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Lee caps off Black History Month with another Blaxploitation playlist for your listening pleasure, in a slightly shorter episode than usual (hey, it's a short month). --Call Me Mister Tibbs (Main Title) from "They Call Me Mister Tibbs" (1970) --Quincy Jones --Coffin Ed and Grave Digger & Cotton Comes to Harlem from "Cotton Come to Harlem" (1970) --Galt MacDermot; vocals by George Tipton --Main Theme from "Hammer" (1972) --Solomon Burke --Hit Man (What You Gonna Do) from "Hit Man" (1972) --H.B. Barnum --Tell That Man to Go to Hell & Hot Wheels (The Chase) from "Gordon's War" (1973) --Badder Than Evil --Newness in Rhythm (Throw a Punch at Me) from "Detroit 9000" (1973) --Luchi De Jesus --Three Hoods from "Sheba Baby" (1975) --Monk Higgins --Main Title & WW III from "Friday Foster" (1975) --Luchi De Jesus; vocals on Main Title by Ward L. Chandler --Pool Hall Rock from "Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold" (1975) --Dominic Frontiere --End Credits from "Joshua" (1976) --Mike Irwin --Ghetto St. U.S.A. (Vocal) from "Petey Wheatstraw" (1977) --Nat Dove & The Devils with Mary Love. Opening and closing music: Main Title from "Battle Beyond the Stars" by James Horner, and Main Theme from "The Final Terror" by Susan Justin.
Dan and Jon are covering a movie for each US State and on this episode, they're in Kentucky to celebrate Pam Grier in Sheba, Baby.Next episode: The Big Easy (1986) • LouisianaSee what native tribes reside or resided in what is now known as KentuckyContact us, follow us on social media, or buy some merch at linktr.ee/RuinedChildhoods Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Producer/co-writer David Sheldon and film historian Nathanial Thompson
Chris and Myron take a look at the 2008 French horror masterpiece Martyrs and also the 2016 American remake, plus the duo also review Arrow Video's Blu-ray release of the Pam Grier blaxploitation fun-fest Sheba, Baby. Expect lots of spoilers and some very crude language.
Pam Grier month continues with ep.278 as I talk Sheba baby Outro Sheba baby by Barbara Mason Twitter: @TheJayGiles @JayMovieTalk Website: www.tvzonepodcastnetwork.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Jason Teasley and Mark Radulich review movies currently on streaming services: Foxy Brown/Sheba Baby/Black Mama White Mama Review! First up is Foxy Brown (1974) (Amazon Prime). Then we move on to Sheba, Baby (1975) (Amazon Prime). Finally we review Black Mama White Mama (1973) (Amazon Prime). Disclaimer: The following may contain offensive language, adult humor, and/or content that some viewers may find offensive – The views and opinions expressed by any one speaker does not explicitly or necessarily reflect or represent those of Mark Radulich or W2M Network. Mark Radulich and his wacky podcast on all the things: https://linktr.ee/markkind76 also snapchat: markkind76 FB Messenger: Mark Radulich LCSW Tiktok: @markradulich twitter: @MarkRadulich
Season 12, Episode 4 discusses 1975’s “Sheba, Baby”. Hosted by: Jeffrey Arauz, Deidre, Legionnaire, Parker James and Osiris. Visit www.PapiChuloRADIO.com. Download many more episodes via PapiChuloRADIO.com/Archives. “Like” the show on Facebook: Facebook.com/PCRSummerCamp. Follow Papi Chulo RADIO on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter: @PapiChuloRADIO.
On this week's KILLER BS we discuss the career of Austin Stoker, star of ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13. We talk about his work with Pam Grier in SHEBA BABY, in addition to his roles in HORROR HIGH, ABBY, THE ZEBRA KILLER, and TIME WALKER.
The crew of The Beat Connection podcast (Alexa Gold, Azrael DiCaprio and Shizz Shiz) join the Mission to discuss the methodology behind their excavation of hip-hop's greatest beats and samples to unearth their melodic roots and explain how DJ Premier stands shoulder to shoulder with Dr. Dre producer-wise. Then (00:21) we discuss colorism in Netflix's The Harder They Fall and get to our review (00:51) of a 'dressed-up' Pam Grier in Sheba Baby. Check out The Beat Connection on YouTube @ The Beat Connection 215. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Frame Fatale es un podcast sobre películas no canónicas conducido por Sebastián De Caro y Santiago Calori. En este octavo episodio, nos ocupamos de El odio es ciego (No Way Out, 1950) de Joseph L. Mankiewicz. Como nos suele ocurrir, hablamos de esa, pero terminamos hablando estas otras: ¿Sabes quién viene a cenar? (Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, 1967) de Stanley Kramer, Pantera negra (Black Panther, 2018) de Ryan Coogler, Blade, cazador de vampiros (Blade, 1998) de Stephen Norrington, La malvada (All About Eve, 1950) y De repente en el verano (Suddenly, Last Summer, 1959) de Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Al calor de la noche (In the Heat of the Night, 1967) de Norman Jewison, La jaula de las locas (La Cage aun Folles, 1978) de Edouard Molinaro, El planeta de los simios (The Planet of the Apes, 1968) de Franklin J Schaffner, Tiburón (Jaws, 1975) de Steven Spielberg, Matar un ruiseñor (To Kill a Mockingbird, 1962) de Robert Mulligan, Heradarás el viento (Inherit the Wind, 1960) de Stanley Kramer, Caballero sin espada (Mr Smith Goes to Washington, 1939) de Frank Capra, Los mellizos del terror (The Other, 1972) de Robert Mulligan, La noche de los muertos vivientes (The Night of the Living Dead, 1968) de George A. Romero, Carnaval de las almas (Carnival of Souls, 1962) de Herk Harvey, El loco de la motosierra (The Texas Chansaw Massacre, 1974) de Toby Hooper, Deadbeat at Dawn (1988) de Jim Van Bebber, Diabólico (The Evil Dead, 1981) de Sam Raimi, Shaft (1971) de Gordon Parks, Masacre policial (Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song, 1971) de Melvin Van Peebles, Sheba Baby (1975) de William Girdler, Coffy (1973) y Foxy Brown (1974) de Jack Hill, Cleopatra Jones (1973) de Jack Starrett, Dolemite (1975) de D'Urville Martin, The Black Gestapo (1975) de Lee Frost, Ilsa la loba de las SS (Ilsa: She Wolf of the SS, 1975) de Don Edmonds, El desquite (1983), La búsqueda (1985) y En retirada (1984) de Juan Carlos Desanzo, Tienes un email (You've Got Mail, 1998), Todos los hombres del presidente (All the President's Men, 1976) de Alan J. Pakula, Ingrid Goes West (2017) y Red social (The Social Network, 2010) de David FIncher... ... por si justo te dio paja anotar, y hasta contestamos preguntas de lxs oyentes. Podés comentar este episodio o hacer nuevas preguntas para los próximos usando el hashtag #FrameFatale en Twitter. Frame Fatale volverá el lunes que viene. Quizás sea una pegada total suscribirte en donde sea que escuches tus podcasts y tener la primicia que de todas maneras, como ya explicamos varias veces, es lo menos importante.
The completion of Sheba's baby part more Sheba, more violence.
Episode 2. Part one. Pam Grier, Brittany Alexis, Deric Brown, Mary Parker, So much star power that we have to split the episode in two. Today we talk about an extremely violent private investigator by the name of Sheba played by the amazing Pam Grier, in her last Blaxploitation movie.
More exploitation movie content than RPG content. I do an overview of all nine of the late, great William Girdler's films and discuss how you can use things from his films in your games. The movies discussed are not politically correct so if that bothers you skip this episode. Movies discussed include Asylum of Satan, Three on a Meathook, The Zebra Killer (aka The Get Man aka Panic City aka Combat Cops), Abby, Sheba Baby, Project: Kill, Grizzly, Day of the Animals, and of course The Manitou. Spoilers for these movies are discussed. Websites for further information and / or discussed Three on a Meathook trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=siZtVkEc1pQ http://www.williamgirdler.com/ https://horrornewsradio.com/podcast-hosts/the-black-saint/ https://gruesomemagazine.com/2017/09/26/gruesome-says-farewell-brother-friend-true-talent-rip-santos-ellin-jr/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jason376/message
This week on Cult Film in Review, the guys are headed home to take care of dad – and take ut the trash, because they’re talking about the 1975 blaxploitation, Sheba, Baby. In this episode, the guys ask why it’s taken them so long to review true Pam Grier movie – this ain’t no Class […] The post Sheba, Baby appeared first on Cult Film in Review.
**Originally Released 15/03/2016**Chris and Myron take a look at the 2008 French horror masterpiece Martyrs and also the 2016 American remake, plus the duo also review Arrow Video's Blu-ray release of the Pam Grier blaxploitation fun-fest Sheba, Baby. Expect lots of spoilers and some very crude language.Movies Discussed:Martyrs (2008) Chris - 5/Myron - 5Martyrs (2016) Chris - 1/Myron - 2Sheba, Baby (1975) Chris - 3/Myron - 3.5The Good, The Bad & The UglyThe GoodChris - Children of the Corn (1984)Myron - Cooties (2014)The BadChris - Children of the Corn II: The Final Sacrifice (1992)Myron - The Diabolical (2015)The UglyChris - Children of the Corn III: Urban Harvest (1995)Myron - Headless Eyes (1971)Email: ancientslumberpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: @ancient_slumber
Lee has finally returned back to a topic he first covered in episode 2: Blaxploitation. This episode and the next will cover a whole hell of a lot of music Lee couldn't fit into that first episode. Get ready to open your ears to cuts from films giving us some of the baddest motherfuckers and fine-ass ladies to ever grace the exploitation genre. Playlist: --Easin' In from "Hell Up in Harlem" (1973) -- Edwin Starr --Good to the Last Drop & Blacula Strikes from "Blacula" (1972) -- Gene Page --Theme from Shaft from "Shaft" (1971) -- Isacc Hayes --Blowin' Your Mind from "Shaft's Big Score" (1972) -- Gordon Parks --Shaft In Africa (Addis) from "Shaft In Africa" (1973) -- Johnny Pate --Theme From Three Tough Guys from "Three Tough Guys" (1974) -- Isacc Hayes --Mr. Jonathan from "Black Shampoo" (1976) -- Gerald Lee --The Rumble from "Dolemite" (1975) -- Soul Rebellion Orchestra --"T" Stands for Trouble from "Trouble Man" (1972) -- Marvin Gaye --A Good Man is Gone from "Sheba Baby" (1975) -- Barbara Mason --Keep On Movin' On from "Willie Dynamite" (1974) -- Martha Reeves --Across 110th Street (Instrumental) from "Across 110th Street" (1972) -- J.J. Johnson --Little Child Running Wild from "Super Fly" (1972) -- Curtis Mayfield Opening and closing music: Money Orgy from "Danger Diabolik" by Ennio Morricone & Main Theme from "The Horror of Dracula" by James Bernard.
Listen to this bullshit halloween podcast.. movies talked about are The Legend Nigger Charley form 1972 and Sheba Baby from 1975. don’t get upset with the amount N words said in the epside. i know some asshole will lose there shit but oh well…
What's great about this film? Pam Grier. What's great about life? Pam Grier. Pam Grier. Pam Grier. We fangirl over the talented Ms. Grier in this otherwise mediocre film.
Welcome back for another Arrow Video sponsored episode of the GGtMC!!! This week Sammy is joined once again by Todd and we bring you coverage of the Blur Ray releases of Sheba Baby (1974) directed by William Girdler and starring Pam Grier and The Mutilator (1984) directed by Buddy Cooper!!! Emails to midnitecinema@gmail.com Adios!!! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ggtmc/message
Ten Thousand Saints v Visible Secrets on the roulette, we ask Questions of the Week, and chat Straight Outta Compton, Sheba Baby, Dope, Jupiter Ascending, Grand Piano, and much more!
Pam Grier introduces Quentin Tarantino's worshipful homage to her action-hero past. Pam Grier is a film, stage and television actor, author, and philanthropist. Best known for her performances in the early '70s features Coffy, Foxy Brown, and Sheba Baby, she later starred in the Quentin Tarantino's Jackie Brown, for which she received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress. She was the first black woman to appear on the cover of Ms. Magazine, was named as one of Ebony Magazine's "100 Most Fascinating Women of the 20th Century," and the recipient of the Career Achievement Award at the 34th Annual Chicago International Film Festival.
So here it is, we've come to the end of Original Gangstas Month! I hope you've enjoyed our coverage of these great actors and wonderful films.To finish it off we have left the best till last! It's the one and only Pam Grier in 2 films from 1975 Sheba,Baby and Bucktown.Jon Wallace joins me to discuss the movies, the era and the woman, our first lady of cinema, queen of the kick ass, Pamela Grier.Support Original Gangstas 2 over at www.originalgangstas2.com Find Jon Wallace on Twitter @Jon__Wallace and read his blog at: http://thingaboutchickens.blogspot.comYou can SHOP The After Movie Diner http://www.cafepress.com/aftermoviediner LOTS of original and unique designs available on a variety of clothing styles for all ages, office & home supplies and gifts for all the family! AND Check out our sister show Dr.Action and the Kick Ass Kid Commentaries: WATCH OUT! This Podcast EXPLODES!!! http://dractionkickass.blogspot.com/ You can e-mail us: aftermoviediner@gmail.com You can follow us on Twitter: @aftermoviediner Find us on Facebook - www.facebook.com/aftermoviediner and please comment, leave feedback, rate and review us on www.talkshoe.com and iTunes We are also on Stitcher, Spreaker and www.podcastpickle.com The After Movie Diner Podcast is part of THE 2ND UNIT PODCAST NETWORK! Our website http://2upn.blogspot.com
Movie Meltdown - Episode 198 This week we continue our Halloween festivities, by heading out on a creepy fieldtrip to the cemetery! That's right, we come to you "live" from the grave of horror and exploitation director William Girdler. The infamous filmmaker is buried right here in our backyard (so to speak), and we pay tribute to him this week by not only paying our respects at his grave, but by also by discussing one of his films as this week's Sofa Theater feature. So join as as we talk about his first film, filmed right here in his hometown, the sinister "Asylum of Satan". And as we try to decipher the garbled voice of Beelzebub, we also discuss... Charles Kissinger, Abby, the basement of the mall, so homely he has to be local, Toma, a man is being cleaved, getting sued by Warner Brothers, the love scene, Leslie Nielsen, Rosemary's Baby, Zebra Killer, a roughly gouged out hole, they could not process the rock, the Sears catalog version of the 60's, 3 on a Meathook, we probably won't drop you down this elevator shaft, revisiting a movie years later, the one-eyed werewolf, the first use of a jet ski in a movie, a Grizzly puffy sticker, hellish vegetables, cultivating chest hair, there's a hole in the ozone layer, AIP, years of choir practice, Hitchcock, Touch of Evil, somebody dressed as a hamster, the benefits of being a hoarder, blood red flowers, 914 Porsche, all of nature turns against you, misinterpreting, old movie ads, Sheba Baby, being outlived by your agent, fighting a bear on top of a mountain, Tonight I'll Possess Your Corpse, Ed Gein, trying to start a race war, playing an adjective, Nick Cave and the Grinderman tour and your child is possessed by Satan... we've got Ritalin. Spoiler Alert: Spoilers for "Asylum of Satan" as well as "3 on a Meathook". "That guy's plaid jacket foreshadows the beast at the end."
The never-say-die actress/singer/icon opens up and lets the world into her life to witness her triumphs, failures, challenges, and loves -- which include the likes of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Freddie Prinze, Sr., and Richard Pryor. She also talks in detail about a couple of well-heeled mystery suitors. This saga of one of the world's most beautiful women, and the overcoming every hurdle that gets in her way, will bring tears and cheers as she survives everything, even a bout with cancer.Pam Grier began her acting career and achieved fame in the early 1970s when she starred in a number of popular films including Coffy, Foxy Brown, and Sheba Baby. In the 1980s, she worked alongside Paul Newman in Fort Apache: The Bronx, starred in Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes, and earned an NAACP Image Award for Best Actress in a play, Fool for Love by Sam Shepard. In the 1990s her performance as the title character in Quentin Tarantino's Jackie Brown earned her nominations for Best Actress from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association's Golden Globe, the Screen Actors Guild, and the NAACP Image Award in 1997. Recorded On: Monday, June 14, 2010
Fierce. Fearless. And, of course, FOXY. That's the invincible Pam Grier. After watching the larger-than-life star on the screen for more than thirty years, her fans will be salivating to read about her life in FOXY: My Life in Three Acts (Springboard Press/Grand Central Publishing Hardcover). The never-say-die actress/singer/icon opens up and lets the world into her life to witness her triumphs, failures, challenges, and loves, which include the likes of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Freddie Prinze, Sr. and Richard Pryor. She also talks in detail about a couple of well-heeled mystery suitors. This saga of one of the world's most beautiful women—and the overcoming every hurdle that gets in her way will bring tears and cheers as she survives everything, even a bout with cancer. Pam Grier began her acting career and achieved fame in the early 1970's when she starred in a number of popular films including Coffy, Foxy Brown, and Sheba Baby. In the 1980's, her accolades continued as Pam worked alongside Paul Newman in “Fort Apache: The Bronx,” starred Ray Bradbury's “Something Wicked This Way Comes,” and earned an NAACP Image Award for Best Actress in a play through her role in “Fool for Love” by Sam Shepard. In the 1990s, her performance as the title character in Quentin Tarantino's Jackie Brown earned her nominations for Best Actress from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association's Golden Globe, the Screen Actors Guild, and the NAACP in 1997.Additionally, her performance as the Nightingale in HBO's “The Empress' Nightingale” earned her an Emmy Nomination from The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in 2000.