterboxd Andy Gump — Monument Valley First and Final Frames by Jacob T. Swinney Trailers of the Week Andy's Trailer: Inferno — "Okay, it’s Tom Hanks so it’s really a no-brainer for me, and I really enjoyed The Da Vinci Code. I think the character of Langdon is an interesting one and love seeing Hanks portray him." Pete's Trailer: Edge of Winter — "I’m mostly into this for Tom Holland. I’m deeply curious about his portrayal of the upcoming Spider-man, and seeing him in something darker and less… you know… _heroey_before that hits is probably just what we need to feel his establishment on screen."
"It should've been left up to the scientists! It's a colossal mistake! Tell the President I said so!" Michael Crichton's space disease thriller hit the public at the perfect time – when everyone was afraid of the astronauts accidentally bringing back space viruses upon returning to Earth. Crichton wrote the book in a very pseudo-scientific way that made it feel like more of a scientific documentation of a real happening, and it worked gangbusters for his readers. When Robert Wise decided to adapt it, he opted to treat it the same and make it feel like a documentary. For some, it works better than for others. Join us – Pete Wright and Andy Nelson – as we continue our disease series with Wise's 1971 thriller The Andromeda Strain. We discuss Crichton, Wise and the adaptation by Nelson Gidding, looking at what works and what doesn't for us. We chat about the non-stars Wise cast in the film, talking about each of their careers then wondering why their careers weren't as strong as Gregory Peck's. We look at the production design and the special effects, enjoying everything they brought to the table, even if they weren't used to their full potentials or, in many cases, often overused. And we chat about the non-score score by Gil Mellé, sharing opposing views as to what a score like this brings to the table to a film like this. It's an interesting film that is burdened by Wise's penchant for including too much of the processes these scientists have to go through, but still one worth talking about. Check the movie out then tune in! Film Sundries Watch this film: iTunes • Amazon Original theatrical trailer Original poster artwork Art of the Title The Andromeda Strain by Michael Crichton Flickchart Letterboxd Andy Gump — Monument Valley First and Final Frames by Jacob T. Swinney Trailers of the Week Andy's Trailer: Inferno — "Okay, it's Tom Hanks so it's really a no-brainer for me, and I really enjoyed The Da Vinci Code. I think the character of Langdon is an interesting one and love seeing Hanks portray him." Pete's Trailer: Edge of Winter — "I'm mostly into this for Tom Holland. I'm deeply curious about his portrayal of the upcoming Spider-man, and seeing him in something darker and less… you know… _heroey_before that hits is probably just what we need to feel his establishment on screen."
Gerade noch auf dem Jakobsweg und schon wieder vor dem Mikrofon im Podcast Studio. So schnell kann das gehen. Leider habe ich es vor 14 Tage nicht geschafft den Podcast auf der Strecke zu machen. Da fehlte mir dann doch irgendwie die Power. Das war dann zu viel. Gut seine Grenzen zu kennen und zu erkennen. Da ich also noch mit frischen Erinnerungen vom Jakobsweg zurück bin, macht es Sinn 10 Punkte, die ich auf dem Weg für das Marketing und das Unternehmertum gelernt habe zusammenzufassen. Ich persönlich habe extrem viel gelernt. Mal sehen, was ihr über meine Punkte denkt. Wer nicht gesehen hat, dass ich auf dem Jakobsweg pilgern war, der kann sich meinen Trip hier nochmal anschauen. Aber mal schön der Reihe nach. Blogthema SISTRIX übernimmt SEOlytics und ich weiß nicht, ob es nicht doch einen Verlierer dabei gibt. Schön zu sehen, dass es neutral kommuniziert wurde. Sehr erwachsen. Webinare oder Video? Schnelle Sales oder indirekte Verkäufe über Marke und Mund-zu-Mund? 9 Filmmaking Channels auf Video den man folgen sollte: Documentary Films, Film School, Fat Lab, Jacob T. Swinney, MPC, Burger Fiction, Everything animated, Philip Bloom, Independent filmmakers Google testet bunte Links (vornehmlich wohl schwarze) Reife Meinungsleistung von Michael Schöttler zur TACTIXX Hauptthema 10 (Marketing) Dinge, die ich auf dem Jakobsweg gelernt habe * Mach dein Ding! * Formate lernen durch MACHEN * Social Media Umgang lernen (Gespür entwickeln) * Abschalten ja, aber wo ist der AN-Schalter? * Community Building als Königsdisziplin * Rituale, Kleinigkeiten und USPs * Externe Meinungen provozieren, einholen und bewerten * Sehnsüchte und Trends erkenn und WIRKLICH was mit machen * Wirtschaftlichkeit erzeugen * Nicht im eigenen Saft hängen bleiben, sondern immer in Bewegung bleiben Eventtipps Barcamp Berlin am 21./22.05.2016 Affiliate Stammtisch Leipzig am 09.06.2016