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Freddie Gibbs rides his rap roller coaster through hedonistic fun on Soul Sold Separately

Freddie Gibbs has been on a famous rapper roller coaster since he put out his first mixtape in 2010—a journey marked with decadent twists, dizzying heights, and equally terrifying descents. Public beefs with big-name artists, moments as a media darling, well-received acting roles (including the lead in last year’s Down With the King), and acquittal from heavy assault charges make him the perfect artist to share a deep convo with over a couple of drinks—if only to separate man from myth. In 2020 his joint record with the Alchemist earned a Grammy nom, and many fans were upset when they lost to Nas for King’s Disease.

Is Gibbs’s brand-new Soul Sold Separately the kind of album a tenured rapper would make after such a high-profile defeat? In a word, yes. Listening to it is like immersing yourself in the fun parts of Martin Scorsese’s 1995 crime epic Casino, ifGibbs owned said casino. You’re enjoying vices, romping through penthouse suites with your famous friend, and shutting the fuck up. Because if you listen closely, you’ll hear the type of gems commensurate with bosses. 

SSS boasts an all-star cast, with Gibbs’s own famous friends (including Jeff Ross and Kelly Price) making guest appearances in lush features and skits. The list of producers is a rapper’s wet dream, and Gibbs always finds the pocket with his midwestern drawl and automatic flow. The Justice League-produced “Rabbit Vision” is cinematic: emotional pianos, expertly sprinkled rock-guitar riffs, and snapping snares complement Gibbs’s rap and street-war stories. SSS runs the gamut of hedonism, right down to the comedown—like any good romp, it ends. Luckily, you can always visit Gibbs at his casino or on the roller coaster. He isn’t going anywhere.

Freddie Gibbs’s Soul Sold Separately is available for streaming and purchase through these music services.

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Cinnamon rolls and campaign petitions

Efforts to elect Alderperson Tom Tunney as Chicago mayor are underway—but some of the signatures that could get him on the ballot are “completely fraudulent,” election attorneys say.

After serving on Chicago City Council for 20 years, Tunney announced on August 30 that he wouldn’t run again for his 44th Ward seat, which encompasses Lakeview and Wrigleyville. At the same time, rumors about his mayoral aspirations have swirled. He told the Sun-Times earlier in August that he was on the fence, and he has been quiet ever since.

But at Ann Sather, a Swedish American restaurant chain known for its enormous cinnamon rolls, Tunney is already a frontrunner. In each of the three locations that Tunney owns, candidate petitions are available at the cash register, adorned with handmade “Tom Tunney for Mayor” signs and containing a healthy number of signatures on each form. 

This practice—leaving petitions out and unattended—is a violation of Illinois election laws, according to experts.

In a statement to the Reader, a spokesperson for the Illinois State Board of Elections said, “The election code in 10 ILCS 5/7-10 is explicit that petition circulators must witness each voter signing a petition sheet.” 

On the affidavit portion of each petition, the circulator swears “the signatures on this sheet were signed in my presence” and signs their name on the bottom of each page in the presence of a notary. 

The spokesperson added that a scenario in which nominating petitions are left unattended “could be grounds for an objection if an opponent or other interested party finds out about it. The objector would need to show proof that the circulator who signed the petition did not witness the signings and, if so, those signatures could be stricken.”

Election attorneys for other mayoral candidates were more blunt. “If it is just being left on the counter, it’s totally illegal,” said Michael Dorf, an attorney who represents Mayor Lori Lightfoot. “All sorts of fraud could be happening. Somebody could be signing two or three names by themselves, and if the circulator isn’t there, there’s no way to prove only one person signed for each of those names.”

Tunney’s office did not respond to the Reader’s request for comment by press time.

Update 10/13/22: After publication, a spokesperson for Alderperson Tunney and Ann Sather Restaurants emailed a statement to the Reader that read, “[Alderperson] Tunney is not an official candidate for Mayor. If he becomes one, his petitions will be filed in full compliance with all legal requirements.”

Petition circulators must attest under oath that they verified the signer is a registered voter and that people are signing only for themselves. If a petition is left unattended, there is no way to confirm the veracity of the signatures, and submitting unverified signatures could constitute a “pattern of fraud” under Illinois election code.

To appear on the ballot, mayoral hopefuls must submit 12,500 valid signatures to the Chicago Board of Elections. Candidates with stuffed coffers and large teams of canvassers will often aim for three times the required amount to survive petition challenges—an expensive and time-consuming strategy used to knock competitors off the ballot.

The Reader found that in all three Ann Sather locations, clipboards with petitions were left unattended at the cash register while hosts and servers tended to diners. The practice could be acceptable if “the clipboard were on a counter in front of the cashier, and the cashier saw people sign, [so] the cashier could act as circulator,” said Dorf. 

But while reporting this story, a Reader reporter observed petitions left unmonitored for long periods of time. No dedicated campaign volunteers were present, though at least one employee wore a campaign button signaling support for Tunney’s handpicked successor, 44th Ward Chief of Staff Bennett Lawson, who announced he was running for the seat hours after Tunney’s retirement announcement.

CREDIT Taylor Moore

“If [the circulator] did not see the person sign and doesn’t know if they meet the qualifications, they’re committing perjury. I assume that it’s probably going to be signed by the managers of the restaurant or something, but whoever signs it would probably not be fulfilling the legal requirements,” said Dick Simpson, a former UIC political science professor who served as 44th Ward alderperson in the 1970s.

“Tom Tunney has been a good alderman,” Simpson said. “I don’t think this is how they should be circulating petitions.”

If the petitions are turned in as-is and someone challenges them, the Chicago Board of Elections could throw out every petition sheet by the violating circulator, which could represent hundreds and even thousands of signatures. 

According to election attorney Andrew Finko, who represents mayoral candidate Willie Wilson, this type of ballot violation is unlikely to lead to a criminal perjury case against the circulator in Cook County, but the drop in valid signatures could hurt the candidate’s chances of getting on the ballot.

Finko said this rule breaking typically slides under the radar, unless an objector steps forward. “This happens all the time. It’s a question of [whether] somebody gets caught.”

According to Block Club Chicago, supporters have been circulating petitions on Tunney’s behalf since at least September 27. A spokesperson told Block Club petitions were being circulated on Tunney’s behalf while the alderperson weighed his options.

Appointed to City Council by former Mayor Richard M. Daley in 2002, Tunney is Chicago’s first openly gay alderperson. He has won five reelection races since then. His decision to not run for his seat again comes amid a “Great Resignation” in City Council. At least 13 alderpeople are expected to leave their posts when the term ends in May 2023. 

Tunney is a former Illinois Restaurant Association chair and has spearheaded development and services across the ward, such as the Center on Halsted, the AIDS Garden on the lakefront, and LGBTQ+ senior housing. 

As vice mayor and chair of the powerful Committee on Zoning, Landmarks and Building Standards, Tunney was an early ally of Lightfoot. But the City Council, he told the Sun-Times in August, is “not a good place to work these days.” He cited Lightfoot’s “strong and somewhat divisive” personality as part of the reason.

Tunney became the owner of Ann Sather in 1981 and was responsible for growing the restaurant to three locations. In December 2020, the restaurant allowed customers to eat inside during the state-mandated COVID-19 indoor dining ban. Tunney called it an “error in judgment” and ceased the practice, which later resulted in a $2,000 fine from the city.

If Tunney declares his run for mayor, he would be the fourth alderperson to do so, after Alds. Raymond Lopez (15th), Sophia King (4th) and Roderick Sawyer (6th). At least 12 people have filed with the Chicago Board of Elections to run for mayor, including Mayor Lightfoot.

November 28 is the last day that mayoral and aldermanic candidates can submit their nominating petitions. 

Election day for the Chicago municipal election is February 28, 2023.


Career politicians are stepping down, and there’s now an opportunity for new—and possibly progressive—Black leaders to take the reins.


CPD officer Frederick Collins has more than 40 misconduct complaints. Now, he’s running for mayor.


LGBTQ+ Chicagoans discuss Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s record.

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MatchesChicago Readeron October 13, 2022 at 3:00 pm

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ClassifiedsChicago Readeron October 13, 2022 at 3:00 pm

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Freddie Gibbs rides his rap roller coaster through hedonistic fun on Soul Sold SeparatelyCristalle Bowenon October 13, 2022 at 5:00 pm

Freddie Gibbs has been on a famous rapper roller coaster since he put out his first mixtape in 2010—a journey marked with decadent twists, dizzying heights, and equally terrifying descents. Public beefs with big-name artists, moments as a media darling, well-received acting roles (including the lead in last year’s Down With the King), and acquittal from heavy assault charges make him the perfect artist to share a deep convo with over a couple of drinks—if only to separate man from myth. In 2020 his joint record with the Alchemist earned a Grammy nom, and many fans were upset when they lost to Nas for King’s Disease.

Is Gibbs’s brand-new Soul Sold Separately the kind of album a tenured rapper would make after such a high-profile defeat? In a word, yes. Listening to it is like immersing yourself in the fun parts of Martin Scorsese’s 1995 crime epic Casino, ifGibbs owned said casino. You’re enjoying vices, romping through penthouse suites with your famous friend, and shutting the fuck up. Because if you listen closely, you’ll hear the type of gems commensurate with bosses. 

SSS boasts an all-star cast, with Gibbs’s own famous friends (including Jeff Ross and Kelly Price) making guest appearances in lush features and skits. The list of producers is a rapper’s wet dream, and Gibbs always finds the pocket with his midwestern drawl and automatic flow. The Justice League-produced “Rabbit Vision” is cinematic: emotional pianos, expertly sprinkled rock-guitar riffs, and snapping snares complement Gibbs’s rap and street-war stories. SSS runs the gamut of hedonism, right down to the comedown—like any good romp, it ends. Luckily, you can always visit Gibbs at his casino or on the roller coaster. He isn’t going anywhere.

Freddie Gibbs’s Soul Sold Separately is available for streaming and purchase through these music services.

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Freddie Gibbs rides his rap roller coaster through hedonistic fun on Soul Sold SeparatelyCristalle Bowenon October 13, 2022 at 5:00 pm Read More »

Cinnamon rolls and campaign petitionsTaylor Mooreon October 13, 2022 at 5:20 pm

Efforts to elect Alderperson Tom Tunney as Chicago mayor are underway—but some of the signatures that could get him on the ballot are “completely fraudulent,” election attorneys say.

After serving on Chicago City Council for 20 years, Tunney announced on August 30 that he wouldn’t run again for his 44th Ward seat, which encompasses Lakeview and Wrigleyville. At the same time, rumors about his mayoral aspirations have swirled. He told the Sun-Times earlier in August that he was on the fence, and he has been quiet ever since.

But at Ann Sather, a Swedish American restaurant chain known for its enormous cinnamon rolls, Tunney is already a frontrunner. In each of the three locations that Tunney owns, candidate petitions are available at the cash register, adorned with handmade “Tom Tunney for Mayor” signs and containing a healthy number of signatures on each form. 

This practice—leaving petitions out and unattended—is a violation of Illinois election laws, according to experts.

In a statement to the Reader, a spokesperson for the Illinois State Board of Elections said, “The election code in 10 ILCS 5/7-10 is explicit that petition circulators must witness each voter signing a petition sheet.” 

On the affidavit portion of each petition, the circulator swears “the signatures on this sheet were signed in my presence” and signs their name on the bottom of each page in the presence of a notary. 

The spokesperson added that a scenario in which nominating petitions are left unattended “could be grounds for an objection if an opponent or other interested party finds out about it. The objector would need to show proof that the circulator who signed the petition did not witness the signings and, if so, those signatures could be stricken.”

Election attorneys for other mayoral candidates were more blunt. “If it is just being left on the counter, it’s totally illegal,” said Michael Dorf, an attorney who represents Mayor Lori Lightfoot. “All sorts of fraud could be happening. Somebody could be signing two or three names by themselves, and if the circulator isn’t there, there’s no way to prove only one person signed for each of those names.”

Tunney’s office did not respond to the Reader’s request for comment by press time.

Update 10/13/22: After publication, a spokesperson for Alderperson Tunney and Ann Sather Restaurants emailed a statement to the Reader that read, “[Alderperson] Tunney is not an official candidate for Mayor. If he becomes one, his petitions will be filed in full compliance with all legal requirements.”

Petition circulators must attest under oath that they verified the signer is a registered voter and that people are signing only for themselves. If a petition is left unattended, there is no way to confirm the veracity of the signatures, and submitting unverified signatures could constitute a “pattern of fraud” under Illinois election code.

To appear on the ballot, mayoral hopefuls must submit 12,500 valid signatures to the Chicago Board of Elections. Candidates with stuffed coffers and large teams of canvassers will often aim for three times the required amount to survive petition challenges—an expensive and time-consuming strategy used to knock competitors off the ballot.

The Reader found that in all three Ann Sather locations, clipboards with petitions were left unattended at the cash register while hosts and servers tended to diners. The practice could be acceptable if “the clipboard were on a counter in front of the cashier, and the cashier saw people sign, [so] the cashier could act as circulator,” said Dorf. 

But while reporting this story, a Reader reporter observed petitions left unmonitored for long periods of time. No dedicated campaign volunteers were present, though at least one employee wore a campaign button signaling support for Tunney’s handpicked successor, 44th Ward Chief of Staff Bennett Lawson, who announced he was running for the seat hours after Tunney’s retirement announcement.

CREDIT Taylor Moore

“If [the circulator] did not see the person sign and doesn’t know if they meet the qualifications, they’re committing perjury. I assume that it’s probably going to be signed by the managers of the restaurant or something, but whoever signs it would probably not be fulfilling the legal requirements,” said Dick Simpson, a former UIC political science professor who served as 44th Ward alderperson in the 1970s.

“Tom Tunney has been a good alderman,” Simpson said. “I don’t think this is how they should be circulating petitions.”

If the petitions are turned in as-is and someone challenges them, the Chicago Board of Elections could throw out every petition sheet by the violating circulator, which could represent hundreds and even thousands of signatures. 

According to election attorney Andrew Finko, who represents mayoral candidate Willie Wilson, this type of ballot violation is unlikely to lead to a criminal perjury case against the circulator in Cook County, but the drop in valid signatures could hurt the candidate’s chances of getting on the ballot.

Finko said this rule breaking typically slides under the radar, unless an objector steps forward. “This happens all the time. It’s a question of [whether] somebody gets caught.”

According to Block Club Chicago, supporters have been circulating petitions on Tunney’s behalf since at least September 27. A spokesperson told Block Club petitions were being circulated on Tunney’s behalf while the alderperson weighed his options.

Appointed to City Council by former Mayor Richard M. Daley in 2002, Tunney is Chicago’s first openly gay alderperson. He has won five reelection races since then. His decision to not run for his seat again comes amid a “Great Resignation” in City Council. At least 13 alderpeople are expected to leave their posts when the term ends in May 2023. 

Tunney is a former Illinois Restaurant Association chair and has spearheaded development and services across the ward, such as the Center on Halsted, the AIDS Garden on the lakefront, and LGBTQ+ senior housing. 

As vice mayor and chair of the powerful Committee on Zoning, Landmarks and Building Standards, Tunney was an early ally of Lightfoot. But the City Council, he told the Sun-Times in August, is “not a good place to work these days.” He cited Lightfoot’s “strong and somewhat divisive” personality as part of the reason.

Tunney became the owner of Ann Sather in 1981 and was responsible for growing the restaurant to three locations. In December 2020, the restaurant allowed customers to eat inside during the state-mandated COVID-19 indoor dining ban. Tunney called it an “error in judgment” and ceased the practice, which later resulted in a $2,000 fine from the city.

If Tunney declares his run for mayor, he would be the fourth alderperson to do so, after Alds. Raymond Lopez (15th), Sophia King (4th) and Roderick Sawyer (6th). At least 12 people have filed with the Chicago Board of Elections to run for mayor, including Mayor Lightfoot.

November 28 is the last day that mayoral and aldermanic candidates can submit their nominating petitions. 

Election day for the Chicago municipal election is February 28, 2023.


Career politicians are stepping down, and there’s now an opportunity for new—and possibly progressive—Black leaders to take the reins.


CPD officer Frederick Collins has more than 40 misconduct complaints. Now, he’s running for mayor.


LGBTQ+ Chicagoans discuss Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s record.

Read More

Cinnamon rolls and campaign petitionsTaylor Mooreon October 13, 2022 at 5:20 pm Read More »

Rising Rockets and other takeaways from the NBA preseasonon October 13, 2022 at 6:41 pm

Houston’s Jalen Green is poised for a breakout season in year two. Carmen Mandato/Getty Images

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The NBA preseason is winding down, and while it’s always difficult to decipher what matters and what doesn’t during exhibition season, there are always a few nuggets with fantasy basketball implications.

With that in mind, we gathered our fantasy basketball experts — Andr? Snellings, Eric Moody, Eric Karabell, Jim McCormick and John Cregan — to go over what stuck out to them over the past few weeks of preseason action.

Young Rockets on the rise

I’ve really noticed the big performances from the young players in Houston. We knew the Rockets were in full-on youth mode, with four starters aged 22 and younger, but in the preseason it appears that the youth is ready to pop.

Jalen Green has 48 points, nine 3-pointers, eight rebounds and seven assists in only 48 minutes over his last two games. Third overall pick Jabari Smith went for 21 points, eight rebounds and five 3-pointers in 25 minutes of his preseason debut, and he hasn’t been the most impressive rookie on the team. Tari Eason, who is fighting for a starting job after dominating the Las Vegas Summer League, is averaging a 20-10 double-double in only 24.5 MPG of three preseason games.

And that’s not even mentioning Alperen Sengun and Kevin Porter Jr., who both could be poised to shine. The Rockets look like fertile ground for fantasy basketball production this season. — Snellings

All eyes on Jalen Green

For me, it has been Green’s stellar preseason. As last season progressed, he was providing real value towards the end of his rookie year. Green averaged 21.4 points, 3.1 rebounds, 2.9 assists and 3.1 triples in the final two months of the season.

The Rockets’ offense will revolve around Green after Christian Wood was traded to the Mavericks. There’s a good chance he’ll have a breakout season, and he’s a strong value at his current ADP (75.1). — Moody

Injured stars returning to the court

2 Related

There is an uncommon amount of star players returning from long absences. Watching preseason slates so far, it has stood out just how many teams are integrating star-level talents back in to the fold after long absences. Every season, of course, offers a series of players returning from injury, but between Denver’s duo of young stars, Kawhi Leonard, Ben Simmons, John Wall, Sexton, and Zion Williamson, the caliber and potential of this crew of returning players is astounding.

This means that fantasy managers will need to hone their positions on each of these situations, as each situation is somewhat unique and decisions will need to be made on these players throughout the early and middle rounds of drafts. — McCormick

Overrating Zion, Kawhi and others

I find that fantasy basketball managers seldom overrate preseason statistics, because they realize so few of the stars play all of the games. Still, based on ADP, they seem to be overly excited about some stars returning from missing the entire previous season.

Not to keep harping on poor, awesome Williamson, but of course he’s going to look good in preseason games. Doesn’t mean he plays back-to-backs the first few months or feels like rebounding once the season starts. Leonard and Jamal Murray are also rising in ADP. Why? We know they are good. Nothing changed. — Karabell

Young players being overlooked in drafts

The inflation of older, established names over younger, still-on-the-come-up names. There’s some small market vs. big market bias at play. But I’m also starting to wonder that with all of the tumult since 2020, if we’re seeing something I’ve read up on as of late; our unconscious regression to a pre-2020 mindset. Because when you look at who’s going where, i’s like last season never happened.

Second-and-third-year players and/or players who took “the leap” last season are getting underdrafted by a round or more. Here’s my (very long) list: Cade Cunningham, Anthony Edwards, Darius Garland, Evan Mobley, Desmond Bane, Dejounte Murray, Jordan Poole, Saddiq Bey, RJ Barrett and Tyler Herro. (Not to mention poor Franz Wagner. And basically the entire Rockets roster.) — Cregan

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Rising Rockets and other takeaways from the NBA preseasonon October 13, 2022 at 6:41 pm Read More »

A love letter to ‘snakies’

It’s often said that love finds you only when you’re not looking for it. This has been my experience with movies about giant snakes, mutant snakes, unholy hybrids of snake and man, and, in one case, a man with a snake for an arm. Why did it have to be snakes? I don’t have especially strong feelings about them, and yet in the last few years I’ve accidentally become an expert on the deranged world of snakesploitation horror cinema. Though they may not earn themselves a spot in the Library of Congress (yet . . .), these magnetically strange B movies have slithered their way into the annals of my heart. As Halloween fast approaches, and with the Criterion Channel now streaming Ken Russell’s more mainstream but cartoonishly horny The Lair of the White Worm as part of their 80s horror collection, there’s no better time to dive into the genre.

In many ways the original snakesploitation story is that of Adam and Eve. For the sake of brevity, though, we can fast-forward to the next most important one: 1973’s Sssssss, about lab assistant David who naively trusts his snake scientist employer, Dr. Stoner, not to inject him with an experimental serum that will turn him into a snake-man. With numerous actual king cobras lunging at its cast onscreen and Animorphs-adjacent special effects by John Chambers—the man behind the beloved ape suits in Planet of the Apes who was also inexplicably one of the masterminds of the real-life hostage rescue that inspired ArgoSssssss remains one of the strangest, most uncategorizable B movies of the early 70s. The joys of watching it are immediate and undeniable, as we bear witness to Dirk Benedict of The A-Team fame as he molts his skin, turns green, falls in love, and is attacked by a mongoose, all while trying to wrest control of his humanity from his mad scientist boss.

Widely considered to be the Michael Jordan of movies about humongous killer snakes, Oliver Reed starred in not one but two snake motion pictures (popularly known as “snakies”) in the early 80s: Venom in 1981 and Spasms in 1983. The former paired him with Klaus Kinski—famed for his Werner Herzog collaborations and for looking like a leather Muppet brought to life by an evil wizard—for a riff on Dog Day Afternoon. The twist, as you may have guessed, is that it’s Dog Day Afternoon with a black mamba snake on the loose amidst Reed and Kinski’s hostages. It’s about as ridiculous as it sounds and has murder-by-snake in abundance, but doesn’t hold a candle to Oliver’s even more unhinged Spasms, in which he plays a reclusive millionaire paying big money to track down the monster serpent whose bite imbued him with extrasensory perception. Peter Fonda costars as a medium hired to facilitate a psychic connection between Reed and the snake, with the one kink in their plans being a satanic snake cult that wants the serpent for themselves. Neither film is essential per se, but both contain fleeting glimpses of what Alfred Hitchcock would call “pure cinema,” by which I mean people get bit real good by giant super-snakes and, in some cases, explode.

Even in their more outré moments, all of these films fall under the more conventional side of snakesploitation, the kind of movies just tasteful enough to air on TCM on a day when Ted Turner is out of the office. There is, however, a weirder, sleazier side of the micro-genre, and here is where Curse II: The Bite comes into play. Call it advanced snakesploitation. A himbo on a road trip with his girlfriend takes a shortcut through a former nuclear test site in the desert, is bitten by one of the many mutant rattlesnakes who call the region home, and soon finds his arm turning into a killer snake with a mind of its own. What it lacks in “suspense” or “pacing”—bourgeois standards of quality invented by The Man to keep the public from seeing a guy with a snake for an arm puke up a lot of smaller snakes at once— it more than makes up for with ever-escalating shock value and an abundance of unhinged gore by Japanese special effects legend Screaming Mad George.

The true hidden gem of snakesploitation cinema though, and the one that achieves the perfect synthesis of studio polish and hysterical trashiness, is 1978’s supercharged Carrie rip-off Jennifer. Everything lurid about Brian De Palma’s film is taken into maximum overdrive here: the bullies are no longer high school evil but attempted-murder evil, the unstable Christian parent is somehow even more unstable and Christian, and the eponymous teen has the power to conjure and mind-control snakes the size of Buicks. It’s a perfect storm of melodrama and exploitation cranked up to 11 as Jennifer’s sex-crazed, bloodthirsty teen rivals repeatedly try to off her for being, in their words, a “hillbilly bitch.” Not only a treat for the snake-loving freaks among us, but a veritable all-you-can-eat buffet of slickly produced garbage.

There is of course an elephant (snake) in the room (plane) when discussing snake cinema. Snakes on a Plane (2006) is snakesploitation gone corporate, snakesploitation selling out on its major-label debut. Needless to say, it holds no respect from me, a leading scholar on herpetological cinema. Directed by the man behind the only two bad Final Destination movies (the second and fourth, for the record), it feels explicitly made to earn back its budget in syndication on Spike TV. There’s plenty of computer-generated snakes biting genitals, but it’s all broad strokes with no passion or thought put into those crotch bites, a product being sold to us by cynical snake-hating Hollywood suits rather than something genuinely weird and interesting. One needs only to look at the Snakes on a Plane climax, in which Samuel L. Jackson easily ejects the snakes from his aircraft by shooting open a plane window. 

Where is the spectacle, where is the joy? Compare this to the climactic moment of Spasms when a 20-foot-long Micronesian serpent attempts to blow up Oliver Reed with psychokinetic explosions, they engage in a man-on-snake knife fight, then licensed medium Peter Fonda steps in to shoot the snake in the mouth many, many times with an assault rifle. Therein lies the radical, man-dominating-nature catharsis we yearn for, and often find, in the humble snakesploitation film.

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