Big Daddy Dispatch: August 2025
Added 2025-07-30 17:38:15 +0000 UTCDispatch Ninety-Nine, July 30th, 2025
Greetings WHM Family!
And just like that, Season 15 has come to an end! We had so much fun doing this season, we’d love to know what your favorite episodes were! So, take to the comments below and social media: Instagram, Facebook, Bluesky, and yes even Reddit to let us know highlights of Season 15! But, the fun never stops here on WHM, so even though we are on “Summer Break” we are releasing some great live episodes, one of which opens with the Season 15 VHS Trailer Game Finale (see below)! Oh, and Patrons? We got you covered with BRAND NEW episodes for every tier in the month of August (and a particularly awesome line-up if we do say so ourselves), so your ears will never go wanting for WHM content. We promise.
Also, we wanted to take a second and thank everyone who came out to our residency at the Oxford Comedy Festival! It was such a unique pleasure to perform for you all and meet some of you as well. Here’s hoping those recordings came out so that the rest of you can hear those killer shows!
Lastly, you’ll notice a small formatting change below, this was due to the fact that we had to write this Dispatch a little early to be sure to have it ready for publication even though we are out of the country. We think you’ll enjoy those changes.
Banner Credit: We Hate Movies Logo by Felipe Sobreiro
Image Credit: "Elementary my Dear Turtle Greenroom" Prep BY Stephen Sajdak
15 YEAR ANNIVERSARY SHOW AT THE BELL HOUSE IN BROOKLYN
I know we just finished six live shows in three nights, but us WHM boys always have something in the hopper! We’re thrilled to announce (on Arnold's birthday no less!) our 15 Year Anniversary show taking place December 6th at the Bell House in Brooklyn talking about….Total Recall! Yes, it’s the good one! It’s gonna be live WLM episode talking about Kuato, Mutant Dean Norris, Sharon fucking Stone, and a ton of bad Arnold Schwarzenegger impressions, live on stage! These Brooklyn shows sell out fast, so get your tickets asap here!
Also, isn’t that Felipe Sobreiro tour art, something? Give that guy a follow on his socials.
LAST MONTH ON WHM

The boys go international, the drug-trafficking way, and then accidentally get too high and learn the meaning of existence with ScarJo, Morgan Freeman and famed filmmaker and sex criminal Luc Besson. Why spend more than three minutes of your techno-action movie on Morgan Freeman’s Brain Facts lecture? Would it be so hard to add in a little more traditional action stuff to make the computer-brain stuff go down easier? Is that a USB stick I’m seeing at the end there? Really? Okay then.
Episode 809 – Jaws (Patrons Only)
For this month’s We Love Movies selection, the fellas head back to the beach and try to avoid becoming jumbo-size meat snacks and blood-geysers for the shark that haunted Amity. What makes this movie endure the way it does? Did they have to take out the cucking subplot from the book? Is the problem with modern masculinity that we don’t get drunk, sing songs, and hunt enormous sharks together anymore? Look out for that Robert Shaw impression, it’s a doozy!
Episode 810 – Beethoven (1992)
After years of teasing it, Andrew, Chris, and Steve finally return to the suburbs to see Charles Grodin get ordered around and saved from financial ruin by a sloppy canine. Is it not difficult to look oneself in the mirror when the dog stops you from selling out your family and your employees to corporate raiders? What exactly is the market for bullets that can really blow open a dog? Where are Bonnie Hunt’s numerous side-pieces who are allowing her the mental and emotional space to remain in a house with this horrible man? Thank God Stanley Tucci and Oliver Platt got out of this part of their careers unscathed.
The boys packed their bags, doused themselves in black and white paint and did their best to fit in with the sleazy denizens of Frank Miller’s Sin City! We got to chat about all the fun and not so fun parts of Robert Rodriguez’ overly long neo-noir anthology including: Bruce Willis alternating between giving a shit from take to take, the ballad of Clive Owen’s career, Mickey Rourke’s monster make-up looking better than his actual face, and whatever the hell Nick Stahl is supposed to be in this one.
Editor’s Note: We recorded this well before the passing of Michael Madsen, so there’s no mention of that here. What a loss.
Episode 812 – Fantastic Four (2015)
Just in time for First Steps, the gang returns to the tales of Reed Richards, Ben Grimm, and the Storm siblings, better known as the first family of the galaxy, the Fantastic Four! Will they ever get this property right or is it just doomed? Who cares about all the body-horror notes when there’s no real and consistent dramatic or thematic meat on the bone? Why did Trank take this job if he knew he didn’t care about it at all? Nice to see so much Reg E. Cathey, regardless.
Episode 812– Night at the Museum (2006)
To end out the Summer Blockbuster Extravaganza, Andrew, Steve, Eric, and Chris get small and real dumb with the rest of the museum miniatures who want to kill Ben Stiller. What brought Ben Stiller from being in bad baby movies to helming Severance and Escape at Dannemora? Were the lives of museum miniatures really that interesting from the outset? Wouldn’t kids get more interested in museums if they knew dinosaur bones were living creatures? No matter how goofy and kid-friendly the movie is, it can’t hide the fact that it signals the beginning of Shawn Levy’s Hollywood dominance. Witness the horror, everyone!
SUMMER SHAKE-UP: TOP 5 SEINFELD & THE SIMPSONS EPISODES
Like we mentioned up top, we needed to replace the What’re We Watching and Mailbag Reject sections with something a little different this month, so please enjoy our Top 5 Episodes from two of our favorite shows, Seinfeld and The Simpsons! There’s obviously no WHM without these shows as we reference them CONSTANTLY. Let us know what you think of these lists below in the comments and on social media! Also, just to note, these lists are not empirical in any way and likely if we did this exercise in two months you’d have a lot of changes.
Top 5 Seinfeld (1989 – 1998) Episodes

Andrew:
“The Subway” (s3 e13): I love the structure of this one with the gang splitting up for various missions on the NYC subway. It’s one of the greatest Costanza humiliations of the entire show. Plus, it features Ernie Sabella, Pumbaa from The Lion King and Mr. Carosi from those Saved by the Bell summer episodes, as the naked guy talking baseball with Jerry as they ride out to Coney Island. This episode always made me envy Jerry’s professional work situation because he’s free to head out to Coney Island first thing in the morning on a week day to ride the Cyclone and get a hot dog.
“The Limo” (s3 e19): Another season three ep. I love how most of the episode is set inside the limo, and the whole mix-up with them thinking George is the leader of the Aryan Union is so dark and fucking hilarious. I’m also drawn to Seinfeld episodes that mention or interact with real New York City stuff (the show was a big influence on my love for this town as a kid regardless of its realism or accuracy), so the fact that they’re all pumped to go to the Garden to watch the Knicks play the Bulls (and maybe see a Jordan 360 dunk!) is so very cool to me.
“The Airport” (s4 e12): This one’s great because I love the total insanity of George and Kramer driving back and forth between JFK and La Guardia airports. If you’re unfamiliar, what they’re trying to do traffic-wise, is virtually impossible, even on a good day, but it’s so hilarious with how it all plays out with Kramer going nuts trying to track down his old roommate who owes him money. I sometimes wonder about Cosmo Kramer’s life downtown in the Village before he moved to the Upper West Side. Must’ve been some seedy shit.
“The Movie” (s4 e15): Another one where the gang’s getting split up for various reasons. This one’s great because it’s filled with references to real movie theaters and comedy clubs that are LONG GONE in this town. George getting screwed over with the ticket stubs is fantastic; Elaine going nuts saving seats is hysterical; I love Kramer needing the Papaya Dog hot dog; and my skin crawls with Jerry spending a fortune on cab fare going between clubs and theaters while also dealing with Pat Buckles, the hack stand-up played by Barry Diamond.
“The Chicken Roaster” (s8 e8): Okay, I’ll toss one later-series one on here too. I think this is one of the absolute weirdest episodes the show ever produced and it’s so great. The whole idea of Jerry and Kramer changing personalities by virtue of living in each other’s apartments is just so absurd (perfect for post-Larry David Seinfeld) and I’ve always thought Seinfeld and Richards really knocked it out of the park. Jerry’s, “Oh, I’m stressed…” and Kramer’s, “That’s a shame,” absolutely slay me every single time I watch the episodes. Also, I mean, Mr. Marbles? Come on, it’s weird as fuck.
Chris:
“The Subway”(s3 e13) & “The Airport” (s4 e12): ” Before this show, there was so much about New York that just felt alien unless you’d lived in a city. What I love about Seinfeld is that it consistently found a way to relate city life to people who’d never come within spitting distance of that way of life. There’s such an elegant balance to how all the storylines fit together in these episodes, and in any other show, that would be enough. Of course, with Seinfeld, both episodes are also complete riots Do not ask me to pick one over the other. I cannot do that.
“The Marine Biologist” (s5 e14): One of the weirder things about Seinfeld fans is that there is genuinely no consensus that I can sense. Not unlike The Simpsons, there’s enough variety in the kinds of humor and structures the writers build that you can’t exactly pin down what has the broadest appeal. That being said, this and “The Contest” are the ones that I most regularly find myself talking about with strangers or new friends. I don’t think I’ve talked about an episode of a comedy program more than this one, and I still watch it and laugh. Kinda incredible.
“The Chicken Roaster” (s8 e8): An all-timer in the Seinfeld vs. Newman series, and suggests a weirder, more unhinged realm of comedy that the show could have headed in the final seasons but stuck closer to the script for better and worse. Also, my uncle’s favorite episode.
“The Bottle Deposit” (s7 e21& e22): As “The Chicken Roaster” is a classic Seinfeld vs. Newman, this is a classic in the Kramer & Newman vein, and crucially, it has to do with scheming. The key part of Kramer’s character to me is the constant scheming and hustling that keeps him barely afloat, and the vaster the view of how he thinks them up, the better. This episode is mostly about him and Newman scheming, so it’s hog heaven to me.
“The Jimmy” (s6 e19): A kind of and, yes, rather insensitive comedy that nevertheless was a substantial part of my comedy diet when I was younger. There are gags in this that wouldn’t be out of place in salad-days Farrelly Bros. movies and while I am beyond thrilled that we’ve largely moved on from this kind of stuff, I cannot help but hold a warm spot for these 24-odd minutes that still make me cackle – George jumping, my god – despite its ever-evident shortcomings and limitations.
Eric:
“The Conversion” (s5 e11): The Lativan Orthodox conversion episode. I love George-centric episodes especially when his parents disapprove of him. Then you have the kavorka adding to the mystique of Kramer.
“The Hamptons” (s5 e21): Another Georgie Boy highlight - the shrinkage. Glad this show was putting important things into the public consciousness. Then you have the stealing of the lobsters adding to the mystique of Kramer.
“The Chinese Restaurant” (s2 e11): I think this really demonstrates the thesis of the show being about nothing but so relatable. A great usage of a singular location too. I know everyone loves the "Cartwright!" lines from the legendary James Hong but I always laugh about "Mr. Cohen always here!" When I was a kid we lived near a decent sit-down Chinese place like this and my parents were "always here!" too.
“The Comeback” (s8 e13): George again. Love the Jerk Store debate in this episode. This is also the Staff Picks at Champagne Video episode where Elaine becomes interested in the mysterious Vincent who turns out to be a kid.
“The Doorman” (s6 e18): The Great Larry Miller as the doorman makes this episode. I love Larry Miller's line deliveries of all these weird pseudo-working-class platitudes. Plus, you have the invention of the Bro/Mansiere.
Steve:
“The Pen” (s3 e3): A bit of an oddball here because half the central cast is missing, but God, is this one is wall-to-wall relatable and hilarious. It kinda gets funnier with age as you watch your parents grow older and deal with all the insanity that comes with it. It builds to a great crescendo with Julia Louis Dreyfuss’ tremendous drugged-out performance. The “If you take out sleeping and eating…it’s like two days, really” quote gets a lot of play in this household around family trips.
““The Contest” (s4 e11): Yes, I’m a basic bitch, but hot damn is this episode the perfect encapsulation of what makes this show great – great scenes in Jerry’s apartment & Monk’s Diner with everybody having something fun to play, talking about sex stuff without actually being graphic, and even some great Estelle Costanza. There’s a reason Always Sunny used this episode for their Seinfeld parody, it’s kind of perfect. Also, I’ve never been able to look at Glamour magazine without thinking about George treating his body “like an amusement park.”
“The Airport” (s4 e12): Like “The Pen” this episode gets more and more relatable every year. Every time I fly I think about this episode, from Jerry and Elaine running to the gate, the Duty-Free shop song and ensuing shenanigans, and the general hell of sitting in the middle seat in coach. This show also does a great bit of elevating certain characters at the expense of others and watching Jerry delight in first class while Elaine suffers is absolute bliss. Also: “You’re a blurb!”
“The Fire” (s5 e19): Everything else on my list was a bit of a must, but this one competed with about six other episodes (curse you Top 5 concept!), but it’s another great example of everyone having fantastic business to do. George’s raging cowardice is so fucking fun to watch, followed by Jerry’s excellent take down of him at the diner, Elaine and Kramer dealing with Toby (an all-time one and done character), with Elaine’s extremely funny “Price is Right” impression and Michael Richards’ legendary “pinky toe” monologue is hard to beat.
“The Rye” (s7 e11): This is probably my favorite “later period” Seinfeld episode, and quite possibly the last truly great Seinfeld episode. It’s a tour de force from Frank and Estelle Costanza, that dinner scene with the Rosses. Just a joy to watch end-to-end. You also get the Beefarino song, another great talking about sex without really talking about it bit from Elaine, and Jerry mugging an old woman. What’s not to love? Also, Frank Costanza is a hero of mine for his anti-spoiler stance. He doesn’t care if it has nothing to do with the plot and neither do I. We both like to go in fresh!
Top 5 The Simpsons (1989 – Present) Episodes
Andrew:
“Treehouse of Horror II” (s3 e7): I know this seems like a weird one, but the fact is, it’s the first episode of the show I ever saw, so there’s no way it’s not on here. And the three segments are solid: the Monkey’s Paw, Bart having omnipotent powers like the kid in that “It’s a Good Life” episode of The Twilight Zone, and, of course, Mr. Burns doing the Frankenstein parody with Homer, which, the shot of Burns and Smithers beating Homer to death with the shovels has always stood out as one of the more cruel moments of violence on the show, and I love it for that too!
“Flaming Moe’s” (s3 e10): I’m a massive fan of Cheers (could do a top five on that show too) and so the Flaming Moe’s intro parody has always had my heart in a big, bad way. I sing it to myself constantly. “Where liquor in a mug, warms you like a hug, and happiness… is just a Flaming Moe away…” I also love Mrs. Krabappel trying to sleep with Joey Kramer of Aerosmith, Homer turning into the Phantom of the Opera at the end, and Moe’s inability to understand that Tipsy McStagger isn’t a real person.
“Marge vs the Monorail” (s4 e12): May seem like an obvious one, but sorry, nothing to be done about it because this episode is excellent. Phil Hartman’s performance as Lyle Lanley is my favorite non-McClure/non-Hutz Hartman role on the show. The song, written by Conan and Al Jean, is another one I sing constantly: “And what about us braindead slobs? // You’ll be given cushy jobs!” It’s also got one of my favorite side gags, when Leonard Nimoy is waxing poetic about the eclipse and they have the guy next to him, I think it’s Castellaneta doing the voice, just go, “Does anybody wanna switch seats?” God, that’s great.
“Cape Feare” (s5 e2): Had to get a Sideshow Bob episode on here and while I also love “Black Widower,” “Sideshow Bob Roberts,” and “Brother From Another Series”, this one takes the cake. The parody works well, the alternate opening is so funny, and the episode is filled with so many classics moments, like Homer not understanding he’s Mr. Thompson, the parade with the elephants, Bob and the rakes, Homer scaring Bart repeatedly, and, of course, Kelsey Grammer singing Gilbert and Sullivan at the end. And let’s not forget one of the all-time Wiggum lines, “Bake him away, toys!”
“Deep Space Homer” (s5 e15): I feel like this needs to be on here simply because it’s the one I’ve seen the most. For whatever reason we had this episode taped off television (we had no other eps taped) and we watched it repeatedly for a while, nearly on loop. I think about “I different kind of mathematician,” at least once a month. I also love James Taylor changing the lyrics to “Fire and Rain,” by swapping out “in pieces on the ground” for “flying safely through the air.” Also, the runner of the one NASA guy loving the Blackjack he bought slays me. “Where’d you get that?” “Sent away.” Would’ve loved to have gotten my picture taken with The Rod.
Chris:
“Brother, Can You Spare Two Dimes?”(s3 e24): My parents were insistent when I was young that I consume every piece of entertainment starring Danny DeVito and along with George Carlin and Lester Bangs, he gave me my first scraps of personality as a young man. Among them were several jokes from this heater, but I also cannot discount how this episode’s off-kilter, yet warm view of brotherly love struck me, an only child, when I was starting to wonder about how you relate to other young men your age. Any Homer’s brother episode is a good one to me.
“Rosebud”(s5 e4) /“The Springfield Files” (s8 e10): My two favorites where they take on a single source for parody and end up roping in a few more because you could never pack enough into these golden age Simpsons episodes. I was already a die-hard X-Files fan by the time I saw “The Springfield Files,” but there’s no doubt in my mind that I saw Citizen Kane so early in my life because of the quest after Bobo the Bear.
“The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson” (s9 e1): As with Seinfeld’s “The Airport” and “The Subway”, this showed me a New York City I was far more familiar with than, say, Home Alone 2: Lost in New York or Last Action Hero. My parents took me into the city once a year for my dad’s home-healthcare conference – he helped run home-nursing companies for much of his career after being a crook/political strategist and before becoming a social-work teacher. Though clearly (and wonderfully) exaggerated for comedic and dramatic effect, all the weird habits and rules of the city and the Marge and the kid stuff wrang true to me. It also looks fantastic.
“You Only Move Twice”(s8 e2): First and foremost, a great idea. What does a Bond villain do during their work day? Give that question to anyone off the street, you get nerdy nonsense. You give it to Saint John Swartzwelder and you get 25 minutes of uninterrupted comedy gold.
“22 Short Films About Springfield” (s7 e21): I can’t imagine any other show in the world throwing one up for François Girard’s superb Thirty-Two Short Films About Glenn Gould. Director Jim Reardon makes a real meal out of this and does so without losing narrative cohesiveness in a script that has a dozen or so credited writers, including Bill Oakley and Matt Groening.
Eric:
“Homer Goes to College”(s5 e3): Did you get a load of the Nerd? Always loved this one for how it subverts old college boob comedies with the dean being just a totally nice guy, for example. So many great gags throughout.
“The Springfield Files”(s8 e10): I saw this before I ever saw The X-Files and it's great. Mr. Burns being hopped up on his medical go-go juice is a great reveal. Shout-out to Moe's secret killer whale kidnapping scheme.
“You Only Move Twice” (s9 e2): This might be my actual favorite. Albert Brooks is so great as Hank Scorpio. Also, like with “Homer Goes to College,” we have a thing here where the supervillain is actually a super nice guy. Personally, right now, I'd kill for someone like Hank Scorpio to seize the East Coast.
“Homer at the Bat” (s3 e17): I told you to shave those sideburns! So many great jokes throughout this one. Great convention of having every ringer player disappear or get locked up in prison for every unsolved homicide in New York City.
“Homer's Enemy” (s8 e23): “And lobsters for dinner!” Funny how even back then they were acknowledging nobody could afford the Simpsons’ lifestyle anymore. Well, boy howdy, have we come even further. Now-a-days, Grimey would need 3 roommates in his apartment above a bowling alley.
Steve:
“Last Exit to Springfield” (s4 e17): This one is jam-packed with terrific moments and parodies. We start with probably my favorite McBain segment (“Ice to see you!”) and it gets crazier from there with great moments like Grandpa Simpsons inane story riot police, Lisa shredding Classical Gas, and Hired goons! It’s got a solid story idea, pitting Homer and Mr. Burns against each other in a labor dispute and allows for some of the best movie references the show has ever done: The Godfather Part II, Batman (’66 and ’89!), Yellow Submarine, and How the Grinch Stole Christmas. Also, if I think about “Lisa needs Braces…Dental Plaaaan” long enough I might actually make myself go insane.
“Homer Goes to College” (s5 e3): A home run derby of an episode. I love how they found a way to thread the needle of parodying 80’s college comedies through a 90’s lens while coming up with so many terrific nerd jokes and really underlining how grossly incompetent Homer is at his life-or-death job. I’d pay money for a full-length version “The School of Hard Knockers” starring Corey Masterson. Also, the cinder block joke is 4 seconds long and so, so funny.
“Treehouse of Horror V” (s6 e6): I needed to put a Treehouse on here and this is my absolute favorite. It’s got a pitch-perfect parody of one of my favorite movies, The Shining, and does it all in like 8 minutes? How do you even do that? All three segments are superb and are also filled with weird, disturbing and violent turns that are equally hilarious. Skinner and Krabappel chasing Bart, Lisa and Milhouse at the end of "Nightmare Cafeteria" is kind of legitimately scary, which is an amazing feat.
“Lisa the Vegetarian” (s7 e3): A personal favorite. Lisa is under-appreciated as a comedy vehicle, and with her as the focus and straight person you can really go off the rails pretty quickly with the rest of the cast. It’s a great episode about school and how that conformity will try to grind you down, crystalized with the “Independent Thought Alarm” joke. Also: “Yes, I’m gonna marry a carrot.” “She admitted it!” is my elementary school experience perfectly realized.
“A Milhouse Divided” (s8 e6): As a bespectacled, nerdy, child of divorce, I gotta give it up for this one. Each act has so many movements from the dinner party itself with the tragically hilarious Pictionary game, to Kirk Vanhouten’s swinging single adventures (“There’s a possum in the pool”) vs. emancipated and loving it Louann, all the way through Homer and Marge’s second marriage ceremony complete with Kirk’s rendition of “Can I Borrow a Feeling.” I love how this episode pushes away from the Simpsons themselves but knows how to find a way to make this a statement about Marge and Homer that actually lands the plane after all the wackiness with Kirk and Louann. Also, Kirk getting fired from the cracker factory might be one of my favorite scenes of all time.
AUGUST SCHEDULE
Say what? The schedule in advance?! It's the least we could do! By subscribing to this newsletter, you get a sneak peek at what we're putting this month
August 5th – Harry and the Hendersons: Live in Seattle
August 12th – The Goonies: Live in Portland
August 19th – The Quantum of Solace: Live in Oxford
August 26th – Pretty Woman: Live in Boston, Featuring the Season 15 Trailer Game Finale!
Patreon Episodes:
August 7th – We Love Movies: Casino Royale (2006)
August 8th – Once in a Lifetime: The Client List (2010)
August 14th – MELR0210: 90210: “Senior Poll (s3, e25) Melrose Place: “And Justice for None” (s3, e10)
August 21st – Animation Damnation: Invader Zim: “The Nightmare Begins” (s1, e1)
August 28th – The Gleep Glossary: Darth Maul
August 29th – The Nexus: TOSTAS: “The Time Trap” (s1, 12), TNG: “Half a Life” (s4, e22)
PATREON RSS BUG
If you’re having trouble with the RSS feed updating or episodes not appearing in your app, Patreon has acknowledged this bug and they have a fix: "Try unsubscribing and re-subscribing via your app by re-entering the unique RSS feed you were given and is on our Overview section of the Creator page. Or try using a different podcast app or RSS feed reader."
Please consult this page and contact Patreon Support if the problem persists. We apologize for any inconvenience you’ve experienced on Patreon and truly appreciate your continued support!
UPCOMING NEWS AND PROMOTION

On Screen Live is currently on a summer hiatus, but there’s so much to look back and enjoy, including our finale, when Eric broadcasted live from Sin City! Subscribe on our YouTube Channel to never miss a broadcast!
We also have all officially sanctioned VHS Trailer Game episodes up to this point. Eric has also put out great clip packages like WTF Exorcism with Marc Merrin, Dr. Loomis is the Worst Doctor, Dilf Den, George Bailey as Michael Meyers, John Wick-Mentary, Toby Jones in Bee Movie, Sausage Claus, David! Muppet Hitchcock Presents, and many more! You can also watch the entirety of our Witchboard episode! Complete with visual gags (most of which are almost funny.). You'll find all sorts of cool shit like Mailbags, VHS Trailer Games, Full Episodes like Rampage (2018), Any Which Way You Can, Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Saw III. Like we said above these are great for sharing and introducing folks to the show. There's so much content there we can't list it all here. Just go and subscribe already!
TJ Hooker…Is back! Join Eric and Ben as TJ gets entangled in a romantic adventure with Miguel Ferrer (I hope they kiss)! Listen here!

Please note that from now until at least the end of 2025, ALL PROFITS from our merch store store will be going directly to the Center for Reproductive rights! Shit’s bad out there and we know it’s likely to get worse and we want to do something, SO, If you're a fan of the show and a fan of looking sharp, you should check out our merch on our new and improved merch store on Dashery! We have some hot off the presses designs by Felipe Sobreiro such as the Superman II Live Show, Too Old For This Shit and Sheenpril Logos as well as A Certain Fat Director enjoying his favorite film filter of all time! We also have "The DILF Den", and a "Crispy Critters" design from friend of the show, Nathan Hamill! There’s a ton of other great designs like The VHS Trailer Game Logo, Demon-o's Pizza, Egg Lawyer, The Order of the Boop, The Kornkast design and many more, with more to come!
That's going to do it for this month's Dispatch! Enjoy this banger of a month and all the rockin’ Patreon shows and fun live episodes coming out! See you in Season (Sweet) 16!
Take it easy,
Andrew, Chris, Eric, and Steve
We Hate Movies
Comments
It's funny but you guys pretty much covered ALL of my favorite Seinfeld episodes EXCEPT two: The Note (Season 3, Episode 1) - This is the one where both Jerry and George see a masseuse, "It moved...." But the FUNNIEST image has to be his mother telling "Run, Billy, RUN!" towards the end! 😆 The Opposite (Season 5 Finale) - SUCH an underrated episode as we get to enjoy George's luck shift suddenly for a change. 😀 Also Kramer's coffee table book appearance on Regis & Kathy Lee is a highlight.....
Geoff Gershon
2025-08-26 23:40:30 +0000 UTCGonna preempt Andrew and say that the 4k for Total Recall looks unbelievable
Tim O'
2025-08-02 00:50:35 +0000 UTCHey, you're welcome! Glad there are folks that are happy it got picked, haha.
Busiris
2025-08-01 18:06:51 +0000 UTChave fun the PNW, say hi busiris and thank him for his duffel bag. ep of the year so far
Brandon
2025-08-01 02:12:08 +0000 UTC