#taken around the same time as the one i used for the facepaints series
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#horizon forbidden west#hfw#aloy#taken around the same time as the one i used for the facepaints series#but different spot#kinda too similar but the colors are so pretty#i just love blues and greens!#i'm in a cauldron if you couldn't tell#idk abt the crop but i wanted to try something different
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Hey remember that weird family thing I was writing, the one where Ryan is taking care of the explody kids and Jack and Geoff have sweet little Jeremy? Yeah, this is part 3.
~
Ryan couldn't relax as he paced the lobby of the office building with his facepaint on; no one seemed even remotely bothered by his presence, and once again he was reminded that the entire building was owned by the Fakes. Which building this actually was in terms of their operation, Ryan had no clue, but he really couldn't focus anyway.
His boys were in a different apartment with the same woman he took to the beach with them the week before. She insisted she'd keep them safe and wouldn't hesitate to hurt anyone that tried to touch them, and something in her eyes told him that was true, but he still couldn't relax, knowing he was away from his boys.
"Vagabond, this way please," a man's voice said, and Ryan turned toward him and stopped in his tracks, absolutely floored that a man like him would be here for this sort of deal.
"B-Burnie Burns?" he asked in disbelief as he followed the well tailored man down a hall and past a series of doors.
"Indeed. Geoff asked me to come and mediate between you and Jack, and once I learned children were involved, I couldn't refuse. With your reputation, you can understand why we were concerned to find out you had two children in your care-"
"They're not in any danger," he all but growled out, gritting his teeth to keep from getting loud.
"I'd like to believe that. I know you have your principles on involving children. I trust that they stay well out of harms way. Though I'm sure, based on the age you picked them up at, they'll inevitably be drawn to the lifestyle anyway." Burnie paused as they stepped into the elevator at the end of the hallway and pressed the button for the top floor.
Ryan remained tense as the doors slid closed and the elevator moved, knowing both he and Burnie were sizing each other up in their peripherals, watching for any movement towards a possible concealed weapon. Ryan wasn't an idiot; he wouldn't hurt Burnie, but he wouldn't hesitate to defend himself if it meant harming the Rooster to ensure his own life.
"Just for the record, Ryan, as much as I would've loved to offer you a permanent position with the Roosters, I think you'll fit in better here."
Ryan tilted his head to look fully at Burnie, thoroughly confused by his statement, but unable to respond as the elevator dinged their arrival and opened. They both stepped out and walked a little ways before entering a fairly large office.
"Welcome, Vagabond, to the Fake AH Crew headquarters."
Ryan's mouth immediately dropped open; this was a far cry from where they'd met when they hired him a few months ago for a contract.
"Don't go thinking they did this all on their own; Geoff never hesitated to ask us for help, and of course, being the friends that we were, we gave what we could. The Roosters and the Fakes go way back, and you'd do well to remember that," Burnie warned as he walked to the table in the middle of the room and sat down. Ryan remained standing as he came to the table, gripping a chair as he stared at the reason he was there in the first place; Jack.
"Hello, Ryan. Glad you could make it."
"Anything to get you off me and the kids' back."
"About that; I've come to offer you a deal to replace the one I allegedly broke."
"If it involves you leaving us the fuck alone, I'm all for it."
Jack smiled slightly as she walked around the table and over to him, setting some papers in front of the chair he was clutching. Eying her as she backed away, Ryan reached down and grabbed the papers, recognizing immediately that they were a contract of some sort. Upon reading a little more thoroughly, Ryan practically slammed them back onto the table as of burned by them.
"You want to hire me full time?!" He bellowed, glaring across the table at the woman.
"And offer you a space in our penthouse. The boys will always be safe there, we have a boy of our own so we make sure to keep security as tight as possible. And you'll never have to worry about work bleeding into home in terms of keeping the boys safe, because we have people for that. They'll be well taken care of and you'll have a steady income. Not to mention, you'll never be bored," she added with a knowing glint in her eye, and Ryan only glared harder.
"After everything you've done to prove I'm not safe from you, you want me to lower my guard and LIVE WITH YOU?" He was having trouble controlling his volume, but neither of the other two seemed bothered by it.
"I told you he'd react like this," Burnie said while glancing at Jack.
"We're you unsatisfied with the way things went last time you were employed by us?"
Ryan stopped and thought, but kept the angry look on his face. Sure, the police had been more of a problem than usual when it came to his jobs, but he'd attributed that to Geoff's lack of subtlety when it came to, well, anything. And Ryan was given more than he thought was his actual fair share, so he couldn't really complain.
"No," he finally answered. "But that doesn't mean you can get away with the bullshit you've put me through over the last two weeks. You broke into one of my apartments, then stalked me, and found my other apartment. Just because you were worried about a couple kids you didn't even know existed until you saw them with me? They're not in the system anywhere; I've checked. They were homeless, identity-lacking kids that barely knew how to take care of themselves. I did what I could for them when they were still on the streets, but once I started getting my reputation, I couldn't keep visiting them, so I decided they were safer somewhere I could protect. And then you went and made sure they couldn't feel safe with me. How the hell am I supposed to trust you now?"
"By realizing that 3 adults watching over 3 kids, 2 of whom know how to defend themselves, is better than 1 adult watching over those 2 kids. You'll still have your privacy, and those kids will still be yours before they're ours, but even you have to be smart enough to know they'll be safer with us."
Ryan could feel his anger flaring again, but he knew Jack was right. He couldn't keep hiring the babysitter, and eventually someone was gonna draw the connection and find the boys.
Sighing, defeated, he picked up the contract again before sitting in the chair he'd been hanging on to since entering the room. Reading it carefully, he finally closed his eyes and motioned for a pen.
"So you'll-
"Yes. Those boys need safety more than I need my pride. And you promised I can keep my privacy, so I expect that."
The room seemed to shift towards relaxed as Ryan signed his name at the bottom of the last paper.
Was he making a mistake?
#achievement hunter#fahc#fake ah crew#fahc ryan#fahc fem!jack#uh hey quick cameo from Burnie lol#Part 3 of that weird family prompt from itscoffeecupcake#Will there be more? Yes#Though the next one -might- be the last
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The 5 Best Halloween Episodes You Should Watch Tonight
Happy Halloween, everyone! How you choose to celebrate this most blessed of holidays is up to you. Some of you will drink pumpkin beer until you poop jack oâ lanterns, some of you will take your children trick-or-treating, and some of you will sit on the couch and absorb horror films. But if I can make a suggestion for that last group: In between your annual viewings of Halloween 4: The One Where Michael Myersâ Mask Looks Like Total Dogshit and Texas Chainsaw Massacre III: Not That Bad, Actually, consider watching some Halloween-themed TV episodes. Because while movies are great for frights, there are a few TV shows that actually capture the spirit of Halloween. For example âŚ
5
The Office: âEmployee Transferâ
The year is 2008. The place is every theater in the known world. The movie is The Dark Knight. And the thought thatâs going through four billion heads simultaneously is âI know what Iâm going to be for Halloween this year.â
Read Next
How The 'Last Of Us 2' Trailer Ruined A Sure Thing
On October 31, 2008, you couldnât throw a Batarang without hitting someone dressed in a Heath Ledger Joker outfit. The simple act of going outside was an invitation for swarms of people in purple sweatpants to come up and ask you if you wanted to see a magic trick. Drama kids draped themselves in long wool coats and ventured into the cool autumn night, looking for prey to listen to their story about how they got their scars. Former frat bros lathered on white facepaint and sipped vodka red bulls as they mumbled through half-remembered things about âchaosâ and âkilling the Batman.â And the one guy dressed as Beetlejuice spent the whole evening correcting people.
It was like magic. Somewhere in Heath Ledgerâs wonderful performance, the worst people you knew heard a dog whistle. A dog whistle which screeched âAnnoy the fuck out of everyone you know and love.â The Office understood that this was going to happen, and thatâs why âEmployee Transferâ is so great.
Airing on October 30th, it was like a warning to the general public: Beware, for tomorrow your neighbors will turn on you, your children will betray you, and your roommates will spend six hours attempting to apply cheek prosthetics before giving up and just using a pound of lipstick. Any show that can accurately capture the frustration of existing in the same universe as the mob of Jokers before that day of frustration actually occurs is worth your attention.
âEmployee Transferâ features some of Steve Carellâs best acting in the whole series, but itâs also a great parody of the time the Earth cancelled Halloween and replaced it with Jokerfest 2008. Iâll never forgive Christopher Nolan. Never.
4
The Spectacular Spider-Man: âThe Uncertainty Principleâ
Itâs hard for superhero shows to do a good Halloween episode, and I think itâs because superheroes wear masks all the time, and a lot of the comedy from any Halloween episode comes from what the characters decide to dress up as. Itâs really hard to properly dress up as anything when your main wardrobe is one bright color with a huge symbol on your chest. Thatâs why most superhero Halloween specials are just plain adventure stories. In The Batman episode âGrundyâs Night,â Clayface pretends to be unkillable zombie Solomon Grundy to better rob intolerable old rich people. Itâs great. You should check it out.
Unsurprisingly, The Spectacular Spider-Man, the best superhero cartoon of all time, broke the mold a little bit and gave us a Halloween episode thatâs a little more think-y. However, all this metaphorinâ doesnât prevent the episode from having a fight between Green Goblin and Spider-Man which takes up the entire third act. That was probably the greatest strength of the show: being able to balance teen drama and deep reflection with radioactive boxing matches that usually lasted about seven glorious minutes.
While most interpretations of the Green Goblin never get past the whole âCurse you, Spider-Maaaaaanâ section of their shtick, this Green Goblin is a playful, sadistic dick. Heâs constantly asking Spider-Man to consider what âmaskâ is real â the mask that hides your face or the mask that is your face. This doesnât just play into the mystery of who the Green Goblin is, but also deals with something thatâs lacking in a lot of superhero shows that are made for kids: At what point does your human identity become the facade? The Green Goblin and Peter Parker arenât opposites; theyâre both freaks who only find respite and fulfillment when they wear their masks. Peter Parker is a bespectacled shell of a nerd. Itâs only when heâs Spider-Man, quipping and punching with psychopathic consistency, that his actual mask gets taken off.
Anyway, Green Goblin (Norman Osborn) fakes a leg injury and then retreats back to his home. There, he finds his son passed out, breaks his own sonâs fucking leg, and puts the Goblin costume on him. Then, when Spider-Man gets there, Norman is all like âWe gotta get my son some help. Heâs really sick. See, his leg is broken. Heâs helpless. WINK.â So yeah, if you want to watch something with all the fun of a Marvel character and all the âOh my god, noâ of comic book child abuse, this is a good one. Jeez. Maybe you shouldâve just gone to a costume party or something, yâall.
3
Any Roseanne Halloween Episode
If you grew up in a small town like I did, you know that Halloweens are a gamble. Youâll get to go trick-or-treating, but only if your parents are down to drive you to a more populated place that supports such an activity. Otherwise youâre just trudging in a ditch down a lonely country road, hoping that a passing car doesnât hit you and ruin your Dollar Store Wolfman mask and spill all of your candy. And when you age out of that, you go to a local haunted maze, which never fails to be out in the middle of nowhere. There, you watch theatrical rednecks rev chainsaws, wave severed prop heads, and ignore copyright infringements. In North Carolina, you donât legally reach puberty until youâve held someoneâs hand through the Hacker House. Itâs the law.
One of the draws of the sitcom Roseanne was that it was about a lower-middle-class family. So many sitcoms were based around how cool it would be to have friends in New York City, or how great it would be if you could shove a dozen family members into the same piece of prime San Francisco real estate. But Roseanne was hunkered down in the suburbs. The main set looked like it had been cobbled together from a thrift storeâs going-out-of-business sale, the costumes were from a Fashion Bug clearance rack, and the family was loud and loving, just like mine.
Except on Halloween.
The Halloween episodes of Roseanne are things of sitcom legend. Barely having anything to do with the show itself, the Halloween episodes would go all out and present an alternate Roseanne reality where the family could suddenly afford elaborate costumes and expensive makeup. Halloween was the biggest day of the year (as it should be in all worlds, fictional or otherwise), and the usual relaxed pace of a Roseanne episode was replaced by a frantic joke parade. And for me, it was pure wish fulfillment.
You wanted to have a Roseanne Halloween. A Halloween where you could buy that expensive costume that you saw at the mall and run around and play pranks on everyone. A Halloween where you could go trick-or-treating with your friends, because most houses were less than a quarter of a mile from each other. A Halloween where everyone, adults included, understood how important Halloween was to you.
The Halloweens I experienced as a kid were fucking wonderful. But just once, I wanted a Roseanne Halloween.
2
How I Met Your Mother: âThe Slutty Pumpkin Returnsâ
I moved from North Carolina to NYC, because itâs the true path of an artist to be miserable in a small town and then move to a large town where youâre only mostly miserable. And itâs there that I learned that you will see most of the people you know maybe once every few months. Itâs just hard to hang out with people. Sure, a subway system connects the whole city, but deciding to use it is flipping the coin on whether a particular train works that day or not. So youâll go a long time without seeing someone important to you. âOh, I remember you! You were at that thing in 1988! New Jersey now, huh?â
The How I Met Your Mother Halloween episode âThe Slutty Pumpkin Returnsâ gets that more than most NYC-based sitcoms. In it, human sweater vest Ted Mosby finally meets up with a girl that he saw at a Halloween party years earlier. Sheâd been dressed as a pumpkin, and as he did with most things with a pulse, he fell in love with her. But now, upon meeting her and dating her, he finds that they have absolutely no spark. Sitcoms, right? One minute youâre in a zany situation, the next youâre finding out that youâve spent the last ten years pining after a lie. Laugh track!
Halloween in a big city is weird. On one hand, you want to explore what it has to offer, but itâs easy to get discouraged by the fact that you know that something like âHALLOWEEN PARTY FEATURING DJ QUANTUM. HALF-OFF SHOTS. PEOPLE IN COSTUMES GET A FREE PUMPKIN TEQUILA ENEMAâ will attract roughly 30,000 people. So you go to parties, where you make friends you donât see again for eight years. And so your big-city circle of friends becomes a mix of a core group you hang out with constantly and people you see once a decade. Itâs kind of nice, especially in a sea of sitcoms that portray NYC as a place where you apparently can teleport from borough to borough, never having to worry about petty things like time or physics.
1
Walker, Texas Ranger: âThe Children Of Halloweenâ
I donât blame you if you donât want to watch Walker, Texas Ranger. Chuck Norris is a pretty cartoonish figure in pop culture, but most episodes of Walker are a slog. Chuck kicks some criminals, administers a moral lesson, and talks down to everyone. Chuck Norris is judge, jury, executioner, God, Jesus, and Shakespeare in Walker, Texas Ranger. Somehow, Chuck Norris made a show about roundhouse kicks into something as boring as a Pat Robertson colonoscopy.
However, if youâre looking for something that is simultaneously a piece of batshit holiday insanity and the Walker-est Texas-est Ranger-est episode of Walker, Texas Ranger ever, watch âThe Children Of Halloween.â It opens with Norris scoffing at his black co-workerâs George Washington Carver costume. Walker is a Texas Ranger, but more than that, heâs an awful dickhead.
One scene of men in ape masks shooting machine guns at a convenience store for no reason later, and we get a touching montage of kids practicing martial arts that feels like it lasts two hours. One of those kids is abducted by a satanic cult, and Walker is dropped into a race against time to stop children from being sacrificed. How spooky is all of this? So spooky that the opening credits adopt a Tales From The Crypt font and show us a cemetery with a blue filter over it. Fucking boo.
Sony Pictures Television Distribution
Thatâs ultimate spooky.
Regardless, Walker has never met a problem he couldnât quite easily resolve by beating it unconscious. In the nick of time, he literally flies onto the screen with a side-kick, and then breaks a Satan worshiperâs neck in front of a group of stunned children. He proceeds to kick an entire cult into submission and saves the day. Walker finishes the episode by drinking coffee in a bar while ignoring the women who hit on him, because as the theme song says, âThatâs what a rangerâs gonna be.â Yep. Murder a bunch of strangers in front of elementary schoolers and never have sex, like, ever. Itâs what a rangerâs gonna be. Who am I to argue?
Daniel has a spooky, scary Twitter.
The Simpsons Tree House of Horror Collection is objectively the greatest Halloween TV youâll ever find on this Earth. Enjoy!
If you loved this article and want more content like this, support our site with a visit to our Contribution Page. Please and thank you.
For more, check out 6 Unnecessarily Horrifying Episodes Of Beloved Kids Shows and 5 Inexplicably Creepy Episodes of Family Friendly TV Shows.
Subscribe to our YouTube channel, and check out The Darkest Episode of an 80âs Sitcom Ever, and watch other videos you wonât see on the site!
Also follow us on Facebook. Boo!
Source: http://allofbeer.com/2017/12/06/the-5-best-halloween-episodes-you-should-watch-tonight/
from All of Beer https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2017/12/06/the-5-best-halloween-episodes-you-should-watch-tonight/
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The 5 Best Halloween Episodes You Should Watch Tonight
Happy Halloween, everyone! How you choose to celebrate this most blessed of holidays is up to you. Some of you will drink pumpkin beer until you poop jack oâ lanterns, some of you will take your children trick-or-treating, and some of you will sit on the couch and absorb horror films. But if I can make a suggestion for that last group: In between your annual viewings of Halloween 4: The One Where Michael Myersâ Mask Looks Like Total Dogshit and Texas Chainsaw Massacre III: Not That Bad, Actually, consider watching some Halloween-themed TV episodes. Because while movies are great for frights, there are a few TV shows that actually capture the spirit of Halloween. For example âŚ
5
The Office: âEmployee Transferâ
The year is 2008. The place is every theater in the known world. The movie is The Dark Knight. And the thought thatâs going through four billion heads simultaneously is âI know what Iâm going to be for Halloween this year.â
Read Next
How The âLast Of Us 2â Trailer Ruined A Sure Thing
On October 31, 2008, you couldnât throw a Batarang without hitting someone dressed in a Heath Ledger Joker outfit. The simple act of going outside was an invitation for swarms of people in purple sweatpants to come up and ask you if you wanted to see a magic trick. Drama kids draped themselves in long wool coats and ventured into the cool autumn night, looking for prey to listen to their story about how they got their scars. Former frat bros lathered on white facepaint and sipped vodka red bulls as they mumbled through half-remembered things about âchaosâ and âkilling the Batman.â And the one guy dressed as Beetlejuice spent the whole evening correcting people.
It was like magic. Somewhere in Heath Ledgerâs wonderful performance, the worst people you knew heard a dog whistle. A dog whistle which screeched âAnnoy the fuck out of everyone you know and love.â The Office understood that this was going to happen, and thatâs why âEmployee Transferâ is so great.
Airing on October 30th, it was like a warning to the general public: Beware, for tomorrow your neighbors will turn on you, your children will betray you, and your roommates will spend six hours attempting to apply cheek prosthetics before giving up and just using a pound of lipstick. Any show that can accurately capture the frustration of existing in the same universe as the mob of Jokers before that day of frustration actually occurs is worth your attention.
âEmployee Transferâ features some of Steve Carellâs best acting in the whole series, but itâs also a great parody of the time the Earth cancelled Halloween and replaced it with Jokerfest 2008. Iâll never forgive Christopher Nolan. Never.
4
The Spectacular Spider-Man: âThe Uncertainty Principleâ
Itâs hard for superhero shows to do a good Halloween episode, and I think itâs because superheroes wear masks all the time, and a lot of the comedy from any Halloween episode comes from what the characters decide to dress up as. Itâs really hard to properly dress up as anything when your main wardrobe is one bright color with a huge symbol on your chest. Thatâs why most superhero Halloween specials are just plain adventure stories. In The Batman episode âGrundyâs Night,â Clayface pretends to be unkillable zombie Solomon Grundy to better rob intolerable old rich people. Itâs great. You should check it out.
Unsurprisingly, The Spectacular Spider-Man, the best superhero cartoon of all time, broke the mold a little bit and gave us a Halloween episode thatâs a little more think-y. However, all this metaphorinâ doesnât prevent the episode from having a fight between Green Goblin and Spider-Man which takes up the entire third act. That was probably the greatest strength of the show: being able to balance teen drama and deep reflection with radioactive boxing matches that usually lasted about seven glorious minutes.
While most interpretations of the Green Goblin never get past the whole âCurse you, Spider-Maaaaaanâ section of their shtick, this Green Goblin is a playful, sadistic dick. Heâs constantly asking Spider-Man to consider what âmaskâ is real â the mask that hides your face or the mask that is your face. This doesnât just play into the mystery of who the Green Goblin is, but also deals with something thatâs lacking in a lot of superhero shows that are made for kids: At what point does your human identity become the facade? The Green Goblin and Peter Parker arenât opposites; theyâre both freaks who only find respite and fulfillment when they wear their masks. Peter Parker is a bespectacled shell of a nerd. Itâs only when heâs Spider-Man, quipping and punching with psychopathic consistency, that his actual mask gets taken off.
Anyway, Green Goblin (Norman Osborn) fakes a leg injury and then retreats back to his home. There, he finds his son passed out, breaks his own sonâs fucking leg, and puts the Goblin costume on him. Then, when Spider-Man gets there, Norman is all like âWe gotta get my son some help. Heâs really sick. See, his leg is broken. Heâs helpless. WINK.â So yeah, if you want to watch something with all the fun of a Marvel character and all the âOh my god, noâ of comic book child abuse, this is a good one. Jeez. Maybe you shouldâve just gone to a costume party or something, yâall.
3
Any Roseanne Halloween Episode
If you grew up in a small town like I did, you know that Halloweens are a gamble. Youâll get to go trick-or-treating, but only if your parents are down to drive you to a more populated place that supports such an activity. Otherwise youâre just trudging in a ditch down a lonely country road, hoping that a passing car doesnât hit you and ruin your Dollar Store Wolfman mask and spill all of your candy. And when you age out of that, you go to a local haunted maze, which never fails to be out in the middle of nowhere. There, you watch theatrical rednecks rev chainsaws, wave severed prop heads, and ignore copyright infringements. In North Carolina, you donât legally reach puberty until youâve held someoneâs hand through the Hacker House. Itâs the law.
One of the draws of the sitcom Roseanne was that it was about a lower-middle-class family. So many sitcoms were based around how cool it would be to have friends in New York City, or how great it would be if you could shove a dozen family members into the same piece of prime San Francisco real estate. But Roseanne was hunkered down in the suburbs. The main set looked like it had been cobbled together from a thrift storeâs going-out-of-business sale, the costumes were from a Fashion Bug clearance rack, and the family was loud and loving, just like mine.
Except on Halloween.
The Halloween episodes of Roseanne are things of sitcom legend. Barely having anything to do with the show itself, the Halloween episodes would go all out and present an alternate Roseanne reality where the family could suddenly afford elaborate costumes and expensive makeup. Halloween was the biggest day of the year (as it should be in all worlds, fictional or otherwise), and the usual relaxed pace of a Roseanne episode was replaced by a frantic joke parade. And for me, it was pure wish fulfillment.
You wanted to have a Roseanne Halloween. A Halloween where you could buy that expensive costume that you saw at the mall and run around and play pranks on everyone. A Halloween where you could go trick-or-treating with your friends, because most houses were less than a quarter of a mile from each other. A Halloween where everyone, adults included, understood how important Halloween was to you.
The Halloweens I experienced as a kid were fucking wonderful. But just once, I wanted a Roseanne Halloween.
2
How I Met Your Mother: âThe Slutty Pumpkin Returnsâ
I moved from North Carolina to NYC, because itâs the true path of an artist to be miserable in a small town and then move to a large town where youâre only mostly miserable. And itâs there that I learned that you will see most of the people you know maybe once every few months. Itâs just hard to hang out with people. Sure, a subway system connects the whole city, but deciding to use it is flipping the coin on whether a particular train works that day or not. So youâll go a long time without seeing someone important to you. âOh, I remember you! You were at that thing in 1988! New Jersey now, huh?â
The How I Met Your Mother Halloween episode âThe Slutty Pumpkin Returnsâ gets that more than most NYC-based sitcoms. In it, human sweater vest Ted Mosby finally meets up with a girl that he saw at a Halloween party years earlier. Sheâd been dressed as a pumpkin, and as he did with most things with a pulse, he fell in love with her. But now, upon meeting her and dating her, he finds that they have absolutely no spark. Sitcoms, right? One minute youâre in a zany situation, the next youâre finding out that youâve spent the last ten years pining after a lie. Laugh track!
Halloween in a big city is weird. On one hand, you want to explore what it has to offer, but itâs easy to get discouraged by the fact that you know that something like âHALLOWEEN PARTY FEATURING DJ QUANTUM. HALF-OFF SHOTS. PEOPLE IN COSTUMES GET A FREE PUMPKIN TEQUILA ENEMAâ will attract roughly 30,000 people. So you go to parties, where you make friends you donât see again for eight years. And so your big-city circle of friends becomes a mix of a core group you hang out with constantly and people you see once a decade. Itâs kind of nice, especially in a sea of sitcoms that portray NYC as a place where you apparently can teleport from borough to borough, never having to worry about petty things like time or physics.
1
Walker, Texas Ranger: âThe Children Of Halloweenâ
I donât blame you if you donât want to watch Walker, Texas Ranger. Chuck Norris is a pretty cartoonish figure in pop culture, but most episodes of Walker are a slog. Chuck kicks some criminals, administers a moral lesson, and talks down to everyone. Chuck Norris is judge, jury, executioner, God, Jesus, and Shakespeare in Walker, Texas Ranger. Somehow, Chuck Norris made a show about roundhouse kicks into something as boring as a Pat Robertson colonoscopy.
However, if youâre looking for something that is simultaneously a piece of batshit holiday insanity and the Walker-est Texas-est Ranger-est episode of Walker, Texas Ranger ever, watch âThe Children Of Halloween.â It opens with Norris scoffing at his black co-workerâs George Washington Carver costume. Walker is a Texas Ranger, but more than that, heâs an awful dickhead.
One scene of men in ape masks shooting machine guns at a convenience store for no reason later, and we get a touching montage of kids practicing martial arts that feels like it lasts two hours. One of those kids is abducted by a satanic cult, and Walker is dropped into a race against time to stop children from being sacrificed. How spooky is all of this? So spooky that the opening credits adopt a Tales From The Crypt font and show us a cemetery with a blue filter over it. Fucking boo.
Sony Pictures Television Distribution
Thatâs ultimate spooky.
Regardless, Walker has never met a problem he couldnât quite easily resolve by beating it unconscious. In the nick of time, he literally flies onto the screen with a side-kick, and then breaks a Satan worshiperâs neck in front of a group of stunned children. He proceeds to kick an entire cult into submission and saves the day. Walker finishes the episode by drinking coffee in a bar while ignoring the women who hit on him, because as the theme song says, âThatâs what a rangerâs gonna be.â Yep. Murder a bunch of strangers in front of elementary schoolers and never have sex, like, ever. Itâs what a rangerâs gonna be. Who am I to argue?
Daniel has a spooky, scary Twitter.
The Simpsons Tree House of Horror Collection is objectively the greatest Halloween TV youâll ever find on this Earth. Enjoy!
If you loved this article and want more content like this, support our site with a visit to our Contribution Page. Please and thank you.
For more, check out 6 Unnecessarily Horrifying Episodes Of Beloved Kids Shows and 5 Inexplicably Creepy Episodes of Family Friendly TV Shows.
Subscribe to our YouTube channel, and check out The Darkest Episode of an 80âs Sitcom Ever, and watch other videos you wonât see on the site!
Also follow us on Facebook. Boo!
from All Of Beer http://allofbeer.com/2017/12/06/the-5-best-halloween-episodes-you-should-watch-tonight/ from All of Beer https://allofbeercom.tumblr.com/post/168246093102
0 notes
Text
The 5 Best Halloween Episodes You Should Watch Tonight
Happy Halloween, everyone! How you choose to celebrate this most blessed of holidays is up to you. Some of you will drink pumpkin beer until you poop jack oâ lanterns, some of you will take your children trick-or-treating, and some of you will sit on the couch and absorb horror films. But if I can make a suggestion for that last group: In between your annual viewings of Halloween 4: The One Where Michael Myersâ Mask Looks Like Total Dogshit and Texas Chainsaw Massacre III: Not That Bad, Actually, consider watching some Halloween-themed TV episodes. Because while movies are great for frights, there are a few TV shows that actually capture the spirit of Halloween. For example âŚ
5
The Office: âEmployee Transferâ
The year is 2008. The place is every theater in the known world. The movie is The Dark Knight. And the thought thatâs going through four billion heads simultaneously is âI know what Iâm going to be for Halloween this year.â
Read Next
How The 'Last Of Us 2' Trailer Ruined A Sure Thing
On October 31, 2008, you couldnât throw a Batarang without hitting someone dressed in a Heath Ledger Joker outfit. The simple act of going outside was an invitation for swarms of people in purple sweatpants to come up and ask you if you wanted to see a magic trick. Drama kids draped themselves in long wool coats and ventured into the cool autumn night, looking for prey to listen to their story about how they got their scars. Former frat bros lathered on white facepaint and sipped vodka red bulls as they mumbled through half-remembered things about âchaosâ and âkilling the Batman.â And the one guy dressed as Beetlejuice spent the whole evening correcting people.
It was like magic. Somewhere in Heath Ledgerâs wonderful performance, the worst people you knew heard a dog whistle. A dog whistle which screeched âAnnoy the fuck out of everyone you know and love.â The Office understood that this was going to happen, and thatâs why âEmployee Transferâ is so great.
Airing on October 30th, it was like a warning to the general public: Beware, for tomorrow your neighbors will turn on you, your children will betray you, and your roommates will spend six hours attempting to apply cheek prosthetics before giving up and just using a pound of lipstick. Any show that can accurately capture the frustration of existing in the same universe as the mob of Jokers before that day of frustration actually occurs is worth your attention.
âEmployee Transferâ features some of Steve Carellâs best acting in the whole series, but itâs also a great parody of the time the Earth cancelled Halloween and replaced it with Jokerfest 2008. Iâll never forgive Christopher Nolan. Never.
4
The Spectacular Spider-Man: âThe Uncertainty Principleâ
Itâs hard for superhero shows to do a good Halloween episode, and I think itâs because superheroes wear masks all the time, and a lot of the comedy from any Halloween episode comes from what the characters decide to dress up as. Itâs really hard to properly dress up as anything when your main wardrobe is one bright color with a huge symbol on your chest. Thatâs why most superhero Halloween specials are just plain adventure stories. In The Batman episode âGrundyâs Night,â Clayface pretends to be unkillable zombie Solomon Grundy to better rob intolerable old rich people. Itâs great. You should check it out.
Unsurprisingly, The Spectacular Spider-Man, the best superhero cartoon of all time, broke the mold a little bit and gave us a Halloween episode thatâs a little more think-y. However, all this metaphorinâ doesnât prevent the episode from having a fight between Green Goblin and Spider-Man which takes up the entire third act. That was probably the greatest strength of the show: being able to balance teen drama and deep reflection with radioactive boxing matches that usually lasted about seven glorious minutes.
While most interpretations of the Green Goblin never get past the whole âCurse you, Spider-Maaaaaanâ section of their shtick, this Green Goblin is a playful, sadistic dick. Heâs constantly asking Spider-Man to consider what âmaskâ is real â the mask that hides your face or the mask that is your face. This doesnât just play into the mystery of who the Green Goblin is, but also deals with something thatâs lacking in a lot of superhero shows that are made for kids: At what point does your human identity become the facade? The Green Goblin and Peter Parker arenât opposites; theyâre both freaks who only find respite and fulfillment when they wear their masks. Peter Parker is a bespectacled shell of a nerd. Itâs only when heâs Spider-Man, quipping and punching with psychopathic consistency, that his actual mask gets taken off.
Anyway, Green Goblin (Norman Osborn) fakes a leg injury and then retreats back to his home. There, he finds his son passed out, breaks his own sonâs fucking leg, and puts the Goblin costume on him. Then, when Spider-Man gets there, Norman is all like âWe gotta get my son some help. Heâs really sick. See, his leg is broken. Heâs helpless. WINK.â So yeah, if you want to watch something with all the fun of a Marvel character and all the âOh my god, noâ of comic book child abuse, this is a good one. Jeez. Maybe you shouldâve just gone to a costume party or something, yâall.
3
Any Roseanne Halloween Episode
If you grew up in a small town like I did, you know that Halloweens are a gamble. Youâll get to go trick-or-treating, but only if your parents are down to drive you to a more populated place that supports such an activity. Otherwise youâre just trudging in a ditch down a lonely country road, hoping that a passing car doesnât hit you and ruin your Dollar Store Wolfman mask and spill all of your candy. And when you age out of that, you go to a local haunted maze, which never fails to be out in the middle of nowhere. There, you watch theatrical rednecks rev chainsaws, wave severed prop heads, and ignore copyright infringements. In North Carolina, you donât legally reach puberty until youâve held someoneâs hand through the Hacker House. Itâs the law.
One of the draws of the sitcom Roseanne was that it was about a lower-middle-class family. So many sitcoms were based around how cool it would be to have friends in New York City, or how great it would be if you could shove a dozen family members into the same piece of prime San Francisco real estate. But Roseanne was hunkered down in the suburbs. The main set looked like it had been cobbled together from a thrift storeâs going-out-of-business sale, the costumes were from a Fashion Bug clearance rack, and the family was loud and loving, just like mine.
Except on Halloween.
The Halloween episodes of Roseanne are things of sitcom legend. Barely having anything to do with the show itself, the Halloween episodes would go all out and present an alternate Roseanne reality where the family could suddenly afford elaborate costumes and expensive makeup. Halloween was the biggest day of the year (as it should be in all worlds, fictional or otherwise), and the usual relaxed pace of a Roseanne episode was replaced by a frantic joke parade. And for me, it was pure wish fulfillment.
You wanted to have a Roseanne Halloween. A Halloween where you could buy that expensive costume that you saw at the mall and run around and play pranks on everyone. A Halloween where you could go trick-or-treating with your friends, because most houses were less than a quarter of a mile from each other. A Halloween where everyone, adults included, understood how important Halloween was to you.
The Halloweens I experienced as a kid were fucking wonderful. But just once, I wanted a Roseanne Halloween.
2
How I Met Your Mother: âThe Slutty Pumpkin Returnsâ
I moved from North Carolina to NYC, because itâs the true path of an artist to be miserable in a small town and then move to a large town where youâre only mostly miserable. And itâs there that I learned that you will see most of the people you know maybe once every few months. Itâs just hard to hang out with people. Sure, a subway system connects the whole city, but deciding to use it is flipping the coin on whether a particular train works that day or not. So youâll go a long time without seeing someone important to you. âOh, I remember you! You were at that thing in 1988! New Jersey now, huh?â
The How I Met Your Mother Halloween episode âThe Slutty Pumpkin Returnsâ gets that more than most NYC-based sitcoms. In it, human sweater vest Ted Mosby finally meets up with a girl that he saw at a Halloween party years earlier. Sheâd been dressed as a pumpkin, and as he did with most things with a pulse, he fell in love with her. But now, upon meeting her and dating her, he finds that they have absolutely no spark. Sitcoms, right? One minute youâre in a zany situation, the next youâre finding out that youâve spent the last ten years pining after a lie. Laugh track!
Halloween in a big city is weird. On one hand, you want to explore what it has to offer, but itâs easy to get discouraged by the fact that you know that something like âHALLOWEEN PARTY FEATURING DJ QUANTUM. HALF-OFF SHOTS. PEOPLE IN COSTUMES GET A FREE PUMPKIN TEQUILA ENEMAâ will attract roughly 30,000 people. So you go to parties, where you make friends you donât see again for eight years. And so your big-city circle of friends becomes a mix of a core group you hang out with constantly and people you see once a decade. Itâs kind of nice, especially in a sea of sitcoms that portray NYC as a place where you apparently can teleport from borough to borough, never having to worry about petty things like time or physics.
1
Walker, Texas Ranger: âThe Children Of Halloweenâ
I donât blame you if you donât want to watch Walker, Texas Ranger. Chuck Norris is a pretty cartoonish figure in pop culture, but most episodes of Walker are a slog. Chuck kicks some criminals, administers a moral lesson, and talks down to everyone. Chuck Norris is judge, jury, executioner, God, Jesus, and Shakespeare in Walker, Texas Ranger. Somehow, Chuck Norris made a show about roundhouse kicks into something as boring as a Pat Robertson colonoscopy.
However, if youâre looking for something that is simultaneously a piece of batshit holiday insanity and the Walker-est Texas-est Ranger-est episode of Walker, Texas Ranger ever, watch âThe Children Of Halloween.â It opens with Norris scoffing at his black co-workerâs George Washington Carver costume. Walker is a Texas Ranger, but more than that, heâs an awful dickhead.
One scene of men in ape masks shooting machine guns at a convenience store for no reason later, and we get a touching montage of kids practicing martial arts that feels like it lasts two hours. One of those kids is abducted by a satanic cult, and Walker is dropped into a race against time to stop children from being sacrificed. How spooky is all of this? So spooky that the opening credits adopt a Tales From The Crypt font and show us a cemetery with a blue filter over it. Fucking boo.
Sony Pictures Television Distribution
Thatâs ultimate spooky.
Regardless, Walker has never met a problem he couldnât quite easily resolve by beating it unconscious. In the nick of time, he literally flies onto the screen with a side-kick, and then breaks a Satan worshiperâs neck in front of a group of stunned children. He proceeds to kick an entire cult into submission and saves the day. Walker finishes the episode by drinking coffee in a bar while ignoring the women who hit on him, because as the theme song says, âThatâs what a rangerâs gonna be.â Yep. Murder a bunch of strangers in front of elementary schoolers and never have sex, like, ever. Itâs what a rangerâs gonna be. Who am I to argue?
Daniel has a spooky, scary Twitter.
The Simpsons Tree House of Horror Collection is objectively the greatest Halloween TV youâll ever find on this Earth. Enjoy!
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from All Of Beer http://allofbeer.com/2017/12/06/the-5-best-halloween-episodes-you-should-watch-tonight/
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