Category Archives: Stuff Steve hates

Can We Please Occupy the Right Places?

Joe: How’s Johnny?

Steve: He’s good.
Bastard drank five ounces at one feeding this morning.

Joe: Joey drank that much, then he puked.
I think Joey and Johnny have one of those “can’t drink a gallon of milk in an hour” contests going.

Steve: We’re in Walnut Creek at Sarah’s parents’ house. We have Odin with us.
He’s very concerned about all these random people holding the baby.

Joe: As am I.
Why did you bring the dog?

Steve: Because.
Dogs need more attention than cats.

Joe: You just wanted an 8 hour car trip with a big dog didn’t you?

Steve: Cats and tortoises we can just have my dad stop by and feed once a day.
The dog we’d have to board if we didn’t bring him. And that costs wicked green.
Fortunately, dogs travel much better than cats too. So it works out.

Joe: Please tell me you stopped in Oakland and yelled “sic ‘em” at those Occupy Wall Street turds.

Steve: Haha.
No.

Joe: Dang.
Then it’s a wasted trip unless you do it on the way back.

Steve: Honestly, I’m a little bit on their side

Joe: I’m on their side the same way I’m on the Tea Partier’s side.
I agree with a fair amount of what they are fighting for, I just think pooping in public parks is retarded.

Steve: Have they done that?

Joe: In NY they have

Steve: Morons.

Joe: I think they will accomplish nothing.

Steve: We’ll see. Protesting almost never directly accomplishes anything, but I think a good amount of the public has gotten pissed off along with them.

Joe: Also, how can you occupy Wall Street in LA/Oakland/Chicago?

Steve: Well they change the names.
It’s called Occupy Oakland.

Joe: Well, I think the public was pissed off with them at first and is now pissed off at them.

Steve: Partly.

Joe: Yeah, well the Occupy L.A. people have been protesting buildings with no bankers in them (namely my building) and making life a mess for middle class people who are part of the “99%”
So fuck them and their idiotic need for attention.

Steve: Ha.
Morons.
I guess anyone in a tall building is fair game.

Joe: I do agree that corporations, especially banks, are evil though.
So it’s not like I’m rooting for Chase or BofA.
But when the other side is a bunch of modern day hippies,  I don’t know who I’m rooting for.

Steve: Yeah.
Thing is, I’m usually the guy who defends corporations.
I was kind of nonchalant about the “corporations suck” mentality until I saw this one chart.

Steve: Someone put it on Facebook. It shows the average CEO salary vs regular worker salary in several countries.
That bugged the crap out of me.

Joe: Right.
Got a meeting.
Peace.

Steve: Right. Later.

Watchmen without Nixon and Battle: Los Angeles


Joe: If we could somehow eliminate the 90′s for Stallone, we’d be cutting out Rocky V, Daylight, Judge Dredd, Demolition Man, Oscar, Stop Or My Mom Will Shoot and just about every film he gets panned for. The only good thing we’d be taking out is Cop Land.

Steve: Actually, I’m very pro-Demolition Man.

Joe: You’re very pro-stupid.

Steve: I think it’s a beautiful example of 80′s/early 90′s action movies.
Muscles, explosions, glorification of said muscles and explosions.

Joe: Regardless, I’m just saying that if we took out the 90′s, he goes from Tango & Cash to Get Carter.

Steve: Yeah…

Joe: No one liked Get Carter, but he was trying to branch out.

Steve: Yeah, on the whole, he needs to lose the 90′s.

Joe: His quote about fake-muscled super stars was pretty accurate. America was fascinated with skinny heroes like Michael Keaton and Keanu Reeves.
There’s no room for him in there.
Arnold hit hard times too, especially with that Batman poop show.
I think the 90′s needs to apologize to the 80′s for fucking shit up, and then the 70′s needs to apologize to humanity for existing.

Steve: No, all the best rock music is from the 70′s.
What we really need to do is wipe out the 60′s.
That was the birth of evil.

Joe: Mmm… I feel like parts of the 70′s (fashion, architecture, politics, oil prices, tele-evangelists, plaid pants, etc.) really need to apologize.

Steve: Yeah, all true.
But the really evil stuff like the sexual revolution, the proliferation of divorce, glorified heavy drug use, etc. all came from the 60′s.

Joe: I feel like it came from the last part of 60′s. There was this odd quote from a throwaway Soderbergh movie where a character says. “The 60′s weren’t the 60′s, just ’68 and half of ’69.”
So maybe we ditch like Jan. 1 1968 – Dec. 31 1974 (Nixon resigns in there)
that really gets rid of a lot – wood stock, MLK’s murder, RFK’s murder, both of Nixon’s elections, etc.

Steve: True.

Joe: Although, if Nixon never gets elected, where does that leave the Watchmen?

Steve: Oh they’d be fine.
As long as there was still a Vietnam War.

Joe: ’68-’74 gets rid of most of the deaths in Vietnam, changes it to more of an Iraq (hey why are we over there, 10,000 Americans got killed) from an “Oh my God, hundreds of thousands of young Americans lost their lives in a war fought completely the wrong way for reasons no one remembers.”
They’d be less snarky.

Steve: Nah.
I have a theory that the level of tragedy that actually took place is not directly proportional to how pissed off Alan Moore is about it.

Joe: You know what I thought about when I saw the first 10 minutes of Watchmen?

Steve: What?

Joe: Alan Moore thinking “You know what would make me more pissed than reality? This other reality I created. Oh man, I’d be so pissed if that actually happened. Holy sh*t, now I am pissed, f*cking Nixon’s fourth term, I’m so pissed.”

Steve: Hahaha.
Truth.

Joe: It was just so odd that he created an alternate reality that every American would have hated…but then passed it off as acceptable. Just really an odd premise. Maybe that’s why I wasn’t a big fan. You can rewrite the future however you want, but rewriting a past that really wasn’t possible makes it hard to grasp I think.
Unless it’s Abe Lincoln vs. Vampires.
That’s awesome.

Steve: I kind of disagree.
The only thing he changed was that America had a god-like superbeing on our side during the Cold War.
I’m pretty sure that would have made most of that stuff happen.
Probably not the four-term Nixon thing, but even that wouldn’t be a huge jump.

Joe: Mmm… I don’t know, didn’t seem believable.

Steve: Well you and I have grown up in a world where two-term limits are just a given.
But that didn’t happen until FDR.

Joe: True.

Steve: In Nixon’s day, there were still people alive who thought of that as a new-ish law.

Joe: But, whatever.
We already had this conversation three or four times.

Steve: We did? I don’t remember having the “feasibility of Moore’s Nixon thesis” discussion.

Joe: Well, we’ve had the overall “Why Joe does not and Steve does like Watchmen”

Steve: Oh. Yeah, the book was better.

Joe: I want to see Battle: LA next weekend, want to go?
or this weekend.
whichever.

Steve: I saw it Sunday.

Joe: Damn.
I was spinning from vertigo.

Steve: No, no.

Joe: How was it?

Steve: I saved you.

Joe: Really?

Steve: Oh yeah.
It’s the worst movie since 2012.
Discounting Avatar, obviously.

Joe: Wow.
I had high hopes for Aaron Eckhart. That makes me sad.

Steve: Dude, I couldn’t believe they got Aaron Eckhart to say some of that dialogue.
I said to Sarah, “This movie has everything.”
In a single unit of Marines, they had the guy with a pregnant wife,
The scared virgin kid who’d never been in combat,
The young leitenant nervous about his first field command,
The staff sergeant with a bad reputation because he got people killed on his last assignment,
The guy whose brother got killed on the staff sergeant’s last assignment,
The guy who was about to get married,
They had a scene with a guy writing a letter beginning with the words “My dearest wife-”
And a later scene where he entrusts that letter to someone else with his dying breath,

Joe: Ok.
You win.
I shouldn’t see it.

Steve: (The woman down the row from us audibly groaned at that part)

Joe: I owe you something for taking the bullet.

Steve: Oh that’s not the best part.
EVERY COOL EFFECTS SHOT WAS IN THE TRAILER.

Joe: Oh man.
What a waste.

Steve: Even with all that horse crap, there wasn’t even any great eye candy to make it worthwhile.

Joe: Ugh, so crappy.
Anyway, lunch.

Steve: Aight later.

Star Trek V vs. Rocky V


Steve: It’s amazing how spending three seconds trimming my mustache to uniform length can make my entire beard look more presentable.
Maybe we only look at someone’s top lip to judge their beard.

Joe: Maybe.
Did I tell you I had vertigo last week?

Steve: Yeah.
You’re all better now?

Joe: Mostly.
I get a dizzy spell now and then, but if I stay hydrated I’m fine.
I guess dehydration is part of the problem.
Something in my head was inflamed, so my whole apartment was a carnival ride wednesday morning, complete with vomit and a strange urine smell.
Had to go see the doctor, get medicine (including Xanax) and watched Star Treks 1, 2 and 3.
Although I didn’t like being sick, I’m glad I was able to watch Star Trek 3 and realize that I was a fool to like such a huge pile of crap.

Steve: Vertigo must have made the Star Trek movies seem like awesome action thrill rides.

Joe: Star Trek 2 was amazing on Xanax/vertigo.
Carlos Montalban in the most amazing breast plate ever was so cool, and the ear wig thingies were super scary.
I watched Star Trek 3 while mostly sober.

Steve: Ricardo

Joe: Right.
Ricardo Montalban.
Out of all the Star Trek movies, you know which line always sticks out the most?

Steve: Yeah, Star Trek 2 would be the perfect movie if they hadn’t cast a whiney dweeb with a blonde fro as the son of James Kirk.

Joe: Oh yeah, possibly the worst miscasting of the 1980′s.

Steve: I can’t understand why that one is so many people’s favorite Trek movie, and the main reason I can’t understand it is that kid.

Joe: With the exception of that kid, it’s a good movie.

Steve: Yeah.
What line sticks out the most?

Joe: “What does God need with a starship?”
From the fifth one I think, which is the worst turd that ever turded a turd.
And you know why it sticks out the most? It’s both a legitmate and mentally retarded question at the same time.

Steve: I would like to make a comparative judgement that may lead to an internet discussion of mammoth proportions.

Joe: Ok.

Steve: Star Trek V, though it is the worst Star Trek movie, and one of the top ten worst major sci-fi movies of all time…
Is still less despicable than Rocky V.
I could sit through Star Trek V way more easily than I could Rocky V.

Joe:

Steve: I know, tough call, but I’m pretty sure it’s true.

Joe: I think that’s true for 2 reasons:

Steve: Yeah, Tommy and Gunn.

Joe: 1. Star Trek movies were already up and down. By that point, 2 and 4 were well received and 1 and 3 were Turd Ferguson.
2. Rocky movies were all awesome or at least spectacular from 1-4, culminating in a bomb of epic proportions.
3. As bad as that blonde kid was, Tommy Gunn was somehow worse in every way.
4. Putting Mickey in as a sign of dementia was like Jesus resurecting as a mummy or something.
5. Someone finally punches Paulie (who deserved to lose his front teeth after the way he treated Adrian in Rocky 1 and ruining their finances in Rocky V) but then somehow the audience is expected to feel bad for Paulie?
On a side note, how fucking long was Rocky in Russia? He goes to train for a fight, gives Paulie the keys to the castle for 6 months at most, and Paulie destroys their finances?

Steve: Oh yeah, not to mention the kid’s age jump.

Joe: Ok.

Steve: He’s like four when Rocky leaves for Russia and like 13 when he gets back.

Joe: You just reminded me of how awful that kid was.
And yet, somehow Tommy Gunn was worse.

Steve: Dude Tommy Gunn is such a bad actor, I wouldn’t believe him if he was reading my diary to me.

Joe: Dude, he’s such a scary guy now. he’s got HIV, denies there’s such a thing as HIV, still boxes in like underground fights… it’s like he’s training to be Joker’s deranged henchman or something.

Steve: He denies there’s such a thing as HIV?

Joe: Yeah, he denies HIV exists.
He has lesions on his face and he denies HIV exists.

Steve: That’s… insane.
And only further proves that Rocky V is the worst thing ever.

Joe: Yup.

Alright, Who Brought the Sierra Mist?

Steve: So.

Joe: Earthquake.
That’s what.

Steve: That’s what Sarah just said.
Didn’t feel it here.

Joe: I’m on the 19th floor
I felt it.

Steve: Anyway.

Joe: What’s up?

Steve: Barbecue time has come and gone again.
Which means I have to ask you a question.

Joe: Yes, I shit a burger.

Steve: No, not that question.
The question is, Joe…
How many Sierra Mists do you want when you come over on Saturday?

Joe: mother fucker

Steve: Mother.
Fucker.

Joe: I hate that shit man.

Steve: It’s a whole unopened 12-pack.
Again.
It’s like someone read our blog and brought it just to spite us.
So far nobody has owned up to it.

Joe: Dude, who brings that crap?

Steve: I actually suspect it brought itself.
I’m sure I’d know if any of my friends were… that way.
Plus, Sierra Mist is a sonovabitch.
Bringing itself to my BBQ is exactly the kind of thing it would do.

Joe: Sierra Mist just caused an earthquake.

Steve: Earlier today, Sierra Mist caused an accident on the Metro Blue Line and made 4000 people late for work.

Joe: Sierra Mist makes collect phone calls to 7-Up and never pays him back.

Steve: Sierra Mist prevented Jean-Claude Van Damme, Steven Seagal, Jackie Chan, Wesley Snipes, Dwayne Johnson and Vin Diesel from joining the cast of the Expendables.
And he cast the A-Team movie without Mr. T.

Joe: Sierra Mist optioned the rights to Airbender, only to hire a down on his luck director and a white kid to ruin it.

Steve: Sierra Mist heard some people think of Hitler as the literal antichrist and started punching llama after llama until he gradually surpassed Hitler’s evil. Just for spite.

Joe: Sierra Mist voted for the Green Party in the last six presidential elections.

Steve: Sierra Mist framed Carmen San Diego.

Joe: Sierra Mist baked three dozen cookies for Mrs. Schneider’s elementary school class and put his own pubic hairs into the batter.

Steve: Sierra Mist directed Pirates of the Caribbean 3 while Gore Verbinski was tied up in his basement.

Joe: Sierra Mist took my mother Dorothy Mantooth out for a nice seafood dinner and never called her again.

Steve: Sierra Mist had $30,000 to invest in my movie Gray, but he spent it all on Vienna sausages and Cabbge Patch Kid dolls, which he rolled into banana leaves and smoked.

Joe: Sierra Mist is on the sex offender list.

Steve: Twice.
Sierra Mist is wanted for drug smuggling in 134 countries.
It used to be 138, but he toppled a few foreign governments.

Joe: Sierra Mist built the Iron Curtain, melted it down to make scrap and then built a statue of the founder of the KKK outside Nashville.

Steve: Sierra Mist doesn’t care about black people.

Joe: Sierra Mist beat up a homeless person, blamed it on the police and then raped a bunny rabbit.

Steve: That bunny rabbit went on to get elected to Congress, where he betrayed every principal of the Democratic party, then blew his brains out on national television.

Joe: Sierra Mist is both pro and anti Prop 8.

Steve: Sierra Mist won’t help me straighten up my office, no matter how many times I ask him.

Joe: Sierra Mist invented cold sores.

Steve: Sierra Mist got David Lee Roth kicked out of Van Halen.

Joe: Sierra Mist keeps propogating the idea that KISS is a good band and that people want more reality shows based on people made famous by other reality shows.

Steve: Sierra Mist is the chief of programming for NBC.

Joe: Sierra Mist is a douche bag.

Steve: I hate Sierra Mist.
It’s like 7-Up took a whiz into some Mountain Dew, then someone spilled the Mountain Dew and had to refill it with seltzer water and poison.

Joe: We have 7-Up, Sprite and vomit, why on earth do we need Sierra Mist?

Steve: I seriously think it’s a test to see how long they can sell a competing product called “Sierra Mist” before “Mountain Dew” figures how to sue the living shit out of them.

Joe: Well, at least we got another blog post out of it.

Steve: Word.

HELLUVA TOUGH!




Steve: Let me tell you something about the 80′s.
In the 80′s every pop culture icon that existed for little boys was either a violent, murdering sonovabitch, or a weepy puss from some John Hughes movie.
Obviously, we all wanted to be tough guys.
Like Rambo or He-Man.
We all wanted guns and fighting.
Because really, that’s what all boys want.
Now I had good parents.
They made sure I knew that it wasn’t cool to start fights and I needed to eat my vegetables.
But some kids didn’t.
Some parents were fools.
And that’s why God created Mr. T.
What other hero could we look to who was an icon of masculinity, but would also look right into the camera and tell us to stay in school, don’t do drugs, drink our milk and respect our mommas?
Nobody else, that’s who.
Only the toughest man in the world could get away with that.
And because he was the toughest man in the world, they gave him a TV show.
That show was called “The A-Team,” but it could easily have been called “Mr. T and his Three Friends.”
Because that’s what it was.

Joe: True.

Steve: And through that show and his other platforms, Mr. T raised an entire generation of young boys to stay in school, drink their milk, not do drugs, and love their mommas.
He was a father figure.
Or at least an older brother figure.
Hulk Hogan had a similar message, but for Hogan it was a persona.
For Mr. T, it’s who he really was, and we know that for sure now.
Now it’s 20 years later and they’ve remade the A-Team as a feature film.
Mr. T hated the movie.
He said it was too violent, too graphc, too much sex.
He didn’t like that people died in it.
He said it was nothing like the show they used to put out every week.
Earlier today someone told me he thinks Mr. T is out of touch or hyperspiritual.
Because he can’t enjoy a movie with too much violence.
Well, I like violent movies as much as the next guy.
But Mr. T’s my big brother.
And he’s helluva tough.
So when Mr. T tells me not to go see the movie based on his own show…
You’d better believe I’m gonna listen.
I pity the fool who don’t.

Joe: Who said he’s hyperspiritual/out of touch?

Steve: A guy you don’t know, but he’s a little too old.
He wasn’t raised by Mr. T.
Plus he grew up in Kenya.
So he has no clue.

Joe: Dude, Americans are too violent. Violence is not a “good” thing and someone who doesn’t like violence is a good person.
Violence means people die or get hurt, and Jesus wasn’t a violent dude. I appreciate good violence, but that’s a part of me that isn’t all that righteous.

Steve: Well, we could debate about that for a long time.
But in short, yes. Someone who doesn’t like violence is right not to.

Joe: Agreed, but saying a person is “out of touch” because they don’t like violence is dumb.

Steve: Exactly.
And saying someone is hyperspiritual because they don’t like it when Hollywood rapes their beloved franchise is even stupider.

Joe: Conan understands.

Steve: Sweet.
And Mr T’s right. That movie is terrible.
I mean, MR. T didn’t like it.
http://movies.msn.com/movies/article.aspx?news=504325&Gt1=28101

Joe: Dude, it’s quite possibly the lamest thing this summer. And this is a particularly bad summer.

Steve: I think the worst part is either when Rampage puts on the tu-tu and prances around singing “Hit Me Baby One More Time,” or when Liam Neeson puts on the full Revolutionary War-era redcoat outift and tattoos “Screw America” across his forehead.

Joe: No, the worst part is where they destroy the A-Team van. Which actually happens.
I mean, it’s like they know they’re crapping on the A-Team, so they crap on themselves since they are the fake A-Team.
It’s just wrong.

Steve: Oh yeah.
Unbelievable.
Mr. T made the right call not doing a cameo alongside Face and Murdoch.
He was obviously too helluva tough to be fooled by the jibba-jabba.

Joe: When Mr. T doesn’t like something – something specifically related to him – you should just follow his lead.
Rampage can suck it.
He’s not Mr. T.

Steve: No. He definitely is not.

Joe: I’d rather go see Sex in the City 2.

Steve: Nor is Liam Neeson George Peppard.

Joe: I’d rather go to see Sex in the City 2 and then go see Shrek 4

Steve: And in case anyone didn’t notice, LIAM NEESON ISN’T EVEN AMERICAN!
His American accent is worse than Arnold’s,
They may as well have just pissed on our childhood.
Rampage’s acting ability makes Mr.T look like Marlon freaking Brando.

Joe: Last summer I had to pretend that the Wayans brother I like the least didn’t take a dump on GI Joe, now I have to do the same thing with the A-Team. Hollywood can get cancer and die.

Steve: Seriously.
Hey remember how great life was back when the A-Team was an awesome show from the 1980′s starring one of the greatest men who ever lived?
Now it’s a crappy action movie that rapes the memory of said show.
Way too much CG. Way too many attempts at sly references to the original show.
When in fact they’re just destroying it.
Oh yeah, and lest anyone forget:
http://movies.msn.com/movies/article.aspx?news=504325&Gt1=28101
That A-Team movie helluva sucks.

Joe: When Ralph Macchio dogged the new Karate Kid I thought “maybe he’s just bitter, I mean, it does have Jackie Chan who is entertaining every fourth movie he does.”

Steve: Macchio didn’t dog it.
He liked it.
He took his son to see the premiere with him.

Joe: But, when Mr. T tears apart a film that either never should have been made or should have starred him, original Face and original Murdoch avenging Hannibal, I know Satan just produced a film.

Steve: Pretty much.
I’ve been waiting twenty years for an A-Team movie and when they finally make one, Peppard is dead and Mr. T’s been replaced by a freaking nobody from idiotsville.
And don’t get me wrong, I love Liam Neeson.
He’s one of the best actors alive today.
But casting a Brit as Hannibal – especially a Brit who can’t do an American accent to save his life…
It’s no different than casting a Brit as Captain America.
We may as well just sign the colonies back over to the freaking Queen.

Joe: Right. They cast a Brit as Hannibal, a South African as Murdoch and a retard as Mr. T.
I’m just appalled on so many levels.
What’s worse is that I think the film will make money because of how bad this summer has been for movies.

Steve: You know what it reminds me of?
Seriously?

Joe: What?

Steve: It plays exactly like one of those stupid comic book fan films.
Like some guys with a camera and a few extra bucks for Final Cut just grabbed the best actors they could get for the weekend and shot a fake concept trailer.
It’s exactly that level of quality.
Only instead of a fake trailer, they actually made the whole movie.
With the wrong actors and CG in place of anything that might actually be cool.
Just like that Mortal Kombat trailer that looks really cool at first until you suddenly stop and go… wait… a Mortal Kombat trailer?

Joe: I know this hasn’t gone on too long, but I think I can’t talk about this any longer. It’s an abomination. Too painful.

Steve: Abomination is exactly the right word.
The toughest man in the world is so disappointed in our culture.
And that makes me sad.

Joe: I don’t pity the fool, I pity us.

Steve: I pity us.
Oh, you know what?

Joe: ??

Steve: http://movies.msn.com/movies/article.aspx?news=504325&Gt1=28101
‘Nuff said, America.
‘Nuff said, Hollywood.

Raw, Unbridled Hatred




Steve: Alright Joe.
I’m gonna tell it like it is.

Joe: Ok.

Steve: I love Star Trek.
Even the worst parts of Star Trek, I love.
I love Star Trek V, which may be one of the worst movies ever made.
I love the episode of the original series when they were transporting space hippies and the first two seasons of TNG when they all wore skintight pajamas and tried to convince us Denise Crosby was the tough one.
I love Enterprise, even though it had totally screwy morals and the worst finale in sci-fi history.
I love Nemesis even though it demolished all of my favorite characters.
I love DS9 even though it only got good after Worf moved in and the last season fizzled out like a campfire in the rain.
I love J.J. Abrams’ remake even though I’ve been his sworn enemy for years.
But I HATE Star Trek: Voyager.
Screw that show.
I hate it so much.
I want it dead.
And that’s how it is.

Joe: Wow.
Very passionate.

Steve: Thank you.

Joe: Not sure I hate anything that much in the world of sci-fi.

Steve: I just happened to see the Futurama episode where he finds all the original cast except they’ve replaced Scotty with Welshie and Melllvar keeps zapping him.

Joe: WELSHIEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!

Steve: It made me realize how much I can love a franchise even though almost half of it is terrible.
And that reminded me that if you factor in Star Trek: Voyager, it becomes more than half.

Joe: Who was in charge of Voyager?
Was it like a random guy who was bored and the rest of the team felt bad for him?

Steve: Berman.
That was the first show that was conceived and developed completely after Roddenberry’s death.

Joe: Ah.
Bad direction then.

Steve: He died during the run of DS9, but he was at least around to help get it going.
And he was long dead when Enterprise happened, but they were actually trying to do something original there so it came out mostly good.
But nobody watched it because Voyager had already killed Star Trek.
Then the movies got worse and worse until they kicked Berman out and started over.
But for all of that, Voyager is the only thing I hate.
I think I blame Voyager for everything that came after.

Joe: Sorta like how the Christians view the Crusades, or the Spanish Inquisition.

Steve:
…yes?
No, yeah. I see what youre saying.
Totally like that.
Like the Crusades or the 700 Club.

Joe: Oooo, the 700 Club is a much less violent example.
No less a travesty though, in my opinion.

Steve: Less violent, but almost as inconvenient.
But yeah. Star Trek is great.
And Voyager never happened.
Just like the Crusades.

Joe: I think Star Trek has a very high ceiling and a very low basement.

Steve: True.

Joe: I think all sci-fi has great potential, maybe Star Trek more so, but when it sucks, it just hits an amazing level of suckitude.

Steve: What carries me through most of the Star Trek suckage is that the shows were never about action or space battles.
It was always more like you were just hanging out with these swell characters on their swell space ship.

Joe: Dude, action movies dressed up in sci-fi suits piss me off.

Steve: So even when they do something stupid like The Final Frontier or Insurrection, you still just have fun hanging out with them.
Which, hey just realized, is probably why Voyager is the one I can’t forgive.
Because there never were any good characters or cool episodes to let me get on their side.
The whole series was bad from start to finish and none of the characters were even conceptually cool or fun to watch.
That can’t be said about any of the other four Star Trek crews.

Joe: Right.
Voyager wasn’t the one with the female captain was it?

Steve:Yeah, it was.

They made this big to do about having a female captain because the future is all full of equality, then we finally see her and she looks, sounds and acts exactly like a man.
Even in the future women have to behave like men to get anywhere?
What was even the point?

Joe: With 7 of 9?

Steve: Yes, 7 of 9 came on there eventually.

Joe: Dude, I saw a total of 5 episodes. Lamest thing I’ve ever seen.
LAMEST.
Really bad.

Steve: Yep.
And while 7 of 9 finally got them back to the classic Trek tradition of hot chicks in tight clothing, it was way too little way too late.
And it really turned out to be just a launching point for another round of horrible story arcs.

Joe: I’m actually mad at you for making me remember I wasted 5 episodes worth of my life that could have been spent sinning somehow (which I’m implying would have been less of a waste of time).

Steve: Yep.

Vote Froyd!


Joe: File under – Reasons to Hate Los Angeles.
http://movies.yahoo.com/feature/movie-talk-should-we-now-call-him-captain-england.html

Steve: Um…
This is a World War II movie.
90% of it should never have been filmed in America in the first place.

Joe: I agree, but the fact that Los Angeles won’t give tax breaks to the one industry indigenous to this town makes me want to pack my things and take my tax revenue with me.

Steve: Vote for this guy:

I would vote for him but I don’t live in his district.
I think you do.
So vote for him and I’ll feel like I’ve accomplished something.

Joe: Ok.

Steve: You’re not even registered in California are you?

Joe: Not yet, but I’ve volunteered for Meg Whitman’s campaign.
I’ll register this week probably, maybe this weekend.

Steve: Whitman reminds me of my old boss.
I’m pretty sure she can eat glass.

Joe: Most likely.
It’s between her and Jerry Brown, who is a douchbag career politician.

Steve: Yeah, well…
welcome to California.
Voting here is like choosing which demon is going to rape your soul.

Joe: Right.

Steve: Except for Merlin. Vote Froyd!

Joe: Ha.

Exotic Meats and the Return of History’s Greatest Villain


Steve: Buffalo.
Hot dogs.

Joe: You had them?

Steve: Yeah.
There’s still one in my fridge.
I’m going back for several pounds worth.
Gonna use them at the BBQ.

Joe: Are they good?
Or just cheap?

Steve: They are awesome.
No, anything but cheap.
They’re $6.99/lb.
But they’re worth it.
Whole Foods is selling them.
I bought the Whole Foods vegetable-fed all-beef hot dogs and the buffalo hot dogs.
Had one of each to compare.
Buffalo dogs blow the beef ones out of the water.

Joe: Sweet.

Steve: Now if I can just find some bear, some alligator and some venison…
This will be the greatest meatfest ever.

Joe: Ha.

Steve: Quite.
Bryan’s telling me he once had bear hot dogs at his uncle’s house.
And deer.
I’ve got him trying to find out where they came from.
I’ve actually found deer hot dogs and gator sausages online.
But I can’t find the bear ones.

Joe: Bear is tough since some bears are endangered.
Plus, I hear women attract bears. They’re attracted to the menstruation.

Steve: Black bear seems to be what most people sell.
But I’ve only found bear burgers.
And we may be out of luck because nobody ships bear to California.
Some grass-smoking hippie probably thinks it’s mean to eat bears and got himself elected to the state senate.
But I figure it’s definitely time to start diversifying my meat sources.
This is year five. Gotta start eating things that could eat us back.

Joe: I’m not sure why we don’t start with those meats.
I know we’re already at the top of the food chain, but those gosh darn lions are getting upity.

Steve: I think it’s easier to raise cows than lions.
Probably because you’d have to raise cows in order to feed the lions anyway.
So we figure, “Why not just eat the cows ourselves and the lions can go screw themselves?”

Joe: Yeah, freaking lions.
You know who hates humans?

Steve: Who?
Doug?

Joe: Sierra Mist.

Steve: Damn Sierra Mist!
You can’t even eat one out of revenge.
Because it’s a liquid.
And a gross one at that.

Joe: Sierra Mist tried to blow up a van in Times Square and then blamed it on a Pakistani.

Steve: Sierra Mist once gave birth to a baby. The baby turned out to be smallpox and it killed millions of people.

Joe: Sierra Mist encouraged Abraham Lincoln to select Andrew Johnson as vice president, then convinced John Wilkes Booth that Lincoln’s head was made of popcorn and thus impervious to bullets.

Steve: Sierra Mist is the reason why communism doesn’t work.

Joe: Sierra Mist invented polytheism.

Steve: Sierra Mist is keeping me from finding bear hot dogs.

Joe: Sierra Mist bought all the bear hot dogs and fed them to the buffalo. He then shot the buffalo.
Also, there are some eagles under the floor boards.
Wait, wrong bit.

Steve: Sierra Mist invented the gun just so millions of people could be killed by it.
Then it invented gun control to make sure only innocent people were hurt.

Joe: Sierra Mist raped 7-Up.

Steve: Sierra Mist gave my cat herpes.

Joe: Sierra Mist is going to give Greece $600 billion in debt in order for Greece to pay off its current debt, only to further their debt problems.
Yes, Steve. Sierra Mist is Europe.

Steve: Sierra Mist does not taste very good.

Joe: Not at all.

National Star Wars Day

Steve: Joe…
It’s National Star Wars Day.
And do you know why it’s National Star Wars Day?
Because
…sigh…
May the 4th be with you.
I hate that I just said that.

Joe: What the hell is wrong with you?

Steve: Hey

Joe: I’m glad you’re not coming over tonight

Steve: Don’t kill the freaking messenger.

Joe: Who said it?

Steve: The world.
The freaking Star Wars fans of the world.

Joe: And, by the way, if 300 taught us anything, it’s that killing the messenger is awesome.

Steve: That’s why everyone’s got Star Wars stuff on Facebook today.
So I looked up National Star Wars Day online, and that’s what I found out.
Fuck ‘em all, that’s what I say.

Joe: I agree

Steve: Wait until tomorrow.
Apparently it’s something about “Revenge of the 5th”

The Great Televised Rage Machine …or: Why Can’t Joe Accept The Truth?

Joe: Worst show that lasted more than two seasons.

Steve: Oh jeez.
We’ll never get to the bottom of that list.

Joe: Yeah, okay, worst sitcom then.

Steve: Pssh.
Same response.
The Jeff Foxworthy Show.
The George Lopez Show.
Anything with that sort of title.
Grace Under Fire.

Joe: Oh my God, I always forget that show existed until someone brings it up, then I get headaches.

Steve: Yup.

Joe: Okay, how about this: show that should have lasted three years that got cancelled prematurely.

Steve: Firefly.
Dollhouse.
I can see already this list is going to be Whedon-heavy.

Joe: I have one easy answer “The Dana Carvey Show.”

Steve: I thought that show was on for a long time.

Joe: Nope.
Like 4 episodes tops.

Steve: I never actually saw it.
Chappelle’s Show.
It was 3 seasons, but it should have been a lot more.
Same with The Tick.
The animated one, not the crappy-ass live action one.

Joe: The producers said “do a sitcom as if it were a late night show.”
To which Dana replied, “You don’t really want that.”
To which the producers replied, “Yes we do.”
To which Dana Carvey replied:

To which the producers replied “Yeah, we didn’t want that.”

Steve: Huh
So it was terrible?

Joe: Mmmm…it was a late night show with Dana Carvey completely at the helm.
Can’t let artists do whatever they want. You get really amazing stuff and really shitty stuff with no balance.

Steve: I thought you were saying you liked it.

Joe: I did.

Steve: Oh.
Well then you were wrong.
Because this clip is dog shit.

Joe: It’s one small clip.

Steve: Ah.

Joe: Do you remember the election of 1996, Clinton v. Dole?

Steve: Yeah.
Nothing but great Norm MacDonald sketches.

Joe:

Steve: haha
Okay, that was good.

Joe: Watch the opening clip of this.

Steve: Wow, I can’t even get through that one.
No offense Joe, but I would have canceled this show too.
Maybe not quite so quickly.

Joe: You know what’s weird about that show?

Steve: What?

Joe: Steve Carrell, Steven Colbert, the guy who did Triumph the Insult Comic Dog and Louis CK were all on it.
That’s a lot of funny in one show.

Steve: Definitely.
I was a huge fan of Dana Carvey’s movies.
You ever see Clean Slate?

Joe: I think so.

Steve: It was great.
And Trapped in Paradise.
With him, John Lovitz and Nick Cage.
That movie was freaking funny.
Not to mention the Wayne’s World duelolloelogy.

Joe: Skip to 11:20 on that last one.

Steve: Nice.
I think I’ve seen that one before.

Joe: Like I said, extremely hit or miss.
If this came on today, it’d be Comedy Central’s best show, but some jackasses put it in primetime in the mid-90′s. Way too soon.