A Greek Assassin. A seductive Norse goddess. Scientists playing God. The youngest superheroine ever. The Girls know what's up and will decide which are Hot, and which are Not. You've been warned!
Featuring permanent panelists Elyse, Isabel, Nathalie, Josée, Amélie and Shotgun.
Listen to Episode 33 (the usual mature language warnings apply) by clicking HERE!
Or you can right-click “download”, choose “Save Target/Link As”, and select a location on your computer to save the file (35 MB).
Or subscribe to oHOTmu OR NOT? on iTunes!
You can follow along! Here are the characters we cover in this episode.
Credits:
"Can You Dig It?" (Theme for oHOTmu or NOT?) by Brian Tyler.
Bonus clips from: "Daredevil" by Mark Steven Johnson, starring Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner; "She-Ra: Princess of Power" starring Melendy Britt; "The Science Love Song" by AsapSCIENCE; Energizer Battery commercials (not a sponsor, other batteries are available); "So Long, Farewell" from "The Sound of Music", interpreted by Amélie Montour
Thanks for leaving a comment!
Featuring permanent panelists Elyse, Isabel, Nathalie, Josée, Amélie and Shotgun.
Listen to Episode 33 (the usual mature language warnings apply) by clicking HERE!
Or you can right-click “download”, choose “Save Target/Link As”, and select a location on your computer to save the file (35 MB).
Or subscribe to oHOTmu OR NOT? on iTunes!
You can follow along! Here are the characters we cover in this episode.
Credits:
"Can You Dig It?" (Theme for oHOTmu or NOT?) by Brian Tyler.
Bonus clips from: "Daredevil" by Mark Steven Johnson, starring Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner; "She-Ra: Princess of Power" starring Melendy Britt; "The Science Love Song" by AsapSCIENCE; Energizer Battery commercials (not a sponsor, other batteries are available); "So Long, Farewell" from "The Sound of Music", interpreted by Amélie Montour
Thanks for leaving a comment!
Comments
I agree that Him and Her are goofy names for characters; as Siskoid mentioned, Her will show up in the "H" entries, but she did eventually go by a couple of other names: Ayesha (which I assume is a play on H. Rider Haggard's "She") and Kismet, which isn't the greatest name in the world, but it's better than Her.