Finish That Fortune 13

Finish That Fortune 10 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:

    Do not be intimidated by _____.

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

Last week’s winner: KayceeK, who wrote: “Human invented language to satisfy the need to ignore its rules of pluralization.”

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.

  

Outside of the In-Crowd – Happy 21st, MST3K

Outside of the In-Crowd 16 Comments
Courtney Enlow

Courtney Enlow

On November 24, 1988, a little life-altering puppet show premiered and changed the face of movie-watching. No, not Kukla, Fran and Ollie, though I understand your confusion. The puppety program was, in fact, Mystery Science Theater 3000. If you’re unfamiliar with the show, you’re dead to me. If you’ve somehow survived that statement, I’ll explain, though I really shouldn’t have to, because this is the Internet, and you should really know.

The premise is as such: an affable janitor/affable temp is forced to watch terrible movies by a mad scientist and his henchman/a mad scientist and his mother/just the mother with a monkey and pale body-less gentleman. He – Joel or Mike – does so with his two robot pals, Crow and Tom Servo. In order to stay sane, our three heroes make fun of the movie, or “riff” on it, as we in the know refer to it.

Also, there’s Gypsy. No one ever mentions Gypsy in their brief descriptions of the show for the benefit of non-fans, but Gypsy was a cool cat, and she was purple, which is my favorite color.

MST3K is my favorite show of all time. I posses most of the episodes, many in their original taped form (because I like commercials), their book, The Amazing Colossal Episode Guide, and I professed my fandom in a frightful enough manner to actually get three of the guys (Mike “Mike Nelson” Nelson, Kevin “Servo/Bobo” Murphy and Bill “Latter Day Crow/Brain Guy” Corbett) to allow me to write a bit for Rifftrax. This was the greatest thing that has ever happened to me, and always will be, and I will tell my children this when they ask why the day of their births are a close second, and I will only say the “close” part for appearances.

In honor of my favorite show’s 21st birthday, and to drink away the sorrow I still feel for that horrible day 10 years ago when the show was canceled, I’m taking it out for a birthday drink. And who better to honor than the show’s best drunks? Feel free to pick the one you’re doing body shots off of (note: if you choose Rowsdower or Mitchell, I’m fairly certain they produce their own salt).

June Talbott, Leech Woman

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Poor June. All she wanted was love. And youth. And vodka. Just … so much vodka, like, all the time. And when her younger/smugger husband decides to leave her and take all his in-office booze with him, she’s naturally devastated. But luck! He decides to use her as a guinea pig for an African aging cure. She gets young, she gets hot, she gets her husband killed by tribesmen and she gets to nail her hot lawyer. But our June refuses to let a thing like happiness get in the way of her drinking. For booze is a stronger soulmate than the wimpy lawyer, Neil. And that is why, June, we salute you. Two straight vodkas for you, old lady-face.

Zap Rowsdower, The Final Sacrifice

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Woodsman. Beer swiller. Child rescuer. Cult fighter. Double denim sporter. Mullet owner. Zap. Rowsdower. Canada’s finest. Recognize.

Rowsdower pulled up in a crappy pickup truck and pulled away at our hearts, never to look back. Sent from the heavens (Canada) to save the world (Canada) from a band of evil (vague group of snowmobilers) and to protect our hero (a skinny useless rat child) by sending the bad guys … to space … I think. I still have no idea what happens in this movie. I’m generally too distracted by the majesty of Rowsdower. A sixer of Molson to you, Zap. Three for your gullet, three for your hair.

Ev, Giant Spider Invasion

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“You been hittin’ the BOOZE again, Ev!” And yes, yes she had, back-braced ginger-bearded redneck husband. Yes she had. A drunken hillbilly, who no doubt boozes to avoid her horrible cheating/molestery husband, slutty sister, rampant spiders and decaying cow carcasses, Ev lives a quiet life of simple pleasures. Mostly in her underpants (see picture, which is the only picture available of our heroine). A blended delight of vodka, ice and spider coming your way, Ev.

Jack Perkins

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While not a movie character, Jack was an important piece of MST’s magic. I’m not sure if he was quite so magical to Mike Nelson, who spent roughly eleventy-thirty hours in makeup, and no doubt still suffers panic attacks when he gets near crepe hair, but it was magical to us and that’s what really matters. Whether he’s telling long dull stories to the uncaring Mads or groping a fey lady-boy who teaches the joy of music, Jack was more than a series of flesh-toned latex applications. He was a hero. A scotch and soda laced with Detrol to you, Perkins.

Father Dude, Soultaker

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I’m almost 97 percent sure his name was Brad, but that’s not important. Nor is it particularly important that he wasn’t drunk, per se, rather coked to the gills. Shiny dewy gills at that, the kind of waxen sheen that only pure ’80s Colombian marching powder can provide. But his lips were no doubt coated with some kind of petroleum-based situation, and I’m sure that could get one all kinds of inebriated. A trough of that stuff for Dude.

Jimmy’s mother, I Accuse My Parents

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Jimmy’s mother really kicks it up a notch. Where others drink to the destruction of their livers, Mrs. Wilson drinks to the destruction of her son’s entire life, leading to the titular accusation. She shows up to his school quasted (quite wasted) in a fancy hat that would make Edie Beale jealous and embarrasses him enough to lead him down the path of sex, murder and hamburgers. And it was his birthday … AND he won the essay contest. She’s a walking (stumbling) course on how to be a proper mother. Serve her whatever she wants, but make sure she drinks it out of her hat.

Mitchell, Mitchell

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My my my my Mitchell. But he’s really all of our our our our Mitchell, isn’t he? Drunk, slovenly, lazy, fat, greasy, hooker-infested, our Mitchell is all these things and so much more. He probably smells like mildew and some variation on pork. He is the king of all things drunken and MSTy. No birthday party would be complete without his presence, slurred insults, failed buttock strokings and passings out on the pool table. He doesn’t need a drink from us – he can undoubtedly suck the remnants off his stained pants and get a decent buzz on.

Commence the party. I’ve brought a cake. Ev dropped spiders all over it, but it’s fine. Party on, folks!

Courtney Enlow is a writer living in Chicago and working as a corporate shill to pay the bills. You can contact her at courtney@hobotrashcan.com.

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Positive Cynicism – What I’m thankful for

Positive Cynicism No Comments
Aaron Davis

Aaron R. Davis

I don’t really do the holidays.

It’s not that I’m some kind of lone wolf, proud of my isolation from family and friends as they go about the greeting card industry-mandated motions and expend the energy and tension necessary to have some vaguely unsatisfying holiday-like experience.

And it’s not that I think I’m somehow better than people who genuinely love holidays and get excited about them and are fulfilled by the family gatherings and the wonderful meal and the ability to take a day to connect with what’s important to them.

It’s just that I’m really, really lazy and think they’re way too much work for very little payoff. I love my family. I don’t need the calendar to remind me of this. And I don’t need Thanksgiving and the vaguely racist “savages taught us about food before we engaged in a systematic policy of genocide for hundreds of years” story to remind me that I’m fortunate to live in a country hellbent on destroying its own economy as quickly as possible because otherwise gay people might get married and poor people wouldn’t get kicked out of their homes and the terrorists would win.

So, as the days get shorter and colder and more intensely depressing, I don’t plan on venturing out to see anyone for Thanksgiving. And although I’ll miss the turkey and stuffing and pumpkin pie, those things are easily purchasable at the nearest grocery store.

But, just to participate in this holiday in as perfunctory a way as possible, I thought I’d share what I’m thankful for this year.

My health. Sure, I’ve got high blood pressure, gastrointestinal reflux disease, clinical depression, anxiety disorder and obstructive sleep apnea, but … what, I don’t really have my health, do I? Well, at least I don’t have a massive head cold, like my poor wife does.

Economic depression. Christmas is one of those wonderful holidays when the media gets together to make you feel horrible for being poor. It sucks when people ask you what you want, and you can’t really afford to buy them anything. But, thanks to the fraud perpetrated by Wall Street over the last couple of decades, everyone else is as poor as I am and can’t afford to get me any presents, either. Finally, the playing field has leveled out.

The continuing cheapening of Christmas as a holiday. To me, Christmas is all Santa drinking Coke and Charlie Brown buying a little tree, anyway. Since the Christmas season apparently starts now three weeks before Halloween, with ever more desperate commercials begging us to go to the store and shop and save the economy, by the time the actual day gets here, the moment’s gone. Everyone shoots their Xmas wad a couple of weeks early, so when the day gets here, it’s beside the point. It’s an anticlimax. And I feel less guilty about not giving a shit.

The Internet. For those of us who don’t really observe, it’s a bummer when every store shuts down for Thanksgiving. Thankfully, the Internet is global, so there’ll be lots of people for me to connect with on Tumblr, Twitter and other such sites, because I apparently have no life whatsoever.

Video games. Because I don’t spend all of my day on the Internet. Really. I don’t. Who told you I did? Well, they lied.

Marvel’s Essential comic book collections. Because I’ve been spending waaaaay too much time with these lately (old Amazing Spider-Man rocks) and yes, even cheesy dialogue and 1960s sexism is preferable to participating in the holiday routine.

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That The Oprah Winfrey Show is leaving the airwaves in 2011. This has nothing to do with Thanksgiving, but since the media treated this like the most important news story in the history of television last week, I thought I should mention it. Good riddance. I’m sure she’ll just move to cable or something, but I did enjoy the tenor of the news stories, which practically screamed: “Who, Lord, who will do our thinking for us now?!”

That my wife’s car broke down. We just have one now. Which means while she’s braving the weather to head to her mother’s house, I’ll be inside with central heating and a mug of coffee watching the Bruce Lee marathon on G4.

The Bruce Lee marathon on G4. I love the holidays.

Yes, I’ll be spending my Thanksgiving alone, drinking coffee, surfing the Internet, playing LEGO Indiana Jones, watching Bruce Lee movies and staying warm. But you know what? I don’t consider that an empty experience. Because in America, the greatest luxury of all is not having to be bothered in any way by the existence of other people. Even if they are family.

Besides, it could be worse. I could be sitting in a theater watching New Moon. That would just be sad.

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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Review – Justice League: The Complete Series

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Justice League

Justice League: The Complete Series

Release Date: November 10, 2009
Own it on DVD

Producers: Dwayne McDuffie, Shaun McLaughlin, Bruce W. Timm, James Tucker, Rich Fogel, Sander Schwartz, Glen Murakami, Linda Steiner

Stars: Carl Lumbly, Phil LaMarr, George Newbern, Kevin Conroy, Maria Canals-Barrera, Michael Rosenbaum, Susan Eisenberg

MPAA Rating: Unrated

HoboTrashcan’s Rating:

Because of the unique visual style and compelling character incarnations producer Bruce Timm helped to create, the collection of animated shows that Timm has worked on are often referred to by fans as the “Timmverse.” Batman: The Animated Series, Superman: The Animated Series and Batman Beyond are all part of the Timmverse, but it’s Justice League that truly allows you to appreciate the scope of the world that Timm and his fellow producers, writers and animators have created.

What’s great about the recently released 15-disc Justice League: The Complete Series box set is that it allows you to see the evolution of this universe. Through the episodes themselves and the bonus featurettes, you can see how Timm and the rest of the creative team were able to create an entire world populated with all of these different DC Comic characters and how they were able to juggle the various characters so that the 22-minute episodes didn’t seem too cluttered or confusing.

In the first two seasons, the League consisted of just seven characters – Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, The Flash, Green Lantern, Hawkgirl and J’onn J’onzz (a.k.a. Martian Manhunter). The seven met inside of a space station orbiting earth and they all worked together to fight evil on this planet and in other galaxies. To best utilize all of the characters, most stories were two or three-parters.

In the bonus featurette entitled “Inside Justice League,” the producers admit that season one was rocky at times while they attempted to figure out the right formula for the show. By season two, though, they had hit their groove and they seemed to figure out the best way to utilize the characters in the allotted time in order to tell the most compelling stories.

When season two came to an end, many people thought it was the end of the Justice League. However, the show was rebranded Justice League Unlimited and was expanded to feature a larger cast of heroes. The first episode, “Initiation,” depicts over 50 different superheroes together in the space station as Superman conducts the first ever meeting of this expanded Justice League. J’onn J’onzz is put in charge of assigning missions, so he decides which collection of heroes is sent out to take on each new threat.

In Justice League Unlimited, the writers did away with the two and three-part stories and instead elected to have overarching storylines throughout the entire seasons. In the first season of Unlimited, the overaching plot involves an organization called Cadmus that believes the League poses a threat to mankind. Cadmus believes they are actually the good guys, protecting us all from these all-powerful beings. In the second season of Unlimited, the Legion of Doom – a collection of supervillians with no illusions that they are the good guys – form to take down the Justice League.

It’s in the two seasons of Unlimited that you are truly able to appreciate the scope of this animated universe. By opening up the group to more characters than the original seven, they are able to introduce a wide range of new heroes into this continuity, creating a new complexity and depth. Also, during the Cadmus storyline, the writers tied the conspiracy theories from old Batman: The Animated Series and Superman: The Animated Series episodes into the plot, which intricately links those shows into this one, which again reinforced the idea that this was one big universe.

Also helping with that continuity was the fact that Kevin Conroy was retained as the voice of Batman. (Unfortunately, due to a scheduling conflict, Tim Daly did not return at the voice of Superman.) However, they did alter the look of the character for this show – Batman was given longer ears and the coloring of his costume was a mix between his look in Batman: The Animated Series and The New Batman Adventures. Superman’s look was also tweaked – he was redesigned to look a bit older in the first season of the show, but fans didn’t like the new look, so it was eventually phased out.

The featurette “The Look of the League” has an in-depth look at how they settled on the look of the seven original characters. Mostly, they tried to stick with the original comic book depictions of the characters, while adapting their looks to Bruce Timm’s signature style.

“Inside Justice League,” “Justice League Declassified,” “Cadmus: Exposed” and “Justice League Chronicles” are all panel discussions that take you through the evolution of the show. There is also “Unlimited Reserve: A League for the Ages,” which is a retrospective looking back at the entire run of the series.

“Storyboards: The Blueprint for Justice,” “Voices of Justice” and “Themes of Justice” take fans even deeper into the creation of the show. As the name suggests, the first featurette shows you how they create storyboards for each episode and how those storyboards are adapted into the animation. “Voices of Justice” shows you how the ensemble cast of voice actors record their lines together (although for some reason Kevin Conroy, the voice of Batman, is left out of this featurette). “Themes of Justice” allows you to isolate the musical tracks on a variety of scenes so that you can appreciate the musical score.

There is also an excerpt from the Bryan Singer and Kevin Burns produced documentary “Look, Up in the Sky! The Amazing Story of Superman,” which is a broad overview of the various incarnations of Superman in the comics, film and television.

Unless you already own each individual season of the Justice League already, I definitely recommend picking up this box set. The stories are rich, the animation is beautiful and the featurettes allow you to appreciate the evolution of the series. So get lost in the Timmverse; it’s a wonderful place to be.

Justice League

Written by Joel Murphy. Justice League: The Complete Series is available now on DVD.

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Management Update

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Starting this week, there will be a slight change in the weekly schedule.

From now on, Murphy’s Law will run on Mondays and Outside of the In-Crowd will run on Wednesday.

I know change is scary, but I promise it will be okay.

- Joel Murphy
Editor-in-chief

  

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