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    adam goldberg

    Explore " adam goldberg" with insightful episodes like "Episode 302 - The Hebrew Hammer", "2014: Fargo (TV Series) / Minnesota in Pop Culture Draft", "1993: Dazed and Confused / Top Movies of 1993", "Saving Private Ryan" and "148. Saving Private Ryan (1998)" from podcasts like ""Where To Stick It", "Pop Culture Yearbook", "Pop Culture Yearbook", "The Guys Review" and "Why Do We Own This DVD?"" and more!

    Episodes (9)

    Episode 302 - The Hebrew Hammer

    Episode 302 - The Hebrew Hammer

    With a lot of Christmas movies being reviewed lately, someone of the Where to Stick It Podcast has decided to switch things up and submit a hanukkiah movie. The Hebrew Hammer! Starring Adam Goldberg as "The Hebrew Hammer" and Andy Dick as Santa Claus. After a coup in the north pole, Santa's son takes the reigns and wages an all out war against hanukkiah. It's up the Hammer to stop this evil new Santa and save hanukkiah!

    Catch new episodes of the Where to Stick It Podcast every Tuesday and Thursday.

    If you like the show, please consider supporting us on Patreon where we upload exclusive content each month for only $3 a month.

    2014: Fargo (TV Series) / Minnesota in Pop Culture Draft

    2014: Fargo (TV Series) / Minnesota in Pop Culture Draft

    Yeah, you betcha we're talkin' Fargo. Not the movie, that was from 1996, but the terrific TV series that started in 2014 with an all-star cast including Billy Bob Thornton, Colin Hanks, Alison Lohman, Martin Freeman, Adam Goldberg, Bob Odenkirk, Oliver Platt, Glenn Howerton, and more. This was a wonderful reimagining of the spectacular source material. We break it down the PCY way.

    Since all things Fargo have such a deep connection to Minnesota, we took this opportunity to draft the best in pop culture from our great state. Whether you knew it or not, Minnesota has a plethora of options to choose from. Listen now to hear what we picked!

    If you enjoy the show, please rate and review us on the iTunes/Apple Podcasts app or wherever you listen. Or better yet, tell a friend to listen!

    Want to support our show and become a PCY Classmate? Click here!

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    1993: Dazed and Confused / Top Movies of 1993

    1993: Dazed and Confused / Top Movies of 1993

    All right, all right, all right. It's time to dig into Dazed and Confused, the Richard Linklater classic from 1993. Most well-known for it's up and coming cast, including Matthew McConaughey, Ben Affleck, Parker Posey, Adam Goldberg, Joey Lauren Adams, Cole Hauser, Milla Jovovich, and others, this movie didn't do well a the box office but became a cult classic over time.

    In addition to the movie, we share our own last day of school memories and draft the top movies of 1993. There's a lot in this episode, so light one up (or don't ), kick back and enjoy the ride.

    If you enjoy the show, please rate and review us on the iTunes/Apple Podcasts app or wherever you listen. Or better yet, tell a friend to listen!

    Want to support our show and become a PCY Classmate? Click here!

    Follow us on your preferred social media:
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    Saving Private Ryan

    Saving Private Ryan

    Saving Private Ryan

     

    Welcome to The Guys Review, where we review media, products and experiences. 

     

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    **ASK CHRIS AND TREY ABOUT THEIR RATING FOR GHOSTBUSTERS**

     

    Saving Private Ryan

     

    Director: Steven Spielberg

     

    Starring:  

    Tom Hanks

    Edward Burns

    Matt Damon

    Tom Sizemore

     

    Released: July 24, 1998

     

    Budget: $70M ($127.5M in 2022)

     

    Gross $485M ($883.1M in 2022)

     

    Ratings:   IMDb 8.6/10 Rotten Tomatoes 94% 

    Metacritic 91% Google Users 93% 

     

    Here cometh thine shiny awards Sire. My Lord Tucker the Wanker second Earl of Wessex. Lord of the Furries. Heir of Lord baldy the one eyed snake wrestler. Protector of Freedom units. Step Sibling with funny feelings down stairs. Entertainer of uncles. Jailor of innocent. Spanker of innocent milk maids and stable boys. The toxic wanker. Big Chief sitting doughnut. Teepee giver to the great Cornholio. Edgar Allan Poe's shaved muse.

     

    The film was nominated for eleven Academy Awards at the 71st annual ceremony, including Best Picture, Best Actor for Tom Hanks, and Best Original Screenplay. The film won five of these, including Best Cinematography, Best Sound, Best Sound Effects Editing, Best Film Editing, and Best Director for Spielberg, his second win in that category.

     

    After the film lost the Best Picture award to Shakespeare in Love, many film pundits criticized the Academy's decision not to award the film with the Best Picture Oscar and has continued to be considered as one of the biggest snubs in the ceremony's history.

     

    The film also won the Golden Globes for Best Motion Picture – Drama and Director, the BAFTA Award for Special Effects and Sound, the Directors Guild of America Award, a Grammy Award for Best Film Soundtrack, the Producers Guild of America Golden Laurel Award, and the Saturn Award for Best Action, Adventure, or Thriller Film.

     

    Saving Piivate Ryan comes in at #71 of AFI's

     

    First Time you saw the movie?

     

    Plot:

     

    An elderly veteran visits the Normandy Cemetery with his family. At a specific grave, he is overcome with emotion and begins to recall his time as a soldier.

     

    On the morning of June 6, 1944, the U.S. Army lands at Omaha Beach as part of the Normandy invasion. Captain John H. Miller leads his command, Company C, 2nd Ranger Battalion in a breakout from the beach. The staff at the United States Department of War learns that James Francis Ryan of the 101st Airborne Division is missing and presumed to be the last survivor of four brothers who are all in the military. General George C. Marshall orders Ryan to be found and sent home so that his family will not lose all its sons.

     

    Miller is ordered to lead a detachment in finding Ryan. As they arrive in the contested town of Neuville between German defenders and the 101st Airborne, Caparzo is killed by a German sniper. Miller and his men find a paratrooper named Ryan but he is not the one for whom they are searching, and they are directed to a rally point where James Francis Ryan's unit should be. Miller learns that Ryan is defending a key bridge in the town of Ramelle. En route, Miller decides against the judgment of his soldiers to neutralize a German machine gun nest, which results in Wade's death. A surviving German soldier is spared by the intervention of Upham, the detachment's interpreter, who is unused to the horrors of combat. Miller blindfolds the soldier, who has been nicknamed "Steamboat Willie", and orders him to surrender to the next Allied patrol. When Reiben threatens to desert, Miller defuses the situation by calmly telling a story that reveals his civilian background as a teacher and baseball coach, of which he has not previously spoken, and which has been the subject of much speculation among his men and a pool of about $300.

     

    Upon arriving in Ramelle, Miller's detachment makes contact with Ryan and informs him of his brothers' deaths. Though deeply upset, Ryan refuses to abandon his post defending the town’s bridge, and the town soon comes under siege by attacking Germans. Miller assumes command as the only officer present. He and his unit fight alongside the 101st, but the German armor advantage takes a toll on the Americans. Jackson, Mellish and Horvath are killed along with most of the paratroopers as the Americans retreat across the town’s bridge. During the final assault on the bridge, Steamboat Willie reappears and shoots Miller as he attempts to blow the bridge with pre-placed explosives, but before the German force can capture it American P-51 Mustang fighter planes and Sherman tanks arrive and halt their advance. Upham confronts Steamboat Willie, who attempts to talk Upham into letting him go again; Upham instead shoots and kills him. The mortally wounded Miller tells Ryan to "earn this" before dying, referring to the sacrifices others have made so that Ryan can have a postwar life.

     

    Returning to the present, Ryan is revealed to be the elderly veteran and the grave to be Miller's. Ryan expresses gratitude for the sacrifices made by Miller and his men, says he hopes he "earned it", and salutes the grave.

     

     

    TOP 5​

    1: The plot was loosely inspired by the true story of the Niland brothers

    Screenwriter Robert Rodat was initially inspired to write Saving Private Ryan when he saw a monument to the four sons of Agnes Allison, who were all killed in the American Civil War. However, when the premise got into the hands of producer Mark Gordon and eventually director Steven Spielberg, inspiration came from the true story of the Niland brothers. They were four brothers fighting in World War II.

    Two of them died and two survived. However, it was initially thought that only one of them survived, as the other one was missing and presumed dead. He turned out to be a prisoner of war in a Japanese internment camp.

     

    2: Steven Spielberg would’ve released the movie with an NC-17 rating

    While he was making Saving Private Ryan, Steven Spielberg feared that the movie’s brutal violence would lead the MPAA to assign it an NC-17 rating. Big Hollywood studios usually strive to avoid NC-17 ratings like the Bubonic Plague, and make whatever cuts are necessary to change the rating, because they’re box office poison. Some theaters won’t show them and the ones that will show them can only admit audience members over a certain age. But Spielberg was so happy with Saving Private Ryan that if it had come back from the MPAA with an NC-17 rating, he still would’ve released it.

     

    3: The gunfire sound effects are authentic

    To acquire the right sound effects for the guns used in the movie, Saving Private Ryan’s sound team went to a live machine gun firing range near Atlanta that was owned by a weapons manufacturer. There, they sourced all of the period-specific weaponry that was being used in the movie, that they needed to find the sounds for, and they just started firing them at the shooting range.

     

    4: Saving Private Ryan is the last non-digitally edited Best Film Editing winner

    Pretty much every movie in the last 20 years has been digitally edited because digital editing – while losing some of the soul of the filmmaking process – is a lot cheaper, easier, and more secure than the old “cutting room” method. Saving Private Ryan was the last movie to be edited using non-digital technology to win the Academy Award for Best Film Editing. Every subsequent winner of the Oscar for editing has been edited digitally. And digital isn’t going away any time soon, so Saving Private Ryan will probably hold onto the distinction of last non-digitally edited Best Film Editing winner indefinitely.

     

    5: The D-Day landings sequence cost $11 million

    Saving Private Ryan’s opening D-Day landings scene took up a hefty chunk of the film’s $70 million budget, costing $11 million to pull off. Steven Spielberg decided chose not to storyboard the sequence at all, instead letting the action tell him where to point the camera (he elected to use a handheld camera for the scene) on the days of shooting. The producers recruited 40 barrels of fake blood and more than 1,000 extras for the scene. Between 20 and 30 of these extras were amputees who could be fitted with prosthetic limbs for the sole purpose of being blown off in explosions.

     

    **TRIPLE LINDY AWARD** - Dude on top of the tank at the end who didn't move, and got blown up. Obviously it was a mannequin.

     

    **REVIEW AND RATING**

    Trey

    Chris

    Stephen .5

    Tucker .5

     

    TOP 5

    Stephen:

    1 Breakfast club

    2 Saving Private Ryan

    3 Ghostbusters

    4 Sandlot

    5 Color out of space

     

    Chris:

    1. sandlots

    2. T2

    3. trick r treat

    4. rocky horror picture show

    5. hubie halloween

     

    Trey:

    1) Boondocks Saints

    2) Mail Order Brides

    3) Tombstone

    4) Very bad things

    5) She out of my league

     

    Tucker:

    1. T2

    2:Saving Private Ryan

    3: Tombstone

    4: My Cousin Vinny

    5: Ghostbusters

     

    WHAT ARE WE DOING NEXT WEEK?

     

    Web: https://theguysreview.simplecast.com/

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    Please, Subscribe, rate and review us wherever you get your podcasts from!!

     

    Thank you,

    -The Guys

    148. Saving Private Ryan (1998)

    148. Saving Private Ryan (1998)

    Diane and Sean discuss Steven Spielberg's devastating WW2 masterpiece, Saving Private Ryan. Episode music is "Tu Es Partout", by Edith Piaf from the OST.

    -  Our theme song is by Brushy One String


    -  Artwork by Marlaine LePage

    -  Why Do We Own This DVD?  Merch available at Teepublic


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    DAZED AND CONFUSED

    DAZED AND CONFUSED

    Alright, alright.... Wait for it... Alright. In the wake of the 60-years-long 2020 election, Aya and Kevin retreat to an all-timer big boy comfort watch in Richard Linklater's seminal 1993 cult classic, DAZED AND CONFUSED. Kevin finds this humanist masterpiece way more melancholic than he remembered, while Aya couldn't stop clawing her eyes out as a Texan baseball jock directed a self-indulgent auto-biographical circle jerk about the other uninteresting men he went to high school with.

    Do "hangout movies" still work if you actually have friends?  Have men ever made a story worth sharing? What ever happened to Michelle Burke?

     

    Aya Lehman: https://twitter.com/ayalhmn

    Kevin Cookman: https://twitter.com/KevinCookman

    Contact/Mailbag: ayavsthebigboys@gmail.com

     

    A Merry-Go-Round Magazine Podcast: https://merrygoroundmagazine.com/

    Support Merry-Go-Round Magazine!: https://www.patreon.com/mgrm 

    Video Games

    Video Games

    On the 39th episode of the Slice By Slice podcast Jesse and Josh discuss horror video games. Recorded on 4/20/20.

     

    Email: sbyspodcast@gmail.com  

    Twitter and Instagram: @sbyspodcast

     

    • Intro
    • Corrections and Updates
    • What we watched
    • Film Discussions
      • Brainscan (1994)
      • Stay Alive (2006)
    • Outro
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