Music Video of the Day: Alcoholic by Chanel West Coast (2013, dir by Nicholaus Goossen)


Wow, look at you getting ready for New Year’s Eve!

If you’re ever feeling like you’ve reached a dead end, just remember that Rob Dyrdek’s receptionist is more famous than you are and …. well, that probably won’t help.

Enjoy!

Retro Television Reviews: City Guys 3.9 “In This Corner” and 3.10 “El-Trainmania IV”


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Thursdays, I will be reviewing City Guys, which ran on NBC from 1997 to 2001.  The entire show is currently streaming on Tubi!

Let’s go back to Manny High and see what’s happening with the neat guys.

Episode 3.9 “In this Corner”

(Dir by Frank Bonner, originally aired on October 16th, 1999)

When this show began, Jamal was an amiable goofball who wasn’t particularly good at sports.  Then, at the start of season 3, he was suddenly transformed into a baseball phenom.  And now, with this episode, Jamal is suddenly an aspiring boxer.  The only problem is that Jamal’s father doesn’t want him to box because apparently, “Uncle Eddie” was blinded in the boxing ring.  When Jamal gets a black eye while sparring, Jamal’s father forbids him to fight in the upcoming tournament.  Jamal leaves home and moves in with Chris.

(Seriously, Chris and Jamal — don’t let anyone tell you that y’all spend too much time together.)

For some reason, Ms. Nobel decides to get involved.  She encourages Jamal’s father to support Jamal’s dream of becoming a slow-witted, punch drunk fighter with CTE.  Jamal’s father does show up, just in time to see Jamal get knocked out in the ring.  Once Jamal wakes back up, he announces that he is retiring as a boxer.

“Hey, Jamal,” Chris says, “since you won’t be training anymore, how about taking a brother out for pizza?”

You’re not a brother, Chris!  Add to that, Jamal probably has a concussion now.  

In the episode’s B-plot, Al accidentally sells some blue boxing gloves to a dorky kid named Martin.  It turns out the gloves belonged to a friend of Ms. Nobel’s so now, Al has to figure out how to get them back.  The loyalty that everyone at Manny High has for their principal is kind of weird.  Most students don’t like their principal.  Anyway, Al gets the the gloves back by setting Martin up on a date with “Dawny Dawn” and “Cassy Cass.”  

Whatever.  This was a dumb episode.

Episode 3.10 “El-Trainmania IV”

(Dir by Frank Bonner, originally aired on October 16th, 1999)

First, Jamal wants to be a boxer. Now, L-Train wants to be a pro wrestler!  At least in L-Train’s case, this development kind of makes sense.  L-Train’s always been portrayed as a fighter and an athlete.  Anyway, L-Train’s new focus on wrestling comes into conflict with his previous commitment to read to underprivileged children.  One of the children decides that he wants to be violent just because L-Train is violent so L-Train decides to abandon being a pro wrestler.  In fact, L-Train’s story so closely follows Jamal’s boxing story that it’s strange that both episodes were apparently aired on the same day.  Did no one say, “Maybe we should move this episode around to make it less obvious that we’re running out of ideas?”

In the B-plot, Chris and Jamal start doing restaurant reviews on their radio show.  Apparently, a good review from Chris and Jamal can make or break a restaurant.  Seriously?  It’s just a high school radio program, people!  Anyway, Chris and Jamal give a review to a bad Greek restaurant so Ms. Nobel forces them to eat there because apparently, Manny High could just run itself and Ms. Nobel had time to waste on the silliest issues.

*sigh*  What a disappointing trip to Manny High!  Hopefully, 2023 will be better.

4 Shots From 4 Films: Ruggero Deodato, Rest in Peace


4 Or More Shots From 4 Or More Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!

Ruggero Deodato, RIP

4 Shots From 4 Ruggeo Deodato Films

The House on the Edge of the Park (1980, dir by Ruggero Deodato)

Raiders of Atlantis (1983, dir by Ruggero Deodato)

Phantom of Death (1988, dir by Ruggero Deodato)

The Washing Machine (1993, dir by Ruggero Deodato)

Retro Television Reviews: The Love Boat 1.18 “Last of the Stubings / Million Dollar Man / The Sisters”


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Wednesdays, I will be reviewing the original Love Boat, which aired on ABC from 1977 to 1986!  The series can be streamed on Paramount Plus!

This week’s cruise is all about family, love, and …. CRIME!

Episode 1.18 “Last of the Stubings / Million Dollar Man / The Sisters”

(dir by Jack Arnold, originally aired on February 4th, 1978)

Fresh from having given Isaac a lesson in black history during the previous cruise, Captain Stubing is excited to give the rest of the crew a lesson about his family.  The Stubings have a long and noteworthy Naval tradition and the Captain is proud to announce that his nephew, L. Courtney Stubing IV (Peter Isacksen), has been accepted to Annapolis.  But, before going to school, he’s going to work on the Pacific Princess and show everyone that he is a natural-born sailor.  The only problem is that Courtney Stubing is not a natural-born sailor.  Instead, he’s a tall, clumsy, near-sighted, and kind of goony guy who has no idea how to talk to the passengers and who would rather be a ballet dancer.  The problem, along with the fact that he’s the last of the young Stubings and expected to carry on the family tradition, is that he’s just as bad at dancing as he is at everything else.

Now, I have to give some credit to Gavin MacLeod here because he made this storyline work.  The scene where, having finally realized the truth of about his nephew, Captain Stubing tells Courtney that it’s okay not to become a sailor and that he should find out what he’s good at was well-written and sensitively acted by MacLeod.  It was about as honest a moment as you’ll probably ever find on a show like The Love Boat.

While the Stubings were bonding, two sisters were fighting.  Rose (Marion Ross) was upset that Noreen (Pat Crowley) was spending all of her time with the handsome Clark Tyler (Brett Halsey).  Seeing as how I mostly know Hasley from his starring role in Lucio Fulci’s Touch of Death, I would have been more concerned for Noreen’s safety than upset that she was ignoring me.  Anyway, it was kind of boring story but it all worked out in the end.  Marion Ross would go on to become the Love Boat’s most frequent passenger, though she always played a different character.  Eventually, she even played a woman who married Captain Stubing but we’ve got a long way to go until we reach that point.

A long, loooooooooong way.

Meanwhile, two passengers found love.  Unfortunately, it was only after they slept together that Stephanie (Marcia Strassman) discovered that Bill (Frank Converse) had stolen a million dollars from his employer and Bill discovered that Stephanie was a cop.  Stephanie explained that she would be required to arrest Bill as soon as the ship returned to the United States.  Bill considered running off to Mexico but, in the end, he decided to face justice in the U.S., on the condition that Stephanie would be waiting for him after he got out of prison.  Honestly, I think it would have made more sense for Stephanie to just join Bill in Mexico and thy two of them could have built a new life there.  I mean, they’ve got a million dollars!  But, whatever.  Strassman and Converse had a lot of chemistry so, despite yourself, you really do hope that things will work out for them while you’re watching the episode.

And I hope things work for you as well, as we sail towards 2023!  The Love Boat will return.

 

Retro Television Reviews: Fantasy Island 2.2 “The Big Dipper/The Pirate”


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Tuesdays, I will be reviewing the original Fantasy Island, which ran on ABC from 1977 to 1986.  The entire show is currently streaming on Tubi!

Smiles, everyone, smiles!  How silly can things get this week?

Episode 2.2 “The Big Dipper/The Pirate”

(Dir by Earl Bellamy, originally aired on September 23rd, 1978)

Pete Raymond (Dan Rowan) and his daughter, Harmony (Jill Whelan), are professional pickpockets who are hiding out from a determined NYPD Detective named Broylan (Cameron Mitchell).  What better place to hide than Fantasy Island?  After stealing a ticket to the island from a reverend, Pete discovers that “his” fantasy is to work on a farm.  Of course, as you probably already guessed, the fantasy is actually Harmony’s.  She wants her father to calm down and live a normal life, away from committing crimes and fleeing the police.  At first, farmwork seems to agree with Pete but then Broylan shows up on the island.

I’ve often wondered about the legal status of Fantasy Island.  Is it an independent nation or is it territory of the United States or a member of the Commonwealth?  Some of the episodes during the first season suggested that Fantasy Island was a territory of the United States.  However, in this episode, Roarke reminds Broylan that the NYPD has no jurisdiction in Fantasy Island and that the island is not required to turn anyone over to America.  Pete is eventually arrested but Mr. Roarke explains that the Fantasy Island magistrate has ruled that Pete and Harmony can stay on the island and work on the farm.  When Broylan demands to know who the magistrate is, Mr. Roarke replies that he is.  So, apparently, we are now back to Fantasy Island being a separate nation where Mr. Roarke makes and interprets all of the laws.

The legal status of Fantasy Island was probably the most interesting thing about this fantasy.  It’s always fun to see Cameron Mitchell playing an obsessed cop but Dan Rowan gives a lousy performance as Pete and it’s never really clear how Harmony was able to set up the fantasy in the first place.  I mean, it obviously took a lot of planning on her part.  Did Mr. Roarke charge her the full price or is she another one of the freeloaders that Tattoo is always complaining about?

The show’s other fantasy is even more ridiculous and, not coincidentally, it’s also a lot more fun.  Painter Ted Cavanaugh (Sonny Bono) is upset that his ex-wife Mary (Diana Canova) is going to be marrying some stuffy rich guy so he asks to be transformed into an 18th century pirate so that he can kidnap Mary and convince her that she’s still in love with him.  WHAT!?  It’s totally completely ludicrous but …. I don’t know.  Sonny Bono is kind of funny as a pirate.  If you’re going to have a silly fantasy, you might as well go out and make it as silly as humanly possible and that’s definitely what happens here.  Fortunately, it all works out in the end.  Who can resist a pirate?