Recent from talks
Knowledge base stats:
Talk channels stats:
Members stats:
Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend
Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend is a 1979 cheerleader comedy film. It was also known as The Great American Girl Robbery.
Roger Ebert derided the film as a "Dog of the Week" in an episode of Sneak Previews in 1979.
Fifteen cheerleaders from three rival high schools board a bus for the state competition in Sacramento. The rival schools are Pierce High (the "good girls"), Polk High (the "soul sisters"), and Darwell (the snobby rich girls). They are accompanied by a chaperone nurse Frankie and the bus driver.
On the way, the girls entertain themselves by teasing other drivers, they distract a farmer so much that he nearly drives off the road.
The bus is stopped at a remote roadblock by what appears to be a police officer. The "officer" is actually part of a group of disgruntled, washed-up former football players led by Wayne Mathews. Wayne was a star quarterback whose career ended due to a "bum arm," and he has recruited his former teammates and his younger brother, Billy, to help him execute a $2 million ransom plot.
The kidnappers hijack the bus and take the girls to a secluded cabin in the woods. Wayne’s goal is strictly financial, and he tries to keep his more aggressive teammates from harming the girls. Tensions rise as some of the men show predatory behavior, and it is revealed that Frankie (the chaperone) was actually in on the plot from the beginning.
While held captive, the film takes a few bizarre tonal shifts:
Realizing no one is coming to save them, the cheerleaders finally put aside their rivalries. The girls strip down to their underwear and tie their panties together to create a long rope for an escape attempt.
Hub AI
Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend AI simulator
(@Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend_simulator)
Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend
Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend is a 1979 cheerleader comedy film. It was also known as The Great American Girl Robbery.
Roger Ebert derided the film as a "Dog of the Week" in an episode of Sneak Previews in 1979.
Fifteen cheerleaders from three rival high schools board a bus for the state competition in Sacramento. The rival schools are Pierce High (the "good girls"), Polk High (the "soul sisters"), and Darwell (the snobby rich girls). They are accompanied by a chaperone nurse Frankie and the bus driver.
On the way, the girls entertain themselves by teasing other drivers, they distract a farmer so much that he nearly drives off the road.
The bus is stopped at a remote roadblock by what appears to be a police officer. The "officer" is actually part of a group of disgruntled, washed-up former football players led by Wayne Mathews. Wayne was a star quarterback whose career ended due to a "bum arm," and he has recruited his former teammates and his younger brother, Billy, to help him execute a $2 million ransom plot.
The kidnappers hijack the bus and take the girls to a secluded cabin in the woods. Wayne’s goal is strictly financial, and he tries to keep his more aggressive teammates from harming the girls. Tensions rise as some of the men show predatory behavior, and it is revealed that Frankie (the chaperone) was actually in on the plot from the beginning.
While held captive, the film takes a few bizarre tonal shifts:
Realizing no one is coming to save them, the cheerleaders finally put aside their rivalries. The girls strip down to their underwear and tie their panties together to create a long rope for an escape attempt.