And you still owe me $4,377.13 for the props I made for you and your book series. I assume you got my lawyer's letter. I suggest you stop ducking me and pay up what you owe!
And you still owe me $4,377.13 for the props I made for you and your book series. I assume you got my lawyer's letter. I suggest you stop ducking me and pay up what you owe!
I agree with you about the truth claims, but am not certain what other productive ideas this piece is playing with. It's well done and funny, but why?
This is a great fake documentary. It self-consciously and purposefully engages with history, identity and truth in a formal project that creates ambiguity about truth, and thus questions the power of the act of recording the visible world to creating legitimate documentaries.
This is sick satire, but fairly well written, the actor keeps borrowing from Jack Nicholson and the characters of Christopher Guest films, especially those of Fred Willard. Schultz fans will not likely appreciate this satire.
Hey! Some of this was shot outside Ghetto Vons in West LA! Hooray!
PleasantFellow 1 year ago
that is friggin hilarious my friend! loved it! hows it going Rick?
christinamarieinsf 2 years ago
To Wolvercat:
Clear that you know nothing about satire.
And you still owe me $4,377.13 for the props I made for you and your book series. I assume you got my lawyer's letter. I suggest you stop ducking me and pay up what you owe!
toygod1138 2 years ago
Clear that you know nothing about satire.
And you still owe me $4,377.13 for the props I made for you and your book series. I assume you got my lawyer's letter. I suggest you stop ducking me and pay up what you owe!
toygod1138 2 years ago
I agree with you about the truth claims, but am not certain what other productive ideas this piece is playing with. It's well done and funny, but why?
MediaPraxisme 3 years ago
This is a great fake documentary. It self-consciously and purposefully engages with history, identity and truth in a formal project that creates ambiguity about truth, and thus questions the power of the act of recording the visible world to creating legitimate documentaries.
WillHeinke 3 years ago
is this the only part about charles schultz?
shoshtari 3 years ago
Sid Veda steals the show!
SteveMinh 4 years ago
This is sick satire, but fairly well written, the actor keeps borrowing from Jack Nicholson and the characters of Christopher Guest films, especially those of Fred Willard. Schultz fans will not likely appreciate this satire.
HunterMann 4 years ago
Overton. Been at it for yeeers.
blainewashington 5 years ago