NEXT STOP EVERYWHERE 208: "Storm Warning" Is Up!

 
"Breathe in deep, Leftenant Commander.  You too, Charley.  You feel that pounding in your heart?  That tightness in the pit of your stomach?  The blood rushing to your head, do you know what that is?  That's adventure.  The thrill and the fear and the joy of stepping into the unknown. That's why we're all here, and that's why we're alive!"
-- The Eighth Doctor to Frayling and Charley Pollard, Doctor Who: "Storm Warning"

Hello again, everyone!  My partner in time Jesse Jackson and I are back with a new episode of Next Stop Everywhere: The Doctor Who Podcast!  This time, we're joined by special guest companion Holly Mac from The Five(ish) Fangirls Podcast to discuss "Storm Warning", the very first Eighth Doctor audio adventure from Big Finish Productions in 2001, featuring the return of Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor, the debut of India Fisher as Charlotte "Charley" Pollard, Gareth Thomas as Lord Tamworth, and Barnaby Edwards as Rathbone!

In this episode, Jesse, Holly and I discuss things like Jesse being thrilled after the U.S. Presidential election, Holly’s podcast The Five(ish) Fangirls Podcast reaching its 300th episode, Holly preferring Charley Pollard over Lucie Miller, Paul McGann’s return as the Eighth Doctor in 2001, “Storm Warning” being a complicated story for audio, “Storm Warning” being my first-ever Big Finish audio drama, Gareth Thomas in Blake’s 7, my love of David Arnold’s Eighth Doctor theme arrangement, the actual survivors of the R101 disaster, Charley’s introduction as an Edwardian adventuress, Charley as the original Impossible Girl, the comfort of Peter David Star Trek novels, Lord Tamworth campaigning for Lawgiver, the triad system of the Triskele, our favorite quotes of the episode, my Reverse the Polarity segment, news about Series 13, my new podcast with Xan Sprouse, and more!

If you'd like to check out our latest episode, you can find us on...

iTunes/Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Direct MP3 downloads/Libsyn -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
Next Stop Everywhere's Facebook page
Next Stop Everywhere's Twitter account
Next Stop Everywhere's Instagram account

We have a NEW Next Stop Everywhere t-shirt with our current logo, which you can find on TeePublic right HEREThis spiffy new shirt looks great when you're listening to your favorite Doctor Who podcast and travelling through time and space!  Or your could order all sorts of cool Next Stop Everywhere merch there as well!

And hey, if you'd like to pick up our classic logo Next Stop Everywhere t-shirt, you can also find it on TeePublic right HERE!  Help support the show and feel free to post pictures on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back next week, as Jesse and I are joined once again by special guest companion DJ Nik as we discuss "Aliens of London/World War Three", the fourth and fifth episodes of Series One from 2005, featuring Christopher Eccleston as the Ninth Doctor, Billie Piper as Rose Tyler, and the debuts of Penelope Wilton as Harriet Jones, Annette Badland as Margaret Blaine, and Naoko Mori as Toshiko Sato!

PEACEMAKER Casts Chris Conrad as The Vigilante

 
Peacemaker is about to have a vigilante problem.

Deadline is reporting that Peacemakerthe upcoming HBO Max series spinning off from the upcoming film The Suicide Squad, has cast Chris Conrad as Adrian Chase, better known to DC Comics fans as The Vigilante.

Peacemaker will explore the origins of the character in the James Gunn movie, a man who believes in peace at any cost — no matter how many people he has to kill to get it.

Conrad is probably best known as Johnny Cage in the movie Mortal Kombat: Annihilation and as Young Jason in the TV series Young Hercules and Hercules: The Legendary Journeys.  He's also appeared in the movie The Next Karate Kid and in episodes of Patriot, Life, Criminal Minds, Bones, and JAG.

According to the article, Conrad joins John Cena as Peacemaker/Christopher Smith, Steve Agee as John Economos, Jennifer Holland as Emilia Harcourt, Robert Patrick as Auggie Smith, and Danielle Brooks as Leota Adebayo.

Created in 1983 by Marv Wolfman and George Pérez, Adrian Chase first appeared in New Teen Titans (vol.1) Annual #2 as a Manhattan District Attorney who worked tirelessly within the system to dismantle the city's Mafia infrastructure.  He frequently worked with the city's resident superhero team, the New Teen Titans, but when Chase's wife Doris, son Adam, and daughter Drew were killed by a bomb planted by the Scarapelli mob family, Chase sought his own justice as the Vigilante.  

He underwent an extremely vigorous training program taught by a number of mystical spirits seeking revenge, and came back to the city perfectly synchronized between mind and body. As the Vigilante, he dispensed justice harshly, and although he inspired many heroes to attempt to make tougher choices, his career was also riddled with many defeats.  Eventually Chase abandoned his identity as Vigilante, believing that he could be both more effective and also happier as a judge.  However, during his absence the identity of Vigilante was assumed, in succession, by two of his friends without his knowledge.

The first of these was fellow judge Alan Welles, who operated in a much more violent manner, even executing petty thieves.  Chase eventually tracked down and killed this incarnation of Vigilante, without realizing it was his friend.  The incident led to increased guilt on Chase's part and also increased scrutiny from a law enforcement task force headed by Harry Stein, as he attempted to cover up Alan Welles' role as Vigilante.

Dave Winston, Adrian Chase's bailiff, soon assumed the Vigilante identity.  Refusing to kill, Winston traded on the fierce reputation of Vigilante to intimidate information out of thugs. He was murdered by Peacemaker while attempting to stop the hijacking of a plane which Chase was on.  In the wake of Winston's death, Chase once again assumed the role of Vigilante, feeling that it was the only way to protect those he loved.  Seeking revenge on Peacemaker, the out of shape Chase was beaten in a fight and unmasked on live TV, thereby ending his secret identity and forcing him even further into the role of the Vigilante.

As the series progressed Chase became ever more conflicted over his role as Vigilante, the violence he engaged in, and the harm he caused to those around him.  He also became increasingly mentally unstable—alternating between bouts of enraged violence, paranoia, and terrible remorse for his actions.  Near the end, he even resorted to murdering innocent police officers who got in his way.  His mounting guilt culminated in the final issue of his series (#50) where, after contemplating the course of his life, Chase committed suicide.

Conrad will be the second actor to portray The Vigilante in live-action, after Josh Segarra on the CW series Arrow.

Peacemaker is scheduled to begin production in early 2021.

Posted on November 12, 2020 .

THE FANDOM ZONE 194: "Nothing Like It in the World" Is Up!

 
"So, are you going to tell me what, or are you just going to stain my clean sheets with your sweaty despair?"
-- Cherie to Frenchie, The Boys: "Nothing Like It in the World"

Hello again, everyone!  It's time for another new episode of The Fandom Zone Podcast!  This time, my co-host DJ Nik and I discuss "Nothing Like It in the World", the fourth episode of The Boys Season 2, featuring Karl Urban as Billy Butcher, Shantel VanSanten as Becca Butcher, Antony Starr as Homelander, Aya Cash as Stormfront, and the return of Elisabeth Shue as Madelyn Stillwell!

In this episode, Nik and I talk about things like Joe Biden being elected President of the United States, the original "Nothing Like It in the World" storyline from The Boys comic book series, When Harry Met Sally, Hughie and Annie singing along to Billy Joel's "We Didn't Start the Fire", some information on the film Taxi Driver, Butcher finally getting some backseat lovin', Meat Loaf's song "Paradise by the Dashboard Light", Becca taming the beast within Butcher, that awkward moment when Butcher called Becca's son Ryan a "Supe Freak", Homelander watching Taxi Driver with Doppelganger as Madelyn Stillwell, Homelander not being down with Doppelganger's idea of having sex with Homelander as Homelander, Homelander trying to intimidate everyone, Homelander reminding us of Donald Trump, educating Nik on Maria Menounos, Stormfront gaslighting Homelander, Hughie calling out Annie's bad candy bar choices, Mother's Milk reminding Nik of Jules from Pulp Fiction, Dawnn Lewis on Futurama and Star Trek: Lower Decks, The Boys discussing systemic racism, our love of revenge movies, the Deep choosing a wife to help him get back in The Seven, being cool with Ed Sheeran, our favorite quotes of the episode, Jim Gaffigan being cast as the Thunderbolt on Stargirl, new Fandom Zone Fanmail from Dave Proctor, "Louie Louie" by the Kingsmen, and more!

You can now check out episodes of The Fandom Zone using...

iTunes/Apple Podcasts -- HERE
Direct Download MP3s/Libsyn -- HERE
Spotify -- HERE
Stitcher -- HERE
The Fandom Zone on Facebook -- HERE
The Fandom Zone on Twitter -- @FandomZoneCast
The Fandom Zone on Instagram -- HERE

And if that isn't enough for you, you can also check us out on YouTube, Soundcloud, and the official Southgate Media Group website!  Oh, and if you're interested in an officially official Fandom Zone Podcast t-shirt that all the cool kids are wearing, you can get those on TeePublic HERE as well!  Feel free to post a picture on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back next week as Nik and I discuss "We Gotta Go Now", the fifth episode from The Boys Season 2, right here on The Fandom Zone Podcast!

Posted on November 10, 2020 .

GHOSTWOOD 087: "The Elephant Man" Is Up!

 
"People are frightened by what they don't understand."
-- John Merrick, The Elephant Man

It is happening again...My co-host with the most Xan Sprouse and I are back with a new episode of Ghostwood: The Twin Peaks Podcast!  In this episode, we discuss The Elephant Man, the 1980 historical drama film directed by David Lynch, starring Sir John Hurt as John Merrick, Sir Anthony Hopkins as Frederick Treves, Anne Bancroft as Madge Kendal, and Sir John Gielgud as Francis Carr Gomm!

LET'S ROCK!

In this episode, Xan and I discuss things like The Elephant Man being more upbeat than the first few days after the 2020 Presidential Election, The Elephant Man being completed robbed at the 53rd Academy Awards, "John Merrick" actually being Joseph Merrick, Merrick's conjectured diagnosis of Proteus Syndrome, differences between the film and Merrick's real life, Kenny Baker serenading Xan, Merrick's official cause of death, Reality TV being the modern sideshow experience, Macho Man Randy Savage, wanting to go back in time to watch Mel Brooks watch Eraserhead for the first time, The Elephant Man giving David Lynch more mainstream acceptance by Hollywood, Mel Brooks being uncredited to avoid confusion with Mel's comedic films, Michael Jackson never actually purchasing Merrick's skeleton, John Hurt reprising the War Doctor for Big Finish Productions, Anthony Hopkins in The Lion in Winter, Blazing Saddles vs. Young Frankenstein, Sir John Gielgud in Arthur, Doctor Who connections to The Elephant Man cast, Frederick Treves being the flip side of Mr. Bytes, Brainy Smurf, Mrs. Mothershead calling out Frederick Treves, Lynch indulging his Industrial Porn fetish, wondering if Merrick deliberately killed himself, Xan and I teasing our upcoming new podcast, and more!

If you'd like to check out our latest episode, you can find us on...

iTunes/Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
Direct MP3 downloads/Libsyn -- RIGHT HERE
YouTube -- RIGHT HERE
Ghostwood's Facebook page
Ghostwood's Twitter account

Be sure to come back in two weeks for Episode 088, as Xan and I discuss the Criterion Collection Blu-Ray release of The Elephant Man, the 1980 historical drama film directed by David Lynch, starring Sir John Hurt as John Merrick, Sir Anthony Hopkins as Frederick Treves, Anne Bancroft as Madge Kendal, and Sir John Gielgud as Francis Carr Gomm!

Posted on November 7, 2020 .

NEXT STOP EVERYWHERE 207: "Dragonfire" Is Up!

 
"Oh, all right, you win."
"I do?  I usually do."
"I'm going now."
"Yes, that's right, you're going.  You've been gone for ages.  You're already gone.  You're still here.  You've just arrived.  I haven't even met you yet.  It all depends on who you are and how you look at it.  Strange business, time."
-- Melanie "Mel" Bush and the Seventh Doctor, Doctor Who: "Dragonfire"

Hello again, everyone!  My partner in time Jesse Jackson and I are back with a new episode of Next Stop Everywhere: The Doctor Who Podcast!  This time, we're joined by special guest companion Holly Mac from The Five(ish) Fangirls Podcast to discuss "Dragonfire", the fourth serial from Doctor Who Season 24 in 1987, featuring Sylvester McCoy as the Seventh Doctor, the debut of Sophie Aldred as Dorothy "Ace" McShane, the departure of Bonnie Langford as Melanie "Mel" Bush, and the return of Tony Selby as Sabalom Glitz!

In this episode, Jesse, Holly and I discuss things like Xan Sprouse not being able to join us as planned, Sabalom Glitz being the Captain Jack Harkness of the classic era, Tony Selby appearing in the original Superman movie from 1978, Stellar being an outer space Shirley Temple, the explanation for why the Seventh Doctor made a literal cliffhanger at the end of Part One, Kane's death vs. Toht's death in Raiders of the Lost Ark, Glitz replacing a character called Razorback, Sylvester McCoy insisting on using his audition speech for Mel's departure, the original plans for Ace in "Dragonfire", the Doctor's reunion with Glitz, wondering why Glitz's ship was named Nosferatu, the Doctor's really long to-do list, '80s Doctor Who showing its age, Sylvester McCoy making the Doctor his own, the Doctor taking in Ace as his new companion, Mel and Ace having a very Odd Couple friendship, wondering why Mel left the Doctor to travel with Glitz, Ace as the first modern era companion, Kane as the Mr. Freeze of Doctor Who, Kane having a really bad ice sculpture made of Xana, Kane's very quick decision to kill himself, needing more time for Belasz's backstory and less of Stellar and her mother, our favorite quotes of the episode, my Reverse the Reverse the Polarity segment, new feedback from Dave Proctor, the healing power of Doctor Who, and more!

If you'd like to check out our latest episode, you can find us on...

iTunes/Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Direct MP3 downloads/Libsyn -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
Next Stop Everywhere's Facebook page
Next Stop Everywhere's Twitter account
Next Stop Everywhere's Instagram account

We have a NEW Next Stop Everywhere t-shirt with our current logo, which you can find on TeePublic right HEREThis spiffy new shirt looks great when you're listening to your favorite Doctor Who podcast and travelling through time and space!  Or your could order all sorts of cool Next Stop Everywhere merch there as well!

And hey, if you'd like to pick up our classic logo Next Stop Everywhere t-shirt, you can also find it on TeePublic right HERE!  Help support the show and feel free to post pictures on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back next week, as Jesse and I are joined once again by special guest companion Holly Mac as we discuss "Storm Warning", the very first Eighth Doctor audio adventure from Big Finish Productions in 2001, featuring Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor, Gareth Thomas as Lord Tamworth, Barnaby Edwards as Rathbone, and introducing India Fisher as Charlotte "Charley" Pollard!

Posted on November 6, 2020 .

THE FANDOM ZONE 193: "Over the Hill with the Swords of a Thousand Men" Is Up!

 
"I thought you said this boat belongs to a friend."
"Well, a stranger is just a friend you ain't met yet."
-- Frenchie and Billy Butcher, The Boys: "Over the Hill with the Swords of a Thousand Men"

Hello again, everyone!  It's time for another new episode of The Fandom Zone Podcast!  This time, my co-host DJ Nik and I discuss "Over the Hill with the Swords of a Thousand Men", the third episode of The Boys Season 2, featuring Jack Quaid as Hughie Campbell, Karen Fukuhara as Kimiko Miyashiro, Giancarlo Esposito as Stan Edgar, Antony Starr as Homelander, and Aya Cash as Stormfront!

In this episode, Nik and I talk about things like the band Tenpole Tudor, the Dublin (Ohio) Irish Festival, the original "Over the Hill with the Swords of a Thousand Men" storyline from the comics, Hughie's use of Billy Joel as a safe space, Frenchie offering Kenji a bag of bad potato chips, Butcher being willing to sacrifice Kenji to get his wife back, Kimiko being the most dangerous member of The Boys, Hughie finally getting his first big win as a member of The Boys, Mother's Milk being the team leader The Boys need, Homelander pushing his son Ryan off a roof, Homelander being a Supermanchild instead of a Superman, pouring one out for Lucy the disemboweled whale, Butcher ramming a speedboat through Lucy the whale, Hughie getting his "second wind" by remaining inside a whale carcass, The Deeo getting shut down by Starlight and Stormfront, Homelander insisting that Starlight prove her loyalty by killing Hughie, Stormfront being fully revealed as a racist uber-Nazi, Stan Edgar pissing off Homelander by making Stormfront the face of The Seven, Kimiko seeking Kill Bill style vengeance on Stormfront, our favorite quotes of the episode, the CW finally announcing 2021 premiere dates for some of their Arrowverse shows, Neil Gaiman teasing the casting of Death in the Sandman TV series, new Fandom Zone Fanmail from Dave Proctor, and more!

You can now check out episodes of The Fandom Zone using...

iTunes/Apple Podcasts -- HERE
Direct Download MP3s/Libsyn -- HERE
Spotify -- HERE
Stitcher -- HERE
The Fandom Zone on Facebook -- HERE
The Fandom Zone on Twitter -- @FandomZoneCast
The Fandom Zone on Instagram -- HERE

And if that isn't enough for you, you can also check us out on YouTube, Soundcloud, and the official Southgate Media Group website!  Oh, and if you're interested in an officially official Fandom Zone Podcast t-shirt that all the cool kids are wearing, you can get those on TeePublic HERE as well!  Feel free to post a picture on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back next week as Nik and I discuss "Nothing Like It in the World", the fourth episode from The Boys Season 2, right here on The Fandom Zone Podcast!

Posted on November 3, 2020 .

NEXT STOP EVERYWHERE 206: "Timelash" Is Up!

 
"Should there be another day, I'll explain to you in great detail which of the many time laws I am not allowed to transgress."
"Who would know?"
"I would.  So would every other Time Lord from here to Gallifrey, and I can assure you they're not all as pleasant and agreeable as I am."
-- The Sixth Doctor and Herbert George Wells, Doctor Who: "Timelash"

Hello again, everyone!  My partner in time Jesse Jackson and I are back with a new episode of Next Stop Everywhere: The Doctor Who Podcast!  This time, we discuss "Timelash", the fifth serial from Doctor Who Season 22 in 1985, featuring Colin Baker as the Sixth Doctor, Nicola Bryant as Peri Brown, Robert Ashby as the Borad, Paul Darrow as Tekker, and David Chandler as H.G. Wells!

In this episode, Jesse and I discuss things like being one week out from the U.S. Presidential election, my lowering the bar for Jesse watching "Timelash", Jo Jones referencing Karfel in The Sarah Jane Adventures story "Death of the Doctor", the original script featuring the First Doctor, Ian, Barbara, Susan, and the Daleks, the actual explanation for how the Sixth Doctor survived the destruction of the Bandril missile, the various references to H.G. Wells' novels, blaming Eric Saward and John Nathan-Turner for the failure of the Sixth Doctor era, one good reason why JNT doesn't suck, Jesse wanting people to use CGI to give Colin Baker a better Sixth Doctor costume, H.G. Wells being portrayed as an annoying buffoon, the Doctor spelunking into the Timelash, Jeananne Crowley not being able to find her line of sight even when talking to someone directly in front of her, good Doctor Who directors using shadows to conceal poorly-designed monsters, Peri escaping into the Karfel junk room you don't want anybody to see when they come over, the Morlox looking like Triumph the Insult Comic Dog, the creative mistake of making Peri a botanist, the sad Bandril puppet, Tekker being the guy at an office willing to throw anyone under the bus, Jesse wondering if the Borad was a previous villain, the Doctor taunting the Borad that he has zero chance hooking up with Peri, how to make the aged skeletons less comical, our favorite quotes of the episode, my Reverse the Reverse the Polarity segment, new feedback from Holly Mac and Dave Proctor, Jesse listening to the new Bruce Springsteen album over and over and over, Xan and I discussing The Elephant Man, and more!

If you'd like to check out our latest episode, you can find us on...

iTunes/Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Direct MP3 downloads/Libsyn -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
Next Stop Everywhere's Facebook page
Next Stop Everywhere's Twitter account
Next Stop Everywhere's Instagram account

We now have a NEW Next Stop Everywhere t-shirt with our current logo, which you can find on TeePublic right HEREThis spiffy new shirt looks great when you're listening to your favorite Doctor Who podcast and travelling through time and space!  Or your could order all sorts of cool Next Stop Everywhere merch there as well!

And hey, if you'd like to pick up our classic logo Next Stop Everywhere t-shirt, you can also find it on TeePublic right HERE!  Help support the show and feel free to post pictures on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back next week, as Jesse and I are joined by special guest companions Xan Sprouse and Holly Mac as we discuss "Dragonfire", the fourth serial from Doctor Who Season 24 in 1987, featuring Sylvester McCoy as the Seventh Doctor, Tony Selby as Sabalom Glitz, the departure of Bonnie Langford as Melanie "Mel" Bush, and the debut of Sophie Aldred as Dorothy "Ace" McShane!

Posted on October 29, 2020 .

THE FANDOM ZONE 192: "Proper Preparation and Planning" Is Up!

 
"You and me are gods.  Son, we can do anything we want and no one can stop us.  Now that is a good feeling, a really good feeling."
-- Homelander to Ryan Butcher, The Boys: "Proper Preparation and Planning"

Hello again, everyone!  It's time for another new episode of The Fandom Zone Podcast!  This time, my co-host DJ Nik and I discuss "Proper Preparation and Planning", the second episode of The Boys Season 2, featuring Karl Urban as Billy Butcher, Karen Fukuhara as Kimiko Miyashiro, Antony Starr as Homelander, Shantel VanSanten as Becca Butcher, and Aya Cash as Stormfront!

In this episode, Nik and I talk about things like Nik becoming an uncle, The Boys' Season 2 soundtrack and its heavy reliance on Billy Joel, the "Proper Preparation and Planning" storyline in the comics, Jack Quaid being the son of Meg Ryan, Butcher constantly wanting to remind The Boys that he's in charge, Butcher being willing to pay any price to get his wife Becca back, Butcher writing down everything he can remember about Becca's location in crayon on a paper placemat, Rayner's funeral probably being closed casket, Grace Mallory not being impressed by an edible arrangement, Butcher punching out Hughie before he can get back in the van, my wanting everyone to keep close watch on the complex relationship between Butcher and Hughie, Homelander deciding to have some father/son time with Ryan, Homelander's frustration that Ryan isn't showing signs of his superpowers, Nik not being able to handle Homelander drinking breast milk, that awkward moment when Becca was told that Vought isn't going to do a damn thing about Homelander, Nik explaining Pippi Longstocking to Americans, Starlight trying to prove to Stormfront that she's not a Vought Barbie Spy, female celebrities being asked the same questions over and over, Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious and Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds, Starlight reaching a Mexican standoff with A-Train, that awkward moment when Kimiko is finally reunited with her brother Kenji only to find out he's a super terrorist, our favorite quotes of the episode, Oscar Isaac being cast as Moon Knight, needing all the WandaVisions, Fandom Zone Fanmail from Dave Proctor, and more!

You can now check out episodes of The Fandom Zone using...

iTunes/Apple Podcasts -- HERE
Direct Download MP3s/Libsyn -- HERE
Spotify -- HERE
Stitcher -- HERE
The Fandom Zone on Facebook -- HERE
The Fandom Zone on Twitter -- @FandomZoneCast
The Fandom Zone on Instagram -- HERE

And if that isn't enough for you, you can also check us out on YouTube, Soundcloud, and the official Southgate Media Group website!  Oh, and if you're interested in an officially official Fandom Zone Podcast t-shirt that all the cool kids are wearing, you can get those on TeePublic HERE as well!  Feel free to post a picture on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back next week as Nik and I discuss "Over the Hill with the Swords of a Thousand Men", the third episode from The Boys Season 2, right here on The Fandom Zone Podcast!

Posted on October 28, 2020 .

STARGIRL Casts Jonathan Cake as The Shade & Nick Tarabay as Eclipso

 
Get ready for more injustice in Blue Valley.

Deadline has revealed that the CW series Stargirl has cast actors Jonathan Cake and Nick Tarabay as DC Comics supervillains The Shade and Eclipso.  Tarabay will be a series regular as Eclipso, while Cake will recur as The Shade.

According to the article, Eclipso is described as "one of the main antagonists set to clash with Stargirl’s Justice Society of America in Season 2.  Eclipso is a life essence trapped inside a blue diamond. Once owned by the Injustice Society of America, that diamond was stolen in Season 1 by (Meg) DeLacy’s Cindy (Burman), which will result in problems for the JSA going forward.  Eclipso is an ancient entity of corruption and vengeance.  Brimming with a cold, terrifying darkness, he exploits the flaws of others, reveling in the impure and sinful, sadistically feeding off the dark side of humanity."

The Shade's description states he's "an English immortal, a classic antihero from DC Comics who wields magical shadow powers.  Tall and slim with an elegant 19th century way to his speech and manners, he masks the horrors he’s experienced and people he’s lost in all the time alive with wry, witty retorts and a false sense that nothing really matters."

Cake, 53, is an English actor who recently appeared as Edward "Blackbeard" Teach on Legends of Tomorrow, and has appeared in episodes of Desperate Housewives, Grey's Anatomy, The Affair, Chuck, Law & Order, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Criminal Minds, and Death in Paradise.

Tarabay, 45, is a Lebanon-born American actor best known as Captain Boomerang on Arrow, Ashur on Spartacus and Cotyar Ghazi on The Expanse.  His other roles include the films Star Trek Into Darkness and Pacific Rim: Uprising, and episodes of Castle, Longmire, Person of Interest, Burn Notice, Moonlight, and The Sopranos.

Created in 1942 by Gardner Fox and Harold Wilson Sharp, the Shade first appeared in Flash Comics #33 as a villain for the original Flash, Jay Garrick.  He was portrayed as a thief who could manipulate the shadows with a magical cane and fought both Garrick and the second Flash, Barry Allen.  He was a member of several supervillain teams, including the Injustice Society.  The Shade was one of three villains used for the first meeting of the two heroes in the famous "Flash of Two Worlds" story, which reintroduced the Golden Age Flash to the Silver Age.  He was jailed along with the Thinker and the Fiddler.

In 1994, the character was changed drastically by writer James Robinson and artist Tony Harris in the DC Comics series Starman.  The Shade was retconned to an English gentleman named Richard Swift, a young man from the year 1838.  One night in London, Swift was trapped amidst an unexplained mystical tragedy, which killed 104 people.  The most immediate effect on him was the permanent loss of his memories prior to the incident.  Coincidentally, a passerby named Piers Ludlow offers to take in Swift while he recovers. The whole affair was a setup, with the Ludlow family being a band of killers and swindlers, who grew wealthy killing their wealthy business partners and then killing a vagrant in the vicinity to give the impression of a failed robbery/homicide.  Before they could make Swift their next scapegoat, he reflexively unleashed his shadows, killing all the present Ludlows.  Only a young pair of twins, absent from the excursion, survived.

Decades later, Swift was ambushed by Rupert Ludlow, one of the surviving twins.  Rupert and his sister had plotted revenge for years, going so far as to raise their children as future assassins.  Though grievously injured, Swift managed to kill Ludlow, as his shadow power made him both immortal and resistant to injury.  Afterward, he left England and started a career as an adventurer/assassin/observer on life, which spanned whole continents and led him to many adventures.  During World War II, the Shade arrived in Keystone City and chose Jay Garrick, the first Flash, as his adversary.  After several decades, he established himself in Opal City and became a mentor for Jack Knight, the son of the Golden Age Starman, Ted Knight, another hero the Shade had fought.

Cake will be the second actor to portray The Shade in live-action, after Mike McLeod on The Flash (2014).  The character has also appeared in various animated projects, including Justice League and Justice League Unlimited (voiced by Stephen McHattie), and Young Justice: Outsiders (voiced by Joel Swetow).

Eclipso was created in 1963 by Bob Haney and Lee Elias, first appearing in House of Secrets #61 as Bruce Gordon, a scientist specializing in solar energy.  While in the jungle to view a solar eclipse, Gordon was attacked by a tribal sorcerer named Mophir.  Before plunging to his death off a cliff, Mophir wounded Gordon with a black diamond.  Afterwards, Gordon transformed into the villainous Eclipso whenever an eclipse occurred.  A blue-gray or purple circle covered the rightmost two-thirds of his face, resembling a partial eclipse.

During this period, Eclipso was portrayed as a conventional villain, possessing super strength, partial invulnerability, and eye blasts (aided by his black diamond).  Eclipso's transformations were later altered so that any type of natural eclipse, lunar or solar, would cause Eclipso and Gordon to split from one another, while an "artificial eclipse" -- an object blocking out a light source -- would merely transform Gordon to Eclipso.  Any bright flash of light would banish Eclipso back into Bruce Gordon's body or reverse the change.

In the early 1990s, DC Comics retconned Eclipso in a company-wide crossover built around the miniseries Eclipso: The Darkness Within.  Eclipso was revealed not simply to be Bruce Gordon's dark half, but a vengeance demon who had possessed Gordon.  Eclipso's soul had originally been bound inside a giant black diamond called the "Heart of Darkness" in Africa.  A treasure hunter found it in the late nineteenth century and brought it to London in 1891, where he had a jeweler cut it into one thousand shards.  This weakened the binding spell, allowing Eclipso to possess anyone who became angry while in contact with one of the shards.  He was no longer limited to possessing Gordon during an eclipse, but pretended otherwise so that Gordon would not know the truth about the black diamonds.

Tarabay will be the first actor to portray Eclipso in live-action.  The character has appeared in animated projects, however, including Justice League (voiced by Bruce McGill) and Superman/Batman: Public Enemies.

Stargirl is expected to return to The CW for Season 2 sometime in 2021.

Posted on October 27, 2020 .

MOON KNIGHT Casts Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector

 
Marvel has found their Fist of Khonshu.

Deadline is reporting that the upcoming Disney+ Marvel Cinematic Universe series Moon Knight, based on the Marvel Comics superhero, has cast Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector...a.k.a. Jake Lockley...a.k.a. Steven Grant...a.k.a. Moon Knight.

According to the article, Isaac is currently in negotiations to star in the series, which will be overseen by Jeremy Slater, who developed and wrote Netflix’s adaptation of The Umbrella Academy from Dark Horse Comics.

Isaac, 41, is a Guatemalan-American actor best known as the pilot Poe Dameron in the Star Wars films The Force Awakens, The Last Jedi, and The Rise of Skywalker.  He also played the Marvel supervillain Apocalypse in the film X-Men: Apocalypse, and will be appearing as Duke Leto Atreides in the 2021 adaptation of Dune.  In addition, he voiced Spider-Man 2099 in the animated film Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, and has appeared in the films The Addams Family (2019), Life Itself, Annihilation, Ex Machina, The Bourne Legacy, Inside Llewyn Davis, and Robin Hood (2010).

Created in 1975 by Doug Moench and Don Perlin, Moon Knight first appeared in Werewolf by Night #32 as a villain hired by the Committee to capture Jack Russell, the Werewolf.  He found out that the Committee wanted to use the Werewolf as a weapon and helped the Werewolf escape, briefly fighting alongside him.

After being recast as a hero, Moon Knight received a full origin and his own ongoing series.  Born in Chicago, Illinois, Marc Spector was a Jewish-American rabbi's wayward son, who, as an adult, had been a heavyweight boxer before becoming a U.S. Marine serving in Force Recon.  Afterward, he left the Marines to become a mercenary occasionally doing work for the CIA.  As a mercenary, he befriended the French pilot Jean-Paul DuChamp, whom he affectionately called "Frenchie".  

While working for the African mercenary Raoul Bushman in Egypt, the group stumbled upon an archaeological dig whose crew included Dr. Peter Alraune and his daughter Marlene Alraune.  The dig had uncovered an ancient temple, where artifacts included a statue of the Egyptian moon god Khonshu. Intent on looting the dig, Bushman killed Dr. Alraune.  In response to Alraune's murder, Spector challenged Bushman to personal combat but was defeated by Bushman and left to die in the sub-zero temperatures of the desert night.  The Egyptians who worshipped the ancient gods found Spector and carried him to their temple.  Helpless before the statue of Khonshu, Spector's heart stopped.  Khonshu appeared to him in a vision, offering Spector a second chance at life if he became the god's avatar on Earth.  Spector awakened, wrapped himself in the silver shroud that covered Khonshu's statue, and again confronted Bushman. This time, he defeated Bushman and returned to America with Marlene, Frenchie, and the statue of Khonshu.  Deciding to become a crimefighter, Spector created a silver cloaked costume, based on the silver shroud, and became Moon Knight, "The Fist of Khonshu".

After his return to the United States, Spector invested the money he had accumulated as a mercenary and developed a small fortune.  To distance himself from his mercenary past, he created the identity of millionaire entrepreneur Steven Grant, using this identity to purchase a spacious estate.  To remain in contact with the street and criminal element, he also created the identity of taxicab driver Jake Lockley and has acquired civilian allies such as Bertrand Crawley, Gena Landers, and her sons.  His origin of being "created by The Committee" was explained as a ruse set up by Frenchie so that Marc could shut the Committee down.  Over time, Spector was revealed to suffer from Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), with his various identities actually becoming alternate personas.

Isaac will be the first actor to portray Moon Knight in live-action, although the character has appeared in the animated series Ultimate Spider-Man (voiced by Diedrich Bader), Avengers Assemble (voiced by Gideon Emery), and Spider-Man (2017) (voiced by Peter Giles).

Moon Knight is currently expected to premiere on Disney+ sometime in 2022.

Posted on October 26, 2020 .

GHOSTWOOD 086: "Sanguinarium" Is Up!

 
"Looks like she took a pretty good shot at you."
"Yes, apparently."
"Nothing that a little plastic surgery won’t patch up though, hunh?"
-- Fox Mulder and Dr. Jack Franklin, The X-Files: "Sanguinarium"

It is happening again...My co-host with the most Xan Sprouse and I are back with a new episode of Ghostwood: The Twin Peaks Podcast!  In this episode, we conclude our retrospective of Twin Peaks actors appearing on The X-Files as we discuss "Sanguinarium", the sixth episode of The X-Files Season Four from 1996, featuring David Duchovny as Fox Mulder, Gillian Anderson as Dana Scully, Richard Beymer as Dr. Jack Franklin, and O-Lan Jones as Nurse Rebecca Waite!

LET'S ROCK!

In this episode, Xan and I discuss things like Xan being a bad influence regarding doughnuts, laying out a Twin Peaks doughnut spread, my insides trying to kill me, skipping "Excelsius Dei" in our retrospective, Ben Horne not having sex with Emory Battis, wondering if Ben Horne knew Ike the Spike, watching Vincent Price die in Edward Scissorhands, Rodney Dangerfield in Natural Born Killers, Jessica Alba in Sin City, the backwards "Vanitas Vanitatum" written in blood, the one Twin Peaks actor who appeared on The Simpsons, wiccans complaining about "Sanguinarium", "Home" being the vilest episode of The X-Files ever, Nurse Waite placing pentagrams everywhere, Mulder and Scully using a pentagram on the door of Nurse Waite's house as probable cause to enter, Nurse Waite lying in wait for Dr. Franklin inside a bathtub full of blood, wondering how the Aesthetic Surgery Unit stayed open for business after three murders by three of their doctors, Carrie Fisher in The Blues Brothers, the Moonlighting episode "Atomic Shakespeare", crappy '90s internet, Richard Beymer's big Face-Off peel, Mulder and Scully's completely failing to arrest Clifford Cox, Tipper Gore and the PMRC, Lady Cassandra on Doctor Who, Ghostwood Mail from Holly Mac, Jesse Jackson and DJ Nik, Robert Patrick not reprising John Doggett in The X-Files revival, everybody being sad that we're leaving The X-Files behind, the attack of the CyberJesses, The Elephant Man being a bit of a downer, and more!

If you'd like to check out our latest episode, you can find us on...

iTunes/Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
Direct MP3 downloads/Libsyn -- RIGHT HERE
YouTube -- RIGHT HERE
Ghostwood's Facebook page
Ghostwood's Twitter account

Be sure to come back in two weeks for Episode 087, as Xan and I discuss the new Criterion Collection blu-ray release of The Elephant Man, the 1980 historical drama film by director David Lynch, featuring Sir John Hurt as John Merrick, Sir Anthony Hopkins as Frederick Treves, Anne Bancroft as Madge Kendal, and Sir John Gielgud as Francis Carr Gomm!

Posted on October 25, 2020 .

NEXT STOP EVERYWHERE 205: "Arc of Infinity" Is Up!

 
"Why didn't you do it sooner?"
"Well, you know how it is. You put things off for a day, next thing you know it's a hundred years later."
-- Nyssa and the Fifth Doctor, Doctor Who: "Arc of Infinity"

Hello again, everyone!  My partner in time Jesse Jackson and I are back with a new episode of Next Stop Everywhere: The Doctor Who Podcast!  This time, we discuss "Arc of Infinity", the first serial from Doctor Who Season 20 in 1983, featuring Peter Davison as the Fifth Doctor, Janet Fielding as Tegan Jovanka, Sarah Sutton as Nyssa, Ian Collier as Omega, Michael Gough as Councilor Hedin, and Colin Baker as Commander Maxil!

In this episode, Jesse and I discuss things like Jesse not recognizing Michael Gough as Alfred Pennyworth from the Batman movies, Colin Baker making his Doctor Who debut as Maxil, why "Arc of Infinity" was partially filmed in Amsterdam, original plans for Louise Jameson to return as Leela and how some of her key plot points were given to Nyssa instead, Colin Baker landing the part of the Sixth Doctor by being entertaining at a wedding reception, the Fifth Doctor repairing one thing in the TARDIS but putting off all the other repairs that needed done, Time Lords being arrogant assholes, Nyssa showing a much stronger side with her protectiveness of the Doctor, wondering why Maxil has such a grudge against the Doctor, Tegan's return with a new pixie haircut after "Time-Flight", the really big coincidence that Tegan's cousin ended up under the thrall of Omega, wondering what the hell is up with the Ergon, my explanation for why the Sixth Doctor ended up with Maxil's face, Councilor Hedin turning traitor against Gallifrey to help Omega return from the antimatter universe, Omega only caring about escaping the antimatter universe, the Doctor shooting Omega with a gunour favorite quotes of the episode, my Reverse the Reverse the Polarity segment, new feedback from Holly Mac and Dave Proctor, our upcoming discussion of the infamous Doctor Who story "Timelash", and more!

If you'd like to check out our latest episode, you can find us on...

iTunes/Apple Podcasts -- RIGHT HERE
Direct MP3 downloads/Libsyn -- RIGHT HERE
Spotify -- RIGHT HERE
Stitcher -- RIGHT HERE
Next Stop Everywhere's Facebook page
Next Stop Everywhere's Twitter account
Next Stop Everywhere's Instagram account

We now have a NEW Next Stop Everywhere t-shirt with our current logo, which you can find on TeePublic right HEREThis spiffy new shirt looks great when you're listening to your favorite Doctor Who podcast and travelling through time and space!  Or your could order all sorts of cool Next Stop Everywhere merch there as well!

And hey, if you'd like to pick up our classic logo Next Stop Everywhere t-shirt, you can also find it on TeePublic right HERE!  Help support the show and feel free to post pictures on our Facebook page of you or some other cool person you know wearing the shirt!

Be sure to come back next week, as Jesse Jackson and I discuss "Timelash", the fifth serial from Doctor Who Season 22 in 1985, featuring Colin Baker as the Sixth Doctor, Nicola Bryant as Peri Brown, Robert Ashby as the Borad, Paul Darrow as Tekker, and David Chandler as H.G. Wells!

Posted on October 24, 2020 .