It’s been nearly twenty years ago since “Mystery Science Theater 3000” graced the television airwaves and now it’s back!
“Green Acres is the place to be! Farm living is the life for me!” Thus begins what is arguably one of the most recognizable theme songs in television history (written…
A guitar playing elephant and an ant worry that their romance is doomed, but somehow love finds a way in this month’s Way Out Junk!
Way back in 2009, back when President Obama still had that new car smell, I had started a column here called “Way Out Wednesday”. It featured odd albums from my…
Well, it’s that time of year again. The good folks at Shout! Factory are blessing us with yet another volume of everybody’s favorite ”cowtown puppet show” with Mystery Science Theater…
Tony Redman reviews Shout! Factory’s new release “The Marx Brothers TV Collection”, a compilation of shows and clips featuring Groucho and company.
Legions of Bat-fans can now rejoice because, after years of wrangling between studios, individuals, and estates of individuals, the seemingly impossible has happened: the 1966 Batman television show will finally…
In the new Mystery Science Theater 3000 boxset you’ll find a teensploitation flick, a sword and sandal classic, a loose head on the loose movie, and one of the most requested MST3K episodes. Read all about it here!
Tony Redman reviews the new Blu-Ray release of Mystery Science Theater 3000’s foray onto the big screen.
Commies, slimy subterraneans, severely overgrown teenagers, and a giant mantis (deadly, of course) are on the menu for the newest MST3K boxset!
Remember when Doctor Who had a robotic dog that was so popular that he even spun off into his own show? Tony Redman reviews “K-9: The Complete Series”.
What’s scarier: death rays, mole people, two-headed dragons, or Kathy Ireland’s voice? Find out as Tony Redman reviews the latest Mystery Science Theater boxset.
Tony Redman reviews Mystery Science Theater 3000, Vol. XXV. You and your DVD player are doomed!!
Tony Redman reviews this 1983 classic from the original Blue Man Group. Will he think it’s the Smurfiest, or will it make him want to Smurf?
Discover the show that got mild-mannered Tony Redman all MSTie eyed, as he reviews “Mystery Science Theater 3000 Vol. XXIV”!
Tony Redman reviews the new “Lancelot Link: Secret Chimp” boxset. (Insert ape-related pun here.)
Tony Redman showcases this crazy and charming Off-Broadway musical from 1996, “Zombies from the Beyond,” in this installment of “Way Out Wednesday!:”
Popdose and Shout! Factory are giving you a chance to win the newest MST3K DVD box set!
Why is this crudely drawn duck inflating his head with a tire pump? He’s celebrating the return of “Way Out Wednesday”!
What do secret agents, Fu Manchu, Star Trek parodies and lemurs have in common? They’re all part of the DVD box set “Mystery Science Theater 3000, Vol XXIII.” See what Tony Redman has to say about it in his review!
Way Out Wednesday returns with Tony Redman bringing Dw. Dunphy in for Listening To Records!
Japanese man-monkeys, brute men, and girl gangs abound on the Satellite of Love as Tony Redman reviews “Mystery Science Theater 3000, Vol. XXII”
Can a male harmony group that was snuffed out mid-coda come back to Earth and make the jump to movies?
Tony Redman reviews the latest Mystery Science Theater 3000 release: “Manos” the Hands of Fate!
As your “Hey, look! Muppets!!” correspondent, I thought I’d mention that OK Go premiered a video for their version of the Muppet Show theme song from The Green Album, and…
Tony Redman reviews the latest Mystery Science Theater 3000 box set, with all five Gamera the flying turtle episodes!
Joe Dante, Guillermo Del Toro, Roger Corman and more share some of their favorite movie trailers in “Trailers from Hell, Vol. 2,” and Tony Redman is there with a review.
Tony Redman reviews the latest releases from Shout! Factory’s Mystery Science Theater 3000 Collection: “Hamlet” and “Gunslinger.”
Way Out Wednesday returns for a spell with a mixtape of songs commemorating the Scripps National Spelling Bee!
What happens when you combine Dixieland music with popular songs from the ’70s? You get “The Next Hundred Years” by the Ragtimers, this week’s album featured on “Way Out Wednesday.”