by Jarrod | Jun 28, 2016 | ANTI-MONITOR, ANTI-MONITOR PODCAST
By Matt Fleming and Jarrod Jones. This is the ANTI-MONITOR podcast, where we’re the Juggernau–okay, we’ll shut right the hell up. This week, Jarrod and Bird dust off an episode recorded six weeks ago, timed for the release of ‘X-Men:...
by Jarrod | Jun 28, 2016 | TUBE ROCKET
Season One, Episode Eight — “The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti” By Brandy Dykhuizen. Chrissy’s got his sad pants on. Everyone’s trying to break his balls. Will no one understand the plight of the artist? He reaches out to his girl, and she only berates him for...
by Jarrod | Jun 28, 2016 | TUBE ROCKET
Season Six, Episode Ten — “The Winds of Winter” By Jarrod Jones. Perhaps the most shocking twist that occurred during Game of Thrones’ sixth season finale was the revelation that three players have been concealing the mutant power of...
by Jarrod | Jun 28, 2016 | HEY, KIDS! COMICS!
by Brandy Dykhuizen. In the Kindts’ otherworldly Poirot/Cousteau hybrid, Dept. H #3 provides Mia with a moment to take a deep breath and recalibrate her countless grinding gears. A childhood at sea taught her how to test the extreme limits of her capabilities, at the...
by Jarrod | Jun 28, 2016 | HEY, KIDS! COMICS!
by Brandy Dykhuizen. A story of atonement set against a backdrop of nightmares and supernatural forces, Thousand Faces follows a 19th Century doctor from London as he sets off slogging across the heated lonely plains of South Dakota. In a brutal land known to be...
by Jarrod | Jun 24, 2016 | ANTI-MONITOR
By Kyle G. King. On Independence Day 1996, the world finally learned it was not alone in the universe. You know. Fictionally. Roland Emmerich’s Independence Day amassed an audience with its powerful gravitational pull while broadening the scope of what a summer...
by Jarrod | Jun 24, 2016 | HEY, KIDS! COMICS!
by Arpad Okay. Black Hammer is Jeff Lemire come full circle. His first major series (from nearly a decade ago) was a dark portrait of rural life, and ever since isolation has been a recurring theme in much of his work. Lemire’s Stephen King-ly lean towards small towns...