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Red Letter Media, LLC
Type Private
Manufacture Flick
Founded
  • Apr 23, 2004; 17 years ago  (2004-04-23)
  • Scottsdale, Arizona, U.South.
Founder Mike Stoklasa
Headquarters

Milwaukee, Wisconsin

,

U.S.

Surface area served

Worldwide

Fundamental people

  • Mike Stoklasa
  • Jay Bauman
  • Rich Evans
Products
  • Film reviews
  • Films
  • Web shows
Owner Mike Stoklasa
YouTube information
Nationality American
Channel
  • RedLetterMedia
Years agile 2007–present
Genre
  • Moving picture review
  • one-act
Subscribers 1.iv million[1]
Total views 850 million[ane]

Creator Awards

YouTube Silver Play Button 2.svg 100,000 subscribers 2012
YouTube Gold Play Button 2.svg i,000,000 subscribers 2019

Updated: 6 April 2022
Website world wide web.redlettermedia.com
Footnotes / references
[2]

Red Letter Media, LLC, stylized as RedLetterMedia on YouTube, is an American film and video production company operated past independent filmmakers Mike Stoklasa (formerly of GMP Pictures)[3] [4] [5] and Jay Bauman (formerly of Blanc Screen Cinema). The company was formed by Stoklasa in 2004, while he was living in Scottsdale, Arizona, merely is at present based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (as of 2021[update]). It attracted significant attention in 2009 through Stoklasa's lxx-minute video review of the 1999 film Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace. The review was posted in seven parts on YouTube, and was presented by his character "Harry S. Plinkett" (oft shortened to "Mr. Plinkett"). While Stoklasa had published other video reviews of several Star Trek films before that, his Phantom Menace and subsequent Star Wars prequel reviews were praised for both content and presentation.

Numerous other series have been produced by Reddish Letter Media, including several movie review-based web series (Half in the Bag, Best of the Worst, and re:View), satirical podcasts (The Nerd Crew) and video game-based web serial (Game Station two.0, Previously Recorded). Low budget features produced past and starring Stoklasa and other Red Alphabetic character Media cast members accept been largely horror films and comedies, such equally Feeding Frenzy, The Recovered, Oranges: Revenge of the Eggplant and Infinite Cop. Alongside Stoklasa and Bauman, Red Letter Media likewise employs Rich Evans, Stoklasa's long-time friend and confidant, as a full-time actor and stagehand for their projects. Stoklasa, Bauman, Evans, and their friends Jack Packard and Josh Davis appear as cast members for the vast majority of their YouTube releases.

Spider web series [edit]

Mr. Plinkett'south Reviews [edit]

Stoklasa created his first video review for Star Expedition Generations after watching the film again in 2008. Stoklasa believed his own vocalism sounded "too slow" for the review and adopted the persona of Harry S. Plinkett, a character he had previously used in several curt films (originally played by Rich Evans).[half dozen] The character first appeared in You're Invited! The Olsen Twins Picture show, a short film that incorporates clips from The Adventures of Mary-Kate & Ashley, in which the Olsen twins accept a phone call from a human being named Mr. Plinkus, a proper noun Stoklasa and Evans either misheard as, or contradistinct to, Mr. Plinkett.[7]

Plinkett has been described as "cranky", a "schizophrenic", and "psychotic"[8] [9] with a voice that has been called "a cross between Dan Aykroyd in The Dejection Brothers and The Silence of the Lambs' Buffalo Neb".[8] [10]

The Star Trek Generations Plinkett review was met with many favorable comments, inspiring Stoklasa to review the other three Star Trek: The Adjacent Generation films—Showtime Contact (1996), Insurrection (1998), and Nemesis (2002).[6] Inspired by these, Stoklasa created his review for Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace, citing his dislike of the franchise's prequel trilogy, and how it influenced a trend of films characterized by CGI spectacle, in lieu of the live-action stunts and meticulously crafted sets that characterized films of earlier decades.[8]

Stoklasa'due south review of The Phantom Menace was published to YouTube on December ten, 2009, and rapidly became popular, receiving over 5 one thousand thousand views in the starting time four months of its release.[6] The video was widely shared, including by celebrities such as Damon Lindelof and Simon Pegg.[6] [10] In comparison to his earlier Star Trek moving picture reviews, which lasted 30 to xl minutes, the Phantom Menace review had a total run time of approximately seventy minutes.[ten] The review took Stoklasa betwixt seven and ten days to complete.[11] As of July 2021, the outset episode of the review is the well-nigh watched video on Red Alphabetic character Media'southward YouTube channel, with more than 10 million views.[12]

Subsequent Plinkett reviews have covered the James Cameron films Avatar [13] and Titanic, Star Wars: Episode Two – Attack of the Clones,[xiv] Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith,[xv] Baby'south Solar day Out [16] (which was referenced at the cease of the Attack of the Clones review), the children's movie Cop Dog (originally mentioned in a short update video), Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,[17] Star Wars: The Force Awakens every bit well as its sequel The Last Jedi,[18] and the 2016 Ghostbusters reboot.[19] Stoklasa also created a satirical brusk pic review of J. J. Abrams' Star Trek [xx] and later on followed information technology up with a full-length review.[21]

Stoklasa has released audio commentary tracks done in the Plinkett character for Star Wars, Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace [22] and Star Trek 5: The Concluding Borderland,[23] which are available for download.

In an interview, Stoklasa stated that in creating a review, he and a friend would sentry the moving picture only once while taking notes and frequently pausing the film to hash out scenes. After that, he would write a twenty–30 page script for it in the Plinkett character, vocalisation information technology, and edit it together along with some improvisations.[24]

One-half in the Bag [edit]

Half in the Bag is a regularly released series in which Stoklasa and Bauman review films in a more than traditional format, albeit with a haphazard and 4th wall breaking overarching plot. Stoklasa has described it as a cross between Siskel and Ebert and a 1980s sitcom[ citation needed ], with Stoklasa and Bauman playing VCR repairmen who discuss movies while finding increasingly convoluted ways of avoiding their scheduled repair work on Mr. Plinkett's VCR.

The testify often features the character of Plinkett portrayed by Rich Evans. Tim Heidecker, who hosts satiric movie review evidence On Cinema, makes a cameo in episode 37 as the owner of the VCR repair shop who bequeaths employment to Jay and Mike.[25]

The commencement episode premiered on March 12, 2011, with a review of Drive Angry and The Adjustment Bureau. On March xi, 2021, the channel posted a scripted video celebrating the 10th anniversary of the series.[26] As of March 2022, the series totals 233 episodes on YouTube.[27] The most viewed episodes of the series are reviews of the Star Wars films The Last Jedi and The Ascent of Skywalker.

Best of the Worst [edit]

Best of the Worst is a regularly-released series in which members of Reddish Letter Media watch and review multiple films ranging from B-movies to instructional videos, sometimes sent in by fans.[22] After viewing and riffing on the films, a rotating panel of 4 sit to discuss what they merely watched. Panels typically consist of whatsoever combination of Mike Stoklasa, Jay Bauman, Rich Evans, Jessi Nakles, Jack Packard, Josh "The Sorcerer" Davis, or special guests. Panel participants then individually decide upon which film or video represents the "All-time of the Worst". Viewing material that is deemed to be insulting, offensive, or especially poor is often destroyed in a creative fashion. Methods of destruction have included dissolving a VHS tape in acetone, forcing a DVD through a paper shredder, dragging a record around the streets tied to the bumper of a car, and cooking a tape on a charcoal grill aslope cheeseburgers.

Canadian visual effects artists Colin Cunningham and Jim Maxwell, who have worked on numerous television series and feature films, ofttimes appear every bit recurring guests. Special guests on the show take included screenwriters Max Landis and Simon Barrett, comic book artist Freddie Williams, actors Macaulay Culkin and Patton Oswalt, comedian Gillian Bellinger and indie motion-picture show auteur Len Kabasinski.

Some episodes feature the "Wheel of the Worst", in which a cycle is spun to select which films/videos will be watched.[22] Wheel selections are often videos that are either extremely bizarre (such as "Dog Sitter", a movie made to appeal to dogs), low budget instructional films, educational films and those which accept little mod relevance (such as Chinese-language instructional tapes near how to use AOL). Videos featured on Bicycle of the Worst are most frequently plant on VHS tapes. The Daily Herald praised All-time of the Worst for being Red Letter of the alphabet Media's most entertaining series.[28]

The show occasionally features other gimmicks to randomly select viewing material such as the "Choose-And-Lose" and the Plinketto Board. Another subsection of Best of the Worst includes the "Black Spine Edition" where the grouping randomly selects VHS tapes which are missing advisory or identification labels on the side of the cassette.

Sometimes the crew will review a specific film which they have previously viewed off camera and recommend to fans of poorly-conceived and poorly-executed B movies. They refer to reviews of this nature as their "Spotlight Series". The offset of these reviews featured the film Hollywood Cop by director Amir Shervan was released on YouTube on June 21, 2017. In this format, low budget indie movies Suburban Sasquatch, Lycan Colony and The Last Vampire on Earth have likewise been featured.

In 2019, the coiffure introduced a 'Hall of Fame' for Best of the Worst, intended to represent the all-time things that have appeared on the testify. There take only been three additions to the hall of fame thus far; histrion Cameron Mitchell and low-budget films Surviving Edged Weapons and Creating Rem Lezar.

re:View [edit]

On May 24, 2016, the visitor released the get-go episode of a new serial called re:View. Compared to the company'due south other shows, the format is a much more stripped downwardly and straight forward arroyo to film critique. Two members of Red Letter Media sit in front end of a red curtain and offering thoughts and insight on a film that they both enjoy. Films chosen for this feature are often either cult classics such equally Pinkish Flamingos, Freddy Got Fingered and Martin, or well renowned genre-defining films like The Thing and Ghostbusters. Clips of the film being discussed are interwoven, typically to lend emphasis to a specific indicate being fabricated, or to showcase some of the most memorable moments from the movie. re:View has too featured Star Trek films and episodes, a particular favorite of Stoklasa's.

For an episode featuring The Guest, the screenwriter of the film, Simon Barrett, appeared equally a guest and spoke about many behind the scenes aspects of the product. A like insight into the background of a film the Red Alphabetic character Media coiffure enjoyed was shared in a ii-office interview series with Samurai Cop lead Matt Hannon, though this occurred prior to the creation of the re:View branding and format. Former kid star Macaulay Culkin made a invitee appearance in a 2018 episode reviewing Hackers, and has since returned to both this series and All-time of the Worst.[29] [30]

The Nerd Crew: A Pop Culture Podcast [edit]

The first episode being uploaded to YouTube on 5 January 2017, The Nerd Crew parodied pop culture "fanboyism" and video serial such every bit Screen Junkies, Collider, and The John Campea Show, with Stoklasa, Bauman and Evans playing "manchildren" demonstrating excessive enthusiasm over Star Wars, the Marvel Cinematic Universe and other content aimed primarily at a juvenile audience.[31] Product placement, native advertising and general subservience to amusement mega-corporations were all satirized.[32] [33]

Previously Recorded [edit]

In July 2014, Red Letter Media affiliates Rich Evans and Jack Packard began a YouTube Video game review channel under the name Previously Recorded or Pre-Rec. Videos from the channel have been featured on the Ruby Letter Media website alongside other Red Letter of the alphabet Media content, and the channel has been referenced in numerous Half in the Handbag and Best of the Worst episodes. The channel was Red Letter of the alphabet Media'due south 2d attempt at producing gaming content after the brusque-lived Game Station 2.0 (2012). On July 22, 2018, the duo announced that they would be broadcasting their final live stream on July 25, 2018 and then the channel would be put on concord for the foreseeable futurity afterwards.[34]

Reception [edit]

Stoklasa'south Mr. Plinkett reviews have been considered part of an emerging art form that hybridizes mashup with video essays, equally they use a combination of footage from the movie in question and other related sources.

Literary and cultural critic Benjamin Kirbach argues that Plinkett enacts a kind of détournement by recontextualizing images that would otherwise serve as Star Wars marketing fabric (such as behind-the-scenes footage and interviews). Defined by Guy Debord as "the reuse of preexisting artistic elements in a new ensemble", détournement is a way of generating meaning out of cultural texts that is antithetical to their original intent.[35] Kirbach argues that Stoklasa uses this tactic to construct a subversive narrative that frames George Lucas every bit "a lazy, out-of-touch, and thoroughly unchallenged filmmaker".[36]

Kirbach likewise argues that Plinkett'due south popularity tin be explained, in part, as a form of catharsis. Considering he is portrayed every bit insane, the Plinkett shtick "legitimates our nerd-rage by literalizing it".[37] Plinkett enrolls George Lucas in an ongoing Oedipal drama as the castrating father effigy, a father effigy we are invited to rage confronting owing to his flagrant ineptitude. But aside from raw catharsis, Kirbach claims that Plinkett'southward insanity is besides a critique of the motion-picture show industry itself. By fictionalizing his critic, Stoklasa constructs a character who is unable to speak at a safe distance from the text he analyzes. "Plinkett becomes the figure of a consumer culture that has been force-fed Hollywood schlock beyond its carrying capacity," Kirbach writes.[38] And further:

Stoklasa'southward major conceit—that someone would accept to exist "crazy" to watch movies the way Plinkett does—as well implies a barely hidden inverse: that the film industry has induced a consumerist fantasy in people who don't watch movies this manner. Plinkett'south obscenity and jokiness are without a doubt designed to garner viewership, but they are too Stoklasa'due south amends for—or defense against—a culture that already construes his level of passion as pathological. This fundamental irony leads us to question what is actually more insane: the consumer who rejects the expressions of a massive culture industry, or the massive culture industry itself. Plinkett satirizes the kind of consumer such a system generates: psychotic, sexist, homicidal.[37]

In an interview with Esquire, comedian Patton Oswalt noted that the Mr. Plinkett reviews are an instance of "astonishing film scholarship" on the Star Wars prequels that demonstrate how much of the Star Wars universe is squandered past them.[39] The Daily Telegraph called the reviews "legendary" and described them equally beingness more popular than the bodily films.[twoscore]

Manager Jordan Vogt-Roberts, whilst critiquing CinemaSins' Everything Wrong With ... video of his pic, Kong: Skull Island, for bad film criticism masked under the guise of "satire", praised Red Alphabetic character Media for proficient film criticism and satire, stating that "Red Letter Media's Phantom Menace review IS satire. They lampoon a certain blazon of nerd culture AND their takedown is accurate & thoughtful. Cherry Letter Media'due south critiques concord up under scrutiny. CinemaSins only wants to shit on things for the sake of shitting on them."[41]

However, the reviews accept likewise been criticized by Star Wars fans. Stoklasa stated that he feels "Star Wars to some people is similar a religion so they respond to attacks on information technology as such."[24] Ane fan wrote a 108-page-long point-by-signal response to the Phantom Menace review, taking effect with many of Stoklasa's criticisms,[42] which Stoklasa mocked in an announcement video for his Revenge of the Sith review.[43]

Films [edit]

Ruddy Alphabetic character Media also produces original feature-length films. Amidst the depression-upkeep features Stoklasa and Bauman have produced and directed on Ruby Letter Media are the action-comedy film Oranges: Revenge of the Eggplant, made in 2005 and available on Netflix[11] (currently only bachelor for DVD rental, not for streaming); The Recovered, a horror thriller starring Tina Krause; and Feeding Frenzy, a 2010 genre-spoof of puppet monster movies like Gremlins. Feeding Frenzy featured Rich Evans as Mr. Plinkett; Evans originated the character in short films, and this feature was filmed before the popularity of the Phantom Menace review.[24] Stoklasa'southward short films are usually dark comedies. Plinkett, played past Evans, appeared in several of them, starting with "Y'all're Invited".

Stoklasa created and starred in 5 seasons of the web sitcom The Grabowskis, opposite Dixie Jacobs, nigh an exaggeratedly trashy and unpleasant sitcom family unit. Installments of the serial were only a few seconds long at outset (comically giving more screen time to the lengthy intro than the episode itself), merely grew to full episode length over time.

On October 26, 2015, the company announced via a curt video that information technology had completed the characteristic-length motion-picture show Space Cop, which had been in product for at least seven years.[44] Space Cop stars Evans in the titular role alongside Stoklasa, who wrote and directed the film. It was made available on Jan 12, 2016, on Blu-ray for $25 through Cherry Letter of the alphabet Media'due south Bandcamp page. The beginning run sold out in a matter of hours.

[edit]

Since 2012, Reddish Letter Media has produced commentary tracks for various films, releasing them on Bandcamp.[45] These began with three commentary tracks by Stoklasa as Mr. Plinkett, but the company has since released tracks by Stoklasa, Bauman, and Evans every bit themselves.

[edit]

  • Episode I – The Phantom Menace (Mike Stoklasa as Mr. Plinkett)
  • Episode Iv - A New Hope (Mike Stoklasa every bit Mr. Plinkett)
  • Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (Mike Stoklasa as Mr. Plinkett)
  • Alien vs. Predator
  • Samurai Cop
  • Ghostbusters 2
  • Halloween
  • Alien
  • The Terminator
  • Jurassic Park
  • Batman & Robin
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street
  • Return of the Jedi
  • Masters of the Universe
  • Gremlins
  • Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
  • The Room
  • Justice League
  • RoboCop
  • Jingle All the Mode
  • Army of Darkness
  • Dungeons & Dragons

Filmography [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "About YouTube channel". YouTube.
  2. ^ "RLM Corporate Inquiry". Arizona Corporation Commission. Archived from the original on 2017-04-14.
  3. ^ "GMP Pictures". Angelfire. Archived from the original on February 17, 2018. Retrieved September half-dozen, 2016.
  4. ^ "Mike Stoklasa: The Grabowskis etc". January 4, 2009. Archived from the original on June 17, 2010. Known for his experimental style, Mike of GMP Pictures (Smashing Movie Pictures, now Red Letter Media) was known for his funny editing - he could take unfunny cloth, material non even meant to exist funny, and edit it in a manner that was funny.
  5. ^ "Return of the Undertale. (part 1)". YouTube. January 10, 2016. Upshot occurs at thirteen:46. Archived from the original on 2021-12-xv. Before Red Letter Media, when we were in high schoolhouse, me and Mike called what nosotros did GMP. GMP Pictures. [The P stood for] stuff. Pictures. It's like DC Comics.
  6. ^ a b c d Jefferies, L.B. (March sixteen, 2010). "RedLetterMedia's Spin on the Crazed YouTube Reviewer". PopMatters . Retrieved March xvi, 2010.
  7. ^ Crimson Alphabetic character Media. "You're Invited". Archived from the original on February ane, 2013. Retrieved June vii, 2012.
  8. ^ a b c Sarlin, Benjamin (December 28, 2009). "Star Wars: YouTube Battle". The Daily Beast . Retrieved March 14, 2010.
  9. ^ Seitz, Matt Zoller (January 20, 2010). "Ranting in Pictures". Independent Film Aqueduct. p. 3. Archived from the original on August 1, 2017. Retrieved March 17, 2010.
  10. ^ a b c Eisenberg, Eric (Dec 17, 2009). "Epic 70-Minute Review Of Star Wars: The Phantom Menace". Picture palace Alloy. Retrieved March 17, 2010.
  11. ^ a b Abrams, Brian (January four, 2010). "Man Behind Epic Phantom Menace Review Speaks". Heeb . Retrieved March 17, 2010.
  12. ^ Star Wars: The Phantom Menace Review (Part 1 of 7), archived from the original on 2021-12-xv, retrieved 2021-07-24
  13. ^ Hart, Hugh (February 1, 2010). "Phantom YouTube Critic Reams Avatar". Wired . Retrieved March 17, 2010.
  14. ^ Eisenberg, Eric (April iii, 2010). "70-Minute Phantom Menace Reviewer Returns For Attack Of The Clones". Cinema Blend. Retrieved April 3, 2010.
  15. ^ Fischer, Russ (December 31, 2010). "Spotter Red Letter Media'due south Review of 'Star Wars: Episode Iii – Revenge of the Sith'". /Film. Retrieved December 31, 2010.
  16. ^ Virtel, Louis (June 21, 2010). "The Definitive Baby's Day Out Review, for All Eternity". Movieline. Archived from the original on 2010-07-27. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  17. ^ Fischer, Russ (December 23, 2011). "Scout Red Letter Media'southward Takedown of 'Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull'". /Film. Retrieved Dec 24, 2011.
  18. ^ "Mr. Plinkett's The Star Wars Awakens Review". YouTube. Ruddy Letter Media. Archived from the original on 2021-12-xv. Retrieved two Oct 2016.
  19. ^ "Mr. Plinkett's Ghostbusters (2016) Review". YouTube. Red Alphabetic character Media. Archived from the original on 2021-12-15. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
  20. ^ "STAR Expedition (2009)". RedLetterMedia.com. Retrieved April 4, 2010.
  21. ^ Lamar, Cyriaque (September 1, 2010). "Mr. Plinkett (a.k.a. "The Phantom Reviewer") takes on J.J. Abrams' Star Trek". io9. Retrieved September 1, 2010.
  22. ^ a b c Tim Brookes (December ten, 2013). "Reddish Letter Media: Cinema-Themed Comedy For Film Fans [Stuff to Watch]". MakeUseOf. Archived from the original on Jan 17, 2014. Retrieved January 17, 2014.
  23. ^ "Plinkett's Star Trek v: The Final Frontier Commentary". July 8, 2014.
  24. ^ a b c "Red Letter Media's Mike Stoklasa". geekpropaganda.net. Feb 4, 2011. Archived from the original on Feb 10, 2011. Retrieved February 4, 2011.
  25. ^ RedLetterMedia (2012-08-07). "Half in the Bag: Episode 37 - Special guest star Tim Heidecker". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-xv. Retrieved 2018-07-16 .
  26. ^ Half in the Purse: x Year Anniversary!, archived from the original on 2021-12-15, retrieved 2021-07-24
  27. ^ "One-half in the Bag - YouTube". YouTube . Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  28. ^ Sean Stangland (January 17, 2014). "Hibernating? Chill out with offbeat shows, DVDs". Daily Herald . Retrieved January 17, 2014.
  29. ^ RedLetterMedia (5 Nov 2018). "Hackers - reView". Archived from the original on 2021-12-fifteen – via YouTube.
  30. ^ "Macaulay Culkin: Überraschender Auftritt bei YouTube-Kritikern". 24 Oct 2018.
  31. ^ "The Frenzied Fraud of Forced Fandom". i May 2017.
  32. ^ "Diese drei Filmnerds zerstören "Rogue One" und Disney mit nur einem YouTube-Video". 9 January 2017.
  33. ^ "5 лучших роликов недели: "Гремлины", "Ходячие мертвецы", "Звёздные войны" и фильм Дарьи Чаруши". kinokadr.ru.
  34. ^ "Twitch". histrion.twitch.tv . Retrieved 2018-07-23 .
  35. ^ Kirbach, Benjamin (2014). "Critical Psychosis: Genre, Détournement, and Critique in Mr. Plinkett's Star Wars Reviews". Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies. 16 (1): 109. doi:10.17077/2168-569X.1430 . Retrieved four May 2015.
  36. ^ Kirbach, Benjamin (2014). "Critical Psychosis: Genre, Détournement, and Critique in Mr. Plinkett'southward Star Wars Reviews". Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies. sixteen (1): 108. doi:10.17077/2168-569X.1430 . Retrieved 4 May 2015.
  37. ^ a b Kirbach, Benjamin (2014). "Critical Psychosis: Genre, Détournement, and Critique in Mr. Plinkett's Star Wars Reviews". Iowa Periodical of Cultural Studies. 16 (1): 112. doi:10.17077/2168-569X.1430 . Retrieved four May 2015.
  38. ^ Kirbach, Benjamin (2014). "Disquisitional Psychosis: Genre, Détournement, and Critique in Mr. Plinkett'south Star Wars Reviews". Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies. 16 (one): 111. doi:x.17077/2168-569X.1430 . Retrieved iv May 2015.
  39. ^ Wood, Jennifer (January 27, 2015). "Patton Oswalt on Moving-picture show Addiction, Star Wars, and the Ane Motion-picture show He'd Picket on Loop". Esquire . Retrieved January 27, 2015.
  40. ^ Bell, Chris (December 16, 2015). "Why information technology'south time to stop hating George Lucas". The Daily Telegraph . Retrieved December nineteen, 2015.
  41. ^ "Jordan Vogt-Roberts on Twitter".
  42. ^ Lussier, Germain (January 13, 2011). "'Star Wars' Fan Writes 108-Folio Rebuttal to Red Letter Media's 'Phantom Menace' Review". /Motion-picture show. Retrieved February 4, 2011.
  43. ^ Reddish Alphabetic character Media. "Episode three Review is at present up ..." YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-15. Retrieved June 3, 2011.
  44. ^ "Infinite Cop Trailer #1 - Cerise Letter Media". redlettermedia.com.
  45. ^ "Red Letter Media commentary tracks". Reddish Letter Media . Retrieved 2016-12-25 .
  46. ^ "r/RedLetterMedia - Release dates of Plinkett Reviews". reddit. ten June 2015.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • IMDb page
    • Mike Stoklasa at IMDb
    • Jay Bauman at IMDb
    • Rich Evans at IMDb
    • Jack Packard at IMDb

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Letter_Media

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