Mystery Science Theater 3000: C/D, S/D.

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Le huh?

Michael Daddino, Monday, 14 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Let me second Ned's Mike Nelson's Movie Megacheese rec. Even if you don't like or are not familiar with MST3K it is an extrodinarily funny take on a lot of overblown movies of the 80s and 90s.

Nicole, Tuesday, 15 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Had you gotten that job I mentioned, David, you'd have been laid off about five months ago. So I did you a favor by being a hopeless slacker.

I think that my slight preference for Joel has something to do with a sense that the guy's a bit . . . off, where Mike is merely charming and funny.

Colin Meeder, Tuesday, 15 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Merely? I wouldn't go that far, though he certainly projects more immediate affability. But every so often he comes out with something or takes on a role that makes you a bit nervous. Thus, when he wigged out about his old temp job in one episode, and in Time Chasers where he played his drunk angry brother or cousin, I forget which. Sure, it's a role, but he inhabited them rather well. ;-)

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 15 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Sampo once remarked that in interview, one can sense that there's something very dark and private about Mike just percolating below the surface, and that's colored my impression of him ever since. One thing to remember: "I suffer from excruciating headaches that dozens of neurologists have tried unsuccessfully to treat. I think I might be possessed."

Michael Daddino, Tuesday, 15 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-three years ago)

I appreciate the fact that both Mike and Bridget are very private about their home life, but from the sound of it from some of Bridget's comments it's a very happy family, lots of singing and nuttiness and fun with their kids. A good reminder that the show was, after all, just a performance.

But yes, Mike has the angst in there somewhere. He just tempers it very beautifully -- thus his legendary turn as Morrissey.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 15 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Fair enough -- Mike probably *is* a churning cauldren of angst. But I think he (and his rage) are probrably more based in reality, where Joel strikes me as more otherworldly. Which I prefer (slightly, only ever so slightly) in humor.

Colin Meeder, Thursday, 17 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-three years ago)

one year passes...
Oh, about time for a revival (thanks in part to a recent link from Mike D.). Actually, there were a number of episodes I didn't have, mostly from the sixth season, but my Seattle trip has given me the chance to dub a lot of those from Brian's collection, yay me. Plus I finally have Daddy-O and Fugitive Alien, that took long enough!

To add to the book recommendations -- Mike N.'s general essay book Mind Over Matters is another fine read (the TV essay alone is some kinda genius, the mock 19th century novel even more so), while I very much liked Kevin Murphy's A Year at the Movies. Chris Piuma mentioned he felt it was fairly Joe Queenan-like and therefore not as distinct as it could be, but I think it was handled very well and worked as both microstudy of the moviegoing experience and general reflection. Certainly any of the ILF/film-going hounds on this board should consider reading/borrowing a copy, at least. Then there's Mike's new novel Death Rat, which I really need to order next month...

And praise to all the other castmembers doing things and the continual rolling out of more DVDs, though apparently Rhino says they've exhausted what they have the rights to right now and are looking into securing more, hopefully...

Ned Raggett (Ned), Sunday, 25 May 2003 15:08 (twenty-two years ago)

...although a quick check of the SatNews link sez there's some sort of further DVD thing coming out later this year, hm! Good thing to know. Also, anyone in Minneapolis can go to a writing workshop taught by Mary Jo Pehl next month, which I think would be great (I'm an unabashed fan of hers but she seems to really grate for a lot of MSTies...).

Ned Raggett (Ned), Sunday, 25 May 2003 15:11 (twenty-two years ago)

is this ever shown in the UK?

mark s (mark s), Sunday, 25 May 2003 15:12 (twenty-two years ago)

It may still be on the Sci-Fi Channel UK, but your best bet is to go on S0ulS33k and download entire episodes (which are about 700MB a pop, FWIW).

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Sunday, 25 May 2003 15:16 (twenty-two years ago)

I've never come across it here, Mark - but I have never had the Sci-Fi Channel.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Sunday, 25 May 2003 15:21 (twenty-two years ago)

It was certainly on (late night) on the Sci-Fi channel a couple of years ago.

N. (nickdastoor), Sunday, 25 May 2003 15:24 (twenty-two years ago)

Michael, I kiss you! I had no idea there were mst3k episodes on soulseek.

Nicole (Nicole), Sunday, 25 May 2003 15:34 (twenty-two years ago)

Yeah, that sounds great, rah Mike! Nicole, I might be able to help with dubbing too though I still need a second VCR, but also please drop me a line about another possible source...

Ned Raggett (Ned), Sunday, 25 May 2003 15:52 (twenty-two years ago)

FYI, Best Brains Inc. has its own little shop with some non-Rhino treasures. I highly recommend "Mr. B's Lost Shorts" which has the hands-down best short, "Mr. B Natural" - you know, the one with the ridiculously perky, questionably-gendered Neverland shill for Conn brass instruments.

"Bad touch."
"Does this mean I like guys now?"
"I feel ill."
"Spanking time!"

http://www.mst3kinfo.com/satnews/catalog/Basement.htm
http://www.mst3kinfo.com/daddyo/images/mrb5.JPG

Ernest P. (ernestp), Sunday, 25 May 2003 15:58 (twenty-two years ago)

It is a thing of beauty, that particular short. And chilling horror. Yeah, there are two short comps that are on DVD, but neither contain that gem. It's possible this thing Rhino is promising is some sort of basement-clearing compilation of all the various video oddities that have surfaced from Best Brains -- the second Poopie tape (the first is a DVD bonus with Manos, the scrapbook, more shorts like that, etc. But we'll see, I guess! (My other irrational hope is a full-on special edition of the movie...)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Sunday, 25 May 2003 16:02 (twenty-two years ago)

Michael, I kiss you! I had no idea there were mst3k episodes on soulseek.

Keep in mind that the fidelity on these files is sometimes suprisingly good considering the size, and sometimes fairly bad, but even the worst files usually have more than enough detail for a person to get what's going on.

I'm hoping the DVD is a Santa Claus vs. The Martians/Santa Claus double fun pak. It is going to come out late 2003, after all.

Later I may want to say something about MST3K in light of Mark's venting on Zappa, but right now I want to go to Central Park and maybe the Malevich exhibit before it starts raining (again).

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Sunday, 25 May 2003 16:33 (twenty-two years ago)

I SERIOUSLY NEED TO BUY SIDEHACKERS. I HAVE NOT SEEN IT SINCE HIGH SCHOOL

goooch....goooch....

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Sunday, 25 May 2003 19:29 (twenty-two years ago)

the tuba is like a fat jolly king! knew your father I did!

This show got me through middle school.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Sunday, 25 May 2003 19:31 (twenty-two years ago)

Live fast, die young, leave a fat, bloated, ugly corpse.

luna (luna.c), Sunday, 25 May 2003 19:38 (twenty-two years ago)

"That squares my breasts!"

Nate Patrin (Nate Patrin), Sunday, 25 May 2003 20:40 (twenty-two years ago)

I've only seen about four episodes of MST3K, but "Mr. B Natural" has got to be one of the funniest shorts ever! "We're white, we're white, we're really, really white..." I obv need to get a-downloadin on this show.

Vinnie (vprabhu), Sunday, 25 May 2003 23:19 (twenty-two years ago)

It is good to see the newer folks here who have the love. :-)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 26 May 2003 00:08 (twenty-two years ago)

I've only seen a couple but I didn't get the point. Why not just rent the original B-movies and come up with your own sarcastic comments?

sundar subramanian (sundar), Monday, 26 May 2003 00:32 (twenty-two years ago)

Well...that is the point, kinda. The AOL MSTies used to monkey-pile together in a chat room, and riff like mad to cable TV movies or rented VHS tapes. I remember Congo and A Star Is Born being particularly good for that.

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Monday, 26 May 2003 00:48 (twenty-two years ago)

I have no TV. I have no VCR. But I do have about 40 tapes of MST3K, well over 100 episodes, mostly Seasons 2-7, with a few 1s and KTMAs.

Chris P (Chris P), Monday, 26 May 2003 00:52 (twenty-two years ago)

I'll admit mst3ks were like bad movies with training wheels for me (and yeah, I love watching b-movies with friends now), but the best episodes still leave me crying.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Monday, 26 May 2003 01:09 (twenty-two years ago)

Hard core MST3K-ites with lots of bandwidth should check out the Digital Archive Project which is where I'm getting most of my episodes from.

Chris Barrus (Chris Barrus), Monday, 26 May 2003 06:09 (twenty-two years ago)

blimey chris, that site's enough to make a young man run out and get broadband and a huge eff-off new harddrive...

(current space on home PC C-Drive abt 700meg, it are old and small)

CarsmileSteve (CarsmileSteve), Monday, 26 May 2003 10:11 (twenty-two years ago)

did I mention that I saw them live w/Joel at the Uptown Theater, one of the TWO PERFORMANCES EVER w/him? well I did < /gloat>

"Santa Claus, you're coming with us!"
"You're coming to town."

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 26 May 2003 14:15 (twenty-two years ago)

Well, I do have broadband and a sum total of 150GB of storage over a couple of drives. My consumption rate of DVD-R blanks is pretty scary.

Chris Barrus (Chris Barrus), Monday, 26 May 2003 23:57 (twenty-two years ago)

I've only seen a couple but I didn't get the point. Why not just rent the original B-movies and come up with your own sarcastic comments?

Because I'm not funny. And neither are you.

NA. (Nick A.), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:31 (twenty-two years ago)

"nipple nipple tweak tweak AWAY!"

nickalicious (nickalicious), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:39 (twenty-two years ago)

sundar OTM. funny at times, but c'mon snapping along to a movie is way up there on the annoyometer.

g--ff c-nn-n (gcannon), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:44 (twenty-two years ago)

And to explain the 'point' a bit more to the unbelievers Sundar and Gff, or at least note the method -- the Best Brains put in a lot of effort and practice over time to make what seemed like a casual delivery of comments done on the spot be just that rather than the intensively scripted effort it really was. When they're firing on four cylinders at their best, it's a marvel.

Fave all time moment ever, from any episode -- this snippet from Santa Claus Conquers the Martians, delivered and timed JUST RIGHT:

MARTIAN: "What soft, and round, and you put it on the end of a stick --"

SERVO: "An elf?"

MARTIAN: "-- and green?"

SERVO: "Oh, a DEAD elf."

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:47 (twenty-two years ago)

"It's not funny when other people do it" is one argument, but "do it yourself" is silly. Why watch a movie at all, then, when you could make your own? Because that's what people do.

Tep (ktepi), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:51 (twenty-two years ago)

Someone should invent MST3K glasses with the robots printed on the bottoms of the lenses for people to wear to movies, except that it would be unnecessary, since the robots are already built into the cognitive and aesthetic faculties of an entire culture. MST3K assumes its audienes are so impotent that they can't enjoy even "bad" films first hand but can derive pleasure from them only over the shoulders of robots.

Chris Fujiwara (sounding a little prim), here.

g--ff c-nn-n (gcannon), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:53 (twenty-two years ago)

(I don't endorse his opinion fully, btw, but hey dissent and all.)

g--ff c-nn-n (gcannon), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:54 (twenty-two years ago)

Argh, that article. Did I ever want to smack up Fujiwara after reading it.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:55 (twenty-two years ago)

Fujiwara = fun hata x10,000,000

Nicole (Nicole), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:56 (twenty-two years ago)

(For instance -- his complaint about 'why didn't they get the really big trashy movies to rip down' falls flat when you realize the economics of what the Brains had the rights and access to in their various TV deals. It wasn't like they could pick anything and everything, and I'm annoyed with Fujiwara essentially ignoring the realities of TV production.)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:58 (twenty-two years ago)

Add me to the "traded for all the tapes" club. I even bought a separate bookshelf just to display them.

Gamera Vs. Guiron is one of my most underrated favorites, with the Gamera song, Cornjob and the Zabriske Point ref. The "Hello/Thank You" scene with the mothers is my #1 funniest MST3K moment.

zaxxon25 (zaxxon25), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:58 (twenty-two years ago)

The first time I saw MST - sittng around livingroom with roommate, TV playing in background.

We both idly comment on stupidity of movie showing and the commentary from Joel + robots. Go back to reading book/half-watching.

15 minutes later - 'actually, this isn't that bad'

10 minutes later - we have both decided this is the best show ever created

H (Heruy), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 15:58 (twenty-two years ago)

I even bought a separate bookshelf just to display them.

I salute you!

I am still in fact missing Gamera Vs. Guiron, though happily I've seen it a number of times -- that along with Gamera Vs. Gaos, It Conquered the World and four season six entries are now the only things I'm missing from season two on...

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 16:00 (twenty-two years ago)

his hate is more fun than the show!

g--ff c-nn-n (gcannon), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 16:08 (twenty-two years ago)

Not really. It's just reading a tedious man moan in a tedious manner.

Nicole (Nicole), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 16:14 (twenty-two years ago)

circle the wagons!

ignoring realities of production? tedium?

g--ff c-nn-n (gcannon), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 16:20 (twenty-two years ago)

I really don't understand why this is being approached as some sort of argument to be won. A number of people here like and get the show, some don't. Big deal.

Nicole (Nicole), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 16:24 (twenty-two years ago)

I think the argument lies in the needle of "and get" there...

I think Fujiwara scores some good points, but yes of course we must give no quarter to a fun-hater.

The show made me laugh but I can't love it.

g--ff c-nn-n (gcannon), Tuesday, 27 May 2003 16:28 (twenty-two years ago)

It is definitely meant for people who grew up in the age of 3 or 4 tv channels and being forced to watch whatever was on.

Iza Duffus Hardy (President Keyes), Thursday, 12 June 2025 18:01 (three weeks ago)

There was a bit in the extended comedians in cars w/ joel where jerry quotes a writer who described joel as ‘thinking cereal commercials were works handed down by gods’ and i think that’s the little difference between the OG joel/mike episodes and the new ones. The old episodes are very much from a singular (hosts’) point of view. The newer episodes seems like a bunch of writers trying to get as many shots off as possible. Different rhythms!

Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Thursday, 12 June 2025 18:06 (three weeks ago)

I've tried several times to watch the revival episodes and never last more than a few minutes. Frankly, I think they're awful, and I think "seems like a bunch of writers trying to get as many shots off as possible" nails why

Paul Ponzi, Thursday, 12 June 2025 18:27 (three weeks ago)

It's definitely a different vibe in the revival years, yeah. I've happily watched them all but I don't think I've rewatched any of them, though the two Christmas ones they ended up doing in seasons 11 and 13 may yet be part of my larger seasonal rotation. That said the live shows I caught right before the pandemic (Joel's final turn as host there and the introduction of Emily and her 'team', as well as a 2021 holiday season show that was strictly Emily's crew) were all really great, probably because they weren't so locked-in and had to respond to audience energy directly. And yes, how the way TV-as-such is watched now is completely different from how it was, just, still watched in the late eighties absolutely changes things; I'm just old enough to remember TV pre-widespread cable through the very late seventies but it was already starting to retreat by the time the show got off the ground.

Anyway this bonus feature just happened to pop up on the MST3K YT channel

Not just this one -- the official channel has gone full on with a TON of the extras created for the various episode DVDs over the years now being rolled out, all kinds of interviews with people from the actual films, mini-features, etc. etc., not to mention the episodes themselves. There's been some talk about how the Gizmoplex model as mini-streaming channel basically seems kinda dead in the water so they're bringing everything over to where the people are, I figure. Not a bad idea at this stage, but I think it underscores that my doubt that any new seasons are going to happen now -- bit of a pity in that an all-Emily season woulda been great, but hey.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 12 June 2025 19:10 (three weeks ago)

As for Kate's wider points -- Mike's been a little more open than that but he's been more circumspect lately, true (I get a sense that he's one of those people finding themselves embarrassed to have Trump as their party's mainstay, which, hey, that's on you, not the rest of us). My beloved It's Just a Show podcast, admittedly run by long time friends so there's my bias, has been pretty solid at consistently looking back with fresh eyes and when necessary applying 'so you went there, that was a choice' observations on jokes-that-aren't, whether during the Mike or Joel runs.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 12 June 2025 19:13 (three weeks ago)

I've been getting into the earlier sleepy "not funny" episodes recently
watching these creaky old films with the creaky old jokes has been like a warm blanket for my soul

( X '____' )/ (zappi), Thursday, 12 June 2025 19:21 (three weeks ago)

Mike was given an ultimatum by Bill several years ago to step down as a co-host or regular on a homophobic Christian podcast.

The "W" and Odie Trail (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 12 June 2025 20:29 (three weeks ago)

Mike was given an ultimatum by Bill several years ago to step down as a co-host or regular on a homophobic Christian podcast.

― The "W" and Odie Trail (Boring, Maryland)

yeah that's the other thing, i don't know bill or kevin's politics at all but whatever he believes privately, he at least has some idea of where his bread is buttered. any personal discomfort i have with mike nelson is just that - personal. he works hard, he's a professional, and he behaves professionally, and i respect that about him.

i do find that i like the old "not funny" episodes more myself. including the ones that were actual UHF television, the KTMA episodes. it's a sense of pacing, maybe. when i was young, part of the appeal to MST3K was that it seemed tremendously fast-paced, something new coming every second. it didn't matter that a lot of the jokes didn't land - it was a fast-paced comedy barrage. the world's just gotten a lot faster since then.

one of the early comedy channel shows time's forgotten is "the higgins boys and gruber". there's one complete episode on, i don't know, the internet archive or something. again, i like the _vibe_ of this. it's kinda redolent of the 90s, just kinda sitting around with your buddies, smoking weed, and watching old "clutch cargo" cartoons on tv for lack of anything better to do.

these days, there's _always_ something better for me to do, and i kinda hate that.

Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 12 June 2025 21:35 (three weeks ago)

Mm, I feel this last point. I admit there's also something about wanting to make sure I am engaging with new things that catch my attention and/or expand my horizons -- not constantly, that's setting myself up to fail. But a show that has over 200 episodes that are each at least an hour and a half long, nearly all of which I know by heart, there's a real feeling of "Hmm, well..." My closest itch being scratched that way these days is via Frank and Trace's Mads are Back work, though that has cut back to every few months now -- still, a great little body of work in its own right now too, and the off-the-cuff feeling suits. Relatedly, Mary Jo and Chris, the guy behind the little effort hosting the Mads, doing unknown-to-them TV movies from the seventies once a month has been a fun delight; that totally is the in-the-moment reaction effort and it's low-key and easy-going in the best way.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 12 June 2025 21:57 (three weeks ago)

xpost When I saw Cinematic Titanic live, Gruber was the opening act.

Iza Duffus Hardy (President Keyes), Thursday, 12 June 2025 22:48 (three weeks ago)

The Mary Jo watch-alongs are a delight, yes.

Kate, I don’t know about Kevin’s politics but Bill Corbett is very lefty, he’s even been on Chapo for what it’s worth.

I love Frank Conniff dearly but his Bluesky feed is pretty standard corny resistance lib.

The "W" and Odie Trail (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 12 June 2025 23:33 (three weeks ago)

I appreciate his enthusiasm at least.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 13 June 2025 00:11 (three weeks ago)

Relatedly, Mary Jo and Chris, the guy behind the little effort hosting the Mads, doing unknown-to-them TV movies from the seventies once a month has been a fun delight; that totally is the in-the-moment reaction effort and it's low-key and easy-going in the best way.

― Ned Raggett

i wonder if they'll get around to watching "The Grass Is Always Greener Over the Septic Tank"!

anyway this is what i love about... i mean to me a lot of the heritage of MST3K is in these boutique labels. it's not about putting down a film, it's about film being more than just the Good Films. people don't get why i spend so much time watching stuff that nobody else really cares about, and a lot of it is MST3K, the idea that someone would go out and purposely watch a movie like Sidehackers or The Dead Talk Back. It's something that I don't have to take too seriously (well, in the _edited for broadcast versions_... I do run into the same problem that Best Brains ran into with Sidehackers when watching these films, except compounded since most of us have various forms of severe trauma...)

where mst3k doesn't hold up for me most of all is that even if i put down joe don baker, call him a lunk, anything like that, i genuinely have no personal animus towards the man. that's something... i mean, maybe i'm a softie, but i see joe don baker, just like mike nelson, as a professional doing professional work. now, sometimes that work is fucking awful. looking this greasy, repulsive 70s film baker did, these days i'm less inclined to draw any conclusion that he personally is greasy and repulsive. i kinda do feel bad for the guy, and if he did hate the MST3K crew, i mean, i don't think it was unjustified. that's _far_ from all mst3k was about, and there's also a lot of love. this idea of someone who thinks 'cereal commercials were works handed down by gods'. i'm that way myself, but only, like, 1970s cereal commercials. quisp. sir grapefellow.

Even when I originally watched it back in the 90s a lot of humor in it was a bit dated--cultural references that people older than me would catch.

― Iza Duffus Hardy (President Keyes)

yeah, i was just re-watching "cosmic princess" this afternoon and they're making references to the banana splits and land of the lost, as long as "sing along with mitch". this was stuff for and by kids who grew up in the 70s, kids who had a thingmaker. to me a thingmaker was a mysterious ancient artifact. that's probably one of the reasons mst3k clicks with me as much as it does... i have this weird cultural obsession with the 70s. it's very very hard for me to have nostalgia for my own childhood. it's more comfortable for me to have nostalgia for things i missed out on. i'm tremendously nostalgic, for instance, for 1970s AM pop radio, dan ingram on WABC. that's the stuff that gives me warm, cozy feelings. i'm not at all nostalgic for '80s stuff the way so many people seem to be.

what i like is that the internet is a place where all kinds of people can do that kind of thing. honestly i think of mst3k as kind of an antecedent of twitch. i got friends who are fans of josh strife, who's a guy who streams on twitch and just says, like... talks about his ideas about how to be an emotionally healthy person. there are so many opportunities to hang out in a room with so many different kinds of people, and for some reason a lot of those people are shitty grifters, and at the same time lots of them are just fun people to hang out with. i don't stream on twitch because i can't be arsed to comply with copyright laws, but with friends, i'm trying to do that. i'll get on my streaming server, like i did last night, and say "hey i'm gonna stream My Name Called Bruce", and a couple of us will just have fun talking shit in the chat. it doesn't _have_ to be good or funny. it can just be, like in "cosmic princess", they just make a bunch of references to dairy queen. that _doesn't_ work as comedy on the same level that, i don't know, _community_ does, but it does mean i'm open to unexpected fun moments:

TITLE ON SCREEN: COSMIC PRINCESS
CROW: I've been called that before.
SERVO: You asked for it, though.

And how would the folks on the podcast Mike Nelson stepped down from take _that_ exchange, you know? I don't know. I do know that my display name on that server is now "Kate, Cosmic Princess".

---

and yeah honestly? i do love frank's corny resistance lib thing, just because it goes so well with the rest of his personality. he's a corny older dude! of course his politics are gonna be corny!

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 13 June 2025 00:37 (three weeks ago)

Kate I think l you’d really like the Mary Jo Pehl Show, especially the monthly episode where she watches some early-70s TV (without watching it first) and she’s just delightful at riffing off the cuff and it’s very not snarky but warm and kind of affectionate. Try watching her riff on “Bad Ronald” a movie worthy of having been a classic MST episode: https://dumb-industries.com/the-mary-jo-pehl-show-clubhouse-plus/v/movie-jo-night-bad-ronald

The "W" and Odie Trail (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 13 June 2025 02:41 (three weeks ago)

def agree about being an 80s kid for whom the 70s will always be this fascinating world just beyond the last visible hill, even though it left all these visible marks on the world i actually inhabited. MST may reflect a similar thing - Gen X kids who grew up in a world when the 50s and even 60s were in endless rerun rotation, and yet profoundly odd and alien, both appealing and unsettling, etc.

Doctor Casino, Friday, 13 June 2025 13:09 (three weeks ago)

like, Joel was born in 60, Mike in 64. their prime monoculture breakfast cereal years were The Long 1970s, if you will. MST's most fertile decades are the 50s and 60s - stuff they probably saw on late night TV but not as "new" pop culture. and part of the special sauce was that they didn't (only) make fun of the lol lame old corny stuff, they also appreciated it. maybe one reason the Joe Don Baker stuff lands differently is they actually did know him as a present-day name headlining bad movies while they were old enough to tell the difference... idk

Doctor Casino, Friday, 13 June 2025 13:14 (three weeks ago)


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