This cover is from 1935.
Music Video of the Day: Saints by The Breeders (1993, directed by Frank Sacramento)
The Breeders did more than just Cannonball. Their entire first album was full of excellent songs, like this one. This video shows that the band was just as cool in the snow as they were at a carnival.
Director Frank Sacramento also worked with Blondie, Everlast, Dru Hill, Hootie and the Blowfish, and House of Pain.
Enjoy!
Late Night Retro Television Review: CHiPs 5.14 “Tiger In The Streets”
Welcome to Late Night Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past! On Mondays, I will be reviewing CHiPs, which ran on NBC from 1977 to 1983. The entire show is currently streaming on Prime!
This week, there’s a big cat on the loose!
Episode 5.14 “Tiger In The Streets”
(Dir by Charles Bail, originally aired on January 10th, 1982)
Ponch and Baker wonder why someone is digging deep holes in the Los Angeles hills and filling them with raw meat. Could someone by trying to capture a tiger that’s recently gotten loose from a wildlife park? Yes, that’s exactly what’s happening! The owner of the park wants to keep the cops from finding out but, when it turns out that the tiger is a mother and is missing her cubs, only the highway patrol can help Animal Control capture her. Baker likes Stephanie, the Animal Control officer. This is one of the rare episodes where Baker actually gets to have a romance while Ponch stands around and looks awkwardly out-of-place.
As for Ponch, he is more concerned with an ex-con who is at the center of a series of violent confrontations involving various car clubs. I’m pretty sure I’ve seen this plot before. CHiPs has been repeating itself a lot during the fifth season. That said, the car chases led to a slow motion wreck and a scene of bouncing hydraulics. I’ve never been in one of those bouncing cars before. It seems like you would get ill riding in one of those.
Finally, Grossie wants to be a comedian. Harlan is a friend of legendary funny man Slappy White. Harlan gives Grossie a bunch of Slappy’s jokes about how black people are different from white people. Needless to say, the jokes don’t go over that well when they’re told be a white guy in a policeman’s uniform.
This episode was silly but I did like the tiger.
The Wanderers (1979, directed by Philip L. Kaufman)
In 1963, teenage Richie Gennaro (Ken Wahl) may not be much of a high school student but he’s the coolest kid on his block. He’s the leader of the Wanderers, an Italian-American street gang. Among his friends are the neurotic Joey (John Friedrich), Turkey (Alan Rosenberg), and Perry (Tony Ganios — yes, Meat from Porky’s), who has just moved to the Bronx but whose height and ability to fight makes him a key member of the Wanderers. Richie dating Despie (Toni Kalem), the daughter of the local mob boss (Dolph Sweet). However, when Richie meets Nina (Karen Allen), he wonders if there’s something more out there than just spending the rest of his days in the Bronx.
Based on a novel by Richard Price, The Wanderers has always been overshadowed by 1979’s other big gang movie, The Warriors. That’s too bad because they’re both great films. Walter Hill has always said that he envisioned The Warriors as being set in the near-future. The Wanderers, on the other hand, is very much a film about the past. An episodic movie that is more about capturing a time and a place as opposed to telling a traditional story, The Wanderers portrays 1963 with a mix of nostalgia and realism. The soundtrack is heavy with early rock and roll. There’s a scene where Richie sees a group of adults crying as they watch the coverage of John F. Kennedy’s assassination. Nina listens to Bob Dylan at a coffeehouse and the local mob boss is a fan of The Hustler. But for Richie and his friends, adulthood is something to be put off for as long as possible. Life is about wearing their jackets, giving each other a hard time, trying to get lucky, trying not get slapped upside their heads by their parents, and preparing for the big football game against a rival gang. When a Marine recruiter tricks the members of one gang into enlisting, it’s a big deal to Richie because he no longer has to worry about being harassed by them. Those of us watching, however, know that Vietnam is in thee future. Scenes of Richie and Joey joking around are combined with moments of sudden violence. For the most part, the Wanderers and their neighborhood rivals are amiable rivals but, take a wrong turn, and you might find yourself being chased by the viscous Ducky Boys. For Richie, his life revolves around being a Wanderer but nothing can last forever and the film ends with a celebration that feels like a last hurrah for a changing world. Some will escape The Bronx and find a new world with new possibilities and new freedoms. There’s a particularly interesting subtext to the friendship of Perry and Joey, with the film ending on a subtle note that suggests that there’s more to their relationship than just being members of the same gang.
The end result is one of the best coming-of-age stories out there. Ken Wahl, John Friedrich, Alan Rosenberg, and Tony Ganios all give excellent performances as the main Wanderers. Karen Allen and Toni Kalem are perfectly cast as the two women who represent Richie’s possible future. (The strip poker scene is a highlight.) Kalem’s Despie represents the Bronx while Allen’s Nina represents the world outside and the film treats both of them with respect. At first, Despite might seem like a stereotype but she soon proves herself to be more aware of what’s actually going on around her than anyone realized. Richie may like Nina but it’s hard to imagine him ever being truly happy away from his home.
The Wanderers deserves more attention than it has received over the years. It’s funny, touching, and sometimes scary. (The Ducky Boys, despite their name, will haunt you.) Wander over and watch it.
Retro Television Review: Miami Vice 5.20 “Leap of Faith”
Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past! On Mondays, I will be reviewing Miami Vice, which ran on NBC from 1984 to 1989. The entire show can be purchased on Prime!
When is Miami Vice not Miami Vice?
Episode 5.20 “Leap of Faith”
(Dir by Robert Iscove, originally aired on June 28th, 1989)
A crazed college professor named Terry Baines (Keith Gordon) is making his own designer drugs and selling them to the cult-like college students who worship his every move. Terry thinks that the drugs will help people move into a dream state. However, Terry also doesn’t care how many people die as a result of entering that dream state. Terry is obviously crazy but he’s got tenure.
Fortunately, the youthful cops of the Young Victims Unit are able to go undercover as college students and infiltrate Terry’s organization. Joey Harden (Justin Lazard) is the newest member of the squad. He’s a cop who does things his way! Zach (Cameron Dye) is the wild man. He’s from Arkansas! And Ray Mundy (Adam Storke), he’s a surfer from California! Their boss is Lt. Paul Cutter (Kiel Martin). Tania Louis (Laura San Giacomo) is their computer expert. Together, they’re….
….not Crockett and Tubbs!
Crockett and Tubbs appear at the start of the episode and then Crockett appears in another scene, in which it’s established that he and Cutter have a contentious relationship. Otherwise, this really isn’t an episode of Miami Vice. Instead, it’s a pilot for a show about the Young Victims Unit. The pilot never became a series and, watching this episode, one can see why. The three undercover cops are all way too similar. They seem like three different versions of the same guy. Kiel Martin and Laura San Giacomo at least manage to bring some life to their characters but the rest of the cast is just bland. The best performance comes from Keith Gordon and he’s dead by the end of the episode.
Next week …. Miami Vice comes to an end as Tubbs falls in love and Crockett refuses to get a haircut.
I Finally Watched The Natural (1984, Dir. by Barry Levinson)
Earlier today, I finally watched The Natural.
As a baseball fan, it feels like heresy to admit that it took me this long to watch The Natural. I had seen plenty of scenes from the film. I knew the music because there’s no way you can watch as much as baseball as I do without hearing it at least a few times every scene. I knew about Wonderboy and the big home run and how Roy Hobbs came out of nowhere to lead the perennially last-place New York Knights to the championship series but I had never actually watched the entire film from beginning to end.
Until this afternoon.
When the movie started, I was worried. Robert Redford plays Roy Hobbs, an outstanding hitter whose promising career appears to be over when a mysterious woman (Barbara Hersey) shoots him in the gut. At the start of the movie, Roy and his girlfriend Iris (Glenn Close) are supposed to be teenagers but Redford was nearly 50 and Glenn Close was close to 40. The whole point of the first part of the movie is that Roy and Iris are young and they have their whole future ahead of them but the actors were both clearly middle-aged. There was a scene where Roy strikes out the best batter in the league (Joe Don Baker) and the batter kept calling Roy a kid but Redford looked like he was older than Baker.
The good thing is that you only have to buy Redford as being a teenager for about 15 minutes. After he gets shot, Roy stops playing for several years. By the time Roy makes it to the major leagues, he’s supposed to be older than everyone else. No one gives Roy much of a chance when he’s first signed to the New York Knights. The other players (including Michael Madsen) don’t respect him and the manager (Wilford Brimley) refuses to play him. But when Roy Hobbs finally does get a chance to swing his home-made bat, he hits homer after homer. Roy is a natural, the next great player even if he is at an age when most players retire. A journalist (Robert Duvall) tries to uncover his background. A seductress (Kim Basinger) tries to lead him astray. A gambler (Darren McGavin) and the team’s owner (Robert Prosky) try to get him to throw the big game. Anyone who has watched a baseball game knows how it ends because we’ve all heard the music and seen that clip. But even if everyone knows how the story concludes, it’s impossible not to cheer when Roy gets a hit and to feel bad when he takes a strike. Redford may have been old for a baseball player but he looked good out there, swinging that bat and throwing that ball.
I loved The Natural. It’s extremely sentimental movie. Sometimes, it feels old-fashioned. That’s perfect for baseball, though. Baseball is a sentimental, old-fashioned game and the story of Roy Hobbs is what baseball is all about. The Knights are behind for most of the season. Roy hits a slump. But neither he nor the team ever give up because they know that baseball is a game of endurance. It’s not like football, where you just have to win 9 games to make it to the playoffs. Baseball is about never giving up, no matter what the score is. Even the movie’s supernatural aspects — the sudden storms, a lightning bolt hitting a tree and creating Wonderboy, and even Glenn Close looking like an angel in the stands — work because baseball is a mystical sport. It’s the closest thing we have to a spiritual sport.
You couldn’t make a movie like The Natural about football or basketball. Only the game of baseball could have given us The Natural.
The Eric Roberts Collection: Groupie (dir by Mark L. Lester)
2010’a Groupie tells the story of the Dark Knights.
The Dark Knights are a legendary band with devoted fans. I’m not sure why because, from what we hear of their music, they really suck. I don’t mean that they suck in a funny deliberate way, like Spinal Tap. I mean, they literally suck. Maybe some of their popularity has to do with their habit of setting their lead singer on fire during their performances.
Unfortunately, during one performance, the fire gets out of control. There’s a panic in the club. A 16 year-old fan is stomped to death. A year later, The Dark Knights are ready to launch their comeback tour. And they’ve got a new groupie, Riley (Taryn Manning)! Riley likes to make death masks. Well, I guess everyone needs a hobby. Riley is also the sister of the fan who was stomped to death. She’s looking for revenge against the Dark Knights and their manager, Angus (Eric Roberts).
That this film appears to be based on a real-life tragedy (i.e. the Station Nightclub Fire) gives the whole film are rather icky sheen. Also adding to the film’s oddness is how straight-forward it is. Riley shows up. A mysterious killer strikes. Riley appears to be the killer and, hey — she is the killer! There’s no real attempt to create any sort of suspense or misdirection as to who the killer may be. That said, Taryn Manning is entertainingly unhinged and director Mark L. Lester keeps the action moving quickly.
As far as Eric Roberts is concerned, he plays a pretty sleazy character but he does so with good humor. Indeed, it’s hard not to have sympathy for Angus. While the band is busy setting things on fire, he’s the one who keeps the tour bus moving.
Previous Eric Roberts Films That We Have Reviewed:
- Paul’s Case (1980)
- Star 80 (1983)
- Runaway Train (1985)
- To Heal A Nation (1988)
- Best of the Best (1989)
- Blood Red (1989)
- The Ambulance (1990)
- The Lost Capone (1990)
- Best of the Best II (1993)
- Love, Cheat, & Steal (1993)
- Voyage (1993)
- Love Is A Gun (1994)
- Sensation (1994)
- Dark Angel (1996)
- Doctor Who (1996)
- Most Wanted (1997)
- The Alternate (2000)
- Mercy Streets (2000)
- Tripfall (2000)
- Raptor (2001)
- Rough Air: Danger on Flight 534 (2001)
- Strange Frequency (2001)
- Wolves of Wall Street (2002)
- Border Blues (2004)
- Mr. Brightside (2004)
- Six: The Mark Unleased (2004)
- We Belong Together (2005)
- Hey You (2006)
- Depth Charge (2008)
- Amazing Racer (2009)
- The Chaos Experiment (2009)
- In The Blink of an Eye (2009)
- Bed & Breakfast (2010)
- Enemies Among Us (2010)
- The Expendables (2010)
- Sharktopus (2010)
- Beyond The Trophy (2012)
- The Dead Want Women (2012)
- Deadline (2012)
- The Mark (2012)
- Miss Atomic Bomb (2012)
- The Night Never Sleeps (2012)
- Assault on Wall Street (2013)
- Bonnie And Clyde: Justified (2013)
- Lovelace (2013)
- The Mark: Redemption (2013)
- The Perfect Summer (2013)
- Revelation Road: The Beginning of the End (2013)
- Revelation Road 2: The Sea of Glass and Fire (2013)
- Self-Storage (2013)
- Sink Hole (2013)
- A Talking Cat!?! (2013)
- This Is Our Time (2013)
- Bigfoot vs DB Cooper (2014)
- Doc Holliday’s Revenge (2014)
- Eternity: The Movie (2014)
- Inherent Vice (2014)
- Road to the Open (2014)
- Rumors of War (2014)
- So This Is Christmas (2014)
- Amityville Death House (2015)
- Deadly Sanctuary (2015)
- A Fatal Obsession (2015)
- Las Vegas Story (2015)
- Sorority Slaughterhouse (2015)
- Stalked By My Doctor (2015)
- Enemy Within (2016)
- Hunting Season (2016)
- Joker’s Poltergeist (2016)
- Prayer Never Fails (2016)
- Stalked By My Doctor: The Return (2016)
- The Wrong Roommate (2016)
- Dark Image (2017)
- The Demonic Dead (2017)
- Black Wake (2018)
- Frank and Ava (2018)
- Stalked By My Doctor: Patient’s Revenge (2018)
- The Wrong Teacher (2018)
- Clinton Island (2019)
- Monster Island (2019)
- The Reliant (2019)
- The Savant (2019)
- Seven Deadly Sins (2019)
- Stalked By My Doctor: A Sleepwalker’s Nightmare (2019)
- The Wrong Mommy (2019)
- Exodus of a Prodigal Son (2020)
- Free Lunch Express (2020)
- Hard Luck Love Song (2020)
- Her Deadly Groom (2020)
- Top Gunner (2020)
- Deadly Nightshade (2021)
- The Elevator (2021)
- Just What The Doctor Ordered (2021)
- Killer Advice (2021)
- Megaboa (2021)
- Night Night (2021)
- The Poltergeist Diaries (2021)
- The Rebels of PT-218 (2021)
- Red Prophecies (2021)
- A Town Called Parable (2021)
- The Wrong Mr. Right (2021)
- Bleach (2022)
- Dawn (2022)
- My Dinner With Eric (2022)
- 69 Parts (2022)
- The Rideshare Killer (2022)
- The Wrong High School Sweetheart (2022)
- The Company We Keep (2023)
- D.C. Down (2023)
- If I Can’t Have You (2023)
- Aftermath (2024)
- Bad Substitute (2024)
- Devil’s Knight (2024)
- Insane Like Me? (2024)
- Space Sharks (2024)
- The Wrong Life Coach (2024)
- Broken Church (2025)
- Shakey Grounds (2025)
- When It Rains In L.A. (2025)
Song of the Day: Blue Sky (by The Allman Brothers Band)

“Blue Sky” by The Allman Brothers Band is one of those songs that instantly lifts your mood — like cruising down a long stretch of highway under perfect weather. Dickey Betts wrote and sang it, and you can feel his sense of ease and optimism through the melody. But while the vocals are sunny and inviting, it’s the guitar work that really carries the song’s soul. Betts and Duane Allman trade licks like two friends finishing each other’s thoughts, creating one of the best musical conversations in rock.
Around 1:07, Duane Allman takes off with the first guitar solo. It’s bright, flowing, and packed with his signature slide-guitar emotion. Duane doesn’t just play notes — he makes the guitar sing, full of expressive bends and lyrical phrasing that sound spontaneous but purposeful. His solo feels alive, like he’s narrating the feeling of absolute freedom the song evokes. There’s a spiritual quality to his touch that sets the tone beautifully for the rest of the jam.
Then at about 2:37, Dickey Betts steps in with his solo, and the vibe subtly shifts. Betts’s lines are cleaner, more melodic, and dance across the rhythm with an almost country-like cheer. His phrasing is so smooth you can hear the future seeds of his later work, where melody takes center stage. While Duane’s solo soars in a soulful, searching way, Betts’s solo feels precise and joyful — he’s painting in sunlight. Together, their contrast creates a satisfying balance between fire and finesse.
The two guitars eventually weave together in harmony, returning to the main theme before easing back into the song’s final verse. It’s one of those moments that reminds you why the Allman Brothers were so special—the sheer communication happening between players. No flashy gimmicks, no ego, just musicians playing from a place of joy. If you’re new to the band, “Blue Sky” is the perfect entry point. It sums up their balance of skill and soul, and it’s the last recording Duane Allman played on before his passing, which gives that final harmony an even deeper resonance.
Blue Sky
Walk along the river, sweet lullaby, it just keeps on flowing,
It don’t worry ’bout where it’s going, no, no.
Don’t fly, mister blue bird, I’m just walking down the road,
Early morning sunshine tell me all I need to know
[CHORUS:]
You’re my blue sky, you’re my sunny day.
Lord, you know it makes me high when you turn your love my way,
Turn your love my way, yeah.
[Duane Allman guitar solo @1:07]
[Dickey Betts guitar solo @2:37]
Good old sunday morning, bells are ringing everywhere.
Goin to Carolina, it won’t be long and I’ll be there
[CHORUS]
Great Guitar Solos Series
- Master of Puppets (by Metallica)
- Free Bird (by Lynyrd Skynyrd)
- Hotel California (by The Eagles)
- Stairway to Heaven (by Led Zeppelin)
- Texas Flood (by Stevie Ray Vaughan)
- Comfortably Numb (by Pink Floyd)
- Powerslave (by Iron Maiden)
- Fade to Black (by Metallica)
- Bohemian Rhapsody (by Queen)
- Sweet Child o’ Mine (Guns N’ Roses)
- Mr. Crowley (by Ozzy Osbourne)
- Rainbow in the Dark (by Dio)
- Róisín Dubh (by Thin Lizzy)
- Rock You Like A Hurricane (by Scorpions)
- Whipping Post (by Allman Brothers Band)
- Carry On Wayward Son (by Kansas)
- War Pigs (by Black Sabbath)
- Since I’ve Been Loving You (by Led Zeppelin)
- Satch Boogie (by Joe Satriani)
- Rambin’ Man (by The Allman Brothers Band)
- Sympathy for the Devil (by The Rolling Stones)
- Little Wing (by Jimi Hendrix)
- While My Guitar Gently Weeps (by the Beatles)
- The Rocker (by Thin Lizzy)
- Bulls on Parade (by Rage Against the Machine)
- Eruption (by Van Halen)
- Killer Queen (by Queen)
- Something (by The Beatles)
- Maggot Brain (by Funkadelic)
- Cliffs of Dover (by Eric Johnson)
- Black Magic Woman (by Carlos Santana)
- Layla (by Derek & The Dominoes)
- Dazed and Confused (by Led Zeppelin)
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Scene That I Love: Billy Dee Williams in The Empire Strikes Back
Happy birthday to the one and only, Billy Dee Williams!
I remember the first time I watched The Empire Strikes Back, I was shocked when Lando betrayed his friend Han Solo. Luckily, Lando was able to later redeem himself but the Cloud City betrayal scene remains one of the best moments in the original Star Wars trilogy.






