Hobo Stu’s Weekly Recap

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Hobo Stu

Hobo Stu

Hello everyone,

I am really looking forward to Halloween this year, although I can’t really decide what I should dress up as.

Of course, everyone here at HoboTrashcan has an opinion. Courtney keeps trying to convince me to dress up as a slutty hobo, but I just don’t have the legs for that costume. Joel wants me to dress up like Ben Jabituya, but that’s actually for a protest he is staging outside of Dimension Films. And Lars just wants me to dress up Detective Frank Tripp just so that he can spout off David Caruso one-liners to me all night.

If you guys have any better suggestions, please let me know.

Here’s what’s new on HoboTrashcan.com this week:

Murphy’s Law – So it’s come to this: a Short Circuit remake
Anyone who grew up in the 80s undoubtedly has fond memories of Short Circuit, the story of an adorable killing machine that gets struck by lightning and becomes self-aware. But Hollywood is out to ruin those memories with a pointless remake of the classic film. Joel Murphy is not happy.

Outside of the In-Crowd – Halloween: A guide to proper slutting
Getting tired of that slutty nurse or slutty secretary costume hanging in the back of your closet? If you are looking to slut it up this Halloween but can’t decide what costume to go with, this week Courtney Enlow offers this helpful guide to show off your creativity (as well as your “assets”).

Positive Cynicism – Deck the patch with orange and black
Halloween used to be one of the most exciting days of the year, but thanks to factors like overprotective parents and stores looking to start the Christmas rush as early as possible, it seems like the holiday is a pale imitation of what it once was. Aaron R. Davis investigates.

Hobo Radio 104 – YEEAAAAH!
David Caruso has battled a lot of bad guys on CSI: Miami, but none of them are as evil as Jay Leno. Luckily, Caruso and Leno have been battling it out on Monday nights in the 10 p.m. time slot and Caruso has continually been the victor. However, CSI: Miami showed a rerun this week while Leno had original programming, giving the chin a chance to reign supreme.

This week Joel and Lars reveal who won that fight. They also find the time to talk about Halloween, Baltimore’s effort to be a real city and a new leather Batman outfit that will make the other members of your biker gang jealous.

Were Caruso’s corny one-liners enough to defeat Leno’s stale jokes? What does Baltimore have against fun? What part did Willem Dafoe almost play in Tim Burton’s Batman? The answers to these questions and more are in this week’s podcast.

Finish That Fortune 9
We provide you with the first half of a real fortune from a fortune cookie and it’s up to you to fill in the blank (and you can’t just write “in bed”). Every week, we will pick the funniest response. You won’t actually win a prize, but you will get the satisfaction of knowing that you are better than everyone else. And your name will be printed here on the site, so that others may bask in your glory.

From the Vault – Hanging Around … Red Bull Flugtag
A giant Oscar Meyer Wienermobile, a beehive hairdo and a One-eyed, One-horned, Flying Purple People Eater were just some of the crafts entered by 23 different teams from around the world who competed in Red Bull Flugtag Baltimore in 2006. They were all seeking glory and hoping to beat the U.S. distance record.

Did anyone break the record? Who reigned supreme? Who crashed and burned? We were there to give you the blow-by-blow. So if you missed our feature back in 2006, here is your chance to relive Red Bull Flugtag Baltimore with a complete recap and tons of photos (plus an interview with celebrity judge Julito McCullum from The Wire).

- Hobo Stu

Hobo Stu’s Weekly Recap is also available as an email newsletter. To sign up for the newsletter to ensure you never miss an update, send an email to newsletter-subscribe@hobotrashcan.com.

Hobo Radio 104 – YEEAAAAH!

Hobo Radio 2 Comments
  • Introduction
  • Jay Leno vs. David Caruso
  • Baltimore, hon
  • Contractually-obligated Batman discussion

Week 104 Spotlight: YEEAAAAH!

David Caruso has battled a lot of bad guys on CSI: Miami, but none of them are as evil as Jay Leno. Luckily, Caruso and Leno have been battling it out on Monday nights in the 10 p.m. time slot and Caruso has continually been the victor. However, CSI: Miami showed a rerun this week while Leno had original programming, giving the chin a chance to reign supreme.

This week Joel and Lars reveal who won that fight. They also find the time to talk about Halloween, Baltimore’s effort to be a real city and a new leather Batman outfit that will make the other members of your biker gang jealous.

Were Caruso’s corny one-liners enough to defeat Leno’s stale jokes? What does Baltimore have against fun? What part did Willem Dafoe almost play in Tim Burton’s Batman? The answers to these questions and more are in this week’s podcast.

Hobo Radio is the official podcast of HoboTrashcan, brought to you by The Podcast Network.

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Finish That Fortune 9

Finish That Fortune 5 Comments

We provide you with the first half of a fortune from a fortune cookie and it’s up to you to fill in the blank (and you can’t just write “in bed”).

Every week, we will pick the funniest response. You won’t actually win a prize, but you will get the satisfaction of knowing that you are better than everyone else. And your name will be printed here on the site, so that others may bask in your glory.

Without further ado, here is this week’s fortune:

    It takes courage to _____.

Leave a comment with your response. The winner will be announced next Thursday.

Last week’s winner: FupDuckTV, who wrote: “Perhaps you’ve been focusing too much on David Hasselhoff.”

Theresa Madeline is the brainchild behind Finish That Fortune, a contest originally designed primarily to keep herself and those close to her amused. When she is not providing an arena for her friends to out wit each other, she is imparting her love of words and humor on the next generation.

Murphy’s Law – So it’s come to this: a Short Circuit remake

Murphy's Law 8 Comments
Joel Murphy

Joel Murphy

At times, I wish “Hollywood” was an actual person so that I could punch him in the throat.

That may sound harsh, but I feel like my anger is completely justified. After all, lately Hollywood has been on a mission to remake everything cherished from my childhood – including this summer’s G.I. Joe and Transformers films – and it seems like they won’t rest until there is nothing left. They are going too far and they need to be stopped (or, at the very least, throat punched).

This week’s anger-inducing, childhood-wrecking announcement comes from Dimension Films, which is currently developing a remake of Short Circuit. For you young whippersnappers out there unfamiliar with the original cinematic masterpiece, Short Circuit is the story of Johnny 5, a military robot who is struck by lightning and suddenly becomes self-aware. The military tries to track him down so that they can wipe his memory clean and have him once again become a killing machine, but he befriends a woman named Stephanie who tries to convince the government scientists to keep him just as he is.

It’s a fun little movie starring Steve Guttenberg (the king of 80s movies with ridiculous premises), Ally Sheedy and Fisher Stevens (as the mandatory over-the-top stereotypical foreign guy). I won’t pretend that it was high art or anything, but it’s solidly entertaining and HBO used to run it non-stop in the late 80s and early 90s, so I watched it roughly 80 million times growing up. It was one of those movies that I would always watch no matter what part it was at, so needless to say, it occupies a special place in my heart.

But Hollywood is heartless, so they don’t care about my childhood nostalgia. They only care about squeezing every last drop of cash from the 80s before they move on to remaking 90s films. And since they know there is zero chance that I will ever jump on board with this remake, they decided to throw an extra poke in the eye my way by hiring the guy who did Paul Blart: Mall Cop to direct this travesty.

And they didn’t stop there. They know to make this movie truly unwatchable, they will also need to make idiotic changes to the script based on advice from some unwashed focus group comprised of random people who had nothing better to do at 2 p.m. on a Wednesday and probably have no intention of seeing the film anyway. That’s most likely how we ended up with this little tidbit: “Scripted by Dan Milano (Robot Chicken), the remake is a robot reboot that brings the iconic Johnny 5 into the 21st century. Built by the military to be a highly sophisticated weapon, Johnny 5 develops a conscience and personality after being hit by lightning. He befriends a lonely boy and his fractured family.”

“We’re bringing Number 5 into the 21st Century and taking advantage of the improvements in robotics that are so massive that robots are now performing heart surgeries in hospitals,” Producer David Foster said.

So basically, they are going to completely change the way Johnny 5 looks (and probably acts). Instead of being the adorable, clunky 80s robot, he will be some slick Michael Bay-style “modern” robot that is completely CGI and lacks the charisma and soul of the original. And, they’ve replaced Ally Sheedy with some little kid with daddy issues. I’m willing to bet that Johnny 5 helps the family patch up their problems and, with any luck, Dan Milano will tack on some ham-handed lesson or social commentary to the end of this thing.

It’s one thing to be so uncreative that you have to remake other people’s ideas. But it’s arrogant and misguided to think that you can also “improve” the source material by modernizing and overcomplicating the robot and by tacking on a ridiculous plot involving a kid and his broken family. You are remaking this movie because it is good and because people liked it – no one ever sat there and said, “Man, I love Johnny 5, but why is he hanging around this charming single woman? I’d much rather he spend his time with some snot-nosed kid whose dad is too busy working on a big corporate merger to come to his T-ball games.”

Then again, if these people were that smart, they never would have attempted to remake this movie in the first place. Or, they would have at least been intelligent enough to realize this movie already was remade recently – by Pixar. It was called Wall-E. And it was a far better movie than this train wreck will end up being.

Now, some of you out there might think I’m overreacting. I’m judging a movie that hasn’t even begun filming yet. Not only that, I’m getting worked up about a remake of a movie that came out 23 years ago, one that starred Steve Guttenberg and was intentionally campy and ridiculous.

mlaw-091028.jpg

But this is about more than that. Those of you who know me (or have at least bothered to read my bio tacked to the end of every single one of these columns) know that as a general rule, I hate robots. They are soulless little killing machines that will one day rise up and kill us all. You all waste your time thinking about zombies, but zombies aren’t real. Robots are. And one day, they will become self-aware and they will destroy us all. It’s going to happen – that’s why every movie ever made about robots always ends with a robot apocalypse … except Short Circuit.

Short Circuit was always the one exception. Johnny 5 was a different kind of robot. He was made to be a killing machine, but became self-aware and decided to be a pacifist. It was such a refreshing notion. I mean, in the second movie, he even got rid of the laser on his shoulder. He was a lover, not a fighter.

And now, Dimension films and the guy who made Paul Blart are out to destroy my one happy robot memory. The one beacon of hope that for years has kept me from throwing out all of my electrical devices and living inside a candle-lit bomb shelter is going to be stripped away from me by greedy Hollywood fatcats.

Don’t take this away from me, Hollywood. Don’t make me throat punch you. No disassemble!

Joel Murphy is the creator of HoboTrashcan, which is probably why he has his own column. He loves pugs, hates Jimmy Fallon and has an irrational fear of robots. You can contact him at murphyslaw@hobotrashcan.com.

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Positive Cynicism – Deck the patch with orange and black

Positive Cynicism 4 Comments
Aaron Davis

Aaron R. Davis

Finally, it’s my favorite week of the year: the week leading up to Halloween. My favorite day of the year. Yep, I’m in as good a mood as I can possibly be.

Well … almost.

Like most years, I feel compelled to ask a certain question: Where the hell is Halloween disappearing to?

I know that seems like a weird question to ask on the Internet. After all, there are lots of people (like me) who are using their blogs to count down to the big day, and pumpkins are popping all over the spidery worldwide web.

And certainly, if you’re one of those young Hot Topic shoppers who keeps buying my childhood on tee shirts and shoelaces, you’re the kind of person who appreciates the weird and the wonderful of the last day in October. Or you’re just a Tim Burton fan, but still, you like the trappings, and it’s all good.

But where has the Halloween gone in the everyday?

I know it’s been asked for so many years now that it’s actually become boorish, but look around, and you really are seeing a Halloween shrink every single year. I’ve been eating pumpkin pie and drinking pumpkin spice coffee and pondering this, and along with a bad case of heartburn, I’ve come up with several reasons why Halloween will most likely disappear from our lives as a major holiday by 2021 (my estimate, based purely on defeatist attitudes).

1. Health consciousness. We all know it’s not good to feed our kids lots of candy, even for just one day out of the year. So part of the ruination of Halloween comes down to those parents who give out healthy snacks like granola bars, raisins, or – worst of all – little tubes of toothpaste and toothbrushes. Where’s the incentive to dress up and trick or treat when you might get the kind of food your mom’s already trying to shove on you at home? There’s a reason we all thought the coolest house on the block was the one that didn’t cheap out and gave full-size candy bars.

2. Kids between the ages of 12 and 18. Yes, you are too old to go trick or treating. No, the way to deal with that is not to get drunk and egg peoples’ homes, you whiny little brats. Find something spookily constructive to do – decorate your porch, make a haunted house or just deal with it and shut up. Vandalism is uncreative.

3. College kids. “Halloween parties,” my ass. I live among you entitled jerk-offs, and I know there are three parties a week. Just because someone might decide to dress up their overloud music-beer-and-date-rape festivals with half-assed stabs at costumes and a pathetically slutty spin on just about anything does not make it a Halloween party. You’re just cheapening the Halloween experience. You can (and do) have a party anytime. Halloween is better than that.

4. Those weirdos who think Halloween celebrates the devil. I don’t know what’s more depressing: that schools and parents can be influenced into not doing something because a few people object to it and think that means they should take it away from everyone, or that those same people actually think made-up concepts like witchcraft, ghosts and the devil actually exist. You can identify these people by the comments they leave on your blog. They’re the ones who demand that you respect their sacred beliefs while not respecting your belief that their beliefs are retarded.

You can hit me with the whole thing about the druids and pagans and celebrating the dead, but I refuse all that stuff out of hand. This is the way all of our holidays work – we forget their original meaning, commercialize it, add some candy and then do whatever the hell we want, anyway. Does it really matter anymore? I mean, where in the Bible does it say to celebrate the birth of Jesus by putting expensive presents under a fir tree and “enjoying” all of the family tension? You see my smarmy point?

5. The Christmas Creep. Christmas is coming earlier and earlier every year, despite a date that seems pretty fixed in the calendar. I really do remember a time when it was confined to the few weeks between Thanksgiving and December 25. But then, as people got greedier for gifts, guiltier for not being able to get them, more conscious about shopping early and more depressed economically than Eeyore watching a documentary about the Holocaust, stores started moving their Christmas season further and further up. It was amusing when Christmas merchandise started appearing a week or so before Halloween; now that this stuff is showing up in July, it ain’t funny anymore. As anyone who has worked in retail the last couple of years can tell you, Christmas shopping is going to start next week. Halloween, one of the few holidays that really is still about joy and amusement and having a good time away from overbearing family expectations, is getting completely lost in the shuffle.

Ask yourself this: how many Halloween commercials have you seen this year? How many did you used to see when you were a kid? For the first time in the decade since moving to the college town I live in now, there’s no seasonal Halloween store. But Big Lots has had Christmas stuff on sale since just after my birthday. (Which is July 17. There’s a day for you college kids to put on your slutty costumes. Just saying.)

6. Parents. With Halloween dying and so many kids soon to be unable to identify the body, we’ve got to finger the culprits behind the murder right here. And I’d love to blame my parents’ generation for it. After all, I remember being told how important it was to stay in groups and wear reflective clothing and never eat any candy that wasn’t wrapped, even though no one in history ever found a razor blade, staple or poison in any Halloween candy or popcorn ball or apple ever (despite what your friend’s aunt’s hairdresser’s second cousin from out of town who I totally don’t know said).

But I can’t completely put the blame on them. After all, when I was a kid (the early eighties, which were glorious), we still went trick or treating. Sure, we usually had someone’s dad walking with us (but not going up to the doors, gawd, Dad), but we still got to go.

No, sadly I’ve got to put the blame on my own generation. I’m 33 years old. Many of my peers have children who are in elementary school. And my generation of parents has proven themselves to be disinterested, ill-equipped and totally fearful as parents. (No, I’m not talking about you; I’m talking about those other jerks.) So we have parents now who think Halloween is too traumatic and frightening for kids. Or parents who really aren’t interested in doing all of the work of making costumes and buying candy and taking their kids trick or treating.

And the worst parents of all: the overprotective parents.

The ones who really believe that this isn’t a safe world for children anymore and that every second they don’t have their precious snowflake in their line of sight is a moment when that child is going to be stuffed into a trunk or a utility van by some kind of sicko.

The ones who seem to think that every adult who doesn’t have children is some kind of pedophile who wants to touch their babies in all sorts of inappropriate ways.

The ones who are convinced that all of us childless adults are buying sealed candy, steaming it open, putting razorblades and staples and poison and springs and cogs and rusty fishhooks and feces inside of the chocolate and then re-steaming the wrappers shut, giggling to ourselves and rubbing our stomachs with glee over the idea of harming their darling whelps.

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The parents who have actually taught their children that everywhere they go they are always, at every second, targets for the apparently endless parade of secret perverts and psychopaths who are always watching them, behind every corner and under every rock, waiting for them to let their guard down for the merest instance so that the psycho perverts can strike quickly, taping them up and making off with them for molestation, cannibalism or even a satanic sacrifice.

And I’m saying this as a childless substitute teacher in his thirties who has encountered these attitudes. Parents can be fucking sick.

So, I’m sorry to say it, but the biggest player in the conspiracy to smother Halloween with a pillow is parental overprotection. This joyous holiday devoted to candy, scares, costumes and monsters is being slowly destroyed by the looming parental nightmare that behind every vampire, werewolf, ghost and Frankenstein’s creature is a (gasp!) single person. And as we all know, there’s something wrong with single people, especially when they like something associated with children.

It’s a depressing attitude, writ ridiculously large by my purple prose and complete exaggeration. But it does exist. And when your children or your children’s children are sitting in the classroom in a decade or two, eating their healthy snacks and making a pumpkin out of construction paper with safety scissors in vague tribute to a half-remembered holiday that no one observes anymore, there will be some of us shaking our heads and sighing heavily as we sit patiently and wait for the Great Pumpkin.

It’s on ABC tonight.

Aaron R. Davis lives in a cave at the bottom of the ocean with his eyes shut tight and his fingers in his ears. You can contact him at samuraifrog@yahoo.com.

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