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September 12, 2018 69 mins
On this episode we chat about the film, Summer of 84. We also talk about some of our favorite movies from the 80's, riding our BMX bikes as kids, 80s synth music, and more. Join us! 
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Episode Transcript

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(00:07):
Feeling by Tacos, beer and BloodyMary's, the only show featuring Baby Jesus
with a nail gun, The Prideof Pa and The Show with the Eye
of the Tiger, The Ladies andGentlemen Punch Fire. Hey, everybody,

(00:29):
listen to the smooth sounds of eightiessent h makes you want to be in
a horror movie? Right? Idon't remember eighties cent being this good though,
Hey, you might be right.Hey, brods, welcome to Punch
Farm. I'm Mark, I'm Alicia, I'm Jeff. And on this episode,

(00:51):
we're gonna talk about the awesome movieSummer of eighty four. Obviously,
that's my opinion that it's awesome.I'm concerned about what Jess gonna say.
Hey, but you never Hey,you're you never know what you um And
I thought it'd be really fun ifyou guys will play along, since this

(01:11):
movie is called The Summary eighty four, kind of like throw out a couple
of things from the eighties that we'rethat we still love to this day,
putting you on the spot. Butif you still love it, you'll know
it. Hey, and if you'relistening to our show, that's cool because
today I just saw we were rejectedon Apple Podcasts, which makes no sense

(01:36):
because we've been on Apple podcasts forevertwo years. I have a feeling that
pod being did you mess up myfeed bro? Because literally, even I
looked this morning, we were onthere because you know, you got jump
on every once a while, Isee if there's a review or anything like
that, check Panel Punchers, andit was there. And then this afternoon,

(01:57):
all of a sudden, punch Farmwasn't there. Sucks yeah, and
I just I just the amount podbeing like, what's up? I email
an Apple? What's up? It'snot like we did anything. There's no
way this show is getting kicked offbecause of our controversial discussions, which would

(02:17):
be hilarious if I can't imagine anythingwe said that Apple was like, we
don't like you very much. Ohman, So I was messing with that
today. Sorry. I know wewere trying to have a nice, delicious
funk beer, but that's all Icould think about, is like, what
did we do to annoy the Applegods? Huh? But that's okay,

(02:38):
there's other ways to find us.I'll get that fixed, and if you're
listening to it, it's fixed.It's fixed right now. This movie Summer
of eighty four. Those awesome dudesover Trick Treat Radio, they already talked
about this movie, and I thinkthey're the ones that planned this. Seat
in my head, like, oh, what's that? Because they always announced
the movies that are gonna check out, and I think they once they said

(03:01):
it was by the same people.A Turbo kid. It's like, I
have to watch this, and Imust say I loved it. I grew
up in the eighties, so Ifelt like I felt nostalgic. Nostalgic.
Yeah, yeah, we'll get inthere a little bit because I'll tell you,
like, you know, the sadpart of nostalgia. Uh, once

(03:23):
we get there. But since thismovie set in the eighties, it's got
this eighties style, same thing goingon. Is there anything now? Listen,
you're born eighties, but still itdoesn't mean that you haven't watched movies
from the ages. You're like,man, the eighties work excellent. True,
Um, do you have anything fromthe eighties that just you still love

(03:46):
to this day more than new stuffthat's coming out? Wow? Um,
the movies obviously, I mean putyou on the spot, bro. Yeah,
I gotta thanks Star Wars. Ohyeah, I mean the original one
came out in seventy nine, butthe other eight was a seventy eight.

(04:10):
Doesn't the other two the other two, Empire Empire came out and what eighty
two eighty one? Yeah, andreturn was eighties eighty six is wrong.
I want to say eighty four EmpireEmpire is an outstanding movie. On that
I want to throw out some ofthe my favorite movies from the eighties.
Now, there's a lot, there'sthere's far too many a touch on and

(04:30):
it's not going to be any horrormovies because there's one that just I can't
help but watch when I you know, find it on TV or whatever.
Rocky three. Okay, okay,so that's just salone in Russia. No,
no, no, this is thatwasn't This was with mister t Clubbert
Lang. Oh, this gave usthe most iconic gym workout song ever.

(04:56):
I had a tiger. Now,I'm not ashamed to say that I have
definitely, uh many of times workedthe heavy bag over listening to Eye of
the Tiger. It definitely fires youup to work out, right, Oh
yeah, you didn't. You couldgive a crap about Rocky uh and working

(05:17):
out? Okay, I mean,that's the problem. You're not listening to
Eye the Tiger. Yeah, canyou get that motivation? And yeah,
get right into it. He squatthree hundred before you know it. No,
I was never a big Rocky moviefan. I mean they were,
they were good movies, but Iwasn't. Ye, they weren't the kind

(05:41):
of movies that I'd sit and rewatchover and over again. You know,
right, I was wrong? Whatdid I say? Eighty seven? This
came out in nineteen eighty two.Rocky three. Wow, I didn't think
it was that early, right meeither? Did you come out? God,
I'm getting old. They came outone right after the other though,
too. Yeah, they're pumping themout. When did a Rocky four come

(06:02):
out? I wonder you be four? Let's yeah, you're probably right.
I mean, obviously we had theCold War going on. Let's see how
close you were, Jeff No,nineteen eighty five pretty close? Yeah,
for some reason, the Rocky movielove that out of the eighties. What

(06:25):
about anything? Any horror movies.M Oh, that's a good one.
That's a good one. That's probablymy all time favorite real horror movie.
Well, let's see if you're righthere, ah Man, nineteen eighty two

(06:46):
was a hell of a year becausethis came polter Geist came out in nineteen
eighty two. There you go,it sounds like eighty two was the Well
that's when I was born, soobviously that was a good year. But
don't forget the eighties gave us IndianaJones m yep Robusters. Yeah, I
remember running around. Uh My buddyhad this uh shed that was like dilapidated.

(07:10):
So we would, you know,play around the shed, you know,
climb around in it because we werelike going through like a pyramid or
something. Okay, we were tryingto beat Indiana Jones, investigating this place
hopefully we would find a golden idol. So you know in this movie we
got like, who were friends hangingout to BMX is now curious? Did

(07:31):
you guys ride around? I didn'tknow you were a baby and eggs.
I wish I had a BMX.You didn't have a BMX bike? Uh?
I think I had a Huffey.No, I had a huffy but
I still called it a BMX.Okay, you mean a real like just
the style. I don't think BMXwas a brand, but uh oh mom,

(07:51):
so that's what I was thinking.Yeah that back then, that was
in the eighties. If you wantedto bike a bm X dirt bike,
it was mongoose because that was likethe ship. Yes, yeah, which
I think my buddy had a mongoosewicked jealous. Yeah, because I had
a huffy. Yep. But Ihad a huffy with a really crappy pseudo

(08:16):
banana seat. Oh I hated.But it's okay because that's when BMX was
getting like really hot. So wego to the bike store and we can
get we can get different type ofseats. You're getting like chrome uh caps
for the tires. We were trickingour bikes out. I must have stripped
down and repainted my bike three orfour times as a kid, just trying

(08:37):
to make it it was a huffy. Yeah. I was doing everything I
could to make it better to makeit not look like a huffy. Even
the name Huffy. It's just it'slike, yo, bro, what kind
of yeah? Like I can't imagineus. Come on, yo, what's
your bike? Bro? It's yeah, no, not working. I had

(09:00):
a sweet huffy that was pink andpurple. First time anybody ever said when
I say sweet, I mean itwas really bad. Did you say like
sweet heart on it or something.Oh man, that would have been awesome.
But it was super heavy, andI still had it when I moved
to Elizabethtown and I put it outon the curb with a free sign,

(09:22):
and nobody took it. No,no, no. Within like ten minutes
it was gone, and I waslike, that was a huffy who wants
that? It doesn't matter, it'sfree. Free yep. Now my huffy
was yellow. It was kind ofugly, but once I tricked it out
a little bit, I eventually paintedit candy apple red. It's always one

(09:43):
like a candy apple red camaro.I thought that'd be badass. Now did
you guys when you didn't Jeff,you didn't have a group of kids You're
will be in next with Yeah,Oh okay, my bad. I wasn't
paying attention. Oh yeah, no. We had the neighborhood crew that we
all rode round in. Did youguys do stuff? We used to take

(10:03):
our bikes and find any reason toif we saw a dirt pile up about
okay, yeah, never broke abone, but I tell you we hurt
ourselves. Oh yeah, times getssmacked right now. Almost every day after
school were trying to do jumps.There was this uh creek we had and
uh it was always kind of likethat thing like if we get enough speed

(10:24):
we could jump. This creek wasn'tthat wide, yeah, but it was
always kind of getting back off thelast second, kind of recalculating versus speed.
Now I never did. My buddywas like, you guys are being
a bunch of assists about this.He grabbed, he grabbed my bike.
He went flying down and he didn'tclear the creek. The creek. We

(10:46):
all laughed, and I think thatwas the last time we tried to.
Then we started actually getting bricks anduh plywood, oh yeah, and making
ramps. Yeah. I was justgonna say that's what we were always obsessed
with it. Who can make thebetter ramp versus you know, length and
height and angles and everything. Wewere always met. Now I'm not going

(11:07):
there. I you know, Ididn't have any people in my neighborhood that
were I lived down in the country, so the people that lived around me,
they were either in their forties orfifties, or there was a couple
of people that maybe were a littlebit older than me, but they didn't
want to really hang out with me, So I kind of did my own
thing. You don't think people canride dirt bike. Well, they didn't

(11:31):
want to ride dirt bike with me, which they probably would didn't getting rested.
Yeah, so I know, Itried to do a couple ramps and
after like the first or second failure, I was like, I would rap
bike. Oh god, it wasbad. It's pretty much would you would

(11:54):
imagine. So, uh, wheelies, Papa wheelie was a big thing.
Yeah. I was never really goodat it. My one body was really
good and you kind of want tojust knock them all. You can't do
it. You can't do it beingso good at it. You can't do
wheelies on a huffy No. Butyou know what I did get really good

(12:16):
at riding the bike without my handson the handlebars. Oh yeah, that's
like the first trick. You're right, that's how you that's how you end
up eating pavement. Yeah, prettymuch. I think I did a couple
of times. So we would definitelyhave where we all would you know,
hit the rows up Perry County.Uh, you know on our dirt bikes,
travel around the little towns, youknow, meeting our friends whatnot?

(12:37):
Um, this uh, this thisnew girl moved in down the street and
she was cute and she's like theonly girl in like a ten mile radius.
So we all were just doing loopspastor house. Yeah, hoping to
get a glimpse. Yeah, yeah, maybe she'll get a glimpse of Yeah,
yeah, check out my sweet Huffy. Would you would you like to

(13:00):
go to the dance with me?You want to ride double the seat?
She came out. We got herattention a little bit. We were shouting
and stuff as riding by and we'relike, hey, you want to go
ride with us? She's like,I don't have a bike. And my
one buddy said, you can rideup my handlebars and I'm like, whoa,
yeah, maybe she'd be into that. And my other buddy held,
I forget how old we are,but not enough for the stuff. He

(13:24):
just said. He was like,you can ride on my face. And
we continue to keep on pedalting becauseI'm like her, dad's gonna kick your
ass. Wow. Yeah, teenagers, we're kind of stupid a little bit
now. And uh, because youknow, watching this movie and they had

(13:46):
their bikes. Yeah, just kindof reminding me of some of that stuff
like that from the eighties. Um, now, let's getting in the movie
because this more nostalgia to come now, first the gas like that this movie
just came out. We're gonna dothat our best and not spoil it.
Right. Yeah, it's not goodat it. So it's been out for

(14:07):
a month August tenth. Okay,it's still people still need to uh hold
on. My dogs chased her taillike a maniac. What are you doing?
Dog? Are you getting excited aboutour movie discussion? I don't want
to call a review because yeah,yeah, um just came out. Like
I said, I heard about itfrom my boys at trick Tree Radio whoo

(14:30):
whoo, and we watched it.I loved it. I honestly really enjoyed
the heck out of this movie.Um. I got a little little sense
of nostalgia. A couple of thingsgot a little As always, when I
see stuff in the eight movies aboutthe age, I'm like, oh,
I never had like a cool treehouse, Like yeah, no, they had

(14:52):
to really kick ass tree house andthey were drinking booze. We'll get to
that story. But here we gotthis s all town up in supposed to
be in Oregon, but I'm assumingit was filmed in Canada because the filmmakers
from Canada probably same like I said, same filmmakers that did Turbo Kid,
which is absolutely one of my mostfavorite movies because it's just so unique,

(15:16):
bizarre, got some gore going on, It's got a killer soundtrack. It's
just one of those things like thisis wickedly unique. Everybody on the planet
should know about this movie. Theseguys made this movie Summer of eighty four,
and I think it's still capture alot of their their their uniqueness.

(15:37):
I don't know what Leish, Whatdid you think because you didn't grow up
in the eighties, so you hadno nostaligia you had. You wanted to
watch compelling, kick ass movie.And I have to say that that's what
this was for me. It wasn'tIt didn't bring back memories for me because
I mean I was eight when itwas nineteen ninety at that point, so
like I was too young for theeighties. Really I grew up in it,

(15:58):
but I was too young. Um. But the movie itself, I
found um to be very interesting.Um. And I was definitely like the
entire movie, I was hooked andtrying to figure out is he the bad
guy or isn't he I can't tell, right, let me give you here,

(16:19):
like, maybe we should give asynopsis otherwise you sound like how are
talking about? Which is normal?So this movie again I said, it's
sent in the eighties in this littletown called ip Switch, Yes, up
in Oregon, and it's this newsreport comes out about the Cape or Cape
Bag killer, and the one dudewho's really in the conspiracy theories heleis that

(16:47):
this Cape Bay killer is one ofthe neighbors. Yes, it's somebody in
their community. So he starts reallyfocusing his tension on next door neighbor cop.
And there's a lot of reasons.Oh yeah, the cop. Yeah,
I mean it's not he's just makingit up as he's going. He's

(17:07):
seen things. It's going to makehim what that's not. And I thought
the actor who was also in theNetflix show Glow and as he did,
I thought he was really great atbeing like borderline creepy, right, but
then maybe not quite, Like you'relike, I'm not sure. I was

(17:29):
waiting for like, Okay, maybeit's actually not him, right, I
tho, maybe it's sister you tryingto play because and then the guy did
a great The actor did a greatjob very interesting character. But these these
little kids go go to work,uh, investigating him, trying to solve
this crime, right, not crime, I'm trying to figure out if he
really is because the one dude,Oh yeah, that's yes, and with

(17:56):
the music and like their little uhmontage of scope in his house out right.
I I was in In fact,I watched it like the next day
over again. Yeah. I watchedit again because you were drunk and had
to rewatch it just so. No, that's not Yeah, I wanted to

(18:19):
watch again. I didn't forget it. That's never happened, Jeff. No,
never, Jeff, what's your opinions, because I know I feel it
differs a little bit from from myenthusiasm. I was expecting something totally different.
I was thinking it was gonna bea a horror movie. Okay,

(18:41):
I would call this more of amystery suspense. Yeah. It had some
gore in it a little bit.Yeah. Um, well, we were
at the bar before we watched themovie. Not today, but a couple
of weeks ago. You were like, you know, we talked about the
chair. You're like, yeah,look, stranger things like but but no,
I don't think straight. You're like, yeah, it looks like Stranger
Things. I'm like, no,it was Stranger Things. I tried to

(19:07):
call bullshit, Yeah, because Iwatched the movies like not even like Stranger
Things, not had the four kids, the one kid's mother is sing,
looked to be single, depressed.Something's going on there, just like Stranger
Things. It, I'll guarantee thethe directors and writers pulled a lot of

(19:30):
things off of it. Now nowsaying back, if you listen to Trick
or Treat your radio, I thinkuh Dynamo was talking that they had this
thing in production before Stranger Things.It was kind of like when Strange Things
came out, it was almost likeshit. Well, but even if they
didn't have it in production before StrangerThings. As I watched this, you

(19:51):
know, and you know, andyour comment was at the back of my
mind because the trailer did kind ofgive you that sense. Well, the
trailer was totally like strange If you'rein Stranger Things, you could I see
how you can get from point Ato point B. Watching the movie,
I'm like, no, not noteven remotely close. Yeah, nothing supernatural,
no, no, no, no, weird alien things. This was

(20:11):
a straight up Uh. He wasreading the what's that those books you had
Nancy Drew and you had the HardyBoys. He was reading Hearty and they
would solve mysteries, right like ScoobyDooish. Yeah. So this, for
me, I was like, that'snot Stranger Things. O, this is
a this is Boys. I'll tellyou. When I was watching it,

(20:33):
I could tell it's pulling. Ifelt that it was pulling things from Stranger
Things, like give me one,give me one thing, four boys you
could say, and actually, um, it came to my own. So
that movie with Mocky mock four Brothers, that was also kind of like a
stranger thing because there was four becausethey're not teenagers in the eighties. I

(20:56):
apologized to everybody in Boston for thataccident. Yeah that's pretty bad. But
it also reminded me of the NewITP movie too, just the way the
characters are together. Okay, they'reinteractions, and a lot of it is
because it's set in the eighties.But do we have I was gonna say,
I feel like this movie plush StrangerThings and it is all set in

(21:19):
the eighties. I think they're tryingto um, like, you guys have
a great memory of the eighties.I do not right, So like it
is that how the eighties were foryou guys? Were you just hanging out
with a bunch of your friends andthe mystery I'll tell you now. The

(21:40):
one thing that I can honestly saynow these kids were they were like fifteen
sixteen, right, yes, fifteen. When I was fifteen, sixteen years
old, I was not out playingflashlight tag. They called it man Hunt.
Yeah, that was ever played that, but we would at night,
especially on the weekends, because wewould say we're camping out. We'd pitched

(22:00):
hands in my buddy's backyard. Yeah, and we were one hundred percent sure.
As parents were asleep, we gorunning around just raise hell around town.
We tore the paper houses. Yeah, but that's not what they were
doing. A porch. Yeah,we play yeah man huh, but we
did some stuff that. Yeah,it's not very cool. I didn't play
man Hunt, but I definitely whenthe group of us would go camping,

(22:23):
um, it would be a bunchof different families we would play. We
called it Power Rangers, but wemade up our own. So you're waiting
for a nostalgic movie and that's setin the ninety yea with a bunch of
nerds playing Power Ranger. It wasbasically hide and seek, but with two
different teams, so like one teamwas seeking, one team was hiding.

(22:45):
Yeah, kind of like a flashlight. Yeah, and we called it Power
Rangers. We made we made upour own thing and we called it Power
Rangers because that was popular at that. Yeah, kicked a can guys when
you were sixteen, No, yeah, I don't never played. We just
rode around and h hung out.Yeah, that's when you're fifteen, sixteen,

(23:11):
before you get a car, that'sall you did. Now, these
guys, definitely as teenagers were obsessedwith their porn mags. Oh yeah,
they were getting they were fifteen andsixteen, So that part's correct, that
part is correct. Did you ever, uh did your friends ever get their
hands on a magazine like that andjust sit around and check it out?

(23:33):
Um? No, No, Idon't think as a group, we would
not sit around and look at porn. So now, well we did not.
Really. My one friend, uhget some stuff around this one guy,
older guy's house and help cut thegrass, things like that, And

(23:55):
when he realized he had a stackof old playboys his basement, he stole
one and then brought it over forall of us to look at it.
Okay, yeah, so I sothat resonated with me because they stole the
uh the one magazine from the fromthe cops in the mailbox. Right,
It's like, oh, yeah,my buddy stole someone's Playboy. I get
it. Boy, that's something kidsnowadays they'll never get. They have phones

(24:22):
now, yeah, they have computers. Yeah, they'll never get what Playboy.
No. No, I mean likegetting a mag a physical magazine,
hiding it and because it was hardto get them back then. Yeah,
you know, you couldn't go intoa bookstore and buy them because you had
to be eighteen, right, No, you had to steal them from someone's
mailbox or something stupid like that.It's not like nowadays you get on you

(24:45):
can't go to any website and therearen't provocative at least, you know,
like women in bathing suits ads.Do you think? Yeah, because the
internet literally, uh it ruined porn. Well you know again with a teenage

(25:06):
sign like you know, I domy best to like, you know,
talk to him, stay in contact, what he's up to, like,
you know, talk to him aboutlike the internet. Uh, but he
could be looking at porn on hisphone yeah, don't. I don't take
his phone. Yeah, why sidthat'd be weird, that would be weird.
I'm throwing out a certainly a highlevel of trust that he's not constantly

(25:30):
on it. Um. But backwhen we were in the eighties, like
it really wasn't a thing too,we didn't have it at the ready,
right, you know you're literally whenyeah, when your buddy managed to do
this, I got this dude's grassand when he wasn't looking at snap,
I grabbed his Playboy. Yeah,it was a huge, huge deal.

(25:51):
Um. Yeah, so again,you know these kids are missing out on
this because this sounds so stupid,I gonna say they're missing out and stealing
someone else to playboy. I meanthat was a big deal back then.
Nowadays, yeah, who cares.Anybody can get online and look at you
if you wouldn't look at that itwas getting besides the Playboy, Like,

(26:14):
I can't tell you the last timeI saw kids in the neighborhood, uh
playing any type of outdoor game runaround, playing tag things like that.
We used to play army. Ohyeah, we all had you know,
if well, it's start out sticks, but I think you know some up
to like just a little fake guns. Yeah, but we literally would go

(26:36):
out in the woods behind our houses, which was the real deal. It
wasn't like a little patch of treesinto suburbia. This was Barry County.
We would go out there in fullcamo yeah, and uh team up and
then just accept it like, okay, what's the rules when you feel like
you you actually shot me before Isaw you. Yea. We would play

(26:56):
that for hours. Yeah, that'sI'm back exactly what I would do.
Luckily, we'd never had ticks,because I don't think ticks were is bad
back in the ays. Now theywere, which is weird, but all
right, I know I used tolike, probably for a whole other topic,
white ticks got worse. Yeah,but yeah, so that to me

(27:18):
was like, man, I loveused to love these days when we were
out at night playing games, noworries and even you know when you hear
well back in then back in myday, you know that you'd have to
come in when the street lights comeon, or you know you hear that
it's like no, we go inwhen it's like ten minutes to bedtime.

(27:41):
Yeah. Well my mom was greatat uh at whistling, Like literally she
could whistle and you could hear froma country. Mind. I knew it
was well, it was time fordinner, yeah, and I'll see you
guys later, and literally everybody wouldjust go eat, yeah, and we'd
meet back up. Well, becauseeveryone eat at six, you'd been back

(28:03):
out by six thirty. Yeah,yeah, and then you'd have all Yeah.
We used to play football, uhin a cow pasture that's a country.
Yeah. It was kind of aI don't know why we did that.
It just was a big, flat, open field. Yeah. He
just had to avoid and there wastimes that the field end goals field goal

(28:26):
area. It was literally like allright, this Coyle Patty, this Skyle
patty. Yeah. But you know, when you're young, you don't you
don't care care, You really don'tthink it, Like right now, I'd
be like, there's no way I'mplaying this cole pad this cow feel Nope.
But when we were young, wejust didn't care, you know what.
And I don't recall ever. Ithink I did tack him on one

(28:48):
buddy into a fresh patty. Otherthan that, I don't really remember us
really ever getting poop on us.I mean we just for kids, We
just played. Yeah, as wegot older, it did escalate into a
little mischievous because then we would starthiking the cow patties. And no,
we never I never wanted to.Really did you? Did you throw cow

(29:11):
patties? Oh? Yeah, OhI would never pick up a cow patty?
Well we would. They would gethard when we uh wouldn't. We
would run the purse. We calledit running the purse. You grab a
bunch of poop, you put itin a purse, and you put it
in the middle of an intersection.Just wait, you wait for somebody to

(29:32):
drive by and stop and pick itup, and then drive a few feet
away and then throw it back out. So funny, it was larous.
Now imagine all of that being akid, that crazy things you do.
But now all of a sudden youbecome obsessed that your next door neighbor is
a murder. A murderer is kidnappingand killing. What were they? All

(29:56):
were fifteen year old boys? Right? Yeah? Well the one was sixteen
because he was dry. Okay,wait would he Well no, he didn't
have a license, but he alsobut he knew how to drive, so
I'm assuming he was taking his buthe was, But what said it?
His motion is the story reporting aboutall these missing fifteen year old kids.

(30:18):
That's when this group went into action. And I really when they started trying
to steak out yeah Pop's house,when they learned his whole routine. I
really loved that scene. And thenI love when they knew when he was
out, how they were, we'regoing to do this. This is just
to find evidence. I could totallysee doing that when I was younger,

(30:41):
and I probably did do stupid shitlike that when I was younger. Man,
I would love just so I'd loveto do that. Now, yeah,
you get it arrested for Yeah.Nowadays you can't do anything. Can't
stake out somebody's house and they godig up their garden. Now, one
other thing I have to bring upabout this movie as it bugged me,

(31:02):
and this is personal experience. Wherethe hell did these kids get their nice
little walkie talkies that reached across theentire damn neighborhood? Because when I was
in eighty four, I would havebeen fourteen. Okay, the walkie talkies
we had, you'd be lucky ifthey reached next door. Honestly, that's

(31:23):
one thing I was a little jealousover, like, like, I don't
we never had walkie talkies and theonly ones that the g I Joes were
the most of the crappiest things thatwere available to me. Yeah, I
know. Um, they did tryto put one of the walkie talkies on
his house. Yeah, that wasthe G I Joe one. Okay,

(31:45):
so then just across the street,which is where he lived, he couldn't
get it to work, right,So I have no idea, like,
so that's what they were using inManhunt too or No, they had had
way better. They had like realmodern not modern because they were, but
they were huge, but they seemedto work across the entire neighborhood where you

(32:07):
can pick it up wherever I feellike I might have or my brother had
walkie talkie. You could get thosetwo packs. They were branded was some
whatever bs you saw it on aSaturday Morning cartoon. But they really would
only work from about one end ofthe house to the other. Yeah,
And it was kind of cool forfive minutes when you realize that's about all
I could do with Oh, nowwhat am I gonna do? You know,

(32:29):
you'd be in the basement and yourbuddy would be upstairs or something like
that. Well, I mean,you know, back then maybe it was
something you can go to radio shack. It was still a thing, right
well, and I also know thatmaybe parents like, we'll get some radio
Shack walkie talkies. Didn't the copthat they were investigating, didn't he say,
hey, I've got some good wietalkie. Yeah, but he never

(32:52):
took him yea decommissioned or I don'tknow, outdated. Yeah, but you
can probably go to radio Shack geta pretty kick ass pair back in the
day. Yeah, But I don'tI just don't see it. It actually
bothered you. Yeah, as opposed. It's like because I for the story,
No, because back then I wantedgood walkie talkies like that. I

(33:15):
get it. And when you knowyou get good ones like that going to
radio shack, you know they probablycost a hundred bucks apiece. So Shack's
not in business. But well backthen that was all new new technology.
So they're gonna be a lot morewalkie talkies in the eighties. That's a
lot of grass cutting. Yeah,I don't know. That didn't bother me.

(33:38):
In fact, I think if theonly thing, uh, the way
it impacted me mentally as watching themovie was like I wish my friends and
I were had walkie talkies and actuallyplayed this game because it looks really cool.
Yeah, I would, honestly,honest to god, I would play
that right now with you, whichwould be hilarious. Yeah, Manhunt,

(34:01):
it's it's it's actually really wicked hot. So not right now. Maybe when
the fall, I would totally playman Hunt. We've been drinking. That
could be really hilarious. We needa lot more people. I feel like
I'm definitely like still a kid inside. I would play man Hunt with with
all my buddies right now. Yeah, at our age, and I'm sure

(34:22):
we'd have a lot of complaints aboutOh man, I threw out my back
right, but I I need IfI could organize that for one night this
fall, we'd all play that game. I would definitely, I'm up for
it. I don't know where you'dplay, though, we know you just
played in your neighborhood. It's toolight with the cops are definitely gonna be

(34:45):
called Yeah, run around walkie talkies. Uh, but wouldn't it be a
blast. That would be fun.I'd be in for it. Yeah,
And then I guarantee wants the copsstop and ask you, hey, we
have some reports if we tell themwe're playing flashlight tag. They might I
mean even they be like, yes, man, I haven't done that since

(35:07):
I've been fifteen, or they'll justarrest us. Yeah, can you guys
go home? Please? Yeah,that's exactly, especially if we've been drinking.
True, I'm up. Well wetake our flasks. Yeah. I
think that's an excellent idea. AndI think adults need to be kids more
often. Absolutely, that's my opinion. People are too serious nowadays. Oh

(35:30):
my god, don't get me started. Yeah, I won't get started.
Okay, go back to the movie. Okay, But like again, it's
hard. I don't I don't wantto spoil this movie. I just hope
that anybody listening it hasn't checked itout. Is like my enthusiasm about the
movie and just you know, whenyou're that age, if that makes you

(35:50):
want to check out the movie,then good. But I can't. I
can't say too much. No,don't spoil it. The ending is actually
kind of surprised, dude. Yes, I did not expect the ending.
Now, I didn't see that comingat all. And as much as I
hate saying like I loved it becausewell what happened, but it was like
wow, thank you for not deliveringsome weak ass everybody's hystereotypical. Yeah.

(36:15):
Ending now it's tied up with abow. They were just like, yeah,
there there is a scene and I'dlike to ask you, guys,
what you thought about this. Umby being vague listeners, don't worry this
one or this one. Well,there's a couple, but just there was
like I liked some of the subtlesubtleties of the movie, like when he's

(36:37):
at someone's house and they just didsomething so vague. I know, but
you're being a little too vague.In the beginning, he there was a
wall of photos, there was somecomments. At the end he sees a
photo of himself and the impact ofknowing it's like oh shit, shit yeah.

(36:59):
Um. I was like, wow, I love I love you introduced
us to this wall. Yeah,and nobody paid attention and I don't think
dang thing about it. Yeah,And when they finally reintroduce it there,
I'm like, wow, that hadthis super freaking interesting. So I actually
thought, really I would. Ihope someday, whether it's in a comic

(37:21):
book or whatever, I write somethingthat's cool. I bring something back around
that has impact, Like yeah,so when he goes down into the basement
and sees everything, Yeah, didyou did you automatically think it was him
or did you think it was Ohman, this guy's kind of it's not

(37:42):
him, but he's got a fuckedup childhood and now he's trying to relive
it or something. Yeah. Iwasn't trying to stay back off the spoilers,
but I know it's kind of harderto what a little more details.
Yeah, the filmmakers about that,but I thought maybe they might be redirecting
our our thoughts um onto somebody elseor well, I'm not gonna go.

(38:08):
They did, but yeah, it'sabout spoiling, about spoiling too much.
They like the whole time I waswatching it, I was like, is
it this person? Or is itor is it something else that I'm not
even And so like my mind wasalready trying to figure out, Oh if
it's not this person, what ifit's this person? Right? Uh,

(38:28):
because my mind just I can't helpmyself. But well, you know there
was one time and I was likeand I felt I actually got pissed because
you were like, I bet it'sthis person. Yeah, It's like I'll
be pissed if they do an mNight Chamalan on me and make it that
person I want. We gotta gowith the spoiler, because it was like,

(38:50):
no, don't, I don't wantany twist like that. No,
I don't, won't spoil it.No, but yeah, you had an
idea, and there was a couplemoments where I'm like, shit, I
know, might be right there.You know what. There was one part
that I kind of thought maybe theywere doing one of those twists, but
I don't want to say who Ithought it might have been without Hey,

(39:12):
welcome to the Vague Podcast. Yeah, we can talk after yeah, during
the break. Yeah, yeah,I'll definitely let you know because I'm curious
if you think the same thing now. You had said at the top of
the show, like you don't remember, uh, eighties music being this cool?
Yeah, our eighties movie musics beingthis cool. Oh, it absolutely

(39:34):
was not. I mean you youhad one or two things in the eighties.
You had hair bands, yeah,and you had shitty synth music.
Now you have what would synth music? Synth music? Uh most of the
stuff in movies. Okay, now, dead eyed did you hear that?

(39:58):
But now you had have talented peopletrying to recreate that synth music and it's
a lot better. M You seewhat I mean? No, because I
would like once you said, nowyou have talented people making the music,
like, well, you don't thinkthey were talented back then. I think

(40:19):
that people making the shitty synth musicback in the eighties were talent, were
talent less. Oh I disagree.Example, Um, most of the um
Nightmaring on the Streets. You don'tlike that the music I thought was they
they tried to do that synth stuffthe whole time and they were just it

(40:42):
was wasn't good, but that wasthe time, but it wasn't good.
What about John Carpenter's was really good? Yeah, that was good. What
about John Carpenter's Halloween three season TheWitch? You know, my thoughts are,

(41:04):
we won't even go there. Man, if I could get that movie
title in every episode, that'd beawesome. At Halloween coming, I can't
wait to watch it again. I'mgonna get the steel book on that one.
Boy. I'm gonna look up Nightmareon Elm Streets music here. Okay,
you think you think it's shitty?Um, A couple of them were

(41:25):
pretty bad, but a couple ofthe movies were pretty bad too. I
actually thought, go ahead, andthat's okay. I was gonna say.
The only Nightmare on Elm Street thatI think I actually watched was The Dream
Dream Warriors. Yeah, let's beclear on something. Number one. I

(41:45):
love that movie because I wanted tobe I him in my dreams. As
long as Dalkin he's playing that hitsong, I love that song. Sorry.
So I was in a hair thatold band, garage band. We
didn't play out anywhere, but wehad the hair. We had the ribbed

(42:06):
jeans. What do you call rememberback in the day when you could take
your jeans and you play bleach onthem as yeah, acid wash, yep.
Hell, I remember you'd have whatwas the name of Carousel, the
store in the mall. It wascalled Carousel, You remember that, And
that's where you went to go buynineties right or was it the eighties?

(42:28):
Both? Okay, but that waswhen where you would go to buy those
acid washed jeans back then. Thisis from Nightmare Elm Street, the first
one now skipped to like the secondor third one where they the first one.
The first night Mare in Elm Streetis is a classic. I mean,

(42:49):
it's one of the best eighties slashermovies? There is? Which one?
The first Nightmare? I'm talking aboutthe set some of the sequels.
You don't think that's good? Allright? So wait, I said,
you're not listening. You don't thinka Nightmare in Ellen Street? The sequels

(43:09):
sat the sequels? Oh, mybad, my bads, you're making fun
of the sequels. Yes, you'remissing it. No, I just said
the first one is probably one ofthe best slasher movies ever, A nightmar
on Ellen Street, the first one. Yeah, I don't know if I
ever saw it. When did itcome out? When Freddie was still dark

(43:31):
and not right? I will agreewith you. Yeah, I mean,
it's just I'm still a fan ofthe Dream Warriors. Yeah, Dream Dream
Warriors a good sequel, but mostof the other Freddy's are pretty bad,

(43:53):
just kind of like money grabs typeof sequels. I haven't seen him for
so long, I don't know,all right. But of course Freddie versus
Jason, that's an instant classic therapytoo. Why don't we take a break.
We'll come back with final thoughts inthis because we were all back again.
We can't spoil the movie for you, so we thought we would at

(44:13):
least let you know how it madeus feel Yeah, and as you can
tell, made me feel awesome.We'll be right back. Trick or Treat
Radio is a phantasmic oracle spin kickstraight for the heart of pop culture,
navigated by the Deadites. We arethe world's greatest electro shock band. We
destroy monsters, we drink booze,and we win championship belts. If you're

(44:36):
not listening to Tricker Treat Radio,here's a taste of what you've been missing.
There's three guarantees in life. Whatare they? Death taxes and Trigger
Treat Radio every Friday morning. Thisis one of the most convoluted movies I've
ever skinned in my life. I'mfucking trying, man, hi hi hi,
oh yeah, hey hey hey ohyeah on a pile of ship.

(44:57):
But you shit on him for lightlyone. He was, well, it's
my job. This podcast out bandin Germany's amit? Shut up? I
call it bullshit. I command don'twant to bring me the face of the
Lindsay low Head. If I hadgenitals, I would definitely find her.
Oh wait, there a great bigfan. You just see the jackpot the
weird movie. They had action haddispense, They had great casters, and

(45:22):
had great acting. I'm gonna strangleyou with my jockey short. I don't
like mobster movies. All right,Well here's my take here at six fuck,
thank you, shut the fuck upand let me talk. Have you
ever seen two thousand and one ToBox, Write, The Box and the
Monkey. Available on iTunes, Stitchyour Radio, and Trick or Treat Radio
dot com. He Hello, thisis the Sasquatch aka Bigfoot. But you

(45:45):
can just call me Frank. Butwhen I'm not stomping around the woods throwing
rocks and hunters, I like tolisten to the Paranormal Punchers podcast. That's
right, Paranormal Punchers. They talkedabout all things paranormal and their highlight areas.
Go find them on iTunes, stitcha Radio, Google Played, and
herold Normal Punchers dot com. Andwe're back Summer of eighty four, the

(46:10):
movie that we barely talked about becausewe sidetracked just a little bit. We
did. We did I again.I don't want to give out any details
or spoil anything, but I willsay, uh, in my opinion,
it's a really kick ass thriller.It just hads to be set in the

(46:30):
eighties. It doesn't. It couldbe set at any time period. Uh.
I don't know if it would workif it was set in two thou
and eighteen. Probably do you thinka movie like that where you know,
fifteen year old kids were spying thetechnology changes everything, it changes, and
then they're gonna be sitting there atthe windows with their phones or something like

(46:51):
that. One of the friends wouldbe really good at hacking. Yeah,
they would hack in the name let'ssee, yeah, let's see all of
his web brown. One of themwould be um, totally not into technology.
He would have like a flip phoneor something. Yeah, that's what
his parents gave him or something.You know what I mean. Do you
know anybody in twenty eighteen has aflip phone? I don't think they make

(47:13):
them anymore, but yes they do, do they? Okay, I'm just
saying, like, so, outof these four kids, the one was
like really into conspiracy theory. Thatsounds like a good movie though, Right,
we'll just remake it set in twentyeighteen. And what he's trying to
hide the gigowaukee talkie puts in hisold phone that yeah, at a streams

(47:36):
it on his laptop on you inthe tree house. Uh, but the
whole thing about them going outside andplaying has to be cut. Yeah,
because they belaying, yeah, they'regonna be playing video games. Uh,
now I know where you're going.He starts with an athi it is a

(47:59):
Fortnite at night. Yeah, that'sreal. That's what my kid plays like.
He's basically his friends. Instead ofgoing outside, Yeah, they sit
on their Xbox and they play agame where their characters run around outside.
Yeah that's pretty much it. Yeah. Uh, how times have changed.

(48:20):
But when you were fifteen sixteen,did you have like a Natari or a
Nintendo or anything? Dude, sD here. I did enjoy it,
but it wasn't the I don't knowwhat games you had. On the twenty
six hundred. Of course, everybodyhad Poem. Do you remember Tank?

(48:44):
But I was super excited when theycame out with the Dungeons and Dragons.
Yes, but you were literally justa square moving around, moving around like
uh, this really crappy map andit just didn't have the thrill now of
D and D, you know.And like again, I had my sad

(49:06):
story I told before where I wouldjust want to play D and D but
none of my friends did. Butif you play it by yourself. Yeah,
but if you had the current videogames back then, I'd probably be
glued to it too. I rememberin the nineties maybe it was late nineties,
early nights. I forget. Balder'sGate came out for the for the

(49:28):
PC and then you can play Dand D where you went around and had
like all kinds of side campaigns themain campaign. It was pretty cool,
pretty engrossing. I must admit Iwasted lots of time in front of my
PC. This is before I hada Mac once. Once I had a
Mac, I never went back becauseyou're gonna play games because it's a far

(49:50):
superior computer for a designer. Nowthat now I do a lot of web
development, I don't really it doesno matter what of them. I never
had an Atari, but I definitelyhad a Nintendo UM and we definitely we
played that a lot. Yeah,but I'm pretty sure my parents were very

(50:12):
like they would limit us, likeyou can play this for a couple hours,
and then you have to go outside, you know what I mean,
So like we weren't inside all thetime. We were. No, it
was you can play for a coupleof hours, then you're going to turn
it off so I can watch theTV. I never had Tendo until the
n sixty four came out. Ohyeah, I went a while without video
games because they weren't really that great. But do you remember the Colliquo Vision.

(50:36):
Oh yeah, I had a CIA. Friend of mine had one.
It was kind of cool. Theywere pretty good. Yeah yeah, but
the twenty six hundred, I actuallywish I still had that. I wish
I had the n sixty four.I gave it to a friend of mine
because he collected old games, likeI'd never play it. But now I'm
like, what a dumb move.Yeah, yeah, I still have the

(50:58):
Nintendo Cube because all right, Imean there were some cool games on that
at the time. You can stillgot go out and buy them. Oh
no, I still have it.No, I mean, like the Nintendo
sixty four and all the older ones. You can still go buy them at
the used game stores and stuff.True. My brother took an original Nintendo
that doesn't work and he made alamp out of it, really cool,

(51:22):
and he has Yoshi on it andeverything. Yeah, pretty, this is
pretty cool, man, I know. And Jim Smith from teal And made
his own console gaming like kind oflike an old you know how video games
at the Bowling Alloy's. Back inthe day we had the joysticks. Yeah,
but you can program it with abunch of stuff to put on like

(51:43):
a big screen TV. Okay,so you have your arcade game. That
was the word I was loking forarcade game. But it's just you're running
some type of Nintendo because they putout that console that like mini console,
what has like a hundred old schoolNintendo. That's cool. Yeah, these
kids did not. There was nota single video game that didn't show up

(52:07):
at all. But I mean wasthat before was he? Oh no,
that would have been big video gameslike that would have been I think the
seventy eight Hungred. But that wouldbecause his dad was working for like some
news station cameraman. They had thatVHS big it was big ass VHS camera

(52:28):
and which they did take because theywanted to get proof, which I thought
was really cool because because we justsaid today they just went ran over with
their iPhones, yeah and did thefilm it. But they had to lug
this giant as VHS h cam quarterto try to get some proof. Right,

(52:49):
man, It's like seems like barbarichow times have changed. I mean,
it's interesting, like this movie forme was really really kick ass,
not even from the nostalgia part,uh, because it was just a well
told story. Setting in the eightiesgave them the ability to tell a story
without the you know, the thingsthat would just ruin this kind of story

(53:15):
like whoa, well, the internetor your cell phone or this or that.
This was like very like it waslow tech. It was the eighties.
Yeah, I mean they had togo in physically be detectives as opposed
to like rig up or you like, like I said earlier, Yeah,
if it was set in today,they would have hacked his computer and he

(53:37):
probably would have had some videos inthere and a secret folder. Yeah.
Yeah. There was even a scenewhere they went to the library, which
hilarious because there's that scene where they'relooking at microfiche. Yeah, and he's
going super slow, which I waslike, what the what is going on?
Why is it going so slow?And dude, you're not gonna break

(54:00):
it? And I was like,ah, hilarious because I was like I
didn't understand. I thought he waslike analyzing the head, doing every little
part of the frame. No,he was just being very ginger with yea
with it. Uh. Yeah.The movie for me is I give it

(54:22):
high mars. I think it's worthworth checking out. You don't even have
to give a rat's ass about theeighties. It's just a good thriller.
Well, it gives it. Yeah. Remember it's not a slasher movie.
It's not a horror movie. It'sa it's a good, suspenseful, yeah,
mystery thriller. There's some horrific parts, but I wouldn't say it's a

(54:42):
horror movie. Yeah. Over thebreak, we were discussing a comma Jeff
had made about the eighties synth musicin today's nostalgic type movies is better than
the eighties music. And your conclusionis, well, I don't know.

(55:04):
That's not what you said before.No, I said, maybe you're right,
because now you have musicians that fellin love with that music and they're
putting out and they're putting their ownspan. Yeah, they're they're wicked,
wickedly challenged. So maybe it's betterbecause of their love of that music exactly.

(55:29):
And maybe better is the run word. And I want to throw this
out to the dead Eyes Dynamo.I'm curious on your opinion. Since you
guys do synth music, I knowyou have a love for the eighties music?
Is it is, Jeff Wright?Is the eighties synth music in movies
today better than it was in theoriginal because these musicians love that and have

(55:53):
perfected their art and their love.Yeah? I think so? Is that
the right way to say that?Yeah? Yeah, And you think you're
right? You might be right?You know, Uh, well the Dead
as do some kick ass shit.T uh. He's he's definitely inspired by
the eighties. Like, is hismusic better than what came out in the

(56:14):
eighties? I don't. I don'tknow. That's very interesting that, you
know that. When we had timeto think about that in the break,
I was like, shit, maybeJeff's right. So what do you guys
think? Is Jeff right? Oris it? Is it? Like,
you know, you love something somuch and you that's the style of music
you love and you play. Thebetter you get, the more interesting and

(56:37):
kick ass and unique your music is. But it's still it's still your expression
of your love of the eighties music, right, I don't know. I'm
probably making shit up at this point. Dynamo, I'm looking for you on
this one, dude. What doyou think? Um? Oh? Speaking
of Dynamo, he did leave usa voice message a couple episodes ago.

(57:00):
Sometimes he's late to the game.It's okay. A couple of episodes ago,
he we talked, we're always lateto the game. Is there even
I don't even know we're in agame? There he left us a message
about Wolf cop Um and if Icould find it on my Dan computer,

(57:21):
I'm going to play it for youguys. So okay, So Dynamo,
where is everybody? Hunches Chappelle,Dynamo, your boy from Central Massachusetts?

(57:45):
And Uh the far inferior Trute Radio. So Wolf cop Um, I always
find it interesting. One I listenedto people's reviews. How kind of point
of view UH influences perception? Now? I also I am a strong believer

(58:05):
of UM. Something is going toengage you, whether you UM are in
on all their jokes or not.UM. As far as the overall film
goes, I liked it pretty good. I did think it was a lot
dumber than the first Wolf Cup,at least by memory. And I feel
like it was kind of like almostlike UH, and this was a good

(58:28):
pull, like an American that hadseemed strange brew and that was their whole
knowledge of Canada, like everything Canadacame from that Bob and Doug McKenzie SCTV
skit. Now, Um, theopening scene did have a lot more gore.
I wonder if um. I mean, that's a pretty traditional thing to

(58:50):
kind of like, you know,get people in their in their seats and
make them stay there. It's thesame with just about any r you you
know, a band wants to openwith like a song that gets people like
really engaged. A professional wrestling show, if built right, always has a
really good opening match to kind ofset the tone for the rest of the
show. And the opening scene inthis sort of film, whether it be

(59:14):
like any sort of and this definitelykind of you leaned more on action tropes
and horror tropes, but it doesn'ta lot in horror movies, will you
know, certain kinds will slashers maybeparticularly you know, we'll set the tone
with like an ultra gory scene.But I also think the people driving the
truck, those people the guy drivingit was Matt Kennedy from Manborg and the

(59:37):
remainder of the guys in the backcorner Sweeney and the rest of those guys
are astron Sicks, who are aCanadian film collective. I guess who do
gore better than anybody around, like, and I think they're definitely the kings
of Canadian low budget filmmakers. Butthey all come from that sort of you

(59:59):
know, the this kind of wasa movement, uh and and it sort
of seemed to stop at Wolf Cop. But you know, there was a
wolf Cop and Hobo with a shotgunand Father's Day and then the Editor and
man Board, which had a littlebit of different DNA but was the same,
you know, same folks. SoI do wonder if like, you
know, you're like, geez,I got these guys in the back of

(01:00:21):
this truck. I gotta fucking raisemy game a little bit because you're immediately
uh, you know, you seethem and if you recognize them, you're
immediately reminded of, you know,the people who are better at this than
anyone else. Um, the hockeyrink scene, I think that um in
the aliens too. UM. Ifeel like those uh, those puppets and

(01:00:52):
stuff like that in the way theum the hockey players look with their masks
looked a lot like, uh,I'm gonna say this guy's name wrong,
I think, but it's Ted K. Miles. One of your listeners can
skewer me on the internet for gettingit wrong. But he made astro zombies

(01:01:13):
and a bunch of other stuff likethat that was kind of low budget,
fair not unlike you know, thatparticular scene in Wolfcop like it was very
and he's still making films that oreven of a lower budget or people.
I actually don't even know he's alive. There's a company who's for whatever reason,
if carried on and a remaking allof his movies, which I think

(01:01:35):
are really is really or sequelizing allhis movies' is like a bunch of astro
zombie films. But at any rate, I wonder if that whole scene wasn't
an homage to that sort of latesixties early seventies ultra cheapie sci fi monster

(01:02:00):
movie, like I think the wholefilm is. You know, I think
that's in the film's DNA, ButI think that maybe he wanted to rail
back and kind of do that butwith just a little bit more special effects,
you know, but not go toofar away from from that kind of
error of like you know, dI y special effects, but you know,

(01:02:23):
have you know enough to have ithappen with some extras and stuff like
that, But you know that Thatwas kind of my take on that.
As far as the strip Club robotgoes, I can't place it either,
But man, it does look familiarif you you know, like sheets,
he said, watch a lot ofpost apocalyptic movies. It definitely has that

(01:02:43):
sort of look of like the trenchcode and the goggles. It reminded me
a little bit of TikTok from Returnto Oz. And then also the way
it moved reminded me of the Cybermenfrom an old third Doctor and fourth Tom
Baker error doctor whom you know,or more specifically, actually I misspoke the
Robots of Death from the Great Robotsof Death episode is who what reminded me

(01:03:07):
the most of it didn't necessarily looklike that, but you know that full
body suit sort of thing, andyou know, it's layers, and it
looked more like it had clothes onthan being a robot. But anyway,
I am way long in the toothand I didn't even get to talk about
Team Titans. So maybe I willcall back and do that next week because

(01:03:28):
I actually have a bunch of stuffto say about that. Sorry, this
is so long. I love you, guys, and I miss you guys,
And until we get to hang outagain. I'm gonna keep on punching.
Thanks to Mars. We miss youtoo, buddy. I'm really curious

(01:03:52):
to see what you think about Jeff'sopinion that a Stalagia music is better than
the music from horror films. AndI imagine you're going to educate us a
lot, because you know, likeI do love horror movies, but I
don't think my memory or the wayI view them and talk about them later.

(01:04:13):
Sometimes I don't things don't resonate theway they do with other people.
That's just me. When I'm watchingthe movie, I'll be like, yeah,
soundtracks kick ass, right, Butif you ask me later at the
movie, I might just be able, well, here's what happened the movie,
But I don't remember the soundtrack,right. It's not until I go
back and re listen, like,oh I missed how cool this was,

(01:04:35):
Like, but in the moment,I'm just focused on what's happening on screen.
Yeah, that's why it's really nicethat they put out like Mondo puts
out these records soundtracks from these eightiesmovies and all kinds of movies. But
it's it's really cool because I reallylike listening to some of this music.
I was listening to the Summer ofeighty four soundtrack today at work because it's

(01:04:59):
on band camp, and I orderedthe record from Mando because I saw Jim
Smith from Tea ordered it. Heordered it. I gotta have it.
But it is it looks pretty badassand the music really it is really cool.
Yeah, some of the sound,some of the music was that very
intense, like the kind of musicexpect like in a horror movie. And
I was like, this is alittle difficult to sit here in a program

(01:05:24):
with some of this music. ButI'm digging in. Yeah, I'd like
I love to hear what Dynamo thinksto wrap this whole thing up. I
actually dug the shit out of thismovie. I highly recommend going checking it
out. Let us know what youthink. Did you like the movie?
Did you like the music? Idon't know. You tell me yes,

(01:05:48):
excellent? Yeah, lish I concurI thought it was an excellent movie.
If you are totally into watching moviesabout the eighties, it's free you.
If you're totally into thrillers, it'sfor you. So I go out and
watch it. Jeff, did youever have friends with the Treehouse? No?

(01:06:10):
But we had like shitty sports andstuff we made in the backyards.
Yeah, we always made shitty sports. My buddy did have a treehouse.
It wasn't that good. Um hewas a little rundown. I don't know
how old it was. My otherfriend had a treehouse. Was pretty nice
because his parents were like rich.He was an only chancel that they really
spurst. But I remember one daybecause we invited him my other friend over,

(01:06:35):
and I don't think this dude thathad the treehouse liked him. We
got an argument and his dad cameout with a chainsaw. I was gonna
just cut the treehouse there. See, if you guys can't get along,
I'm just gonna cut it. Then. Look, he had an electric chainsaw.
So he came out and had thischord and when he fired up was
like and he started and his son, Craig, it was like, oh

(01:06:59):
dad, stop, but I'm ah, he's not gonna be able to cut
this treehouse down, like the wholeHis anger initially was a shock, but
when he broke out an electric chainsaw, we were all, yeah, you're
not gonna be able to cut thatthing, you know. I and I
always wanted a treehouse and there wasa TV show, probably on HDTV or

(01:07:20):
one of those kind of networks thatwas about elaborate oh extreme treehouse. Yeah
dude, they're like like, I'mjust gonna live here. Yeah, amazing
treehouses. Yeah, it's when yougot your five million dollar house and let's
go ahead and build a three hundredthousand dollars treehouse just because now. And

(01:07:43):
I you know, my one buddystree house. We did, uh camp
out, camp out, we're ina treehouse. We did, but have
our sleeping bags, we you know, raising hell. I think we were
just watching HBO's house. But thenwe would go out and sleep in the
treehouse. Um, and as wegot older, we just slept in the
shed. That way we could dowhatever, do whatever. His parents had
to be like an ear shot,so the treehouse never became a thing,

(01:08:05):
but sheds or I think we couldset up to be away from Paris.
But I always wanted to kick asstreehouse. Yeah even today, Oh that
would be cool. And there wasa time period I was really into the
martial arts and I thought it'd bebadass to build a dojo like and in
the backyard. Oh okay, yeah, no, why are you laughing with

(01:08:26):
those doors you can slide open.Because you got a tiny little yard.
Where are you gonna put it?But where that shed is? OK?
Lose the shed all right? Putinto Joe because that would kind of be
like my treehouse. I could godown there and dukata and uh, you
know, play the theme from KarateKid yea, and of course the theme
from Rocky three. Come on likeas you get older, I turned the

(01:08:49):
treehouse concept into a dojo concept.Maybe some Eye of the Tiger that was
from Rocky three then and then youjust come down. You'd probably only walk
out the back door and turn rightaround. Yeah he's listening to Hit the
Tiger again. Yeah. I haveno more thoughts on this topic. Great
movie, Great reminiscing about the eighties. God, I wish I was still

(01:09:13):
back in the eighties. What Iknow now? Oh boy, instruction I
could call use back then. Ohyeah, guys as always a great hang
out with you. Remember hit usup punchmart dot com. Send us a
message. You can just go tothe website. You can find all the
stuff, you can find all thedetails. You can find out how to
send us a message. It's magic. You guys are awesome. You're awesome.

(01:09:36):
Until next time, Remember keep allpaunching everybody
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