Creation Entertainment just announced that Richard Speight, Jr. will be joining Briana Buckmaster as host of the Thursday night PJ Party at the Supernatural convention in Dallas, TX. The PJ Party is typically co-hosted by Buckmaster and Kim Rhodes, but with Rhodes being unable to attend the convention due to scheduling conflicts, an amazing new pajama-wearing duo has come about!
The PJ Party is always full of innuendo, shenanigans, raucous laughter, and games. We can guarantee this one will be no different. As Kim and Bri like to say, the PJ party conversations always lead back to butt stuff… well, in this case it is all about Dick!
Picture by Kelsi Sickman, Staff Photographer
Buy tickets for what will inevitably be one of the most hilarious nights of your life. Dick and Bri’s PJ Party is on Thursday, June 20 at #SPNDallas.
Yesterday, CBS announced three new cast members for the new Star Trek series.
Alison Pill (American Horror Story, Scott Pilgrim), Harry Treadaway (Penny Dreadful) and Isa Briones (Takers) are joining Patrick Stewart, Santiago Cabrera, Evan Evagora and Michelle Hurd.
The plot and the name of the show are still unknown but it will be centered on Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) last seen in Star Trek Nemesis.
Broadway’s musical comedy, The Prom, has been nominated for three Drama League Awards. They include ‘Outstanding Production of a Musical’ and ‘Distinguished Performance’ by Brooks Ashmanskas who plays the character Barry Glickman, and Beth Leavel who stars as Dee Dee Allen.
This will be the Drama League Awards’ 85th year, making it the oldest theatrical honors in America. The ceremony will take place on May 17 in NYC.
You can take a look at all of the categories and nominees here!
Great news for those planning on attending the upcoming Briana Buckmaster, Billy Moran, Paul Carella, and Jason Manns show at Rockwood Music Hall in New York City on July 20 — there will be BRUNCH!
On Sunday, July 21, fans can attend an exclusive brunch date with Buckmaster, Moran, Carella, and Manns for food, conversation, photos, and autographs!
Purchase tickets here, and act quickly before they sell out! Tickets for the actual concert on July 20 are not yet on sale.
Ray Fisher, who plays Victor Stone/Cyborg in Justice League, came face-to-face with his bionic double at Madame Tussauds Orlando. The 3-D printed figure is part of an exciting experience called “Justice League: A Call for Heroes” that showcases wax figures of fan favorites such as Jason Momoa’s Aquaman, Ezra Miller’s The Flash, Gal Gadot’s Wonder Woman, and more.
Fisher tweeted out his excitement about the addition of his character on April 12th:
“Justice League: A Call for Heroes” debuted exclusively inside Madame Tussauds Orlando and Sydney last year and continues to offer an unrivaled experience for fans of the iconic DC Super Heroes. The experience features special effects that include a series of hands-on, interactive missions and a larger-than-life-set where fans can become the stars of their favorite stories.
Go to Madame Tussauds’ website here to learn more about purchasing tickets.
At SeaWorld Orlando’s Inside Look, guests that visit on May 11, 12, 18, and 19 can go behind the scenes, hear and see firsthand what goes into providing world-class animal care from the people who do it every day. This special event will feature 6 unique, entirely behind-the-scenes locations, 5 of which have never been accessible to guests before this event -– not even through SeaWorld Orlando’s exclusive VIP tour programs!
On May 11-12, guests can hear SeaWorld’s Jon Peterson discuss field-based rescue operations. Peterson’s leadership expertise in animal care, transport, and rescue is highly regarded worldwide among the animal rescue and rehabilitation community.
On May 18-19, OCEARCH Founding Chairman and Expedition Leader Chris Fischer will present exciting research on tracking and biological studies of keystone marine species such as great white sharks. The global reach of OCEARCH and regional collaboration with researchers is changing the conversation about sharks for the better and is also inspiring future generations of explorers, scientists, and stewards of the ocean.
The locations for SeaWorld Orlando’s Inside Look in May are the SeaWorld Rescue Center, the Dolphin Theater, Antarctica: Empire of the Penguin, Shark Encounter, Birds of Prey Rescue Center, and Shamu Stadium. The best way to enjoy these exciting attractions is with a SeaWorld Annual Pass that starts as a low as $6.99/month plus $50 down payment, taxes, and service fee.
Gifts for the Geek has announced via Twitter the release of a vinyl album from Jason Manns! The album will be available exclusively at Hub Productions’ All Hell Breaks Loose 10 in Melbourne Australia this May. Get your tickets and up to date information for AHBL 10 here.
Something tells me Aussie fans are going to be getting a lot of requests to ship some stateside but if you want to get your hands on your own, there is still time to catch a flight. Who knows, maybe you can grab an album and an autograph from the Mann himself! See what I did there…
Get your boogie on with Oogie this Halloween season. Disneyland Resort is bringing a new all-ages event to Disney California Adventure: the Oogie Boogie Bash – A Disney Halloween Party. This separate-ticket party gives guests access to multiple new experiences that are fun for the whole family, from the new World of Color spectacular — Villainous! — to an interactive Descendants-inspired dance party, a stage show with Mickey Mouse, and a mysterious Disney villains walk-through experience.
Image courtesy of Disney.
Celebrate Halloween at the “Oogie Boogie Bash – A Disney Halloween Party” September 6 through October 31.
Disneyland Resort Annual Passholders, Disney Vacation Club members, and Disney Visa card holders can start purchasing tickets April 23, 2019.
The general public can start purchasing tickets April 30, 2019.
For more information on events and tickets, visit Disneyland’s Halloween Party website here.
Image courtesy of Brad Jones/The Cinema Snob on YouTube.
Brad Jones has been playing the character of The Cinema Snob on YouTube for years. Posing as this haughty and downright, and well, snobby, film critic, Brad reviews out-there and niche films you may or may not have heard of. Humorous and informative, Brad’s channel has grown, and he has solidified himself as a staple of YouTube.
Recently, we had the pleasure of asking Brad about his work.
Nerds and Beyond: For those unfamiliar with you, can you briefly describe the content on your channel?
Brad Jones: We have a little bit for all kinds of movie lovers. Our main show The Cinema Snob is a video riff show on everything from old exploitation films to crazy forgotten Hollywood movies. We have a show about weird food and drinks called Brad Tries, plus a current movie review show Midnight Screenings as well as original movies of our own.
Nerds and Beyond: What are some of your favorite videos you’ve done and why?
Brad: I love being able to do my micro-budgeted movies. I’ve been writing and producing my own movies for about 20 years now. I did a dark comedy called The Hooker with a Heart of Gold about a hooker with a literal heart of gold, plus recently a dramedy called Disco about three sisters having a night in a discotheque. Doing things like The Cinema Snob and all the movie reviews makes it possible for me to keep doing my own indie flicks.
Nerds and Beyond: What are some of your favorite movies of all time?
Brad: My go to favorite movies are typically Caligula, The Toxic Avenger, The Great Race, Saturday Night Fever, Batman, The Hollywood Knights, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Blue Velvet, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, Dumb and Dumber.
Nerds and Beyond: If someone was brand new to your channel, what 3 videos would you recommend to them to start with?
Brad: Some good places to start would be The Cinema Snob episodes on Ms. Velma’s Christmas and Old Fashioned, and definitely check out our animated series Lloyd, about a private detective Siamese cat.
Nerds and Beyond: How did your Midnight Screenings series come about?
Brad: It came about pretty organically. They did a midnight release of Thor, so I thought it’d be cool to see it at midnight and then review it from the car after. Then the following week they showed more new movies at midnight, so we went to those, too. Then they did that for every movie that summer. It became a summertime series that we did, and in 2013, movie theaters started showing early screenings for movies every week of the year. They don’t do it at midnights anymore, so even though the name of the show doesn’t make much sense anymore, we love doing the show and talking about new movies. We’ve even turned it into a livestream series where people can watch our reviews of these movies live on our channel.
Nerds and Beyond: What is your favorite part about making appearances at comic conventions?
Brad: Getting to talk with fans about movies, as well as getting to know them and finding out where they’re from and how far they’ve traveled. We also love going to the local restaurants around the area as well and trying out new things that we don’t have in our town.
Nerds and Beyond: We here at Nerds and Beyond love our dad jokes. What’s your favorite dad joke?
Brad: I guess I’m partial to “Two peanuts were walking down the street. One was a salted.”
Author’s Note: I highly recommend Brad’s original movie Jesus, Bro!, available on the website linked below. It is one of my personal favorite movies.
The Saturday Night Special. Not that one at the bar (although that one’s good, too.) No, this particular Saturday Night Special is an unrivaled, incomparable concert that can only be experienced at a Creation Entertainment Supernatural Convention. If it had to be described using a single word, only one simple adjective comes to mind on first instinct … special (I know, I know, give me chance.)
SNS is spearheaded by LA indie rock band Louden Swain, which is impeccably comprised of singer/songwriter Rob Benedict (Chuck Shurley/God on Supernatural), guitarist/songwriter Billy Moran, drummer Stephen Norton, and bassist Michael Borja. Now, the band playing their originals is and always will be a treat in and of itself, but logistically what makes this a Saturday Night Special versus a Louden Swain concert are the friends that weave into the night alongside them. Familiar faces emerge from the black curtains backdropping the stage to join the band, covering a number of their own favorite songs with our supreme four rocking out along beside them. But this isn’t about logistics, this is about the magic of this show — what happens when courage, vulnerability, genius, talent, love, and respect all join together and blossom into the palpable vivacity that is all but impossible to convey to someone who’s simply never seen it. That’s what this is about.
Whether you’re in either of the pit sections at the sides of the stage or watching from your seat, the overall thrills and sentiments of the night will not surpass you. Not wanting to sound cliche — but also not caring if it is — from the moment the band slips out from behind the curtains to the final bow, the emotions swirling around the room from performers and fans alike has the power to ground you in the now. Worries of what’s to come and what has passed slip away with each beat of the drum, leaving you thriving in the aura and the emotion, taking in every note and every lyric, one’s familiarity with the songs irrelevant to the spell they cast. Whether it’s when the crowd hums along to the soul-awakening cover of “Hallelujah” with The Station Breaks (Rob Benedict, Billy Moran, and Jason Manns) or the excitable, energetic “Mamma’s Jam” as Benedict and Moran take their guitars on the run while friends keep the party alive onstage screaming and cheering, at one point in that two hours something will hit you, giving pause to the noise in your brain and trapping you in the moment.
The sense of togetherness and family saturating the room is only heightened by the tangible trust between both the performers with one another and the spectators stretching from wall-to-wall before them. Those who have been around through the years know that that constancy has bore a flourishing of comfort and ease in many performers once too demure to share their talents with an audience. Albums have been born from this little show that could, like Briana Buckmaster’s Begin and Gil McKinney’s How Was I to Know. One could remember a time when Jensen Ackles shared his musical inclinations in a moment of vulnerability to a small crowd after a convention; that same Jensen Ackles now commands the stage on those rare opportunities he can join the show, with an upcoming album to boot. It’s been a gift to watch these talents emerge from their own shrouds of doubt and bestow their artistries with their friends and the fans that they’ve come to feel confident and safe with.
But that calm and safeguarding certainty isn’t solitary to the performers, it extends to the sea of faces surrounding them. This has always felt different than any other concert — quieter, less coordinated, less choreographed. Not that there’s anything wrong with those things, but the lax, creatively free environment only facilitates more raw emotion, more sincerity, and an inimitable veracity. It’s easy to feel the passion and the respect radiating off of each and every person in the space. Being in that room, lit with waving lights as the band performs the transcendent, poignant ballad “She Waits,” there’s no escape from the solidarity you feel as Rob Benedict belts out that chorus. You feel the vehemence in his voice and the blinding passion, all of which can be attributed to his ardor and the trust he shares with each and every person surrounding him. As he looks out across the crowd, taking in each glowing beacon representing each filled seat and space as they sway to the slow rhythm, it’s apparent in his expression that the moment is never, and will never be, lost on him. This pause gives break to the elapse of time, leaving an opening to breathe it in, and it will overcome you if you allow it to. Don’t let it pass you by.
And meanwhile the house is empty
The floors lay, naked and weary
The walls, barely hanging on
Carry on
And she, waits for you.
As I said before, SNS is … special. It’s uniting, strengthening, and inspiring — it’s a show that leaves you different on the other side of it. Whether you walk in with high or zero expectations, they will be blown away by the time the audience begins to chant “Louden Swain! Louden Swain! Louden Swain!” beckoning the band out for at least one last song in an always obliged encore. You’ll walk away with a newfound respect for those four performers and each and every guest star — there’s no escaping the tactile joy and unwavering fellowship felt between them. It’s fun, it’s emotional, and it’s always a much needed break from the harsh realities of the world. Just don’t forget, when “Rock Song”‘s familiar chords begin to hauntingly echo off the walls, scream that second “Where are all my friends?” verse like you mean it, cause whether you’re there alone or with a group, you’ll realize that each and every soul in that room has come together for one sole purpose — family.
“Screaming will be heard … they will hear us.” – Louden Swain’s “Rock Song”
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