After dropping out of the console race in 2001, Sega’s first Nintendo release was NOT a Sonic game, but instead a puzzle game about space-traveling mice eluding cats!
In honor of Father’s Day, our panel of expert parents share the TV and movies their kids love that they hate. Join us for a cathartic episode where our parent friends unload on how much they hate Caillou and Thomas the Tank Engine and Toodles!
Sometimes we hate how the main character is a whiny brat. Sometimes we hate the premise of the whole world wondering things like why is a science teacher relying on his 4th-grade students for lesson plans and how can Caillou’s family afford that house on a single income?
Also, to balance out all the negativity, our panel explains the things they do like and the things they wished their kids did like.
For those of you don’t have kids, this episode will give you all the things you need to avoid. And for those of you that don’t want kids, this episode will re-affirm that you made the right decision.
To celebrate his big screen arrival, we took a look at the weirdest Apocalypse miniseries we could find, and that was X-Men: Apocalypse vs. Dracula!
Sounds cool, doesn’t it? We thought so too, but instead we just got a bunch of British dudes showing off their tattoos. Listen as we try to figure out why this comic exists and what would have made a much more interesting story.
On this episode of THAT WAS A GAME, we look at XIII (Thirteen), a stylish 70’s era conspiracy from 2003. This game’s got it all: a cool cel-shaded aesthetic, folding chairs, and David Duchovny!
The Nintendo 64 turns 20 this year, and we’re hitting our 64th episode, which means it’s time for our NINTENDO 64 SPECIAL!
Many of our friends had extensive videogame collections, and those collections helped inform whose house we wanted to go over to for sleepover parties. Chase, Cody, and Vince draft the best Nintendo 64 collection, made up of the best racing, sports, multiplayer, and single-player games!
Join us for an awesome trip down memory lane and some great retro-gaming recommendations.
Fred Armisen finishes out Season 41 with a bang! Weird Lewis & Clark plays, high school theatre troupes, and Dead Poets Society parodies galore!
It took until the season finale for our predictions to finally come true (Digital Short promoting Andy Samberg’s new movie, Fred Armisen foregoes a comedy skit for a song with his famous friends).
Also, average-sized Kia wonders if tall people hitting fans is really a thing (Tall Vince says “Yes”).
Also, while SNL Season 41 may be over, we’re not done yet! We still promised you we’d have an “end of the season spectacular” where we pick the best skit of the season. That’ll be a new episode in a few weeks.
Visit allmyfriendsarerighthere.com or youtube.com/allmyfriendsarerighthere to see the playlist for our best skits of the night!
Weirdly, “Miley Wedding Tape” isn’t available on YouTube. But we’ve compiled a YouTube playlist for all the other best skits of the night!
Darwyn Cooke, one of our favorite comic book creators, passed away last week at the age of 53.
To honor him, we decided to cover his magnum opus, DC: The New Frontier, which takes a look at the Dawn of DC’s new superheroes and the birth of the Justice League in the 1950’s.
It’s an oversized 6-issue miniseries completely written and drawn by Cooke himself and it’s an absolute must-read for fans of the genre, young and old.
X-Men: Apocalypse comes out this week, and to celebrate the X-Men film series’ Sweet 16, we’re ranking the previous 5 X-Men films (and discussing the 3 spinoff films). What’s the worst? What’s the best?
Also, who’s really to blame for the failure of The Last Stand (which turns 10 years old today)? And we discuss screenwriter Simon Kinberg’s penchant for burning bridges (in both The Last Stand and Apocalypse). And what X-Man would be the best Pokémon?
Remember that time Superman had a game for the Game Boy Advance? And it was actually a Sudoku game instead of an action game? Welcome to Superman Returns: Fortress of Solitude!