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In this week's episode, I take a look back at the movies and streaming shows I watched in Summer 2025. This coupon code will get you 50% off the audiobook of Ghost in the Serpent, Book #1 in the Ghost Armor series, (as excellently narrated by Hollis McCarthy) at my Payhip store: FALLSERPENT50 The coupon code is valid through September 15, 2025 (please note the shorter expiration date). So if you need a new audiobook this fall, we've got you covered! TRANSCRIPT 00:00:00 Introduction and Writing Updates Hello, everyone. Welcome to Episode 267 of The Pulp Writer Show. My name is Jonathan Moeller. Today is September 5, 2025 and today I'm doing a review roundup of the movies and streaming shows I saw in Summer 2025. Before we do that, we will have Coupon of the Week and a progress update on my current writing and audiobook projects. First up, this week's coupon code will get you 50% off the audiobook of Ghost in the Serpent, Book One in the Ghost Armor series (as excellently narrated by Hollis McCarthy) at my Payhip store. That is FALLSERPENT50. This coupon code will be valid through September 15th, 2025 (exactly one week). So if you need a new audiobook to listen to as we head into fall, we have got you covered. Now for an update on my current writing and audiobook projects. I am pleased to report that the rough draft of Blade of Flames, which will be the first book in my new Blades of Ruin epic fantasy series is finished. The rough draft came at about 90,000 words long, which was what I was aiming for. Next up, I will be writing a short story set as sort of a bonus in that plot line called Thunder Hammer and that will be the backstory of one of the characters in Blade of Flames. And when Blade of Flames comes out (which will hopefully be later this September), newsletter subscribers will get a free ebook copy of Thunder Hammer. So this is an excellent time to subscribe to my newsletter. I am also 8,000 words into Cloak of Worlds. At long last, I am coming back to the Cloak Mage series after nearly a year's absence. Longtime listeners will know the reason was that I had five unfinished series and I wanted to spend the summer of 2025 finishing the unfinished ones and focusing up so I will only have three ongoing series at any given time. I'm hoping Blade of Flames will come out before the end of September and Cloak of Worlds before the end of October, and after that I will be able to return to the Rivah series at long last. In audiobook news, recording is finished on Shield of Power. That will be excellently narrated by Brad Wills and hopefully once it gets through processing and quality assurance and everything, it should be showing up on the various audiobook stores before too much longer. Hollis McCarthy is about halfway through the recording of Ghost in the Siege, which was, as you know, the last book in the Ghost Armor series that just came out. And if all goes well, the audiobook should be coming out probably in October once everything is done with recording and quality assurance and all that. So that is where I'm at with my current writing and audiobook projects. 00:02:34 Main Topic: Summer 2025 Movie/TV Roundup So without further ado, let's head into our main topic. The end of summer is nigh, which means this time for my summer movie review roundup. As is usual for the summer, I saw a lot of movies, so this will be one of the longer episodes. For some reason I ended up watching a bunch of westerns. As always, the movies are ranked from least favorite to most favorite. The grades of course are totally subjective and based on nothing more than my own opinions, impressions, and interpretations. Now on to the movies. First up is the Austin Powers trilogy, the three movies of which came out in 1997, 1999, and 2002. The Austin Powers movies came out just as the Internet really got going in terms of mass adoption, which is likewise why so many Austin Powers and Dr. Evil memes are embedded in online culture. Despite that, I had never really seen any of them all the way through. They've been on in the background on TBS or whatever quite a bit when I visited people, but I've never seen them all. But I happened upon a DVD of the trilogy for $0.25 (USD), so I decided for 25 cents I would give it a go. I would say the movies were funny, albeit not particularly good. Obviously the Austin Powers movies are a parody of the James Bond movies. The movies kind of watch like an extended series of Saturday Night Live skits, only loosely connected, like the skit is what if Dr. Evil had a son named Scott who wasn't impressed with him or another skit was what if a British agent from the ‘60s arrives in the ‘90s and experiences culture clash? What if Dr. Evil didn't understand the concept of inflation and demanded only a million dollars from the United Nations? What if Dr. Evil was actually Austin's brother and they went to school together at Spy Academy? Michael Caine was pretty great as Austin's father. Overall, funny but fairly incoherent. Overall grade: C- Next up is Horrible Bosses, a very dark and very raunchy comedy from about 14 years ago. It came out in 2011. Interestingly, this movie reflects what I think is one of the major crises of the contemporary era, frequent failures of leadership at all levels of society. In the movie Nick, Dale, and Kurt are lifelong friends living in LA and all three of them have truly horrible bosses in their place of employment, ranging from a sociopathic finance director, the company founder's cokehead son, and a boorish dentist with a tendency to sexual harassment. At the bar, they fantasize about killing their horrible bosses and then mutually decide to do something about it. Obviously, they'd all be prime suspects in the murder of their own bosses, but if they killed each other's bosses, that would allow them to establish airtight alibis. However, since Nick, Dale and Kurt are not as bright as they think they are, it all goes hilariously wrong very quickly. Bob Hope has a hilarious cameo. If the best “crude comedies” I've seen are Anchorman, Zoolander, Tropic Thunder, and Dodgeball, and the worst one was MacGruber, I'd say Horrible Bosses lands about in the middle. Overall grade: C Next up is Cowboys and Aliens, which came out in 2011. Now I almost saw this in 2011 when it came out, but I was too busy to go to the theater in July of 2011, so I finally saw it here in 2025 and I would say this was almost a great movie, like the performances were great, the concept was great, the scenery was great, the special effects were great, and the story was packed full of really interesting ideas, but somehow they just didn't coalesce. I'm not entirely sure why. I think upon reflection, it was that the movie is just too overcrowded with too many characters and too many subplots. Anyway, Daniel Craig portrays a man who wakes up with no memory in the Old West, with a mysterious bracelet locked around his wrist. He makes his way to the town of Atonement, and promptly gets arrested because he is apparently a notorious outlaw (which he doesn't remember). While he is locked in jail, space aliens attack the town. The aliens, for unknown reasons, abduct many of the townspeople, and Daniel Craig's character, who is named Jake even if he doesn't remember it, must lead the town's effort to recover their abducted citizens. Harrison's Ford has an excellent performance as this awful cattle baron who nonetheless has virtues of courage and fortitude that you can't help but admire. An excellent performance. That said, the movie was just too packed, and I thought it would work better as a novel. After I watched the movie, it turned out that it was indeed based off a graphic novel. Novels and graphic novels allow for a far more complex story than a movie, and I don't think this movie quite managed to handle the transition from a graphic novel to a film. Overall grade: C Next up is Heads of State, which came out in 2025. This was kind of a stupid movie. However, the fundamental question of any movie, shouted to the audience by Russell Crow in Gladiator is, “are you not entertained?!?” I was thoroughly entertained watching this, so entertained I actually watched it twice. Not everything has to be Shakespeare or a profound meditation on the unresolvable conflicts inherent within human nature. Anyway, John Cena plays Will Derringer, newly elected President of the United States. Idris Elba plays Sam Clark, who has now been the UK Prime Minister for the last six years. Derringer was an action star who parleyed his celebrity into elected office (in the same way Arnold Schwarzenegger did), while Clarke is an army veteran who worked his way up through the UK's political system. Needless to say, the cheerful Derringer and the grim Clarke take an immediate dislike to each other. However, they'll have to team up when Air Force One is shot down, stranding them in eastern Europe. They'll have to make their way home while evading their enemies to unravel the conspiracy that threatens world peace. So half action thriller, half buddy road trip comedy. The premise really doesn't work if you think about it too much for more than thirty seconds, but the movie was funny and I enjoyed it. Jack Quaid really stole his scenes as a crazy but hyper-competent CIA officer. Overall grade: C+ Next up, Captain America: Brave New World, which came out in 2025 and I think this movie ended up on the good side of middling. You can definitely tell it went through a lot of reshoots and retooling, and I suspect the various film industry strikes hit it like a freight train. But we ended up with a reasonably solid superhero thriller. Sam Wilson is now Captain America. He's not superhuman the way Steve Rogers was and doesn't have magic powers or anything, so he kind of fights like the Mandalorian – a very capable fighter who relies on excellent armor. Meanwhile, in the grand American political tradition of failing upward, Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross, who spent years persecuting The Hulk and whose meddling caused the Avengers to disband right before Thanos attacked, has now been elected President. To Wilson's surprise, Ross reaches out and wants him to restart the Avengers. But Ross (as we know) did a lot of shady black ops stuff for years, and one of his projects is coming back to haunt him. Wilson finds himself in the middle of a shadowy conspiracy, and it's up to him to figure out what's going on before it's too late. I was amused that lifelong government apparatchik Ross wanted to restart the Avengers, because when the Avengers had their biggest victory in Avengers: Endgame, they were essentially unsanctioned vigilantes bankrolled by a rogue tech billionaire. Overall grade: B- Next up is Ironheart, which came out in 2025. I'd say Ironheart was about 40% very weird and 60% quite good. It's sort of like the modern version of Dr. Faustus. The show got some flak on the Internet from the crossfire between the usual culture war people, but the key to understanding it is to realize that Riri Williams AKA Ironheart is in fact an antihero who's tottering on the edge of becoming a full-blown supervillain. Like Tony Stark, she's a once-in-a-generation scientific talent, but while she doesn't have Stark's alcohol problems, she's emotionally unstable, immature, ruthless, indifferent to collateral damage and consequences, and suffering from severe PTSD after her best friend and stepfather were killed in a drive-by shooting. This volatile mix gets her thrown out of MIT after her experiments cause too much destruction, and she has to go home to Chicago. To get the funds to keep working on her Iron Man armor, she turns to crime, and falls in with a gang of high-end thieves led by a mysterious figure named Hood. It turns out that Hood has actual magic powers, which both disturbs and fascinates Riri. However, Hood got his magic in a pact with a mysterious dark force. When a job goes bad, Riri gains the enmity of Hood and has to go on the run. It also turns out Hood's dark master has become very interested in Riri, which might be a lot more dangerous for everyone in the long run. Overall, I'd say this is about in the same vein as Agatha All Along, an interesting show constructed around a very morally questionable protagonist. Overall grade: B Next up is A Minecraft movie, which came out in 2024. I have to admit, I've never actually played Minecraft, so I know very little about the game and its ecosystem, only what I've generally absorbed by glancing at the news. That said, I think the movie held together quite well, and wasn't deserving of the general disdain it got in the press. (No doubt the $950 million box office compensated for any hurt feelings.) One of the many downsides of rapid technological change in the last fifty years is that the Boomers and Gen X and the Millennials and Gen Z and Gen Alpha have had such radically different formative experiences in childhood that it's harder to relate to each other. Growing up in the 1980s was a wildly different experience than growing up in the 2010s, and growing up in the 2010s was an even more wildly different experience than growing up in the 1960s. Smartphones and social media were dominant in 2020, barely starting in 2010, and implausible science fiction in 2000 and earlier, and so it was like the different generations grew up on different planets, because in some sense they actually did. (A five-year-old relative of mine just started school, and the descriptions of his school compared to what I remember of school really do sound like different planets entirely.) The Minecraft game and A Minecraft Movie might be one of those generation-locked experiences. Anyway, this has gotten very deep digression for what was essentially a portal-based LitRPG movie. A group of people experiencing various life difficulties in a rural Idaho town get sucked into the Minecraft world through a magic portal. There they must combine forces and learn to work together to master the Minecraft world to save it from an evil sorceress. As always, the fundamental question of any movie is the one that Russell Crowe's character shouted to the audience in Gladiator back in 2000. “Are you not entertained?” I admit I was entertained when watching A Minecraft Movie since it was funny and I recognized a lot of the video game mechanics, even though I've never actually played Minecraft. Like, Castlevania II had a night/day cycle the way Minecraft does, and Castlevania II was forty years ago. But that was another digression! I did enjoy A Minecraft Movie. It was kind of crazy, but it committed to the craziness and maintained a consistent creative vision, and I was entertained. Though I did think it was impressive how Jack Black's agent managed to insist that he sing several different times. Overall grade: B Next up is Back to School, which came out in 1986 and this is one of the better ‘80s comedies I've seen. Rodney Dangerfield plays Thornton Melon, who never went to college and is the wealthy owner of a chain of plus-sized clothing stores. His son Jason is attending Great Lakes University, and after Thornton's unfaithful gold-digging wife leaves him (Thornton is mostly relieved by this development), he decides to go visit his son. He quickly discovers that Jason is flailing at college, and decides to enroll to help out his son. Wacky adventures ensue! I quite enjoyed this. The fictional “Great Lakes University” was largely shot at UW-Madison in Wisconsin, which I found amusing because I spent a lot of time at UW-Madison several decades ago as a temporary IT employee. I liked seeing the characters walk past a place where I'd eat lunch outside when the day was nice, that kind of thing. Also, I'm very familiar with how the sausage gets made in higher ed. There's a scene where the dean is asking why Thornton is qualified to enter college, and then it cuts to the dean cheerfully overseeing the groundbreaking of the new Thornton Melon Hall which Thornton just donated, and I laughed so hard I almost hurt myself, because that is exactly how higher ed works. The movie had some pointless nudity, but it was only a few seconds and no doubt gets cut in network broadcasts. Overall grade: B Next up is Whiskey Galore, which came out in 1949 and this is a comedy set in Scotland during World War II. The villagers living on an isolated island have no whiskey due to wartime rationing. However, when a government ship carrying 50,000 cases of whiskey runs aground near the island, wacky hijinks ensue. I have to admit the first half of the movie was very slow and deliberate, gradually setting up all the pieces for later. Then, once the shipwreck happens, things pick up and the movie gets much funnier. Definitely worth watching both as a good comedy movie and an artifact of its time. A modicum of historical knowledge is required – if you don't know what the Home Guard is, you might have to do some Googling to understand the context of some of the scenes. Regrettably, the version I watched did not have captioning, so I had to pay really close attention to understand what the characters were saying, because some of the accents were very strong. Overall grade: B Next up is Happy Gilmore 2, which came out in 2025. This was dumb and overstuffed with celebrity cameos but thoroughly hilarious and I say this even though it uses one of my least favorite story tropes, namely “hero of previous movie is now a middle age loser.” However, the movie leads into it for comedy. When Happy Gilmore accidentally kills his wife with a line drive, he spirals into alcoholism and despair. But his five children still love him, and when his talented daughter needs tuition for school, Happy attempts to shake off his despair and go back to golf to win the money. But Happy soon stumbles onto a sinister conspiracy led by an evil CEO to transform the game of golf into his own personal profit center. Happy must team up with his old nemesis Shooter McGavin to save golf itself from the evil CEO. Amusingly, as I've said before, the best Adam Sandler movies are almost medieval. In medieval fables, it was common for a clever peasant to outwit pompous lords, corrupt priests, and greedy merchants. The best Adam Sandler protagonist remains an everyman who outwits the modern equivalent of pompous lords and corrupt priests, in this case an evil CEO. Overall grade: B+ Next up is Superman, which came out in 2025 and I thought this was pretty good and very funny at times. I think it caught the essential nature of Superman. Like, Superman should be a Lawful Good character. If he was a Dungeons and Dragons character, he would be a paladin. People on the Internet tend to take the characterization of superheroes seriously to perhaps an unhealthy degree, but it seems the best characterization of Superman is as an earnest, slightly dorky Boy Scout who goes around doing good deeds. The contrast of that good-hearted earnestness with his godlike abilities that would allow him to easily conquer and rule the world is what makes for an interesting character. I also appreciated how the movie dispensed with the overused trope of the Origin Story and just got down to business. In this movie, Lex Luthor is obsessed with destroying Superman and is willing to use both super-advanced technology and engineered geopolitical conflict to do it. Superman, because he's essentially a decent person, doesn't comprehend just how depraved Luthor is, and how far Luthor is willing to go out of petty spite. (Ironically, a billionaire willing to destroy the world out of petty spite is alas, quite realistic). Guy Gardener (“Jerkish Green Lantern”) and the extremely competent and the extremely exasperated Mr. Terrific definitely stole all their scenes. The director of the movie, James Gunn, was quite famously fired from Disney in 2018 for offensive jokes he had made on Twitter back when he was an edgy young filmmaker with an alcohol problem. I suppose Mr. Gunn can rest content knowing that Superman made more money than any Marvel movie released this year. Overall grade: A- Next up is Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, which came out in 1988. This was a very strange movie, but nonetheless, one with an ambitious premise, strong performances, and a strong artistic vision. It's set in post WWII Los Angeles, and “toons” (basically cartoon characters) live and work alongside humans. Private eye Eddie Valiant hates toons since one of them killed his brother five years ago. However, he's hired by the head of a studio who's having trouble with one of his toon actors, Roger Rabbit. Roger's worried his wife Jessica is having an affair, and Valiant obtains pictures of Jessica playing patty cake (not a euphemism, they actually were playing patty cake) with another man. Roger has an emotional breakdown, and soon the other man winds up dead, and Roger insists he's innocent. Valiant and Roger find themselves sucked into a dangerous conspiracy overseen by a ruthless mastermind. This movie was such an interesting cultural artifact. It perfectly follows the structure of a ‘40s film noir movie, but with cartoons, and the dissonance between film noir and the cheerfulness of the toons was embraced and used as a frequently source of comedy. In fact, when the grim and dour Valiant uses the toons' comedy techniques as a tactical improvisation in a moment of mortal peril, it's both hilarious and awesome. Christopher Lloyd's performance as the villainous Judge Doom was amazing. (I don't think it's a spoiler to say that he's villainous, because his character is named Judge Doom and he's literally wearing a black hat.) Like, his performance perfectly captures something monstrous that is trying very hard to pretend to be human and not quite getting it right. And the amount of work it must have taken to make this movie staggers the mind. Nowadays, having live actors interact with cartoon characters is expensive, but not unduly so. It's a frequent technique. You see it all the time in commercials when a housewife is smiling at an animated roll of paper towels or something, and Marvel's essentially been doing it for years. But this was 1988! Computer animation was still a ways off. They had to shoot the movie on analog film, and then hand-draw all the animation and successfully match it to the live film. It wouldn't have worked without the performance of Bob Hoskins as Eddie Valiant, who plays everything perfectly straight in the same way Michael Caine did in A Muppet Christmas Carol. So kind of a strange movie, but definitely worth watching. And it has both Disney and Warner Brothers animated characters in the same movie, which is something we will never, ever see again. Overall grade: A Next up is K-Pop Demon Hunters, which came out in 2025. Like Who framed Roger Rabbit?, this is a very strange movie, but nonetheless with a clear and focused artistic vision. It is a cultural artifact that provides a fascinating look into a world of which I have no knowledge or interest, namely K-pop bands and their dueling fandoms. Anyway, the plot is that for millennia, female Korean musicians have used the magic of their voices to keep the demons locked away in a demon world. The current incarnation is a three-woman K-Pop group called Huntrix, and they are on the verge of sealing away the demons forever. Naturally, the Demon King doesn't like this, so one of his cleverer minions comes up with a plan. They'll start a Demon K-Pop Boy Band! Disguised as humans, the demon K-Pop group will win away Huntrix's fans, allowing them to breach the barrier and devour the world. However, one of the Huntrix musicians is half-demon, and she starts falling for the lead demon in the boy band, who is handsome and of course has a dark and troubled past. Essentially a musical K-drama follows. I have to admit I know practically nothing about K-Pop groups and their dueling fandoms, other than the fact that they exist. However, this was an interesting movie to watch. The animation was excellent, it did have a focused vision, and there were some funny bits. Overall grade: A Next up is Clarkson's Farm Season Four, which came out in 2025. A long time ago in the ‘90s, I watched the episode of Frasier where Frasier and Niles attempt to open a restaurant and it all goes horribly (yet hilariously) wrong. At the time, I had no money, but I promised myself that I would never invest in a restaurant. Nothing I have seen or learned in the subsequent thirty years has ever changed that decision. Season 4 of Clarkson's Farm is basically Jeremy Clarkson, like Frasier and Niles, attempting to open a restaurant, specifically a British pub. On paper it's a good idea, since Clarkson can provide the pub with food produced from his own farm and other local farmers. However, it's an enormous logistical nightmare, and Clarkson must deal with miles of red tape, contractors, and a ballooning budget, all while trying to keep his farm from going under. An excellent and entertaining documentary into the difficulties of both the farming life and food service. I still don't want to own a restaurant! Overall grade: A Next up is Tombstone, which came out in 1993. The Western genre of fiction is interesting because it's limited to such a very specific period of time and geographical region. Like the “Wild West” period that characterizes the Western genre really only lasted as a historical period from about 1865 to roughly 1890. The Western genre was at its most popular in movies from the 1940s and the 1960s, and I wonder if it declined because cultural and demographic changes made it unpopular to romanticize the Old West the way someone like Walt Disney did at Disneyland with “Frontierland.” Of course, the genre lives on in different forms in grittier Western movies, neo-Westerns like Yellowstone and Longmire, and a lot of the genre's conventions apply really well to science fiction. Everyone talks about Firefly being the first Space Western, but The Mandalorian was much more successful and was basically a Western in space (albeit with occasional visits from Space Wizards). Anyway! After that long-winded introduction, let's talk about Tombstone. When Val Kilmer died earlier this year, the news articles mentioned Tombstone as among his best work, so I decided to give it a watch. The plot centers around Wyatt Earp, played by Kurt Russell, who has decided to give up his career in law enforcement and move to Tombstone, Arizona, a silver mining boomtown, in hopes of making his fortune. However, Tombstone is mostly controlled by the Cowboys outlaw gang, and Earp is inevitably drawn into conflict with them. With the help of his brothers and Doc Holliday (Val Kilmer's character), Earp sets out to bring some law and order to Tombstone, whether the Cowboys like it or not. Holliday is in the process of dying from tuberculosis, which makes him a formidable fighter since he knows getting shot will be a less painful and protracted death than the one his illness will bring him. Kilmer plays him as a dissolute, scheming warrior-poet who nonetheless is a very loyal friend. Definitely a classic of the Western genre, and so worth watching. Overall grade: A Next up is Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning, the eighth Mission Impossible movie. Of the eight movies, I think the sixth one was the best one, but this one comes in at a close second. It continues on from Dead Reckoning. Ethan Hunt now possesses the key that will unlock the source code of the Entity, the malicious AI (think ChatGPT, but even more obviously evil) that is actively maneuvering the world's nuclear powers into destroying each other so the Entity can rule the remnants of humanity. Unfortunately, the Entity's source code is sitting in a wrecked Russian nuclear sub at the bottom of the Bering Sea. Even more unfortunately, the Entity knows that Hunt has the key and is trying to stop him, even as the Entity's former minion and Hunt's bitter enemy Gabriel seeks to seize control of the Entity for himself. A sense of apocalyptic doom hangs over the movie, which works well to build tension. Once again, the world is doomed, unless Ethan Hunt and his allies can save the day. The tension works extremely well during the movie's underwater sequence, and the final airborne duel between Hunt and Gabriel. I don't know if they're going to make any more Mission Impossible movies after this (they are insanely expensive), but if this is the end, it is a satisfying conclusion for the character of Ethan Hunt and the Impossible Mission Force. Overall grade: A Next up is Deep Cover, which came out in 2025. This is described as a comedy thriller, and I didn't know what to expect when I watched it, but I really enjoyed it. Bryce Dallas Howard plays Kat, a struggling comedy improv teacher living in London. Her best students are Marlon (played by Orlando Bloom), a dedicated character actor who wants to portray gritty realism but keeps getting cast in tacky commercials, and Hugh (played by Nick Mohammed), an awkward IT worker with no social skills whatsoever. One day, the three of them are recruited by Detective Sergeant Billings (played by Sean Bean) of the Metropolitan Police. The Met wants to use improv comedians to do undercover work for minor busts with drug dealers. Since it plays 200 pounds a pop, the trio agrees. Of course, things rapidly spiral out of control, because Kat, Marlon, and Hugh are actually a lot better at improv than they think, and soon they find themselves negotiating with the chief criminals of the London underworld. What follows is a movie that is both very tense and very funny. Kat, Marlon, and Hugh are in way over their heads, and will have to do the best improv of their lives to escape a very grisly fate. Whether Sean Bean dies or not (as is tradition), you will just have to watch the movie and find out. Overall grade: A Next up is Puss in Boots: The Final Wish, which came out in 2022. I don't personally know much about the history of Disney as a corporation, and I don't much care, but I do have several relatives who are very interested in the history of the Disney corporation, and therefore I have picked up some by osmosis. Apparently Disney CEO Michael Eisner forcing out Jeffrey Katzenberg in the 1990s was a very serious mistake, because Katzenberg went on to co-found DreamWorks, which has been Disney's consistent rival for animation for the last thirty years. That's like “CIA Regime Change Blowback” levels of creating your own enemy. Anyway, historical ironies aside, Puss in Boots: The Final Wish was a funny and surprisingly thoughtful animated movie. Puss in Boots is a legendary outlaw and folk hero, but he has used up eight of his nine lives. An ominous bounty hunter who looks like a humanoid wolf begins pursuing him, and the Wolf is able to shrug off the best of Puss In Boots' attacks. Panicked, Puss hides in a retirement home for elderly cats, but then hears rumors of the magical Last Wish. Hoping to use it to get his lives back, Puss In Boots sets off on the quest. It was amusing how Little Jack Horner and Goldilocks and the Three Bears were rival criminal gangs seeking the Last Wish. Overall grade: A Next up is Chicken People, which came out in 2016. A good documentary film gives you a glimpse into an alien world that you would otherwise never visit. In this example, I have absolutely no interest in competitive chicken breeding and will only raise chickens in my backyard if society ever collapses to the level that it becomes necessary for survival. That said, this was a very interesting look into the work of competitive chicken breeding. Apparently, there is an official “American Standard of Perfection” for individual chicken breeds, and the winner of the yearly chicken competition gets the title “Super Grand Champion.” Not Grand Champion, Super Grand Champion! That looks impressive on a resume. It is interesting how chicken breeding is in some sense an elaborate Skinner Box – like you can deliberately set out to breed chickens with the desirable traits on the American Standard of Perfection, but until the chickens are hatched and grow up, you don't know how they're going to turn out, so you need to try again and again and again… Overall grade: A Next up is The Mask of Zoro, which came out in 1998. I saw this in the theatre when it came out 27 years ago, but that was 27 years ago, and I don't have much of a memory of it, save that I liked it. So when I had the chance to watch it again, I did! Anthony Hopkins plays Diego de la Vega, who has the secret identity of Zorro in the final days before Mexico breaks away from the Spanish Empire. With Mexico on the verge of getting its independence, Diego decides to hang up his sword and mask and focus on his beloved wife and daughter. Unfortunately, the military governor Don Montero realizes Diego is Zorro, so has him arrested, kills his wife, and steals his baby daughter to raise as his own. Twenty years later, a bandit named Alejandro loses his brother and best friends to a brutal cavalry commander. It turns out that Montero is returning to California from Spain, and plans to seize control of California as an independent republic (which, of course, will be ruled by him). In the chaos, Diego escapes from prison and encounters a drunken Alejandro, and stops him from a futile attack upon the cavalry commander. He then proposes a pact – Diego will train Alejandro as the next Zorro, and together they can take vengeance upon the men who wronged them. This was a good movie. It was good to see that my taste in movies 27 years ago wasn't terrible. It manages to cram an entire epic plot into only 2 hours and 20 minutes. In some ways it was like a throwback to a ‘40s movie but with modern (for the ‘90s) production values, and some very good swordfights. Overall grade: A Next up is Wick is Pain, which came out in 2025. I've seen all four John Wick movies and enjoyed them thoroughly, though I've never gotten around to any of the spinoffs. Wick is Pain is a documentary about how John Wick went from a doomed indie movie with a $6.5 million hole in its budget to one of the most popular action series of the last few decades. Apparently Keanu Reeves made an offhand joke about how “Wick is pain” and that became the mantra of the cast and crew, because making an action movie that intense really was a painful experience. Definitely worth watching if you enjoyed the John Wick movies or moviemaking in general. Overall grade: A The last movie I saw this summer was Game Night, which came out in 2016. It was a hilarious, if occasionally dark comedy action thriller. Jason Bateman and Rachel McAdams play Max and Annie Davis, a married couple who are very competitive and enjoy playing games of all kinds. Jason has an unresolved conflict with his brother Brooks, and one night Brooks invites them over for game night, which Max resents. Halfway through the evening, Brooks is kidnapped, with Max and Annie assume is part of the game. However, Brooks really is involved in something shady. Hilarity ensues, and it's up to Max and Annie to rescue Brooks and stay alive in the process. This was really funny, though a bit dark in places. That said, Max and Annie have a loving and supportive marriage, so it was nice to see something like that portrayed on the screen. Though this also leads to some hilarity, like when Annie accidentally shoots Max in the arm. No spoilers, but the punchline to that particular sequence was one of the funniest things I've ever seen. Overall grade: A So no A+ movie this time around, but I still saw a bunch of solid movies I enjoyed. One final note, I have to admit, I've really come to respect Adam Sandler as an entertainer, even if his movies and comedy are not always to my taste. He makes what he wants, makes a lot of money, ensures that his friends get paid, and then occasionally takes on a serious role in someone else's movie when he wants to flex some acting muscles. I am not surprised that nearly everyone who's in the original Happy Gilmore who was still alive wanted to come back for Happy Gilmore 2. So that is it for this week. Thank you for listening to The Pulp Writer Show. I hope you found the show enjoyable and perhaps a guide to some good movies to watch. A reminder that you can listen to all the back episodes at https://thepulpwritershow.com. If you enjoyed the podcast, please leave a review on your podcasting platform of choice. Stay safe and stay healthy and see you all next week.
The story goes that Little Jack Horner put his thumb in a pie and pulled out a plum. Similarly, our own Andy, Flask, Greg, John, and Vito put their thumbs down and plumb an episode of ARK: Survival Ascended, WH40K: Darktide, ANEURISM IV, The Roottrees Are Dead, Psycho Patrol R, Adventure Time, George A. Romero's Resident Evil, some orange goo, Split Fiction, Invincible S03, Game Informer's resurrection, the latest Nintendo Direct, and more. 0:00 - Intro 1:31 - Greg (Roundtable) 1:50 - ARK: Survival Ascended 8:03 - Battlefield 1 12:01 - John (Roundtable) 12:07 - Cyberpunk 2077 15:18 - WH40K: Darktide 20:31 - Andy (Roundtable) 20:35 - ANEURISM IV 29:22 - Kingdom Come: Deliverance II 32:03 - The Roottrees Are Dead 38:30 - Psycho Patrol R 45:36 - The goo-filled stress ball pops 47:15 - Flask (Roundtable) 47:46 - Adventure Time 53:05 - George A. Romero's Resident Evil 57:36 - Phil Tippett: Mad Dreams and Monsters 1:00:21 - The Roundup series 1:06:00 - That's a lot of orange goo 1:07:40 - BREAK Do a little dance, and make the good dance 1:09:16 - Vito (Roundtable) 1:09:37 - The Finals 1:10:37 - Split Fiction 1:13:12 - Kingdom Come: Deliverance II 1:13:16 - Invincible S03 1:13:56-1:18:23 - Spoilers 1:19:16 - Lorelei and the Laser Eyes 1:28:14 - NEWS 1:28:26 - Game Informer is back 1:30:17 - Bam Margera will be in THPS 3+4 1:32:32 - Nintendo Direct 3/27/25 1:45:33 - Outro Find out more at https://broken-campfire.pinecast.co
The Language of Longears - Meredith HodgesTimes have changed, which presents new challenges in working with your animals.Learn how to work with your mule.Video your progress when possible.Animals will mirror you and react to what your body is telling them.Become sensitive to the needs of your animals.Working with a coach may not work for you and your mule. Meredith discovered her donkey, Little Jack Horner had gone deaf; his training program was then adapted to his needs. This and more on Mule Talk! #longears, #muletraining, #donkeytraining, #horsetraining, #meredithhodges, #luckythreeranch, #cindykroberts, #muletalkMule Talk is on Facebook - Mule Talk is an Every Cowgirl's Dream production - www.EveryCowgirlsDream.Com
It's Christmastime again, and we are back with another Xmas themed movie episode, featuring Arthur Howell from the 2 Cents Critic Podcast! Karyn has guested on Arthur's pod a couple of times (check those episodes out!) so the girls are excited to have him on their show to discuss 2008's “Four Christmases”, starring Reese Witherspoon and Vince Vaughn! It's a favorite of Karyn's and a not-so-favorite of Arthur and Aubree's... Other things discussed include (but are not limited to): Hollywood Bad Guys, Aubree's childhood version of the Little Jack Horner poem, and the fact that Karyn thought Santa Claus might be her real dad. Join in the fun and be sure to have a happy holiday and check out Arthur's Show!
Big Dipper and Meatball talk about the art of the fart, their upcoming live shows, and the process of buying in bulk with reusable containers. They also listen to your voicemails and relive some gay thievery, as well as celebrate the release of Big Dipper's new music video “Club Go Up.” (Finally)Watch “Club Go Up” here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLzBFza2G1c Listen to Sloppy Seconds Ad-Free AND One Day Early on MOM PlusCall us with your sex stories at 213-536-9180!Or e-mail us at sloppysecondspod@gmail.comFOLLOW SLOPPY SECONDSFOLLOW BIG DIPPERFOLLOW MEATBALLSLOPPY SECONDS IS A FOREVER DOG AND MOGULS OF MEDIA (M.O.M.) PODCAST Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Big Dipper and Meatball talk about the art of the fart, their upcoming live shows, and the process of buying in bulk with reusable containers. They also listen to your voicemails and relive some gay thievery, as well as celebrate the release of Big Dipper's new music video “Club Go Up.” (Finally) Watch “Club Go Up” here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLzBFza2G1c Listen to Sloppy Seconds Ad-Free AND One Day Early on MOM Plus Call us with your sex stories at 213-536-9180! Or e-mail us at sloppysecondspod@gmail.com FOLLOW SLOPPY SECONDS FOLLOW BIG DIPPER FOLLOW MEATBALL SLOPPY SECONDS IS A FOREVER DOG AND MOGULS OF MEDIA (M.O.M.) PODCAST Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Notre critique du film "Le Chat Potté 2" éalisé par Januel P. Mercado et Joel Crawford avec les voix de Boris Rehlinger et Diane Dassigny. Regardez l'émission sur YOUTUBE : https://bit.ly/3nm7Oy9 --- Titre : Le Chat Potté 2 Sortie : 7 décembre 2022 De : Januel P. Mercado et Joel Crawford Avec : Boris Rehlinger et Diane Dassigny. Synopsis : Le Chat Potté découvre que sa passion pour l'aventure et son mépris du danger ont fini par lui coûter cher : il a épuisé huit de ses neuf vies, et en a perdu le compte au passage. Afin de retomber sur ses pattes notre héros velu se lance littéralement dans la quête de sa vie. Il s'embarque dans une aventure épique aux confins de la Forêt Sombre afin de dénicher la mythique Etoile à vœu, seule susceptible de lui rendre ses vies perdues. Mais quand il ne vous en reste qu'une, il faut savoir faire profil bas, se montrer prudent et demander de l'aide. C'est ainsi qu'il se tourne vers son ancienne partenaire et meilleure ennemie de toujours : l'ensorcelante Kitty Pattes De Velours. Le Chat Potté et la belle Kitty vont être aidés dans leur quête, à leur corps bien défendant, par Perro, un corniaud errant et galleux à la langue bien pendue et d'une inaltérable bonne humeur. Ensemble ils tenteront de garder une longueur d'avance sur la redoutable Boucles D'Or et son gang des Trois Ours, véritable famille de mafieux, mais aussi sur Little Jack Horner devenu bien grand, ou encore sur le chasseur de primes le plus féroce du coin : Le Loup. Bande-annonce : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwiLlB-hIFQ #CINECAST #Podcast
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 602, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: "California" Songs 1: "Though East Coast girls are hip," the Beach Boys wished "'they all could be" these. "California Girls". 2: The Eagles' top-selling single that begins "on a dark desert highway". "Hotel California". 3: "All the leaves are brown and the sky is gray," it is 1966, and the Mamas and the Papas are doing this. "California Dreamin'". 4: Albert Hammond's sadly inaccurate weather presumption: 'cause "it pours, man. It pours". "It Never Rains In Southern California". 5: In this 1924 song, Al Jolson, born in Russia, claimed the West Coast was "right back where I started from". "California, Here I Come". Round 2. Category: "Little" 1: We're never told what this "good boy" did with his thumb or the plum once he pulled them from the pie. Little Jack Horner. 2: Ursa Minor. little bear. 3: If your wife is a member of N.O.W., you'd probably never introduce her as this. the little woman. 4: Now a Los Angeles newscaster, she was Miss America in 1976. Tawny Little. 5: A young quahog suitable for eating raw. littleneck clam. Round 3. Category: Battles 1: The American Revolution began in April 1775 with the battles of these 2 Massachusetts towns. Lexington and Concord. 2: This battle fought in Maryland in 1862 was the bloodiest single day of the Civil War. Antietam. 3: England's King Harold II lost the all-important Battle of Hastings in this year. 1066. 4: The Battles of Missolonghi and Navarino helped win this country its independence from Turkey. Greece. 5: "2 ships, 2 brigs, 1 schooner and 1 sloop" were the fleet defeated in this battle in the War of 1812. the Battle of Lake Erie. Round 4. Category: Movie Crossword Clues "G" 1: Steve and Ali made one, before Kim and Alec(7). Getaway. 2: They "Prefer Blondes"(9). Gentlemen. 3: It precedes "Canyon", "Hotel" and "Theft Auto"(5). Grand. 4: "Luminous" Boyer and Bergman classic(8). Gaslight. 5: Oddjob's master (10). Goldfinger. Round 5. Category: Native Americana 1: The well-meant Dawes Act of 1887 divided these Indian areas into individual parcels of land. Reservations. 2: Mahicans lived along the Hudson; Mohegans lived in Connecticut; Mohicans were created by this author. James Fenimore Cooper. 3: The name of this soft leather Native American shoe comes from an Algonquin word. a moccasin. 4: This English word comes from a Delaware name for a turtle. Terrapin. 5: The Crow are known for their ceremonial costumes with unique beadwork and dyed quills from these. porcupines. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia! Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 589, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Island Countries 1: It takes up an entire continent. Australia. 2: In 1998 Pope John Paul II concluded his visit to this country with a mass at the Plaza de la Revolucion. Cuba. 3: Its national anthem, "San-Min-Chu-I", was co-written by Dr. Sun Yat-sen. Taiwan. 4: "Please, Sir, I want" this Polynesian island that dropped "Western" from its name in 1997. Samoa. 5: The Mozambique Channel separates this island nation from the African mainland. Madagascar. Round 2. Category: Gone Too Soon 1: Sadly, in 1997 this "Saturday Night Live" comic, like his idol, John Belushi, died at age 33. Chris Farley. 2: 2 of the 3 rock legends, aged 28, 22 and 17, who lost their lives February 3, 1959. The Big Bopper, Buddy Holly and /or Ritchie Valens. 3: He ran off with a 1988 Oscar nomination for his role in "Running on Empty". River Phoenix. 4: At the 2000 U.S. Open in Pebble Beach, a memorial was held for this golfer and winner of the title in '99. Payne Stewart. 5: (Hi, I'm Katie Wagner) In 1996 I co-produced and narrated "An Intimate Portrait" of this actress, my stepmother, for Lifetime TV. Natalie Wood. Round 3. Category: Crossword Clues "Y" 1: A tired response(4). a yawn. 2: Sing like an Alpine mountaineer(5). yodel. 3: Park Place(8). Yosemite. 4: A fungus for fermentation and leavening(5). yeast. 5: Brute in "Gulliver's Travels"(5). a Yahoo. Round 4. Category: There's No Business Like Business Business 1: On its first night of continuous operation in 1973, this co. delivered 186 packages to 25 cities overnight using 14 jets. FedEx. 2: The first Blockbuster Video store opened during this decade in Dallas, Texas. the '80s. 3: Founded in Seattle's Pike Place Market, this company perks up about 33 million customers a week. Starbucks. 4: Though Phil Knight didn't love the Swoosh logo, he hoped it would grow on him after paying $35 for it for this company. Nike. 5: In 1963 the Tandy Corporation bought this company; in 1977 it marketed the TRS-80 personal computer. RadioShack. Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 589, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Countries By Region 1: Oaxaca,Durango,Nayarit. Mexico. 2: Damietta,Suez,Gharbiya. Egypt. 3: Corse,Auvergne,Bretagne. France. 4: Western Plateau,Great Victoria Desert,Great Artesian Basin. Australia. 5: Ostergotland,Vasterbotten,Uppsala. Sweden. Round 2. Category: Classic Logos 1: Metro's bird lost out to this animal to be the symbol of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios. Leo the Lion. 2: Hands cupped together, holding a house and a car, was the classic symbol for this insurer. Allstate. 3: Piece of clothing worn by the Pillsbury Doughboy that has the Pillsbury logo on it. Chef's hat. 4: This automaking corporation got its Pentastar symbol in 1962. Chrysler. 5: It's the name given to that hooked line under the word Nike. Swoosh. Round 3. Category: Easy As "Pie" 1: Little Jack Horner stuck his thumb in this and pulled out a plum. Christmas pie. 2: This No. 1 hit referred to the death of Buddy Holly as "The Day the Music Died". "American Pie".
Afternoon Service led by- Pastor Harry Zekveld-What We Believe- Heidelberg Catechism, Question - Answers 3-5-Scripture Reading- Matthew 19-16-26-Sermon- Little Jack Horner Religion Confronted-- God's War against Self-Deception-- God's Tool of Self-Evaluation-- God's Gift of Self-Awareness
Little Jack Horner is a famous nursery rhyme about a good boy named Jack who stuck his thumb in a pie. Rachel Teichman, LMSW didn't know this rhyme, and co-host Victor Varnado, KSN did. Together, they read this article to celebrate Pi Day with you. Produced and hosted by Victor Varnado & Rachel Teichman Full Wikipedia article here:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Jack_Horner WE APPRECIATE YOUR SUPPORT ON PATREON! https://www.patreon.com/wikilistenpodcast Find us on social media! https://www.facebook.com/WikiListen Instagram @WikiListen Twitter @Wiki_Listen Youtube Get bonus content on Patreon Get bonus content on Patreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 383, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Sinonyms 1: "Sow" these and you may be sinning or just planting. Wild oats. 2: A bad habit that can have a grip on you, the police have a squad to fight it. Vice. 3: From a word meaning "uneven", you may find "a den of" one. iniquity. 4: If you're doing this you're sinning; if you "Ain't", you're a musical. Misbehavin'. 5: It can mean to sin or to sneak onto another's land, and you may be shot for doing it. Trespassing. Round 2. Category: S-S-Snakes-S-S 1: Each time a rattlesnake does this, its rattle gets a little bigger. Sheds its skin. 2: These fluids are classified into 2 major groups: neurotoxic and hemotoxic. Venom. 3: This snake, subject of a 1997 film, is the largest in the Western Hemisphere. Anaconda. 4: The Naja Haje or Egyptian cobra is commonly known by this 3-letter name. Asp. 5: This snake's French name is from its head's resemblance to the tip of a knight's weapon. Fer-de-lance. Round 3. Category: Official State Things 1: "Roll On, Columbia, Roll On" is this state's official folk song. Washington. 2: Everyone hit the beach to enjoy this state's official sports: surfing and outrigger canoe paddling. Hawaii. 3: In 1973 North Carolina went dark green and designated this its official state precious stone. an emerald. 4: State tree:Black Hills Spruce. South Dakota. 5: We wonder whether the pheasant that's its state bird nests in the Black Hills Spruce, its state tree. South Dakota. Round 4. Category: Tv Jailbirds 1: Barney locks himself in jail after Gomer makes a "citizen's arrest!" on a classic episode of this series. The Andy Griffith Show. 2: November 21, 1980: Sue Ellen's fingerprints are on the gun, so she's mistakenly arrested for shooting this man. J.R.. 3: November 26, 2006: Mike the plumber is arrested for murder; Edie visits him in jail and tells him she's dumping him on this series. Desperate Housewives. 4: (Hi, I'm Christopher Meloni of Law and Order: SVU.) I've been on both sides of the law--I played devious serial killer Chris Keller on this HBO prison drama. Oz. 5: The inmates on this Fox series escaped from a jail called Fox River. Prison Break. Round 5. Category: Easy As "Pie" 1: Little Jack Horner stuck his thumb in this and pulled out a plum. Christmas pie. 2: This No. 1 hit referred to the death of Buddy Holly as "The Day the Music Died". "American Pie". 3: This phrase refers to the deceptively rosy prospect of future events. Pie in the sky. 4: It's a representation of facts presented as a circle divided into sectors of relative sizes. Pie chart/graph. 5: Created by Paul Terry, the fast-talking Heckle and Jeckle are 2 of these crow relatives. Magpies. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!
This week on the show, we talk about crabless tacos and eat Hidden Valley Plant Powered Ranch dressing.Links and things:Little Jack Horner was eating a Christmas pie.Liz recommended Pop Corners, which are a cross between popcorn and crackersMy sister was recently talking up Fever Tree Pink Grapefruit. LiveKindly reports on a new vegan mushroom bacon that's getting some big venture capital backing. If you don't want to wait, try my smoky mushroom bacon recipe it's so easy! I also make mushroom sausage that is pretty addictive.Dave made oatmeal coconut cookies from Loving It Vegan. How we made our crabless tacos:flour tortillas1-2 Gardein Crabless Cakes - If you use one per taco, slice it in half. Air fry at 400° F for 10-12 minutes.a dollop of my jalapeño slaw, made while the Crabless Cakes cooksliced avocadoThank you so much for listening. We record these episodes for you, and we'd love to hear from you. Got a favorite vegan treat that you think we should cover on the podcast? Send your suggestions to talkintofupod@gmail.com!
Buckle up for a typically shallow dive into the dark origin of your favourite nursery rhymes! It's all murder and theft over here as Nikki tells us how Mary Mary Quite Contrary is probably about mass burnings. And how the Three Blind Mice are not the cute supporting characters Shrek would have you believe they are. Meanwhile Joyce joins in on the fun with Little Jack Horner and that isn't a plum he pulled out of the pie, it's land theft.
Are You Still Awake? Sleepy Stories For Kids by Baby Big Mouth
It's time for a nap. Let's listen to a quick little poem to help get us off to dreamland. In this episode we read Little Jack Horner. Little Miss Muffet makes an appearance as well.
IS THIS ON? S1, EP 11 - recorded July 4, 2020 on KMKR 99.9 FM/Tucson, AZ We introduce a new feature--Updated Nursery Rhymes! *** Little Jack Horner hung out on the corner But he refused to mask it Little Jack Horner is back in the corner That’s where they placed his casket *** Join Dave Margolis and Phil Gordon as we celebrate Carl Reiner, look at Special Days in July, and dip into James Carville's Dirty Tricks Diary! There's something for everyone Wednesday night on IS THIS ON? --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
On the latest episode of Coogee Voice we are interviewing Brenton McHatton, better known as BJ from Little Jack Horner. BJ shares his experiences of operating a business during COVID-19, his thoughts on activating Coogee Beach as well as what he and his wife Brooke have been doing to support our community during the bushfires, COVID-19 as well as their fundraising for the Sydney Children’s Hospital Foundation.
This week the guys talk about what the new normal to come post-COVID19, needing a horn to know what love is and how much we should accept racist jokes amongst other topics. Indulge!
Little Jack Horner - 1890 - Edison talking Dolls
Support this channel: thesymbolicworld.com/support/ patreon: www.patreon.com/pageauvideos subscribestar: www.subscribestar.com/jonathan-pageau paypal: www.paypal.me/JonathanPageau Interpreting the nursery rhyme of Little Jack Horner and showing how it contains deep symbolic structures relating to Christmas and the winter solstice. Original video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=gowRz-snepI My links: website: www.thesymbolicworld.com facebook: www.facebook.com/TheSymbolicWorld/ twitter: twitter.com/pageaujonathan The podcast was edited by Justin Ward.
Cooking sounds and a story about a school baking competition.
The archaeopterx is considered the link between dinosaurs and modern birds. A Chickenosarus might resemble one of these extinct creatures. After working as a consultant on Jurassic Park, a paleontologist wants to bring back the dinosaurs. Clearly, he didn’t pay enough attention to the movie.
Serving Sacrificially: Do we act more like Little Jack Horner, or Jesus Christ?
Serving Sacrificially: Do we act more like Little Jack Horner, or Jesus Christ?
Australian comedian, writer & musician, Andrew Hansen from The Chaser. One of the most hilarious, engaging & insightful podcasts that I’ve ever had the pleasure to be part of. Set in Sydney’s Giant Dwarf Theatre, Andrew & I enjoy vast ranging chats, bond over our grandfathers who were in World War II, his grandfather actually landing into Hiroshima the day after the bomb dropped to demand the surrender of a local general, The Chaser’s War On Everything’s hilarious APEC stunt with George W Bush and “Osama Bin Laden” (in fact Chas Licciardello dressed up as Osama), Andrew Denton, Giant Dwarf and so much more. Sitting here in Little Jack Horner cafe in Coogee Beach writing this article and editing the podcast as we speak, wearing a massive smile on my face. Such an amazing chat!
I have a little pager/ they call her Beep Beep, Jack Sprax could send no fax, and Little Jack Horner/ cassette in the corner/ rewinding his VHS. On this episode of the Hungry Cliff podcast, Andrew's friend Brad Mitchell, Production Director & Radio Air Talent Extraordinaire, joins the team to discuss the Hots and Nots of 2016. That's right, it's time for Hungry Cliff's annual Year in Review! Who wound up with an unexpected intern? Who ranks Chris Rock above his own progeny? Who is Mendanskas? Who has experienced Nickelodeon-driven fever hallucinations? More importantly, who hasn't? Find out the answers to all the questions you didn't even know you were going to ask on what is simultaneously our last episode of 2016 and first episode of 2017! Links: Sugar Cookie Pringles The Secret World of Alex Mack Clermont Pho & Grill Fixer Upper The whole thing going on with the President of South Korea Last VCR ever manufactured Echo (Dot) Paul Lynde Folding@home Babe Babe: Pig In The City Gordy Elijah Wood's Greatest Role Don't forget you can support Hungry Cliff by going to our Shop at the top of our page or by using our Amazon and iTunes Search Boxes on our site. Also, Like us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter and subscribe to the podcast in iTunes so you don't miss a thing! And if you want to help us out some more, please review us on iTunes 'cause every little bit counts. Hosts: Tony Silanskas, Matthew Biggers, Andrew Silanskas Guest Hosts: Brad Mitchell, David Houston, Jessica Houston, Pedro Mendoza Intro and outro music: Pedro Mendoza Email us: tony (at) hungrycliff (dot) com or matthew (at) hungrycliff (dot) com © 2017 Hungry Cliff
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Australian comedian, writer & musician, Andrew Hansen from The Chaser. One of the most hilarious, engaging & insightful podcasts that I’ve ever had the pleasure to be part of. Set in Sydney’s Giant Dwarf Theatre, Andrew & I enjoy vast ranging chats, bond over our grandfathers who were in World War II, his grandfather actually landing into Hiroshima the day after the bomb dropped to demand the surrender of a local general, The Chaser’s War On Everything’s hilarious APEC stunt with George W Bush and “Osama Bin Laden” (in fact Chas Licciardello dressed up as Osama), Andrew Denton, Giant Dwarf and so much more. Sitting here in Little Jack Horner cafe in Coogee Beach writing this article and editing the podcast as we speak, wearing a massive smile on my face. Such an amazing chat!
In this sequel to our previous "FOUR AND TWENTY BLACKBIRDS", we discuss the real meaning behind some of those of those innocent nursery rhymes that kids have been enjoying for years., and look at the "grim" facts behind some well known fairy tales. In order: London Bridge is Falling Down, Jack and Jill, Humpty Dumpty, Little Miss Muffet, Cinderella, Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Little Red Riding Hood, Lucy Locket, and Little Jack Horner.
点击详情,查看歌词: Little Jack Horner sat in a corner Eating a Christmas pie. He put in his thumb And pulled out a plum And said,"What a good boy aml!"
Rub a Dub Dub, Hickory Dickory Dock, This Little Piggy Went to Market, Little Jack Horner, Here we go round the Mulberry Bush, Ring a Ring a Roses, Oranges and Lemons say the bells of St. Clement's