The Last Drive-in: Just Joe Bob Season 1
All the rants, raves, reviews you can handle... without the movies. Gather round with JBB, Darcy and the whole Drive-in crew for the segments and commentary from all of The Last Drive-in. No films, just Joe Bob.
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The Last Drive-in: Just Joe Bob
2018The World’s Foremost Drive-in Movie Critic – actually he’s pretty much the world’s only Drive-in Critic – Joe Bob Briggs brings his iconic swagger to Shudder. Across 13 movies, this firebrand of horror and drive-in cinema offers honest appreciation, hilarious insight, inside stories and of course, the Drive-in totals.
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The Last Drive-in: Just Joe Bob Season 1 Full Episode Guide
Joe Bob pays tribute to horror host John Zacherle and tells the story of how he nearly lost his job over a review of the 1982 slasher "Pieces," which he then proceeds to emcee.
Joe Bob has a convoluted argument with himself over the meaning of the phrase "take a knee" before spouting off a slew of trivia about Hellraiser
Joe Bob discusses his days in the Boy Scouts, and then he's joined by author/actor/musician/cryptozoologist Lyle Blackburn to discuss The Legend of Boggy Creek (1972) and perform an impromptu sing-along.
Joe Bob jumps right into his introduction for Demons (1985), though he veers into a dystopian tirade before trying to sort out the complex history of the notoriously grisly Italian import and its sequels.
Joe Bob gives a lecture on the human brain before hosting the cult favorite Re-Animator (1985).
Joe Bob discusses the making of Basket Case (1982), as well as his personal involvement with the original release of the film.
Joe Bob shares an in-depth history of the career of Herschell Gordon Lewis and the making of Blood Feast (1963).
Joe Bob digresses into rhetoric about gluten before giving a geography lesson and discussing Daughters of Darkness (1971).
Joe Bob's discusses Sorority Babes in the Slimeball Bowl-O-Rama (1988) and devolves into a prolonged rant about the lack of awareness of the Los Angeles mass transit system.
Joe Bob gripes about people fiddling with their phones, and then he criticizes the dull senselessness of The Prowler (1981), but heavily praises Tom Savini for his work on the film.
Joe Bob delves into the forgotten history of 1970s pornography when he hosts the first mainstream film starring Marilyn Chambers, David Cronenberg's Rabid (1977).
Joe Bob goes on a tangent about the transgender bathroom scandal before conversing with Felissa Rose, the vivacious star of Sleepaway Camp (1983).
Joe Bob welcomes himself back, and then he discusses the careers of Chuck Connors and other cast and crew members of Tourist Trap (1979).