"Oh my wife loves Stephen King, it will be so nice to watch this with her" Within 5 minutes, she was giving full cometetive Brennan energy. It wasn't enough for her to know most of the answers, or for her to answer before everyone else (which she did). She had to yell at Trapp how wrong he is any time her answers differed slightly. Anyway, I'm "getting in the comments" as per her orders. She needs everyone to know that she won, and that everyone else can suck it.
I have to say I love the work around to the filming flummox snafu the creative team at CollegeHumor/DropOut took with this episode. Of course I have seen the animators do various work across the platform, so I think it’s ingenious and my hat goes off to them. It worked well and didn’t distract from the fun of the show, of fact I think it made it a tad more fun!
Personally, I'm not convinced there actually was a recording issue. I think that was just a silly, tongue-in-cheek reason they gave for his being animated. Since he's from Rooster Teeth, which does a LOT of animation work, I think that was intentional.
Um, actually... That "weird verbal tick" quote comes from Samuel L Jackson during an interview about his role in Kingsmen, he did reference Steven King as an inspiration for the idea though.
the Stephen King being hit by a car story had another interesting bit to it. he bought the van that hit him, just so he could destroy it with a sledgehammer
I barely caught that in the last one, phew! I wonder if Trapp tried to come up with a riff on that: "Shining questions are like The Shining movie, they stand out and are a little different but aren't worth any more than the others"...
one of my favorite facts about cujo (which imo helps the sad factor) is how the dogs were apparently nightmares to work with for the movie. st bernards are simply too friendly! They had to tape down their tails to stop them from wagging in shots and had to use rottweilers at points. similarly the cats in the new pet semetary apparently all loved the lead actor and so a cgi cat had to be used in some scenes
Very similar to how when they use wolves in movies and shows they're usually mixed breed wolf dogs and usually have to have their tails CGI'd out in scenes where they appear savage and snarling, cause they keep wagging their tails.
Was worried I’d be out of my depths in a Stephen King episode, first question and I see Mike’s up to his whole “Try to sneak Discworld references in” antics and I feel right at home.
I love themed episodes like this even if I don't know the subject! A Song of Ice and Fire/Game of Thrones episode would be hilarious as the contestants try to parse the book and tv versions.
With a lot of them, I think it goes to show how iconic a colour scheme can be to a movie. I also guessed it immediately - though thought it was a different frame - based entirely on recognising those walls and floor tones.
Cujo is my favourite Stephen King novel and, um, actually, Cujo was possessed by the spirit of Frank Dodd, the rapist and murderer of The Dead Zone, although the dog's murderous rampage was due to the rabies infection and the possession was of little to no consequence and even left out of the movie. It was also suggested that the little boy in the book, Tad Trenton, had the shining and foresaw the book's grisly ending. In conclusion, some supernatural elements were shoehorned into the novel, but at its core the book is a PSA about rabies and how one should never leave pets or children in a car on a hot day.
@@AndrewJohnson-oy8oj Yeah I was thinking "what Icelandic characters can I come up with from Stephen King novels..." (Although apparently there it's "takk" oh well I visited a long time ago)
some um actually’s about 11/22/63 because it’s one of my favorite books ever: 1) jake begins the book in maine, he doesn’t just take a detour there to say hi to the kids from IT. he decides to stay in maine long term to test how changing the past works by attempting to save the lives of harry dunning’s family. 2) al templeton does not wait until he is old to come up with stopping the kennedy assassination. yes, he does the beef thing (which is one of my favorite things in the book lol) BUT the reason he is so old is because he was attempting to stop the assassination himself. jake sees al age significantly in under 24 hours because he al was back in time and had to come back because he was dying of lung cancer, so he passes the job onto jake.
Um actually, Mercy is the SECOND adaptation of "Gramma". The first was a segment of the New Twilight Zone series, called "Gramma", which actually starred the kid from "Neverending Story". That episode gave me nightmares.
The “I love Stephen king but hate remembering things” is exactly my vibe. Not just for King but I am in a fan group and the minutia of detail people remember and can spit back and a moments notice is wild. I’m like, yeah I read it, enjoyed it, can maybe give you a brief summary but that’s about it😅
I'm 3 months late to this episode, but I'm very disappointed that I don't see a single comment pointing out that the graphic for "Shiny" questions has been changed to say "Shining" questions for this episode. (13:31 for reference)
I still remember seeing Silver Bullet on the tv listing, and thinking "oh cool, I bet this is about werewolves!" only to be disappointed to learn it was the name of the kid's wheelchair. And then it was about werewolves!
I like how they talk about the Dark Tower series as being like doing the multiverse before it was cool. There was another author that did that in the 80s - Robert Heinlein. Check out "The Cat Who Walks Through Walls."
I love his stories. Also, if you read his works in the order he wrote them, you can track him slowly losing his mind and becoming more obsessed with shagging his grandkids.
Hoping Amazon brings back the cancelled Dark Tower pilot they filmed with Michael Rooker. There is a petition to bring it back and it needs 7,500 votes and right now it’s at 5,608.
@@Jagjamin he only had a single grandchild, Dr. Amy Baxter. She was adopted at her own request via a fan letter. They never actually met in person, and Dr. Baxter didn't even meet Virginia until after Robert died. Whatever his fantasies may have been or the topics he explored in his book, there is no known evidence that he had any real world considerations, let alone actions, that even point to this. Intergenerational relationships sure, but there shouldn't be any sort of problem with a 20 something shacking up with a 60 something, no matter the pairing, because they're both consenting adults.
Re: The Mangler: i had NIGHTMARES ABOUT THAT MOVIE when i was very young, but I was so upset I accidentally called it the Wrangler and my grandparents thought it was the funniest thing.
I have two things to say about the crazy stuff that happens in Derry, Maine. First no one really knows what happens in Derry, they kinda forget about those evens because of some vague magical force. Second People live in tornado alley. Which happens to have tornadoes hit it way more then every seventeen years.
I read the book, and I think there is something that makes people ignore IT but also kinda forget. When things are happening with It people are aware and actively ignore things that happen even things that happen not involving IT. When IT is "Sleeping" people somewhat,forget what happened, not those that lost a family member but those that haven’t move on as if nothing happened. They can be reminded but people will come up with other explanations even if they actually encountered IT. As for those that leave town they forget just about everything that happened in Derry. As for other events sometimes everyone forgets.
The talisman, and black house, are probably my favorite king books. The talisman is the coolest adventure story, with just enough horror when I was like 14 to really get me. I guess it read similarly to Bradbury’s ‘something wicked this way comes’ which might be my favorite story of all time:)
Well, technically… When Mike said that the only similarities between the short story “Lawnmower Man” and the movie was a guy using a riding mower, he was wrong. The character Jobe in the movie only uses push mowers and prefers the motorized one he himself fixed up. Pedantic, perhaps, but it’s a pedantic game. 😄
Somewhere around 6:30min trapp talks about the idea that Stephen might just kinda take idea from things around him. I live in the same town as him and use to work in a grocery store he shopped in and we had a sale on blood oranges and while I was working he happened to be shopping noticed them and said something to the effect of Blood oranges huh maybe a story in that if not just an idea. I don’t think he was talking to me just anyone whom happened to be listening. He came in almost weekly and was always super pleasant.
There's an episode of _Quantum Leap_ where Sam leaps into a horror writer who lives in Maine in 1964. A minor character is a teen named Stevie who has a big dog named Cujo and drives a Plymouth Fury.
Um Actually, the portal in 11/22/63 is in Al's pantry, Al's Diner doesn't even have a cellar. Also the reason Jake travels to Derry, Maine in 1958 is to save the family of the school janitor Harry Dunning from being murdered by their father.
True story. I never read any Stephen King stories until after I graduated High School when I picked up the short story collection "Night Shift" at a 711 to read during a post graduation Road Trip. I skipped around and read The Mangler, and Battleground back to back. Stories about a killer Laundry Press and Killer Plastic Army Men respectively. I tossed the book in the back of the van and refused to read King's work for another 10 years when I was reluctantly pressured into reading the Dark Tower.
"Beep Beep" is also in the book 11/23/63. We get to see Bevy from the levy and Richie from the Ditchy practicing the Lindy Hop in one scene. Edit: I didn't expect the scene to be referenced during the game.
I find this episode so frustrating. I knew at least 80% of all the answers. . I was pathetically yelling out "desperation!" At the tak question, Thoroughly wallowing in the irony of what I was doing. Man, I love this show
04:07 The movie version of _The Mangler_ (1995) was made by Tobe Hooper. It starred Robert England as Mr Gartley, the cruel crippled owner of the laundromat and Daniel Matmoor as Mark Jackson, the protagonist.
Um, Actually, no one wants to move out of Darry because Pennywise causes the inhabitants to forget all the murders and disappearances over time, accepting them and not being as concerned as they should be so that they stay there and he can have more kids to feast on the next cycle. And then when the Losers’ Club weakens Pennywise, they all end up moving away and forgetting the creature because of this same magic.
It also acts as somewhat of a good luck charm, bringing prosperity to Derry at the cost of the town's children and the unwelcome townsfolk. It is important to remember that some of the start victims in Pennywise's cycle are adults that the town of Derry just doesn't accept.
Um, actually the character of Collie Entragian is a male sheriff in Desperation, and a former police officer in The Regulators, by Stephen Kings pseudonym Richard Bachman.
It was also in the TV show he wrote The Kingdom, where one of the main characters gets hit identically to how it happened in real life. He also starts seeing a weird anteater thing only he can see. It was pretty bad.
Petty or no, apparently the candy bar thing was real. In “On Writing,” King referenced that he remembered that the driver who hit him was on his way to buy some “Marses Bars.”
No one commenting about how the Shiny Questions are now "Shining" Questions? Tripp doesn't even mention it when he says it, but it's in the title cards. Nice amendment there :P
As there seems to be a lot of S.K.'s works being adapted these days wouldn't it be prudent for a SK centralized spoof movie to be made. 'HOW PENNYWISE GOT ITS GROOVE BACK' a heartwarming coming of age story about a young interdimentional lightspider/clown whom had to deal with the hardships of moving from a small town to the big city after being attacked by a roving gang of delinquent hooligans
I knew M-O-O-N would be mentioned the moment they said verbal ticks/catch phrases. I still remember getting chills when Flag was trying to read the mind of the unidentified spy and all he could see was the moon.
the very moment he mentioned verbal ticks for characters, all I could think was Ron Perlman baring out "Tak!", and lo and behold it was the first example XD
I feel bad that the only one I knew immediately was the “Needs more Pixels” Shiny, and that was because of Ready Player One. I need to catch up on my Stephen King…
I also immediately guessed the Shining for the pixelated picture but an entirely different scene! That movie must just have a really recognizable color palette!
Darn, when they did the Shiny about adaptations with unrelated titles I was really hoping Haven was going to come up. I stuck with it all the way to the terrible end; I should at least get the smugness of being right about an internet quiz show out of it!
"Oh my wife loves Stephen King, it will be so nice to watch this with her"
Within 5 minutes, she was giving full cometetive Brennan energy. It wasn't enough for her to know most of the answers, or for her to answer before everyone else (which she did). She had to yell at Trapp how wrong he is any time her answers differed slightly.
Anyway, I'm "getting in the comments" as per her orders. She needs everyone to know that she won, and that everyone else can suck it.
My wife wants you to know she knows xactly how you feel after watching this with me lol
Love this! I've started watching these with a few friends and inevitably one or two of us get like this each time :')
Your wife is awesome.
I love how Betsy makes every horror episode so fun and supportive.
100%
I have never identified more with a phrase than “I love remembering things, but I’m not good at it.”
Some might even speculate that's the biggest reason I love it so much when I can pull it off!
I have to say I love the work around to the filming flummox snafu the creative team at CollegeHumor/DropOut took with this episode. Of course I have seen the animators do various work across the platform, so I think it’s ingenious and my hat goes off to them. It worked well and didn’t distract from the fun of the show, of fact I think it made it a tad more fun!
To expand on that thought, can we request all future remote pandemic shows be animated?
If they ever do another Jim Henson special, I request that it be hosted by a muppet Mike Trapp.
@@ConManAU And in addition, the requirement to say "um, actually" will be temporarily modified to require "um, actually, Muppet Mike".
Personally, I'm not convinced there actually was a recording issue. I think that was just a silly, tongue-in-cheek reason they gave for his being animated. Since he's from Rooster Teeth, which does a LOT of animation work, I think that was intentional.
Um, actually... That "weird verbal tick" quote comes from Samuel L Jackson during an interview about his role in Kingsmen, he did reference Steven King as an inspiration for the idea though.
the Stephen King being hit by a car story had another interesting bit to it. he bought the van that hit him, just so he could destroy it with a sledgehammer
And that's called "cathartic vengeance"
I mean, if he has the disposable income, more power to him. Destroying something that hurt me would probably feel pretty good.
It was also the origin of him using 19 as the number representing evil, death, and other bad stuff.
Um actually, he just had it crushed at a junkyard
Love that the "Shiny Questions" are labeled "Shining Questions" for this Episode.
was desperately scrolling the comments for someone else who noticed
I barely caught that in the last one, phew! I wonder if Trapp tried to come up with a riff on that: "Shining questions are like The Shining movie, they stand out and are a little different but aren't worth any more than the others"...
one of my favorite facts about cujo (which imo helps the sad factor) is how the dogs were apparently nightmares to work with for the movie. st bernards are simply too friendly! They had to tape down their tails to stop them from wagging in shots and had to use rottweilers at points. similarly the cats in the new pet semetary apparently all loved the lead actor and so a cgi cat had to be used in some scenes
Animal actors are precious and I love them.
Very similar to how when they use wolves in movies and shows they're usually mixed breed wolf dogs and usually have to have their tails CGI'd out in scenes where they appear savage and snarling, cause they keep wagging their tails.
I adore every episode with Betsy in it, please do more themed episodes of things that she’s into as an excuse to get her in the show!
Was worried I’d be out of my depths in a Stephen King episode, first question and I see Mike’s up to his whole “Try to sneak Discworld references in” antics and I feel right at home.
I love themed episodes like this even if I don't know the subject! A Song of Ice and Fire/Game of Thrones episode would be hilarious as the contestants try to parse the book and tv versions.
Needs More Pixels is my favorite shiny question. The level of just instinct-based nerdiness is exciting when they guess very early.
With a lot of them, I think it goes to show how iconic a colour scheme can be to a movie. I also guessed it immediately - though thought it was a different frame - based entirely on recognising those walls and floor tones.
Cujo is my favourite Stephen King novel and, um, actually, Cujo was possessed by the spirit of Frank Dodd, the rapist and murderer of The Dead Zone, although the dog's murderous rampage was due to the rabies infection and the possession was of little to no consequence and even left out of the movie. It was also suggested that the little boy in the book, Tad Trenton, had the shining and foresaw the book's grisly ending. In conclusion, some supernatural elements were shoehorned into the novel, but at its core the book is a PSA about rabies and how one should never leave pets or children in a car on a hot day.
THIS!!
A lesson worth learning no matter the shoehorned Stephen King nonsense
The most horrifying thing you can say to an Epidemiologist is 'Airborne Rabies'.
As a Polish person I was not ready for Mike Trapp to violently scream "YES" in my native language at me, great episode.
Imagine how the Norwegians feel about him yelling "thank you!"
@@AndrewJohnson-oy8oj Yeah I was thinking "what Icelandic characters can I come up with from Stephen King novels..."
(Although apparently there it's "takk" oh well I visited a long time ago)
Um, Actually, Andrew Rosas is actually an animated cartoon who uses camera filters to appear human.
I can't express how happy I am this is back. This series almost solely alone fuels my Fridays
Oh, my God! The mangler bit delighted me! I love Stephen King so I've been waiting for you guys to do this episode! Great job!
Came down to the comments to say the exact same thing. Loved it
A special episode of my favorite show about one of my favorite authors? I am so happy about this!!
some um actually’s about 11/22/63 because it’s one of my favorite books ever:
1) jake begins the book in maine, he doesn’t just take a detour there to say hi to the kids from IT. he decides to stay in maine long term to test how changing the past works by attempting to save the lives of harry dunning’s family.
2) al templeton does not wait until he is old to come up with stopping the kennedy assassination. yes, he does the beef thing (which is one of my favorite things in the book lol) BUT the reason he is so old is because he was attempting to stop the assassination himself. jake sees al age significantly in under 24 hours because he al was back in time and had to come back because he was dying of lung cancer, so he passes the job onto jake.
Um actually, Mercy is the SECOND adaptation of "Gramma". The first was a segment of the New Twilight Zone series, called "Gramma", which actually starred the kid from "Neverending Story". That episode gave me nightmares.
The “I love Stephen king but hate remembering things” is exactly my vibe. Not just for King but I am in a fan group and the minutia of detail people remember and can spit back and a moments notice is wild. I’m like, yeah I read it, enjoyed it, can maybe give you a brief summary but that’s about it😅
I'm 3 months late to this episode, but I'm very disappointed that I don't see a single comment pointing out that the graphic for "Shiny" questions has been changed to say "Shining" questions for this episode. (13:31 for reference)
The mangler bit sent me into orbit with laughter
I still remember seeing Silver Bullet on the tv listing, and thinking "oh cool, I bet this is about werewolves!" only to be disappointed to learn it was the name of the kid's wheelchair.
And then it was about werewolves!
Great episode! As a reader of nearly all of Stephen King's works, this was the first episode I would have been competitive in!
Betsy Sodaro is just the best. She's funny, witty and kind and supportive. Betsy for the win!
Um, actually, The Mangler is a laundry mangle. That's the whole pun of the name.
First answer had me screaming “HIS NAME ISN’T A’TUIN” but also not remembering what the name was
I like how they talk about the Dark Tower series as being like doing the multiverse before it was cool. There was another author that did that in the 80s - Robert Heinlein. Check out "The Cat Who Walks Through Walls."
Yep, I think it started with "The Number of The Beast," continues in "To Sail Beyond the Sunset," and finished in The Cat.
And also Diane Duane a bit later.
I love his stories. Also, if you read his works in the order he wrote them, you can track him slowly losing his mind and becoming more obsessed with shagging his grandkids.
Hoping Amazon brings back the cancelled Dark Tower pilot they filmed with Michael Rooker. There is a petition to bring it back and it needs 7,500 votes and right now it’s at 5,608.
@@Jagjamin he only had a single grandchild, Dr. Amy Baxter. She was adopted at her own request via a fan letter. They never actually met in person, and Dr. Baxter didn't even meet Virginia until after Robert died. Whatever his fantasies may have been or the topics he explored in his book, there is no known evidence that he had any real world considerations, let alone actions, that even point to this. Intergenerational relationships sure, but there shouldn't be any sort of problem with a 20 something shacking up with a 60 something, no matter the pairing, because they're both consenting adults.
Ummmmmm actually It's not Al Tempelton's cellar that has the portal back to the 1958, it's his pantry. You can't get me on my favorite book!
Came here to say this!
Re: The Mangler: i had NIGHTMARES ABOUT THAT MOVIE when i was very young, but I was so upset I accidentally called it the Wrangler and my grandparents thought it was the funniest thing.
“i love remembering things but i’m not good at it” I LOVE HER SO MUCH
First Gus now Andrew please bring more Rooster Teeth people on.
I appreciate the effort of the animation to make up for the lack of a camera. Looks wonderful.
I have two things to say about the crazy stuff that happens in Derry, Maine. First no one really knows what happens in Derry, they kinda forget about those evens because of some vague magical force. Second People live in tornado alley. Which happens to have tornadoes hit it way more then every seventeen years.
Wasn't it stated directly at some point in the book that It was making people forget, essentially just to make things easier for itself?
I read the book, and I think there is something that makes people ignore IT but also kinda forget. When things are happening with It people are aware and actively ignore things that happen even things that happen not involving IT. When IT is "Sleeping" people somewhat,forget what happened, not those that lost a family member but those that haven’t move on as if nothing happened. They can be reminded but people will come up with other explanations even if they actually encountered IT. As for those that leave town they forget just about everything that happened in Derry. As for other events sometimes everyone forgets.
The talisman, and black house, are probably my favorite king books. The talisman is the coolest adventure story, with just enough horror when I was like 14 to really get me. I guess it read similarly to Bradbury’s ‘something wicked this way comes’ which might be my favorite story of all time:)
Well, technically… When Mike said that the only similarities between the short story “Lawnmower Man” and the movie was a guy using a riding mower, he was wrong. The character Jobe in the movie only uses push mowers and prefers the motorized one he himself fixed up. Pedantic, perhaps, but it’s a pedantic game. 😄
Happy Friday everybody who loves and routinely watches Um, Actually!
You too
Happy Friday, Benton
Somewhere around 6:30min trapp talks about the idea that Stephen might just kinda take idea from things around him. I live in the same town as him and use to work in a grocery store he shopped in and we had a sale on blood oranges and while I was working he happened to be shopping noticed them and said something to the effect of Blood oranges huh maybe a story in that if not just an idea. I don’t think he was talking to me just anyone whom happened to be listening. He came in almost weekly and was always super pleasant.
There's an episode of _Quantum Leap_ where Sam leaps into a horror writer who lives in Maine in 1964. A minor character is a teen named Stevie who has a big dog named Cujo and drives a Plymouth Fury.
Um Actually, the portal in 11/22/63 is in Al's pantry, Al's Diner doesn't even have a cellar. Also the reason Jake travels to Derry, Maine in 1958 is to save the family of the school janitor Harry Dunning from being murdered by their father.
True story. I never read any Stephen King stories until after I graduated High School when I picked up the short story collection "Night Shift" at a 711 to read during a post graduation Road Trip.
I skipped around and read The Mangler, and Battleground back to back. Stories about a killer Laundry Press and Killer Plastic Army Men respectively.
I tossed the book in the back of the van and refused to read King's work for another 10 years when I was reluctantly pressured into reading the Dark Tower.
"Beep Beep" is also in the book 11/23/63. We get to see Bevy from the levy and Richie from the Ditchy practicing the Lindy Hop in one scene. Edit: I didn't expect the scene to be referenced during the game.
I'm sorry, you failed to begin with Um, Actually. I cannot award you the point.
I find this episode so frustrating. I knew at least 80% of all the answers. .
I was pathetically yelling out "desperation!" At the tak question,
Thoroughly wallowing in the irony of what I was doing.
Man, I love this show
Same! & with The Stand question too!
Lets not forget it was in The Regulators also, said by Seth over the phone. Also He called Collie a "she"
Omg - just found your channel - it's great!
it"s 27 yrs btw - not 17.
04:07 The movie version of _The Mangler_ (1995) was made by Tobe Hooper.
It starred Robert England as Mr Gartley, the cruel crippled owner of the laundromat and Daniel Matmoor as Mark Jackson, the protagonist.
Um, Actually, no one wants to move out of Darry because Pennywise causes the inhabitants to forget all the murders and disappearances over time, accepting them and not being as concerned as they should be so that they stay there and he can have more kids to feast on the next cycle. And then when the Losers’ Club weakens Pennywise, they all end up moving away and forgetting the creature because of this same magic.
It also acts as somewhat of a good luck charm, bringing prosperity to Derry at the cost of the town's children and the unwelcome townsfolk. It is important to remember that some of the start victims in Pennywise's cycle are adults that the town of Derry just doesn't accept.
Um, actually the character of Collie Entragian is a male sheriff in Desperation, and a former police officer in The Regulators, by Stephen Kings pseudonym Richard Bachman.
Um actually, Collie Entragen from Desperation not a woman but a man! Tak!
Also for #1 - Um actually, the Macroverse isn't an alternate reality, it's a collection of all infinite realities that ours is a part of.
King used his accident in a bunch of his works. In fact if anyone remembers the Tv series Kingdom Hospital the accident was a major plot point.
"I love my son but I wish he would stop saying 'this human form is limiting.'"
I also believe the car accident at the start of Dreamcatcher is inspired by the one that hit King.
It was indeed. Jonesie is supposed to represent King in the book. Hence the whole “mind library” thing he has going on.
It was also in the TV show he wrote The Kingdom, where one of the main characters gets hit identically to how it happened in real life. He also starts seeing a weird anteater thing only he can see. It was pretty bad.
Man I love Bets energy she is always so fun!
Betsy is always such a joy to watch.
i felt so fuckin cool getting the pixelated question before andrew 😂💕
It took me two seconds of thinking that “Shining Question” was a typo before I realized
Same!
I'm surprised Trapp didn't start the show with "From Randall Flagg to Randall Stephens..."
Shining Question! Clever.
Was the Long Walk really televised? I had the same answer with Ben but turns out I was wrong.
Same turtle in "it" is the one referenced in relation to the path of the beam the guardian in the dark tower books?
Yeah, it's the same one
Glad ya’ll are back!
I screamed at my phone when they weren’t getting “The Stand” question with the “m-o-o-n” part 😂 my mom & I say that to each other all the time.
M-O-O-N that spells Tom Cullen!
Petty or no, apparently the candy bar thing was real. In “On Writing,” King referenced that he remembered that the driver who hit him was on his way to buy some “Marses Bars.”
Under The Dome is probably my favourite stand alone of all time
@13:31.....I didn't get the gag at first, thought "Shining Question" was a typo......now I get it.....duh.....
"I got some time to kill, I guess I will go to Maine... because this IS a Stephen King story."
Umm actually the time hole in 11/22/63 is in a pantry not a cellar. There isn’t a cellar in the diner because it’s an old aluminaire trailer.
The laundry machine is also called the Mangler in the novella Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption. Stephen King worked in a laundry.
So Andy Dufresne also had to deal with maybe getting mangled?!
The movie producers were thinking 'we can't be sued for the same thing twice, that's double jeopardy'
10:18 Um actually those books didn't have _Dark Tower_ references, _Dark Tower_ had those book references.
No one commenting about how the Shiny Questions are now "Shining" Questions? Tripp doesn't even mention it when he says it, but it's in the title cards. Nice amendment there :P
i think it's just her cadence but betsy reminds me a lot of chris farley. so funny
I have never seen the Shining, but even I immediatly thought of that hallway due to the sheer amount of pop culture references to it!
The bit about Running Man makes me think that this was filmed before Squid Game was released
THIS WAS SO GOOD!
Very entertaining episode. Thank you guys!
I was not prepared to answer what I thought the photo was in “Needs More Pixels” segment.
As there seems to be a lot of S.K.'s works being adapted these days wouldn't it be prudent for a SK centralized spoof movie to be made.
'HOW PENNYWISE GOT ITS GROOVE BACK' a heartwarming coming of age story about a young interdimentional lightspider/clown whom had to deal with the hardships of moving from a small town to the big city after being attacked by a roving gang of delinquent hooligans
You know it's gonna be a good episode/experience with Betsy
me screaming “MATURIN” at my television two minutes in made me way overconfident in my own ability to win this episode
I knew M-O-O-N would be mentioned the moment they said verbal ticks/catch phrases. I still remember getting chills when Flag was trying to read the mind of the unidentified spy and all he could see was the moon.
the very moment he mentioned verbal ticks for characters, all I could think was Ron Perlman baring out "Tak!", and lo and behold it was the first example XD
Oh I just noticed the Shiny question title card change, nice! ;)
I feel bad that the only one I knew immediately was the “Needs more Pixels” Shiny, and that was because of Ready Player One. I need to catch up on my Stephen King…
TAK also appears in the Regulators if i'm not mistaken?
I also immediately guessed the Shining for the pixelated picture but an entirely different scene! That movie must just have a really recognizable color palette!
19:22 To the closed captioner: Um Actually in the context of Stephen King it's "Pet Sematary" not "Pet Cemetery."
I can't stop screaming at the screen
"Ooo thats good. Fresh. Like laundry"
I lost it.
Desperation is by far one of Stephen King's best books, read it!!
Super favorite. I like it a lot better than The Regulators, but sadly I am unable to read one without following with the other.
I love regulators, too, but desperation is better. TAK!
YES FINALLY, MY EPISOOOODE
Betsy is such a delight
“I was at a haunted prison in Idaho a couple of years ago-“ is an absolutely buck wild way to start a sentence.
betsy will live on in my heart as the most entertaining person to appear on this show
I mean, she also lives on in real life as far as I know :P
Ben Joseph IMMEDIATELY gave me Chad from Rooster Teeth vibes
Um actually, Lisey's name in Lisey's Story is pronounced "Lee-see," not "Lie-see."
"Our clothes are FULL of secrets!" 😂
Yay! Love Andrew Rosas! Bring him back!
Darn, when they did the Shiny about adaptations with unrelated titles I was really hoping Haven was going to come up. I stuck with it all the way to the terrible end; I should at least get the smugness of being right about an internet quiz show out of it!
Um actually at 25:24 it should say “an old woman” not “and old woman”
Um Actually, it's not a "weird loop hole in the rules" it's just due to the actual rule. 😂
I think it is called the mangler because the laundry press is also called a mangle.