1991 soundtrack album by Various Artists
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Look, you all know why you're here. You wanna hear us talk about Ninja Rap. Well, you're in luck, because I'm joined once again by Henry Gilbert (@hEnereyG on Twitter and @henereyg.bsky.social on BlueSky) of the Talking Simpsons podcast, and we definitely talk about that song--as well as a whole lot of other stuff--while we dig into TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES 2: THE SECRET OF THE OOZE. So check it out, and as always, GO NINJA GO NINJA GO!Check out Talking Simpsons here: https://talkingsimpsons.libsyn.com/Support it on Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/talkingsimpsons?utm_campaign=creatorshare_fanSupport the show on Patreon! It's the one thing that's gonna help keep the show going: www.patreon.com/soundtracker
Boomer is out this week so it's Gio and Jerry this morning. The Yankees came back from the all star break and have lost 2-of-3 so far and they continue to have problems on offense. In the last six weeks, Aaron Judge has been the only consistent hitter. We are a long way away from this happening, but if the Yankees don't make the playoffs after being 28 games above .500, that would be an epic collapse that somebody would have to pay for. C-Lo is here for his first update of the day and starts with the sounds of yesterday's Yankees loss to the Rays. They left a lot of guys on base again. The Mets lost to the Marlins thanks to a Jazz Chisholm Jr 3-run homer. The Mets struck out 14 times yesterday. In the final segment of the hour, Pitbull performed at the WNBA all star game and it did not go great. We also talked about Vanilla Ice and his song, Ninja Rap. We also talked about He-Man and Thundercats.
Hour 1 Boomer is out this week so it's Gio and Jerry this morning. The Yankees came back from the all star break and have lost 2-of-3 so far and they continue to have problems on offense. In the last six weeks, Aaron Judge has been the only consistent hitter. We are a long way away from this happening, but if the Yankees don't make the playoffs after being 28 games above .500, that would be an epic collapse that somebody would have to pay for. C-Lo is here for his first update of the day and starts with the sounds of yesterday's Yankees loss to the Rays. They left a lot of guys on base again. The Mets lost to the Marlins thanks to a Jazz Chisholm Jr 3-run homer. The Mets struck out 14 times yesterday. In the final segment of the hour, Pitbull performed at the WNBA all star game and it did not go great. We also talked about Vanilla Ice and his song, Ninja Rap. We also talked about He-Man and Thundercats. Hour 2 Jerry heard about Joe Biden dropping out of the presidential race while listening to the Mets as Howie Rose broke the news. It looks like it's going to be Kamala Harris. Gio said his entire Twitter timeline is people bashing Kamala as if they were all ready with their videos for when the announcement was made. Gio went to see Jordan Davis this past weekend and played guitar with him in the greenroom before the show. C-Lo returns for an update and starts with the Yankees losing to the Rays as they loaded the bases twice and didn't score. Judge did hit his 35th HR. The Mets lost to the Marlins thanks to a Jazz Chisholm Jr HR. Aaron Rodgers was on Pardon My Take, but unfortunately it was recorded a few weeks ago. Gio has had it with Daniel Jones and Rob Saleh. C-Lo has a fake A-I Mike McDaniel talking about Tyreek Hill having a lot of children. In the final segment of the hour, we talked about Evan & Tiki interviewing Craig Carton and not asking him about his relationship with Suzyn Waldman. Hour 3 There are 2 articles in the USA Today that interest Gio and he hasn't thought about the USA Today in years. Pat Boyle threw out the first pitch at the Somerset Patriots game and we're wondering how that happened. We think he's working with some broadcast camp. C-Lo returns for an update and has audio of a pen exploding in Brandon Tierney's mouth during the show. Aaron Judge hit his 35th HR but the Yankees lost to the Rays again. The Mets lost to the Marlins and have lost 2-of-3 so far. In the final segment of the hour, Gio saw a list of best fast food restaurants in the United States according to USA Today. It was a surprising list. Jerry used to love himself a Roy Rodgers fixins bar. Hour 4 For the rest of the week, Gio will be hosting with Stugotz filling in for Boomer. Gio wondered if there's still an issue with Stugotz and Sal Licata. We wondered if Evan Roberts likes Stugotz since Stugotz made it clear he wanted Evan's job. We talked a lot about Stugotz and his personality. C-Lo returns for his final update of the day, but first we talked about the best time to drink a beer, like right after mowing your lawn. Gio had a travel agent plan his entire trip to Italy. We had some fun playing A-I Mike McDaniel talking about Tyreek Hill having many children. We also have an Aaron Judge A-I voice talking about how bad the Yankees are. C-Lo has sound from the baseball HOF. The Moment of The Day involves Peter Schwartz throwing out a first pitch a while ago and not being able to do the coin toss at a Jets game. In the final segment of the show we get another subway series tomorrow night in the Bronx. Gio has a Disney vacation coming up in March and he said he's been told by many people that it's the worst.
Kuro, Paul, Laser and Sketch discuss the latest Toonami schedule update and Jason DeMarco's Q&A before they share their thoughts on the final episode of Ninja Kamui. Then Paul calls it a night and the other three get caught up on Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead. 0:00:00 - Schedule Update / Q&A Discussion 0:19:34 - Ninja Kamui Wrap-Up 1:19:10 - Zom 100 Eps 4-6 Recap Music credits for this episode: "Ninja Rap" as performed by Vanilla Ice Ninja Robots Theme "Trogdor" Instrumental (Unoffical)
In this totally tubular episode, we're diving shell-first into the nostalgia ooze as Nick shows Melissa Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze for the first time! Can this childhood favorite of Nick's stand the test of time? Will Melissa be impressed with the turtle-riffic animatronics? Crank up Vanilla Ice's Ninja Rap, grab a slice of your favorite pizza and find out! Cowabunga!
If the 80's had anything in abundance, it was ninjas. This game does very little to hide any bit of it's cheapness or obvious "cash-in" of the ninja popularity. Tune in for a hilariously bad ride through the mis-adventures of the Black Manta!Show Links: https://linktr.ee/supergarbagedayVanfernal's Retro StreamSong: "Ninja Rap" by Vanilla IceSupport the showHosted by: B-Ross and Vanfernal Produced and edited by: B-Ross Email us at: supergarbageday@gmail.com
[Aha Super 045] Poczucie egzystencji Czas leci za szybko, nie tylko dla ludzi z rocznika 77. Tymczasem zaczynamy od komentarzy do Ahy 44. Dziękujemy! Pytanie czy aktualne kino głównego nurtu tudzież komercyjne, komentuje bieżące problemy społeczne? Zaczęliśmy Mr. and Mrs. Smith i True Detective 4. Halo, Tokyo Vice, Kiedy ślub? Ekspatki. Disney wchodzi w epica żeby młodzi pamiętali kluczowe IP gdyby kolejne filmy się nie udały. Roadrunner dla fanów Anthony Bourdain'a a dla każdego “Teściowie” Jakuba Michalczyka. Kuna, Woronowicz, Ostaszewska, Dorociński. Nie ma konkursu, Rafał wygrał. Potem misja niemożliwa z Tomem Wiecznie Młodym Cruisem - część kolejna. Dyskutujemy czy polscy aktorzy rzeczywiście robią karierę w Stanach. Na pewno Joanna Pacuła. Nowe żółwie ninja omówimy, ale w kolejnym odcinku. No i miałem racje - Vanilla Ice nagrał piosenkę “Ninja Rap” do Żółwi 2 z 1991 r. Potem “Kaczki”, najważniejsza lektura Baracka Obamy. Ale tak na serio, ja to kupię i przeczytam. Piękny samuraj wróci w innym świecie jak Assassin's Creed. O Skull and Bones szkoda gadać. Podobno warto zagrać w demo “Indika”. Potem znów Cyberpunk, chyba już po raz ostatni. Wstępniak. (02:46) Ludzie listy piszą Tematy główne. (18:45) Zaczęliśmy nowe seriale (23:20) Halo S02 [SkyShowtime] (25:40) Tokyo Vice [HBO Max] (27:40) Kiedy ślub? [C+] (30:00) Disney kupuje Epica:) (33:00) Ekspatki [Prime] (36:10) Anthony Michael „Tony” Bourdain (39:10) “Teściowie” Jakuba Michalczyka (43:40) Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One (50:00) “Duchy Marsa” Johna Carpentera (58:30) Kate Beaton “Kaczki” (01:02:40) Blue Eye Samurai [Netflix] (01:06:50) Silent Hill: The Short Message (01:07:25) Trepang 2 (01:10:15) Nowe gry od 11 bits (01:15:50) Skończyłem “Phantom Liberty” O nas więcej, tu też wszystkie linki! https://www.ahasuper.pl Fajnie? Niefajnie? Napisz do nas! ahasuper@ahasuper.pl Współpraca reklamowa: info@digitalaudio.pl Gdzie nas słuchać? https://anchor.fm/bartosz-drozdowski Gdzie nas oglądać? https://www.youtube.com/@ahasuper Aha Super na fejsie, https://www.facebook.com/AhaSuper01 Aha Super na insta! https://www.instagram.com/AhaSuper01/ Music by Lukrembo, “Bread” https://soundcloud.com/lukrembo #drozdowski #szychowski #ahasuper #podkast #podcast #lifestyle #seriale #filmy #komiksy #gry #kultura #dzieci #rodzina #giełda #btc
This week, we have a much more nuanced, empathetic take on teens, drugs, and addiction than our last entry in the YA Diary genre. We read Things I'll Never Say by Cassandra Newbould, published in 2023. It's a beautiful story about grief, love, and what comes next in life. Other topics of interest include sword-crossing erotica, the booze-soaked fruit drinks of our youth, and Vanilla Ice's Ninja Rap. Unlike Go Ask Alice, Nixon never would've given this book his seal of approval…so you know it's a good one. Content Warning: Drug Use, death by drug overdose, loss, and weight talk Follow us on Instagram @toalltheya www.instagram.com/toalltheya You can find citations, notes, and further reading on this episode at our website kayceeracer.com/toalltheya Theme Music by Slip.stream - "In And Out Of Love"
The “What You Need To Know” is about the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, which prompts a whole convo about TMNT, Ninja Rap and Kap feeling old. GUEST - Chris Manning, NBA2K TV Host and Producer - NBA 2K24 Comes out for PS5 and Xbox tomorrow, and Chris tells the guys why it's the best version of the game ever. The guys swipe left or right in Radio Tinder. GUEST - Blake Harris, Dodgers Insider - Blake stops by to talk Clayton Kershaw, the Dodgers pitching staff and what to expect down the stretch. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Go Ninja! Go Ninja! Go!!! Adam Pally joins Paul, Jason, and June to discuss Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze LIVE from Irving Plaza in New York City. They cover the horrific amount of pizza, why these are the most charmless turtles imaginable, April O'Neil's strange relationship with the turtles, and more. Plus, we hear from Vanilla Ice himself on how Ninja Rap was born. (Originally released 06/26/2015) HDTGM is going on tour this August! Tix on sale at hdtgm.comFor more Matinee Monday content, visit Paul's YouTube page: https://www.youtube.com/c/PaulScheerFollow Paul on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/paulscheer/HDTGM Discord: discord.gg/hdtgmPaul's Discord: https://discord.gg/paulscheerCheck out Paul and Rob Huebel live on Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/friendzone) every Thursday 8-10pm ESTSubscribe to The Deep Dive with Jessica St. Clair and June Diane Raphael here: listen.earwolf.com/deepdiveSubscribe to Unspooled with Paul Scheer and Amy Nicholson here: listen.earwolf.com/unspooledCheck out The Jane Club over at www.janeclub.comCheck out new HDTGM merch over at https://www.teepublic.com/stores/hdtgmWhere to find Jason, June & Paul:@PaulScheer on Instagram & Twitter@Junediane on IG and @MsJuneDiane on TwitterJason is not on Twitter
This week on Talking Back we're covering a long awaited sequel with Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: The Secret of the Ooze! Long awaited refers to the time between us covering TMNT 1 and TMNT 2. It does not refer to how long people had to wait for TMNT 2 to come out in theatres which was less than 1 year after the release of TMNT 1. That rushed production schedule led to some interesting choices in the movie. Join us as we walk through the film chatting about some of the things we liked and some of the things we didn't. We'll chat characters, missed opportunities, who helped write the Ninja Rap, and more! Be sure to tell your friends about Talking Back and we hope you enjoy our review of The Secret of the Ooze! If you'd like to unlock bonus episodes from Talking Back every month, then check out our page on Patreon! You can also support Talking Back by sending us a Coffee at Buy Us a Coffee! Please consider leaving a 5 star rating and review on Apple Podcasts! This helps make our Podcast easier for listeners to find. Feel free to drop us a line on Social Media at Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. Or drop us an email us at talkbackpod@gmail.com. This podcast is part of the BFOP Network
Des tortues mutantes et adolescentes adeptes de l'art du ninjutsu ? Un drôle de concept qui cartonne depuis quarante ans ! L'occasion pour moi de revenir sur cette licence aussi culte que protéiforme ! WE STRIKE HARD, AND FADE AWAY… INTO THE NIGHT.Comics, jouets, dessins animés, jeux vidéo : quel que soit le support, il est pratiquement impossible que vous soyez passés à côté des Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, à moins d'avoir vécu dans les égouts ces quarante dernières années ! Comme beaucoup de succès story improbables, l'histoire des Tortues Ninja commence avec deux geeks fauchés : Kevin Eastman et Peter Laird. Ces deux jeunes artistes ont pour habitude d'échanger leurs idées dans l'appartement de Laird, transformé pour l'occasion en ce qu'ils appellent "Mirage Studios", un atelier nommé ainsi du fait de son existence toute relative. Un soir de 1983, Kevin Eastman dessine une tortue se tenant sur ses pattes arrière et maniant des nunchakus. Cette idée saugrenue amuse beaucoup les deux comparses qui décident de retravailler le concept, donnant naissance à quatre tortues, utilisant chacune une arme différente. En 1984, Eastman et Laird rassemblent leurs économies, empruntent de l'argent à l'oncle de Kevin et publient eux-mêmes le premier numéro de Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, tiré à 3000, 3250, ou 3275 exemplaires selon les sources. Le succès est au rendez-vous, puisqu'ils doivent bientôt réimprimer 6000, puis 35 000 copies de ce premier numéro. N'ayant absolument pas anticipé un tel accueil, et encore moins l'engouement des lecteurs qui en redemandent, les deux auteurs vont bientôt devoir imaginer une suite à ce qui devait être un one-shot. En quarante pages, le premier numéro pose les bases de tout un univers. Transformées par un étrange liquide mutagène, quatre petites tortues vont être entraînées à l'art ancestral du Ninjutsu par Splinter, un rat humanoïde, qui leur donne à chacune le nom d'un artiste de la Renaissance : Leonardo, Raphael, Donatello et Michelangelo. Ensemble, ils affrontent Shredder, terrible combattant à la tête du Clan des Foot, dont l'histoire est intimement liée à celle de Splinter. Réunis par leur amour de l'œuvre de Jack Kirby, et inspirés par les travaux de Frank Miller sur Ronin ou Daredevil, de Dave Sim et de son héros Cerebus, et par les New Mutants de Chris Claremont chez Marvel, Eastman et Laird n'hésitent pas à mélanger les influences, entre hommage et parodie, pour donner naissance à leurs Chevaliers d'Écaille. Ainsi, on trouve plusieurs points communs entre nos tortues préférées et Matt Murdock : elles sont transformées par un étrange produit chimique et affrontent par exemple le Clan des Foot, là où Daredevil tient tête à la secte de La Main. Quant à l'influence de Kirby, si elle est plus qu'évidente sur le plan graphique, elle est aussi distillée tout au long du développement du lore de la licence, qu'il s'agisse d'interventions extra-terrestres ou transdimensionnelles. Seuls aux commandes des premiers numéros de la série, Kevin et Peter vont alors alimenter une véritable mythologie autour des tortues, introduisant des personnages devenus incontournables comme April O'Neil et Casey Jones, des antagonistes mutants comme Leatherhead, ou encore les races extraterrestres des Utrom et des Triceratons. Ces derniers étant d'ailleurs, tout comme le personnage de Fugitoid, des créations de Mirage Studios antérieures aux Tortues Ninja. Le succès affiché par le comic book de Eastman et Laird et le foisonnant univers qui anime ses pages, mais aussi celles de son spin-off Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles et des Micro-Series, vont bientôt attirer l'attention de pas mal de monde et surcharger l'emploi du temps des deux amis qui recrutent alors Jim Lawson, Mark Martin, Michael Dooney ou encore Eric Talbot pour leur filer un coup de main. Des artistes qui vont, à leur tour, nourrir le déjà très riche background des TMNT de leurs créations. COWABUNGA ! Parmi les projets qui occupent le duo, il y a bien évidemment les produits dérivés. Après la sortie d'un jeu de rôle et de figurines en plombs vendues par Dark Horse Miniatures, c'est en 1987, alors qu'à peine une dizaine de numéros a été publiée, que la société Playmate Toys contacte Kevin Eastman et Peter Laird pour commercialiser une ligne de jouets dérivée des Tortues Ninja. Conscients du risque, ils misent sur la production d'un dessin animé pour booster la vente de figurines. À jamais ancrée dans la Pop Culture, la série s'adresse en priorité aux enfants et modifie de nombreux éléments de l'univers des tortues. Premièrement, si dans le comic book original, les tortues ont toutes un bandeau rouge, il est décidé de leur attribuer une couleur différente à chacune afin que les enfants puissent les identifier plus facilement. Les origines de Splinter sont revisitées : ici, il ne s'agit plus du rat compagnie de Hamato Yoshi, mais de Yoshi lui-même, transformé en rat par le mutagène. Le dessin animé introduit également de nouveaux personnages, comme Bebop et Rocksteady, ainsi que Krang, représentant de la race des Utrom, qui elle, existe bien dans les comics.Enfin, le point le plus important concerne de toute évidence les pizzas : c'est bel et bien le cartoon qui établit cette habitude alimentaire de Don, Raph, Leo et Mikey, qui est aujourd'hui indissociable de nos héros. Comme tout phénomène de société, les Tortues Ninja connaissent leur lot de paniques morales. Au Royaume-Uni, le titre Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles est remplacé par Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles, le mot "ninja" étant jugé trop violent pour le jeune public. Les scènes où Michelangelo utilise son nunchaku sont également coupées, cette arme étant interdite en Angleterre. Ces quelques excentricités britanniques n'empêchent pas les Chevaliers d'Écaille de cartonner partout sur la planète : les figurines sont déclinées à l'infini et un jeu vidéo, aujourd'hui célèbre pour sa difficulté, sort sur Nintendo NES en 1989. La même année, l'éditeur Archie Comics, célèbre pour son personnage éponyme, lance Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures, un comic book adaptant dans un premier temps la série animée, avant de développer son propre univers, dont certains éléments seront repris par la suite par l'univers classique des tortues. On y découvre, par exemple, la première apparition sur le papier de Man-Ray, Mondo Gecko, et des Mutanimals. En à peine cinq ans, les Tortues Ninja sont passées d'une obscure création de deux passionnés de BD, à destination des amateurs de comics underground, à l'une des licences les plus bankables de la planète, star des cours de récré. Mais nos mutants mangeurs de pizza ne vont pas en rester là… En 1990, les Tortues Ninja connaissent leur première adaptation au cinéma, réalisée par Steve Barron, à qui l'on doit les clips vidéo pour Take On Me de A-Ha ou Africa de Toto. Réussissant l'exploit de piocher dans le meilleur des tout premiers numéros du comic book en y ajoutant une petite dose des éléments du dessin animé pour ne pas perdre les plus jeunes, il devient l'un des films indépendants les plus rentables de l'histoire, notamment grâce à l'incroyable travail du studio de Jim Henson, et enfonce définitivement le clou de la Turtlemania ! Pépite sombre influencée par le Batman de Tim Burton, brillant par ses cascades, ses bastons et son utilisation des practical effects, le film de Barron reste pour moi l'une des meilleures adaptations de comic book, captant à merveille l'esprit des TMNT tout en le rendant accessible au plus grand nombre. Un petit tour de force à l'heure où plusieurs versions des tortues, visant des publics très différents, cohabitaient déjà. Perdues entre le Ninja Rap de Vanilla Ice et la recette émoussée du voyage dans le temps ; qui, rappelons-le, est souvent synonyme d'une pénurie d'inspiration ; les deux suites, sorties respectivement en 1991 et 1993, peineront à réitérer l'exploit. Bien que pouvant être considérés comme de sympathiques divertissement, Les Tortues Ninja II et III marquent déjà un début d'essoufflement pour la licence, tout comme le spectacle musical “Coming Out of Their Shells”, sponsorisé par Pizza Hut entre 1990 et 1992. Un véritable essorage qui a aussi lieu du côté des jouets. Avec plus de quatre-cents figurines produites durant cet âge d'or, sans compter les véhicules, les tortues ont été remodelées à toutes les sauces : transformables, musiciennes, en monstres de Universal Studios, avec des cheveux colorés de Trolls, tirées des films ou en tenue de personnages de Star Trek… L'originalité des déclinaisons n'a d'égale que la frénésie commerciale qui la motive. GO NINJA, GO NINJA, GO ! Malheureusement pour Laird et Eastman, ce déclin des Tortues Ninja va aussi avoir lieu sur leur support d'origine : le papier. La série originale, qui prend fin en 1993 après soixante-deux numéros, est immédiatement suivie par une seconde série se présentant comme une suite directe, également publiée par Mirage Studios. Pilotée par Jim Lawson, cette seconde mouture tire sa révérence en 1995 après seulement treize numéros. L'effondrement du marché de la bande dessinée américaine et une inondation dans les locaux de Mirage Studios finissant d'achever la licence déjà exsangue à force d'être revisitée à toutes les sauces. À partir de cette date, les créateurs des Tortues Ninja s'éloignent radicalement. Eastman, qui vient de racheter le magazine Heavy Metal, homologue américain de notre Métal Hurlant national, a envie de travailler sur d'autres projets. Moins d'une année plus tard, sous l'impulsion de Erik Larsen, créateur de Savage Dragon et cofondateur de Image Comics, une troisième série est lancée. Aujourd'hui sous-titrée Urban Legends, et considérée comme non-canonique, cette série est bien connue des fans des TMNT pour prendre de nombreuses libertés et pour ne pas hésiter à transformer définitivement les Chevaliers d'Écaille, quitte à aller jusqu'à les mutiler ! Un parti-pris plutôt osé qui aurait pu raviver l'intérêt pour la licence auprès des lecteurs de comics, mais qui s'arrête en 1999 après vingt-trois numéros, le travail de Gary Carlson et Frank Fosco ne parvenant ni à convaincre les fans de la première heure, ni à attirer un nouveau public. La série sera pourtant réimprimée par IDW à partir de 2018, et l'éditeur permettra même à l'équipe créative originale de clôturer son histoire proprement avec trois épisodes inédits. En parallèle, la série animée débutée en 1987 s'arrête en 1996, avec 193 épisodes au compteur. Bien que largement édulcorée en comparaison du comic book d'origine, et diffusée en version censurée dans de nombreux pays pour paraître encore moins violente, elle reste l'un des piliers du succès et de la popularité des TMNT dans le monde, et à l'origine de l'expression culte “COWABUNGA !”, indissociable des tortues. Mais les Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles ne disparaissent pas du petit écran pour autant. Dès 1997, Haim Saban, déjà connu pour avoir importé les Super Sentai japonais aux États-Unis avec la licence Power Rangers, s'empare des Tortues Ninja pour produire une série live, qui laisse suggérer à travers quelques décors et références qu'elle peut être considérée comme une suite de la trilogie sortie au cinéma. Malheureusement, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles : The Next Mutation s'avère bancale, plutôt cheap, et assez peu inspirée. Ici encore, Michelangelo est victime de l'étrange phobie de certains pays pour les nunchakus, ces derniers étant remplacés par des tonfas. April O'Neil et Casey Jones sont totalement absents et le Seigneur Dragon, créé spécialement pour la série, sert de principal antagoniste. Si une cinquième tortue nommée "Kirby", toujours en hommage à Jack Kirby, devait être au centre d'un quatrième film jamais produit, The Next Mutation introduit en la personne de Venus, une tortue femelle qui aurait été oubliée par Splinter et élevée en Chine. Un personnage régulièrement parodié, voire moqué, et qui résume à lui seul à quel point cette série est un enfer pavé de bonnes intentions. Annulée après une unique saison de vingt-six épisodes, The Next Mutation reste pour beaucoup de fans le chant de cygne avant une longue traversée du désert pour nos Chevaliers d'Écaille, qui peut tout de même se vanter de nous avoir offert le premier crossover entre les Power Rangers et les Tortues Ninja, dans le quatrième épisode de Power Rangers in Space. Chacun ses petits succès. En 2001, alors qu'il a entrepris de racheter les droits appartenant de son associé, Peter Laird, passablement désabusé par les égarements nés de la surexploitation de sa création, auxquels il a parfois participé, décide de reprendre les TMNT en main en compagnie de Jim Lawson. La publication d'une quatrième série débute chez Mirage, mais les temps ont changé. Sous l'impulsion d'éditeurs comme Dark Horse, Image Comics et Valiant, le secteur du comic book indépendant s'est largement industrialisé et a établi de nouveaux standards. Le succès d'antan n'est plus au rendez-vous, et le rachat, en 2009, de la licence Tortues Ninja par le groupe Viacom, va définitivement changer la donne. C'est le début d'une longue pause, encore d'actualité, pour Mirage Studios. L'accord stipule que Peter Laird ne pourra plus sortir que dix-huit comics par an pour terminer sa série en cours, et les projets d'adaptations seront désormais confiés à des filiales de Viacom, comme Paramount et Nickelodeon. Le XXIe siècle est d'ailleurs plus que chargé en matière d'adaptations pour les Tortues Ninja. En 2003, un nouveau dessin animé produit par 4Kids est lancé. Plus sombre et plus fidèle aux comics sur de nombreux points, il souffre pourtant de comparaison avec la première version animée de 1987, devenue l'image officielle des tortues dans l'esprit de nombreux fans. Après sept saisons, la série, en perte de vitesse, est clôturée en 2009 par le téléfilm Turtles Forever, qui fête le vingt-cinquième anniversaire de la licence en faisant se rencontrer les tortues 2003 et celles de 1987, offrant même une incursion dans l'univers du comic book original au spectateur. En 2007, un film TMNT entièrement en images de synthèse est écrit et réalisé par Kevin Munroe. S'il est présenté comme la suite de la trilogie de films live des années 1990, il assume assez peu ce statut dans les faits et n'a pas vraiment marqué le grand public. De 2012 à 2017, une troisième série d'animation est produite par Nickelodeon, et déjà, le look beaucoup plus cartoonesque des Chevaliers d'Écaille suscite quelques réactions de pseudo-puristes qui ne reconnaissent plus leurs tortues. Il faut dire que c'est sûrement la première fois que Donatello, Michelangelo, Raphael et Leonardo possèdent autant de signes pouvant les distinguer les uns des autres et des personnalités aussi affirmées. Brillant notamment par son casting de comédiens de doublage dans sa version originale, la série est plutôt bien accueillie par la critique et reste très plaisante à regarder. Il est évidemment impossible de parler des portages des Tortues Ninja à l'écran sans évoquer les deux films produits par Michael Bay, sortis en 2014 et 2016. Si cette nouvelle adaptation, réalisée par Jonathan Liebesman, a fait couler beaucoup d'encre, elle renoue pourtant avec quelques idées méconnues issues du comic book de Eastman et Laird, comme l'origine extraterrestre du fluide mutagène ayant transformé les tortues. Sa suite introduira Bebop, Rocksteady et Casey Jones, mais les deux films restent globalement mal-aimés par les fans de la première heure, sans doute en partie à cause des clichés entourant, à tort ou à raison, le cinéma de Michael Bay. Enfin, diffusée à partir de 2018, la série animée Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, ou Le Destin des Tortues Ninja en version française, ne connaîtra que deux saisons avant d'être annulée. Un film Netflix, sorti en 2022, sert de conclusion à la série, tout en surfant, encore une fois, sur l'idée d'une sorte de multivers nourri de paradoxes temporels. Là encore, le design et la personnification des tortues vont faire débat, car tranchant drastiquement avec l'image classique des personnages. Il est pourtant intéressant de souligner que ces cinq visions à l'écran des TMNT, au ton et au public cible très différents, sont sorties sur une période s'étalant sur moins d'une vingtaine d'années. Une démonstration plutôt évidente que l'image ancrée par le dessin animé de 1987 et le film de 1990 est largement remise en question au cours des décennies suivantes. TURLTES IN TIME Mais revenons-en aux comics, si vous le voulez bien. En 2011, IDW obtient de Viacom le droit de publier une nouvelle série de comic book, qui se veut à la fois fidèle aux racines des Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles et résolument moderne. Tom Waltz y œuvre comme scénariste, en compagnie de Kevin Eastman, le co-créateur des tortues, tandis que Dan Duncan, Mateus Santolouco, Sophie Campbell et Dave Wachter font partie des principaux artistes se succédant au dessin. En tirant dès le départ le meilleur des versions précédentes, la série IDW s'impose comme un point culminant pour la licence Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. On y retrouve les grands concepts des premiers arcs narratifs de Eastman et Laird, les personnages phares de la série animée comme Krang, Bebop et Rocksteady, et les Mutanimals apparus chez Archie, le tout associé à de véritables enjeux et à une approche plutôt sombre. Les origines de Leonardo, Raphael, Michelangelo, Donatello et Splinter sont étoffées, tout comme leurs liens avec le Clan des Foot. Beaucoup de personnages secondaires, comme Slash ou Old Hob, des Mutanimals, gagnent en profondeur et deviennent des acteurs à part entière d'un monde complexe où les alliances se font aussi vite qu'elles se défont. Sans aucune hésitation de ma part, il s'agit de l'un des meilleurs comic books des années 2010, avec une constance et une cohérence pour le moins brillantes compte tenu de sa longévité. Plus longue série TMNT jamais publiée, elle est devenue, en passant la barre symbolique des cent numéros en 2019, une pierre angulaire de ce que sont les Tortues Ninja aujourd'hui. Avec le retour sur la publication de Sophie Campbell en tant que scénariste au numéro 101, la série prend une nouvelle direction, tandis que Jennika, une cinquième tortue au bandeau jaune, fait son apparition. En parallèle, à la fin de l'année 2020, Peter Laird et Kevin Eastman se retrouvent pour The Last Ronin, une mini-série en cinq numéros, pensée par les deux auteurs, il y a déjà de nombreuses années, comme une fin possible aux Tortues Ninja. Un dystopie cyberpunk qui voit le dernier Chevalier d'Écaille partir en croisade contre la domination du Clan Foot pour venger ses frères disparus. Un nouvel hommage à peine dissimulé à Frank Miller et à son The Dark Knight Returns, qui avait littéralement fait chavirer la bande dessinée de super-héros en 1986. Si la publication de The Last Ronin est un brin chaotique aux États-Unis, le succès est au rendez-vous, si bien qu'une autre série tirée de cet univers intitulée The Last Ronin – The Lost Years est publiée en 2023, et qu'une suite et un projet de jeu vidéo sont également annoncés. Il est difficile, voire presque impossible d'être parfaitement exhaustif sur le sujet, tant il existe de produits dérivés et de versions, parfois très exotiques, des Tortues Ninja. Aussi, je ne passerai pas en revue tous les jeux vidéo adaptés de l'œuvre de Eastman et Laird, le quatuor ayant été présent à un moment ou un autre sur pratiquement toutes les consoles du marché. Je ne pourrais pas non plus lister toutes les licences qui, tous supports confondus, s'inspirent de près ou de loin, et parfois à la limite du plagiat, du succès des tortues : de Battletoads à Street Sharks, en passant par Biker Mice from Mars ou Extreme Dinosaurs. En ce qui concerne leurs aventures sur le papier, il devient de plus en plus difficile d'énumérer tous les crossovers au cours desquels les Tortues Ninja croisent des héros venus d'autres univers, de Batman à Usagi Yojimbo, des Power Rangers aux Ghostbusters, en passant par les gamins de Stranger Things ou les combattants de Street Fighter… Je ne pourrais pas rendre hommage à tous les artistes qui, comme Richard Corben ou Michael Zulli, ont insufflé leur vision unique, et parfois bestiale, aux créations de Laird et Eastman. Et je ne reviendrais pas non plus en détail sur le foutoir sans nom entourant les droits des Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, une affaire qui, jusqu'à aujourd'hui, a compliqué bien des choses, comme la rediffusion ou l'édition sur support physique du dessin animé de 1987 dans son intégralité, par exemple. TURTLES DON'T DO DRUGS ! Mais alors, quelle recette, encore plus mystérieuse que celle du mutagène, se cache derrière le succès des tortues ? Je n'avais pas encore dit "Tortues Ninja" et vous fredonniez déjà le générique du dessin animé. C'est normal, c'est le pouvoir de la nostalgie ! Comme tout un tas de gens, vous avez sûrement découvert les Chevaliers d'Écaille avec cette série, et votre attachement à la version animée a peut-être tendance à provoquer chez vous un rejet de toutes les autres adaptations qui ont pu suivre. Pourtant, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles est l'une des rares licences à avoir autant d'interprétations différentes, l'histoire des tortues étant régulièrement revisitée, y compris par ses propres créateurs. Comme on a pu le voir, le succès n'a pas toujours été au rendez-vous pour les Tortues Ninja. Essoufflement au cinéma, échec sur le papier ou à la télé : dans leur course de fond pour gagner leur place sur le podium de la Pop Culture, les TMNT ont rencontré pas mal d'obstacles, quittant les sombres galeries des productions underground pour toucher un public toujours plus large, mais parfois aussi très ingrat. Et si, malgré le poids des années, les tortues continuent de parler aux jeunes et aux moins jeunes, avec plusieurs représentations qui cohabitent au même moment dans les pages des comics, sur les consoles de jeu et sur les plateformes de streaming, c'est sans doute grâce aux valeurs portées par la licence depuis ses origines. Les liens du sang, la fraternité, l'entraide : ces principes de base, identiques quelle que soit la version des Tortues Ninja, font toujours écho quelque part en nous. On a tous été ado, et on a tous des liens forts avec quelqu'un que l'on considère comme un membre de notre famille, qu'il en fasse réellement partie ou non. Et au fond, c'est ça l'essence des Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Qu'importe les difficultés que vous devez surmonter, dans les bons comme dans les mauvais moments, les membres d'une même famille doivent faire front commun pour avancer ensemble. Splinter sait qu'il peut compter sur ses fils ; Michelangelo, Leonardo, Raphael et Donatello savent qu'ils peuvent compter les uns sur les autres ; et April O'Neil sait qu'elle peut compter sur ses amis les tortues… Alors qu'une nouvelle adaptation animée débarque sur les écrans de cinéma, confirmant la règle de l'éternel recommencement, nos héros préférés changent une nouvelle fois d'apparence, mais propagent toujours le même message, universel et intemporel. Un peu comme si les chevaliers d'écailles ne pouvaient pas faire autre chose que de vivre avec leur temps. Avant de terminer, vous ne pouvez pas échapper à quelques conseils pour vous lancer dans la lecture des comics Tortues Ninja. Le meilleur point d'entrée actuellement est le premier tome de la collection Les Tortues Ninja L'Intégrale, qui permet de lire la série IDW de 2011 dans l'ordre chronologique, avec tous ses épisodes hors-série. Il s'agit de l'adaptation chez nous par HiComics de la IDW Collection publiée aux USA et incontestablement de l'un des meilleurs comics que vous puissiez lire en français. Pour moi, c'est absolument impossible de passer à côté. Si vous voulez revenir aux origines des tortues, HiComics propose de redécouvrir les premiers épisodes de Eastman et Laird publiés par Mirage Studios avec la collection Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Classics. Ici, c'est la fameuse Ultimate Collection de IDW qui est traduite en français, avec un contenu qui s'adresse aux lecteurs et aux lectrices plus aguerris et curieux de retrouver les racines indé de la série. Ça déborde de créativité et ça n'a rien perdu avec le temps. Si vous avez déjà quelques bases en matière de TMNT ; disons que vous avez grandi avec les films ou les séries animées, par exemple ; The Last Ronin est un récit complet de choix. Dynamique, rythmé, et plutôt novateur vis-à-vis de l'habituel statu quo, il ne pourra pas vous décevoir. Enfin, de son côté, l'éditeur Vestron a la bonne idée d'importer chez nous quelques pépites issues de l'univers des tortues, comme le frénétique Bodycount dessiné par Simon Bisley ou le déroutant Soul's Winter de Michael Zulli, mais aussi la série Archie Comics. De quoi ravir les complétistes et les curieux ! N'hésitez pas à partager cet article sur les réseaux sociaux s'il vous a plu ! Recevez mes articles, podcasts et vidéos directement dans votre boîte mail, sans intermédiaire ni publicité, en vous abonnant gratuitement ! Get full access to CHRIS - POP CULTURE & COMICS at chrisstup.substack.com/subscribe
On today's episode, the boys discuss the history of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! The boys discuss such issues as the early years of the turtles, the cartoons, the first movies, the Bayification of the Turtles, Venus, their Mt. Rushmore of Turtles and the Ninja Rap?!?!?! Join us! https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/pr0ynrMp8xb - On the Discords! https://discord.gg/WyRcK5cf6F - and the Facebooks! https://www.facebook.com/EGTNerdom/ - Or the Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/egtnerdom/ - Follow Kyle on Twitch! https://www.twitch.tv/k_sig - Follow Chris on Twitch! - https://www.twitch.tv/guyverunt01 Everything will be fiiiiiiiiinnnneeee
[last lines] Splinter: Were you seen? Leonardo: Of course not, Master Splinter. Donatello: We practiced Ninja. Michaelangelo: [off camera] The art of invisibility. [appears from behind Raph] Splinter: [holds up the New York Post, with a front page picture of the turtles on stage, with the headline "Ninja Rap is Born!"] Practice harder. [the turtles groan] Splinter: Ten flips, now! And remember: [quoting the song played at the show] Splinter: "Go Ninja, go Ninja, go!" I made another funny! [laughs]
What's cooler than cool? It's Ice, baby! Sneak a peak at a taste of the early 90s and drop those zeros and get with our hero, Robert Van Winkle. Check out his fight skills that rival Steven Seagal and his detective skills that rival Walker Texas Ranger. But what does he do in his down time? He's just coolin' but don't be trippin' and skippin' this episode because it's Cool as Iccccccce!
We discuss the best and worst Anime Live Action Adaptations with Special Guest Tim "BigKingKuma" Murray.1YL2UisfgLrDTbpfqCvE
In this episode, host Brian VanHooker is joined by cartoonist Kyle A. Carrozza, the creator of Cartoon Network's "Mighty Magiswords" and a lifelong TMNT fan. Kyle comes to Turtle Tracks to debut his new song "I Have Never Seen a Turtle Get Down," which is something of a companion piece to Vanilla Ice's "Ninja Rap." He also shares his song "Ray Fillet" and explains why the mutant manta ray is his favorite Ninja Turtles character. Sound engineering by Ian Williams.
One day I was having a good, long, think about Vanilla Ice's indelible Ninja Rap from the TMNT 2: The Secret of the Ooze soundtrack and I thought just a little too hard about a musical question posed early on. I showed my lyrics to Luke and he requested that he be involved. Two years later, I remembered to record it!
Shows, butthole doctors, travel, and the best, worst, and criminally unmentioned movie theme songs.
0:00 - Intro & Summary2:00 - Movie Discussion49:40- Cast & Crew/Awards1:02:41 - Pop Culture1:13:48 - Rankings & Ratings To see a full list of movies we will be watching and shows notes, please follow our website: https://www.1991movierewind.com/Follow us!https://linktr.ee/1991movierewind Theme: "sunrise-cardio," Jeremy Dinegan (via Storyblocks)Don't forget to rate/review/subscribe/tell your friends to listen to us!
Tonight we jump around a bit from basic announcements, to conspiracy theories (#KiraIsTheSpy) to a deep convo about heroic events as compared to SLB's. In the last 10 minutes you get a super secret special surprise related to Espionage, and somewhere in there we also broke down the cultural significance of the "Ninja Rap." Enjoy the show! Visit us online at www.UltimatDJzPlayz.com for links to our socials!
Are you a "T-U-R-T-L-E Power" lad or a "Ninja Rap" kid? How you answer may determine what kind of fan you are of the 1990 live-action version of "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" and its two direct sequels from 1991 and 1993. If you said "Ninja Rap," then chances are your feelings about early 90s Turtle Mania is either ironic or steeped in heavy nostalgia. It's no secret that one Old Millennials Remember Movies host is one of the more die hard Ninja Turtles fans in the world (and you may find a few episodes of the sporadically recorded "Ninja Turtle Talk Live" podcast on the Old Millennials website). For the other Old Millennials host, well, she only really dove into the TMNT universe as an adult. In short, she holds no nostalgia for these rubber-suited, pizza-obsessed sewer dwellers. Here's the thing about the 1990 movie: It's much more like the original Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird comics, which leaned into the fighting and criminal underworld of New York City. Raphael is moody instead of sarcastic, and Shredder is a stone-cold badass who is smart enough to keep himself away from alien brain creatures and dimwitted mutant sidekicks. And much of the movie's story borrows heavily from various early issues of the comic series. Old Millennials Tyler and Angela take an extensive look at the 1990 original, which they also showed to their four kids for the first time. Tyler loves it, obviously, and Angela wants to start a fight, but, spoiler alert, she ultimately can't deny the grimy charm of the movie. At least we can agree that punk kid Danny deserves to go to jail, and that April's boss at the news station is a total creep. Also, give us more Sam Rockwell! Then the hosts dive into the far more divisive sequels, 1991's "The Secret of the Ooze," and 1993's "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3," often subtitled nowadays as "Turtles in Time." Neither host have much to defend about "Ooze," but it gives Tyler an opportunity to talk about that time Angela went to see Vanilla Ice in concert. And, look, we know #3 is mocked for its shoddy rubber suits, idiotic jokes and lack of memorable villains, but you'll hear a somewhat spirited defense of the movie here. Look, at least the Turtles get to fight with their weapons, rather than with sausages and break dance moves like in "Secret of the Ooze." So join the Old Millennials for this special episode on the original TMNT trilogy, with talk of Judith Hoag vs. Paige Turco as April, the unacceptable absences of Elias Koteas as Casey Jones and Corey Feldman as the voice of Donatello in part 2, and about a thousand different tangents from Tyler about Ninja Turtles comics, the stellar 2003 animated series, the equally strong Nickelodeon series that started in 2012, and those garbage, Michael Bay-produced movies in the 2010s. And, remember, if you lose a sai, don't worry; you can get it back! You can get it back! Damn! Looking for a more obvious stinger? Fine. "Wise man say, 'Never pay full price for late pizza.'" Also discussed on this episode of Old Millennials Remember Movies Peacemaker (2022 HBO Max series) I Want You Back (2022) Marry Me (2022) Kimi (2022) Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2022) Hollywood Homicide (2003) Rush Hour 3 (2007)
The results of our Black Friday poll are in and the winner is our inner child, because you voted overwhelmingly for TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES II: THE SECRET OF THE OOZE (1991)! Whether that inner child is still entertained by goofy pratfalls performed by martial artists in foam rubber suits is questionable, but the point is that we're doing what we can to keep you coming back for more in 2022 as we round out this year with some wholesome nostalgia talk. We will be back next week with horror, but this week, Ninja Rap is born! If you like the show, be sure to Rate, Review & Subscribe! Email us at HMNPodcast@gmail.com Follow us on social media! Twitter: @HMNPodcast Instagram: @HMNPodcast Facebook Group: Horror Movie Night Podcast Donate to our Patreon: Horror Movie Night Podcast is creating A Comedy Podcast about Horror Films | Patreon This podcast is powered by Pinecast. Try Pinecast for free, forever, no credit card required. If you decide to upgrade, use coupon code r-4222c3 for 40% off for 4 months, and support Horror Movie Night.
The Bloobcast delve into the gritty comic book roots of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles They discuss parallels to Daredevil, the distinctive artwork, how the comics were adapted for the first live action movie, the absurdity of naming your evil Ninja organisation “The Foot”, the whole UK “Hero Turtles” debacle, and the dodgy direct to VHS specials that mark the franchise's lowest point. Music Used: Cool Vibes by Kevin MacLeod Cool Vibes Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Intractable by Kevin MacLeod: Intractable Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Ninja Rap by Vanilla Ice Warriors (She Ra and the Princesses of Power theme) (instrumental)
Youtube & Teepublic: We have tales of fighting Youtube strikes and Teepublic sales! Michael Jackson and E.T., we failed them.The Gathering Of The Juggalos 2021: Against all odds, we are getting a GATHERING 2021! Let's watch the 1 hour livestream of announcements featuring Violent J OFF A BEAN!COKES!, ADDERALL!, SCENE!, THE SHOW ABOUT THE SHOW!, THE REAL ONES!, EPISODES!, CONTENT KINGS!, COAT TAIL KING!, YOUTUBE!, COPYRIGHT HIT!, FAIR USE!, RELEASE THE BLOCK!, COREY FELDMAN!, MICHAEL JACKSON ESTATE!, AUTISM TELETHON!, INCONVENIENCE!, TEEPUBLIC SALE!, WE FAILED THEM!, MICHAEL JACKSON!, E.T.!, SCIENTISTS!, ALF!, RINGER!, BAD NEWS WIZARD!, LIQUID TERMINATOR!, INSANE CLOWN POSSE!, ICP!, LIVESTREAM!, PRODUCTION VALUE!, GATHERING INFOMERCIAL!, VIOLENT J!, SHAGGY 2 DOPE!, JUMPSTEADY!, EPIC!, FAMILY REUNION!, SHANGRI LA!, FACE PAINT!, OLD GUYS!, KISS!, YUKON MOOSE DICK!, BIGFOOT!, BIGFOOT SONG!, CD!, SPECIALTY TICKET!, HAY WAGON!, HAUNTED WOODS!, OHIO!, DIORAMA!, MOCK UP!, AUCTION!, LAME SHIT!, STAGE CLOWN DRIP!, PEEP THIS SHIT STAGE!, OPEN MIC!, KID N PLAY!, HOUSE PARTY!, VANILLA ICE!, 6IX9INE!, VAMPING!, FAT JOE!, GALLERING!, NASCAR ALOE!, CAMBODIAN AMERICAN!, 3 SIX MAFIA!, JUCIY J!, DJ PAUL!, 90S TOUR!, MICHAEL IAN BLACK!, VANILLA ICE!, BRIAN AUSTEN GREEN!, BAG!, NINJA RAP!, JCW!, WRESTLING!, STEVE-O!, HATCHET ARTISTS!, BLAHZAY ROZE!, ICONS!, FAYGO!, DOUBLE HOMICIDE!, JACK FROST!, THE MISFIT TOYS!, THE EASTER BUNNY!, YUKON CORNELIUS!, BROCK LESNAR!, RA THE RUGGED MAN!, OUIJA MAC!, LYTE!, THE CLOWN DICK STAGE!, GO CRAZY!, DEATH DEFYING STUNTS!, BLOODY TAMPON!, NUTSACK IN A BEAR TRAP!, NINJA!, AIDS BLOOD!, CHRIS HANSEN!, THE BOY BLUE!, CYRAXX!, DR DEMENTO!, LARDI B!, WEIRD AL!, FUNNY FIVE AT 9!, RAVEN BLACK!, FAYGO ARMAGEDDON!, SADDEST LINEUP!, LUCAS!, PROMOTION!, JAKE!, 521 PART 1!You can find the videos from this episode at our Discord RIGHT HERE!
In this episode of Thirty Pop, Luke sits down with his new friend, filmmaker Aaron Kirk, to talk about Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze!*Stream this week's Thirty Pop 1991 Mixtape Playlist: *Apple Music | SpotifyMERCHCheck out our store on TeePublic.com for Thirty Pop merch!SOCIALSBe sure to follow and tag Thirty Pop on Facebook Twitter & Instagram!BECOME A PATRONThis show is made possible by patrons like Becky & Jim Brawner and Candice & Marc Robinson. Join the neighborhood we're building and receive bonus content from this and other Milieu Media Group shows for as little as $1 a month on Patreon!EPISODE CREDITS:Produced, edited and mixed by Luke BrawnerArtwork designed by Heather Hale of Hale HouseMusic licensed through PodcastMusic.com© 2021 Milieu Media Group, LLC
This week at The Tape Store we celebrate the 30th anniversary of 1991's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze, the direct sequel to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990) and the film that birthed "Ninja Rap". We talk at length about this film's sudden divergence from its predecessor, the problems this presented, the merits the film manages to have despite its significant shortcomings, and the iconic moments in it that scream "1990s!".
Happy 30th Anniversary to the film that gave us Ninja Rap. But is there more to this film?? --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Episodio preludio del cumpleaños de Pari y los diferentes tipos de felicitaciones cumpleañeras, nueva entrada de su hashtag favorito: #RolasPutonasPeroMatonas. Wisto cumple y ya vió La Monja, la partida de Sean Connery, frases de películas que repites mucho en tu vida diaria y la escena épica de Ninja Rap en la película de las Tortugas Ninja!! Escúchanos en: Spotify / Apple Podcast / ivoox Apóyanos en Patreon!! Síguenos: Twitter/ Facebook/ Instagram: holamsupernova holamsupernova@gmail.com
Episodio preludio del cumpleaños de Pari y los diferentes tipos de felicitaciones cumpleañeras, nueva entrada de su hashtag favorito: #RolasPutonasPeroMatonas. Wisto cumple y ya vió La Monja, la partida de Sean Connery, frases de películas que repites mucho en tu vida diaria y la escena épica de Ninja Rap en la película de las Tortugas Ninja!! Escúchanos en: Spotify / Apple Podcast / ivoox Apóyanos en Patreon!! Síguenos: Twitter/ Facebook/ Instagram: holamsupernova holamsupernova@gmail.com
Wow wow wow wow wow wow! René Aussant returns to discuss the insanity of The Ooze. We dive into his relationship to the Turtles and how growing up with brothers emboldened it. The movie isn't amazing, but the Ninja Rap is dope, "Combat Cold-Cuts" is dope, and super-cheesy pizza is dope, which makes 'TMNT II: The Secret of the Ooze' pumped full of ultra-cool-radical-cowabunga-cheesy-dopeness. Follow @WhatWillWeWatch Guest René Aussant on Spotify(Listen here) Hosted by Willem Osland(@willemozland) Produced by Kyle Bhawan and Willem Osland Music by Josh Polanco(@polancotheperson) Cover art by Nick Carlin(@nickcarl.in)
Jason Martin & Ramon Foster get amped for Vol Week, as the Vols play Saturday at South Carolina. Plus, Steve Palazzolo from Pro Football Focus joins the show, and Ramon gives him grief about O-line play. Also, the boys re-live the magic that was/is Vanilla Ice's "Ninja Rap".
Jason Martin & Ramon Foster get amped for Vol Week, as the Vols play Saturday at South Carolina. Plus, Steve Palazzolo from Pro Football Focus joins the show, and Ramon gives him grief about O-line play. Also, the boys re-live the magic that was/is Vanilla Ice's "Ninja Rap".
Will and Matt discuss how the gang is all here, Krang, Shredder, Baxter, Bebop and Rocksteady, April, the Turtles and Splinter, and Casey "Officer Steve Amell" Jones, in this (as for now) last episode of "Ninja Rap". Disclaimer: Adult Language and Spoilers, NSFW
Will and Matt discuss fighting, an homage to Ernest, and the Vanilla Ice Theory, plus much more as they cover the first live action Michael Bay Turtles film!Disclaimer: Adult Language and Spoilers, NSFW
Will and Matt discuss the heavy topics like: Leonardo's a bad leader, Matt's inability to disappear like a ninja, and the existential crisis that is the animated 2007 turtles film.Disclaimer: Adult Language and Spoilers, NSFW
Will and Matt talk about faux muppets, how time travel makes everything better, and the intricate depth of the background plot in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3... yes... there was a third part... Disclaimer: Adult Language and Spoilers, NSFW
Will and Matt talk about ooze, secrets, donuts... Vanilla Ice... Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: Secret of the Ooze (aka "The Vanilla Ice One")Disclaimer: Adult Language and Spoilers, NSFW
A whole new season, a whole new franchise... but still the same two dudes... this time their coming at ya from the half shell... In this episode, Will and Matt discuss the darkness of 1989 New York, April's boss, the problematic Casey, and a whole lot more.DISCLAIMER: Language AND Spoilers
If you thought this podcast was done discussing everyone’s favorite gang of pubescent crime fighting reptiles, we’ve got news for you! Less than a year after the first TMNT movie did some major league butt-kicking at the box office, TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES II: THE SECRET OF THE OOZE offered a second helping of Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael, and Michelangelo — plus their furry but wise sensei Splinter, their cutlery-inspired arch-nemesis Shredder, and a whole lot of shameless pizza promotion. There’s no question that this sequel is more kid-friendly than the original, replacing Judith Hoag’s feisty April O’Neil with the more amiable Paige Turco, ditching the hockey-stick wielding bad boy Casey Jones, and giving our heroes a teenage pizza delivery boy sidekick. It also shows off more of Jim Henson’s creature effects with its super-sized baby villains Tokka and Rahzar. But TMNT II is perhaps best known as the film debut of Vanilla Ice, whose “Ninja Rap” inspires the hip-hop dance number that no early 90s family flick should be without. And before we’re completely done dining on turtle soup, our hosts reminisce about the video games, action figures, concert tours, and other wild TMNT merch we begged our parents to buy us — and recap their recent viewing of 1996's SPACE JAM, too. Go ninja, go ninja, go listen to part two of our podcast — back by bodacious demand! Follow us on Twitter and Instagram at @WWWYshow, on Facebook at Facebook.com/WWWYShow and email your episode suggestions to wwwyshow@gmail.com. Don’t forget to subscribe and review us on Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts so more folks check out the show! Help us defray the costs of creating this show, which includes purchasing movies/shows/music to review, delivery food to eat our feelings, and producing & editing in-house at the MFP Studio in Los Angeles, California, by donating to our Patreon account at patreon.com/WhenWeWereYoung
If you thought this podcast was done discussing everyone’s favorite gang of pubescent crime fighting reptiles, we’ve got news for you! Less than a year after the first TMNT movie did some major league butt-kicking at the box office, TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES II: THE SECRET OF THE OOZE offered a second helping of Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael, and Michelangelo — plus their furry but wise sensei Splinter, their cutlery-inspired arch-nemesis Shredder, and a whole lot of shameless pizza promotion. There’s no question that this sequel is more kid-friendly than the original, replacing Judith Hoag’s feisty April O’Neil with the more amiable Paige Turco, ditching the hockey-stick wielding bad boy Casey Jones, and giving our heroes a teenage pizza delivery boy sidekick. It also shows off more of Jim Henson’s creature effects with its super-sized baby villains Tokka and Rahzar. But TMNT II is perhaps best known as the film debut of Vanilla Ice, whose “Ninja Rap” inspires the hip-hop dance number that no early 90s family flick should be without. And before we’re completely done dining on turtle soup, our hosts reminisce about the video games, action figures, concert tours, and other wild TMNT merch we begged our parents to buy us — and recap their recent viewing of 1996's SPACE JAM, too. Go ninja, go ninja, go listen to part two of our podcast — back by bodacious demand! Follow us on Twitter and Instagram at @WWWYshow, on Facebook at Facebook.com/WWWYShow and email your episode suggestions to wwwyshow@gmail.com. Don’t forget to subscribe and review us on Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts so more folks check out the show! Help us defray the costs of creating this show, which includes purchasing movies/shows/music to review, delivery food to eat our feelings, and producing & editing in-house at the MFP Studio in Los Angeles, California, by donating to our Patreon account at patreon.com/WhenWeWereYoung
No Franchise Fatigue Episode 7 “(American) Ninja Ninja Rap” Sean and Matt discuss the seminal American Ninja action franchise, plus they discuss Canon Films, B-action movie stars, and maybe even learn a thing or two about love. Mostly those first three things though. Credits: Hosted by Matt Reifschneider and Sean Caylor Produced by Matt Reifschneider and Sean Caylor Edited by Sean Caylor bloodbrothersfilmreviews.blogspot.com Reach us at: nffpod.sean@gmail.com facebook.com/nofranchisefatigue twitter.com/nffpod Thank you for listening. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nffpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/nffpodcast/support
In this episode, host Brian VanHooker talks to actor Michelan Sisti, the guy inside the Michelangelo suit for the first Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie as well as The Secret of the Ooze. Sisti recalls sweating like crazy in those heavy suits, Mikey's deleted storyline from the first film and the choreography of Vanilla Ice's "Ninja Rap." Sound engineering by Ian Williams.
In this episode of The Marty Ray Project: Chats, we chat with our friend Vanilla Ice, AKA Rob Van Winkle, and get his thoughts on the Marty Ray Project version of his iconic song, Ice Ice Baby. We also set the record straight about what actually happened between him and Suge Knight a long time ago. Other than that its Ninja Turtles and Japanese Ninja shows. We do have fun! Check out Vanilla Ice Project and his new show Mystery Rides on DIY and HGTV. PLEASE SUBSCRIBE, DOWNLOAD, & RATE! Love ya! In this episode Vanilla Ice challenges me to do something different with his TMNT song Ninja Rap, so I did a little bit at the end. Hope y'all enjoy it!
Our Netflix's THE TOYS THAT MADE US coverage is back and we're talking about everyone's favorite green turtle karate boys--The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! (By PLAYMATES). We also introduce a new, permanent host to the show: Blake's Soundboard. Also, Josh is here again. Head to the sewers with us and discuss the Toiletest Humor. Bring down the house with our piping hot Eugene Levy clips. Why is April O'Neil so dumb looking? Why does Blake cackle himself hoarse in this one? Really, you can hear it, so sorry about that. You know we're gonna talk #toiletgate AND #puppetgate. Josh will Ninja Rap his ass off. Also: Nostalgia vs original IP, Adam's NECA TMNT Target quest for Bebop and Rocksteady, Parasite (the movie), Ace Duck, NECA Ambassadors, NO TURTLE ON THE SHELF. Intro music PARODY by Blake Walker. Outro music: "Turtle Power" by Partners in Kryme (which is infinitely superior to Ninja Rap). Brought to you by AUX Audio Enterprises.
Our Netflix's THE TOYS THAT MADE US coverage is back and we're talking about everyone's favorite green turtle karate boys--The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! (By PLAYMATES). We also introduce a new, permanent host to the show: Blake's Soundboard. Also, Josh is here again. Head to the sewers with us and discuss the Toiletest Humor. Bring down the house with our piping hot Eugene Levy clips. Why is April O'Neil so dumb looking? Why does Blake cackle himself hoarse in this one? Really, you can hear it, so sorry about that. You know we're gonna talk #toiletgate AND #puppetgate. Josh will Ninja Rap his ass off. Also: Nostalgia vs original IP, Adam's NECA TMNT Target quest for Bebop and Rocksteady, Parasite (the movie), Ace Duck, NECA Ambassadors, NO TURTLE ON THE SHELF. Intro music PARODY by Blake Walker. Outro music: "Turtle Power" by Partners in Kryme (which is infinitely superior to Ninja Rap). Brought to you by AUX Audio Enterprises.
Big Cliff returns and this time we don't quit mid podcast talking about our subject.In this episode we discuss the highs and lows of the live action TMNT movies.also included is a special rendition of the Ninja Rap performed by James Beaver himself. _(Big Cliff is a professional wrestler and Security guard trainer)_ Instagram - BeaverdoesmoviesTwitter - beaverdoesFacebook - BeaverdoesmoviesWebsite - [http://beaverdoesmovies.com](http://beaverdoesmovies.com/)Email - beaverdoesmovies@gmail.com [Support the show](https://ko-fi.com/beaverdoesmovies) (https://ko-fi.com/beaverdoesmovies)
Big Cliff returns and this time we don't quit mid podcast talking about our subject.In this episode we discuss the highs and lows of the live action TMNT movies.also included is a special rendition of the Ninja Rap performed by James Beaver himself.(Big Cliff is a professional wrestler and Security guard trainer)Instagram - BeaverdoesmoviesTwitter - beaverdoesFacebook - BeaverdoesmoviesWebsite - http://beaverdoesmovies.comEmail - beaverdoesmovies@gmail.comSupport the show (https://ko-fi.com/beaverdoesmovies)
Duff is back to break down the lyrics of the Ninja Rap, and discuss the burgeoning friendship of Perry-Tello, Tom Waits, TMNT Minute is a Dueling Genre Production Join our Facebook Group! – TMNT Minute Listener Group Follow us on Twitter and Instagram – @TMNTMinute Email … Continue reading →
Have you ever seen a turtle Get Down? Get ready for the Ninja Rap, people! Listen as we get crack-a-lackin’ through the complete and definitive Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Soundtracks. Oh, and the flaming shit pile that is the Coming Out of Their Shells Tour. Yeah, that one left us all feeling betrayed as children. … Continue reading "Anatomy of Mixtape Episode 10: TMNT Soundtracks/Coming Out of Their Shells"
Have you ever seen a turtle Get Down? Get ready for the Ninja Rap, people! Listen as we get crack-a-lackin’ through the complete and definitive Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Soundtracks. Oh, and the flaming shit pile that is the Coming Out of Their Shells Tour. Yeah, that one left us all feeling betrayed as children. … Continue reading "Anatomy of Mixtape Episode 10: TMNT Soundtracks/Coming Out of Their Shells"
Reeking of development hell, Sequel Season finally arrives a whole two months after being announced, and what a doozy we're beginning with, it's 1991's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: The Secret of the Ooze!We get confused and confounded over which Turtle is which, and talk the film's utterly useless antagonists, Splinter's horny side, endless plot points that go nowhere and the glorious return of Vid Neg alum Vanilla Ice and his on-the-spot improv skills with a line-by-line reading of the majesty that is the Ninja Rap!Also, pro wrestler Kevin Nash's star turn as Super Shredder gets a look in and we reveal the next film as part of the season, one with a whopping 3% on Rotten Tomatoes! Tune in to find out what it is!
Justin Peters joins the boys to discuss one of his all time favorite films: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze. This discuss the Ninja Rap, Karate, and the Power Rangers. Movie discussed: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze (1991) If you enjoy the Overtalking Podcast, please RATE and especially REVIEW on iTunes or wherever you listen! Visit our website at overtalkingpod.party Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram @overtalkingpod Email us at overtalkingpod@gmail.com or give us a call and leave us a message at (872) 228-1591 Logo by Nate Richards, check him out on Instagram @naterichardsdesigns
Mixed Up Confusion is our vehicle to discuss the culture that surrounds our weekly conversation about Bob Dylan. Today we talk about music videos that tied into movies. We go everywhere from the casually related ("Eye of the Tiger," "Flashdance," "Streets of Philadelphia") to videos with clips of little consequence ("My Heart Will Go On," "Prince of the Universe," "Danger Zone," "Kiss From a Rose," "I Believe I Can Fly," "Hero") to music videos made with connections to the source material ("The Goonies R Good Enough," "Ninja Rap," "Ghostbusters," "We Don't Need Another Hero," "Deepest Bluest," "Come With Me," "I Don't Wanna Miss A Thing," "Lose Yourself," "Men in Black" "Vindicated," "Mission Impossible" "Everything is Awesome") to movies in and of themselves ("Batdance," "Partyman," "Wild Wild West" and "Gangsta's Paradise"). We also dive into Dylan's video for "Things Have Changed," his Oscar performance in 2001, his Oscar speech, and 2014 Super Bowl commercial about America. As always, full show notes at our website. You can also follow along with our weekly real-time Spotify playlist – See That My Playlist is Kept Clean – and join the conversation on Twitter, message us on Facebook, and like on Instagram. And if you're loving us, consider our Patreon. For as little as one dollar you get early access to every episode we do as soon as they're edited (and a dedicated feed just for you) and exclusive content that'll only ever be on Patreon. Thanks!
Like everyone is doing, a breakdown of the new Monkey bike and Supercub. Best/Worst bike in the world this week and A MotoGP silly season update. Matty explains what Ninja sales have to do with your mom and MotoGPete accuses Kawasaki of hardcore sexual harassment against the others of the big four. Vanilla Ice makes a brief appearance. Best bike in the world this week Worst Bike in the world this week
This week on There’s No Place Like Terra: Nixie and Grace trudge through a clipisode while entertaining themselves with the Ninja Rap and DnD analogies, plus Atlantis Table spoilers (but not really). @terrapodcast on twitter facebook.com/theresnoplaceliketerra patreon.com/theresnoplaceliketerra theresnoplaceliketerra@gmail.com
Episode 0001: We Die! Our powers have doubled (recording time) since the last time we met so get ready! Albert and Mike return along with help from Cantina Cast co-host Jonesy and Cantina Cast Discord's Veteran Joe to cover the woolly mammoth that is Chapter 1! There's a crap ton of stuff to cover so stop reading this and just jump on in: News from the front lines! Ready Player One should break $500 million worldwide! Host reactions to the movie adaption Armada is a GO! Galaga (1981) It has a lot of sequels New Retro Arcade: Neon version seems to be the way to go Jonesy plays a LOT of Galaga Defender (1981) Fun game, crazy controls, not for the feint of heart Choplifter comparison Defender 2 (Stargate) Asteroids (1979) Flipping game scores - this is not a thing Albert is NOT good at everything…trust me Vector graphics, simplistic game play, but boring?! Robotron 2084 (1982) Eugene Jarvis was behind this one as well as Defender Twin sticks, fast paced, lots of action Joe liked this one…he's going back for more Family Ties (1982 - 1989) Every season is on Amazon Prime Alex Keaton was a fashion inspiration Feel good family of the early 80's Horny Hippie Parents or just crazy in love? “Say Uncle” with Tom Hanks Episodes covered a lot of sensitive and controversial topics for its time The Amazing Spiderman (1962) Who was the best? Tobey Maguire, Andrew Garfield, or Tom Holland? Answer: Neil Patrick Harris The Ramones' cover X-Men (1963 - present) Favorite X-Man (or woman)? Least favorite? Green Lantern (1940) Who was your favorite Green Lantern? We love The Justice League cartoon and now you can too! Sesame Street (1969) Favorite character? “Hey, Bert!” Mr. Snuffleeupaugus, Mr. Hooper, Yip Yip Martians Cosmos (1980) “Billions of billions of billions…” Nova vs . Cosmos “Professor Wear” Mike wakes up around this point… Donkey Kong (1981) Cut scenes were cool but more on the game later in later episode Billy Mitchell was stripped?? BurgerTime (1982) Mr. Hot Dog, Mr. Pickle, and Mr. Egg Pitfall (1982) Released by Activision Editor's Note: We should have spent more time here “Jedi building his first lightsaber” Jonesy built his own lightsaber - and it works! Return of the Jedi deleted scene Right of passage for anyone The Bat Cave (1942) NOT where Batman goes to the bathroom Ben Batfleck vs. Adam West Fortress of Solitude (1958?) Didn't originate with Superman Visually synonymous with Reeves movies Fruity Pebbles (1971) vs. Off Brands Fruity Pebbles VS. Cocoa Pebbles! Fruity Milk VS. Cocoa Milk! The Redemption of Mr. Post The People (Barney and Fred) vs. Hulk Hogan Lunch Boxes Plastic vs. Metal Our favorites growing up Ninja Rap is a good rap The Last Starfighter (1984) Does the CG hold up? Anyone can be a hero storyline resonates Parallels between TLS and RPO Wil Wheaton cameo! “Video Game Available from Atari Inc.” Final thoughts on the FUN that is TLS “We Die.” Hosts: Albert “Hey, Bert!” Padilla Mike “Get Of My Lawn” Rondeau Jonesy aka “Mr. Cocoa Pebbles” Joe “Dystopia” Kane Like us, follow us, pay us here: Instagram: @TheBasementRPO Twitter: @TheBasementRPO Facebook: /TheBasementRPO Patreon: patreon.com/TheBasementRPO TeePublic:http://tee.pub/lic/mjtTM-nrguo Be kind, rewind!
Podcast for a deep examination into the career and life choices of Adam Sandler. Special Guest Sponsor Soylent helps the gang become an unstoppable force of efficiency. Patrick lifts a car over his head. Joe sires twelve offspring in a single night. Lev rides to the studio by skiing on two lions. Intern Jiminy is still regular. He's sick so he didn't show up for this episode. A bottle of Soylent might have helped to prevent that illness : What non-Soylent things are discussed on this week's episode? You'll have to tune in to find out! Also drink Soylent. Lots of Soylent. Disclaimer: This episode was recorded in October 2016. References may feel confusing and/or dated unusually quickly. 'That's My Boy' available on DVD, streaming, and unnecessarily on Blu-ray: https://www.amazon.com/Thats-Boy-Blu-ray-Adam-Sandler/dp/B008RNYMH4https://www.amazon.com/Jack-Jill-UltraViolet-Digital-Blu-ray/dp/B006LL3WAM/ref=tmm_blu_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr= Clips from 'That's My Boy' Music from "Ninja Rap" by Vanilla Ice and "Hangin' Tough" by New Kids on the Block Artwork from BJ West quixotic, united, skeyhill, vekeman, sandler, syzygy, that's my boy, sandberg, vanilla, ice, todd bridges, caan, wassup, incest, statutory, turtle, ninja, new kids on the block, hangin tough, tatu, tattoo, soylent, harms,
Jason calls in sick, but no worries because Mike is joined by Jack Hull to discuss the original 1990 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! And everyone's favorite Cocaine dealing ninja biker classic Miami Connection. We dig deep and discuss what really happened to Bruce Lee, Ninja Rap, Roger Corman's bizarre take on the Turtles.
Cowabunga Dude! Lean, Green and….OMG why did they make 3 live action Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movies in the 90s?!?! James and Craig break down the TMNT Trilogy with more fun and excitement than a Vanilla Ice Dance Party! The Totally Awesome Guys also talk about the 4th TMNT movie that was almost made! Ninja, Ninja Rap!
Welcome, ladies and gents, to the 10th episode of the best podcast about ninja turtles recorded in a kitchen in Birmingham, Podcast In A Half Shell! This episode, Duncan and I sink our teeth into the mildly disappointing second installment of the TMNT live action movies; Secret of The Ooze! We discuss why Keno makes us want to punch him right in the kisser, why having swords makes getting out of a rope net very easy actually, how anthropomorphic animal suits can be both great and terrible all at once, and loads more! All this, plus the Turtles losing all semblance of ninja skill, Shredder possibly suffering brain damage, and, of course, Ninja Rap... Enjoy!
Aaron and Scotty are feeling all 22 with the newest episode of The Weekly Mopcast. The guys talk about their spring breaks, Scotty mentions his love for Honda All Star Campus Challenge and his dislike of the National Broadcast Society convention. Plus there is some Vanilla Ice Love with the Ninja Rap from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: Secret of the Ooze. So sit back and enjoy!
It's the last show of the year! We share Christmas stories, Whatchuplayin', the News According to Us, and so much more. Netflixation was Saint Nick and well, you just need to listen to the episode. It could be our worst or it could be the best!
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze was a sure thing. The original became the most profitable independent film of all time, the toys were still selling well, and the Turtles were even touring the country with a musical stage show. Add in chart-topping rapper Vanilla Ice with his Ninja Rap, plus new mutants for the Turtles to fight, it couldn't go wrong. Or could it? Join Stuart, Jakob, and Arnie this week to find out with their Oozing review of the second Turtles film!
Esta semana en Hablemos en Bits: Fonchi hace el Ninja Rap, Arquimedes se somete y Stephanie llega a poner las cosas en orden. Noticias, Recomendaciones, Comunidad y mucha más Penka descalibrada con aire a programa barato de los 80's.
Esta semana en Hablemos en Bits: Fonchi hace el Ninja Rap, Arquimedes se somete y Stephanie llega a poner las cosas en orden. Noticias, Recomendaciones, Comunidad y mucha más Penka descalibrada con aire a programa barato de los 80's.
Agents Of F.O.U.R. Yes, the episode title is a blatant piece of attention-grabbing, what with the release of the TV show. This week, we welcome back Charlie Niemeyer to the show. Host of Superman In The Bronze Age and Charlie's Geekcast, and co-host of Starman Observatory, Charlie is just the guy we wanted to have sit around whilst Steve summarises this week's issue! And what an issue. Having been teased with Gorgon last week, we now get a full bevy of Inhumans this week. Crystal. Lockjaw. Karnak. Triton. Black Bolt. Kirby's opened up his imagination and letting everything spill out. Along the way, we find time to do the Ninja Rap, have a gimp on the show, and sing the Dogtanian theme. Send in your feedback to fantastic4podcast@gmail.com, leave your comments at the libsyn site, or at fantasticflameon.wordpress.com. Follow us on twitter, where we are @fantasticast
It's the 30th episode of Rewatchability, and to celebrate we have a super-sized episode dedicated to one of our favourite topics: the seminal popular culture phenomenon that is Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! We re-watched the first three movies, and also managed to discuss the cartoon series, the Nintendo games, the breakfast cereal, and the Ninja Turtles' unfortunate 1990 Live Tour. We're joined by guests Matt Johnson (who you might recognize from Nirvana the Band) and Curtis Lobb who's currently working on a TMNT documentary. In this episode we address some important issues: Was Casey Jones homeless? Where were Corey Feldman and Elias Koteas during Secret of the Ooze? What will Michael Bay's reboot of the franchise look like?* Which rap is better, Ninja Rap or TURTLE Power? You'll have to listen to the podcast to find out! MUSIC: This week’s featured artist is Del Bel Curtis can be found at FauxPopTV and iProductions * UPDATE: Since recording this podcast, Michael Bay has announced that the Ninja Turtles in his new film won't be Mutants but rather Aliens... yeah. I wonder what the guy who voiced Michaelangelo in the movies thought of that. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
STL is back! In what feels like a month I talk tons of stuff. Movies, music, of course I have to talk some Dwyane, and great stories from my adventures at the Skillet concert. Oh yea, I even find time to talk some TMNT 2 at some point. This is the worse tangent episode yet. I feel like I'm on "Show Me The Winston". Come along for the ride and let's jam to some "Ninja Rap" in episode 37.
Our Netflix's THE TOYS THAT MADE US coverage is back and we're talking about everyone's favorite green turtle karate boys--The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! (By PLAYMATES). We also introduce a new, permanent host to the show: Blake's Soundboard. Also, Josh is here again. Head to the sewers with us and discuss the Toiletest Humor. Bring down the house with our piping hot Eugene Levy clips. Why is April O'Neil so dumb looking? Why does Blake cackle himself hoarse in this one? Really, you can hear it, so sorry about that. You know we're gonna talk #toiletgate AND #puppetgate. Josh will Ninja Rap his ass off. Also: Nostalgia vs original IP, Adam's NECA TMNT Target quest for Bebop and Rocksteady, Parasite (the movie), Ace Duck, NECA Ambassadors, NO TURTLE ON THE SHELF. Intro music PARODY by Blake Walker. Outro music: "Turtle Power" by Partners in Kryme (which is infinitely superior to Ninja Rap). Brought to you by AUX Audio Enterprises.