So Weird Was SO GOOD!

So Weird Was SO GOOD! Family Reunion: ghosts (and children, and ghost children) are people too!

September 10, 2022 Hannah Werme, Chelsea Gabzdyl, and Friends Season 2 Episode 1
So Weird Was SO GOOD! Family Reunion: ghosts (and children, and ghost children) are people too!
So Weird Was SO GOOD!
More Info
So Weird Was SO GOOD!
So Weird Was SO GOOD! Family Reunion: ghosts (and children, and ghost children) are people too!
Sep 10, 2022 Season 2 Episode 1
Hannah Werme, Chelsea Gabzdyl, and Friends

Let's meet the characters, gush about our bisexual neurodivergent icon Fi, responsible older brother Jack, stoner-coded comedic relief Clu, mother-of-the-year Molly. Chelsea the elementary school teacher and Hannah the former homeschooled kid agree; Ned is teacher of the year. 

This episode begins with images of corpses being pulled out of a shipwreck, builds up to parents watching their child fall to their death, and ends with absolutely iconic 90s fashion. Along the way we compare it to The X-Files, The Addams Family and Lizzie McGuire, deconstruct 90s dumb-blonde culture, discuss which moments fucked us up as kids and which moments fucked us up as adults, the importance of listening to kids (the fictional ones in the show, us as the audience, and ghost kids haunting your laptop), memoirs of the 90s Satanic Panic and hiding our love of this show from loved ones because of it, and reflect on the irony of having technical difficulties while watching a show about a ghost haunting a laptop.

Everyone involved in producing this show was obviously giving it their all, and we are so grateful. 

Show Notes

Let's meet the characters, gush about our bisexual neurodivergent icon Fi, responsible older brother Jack, stoner-coded comedic relief Clu, mother-of-the-year Molly. Chelsea the elementary school teacher and Hannah the former homeschooled kid agree; Ned is teacher of the year. 

This episode begins with images of corpses being pulled out of a shipwreck, builds up to parents watching their child fall to their death, and ends with absolutely iconic 90s fashion. Along the way we compare it to The X-Files, The Addams Family and Lizzie McGuire, deconstruct 90s dumb-blonde culture, discuss which moments fucked us up as kids and which moments fucked us up as adults, the importance of listening to kids (the fictional ones in the show, us as the audience, and ghost kids haunting your laptop), memoirs of the 90s Satanic Panic and hiding our love of this show from loved ones because of it, and reflect on the irony of having technical difficulties while watching a show about a ghost haunting a laptop.

Everyone involved in producing this show was obviously giving it their all, and we are so grateful.