Relatively Terrible

Uploads of Fun

Relatively Terrible is the Uploads of Fun family questioning today's culture with humor and just enough dysfunction to feel relatable.

  1. 3 DAYS AGO

    Why Ozzy’s 1991 Comeback Still Hits Hard

    Watch The Video Version Here Is No More Tears Ozzy Osbourne’s peak, or just the best-looking chapter in a long legend? We don’t tiptoe around it. One of us calls it his peak album with zero hesitation, another hears a dated 90s sheen, and the rest of us bounce between admiration, annoyance, and that reluctant “fine, the production is great” respect that only a big rock record can force out of you. We dig into the 1991 context, the jump from earlier eras into the Zakk Wylde lineup, and why the guitar tone and pinch harmonics feel like their own character. We also get into the details that actually shape how a listener experiences the record: synths that either elevate the drama or instantly timestamp it, riffs that stand out versus riffs that blur together, and Ozzy’s unmistakable voice doing the heavy lifting even when we disagree on the songs. If you care about heavy metal production, classic rock songwriting, or what makes a track “sing-along metal,” there’s plenty to chew on. The conversation gets sharper when we hit lyrics and meaning. “Mr. Tinkertrain” sparks real pushback, “Mama, I’m Coming Home” gets misread in a way that makes everyone stop and reassess, and we talk about how radio overplay can permanently attach music to childhood memories, dentist offices, and retail jobs. Then we let it all explode in our “dumb hill” segment, including a full-on Ozzy versus Metallica Black Album argument, plus what we’d cut, fix, or shamelessly merch if we owned the catalog. If you’ve got a take on No More Tears, we want it. Subscribe, share this with the friend who always says “Ozzy is overrated,” and leave a review with your verdict: peak album, flawed classic, or total skip? Fighting The Suck Since ©2026 Relatively Terrible

    39 min
  2. 18 MAY

    Daredevil Born Again Season 1 Verdict

    Watch The Video Version Here. Daredevil is back, and the first thing we notice is the impact: tighter filmmaking, nastier fights, and a street-level Marvel tone that doesn’t flinch. We ask the question people keep dodging, though: is Daredevil: Born Again Season 1 a real MCU comeback, or is it just an aggressively angry spinoff with better lighting and a whole lot of concussions? From the jump, we’re weighing it against the Netflix legacy and the uneven track record of Disney Plus Marvel shows.  We get into what worked, what annoyed us, and what made zero sense. Matt Murdock remains an all-time compelling superhero lead, and Charlie Cox sells the character’s calm decency even when the action is brutally physical. We also unpack the details that make the show feel “real” for Marvel: sound design that highlights his senses, violence that has consequences, and a story that stays human-scaled instead of defaulting to aliens and sky beams. Then we argue about the problem baked into the MCU timeline: if this is New York after No Way Home, where is Spider-Man, and why does it feel like nobody else is on call?  Wilson Fisk and Vanessa Fisk get their own spotlight because their relationship is its own kind of horror story. We talk manipulation, loyalty, trauma, and the way “vigilante” becomes a label that gets weaponized. We also hit pacing, including the debated middle stretch, and we finish with our favorite part of any family podcast: defending one ridiculous take each before we rate the season on our Relatively Terrible scale.  If you’re watching Daredevil: Born Again, tell us your hottest take and whether you’d fix the middle. Subscribe for more, share this with a Marvel friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Fighting The Suck Since ©2026 Relatively Terrible

    39 min
  3. 11 MAY

    Reviewing Bilmuri’s New Album Kinda Hard With Comedy And Brutal Honesty

    Watch The Video Version Here. A 35-minute album called Kinda Hard shouldn’t trigger a full-on debate about the future of heavy music, but here we are. We come in hot on Bill Murray’s latest release and immediately start swinging at the biggest question: is this real innovation in modern rock and metalcore, or just a perfectly executed bit? From production choices and super-clean vocals to riffs that blur together and choruses that refuse to leave your brain, we break down what works, what repeats, and what makes us laugh, squint, or both. We talk about the band’s genre blend of metalcore, pop-metal hooks, country elements, and that sax moment that turns heads. We also get honest about why the humor matters: sometimes a dumb joke is the door that lets real breakup lyrics and emotional sincerity walk in without feeling too exposed. Then we go bigger than the tracklist. We dig into why crowds seem hungry for music that builds community again, where people sing together and stop treating everything like a political litmus test. We pitch fixes (more weirdness, more orchestral textures, rearranged breakdowns) and we pitch cash-ins (limited city hats, plushie merch, beard oil, protein flavors), then we rate the album on our Relatively Terrible scale. We close with what was good this week, from Theo Von’s surprisingly vulnerable advice clip to Daredevil: Born Again, Deep Purple coming to Memphis, and a Final Fantasy VII Remake moment that made us do a double take. If you’ve listened to Kinda Hard, we want your verdict. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves loud music, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What’s the best track on the album, and what’s your hottest take? Fighting The Suck Since ©2026 Relatively Terrible

    38 min
  4. 4 MAY

    Bob Odenkirk’s Small-Town Action Mystery "NORMAL" Put To The Test!

    Watch The Video Version Here. Normal opens with a simple promise: a quiet town, a steady lawman, and a plan to leave everything exactly as he found it. Then the movie gleefully breaks that promise with corrupt locals, hidden money, and violence that is so over-the-top it starts to feel like a dark joke you cannot unsee. We dig into why Bob Odenkirk keeps working as a late-career action lead, and whether Normal is a smart genre cocktail or just another excuse to watch him power-walk through danger. We get spoiler-heavy as we debate the best parts and the biggest faceplants: Henry Winkler’s unforgettable scenes, the town’s “something is off” energy, the bank and vault chaos, and the plot mechanics that seem like they are setting up a payoff before swerving away. We also unpack the moment that drives us the most insane, the champagne cork sequence, and why that kind of randomness can drain tension even when the gore is technically “fun.” If you enjoy movie reviews that mix genuine praise with picky storytelling critique, you’ll feel right at home. Then we zoom out into the bigger question: why are we, as a culture, so hooked on middle-aged damaged action heroes and small-town corruption mysteries right now? We connect Normal to Nobody, John Wick, Better Call Saul, and the broader trend of finally letting older actors be the main event. We end by pitching how we would fix the third act, how we would make the town even weirder, and what Normal, Minnesota merch we would actually wear. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves action-thrillers, and leave a review with your take: did Normal stick the landing for you? Fighting The Suck Since ©2026 Relatively Terrible

    34 min
  5. 27 APR

    Pixar Hot Takes

    Watch The Video Version Here. Pixar used to feel like a sure bet: the kind of animated movie you see opening weekend without checking a trailer, because you trust the storytelling. Lately, that trust feels shakier and we’re not quiet about it. We go from real-life “what was terrible” chaos (including the special misery of TCAP testing logistics and a household bug) straight into a no-filter family debate about what Pixar still does well and what it’s lost. We each throw our favorite Pixar movies on the table and defend them like it’s court: Up for its message and emotional punch, Toy Story 3 for the action and the ending that felt final, Monsters Inc for peak characters and heart, and Coco for its twists, music, and bold cultural storytelling around family and death. Then we pivot to underrated picks like Monsters University and Onward, plus the small details Pixar fans love, from Easter eggs to the feeling of a shared Pixar universe. The real fireworks start when we talk sequels. How soon is too soon, how late is too late, and when does “continuing the story” turn into a cash grab? That quickly becomes a Toy Story argument, complete with hot takes on Toy Story 2 vs Toy Story 4, side quests into Cars and Inside Out, and a bigger question about whether Pixar still leads the animation world compared with studios like Sony, DreamWorks, and Illumination. We even read brutal one-star reviews of beloved movies, because sometimes the internet is the most unhinged focus group you’ll ever meet. If you love Pixar movies, hate Pixar movies, or just miss the era when Disney Pixar felt unstoppable, hit play and come argue with us. Subscribe, share with a friend who has a spicy Toy Story ranking, and leave a review telling us your most unpopular Pixar opinion. Fighting The Suck Since ©2026 Relatively Terrible

    48 min
  6. 13 APR

    Our Family Review Albums Outside Our Taste

    Watch The Video Version Here. We wanted to know if our strongest music opinions are real or just comfortable, so we forced a test: each of us picked an album for someone else that they would never choose on their own. Then we listened all the way through and came back with ratings, a marketing pitch, and the kind of blunt honesty you only get from people who actually know each other. If you like music review podcasts that talk craft, lyrics, and culture without pretending every take is “nuanced,” you’ll feel right at home. Josh ends up stuck with Jelly Roll’s “Self Medicated” and breaks down why the production can’t save what feels like a spiral of drugs, sex, and despair. Rachel lands on Babymetal’s “Metal Forth” and explains why the metal-pop-anime blend is weirdly close to working, even when the vocals and language barrier make it hard to connect. Calvin goes off on Chappell Roan’s “The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest Princess,” which opens a bigger argument about explicit lyrics, shock value, and what counts as meaningful songwriting. Jackson takes on Lil Wayne’s “Tha Carter VI” and questions cohesion, repetition, and how overproduction can flatten a full album into background noise. From there we zoom out to the streaming era: rage-based algorithms, why pop often gets a pass, why metal gets judged faster, and how audiences can mistake catchy for good. We wrap with a little palate cleanser of what’s actually been good lately, from Dragon Con plans to Gravity Falls and new books. If you enjoyed the chaos, subscribe, share this with a friend who argues about music, and leave a review with your most unpopular album opinion. Fighting The Suck Since ©2026 Relatively Terrible

    34 min
  7. 6 APR

    Rapid-Fire Family Favorites

    Watch The Video Version Here. The fastest way to learn who someone is? Put them on the spot with “favorite” questions and let the arguing begin. We open with what felt truly terrible this week, including our reaction to the live-action Moana trailer and an all-too-real dentist rant, then we hit the gas on a rapid-fire round that turns into a full personality reveal. We trade picks for favorite movies, foods, and songs, bouncing from The Dark Knight to Back To The Future, from fried chicken and potatoes to anything Mexican, and from Alice Cooper to Underoath with a surprise shout for the Wallace & Gromit theme. Along the way, we get into holiday loyalty, boredom habits, and the kind of misheard lyrics debate that only happens when you’ve known each other forever. If you love funny conversation podcasts, sibling-style roasting, and pop culture opinions with zero filter, this one is built for you. Then we go deeper without getting sappy: favorite family memories, Universal Studios nostalgia, inside jokes that never die, the best things we’ve filmed together, and the weird food combos we can’t explain but still stand by. We wrap by sharing what we actually like about ourselves and end on a “not so terrible” win from the week. Subscribe for more Relatively Terrible, share this with someone who’d argue their favorites loudly, and leave a review if you laughed. What’s your all-time favorite movie or your weirdest food combo? Fighting The Suck Since ©2026 Relatively Terrible

    18 min

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Relatively Terrible is the Uploads of Fun family questioning today's culture with humor and just enough dysfunction to feel relatable.