Pop Culture Graveyard Hollis James and Dave Horowitz
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- TV & Film
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Pop Culture Graveyard is a podcast hosted by Hollis James and Dave Horowitz, two friends who excitedly discuss their favorite movies, TV and other entertainment delights. Hollis watches everything a million times. Dave usually watches things only once. New episodes drop every Friday! Join our Patreon for early access to episodes!
https://patreon.com/popculturegraveyard
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"We're just real Topeka people, man."
Hollis and Dave straighten their hair with shaving cream, go on tour with Stillwater, and pass out high on quaaludes while paying tribute to the Cameron Crowe rock-epic Almost Famous (2000).
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"I wish I could go back to not selling books."
Hollis and Dave pay tribute to one of the most brilliant films of the past five years, American Fiction (2023).
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"I'm just here for the gasoline."
Hollis and Dave visit a much simpler world... the vast wasteland of a post-apocalyptic landscape populated by gangs of cutthroat marauders hellbent on destruction, in George Miller's The Road Warrior (1981).
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"Serrano's Got The Disks!"
Hollis and Dave run afoul of bounty hunters, crime bosses, mafia accountants, and special agent Alonzo Mosely of the FBI, in the 1988 action-frenemy-comedy Midnight Run!
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"Be a lot cooler if you did..."
Hollis and Dave attend a beer bust out at the moontower with the coolest senior class ever in Richard Linklater's Dazed and Confused (1993).
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Ep 37: "Why can't we all not fit in together?"
Hollis and Dave take on SkullFlower and Mollycoddle at the greatest high school Battle of the Bands ever in Metal Lords (2022). GLHS is lit!
Customer Reviews
Insightful, witty, and great taste.
These two offer really sharp insights into classic entertainment. They’re extremely knowledgeable, and bring in different perspectives to shed light on favorite cultural moments. They have great chemistry as hosts, and they bring a great sense humor to in depth commentary and criticism. Really excited for more episodes!
Great show
Dave, Hollis,
Great episode. I think you miss one amazing allegory, which is the potential unification of the gangs-it feels like an odd retelling of black power from the 60s/70s…etc.
Like what sort of alternative universe was not realized that instead cascaded into gang to gang violence.
Xo,
Conrad