
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
🎄 Happy Back to the Future Day! Set your time circuits to 1845 by way of 1991 for a special Christmas in July episode of the Back to the Future Saturday morning cartoon, featuring hologram clothes, the hoverboard equivalent to texting while driving, and Bill Nye the Science Guy. Â
The actually animated segments of the animated series feature Dan Castelleneta as Doc, plus the return of Thomas F. Wilson (Batman: The Animated Series) as various Tannens throughout history, and Christmas movie all-star Mary Steenburgen (Elf, One Magic Christmas) as Clara. Â
**** Â
🎙 Guests: ÂJoey O.(Y-Not Radio, Words With Nerds, @imgonnadj24). Â
Joseph Wade (Christmas Creeps, The O/S/T Party, @cordialwombat). Â
**** Â
đź’¬ Topics & Tangents: Â1. Mary Steenburgen playing Informer on the accordion in Last Man on Earth. Â
2. Series art director James S. Baker storyboards his own blog. Â
3. The Back to the Future pinball game and its random movie quotes. Â
4. Futurepedia on how Doc’s clothing converter camera works. Â
5. Weird things we did as kids to show our parents we were responsible. Â
6. Some toys in Fedgewick’s shop shouldn’t be there yet in 1845. Â
7. Did We Wish You a Merry Christmas exist in 1845? Possibly, but not the version we know. Â
8. Doc’s wad of cash vs. England’s bank notes circa 1845. Â
9. Wilkins’s dog looks like 1980s T-shirt icon Rude Dog. Â
10. My Back to the Future-themed Good Friday and Easter Sunday tweets. Â
11. The closest thing we could find to a Kaiju Christmas movie is 1962’s Gorath. Â
**** Â
📼 Retro Commercial Break: ÂBack to the Future: The Ride at Universal Studios Florida, 1996. Â
Hi-C Ecto Cooler Commercial, 1989, starring David Kaufmann, the voice of Marty. Â
**** Â
“Back to the Future,” the Animated Series, and “Dickens of a Christmas” © 1991 Universal Cartoon Studios / Amblin Television. Â
Say hi on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. Â
Full show notes with links at adventcalendar.house.
Theme song by Bronwen’s Ghost. Â
Full show notes and social links at adventcalendar.house.
4.8
6161 ratings
🎄 Happy Back to the Future Day! Set your time circuits to 1845 by way of 1991 for a special Christmas in July episode of the Back to the Future Saturday morning cartoon, featuring hologram clothes, the hoverboard equivalent to texting while driving, and Bill Nye the Science Guy. Â
The actually animated segments of the animated series feature Dan Castelleneta as Doc, plus the return of Thomas F. Wilson (Batman: The Animated Series) as various Tannens throughout history, and Christmas movie all-star Mary Steenburgen (Elf, One Magic Christmas) as Clara. Â
**** Â
🎙 Guests: ÂJoey O.(Y-Not Radio, Words With Nerds, @imgonnadj24). Â
Joseph Wade (Christmas Creeps, The O/S/T Party, @cordialwombat). Â
**** Â
đź’¬ Topics & Tangents: Â1. Mary Steenburgen playing Informer on the accordion in Last Man on Earth. Â
2. Series art director James S. Baker storyboards his own blog. Â
3. The Back to the Future pinball game and its random movie quotes. Â
4. Futurepedia on how Doc’s clothing converter camera works. Â
5. Weird things we did as kids to show our parents we were responsible. Â
6. Some toys in Fedgewick’s shop shouldn’t be there yet in 1845. Â
7. Did We Wish You a Merry Christmas exist in 1845? Possibly, but not the version we know. Â
8. Doc’s wad of cash vs. England’s bank notes circa 1845. Â
9. Wilkins’s dog looks like 1980s T-shirt icon Rude Dog. Â
10. My Back to the Future-themed Good Friday and Easter Sunday tweets. Â
11. The closest thing we could find to a Kaiju Christmas movie is 1962’s Gorath. Â
**** Â
📼 Retro Commercial Break: ÂBack to the Future: The Ride at Universal Studios Florida, 1996. Â
Hi-C Ecto Cooler Commercial, 1989, starring David Kaufmann, the voice of Marty. Â
**** Â
“Back to the Future,” the Animated Series, and “Dickens of a Christmas” © 1991 Universal Cartoon Studios / Amblin Television. Â
Say hi on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. Â
Full show notes with links at adventcalendar.house.
Theme song by Bronwen’s Ghost. Â
Full show notes and social links at adventcalendar.house.
847 Listeners
280 Listeners