Shows

Film & TV: American Vandal (Season 2)

TLS put on their big boy pants to investigate fecal-related crimes along with American Vandal Season 2.
[Aggregate score: 10]

Film & TV: First Man

TLS takes one giant step towards deciding if Neil Armstrong’s personal story makes for quality film.
[Aggregate score: 8.6]

 

 

Fallout 76 Round Table (Crossover Episode!)

On this bonus episode Matt and Jesse of the American Slacker Podcast sit down with Steve and Scott of The Lost Signals and discuss the soon to release Bethesda production, Fallout 76. The guys dive into the Fallout timeline, what to expect and much more!

Check out more stuff from the Slackers at the book facetweedzler, or by searching American Slacker Podcast wherever dem ‘casts are found. Enjoy!

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers

MOTS-O-Ween 2018 concludes with The Return of Another Hollywood Halloween cash-grab. All trick, no treat! [Aggregate score 2.75]

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: Creature From the Black Lagoon (1954)

In the Amazon jungle, a lonely merman’s paradise is permanently polluted and his courtship curtailed by colonialists with spears, nets, and too many outfits in 1954’s “Creature from the Black Lagoon.” [Aggregate score 5.25]

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: The Invisible Man (1933)

Chaos, madness, train wrecks and unhealthy relationships are all topics of discussion in our review of “The Invisible Man,” starring the voice of Claude Rains. [Aggregate score 8.33]

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: The Mummy (1932)

TLS unearths some recurring themes, a couple fine performances and a creepy love triangle from the sarcophagus of 1932’s “The Mummy.” [Aggregate score 6.75]

 

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: Frankenstein (1931)

Angry mobs with torches, the titular doctor’s madness and a nameless monster in love, bring discussions of creators and creations in 1931’s “Frankenstein.” [Aggregate score 7.6]

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: The Wolf Man (1941)

A new moon, wolfsbane in bloom and a voyeur’s intent is thwarted by a band of gypsies, a wolf and a discussion on the duplicity of the human condition in our review of 1941’s “The Wolf Man.”  [Aggregate score 7.75]

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: Dracula (1931)

TLS scare up Universal’s oeuvre of monsters for this year’s MOTS-O-Ween, starting with a discussion of vampires, stalkers and European economics in 1931’s “Dracula” starring Bela Lugosi. Leave the bugs, bring the garlic.  [Aggregate score 8]