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Agents Scott and Cam hear the call of the wild and go barking mad as they close out the Cats & Dogs trilogy with 2010's The Revenge of Kitty Galore and 2020's Paws Unite. The Revenge of Kitty Galore - Directed by Brad Peyton. Starring Bette Midler, Chris O'Donnell, Jack McBrayer, James Marsden, Nick Nolte, Christina Applegate, Katt Williams, Neil Patrick Harris, Sean Hayes, Wallace Shawn, Joe Pantoliano and Roger Moore. Paws Unite - Directed by Sean McNamara. Starring Melissa Rauch, Max Greenfield, George Lopez, Callum Seagram Airlie, Sarah Giles, Lauren K. Robek, John Murphy and Paul Dobson. Become a SpyHards Patron and gain access to top secret "Agents in the Field" bonus episodes, movie commentaries and more! Purchase the latest exclusive SpyHards merch at Redbubble. Social media: @spyhards View the NOC List and the Disavowed List at Letterboxd.com/spyhards Podcast artwork by Hannah Hughes Theme music by Doug Astley.
Podketeers - A Disney-inspired podcast about art, music, food, tech, and more!
To all who come to this wacky place, welcome! Quizneyland is your land. Here Andrew quizzes you on questions from the past… and here you may learn bits of trivia you may use in the future. Quizneyland is dedicated to the ideas, dreams, and hard facts that have created the Disney Company… with hopes that it will be a source of fun and information for all the world! Subscribe using your favorite podcast app or listen using the link below: Listen to Quizneyland at Podketeers.com/Quizneyland
Whether it's Sean Connery, Roger Moore or others portraying James Bond, or Tom Cruise as Ethan Hunt in the "Mission: Impossible" film series, we find ourselves sucked into the world of espionage thanks to the spy genre of television shows and movies. In this week's episode of Streamed & Screened, hosts Bruce Miller and Terry Lipshetz have a brief discussion of the genre to set up a conversation with Guy Pearce, the star of "Spy Among Friends," a limited series available now on MGM+. Read more: Guy Pearce, Damian Lewis ponder betrayal with 'Spy Among Friends' About the show Streamed & Screened is a podcast about movies and TV hosted by Bruce Miller, a longtime entertainment reporter who is now the editor of the Sioux City Journal in Iowa and Terry Lipshetz, a senior producer for Lee Enterprises based in Madison, Wisconsin. Episode transcript Note: The following transcript was generated by Podium.page and may contain misspellings and other inaccuracies as it was generated automatically: 0:00:03Welcome everyone to another episode of streamed and screened in an entertainment podcast about movies and TV from Lee Enterprises. I'm Terry Lipshetz, a senior producer at Lee and cohost of the program with Bruce Miller, editor of the Sioux City Journal and a longtime entertainment reporter. Bruce, I I wanna pass you a note. I've got some secrets. Do you have any secrets? Can you share anything? Yeah. Send me a text. Okay? That might be the best. 0:00:28In the old days, you know, spies were so much different because they would sit on a park bench and they pass an envelope between each other. Right? Right? Now it's like we're hacking into systems and we're going to we always you notice how they always have that clock that counts down until the file is uploaded, and it's like, oh, is it gonna happen? Is it gonna happen? Well, there, all you had to worry about was did somebody grab the envelope or are you just letting it go? So it is a different world. 0:00:57And there's a new mini series or limited series, whatever you wanna call it, that has been airing in Great Britain already, and it got huge reviews. They loved it over there. It's called a spy among friends. And we're getting it now on MGM Plus. And it is the the sort of true story of Kim Philby. You probably have never heard of Kim Philby at all. But he was a traitor to Great Britain. He was a spy, but he was getting information from Russia. And when they found out that he was defecting to Russia, they sent his friend to try and talk to him about all of this. And, like, would you keep this information? I don't know how I could ever be a spy because I talk too much. And I think I I would tell too much. But that your your best friend could not guess that you were gonna be a traitor. And, you know, wouldn't you have dropped some kind of message about this? I find that just really hard to believe. Yeah. But but yeah. And that was a big scandal in the sixties. And people remember the name Kim Philby because he was this trader who went to Russia. And he was very well known. Today, it doesn't graze the radar. People really don't know who he is, or who his friends were. 0:02:17But the film, which kind of looks at the class system that's very popular in Great Britain, tries to explain all of that by that because there was a group of young man who thought that they were if you will, better than other people because they went to the right schools, they had the right majors, they had the right connections, their parents were probably somebody. And as Damian Lewis says, they dabbled in communism. And so they thought that this was kind of a cool thing that we could do, and they wouldn't be caught for anything like this. Well, Kim Philby, didn't just dabble. He was doing a little bit more with all of that. And I got a chance to talk to Guy Pierce who plays Kim and he was talking about acting acting and acting as a spy. How much acting is involved with all of that? Do you really Do you feel you need to pretend all the time? And he said this class system is something that kind of it didn't matter. You didn't have to do that because they just accepted whatever you were doing was just temporary, and they were allowed to do that. And he and the the creator of the series, Alexander Carey, talk about how this is kind of important again today. Because we're seeing a class system that's being created in just all parts of the world, where some people think they're above the law, and they don't have to worry about consequences. And then others who don't don't seem to be able to catch a break no matter what. That's fascinating. 0:04:00What's your general thought on on spy movies and TV shows in general? Do you do you enjoy them? Do you get sucked in? Oh, you know it. I I it's strange how something like James Bond has changed so drastically. Because in those early days, you know, with Sean Connery, maybe Roger Moore, who didn't they did a lot of things that was they they were just conversational. That's how they got their information. And then they started getting all those toys. And then they started having gadgets and, you know, I mean, come on. Where do you find all this stuff? And how would you be able to create all this? And then you have all these kind of inched people. How do you keep anything from somebody else that they wouldn't know? Today, it's so over the top. Look at how, you know, it takes several years for somebody like Tom Cruise to make one of his spy films. So it's a it's a different game. I think it's changed. But I think they suck you in all the time because you always wonder That was the bad guy. I'm not really sure I know who the bad guy is. 0:05:06Did you see the spy a couple years ago. That was the one. It starred Sasha Baron Cohen, you know, who everybody knows is Borr at, but he did a really serious take He played Eli Cohen, who's a Israeli, and he was spying in the nineteen sixties. And ultimately was caught, but it was the the true life story and it was a very serious role for him. But it was a real fascinating look into into espionage. 0:05:36Could you be a spy? I thought about it. I I think I could. Really? Yeah. I don't know how you do that in school, where you say, alright, I'd like to go on the spy track, please. Could I please take those classes that are necessary for that? I I couldn't. I know I couldn't. Because the I mean, I can keep a secret, but I don't think I could like the Americans, I don't know I could do what they did, where you just suddenly assume new identities and live among people for years, and then you're kind of trying to get a little bit of information out to the others. I don't know that I could do that. At some point, I would break. 0:06:12And I think where they always go wrong with these kinds of films is they have families. Right. And I think a true spy has no connections. That's why you see James Bond as such a good spy. Because he always seems to be a loner. Once they get him with somebody, then it becomes, uh-oh, I've got to worry about somebody killing this person. You know, to get to me. So if you're as bi, you should be a loner. It never worked out well for for James Bond in those movies because he would he would either meet someone and they would end up dead or they would end up turning on him. 0:06:51Well, could you imagine that this day if you were, like, googling pussy galore, I think it's a reminder. I think it's a reminder. You know, they in when that movie became out, they released trading cards for that movie. Did you say that? No. Because I I wasn't born back numbers, but but they changed the name of that character to Kitty Galore because we couldn't we couldn't go that. It's a little too dirty for the kids back in the sixties. So, yeah, that that was always kind of fun, Goldfinger. But, yeah, I I don't know if I could be a spy. 0:07:29Like, it it always sounds cool, but then you think about, well, you got all these crazy secrets. You can't settle down with the family. Somebody's gonna keep a secret in your own house. If you get kids, come on. They don't have work. They do. Right? 0:07:43I always wonder too when watching things like mission impossible. You know, that that that this recording will self destruct in ten seconds. But it it goes up in flames. Nobody notices that. Nobody sees this, like, flaming package that's sitting next to you on the train and and it does it not set off as smoke alarm? 0:08:02You know, for many years, studios would send out DVDs of their films. And they would disintegrate. I mean, after you had watched it once, you couldn't watch it again. And they always said, well, that's how they should have done that stuff. Because a tape recorder that's burning yeah. That's not gonna happen. Not a problem. That might that might raise a couple of red flags. 0:08:25Well, and you could never rerun. You know, you never could go back and look at a scene again. You saw once. It's on your computer. That's it. It's done. Now you can go back to screening lengths and go back and see things if you wanna look at the more than once. 0:08:39But yeah. So the spy world? No. The the best best thing about me is I couldn't remember anything because I think I've learned so much in my lifetime. There's so much crap in my head. That we have to we have to empty the trash at some point to try and remember these things. So if you put me under oath and had a lie detector and everything hooked up, I'd be good because I couldn't remember a darn thing that you'd told me. 0:09:04Does did Guy Pierce talk about at all? Like, how he how he researched for this. Yes. You're using. He did. And and that's that's in the interview. I want you to listen to the interview, you know, talk to some of the kind of research he did. And how it would kind of work for him? How he would be as a if he could be a spy? So there's a lot of interesting things there. I think you should unpack it. It's not that long. 0:09:29We have Guy Pierce and Alexander Carey talking about a spy among friends. Can a spy really have a friend? I think I think friendship is the main currency of of spies. I think that I think I think I mean, it's a good question because on one side of the relationship, yes, that question is pertinent. On the other one, it's pertinent in a different in completely the opposite way. Yeah. It it just it struck me as if I were a spy, I would not be friendly with anybody. I would just let it go. But there also is an element of acting that's involved. And Guy, would you make a good spy? Well, look, I I may make a good spy, you know, on the surface, but I mean, of course, I can work as an actor on screen but it's never a life or death situation. I don't know how I'd I don't know how if I've got the Hutzpa to to, you know, act as well when I know that there are lives or countries or at stake. So probably not, I think, is the answer. 0:10:40How does spies operate today when there's just so many ways that the truth could come out? Is it a a whole different world and what? Because the the sixties is kind of a a a real romantic period at at least for spies. Well, you're I think in the sixties, human intelligence, in other words, human to human getting information in sort of bars and on park benches and all the rest of it was a reality. And and was the the the the the main way of of getting and passing information these days. There's a lot more of sort of cyber espionage and all the rest of it. And I think you'll find that in various intelligence agencies. There are also still two factions. You know, there's the there's the one that goes, well, human intelligence is really the only the way that you're gonna get the definitive stuff or the stuff that's gonna be, you know, keep on giving. And then there are people who are gonna go, no. Let's just put a drone up. So so So, you know, they're very different these days. But Yeah. But that's the friendship thing. The friendship thing is important for a spy. Yeah. It doesn't seem as much fun, but maybe I'm wrong, never been a spy, can't can't weigh in. 0:11:52Guy, how much did you read about him before you actually started doing this? Did you know much about him or not? I didn't know a lot. No. I mean, I'd seen a couple of films that had been made and I'd seen a documentary once about the Cambridge five. So I didn't know a lot. I knew of Kim Filby, of course, but knew no detail about about him really and certainly knew nothing about this relation it between he and Nicholas Elliott. 0:12:17I read a number of books before we started and through the course of making the show. One in particular, I think, was a was a helpful piece, which was written by Eleanor, his third wife, his American wife, the wife that he was with in Beirut when he when he left. She wrote a book that that that looked at some of the letters between the two of them, you know, that published the letters between the two of them through that time. So there was something personal and human about the way she wrote. And so that was an interesting little way in for me into into Filby. But, yeah, I read I read bits and pieces of all sorts of things before we started. But of course, I always would would come back to the the script. 0:13:07And at a certain point, I find I have to sort of let the let the research material go. Were there things you could relate to? And did you like him at all or not? I never know the answer to the liking question because whilst making I'm so in I'm so embedded in into him that I lose myself in a way. So it's not necessarily that I have then have an opinion of him. I'm I'm I'm so sort of, yeah, lost in trying to just become and understand him. I think the bigger question is is is whether I understand him and and, you know, I'm that's what I'm searching to do through the process and and, you know, you can probably only understand any character, you know, this much at the best of times when you're dealing with someone like Philby, you can probably only understand him this this much because he's a mystery to everybody. So it was a complex and challenging process. Yeah. Well, thank you. Both it's been so exciting to watch this unfold. And I'm just playing dumb through the whole thing. I'm not I'm not looking ahead to find out anything. I don't wanna know anything, but it is fascinating. It's a a different world, a different time. So thank you so much. Thank you very much. Thanks, Bruce. Nice to meet you. Alright, Bruce. Thanks for that interview. A fascinating discussion there. 0:14:37Did you get to talk to anybody else from that Phils from that series. Who is who plays the friend that, you know, has to try and talk to this Kim Philsby. I did get to talk to him. And I do have a story Maybe you can add a link to this. And if you don't wanna read, you'll see some more stuff from him about this whole project. But it's a six part limited series on MGM plus. And, Eric, could you do anything this next week that I worry about? I'll know you're a spy. Sounds good, Bruce. So we'll have a link to that article in the show notes of this episode. And otherwise, we will see you next week with another episode of streamed and screamed. Have a great one.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On the film Club Jay, Ju and Deeps watch one film from the IMDB top and bottom 250 List and review it...This weeks films are Gone Girl and Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore
Who was the man with that grassy little mole? This week Abigail and Michelle watched the Cats and Dogs sequel so you don't have to. They take a quick dive into the films logic holes, voice actors, and Michelle's love of infrastructure
dog jail dog jail dog jail dog jail
Behind Closed Doors host Sasja Sydek interviews a closed friend of Kitty Galore who just found out about Kitty's sex work. Listen to their discussion on what his opinion is on sex work and explores any emotion of shock. Sasja also follows up with Kitty's reflections.
Greg and Tom interview the Cinematographer Steven Poster and discuss his work as DP on such classic films as "Donnie Darko", "Strange Brew" and his work as camera operator on "Bladerunner" "Close Encounters of the third kind" and many more films. And for the animal lovers in the audience we talk about his work with animals on "Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore " as well as an Elephant and Giraffe on "Big Top Pee-wee" We also talk about his role while President of the ICG local# 600 (International Cinematographers Guild) and his work with the ACS (American Cinematographers Society) We also get into some discussions about Film and Digital along with Steven's love for still photography and black and white work.Steven Poster's BIOSteven Poster was born and raised In Chicago, and was first interested in still photography. He studied at Southern Illinois University, Los Angeles Art Center College of Design, and the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology. He first filmed commercials and documentaries. He then worked on "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" and "Blade Runner". He is currently filming "Une Chance Sur Deux" in France under French director Patrice Leconte. He currently lives in Los Angeles.Links that Steven mentions on the show.Scriptation Go Paperless On SetMark up scripts, transfer notes, save hours of prep with Hollywood's must-have app for production.ShotDeck ShotDeck is an invaluable research and educational resource that makes life easier for anyone in Film, Media, Advertising, and Education.Podcast intro music:Kamihamiha! - Alien Warfare Stems by Kamihamiha (c) copyright 2020 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/Kamihamiha/60882End music from CC Jay Music Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial (3.0) license.the bird sounds are natural (in Steven's backyard)Helicopter noise courtesy of the "Everyday Sounds" of Los AngelesPodcast ©2021 King Dyro ProductionsMovie Reviews and Serious Nonsense is a King Dyro Production
The Three Act Thirsty boys join The Men to discuss blink-182’s titular Dogs Eating Dogs along with the 2010 family comedy Cats & Dogs: The Revenge Of Kitty Galore. Along this journey they theorize about Joe Biden’s anonymous Reddit account, pick their favorite blink lyric, and perform a symphony of Ray Romano impressions.
Micah Sierra "Katt" Williams (born September 2, 1971) is an American stand-up comedian, actor, rapper, singer, and voice actor. He had a role as Money Mike in Friday After Next, had a stint on Wild 'n Out, portrayed Bobby Shaw in My Wife and Kids, provided the voice of A Pimp Named Slickback in The Boondocks, Seamus in Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore, and portrayed Lord Have Mercy in Norbit. In 2008, he voiced himself in the video game Grand Theft Auto IV. Subscribe to our new LOL Comedy Showcase YouTube Channel at: https://bit.ly/31y1Krf Become a Sponsor of this podcast with a monthly donation of $1 or more. All donations are appreciated. You can also support this podcast by subscribing to your YouTube channel. It costs nothing. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lol-comedy-showcase/support
FOR MATURE AUDIENCES ONLY! Let’s Go Little Kitty Kat! T&A talk with “romance consultant”, aka The Kitty Galore, Joi, and sex therapist, Cheryl about #WAP, whips, and you can get WHAT for $3000?! Follow Relatively Unstable and T&Ahttps://www.facebook.com/RelativelyUnstableTA/https://www.instagram.com/relativelyunstable_ta/https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCL0T-6ZE9DcrrzZAkLDwAEQ Follow The Kitty Galorehttps://www.instagram.com/thekittygalore_/https://www.facebook.com/TheeKittyGalore/kittygalore@gmail.comthekittygalore.com (coming soon) Follow Cheryl Walkerhttps://www.realsextherapytalk.com/https://www.instagram.com/realsextherapytalk/https://www.facebook.com/Real-Sex-Therapy-Talk-118666372875586/https://twitter.com/RealSexTherapyJaded Sex, the podcast Podcasts apps:Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSoundcloudSpotifyiHeartRadioStitcherPodcast AddictPodchaser This media content is for entertainment purposes only. The contents of any posts, episodes or comments do not constitute medical or professional advice, do not reflect the opinions of any company, any of its parent companies, affiliates, subsidiaries, promotional sponsors, or advertising agencies, and do not create any type of patient-physician relationship or other professional relationship between the audience and presenters. No person viewing any content from this website should act or refrain from acting on the basis of the content within without first seeking appropriate professional advice and/or counseling, nor shall the information be used as a substitute for professional advice and/or counseling. The owners of this content – Tiffani Langford, Andrea Williams, and any guests – expressly disclaims any and all liability relating to any actions taken or not taken based on any or all contents of any posts. This is a personal media outlet. We make no representations as to accuracy, completeness, correctness, suitability, or validity of any information on this site and will not be liable for any errors, omissions, or delays in this information or any losses, injuries or damages arising from its display or use. All information is the consumer’s responsibility to verify their own facts. The views and opinions expressed in this outlet are those of the hosts and do not reflect the official policy or position of any other agency, organization, employer or company. Assumptions made in dialogue or writing are not reflective of the position of any entity other than the hosts, and are subject to change at any time. Please do not hold us to them in perpetuity. Comments on this outlet are the sole responsibility of their owners and their owners will take full responsibility, liability, and blame for any libel or litigation that results from something written or verbalized as a direct result of any content or comments posted. The hosts are not to be held responsible for misuse, reuse, recycled and citations within this outlet. WE DO NOT OWN THE RIGHTS TO ANY MUSIC HEARD WITHIN OR IN THE BACKGROUND OF THIS MEDIA.Our content is directed to persons eighteen (18) years of age and older. We do not knowingly collect personally identifiable information from children under thirteen (13) years of age. If you are younger than thirteen (13), please do not submit any information to the own
2/26/20, the boys pay homage to Katt Williams, side note where is he at #amberalert... The info about him online is hella obscure but we did our best... Micah Sierra "Katt" Williams[1][2][3] (born September 2, 1971)[1][4] is an American stand-up comedian, actor, rapper,[5] singer, and voice actor. He had a role as Money Mike in Friday After Next, had a stint on Wild 'n Out, portrayed Bobby Shaw in My Wife and Kids, provided the voice of A Pimp Named Slickback in The Boondocks, Seamus in Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore, and portrayed Lord Have Mercy in Norbit. In 2008, he voiced himself in the video game Grand Theft Auto IV. #29DaysOfBlackHistory *Putting People On Game does not own any rights to this music or images* Hit us up or send us a text 214-744-3601! Subscribe to PPOGPOD channel ► LIKE, COMMENT and SHARE ► WATCH MORE: Youtube ► SUBSCRIBE and LISTEN to full episode on Apple Podcast ► SUBSCRIBE and LISTEN to full episode on Spotify ► FOLLOW PPOGPOD on Instagram ► FOLLOW PPOGPOD Twitter ► LIKE PPOGPOD on Facebook ► FOLLOW and LISTEN to PPOGPOD on AudioMack
Has the creative team written themselves into a cul de sac? This episode we continue our round-up of all the latest news and interviews for No Time To Die since principal photography wrapped, digging in to some of the more contentious issues that have popped up in recent weeks. Along the way, we discuss an MIA composer, underscored scenes, Kitty Galore, bad dubbing options, a BMW switcheroo, retirement planning, Bill's Sisyphean task, and whether the attempts to appease sections of the audience may end up leaving everyone unsatisfied. The recording took place on November 15th in the UK, USA, and Spain. James Page is co-founder of MI6-HQ.com and the magazine MI6 Confidential John Clark (AKA HaphazardStuff) runs the aptly named haphazardstuff.com Calvin Dyson Reviews Bond channel can be enjoyed at youtube.com/calvindyson Joseph Darlington is Head of Section at beingjamesbond.com David Leigh runs thejamesbonddossier.com Bill Koenig runs the Spy Command at hmssweblog.wordpress.com This podcast is copyright Pretitles LLC © 2019 Music credit 'Spy & Die' by Jay Man
Victorian State MP, David Limbrick of the Liberal Democrats, joins Kitty Galore and Dean Lim to discuss Sex Work Lawsand the need for decriminalisation. Please note 3CR and Behind Closed Doors in no way endorses the Liberal Democrats Party.This was an unpaid interview. The words and thoughts expressed by David Limbrick are his own.
EPISODE 157 - Lights, Camera, Barstool(VOTE FOR ALL 2019 MOVIES IN LINKS BELOW)0:00 – Mick Jagger Austin Powers || 6:19 – Golf and Outback Steakhouse || 9:55 – Jeopardy! and Maury Povich || 11:36 – Dark Phoenix is BRUTAL (?) || 13:50 – Mick Jagger Dave Matthews Silver Surfer || 15:08 - Ford v Ferrari trailer || 20:05 – Pixar's Onward trailer || 25:04 – Rambo: Last Blood trailer || 30:21- The Kitchen trailer || 33:45 – Beyonce's Lion King voice revealed || 35:23 – Revenge of Kitty Galore and Homeward Bound || 40:18 – Scary Stories To Tell… trailer || 44:59 – Outback Steakhouse || 45:32 – Discussing Apple's announcements || 49:25 – Marvel wants Keanu for The Eternals || 52:00 – Idris Elba as Bronze Tiger in Suicide Squad? || 53:31 – Breaking down The Rock's cheat day || 58:17 – Live-action Snow White progressing || 1:01:08 – Fox wanted Deadpool/X-Men/Fantastic Four movie || 1:02:49 – Godzilla 2 with a really bad opening || 1:07:31 – Liam Neeson not in Kingsman prequel || 1:10:59 – MATTHEW VAUGHN (KINGSMAN, KICK-ASS, ROCKETMAN) INTERVIEW || 1:39:18 – BOOKSMART REVIEW (SPOILERS) || 1:56:24 – GaryVee, Pokémon and high school classes
CHECK OUT POP CULTURE VULTURE►https://goo.gl/tN6PT3 CHECK OUT OUR MERCH► https://teespring.com/stores/cult-popture Joined by Nadezhda Sim, AKA Pop Culture Vulture, this week our boys are discussing the lost-to-the-ages family film CATS & DOGS and it's completely unwarranted distant sequel CATS & DOGS: THE REVENGE OF KITTY GALORE LIKE US ON FACEBOOK ► goo.gl/9EFEIa FOLLOW US ON TWITTER ► goo.gl/tuixnW SUBSCRIBE TO US ON YOUTUBE ► goo.gl/ITdEhK EMAIL US AT ► cultpopturemedia@gmail.com FOLLOW US ON SOUNDCLOUD ► goo.gl/s6egEh FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM ► goo.gl/1rrpH7 VISIT THE WEBSITE ► www.cultpopture.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Contance Fox returns to have a one-on-one intimate conversation with Fish about G-Force and Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore. They also discuss sad holidays, and the availability of a particularly exotic cuisine. Theme song I dunno by grapes Ft: J Lang, Morusque dig.ccmixter.org/files/grapes/16626 (c) 2008 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license.
We play with the format again as we tackle another film with an animal protagonist. Andrew tries to get Tom to watch this turd. Chris O’Donnell’s sad this entire movie. No one wanted to come back for this movie. Who the hell is Kitty Galore?
Are most Star Wars movies bad? Where does The Secret Life of Pets fit on the animation landscape? Does anyone care about these movies any more? All that and more on this episode of Talking During the Movie.
Welcome to another fun-filled episode of Movie B.S. with Bayer and Snider. The boys talk about “Dinner for Schmucks” starring Paul Rudd and Steve Carell. They agree on most things, especially Carell stealing the show. “Charlie St. Cloud” with Zac Efron is not awful. Surprising, isn’t it? Snider sat through “Cat and Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore” and didn’t mind it. But then all things turned to “Eureka” with special guest star Jaime Paglia. He’s the executive producer and writer of the Syfy show in its fourth season. We talk James Callis, Wil Wheaton and what goes into making the show. Plus, Paglia joins the boys in “Pitch Me.” The QOTW for next week’s show is “Favorite Cop Movie.” Email your answers to moviebspdx@gmail.com
Movie Meltdown - Episode 86.1 This week we welcome listener and new member of the gang, Greg to sit in and bear witness to our usual level of ridiculousness. And a good portion of that ridiculousness revolves around… Extract, Piranha 3D, Criminal Minds, MGM financial woes, GattiLand, Step Up 3D, Rowlf the Dog is a lot like the Predator, zombie baby!, Machete, there’s a lot of singing in the dystopian future, painfully becoming a grown-up, The Guild, Youth in Revolt, we had the best allotment of trailers - possibly ever!, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, can you fit that much awesome in a movie?, forcing kids to watch Fellini, futuristic percussion poetry, reminiscing about Showgirls, The Expendables, Chris Hansen vs.The Predator, Saoirse Ronan, The Little Mermaid = Splash > AquaMarine, stunt men, double you pleasure, double your Mad max reboots, playing Mystery Date, James Bond 23, Beverly Hills Chihuahua, The Apple, Jean Smart?, Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore, hating on The Lovely Bones, The Fall Guy and as if we didn’t already know Bryan was going to hell…he’s sealed his fate this episode with possibly the most tasteless comment we’ve ever made. “Why can’t more shows be like Alf?“
When a movie needs a little more ‘cattitude’ or must unleash some canine goofiness, movie moguls often turn to our special guest, Christopher Lennertz. This award-winning music composer creates the mood with just the right tempo, tone and use of instruments on such popular movies as Marmaduke, 101 Dalmatians, Free Willy 2, Alvin and the Chipmunks and the upcoming 3-D Cats & Dogs: Revenge of Kitty Galore (premieres July 30). Lennertz happily shares how his work has bee influenced by a pair of four-legged music muses -- his pets who include a liver-spotted Dalmatian named Miles Davis and a very chatty cat named Loca. Definitely tune in to this special episode of Oh Behave! More details on this episode MP3 Podcast - Emmy-Nominated Christopher Lennertz is a Howling Success as a Music Composer for Popular Movies and More with Arden Moore