State of the Dolphins' Stock, Ime Udoka's Fiasco, Dixson's 004DAISY Review and Scarface
In this episode, Wellington and Savon discussed the Dolphins’ extremely successful start to the season, how Tampa Bay’s defense has been elite but the offense is still lagging plus how the Broncos are still adjusting to a new system. Next, they discuss Oklahoma’s upset loss vs. Kansas St., how Clemson is dealing with a very competitive ACC and give their transparent thoughts on Ime Udoka’s one-year suspension and the surprising developments of the final decision and what might follow. For their album reviews, they review Dixson’s 004DAISY and how there’s different sounds plus themes of full-on dance and R&B, Symba, DJ Drama’s Results Take Time, Jessie Reyez’s Yessie album and finally two new singles in Ab-Soul’s “Moonshooter” and Freddie Gibbs’ “Dark-Hearted”
In the second half, they review Scarface, a 1993 crime drama film directed by Brian de Palma and written by Oliver Stone. Starring Al Pacino, Steven Bauer, Michelle Pfeiffer and Mary Elisabeth Mastrantonio. They discuss how this film was stylized, ultra-violent and also a thin line between moral drama and celebratory excess. They also analyze Pacino’s riveting performance and the cinematic betrayals of it, Tony’s final stand and this being a vintage 80’s movie.
In this episode, Wellington and Savon discussed the Dolphins’ extremely successful start to the season, how Tampa Bay’s defense has been elite but the offense is still lagging plus how the Broncos are still adjusting to a new system. Next, they discuss Oklahoma’s upset loss vs. Kansas St., how Clemson is dealing with a very competitive ACC and give their transparent thoughts on Ime Udoka’s one-year suspension and the surprising developments of the final decision and what might follow. For their album reviews, they review Dixson’s 004DAISY and how there’s different sounds plus themes of full-on dance and R&B, Symba, DJ Drama’s Results Take Time, Jessie Reyez’s Yessie album and finally two new singles in Ab-Soul’s “Moonshooter” and Freddie Gibbs’ “Dark-Hearted”
In the second half, they review Scarface, a 1993 crime drama film directed by Brian de Palma and written by Oliver Stone. Starring Al Pacino, Steven Bauer, Michelle Pfeiffer and Mary Elisabeth Mastrantonio. They discuss how this film was stylized, ultra-violent and also a thin line between moral drama and celebratory excess. They also analyze Pacino’s riveting performance and the cinematic betrayals of it, Tony’s final stand and this being a vintage 80’s movie.