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Cody and I dissect MSP’s iconic 2004 film, Yearbook, and discuss its most memorable segments, its impact on the sport, who won the movie, and more.
RELATED LINKS:
Watch Yearbook
Get Yourself Covered: BLISTER+
Join Us! Blister Summit & Blister Awards Show
TOPICS & TIMES:
The Significance of Yearbook (2:59)
Star Power (8:26)
Most Rewatchable Scenes (9:35)
Ingrid Backstrom (14:55)
What’s Aged the Best? (23:45)
What’s Aged the Worst? (33:03)
Best Quote (43:27)
Who Needed BLISTER+ the Most? (45:45)
Best Cameo (51:03)
‘Gimme More’ Award (52:10)
‘Trying Too Hard’ Award (56:04)
Attention-Span Award (57:15)
Recasting Couch (59:07)
Could / Should it Be Remade Today? (1:00:04)
Who Won the Movie (1:08:05)
Our Final Grades (1:10:28)
Wrt your observations about preferring to watch female big-mountain skiers I feel the same about ski racing. If I want to demonstrate a point of racing technique to somebody I almost always pick a videos of an elite woman. To Cody’s point, their technique tends to be cleaner and “purer” in my experience, with less reliance on brute force. I also learn a lot more by watching womens’ racing.
BTW my facetious (but also halfway-serious) theory is that women have better technique because they actually listen to their coaches and each other.
I agree with this take, Patrick. The same is true of rock climbing/bouldering — men usually try and muscle their way up, while women are more likely to try and employ good technique, be balanced, and be efficient.
As a 55 year old guy who got back into skiing last year after what would be consider a 30ish year break, and I came back with the urgency of my Mid Life Crisis. I watched almost the whole Matchstick catalog this Spring to Fall first as You Tube snips and then as Entire Movies.
* Yearbook was so fun and the 15 to 20ish something boy / young man in me enjoyed a lot of the humor that is, well not ok in 2023 for many of the reasons you and Cody outlined.
* Intro: Just yes! And we all wished we could have taken that young lady to the PROM.
* The Sock and The Cheerleader segments will make me laugh out loud spontaneously just thinking about them.
* I watched the Shane segments on You Tube as Shorts before I knew who Shane was and how he ultimately died. Then I saw them in the movie as a whole. His segment while having nothing to do with Skiing and certainly Skiing that normal people can do was and is just Jaw Dropping. Even re-watching this week before the show just jaw dropping. Kinda like watching Fast and the Furious 8, then going out to drive in your parents 1987 Oldsmobile.
* Lots of 15 year old boy insecurities to laugh at in this movie which just made it so awesome.
My question out of all of this is When / Why / How did skiing moguls stop being cool? or is Matchstick and TGR just not doing that type of content?
Great thoughts, Peter – thanks for sharing.
And equally great question about mogul skiing. I don’t know if it’s cool or not … but I know that in my ski life in Taos and Crested Butte, we’re skiing at least some moguls every single day. And we will definitely be featuring some mogul-centric films on Blister Cinematic. Stay tuned!
To answer Shanes question:
211′ from the takeoff cliff