On Saturday November 28th, 2015, TBTL recorded their 2000th “epithode” at the Neptune Theatre in Seattle, Washington. The show was also live broadcasted on the radio via KIRO-FM, in which listeners could listen live via a web stream on their website. The night before I traveled up to Seattle to attend the show, Luke asked if I was interested in being the official photographer for the show and I enthusiastically agreed.
Below is a slideshow of the photos that I took from the event and posted on to Flickr. You can also view the album directly on Flickr.
Andrew and Genevieve have launched a new podcast called “After These Messages” in which they discuss TV commercials that they love, love to hate, hate to love or just outright hate. Check out the podcast on Soundcloud, embedded below, or on iTunes or on Stitcher.
The Marsupial Gurgle could not exist without the help and the support from the TBTL Tens and for that, I am absolutely grateful and want to thank everyone.
Although the site is free for everyone, there are still costs associated with maintaining and hosting the site, along with the amount of time required to curate the clips from the TBTL podcart.
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With the 2000th TBTL show looming near, Joseph Jordan, a TBTL Ten, created a Hollywood movie-like trailer for TBTL 2K using clips from the Marsupial Gurgle and his Hollywood announcer voice. Below is what he created, and it is awesome:
Back on August 6th, Andrew posted a request on the sTens group on Facebook requesting help with the creation of an image for the TBTL weekly newsletter. I virtually raised my hand and Andrew gave me the assignment of creating an image of Luke and Andrew standing behind podiums, debate-style. Also, the use of the Luke (aka “Johnny) and Andrew (aka “Bobo”) dolls would be perfectly fine. Also, attribution would be included in the newsletter.
So, I started to scrounge around for very high-resolution images of podiums and a stage, and found a set that I really liked. Since I didn’t have any clean images of Luke or Andrew standing, I opted to use the dolls that I got from the TBTL-a-Thon and did an impromptu shoot of them at home.
I spent a bit of time cleaning up the photos of the dolls and started putting all of the pieces together. After about an hour or so, I had basically a final draft and sent it over to Andrew for approval. Once I got the thumbs up, I finalized the image and sent it over.
When the TBTL newsletter was sent out on August 7th, I took a look at it and found that there was no attribution to the image and started to steam up a little bit. Andrew messaged me later in the day saying that the captions for the photos got removed by the editor and that he’ll make up the mishap. A little bit later, Andrew posted an image showing that the draft of the newsletter he submitted had the captions and provided attribution to the photo. All was good in the world…
That is, until I listened to that night’s show, TBTL #1921, when Andrew started to talkĀ about the newsletter (at around the 10 minute mark) and then mentioned the newsletter image and mentioned me as an attribution and thanks.
I have been able to pull clips from most of this week’s shows up through Thursday. Unfortunately, I won’t be able to get to the rest and won’t be able to start posting them starting Sunday.