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October 18, 2023 57 mins

Gem and Em tune into the television wormhole and teleport to TV-Landia. From the golden age of flipping through channels to the streaming supernova of today, your favorite space captains explore the series' that have left a mark on the galaxy, how viewing habits have transformed through the years, and the small screen stories that shaped their childhoods. What canceled show would you bring back? Are "Friends" and "The Office" worth all the hype? How have streaming services impacted the quality of television? Switch your channels to "IOOW" and buckle in for the ride.

Featuring: Emily Estefan and Gemeny Hernandez

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
I hate you the same. Let's go to a man
ready for.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
Launch, Ladies, Germs, Earthlings, earth lungs.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
Earth lingis earth loons, earth loom ba saloons, almost planet.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
How are you today, Welcome back today. I'm happy to
report you are only with your captains, gentlemen. I know.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
I was like, you know, we're spoiling them too, with
all these wonderful people. Let's bring it back home for
a moment. Yeah, exactly, just bring it back to base baby.
And also we were thinking about what we could possibly
talk about that we have been thinking about for a while,
because look, we were born in the nineties, both in
ninety four, right, and we have been through a very

(01:08):
interesting time in media, specifically TV, right, because for example,
I remember when I was growing up, Thursdays were for
this show and Mondays were for this show, and it
was you.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
Had to wait a whole week exactly and commercials hello.
And now we're living in the age of YouTube it
and streaming, and I think it's a very interesting take
and perspective to talk about maybe some TV.

Speaker 3 (01:33):
What do you think Television Landia, Television Landias Today.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
Welcome to Television Londia, sponsored by Nobody anywhere. Yeah, I'm excited,
me too. Why don't we go through the ages? Oh gosh, okay,
I'm like.

Speaker 3 (01:56):
Okay, what are some of your favorite television shows you
remember formed your childhood experience?

Speaker 2 (02:04):
So when I was growing up, it was either you
were like a Disney channeler or you were like a
Nickelodeon cartoon networker.

Speaker 3 (02:12):
Okay, but they're not Nickelodeon cartoon network Nickelodeon.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Yeah, but it was a Vibe cartoon. Yeah, it was
the vibe like me. And they're all different, like you
showed me the Cheetah Girls in my twenties. I can't
believe that. Like, well, because I was watching freaking Deck.

Speaker 3 (02:26):
That's a lab.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
That's Cat and Dog.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
Okay, but yeah, okay, so I was watching Cat Dog
and Dexter's Lab too, What were you?

Speaker 4 (02:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (02:33):
I was, But I was also watching Even Stevens. That's
a raven McGuire.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
None of that. I didn't watch any of that. I
watched Out of the Bucks and Man a Man a
Man a Man of Man this show, you know. Okay, Yeah,
but Out of the Box was Disney. Oh shit, yes,
blocked in me my ounch. No it wasn't ye Okay,
was it? Yes, Google, it was it? Oh my god,
I thought it was like Naked Night or some shit.
What No, out of the Box is so it's like

(03:01):
rated G. I'm sure, wait, but what do you think
Nickelodeon's rated R.

Speaker 3 (03:04):
Nickelodeon was a little bit more like okay, but also
Hello wildthorn Berries?

Speaker 2 (03:10):
Yeah? Or what was the only Rocko's Modern Life? Okay,
look it up Disney out of the Box. I know,
all right, I stand corrected, of course you do. My apologies.
I did watch Out of the Box, accepted, but no,
I'm saying that. Yeah, I didn't watch even Stevens or that.
So Raven Disney Channel was like super PC.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
Nickelodeon was I feel like, for like the cooler kids
or maybe even the older kids. And then Cartoon Network
was like raunch. Cartoon Network was cut throat, like if
you watched Courage the Cowardly Dog like you were you
were a gutsyed scary Yeah. Edited Eddie, Edited Eddie was
full of conflict. That was for like middle in high school. Okay,

(03:54):
I had no business watching this in elementary but I was.

Speaker 2 (03:56):
I don't know. I watched SpongeBob now, okay, so sponge
let's go back foremist parts of our generation. Thank you
formative for me, shows like shows that I remember watching
all the time, because I also remember like cartoons like
morning cartoons. Yeah, edited Eddie before school? Okay, so SpongeBob,
powerpuff Girls, Oh, powerpuff Girl literally amazing? What else? Oh

(04:21):
my god? And then when it got like uh fairly
odd parents, when I got a little later, what happened? Man, Well,
SpongeBob is still running. I still play Jimmy Trump, Jimmy Nutron,
Jimmy nutroump. All right, So if you had to pick
all time favorite cartoon before you you know, before you
left your childhood, like of your childhood, I can. I

(04:44):
love them all for very different reasons. I would say SpongeBob. SpongeBob,
I think is.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
Like the all encompassing like representative of our generation.

Speaker 2 (04:54):
Like who didn't love SpongeBob. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (04:58):
In fact, that was the screen name for me, remember, yeah, yeah,
one of my screen names, you know, one of them.
We're not going to discuss it here. Yeah, not age appropriate,
But one of my original screen names for AIM was
spongeb Lover three one one, because I also really liked
that song Amber by three eleven Oh my god, so
Sponge spongeb lover three one one.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
It was a whole vibe. I feel like cartoons and
stuff and everything was a vibe for sure, different than now.
Now we're in the streaming world and not the world
of waiting a week for everything. You know what else,
Like even the live shows American Idol, the voice, like
when those reality reality TV when that's we were, we

(05:42):
were there for the beginning of reality TV. What was
that show with Nicole Rich and Paris Hilton, The Simple Life?
Simple Life?

Speaker 1 (05:51):
What Hello?

Speaker 2 (05:54):
That's that's like og? That is og stuff? Jersey Shore.

Speaker 3 (05:59):
I remember the first year the Shore or all the
reality TV shows, all those reality TV shows on MTV
were was like the mother hated the boyfriend, the son's girlfriend,
or next next, next, next that shit?

Speaker 2 (06:13):
Is that problematic?

Speaker 3 (06:14):
Or what about the one where they would go room
invasion vas Oh my god, I didn't go with the
black lights.

Speaker 2 (06:20):
That was disgusting, disgusting and disgusting. Was like Hi on Kyle,
like so cringey and we were hooked, hooked, I know,
hooked down that hello and then True Life Life, True Life.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
I eat styrofoam for breakfast, like the craziest things. That's
when you really started to realize reality TV shows like
True Life really showed you how many kinds of people
exist on the planet.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
Yeah, and I also think that it was like a
premonition for what was coming.

Speaker 3 (06:51):
Also, I feel like Hoarders Owes it's its inception to
True Life because that's why I originally.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
Oh my god, my strat that's all I'm telling you.

Speaker 3 (07:01):
Like people eating like mattress, which like, okay, no judgment,
I mean, just don't hurt yourself, but people eating mattress foam,
you want.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
To really take it back. Fear Factor a thousand Ways
to Die, okay, but no fear Factor Factor was one
of those shows. Yes, like they subliminately, subliminally start to
be like, oh, let's push the envelope and it's like
benign and super cute and there's still slime involved and
few things, and then it really went off the rails,

(07:29):
Like think about it, I mean being completely real right now,
Like we're joking about cartoons and all that stuff. Because
you know, TV, whether you like it or not, has
been a big part of everybody's life that has access
to that. Obviously, everybody our generation and beyond all for sure.
So but then when it started to get we talked

(07:50):
about reality like Survivor and you know, these shows that
start pushing the limits and Naked and Afraid Big Brother.
It started getting to a place where now I feel like,
what are the limits? YouTube to me has kind of
taken over TV in the sense of that they continue

(08:10):
to push the limits.

Speaker 3 (08:11):
Hello Jackass, That entire franchis Oh yeah, talk about pushing
the limits.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
I know you do. I know, especially Steve.

Speaker 3 (08:20):
We know Stevo all the time, we tell you come
on the show. But that entire like, I mean, that's danger,
that's dangerous. Things like Jackass are the reason why you
and I grew up with things like Cinnamon Challenge, because
we think that that kind of crazy shit is funny or.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
Or at least like exhilarating or exciting, or which is
kind of fed up. Hello Punked.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
Oh I will never have that. That scene where Beyonce
is watching Christmas Fall and all the little kids. I
will never that lives rent free in my brain constantly,
Ashton raise some hell, the Lizzie Lohan episode Gold Gold

(09:10):
TV Gold, TV Gold, It's so good. Those are the
those are the predecessors to like the shows it still
exists now, Like, hello, what were we watching last night?

Speaker 2 (09:19):
Prank Wars? I know, but wait no, what is it? Yeah,
prank panel, prank Panel. Sorry, by the way, with Johnny Knoxville,
who is one of the you know, pushing boundaries all
over the place, and still they keep it a tad
benign because you have it is so benign. Yeah, you
have to like reach some limitations. But that was the culture.

(09:43):
Like that show Ridiculousness or Scarred. It was literally a
show where you saw like the worst a personal favorite
anything by Nathan Fielder. Oh, I like stuff was weird
and exploratory.

Speaker 3 (09:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:57):
Yeah, yeah, we've toned it down a little. Yeah, but
we've lost a lot too, Like yeah anything Master Chef
is or any of them. You love those competition shows,
you do.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
I get stressed after a while, Like I don't like
it when they lose, I don't like it when they win.
I cry both times. It's like I'm either sad. Ask
him what was the show that we were watching recent?
It was literally Master Chef. I love them because I
love cooking shows. I love Gordon Ramsey. I don't care
what you say. I love Gordon Ramsey. I've always loved.
I just don't care if anybody says anything, I don't care.

(10:29):
I love Gordon Ramsey and we love watching him. We
love watching his shows that we think he's fabulous and
so such a pro, such a pro.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
He gives drama. He gives all the drama that you need.

Speaker 3 (10:38):
And beyond that, when something good happens to these contestants,
I feel like I'm them or like not them, I
feel like I'm like their cousin. Yeah, and I feel
so emotionally invested that like I'm like.

Speaker 2 (10:54):
Oh, and when they don't.

Speaker 3 (10:56):
Win, it's excruciating for me, like I don't want anyone
to lose.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Hello, it's like The Golden Bachelor. Oh my god, stop
whatever you are doing. Turn this podcast episode off right now?
No please, don't, no kidding, stay with us, stick around.

Speaker 3 (11:11):
But afterwards they don't pay us to say this, but
you need to watch I don't even like reality TV
shows like that The Golden Bachelor. I've never seen a
season of The Bachelor of the Bachelorette, don't even try.
But it is The Bachelor, except with people over the
age of sixty, and it is some of the greatest

(11:32):
television I've seen in a while. Yeah, First of all,
the first Golden Bachelor, Gary, if hesus done with first
of why he's super good looking, let's start by that
Gary is a hunk as a hunk of a man,
and he is also the cutest, sweetest, tenderest little thing ever.

(11:56):
I feel like I'm watching a little baby baby like
like genuinely falling for these women, like not knowing what
to do with all his feelings. Because I really feel
like he really is developing these connections with these women.
I can't blame him. The women are fucking beautiful. These
women are gorgeous, intelligent. Of course, they cast the cast.
The casting crew did an incredible job selecting.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
What are they called bachelorette?

Speaker 3 (12:20):
No, they're not that, No, Emily, but what's their name,
like with the contestant the Bachelor, No, he's the bachelor.

Speaker 2 (12:31):
The lady things. We're not referring to them as lady things.
Ye Hosi, Yeah, it's good. I'm sorry. They're so nice,
especially Edith Edith spoiler alert we should have said spoiler alert.
I don't care anyway it right now? Yeah, watch, by

(12:55):
the way, before we move on to the next phase
of TV, which is completely devoid of this because I remember,
I know about you. We're young, but we still grew
up in a time when I would come home and
like MTV and v H one were playing music video
that was my mornings dude for school, Like that was

(13:16):
not only do they play now? I don't know, like
I can't. I don't even like do people like watch TV?
Do they turn on channel?

Speaker 3 (13:25):
I want to say that I have a feeling that
like channel channels.

Speaker 2 (13:28):
And things like that, it will soon be obsolete. When
we watched a Golden Bachelor a couple of nights ago,
that was one of the first times ever I can
remember like planning to get together and sit and watch
a show. And that's also like fire, that's nice, it's cute.
It's so cute. I guess it's like less of an

(13:50):
excuse to do so when you can play it at
any time, like streaming, you know, if you miss it,
Oh my god, unless you had t VO. I never TVO.

Speaker 3 (14:01):
We weren't a t Bow family. We never had t Okay,
yeah we had. I really wanted direct TV. My mom
wouldn't even get us a good gable. She she's not like
she's never been like the like supporting the distraction, like thing,
she'll take me to buy a book, but she never
really bought us video games. We started having video games.
It's because that's why you play video games, why I'm
a gamer, my mom says it. Actually, that's a whole

(14:24):
other of it. Well, also, to be fair, my dad's
also a gamer.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
It must be. Yeah. So let's say you're on an island. Okay,
is this Surviver No? Okay, then there's somehow a TV
on this island, but you can only take the box sets,
like you know what I mean, Hold, let me finish.

(14:49):
I'm sorry, freaking Dichondria. I'm just saying b al word. Okay, listen,
because you know another thing that I remembers. I know
this thing I remember is that if I finished the
show aka Friends or Pee Wee's Playhouse or whatever, then
I would get the box set. Like literally, it would

(15:09):
be every season was a different color. You pull out
the DVDs and it would be like a fan of
different DVDs. And if you know, you know, if you don't,
I'm sorry. The point is if you could take the
box set aka the entire series, okay, because that's another
thing we grow up in the era of, like eight seasons,

(15:31):
nine seasons. Now one season and you're done. Two seasons,
you're done. So if you could take the box set
of three shows three two An Island, I would you say? First,
what the hell you already said the old Rick and
Morty for sure? First of all, it's not done yet.
It doesn't matter. Okay, so the l word rick and Morty.
You got one left? I don't know. Can I answer

(15:55):
it later? No? No, please, Like it's so hard. I
can't even think of all the TV shows that I love.
No no, no, no no please, no no, I don't like this.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
Please please could I just please answer the third one later?

Speaker 2 (16:13):
It has to be honest? Okay, okay, what about you
give me two or three? Optional? Okay? The office because
it makes me really laugh, probably something educational. I'm sorry,
I rebuke you.

Speaker 3 (16:28):
I'm not look a perfect opportunity, guys, no offense, nothing
against the office.

Speaker 2 (16:35):
There's enough taste, well clearly, because but you know, okay,
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (16:43):
I just I never got the itch. I also never
got the friend's itch.

Speaker 2 (16:48):
Okay, that would be my second one. Here's no no
like okay, sorry, the office, like I said, And then
I think I need some kind of educational or like
grounding thing, because if I'm on an island, you're not
thinking about the exterior things here. I said, if you're
on an one, you have a TV you could take
three box sets. Honestly, maybe a fucking cooking show, bitch,
because I don't know the maybe like a survival cooking show,

(17:08):
like what to do on an island. I mean, you're
not thinking outside the box here, Oh my gosh. Anyway,
and then friends, the thing is that I felt like
they were my friends. I know you keep telling no
one and I'm so fucked up. I'm friendless. I'm your friend. Okay.

Speaker 3 (17:28):
Anyway, Okay, so you reserve the right to answer the
third one of the later moment.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
No, I told you the office something that would either
help me cook or survive on the island. And no,
it has to be an actual tam.

Speaker 3 (17:41):
You can't just like conceptualize it's like show as a
box set. Okay, Then mine is an episode on a
TV series. I would teach me how to survive, become
a millionaire, and grow an entire island community.

Speaker 2 (17:54):
You're alone on that island. I don't see you printing
money on the other because I'm just.

Speaker 3 (17:59):
Saying, like, if you can make a if you can
hypothetically create a TV show here, then my TV show
would solve all.

Speaker 2 (18:04):
Of my problems. Yeah, not just the island one. I
forget that you can weasel your way out of any
question with your intelligence.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
It's just that's not fair. So you can't just give
me an actual TV show.

Speaker 2 (18:19):
So the first one is the office. The second one is, oh,
what the fuck? Like like a music thing, and I
could listen to music, like maybe like freaking.

Speaker 3 (18:32):
You said there wasn't music on this island. That was
part of you didn't say. You said I could only
take three box sets. You didn't say it would also
be the only piece of audio or media that you
could consume.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
I don't like this game. I want to move on.
But guess why you're making up rules as you go. Implied. Yeah,
the thing is implied. Okay, the island could have a hospital,
the office like the woodstart what documentary concert footage?

Speaker 3 (19:01):
And that's not considered television, said box at TV show
this girl.

Speaker 2 (19:08):
All right, now you're being let's move on. Let's move on.
Crash and burn, you know what, Let's go back to
reality TV. Insert crash and burn sounds. That's all I got.

Speaker 3 (19:32):
I want to go back to reality TV because I've
never been a reality TV consumer, and.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
Lately I am oh yeah, another.

Speaker 3 (19:38):
Reality TV show that I love. I just love, And
I want to meet the casting director for the show,
and I want to ask them, how did you become
such a genius?

Speaker 2 (19:50):
I know, what did you do? I know?

Speaker 3 (19:53):
Because holy crap, Flora Bama Short, Yeah, I'm sure is
a master piece.

Speaker 2 (20:04):
It really is. I cannot believe the way I laugh
watching this show. I know it's brilliant. I don't know.
Set the scene.

Speaker 3 (20:14):
First of all, those are my friends. If your friends,
friends are your friends, Flora Bada Shore is my friends.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
I'm gonna set the scene. Set the scene. The scene is.

Speaker 3 (20:23):
Twenty one twenty two year olds from the Panhandle, Florabama,
bordering the Alabama border, meat in Panama City Beach in
a house where they are to live and work in
the summer. It's basically the Jersey Shore premise. But Flora Mama,

(20:46):
I cannot tell you how unhinged some of these moments are,
and laugh out loud is truly some of the greatest
relief stress like.

Speaker 2 (21:00):
Dissolver. Yeah, I have seen.

Speaker 3 (21:02):
It in a freaking while, and it is one of
those shows that is like a wildfire. Every single person
I showed to they love it, ends up writing me
like the next week like dude, I'm on season three.

Speaker 2 (21:13):
I'm like, dude, did you see what happened? Season two?
The cast is incredibly credible, and but also you can
really tell that they actually have do not care and
love for each other.

Speaker 3 (21:22):
And it's funny because you forget that you're watching real
people because it feels like they're character I know the
moment that that.

Speaker 2 (21:31):
Didn't happen, Yeah, Courtney episode one. Now everywhere there's pretty much.

Speaker 3 (21:37):
No, I'm no, I'm cuinding go no. I don't want
you to say I want people to see. I want
people to see anyway. Yeah, you know, I don't know
why I find it's so entertaining, but it really is.

Speaker 2 (21:47):
It is entertaining.

Speaker 4 (21:48):
Go on.

Speaker 2 (21:48):
Flora is hilarious. Yeah, And like, speaking of that, like,
I remember when you showed one of your best friends,
Adiela Flora. Sure you were like, oh my god, season one.
That's right. Adiella was a guest on season one. You
guys sat there and you told me that she watched
like the entire first season in one go, it's you
can't it's addicted, you know, three cheers for binge watching.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
Yeah, that's see talk about TV. That's why we had
box sets. You know what's a box One of the
first box sets I had, and I technically didn't even
buy it. I was I kind of like inherited it
because it was lent to me. But I never technically
should never asked for it back either, and I just
never stole it. No, No, it was never like that.

(22:33):
It was actually Kara.

Speaker 2 (22:35):
Also, just so you know, shout out season one, episode two.

Speaker 3 (22:40):
The next shout out care if you're wondering where your
O C DVDs are.

Speaker 2 (22:44):
I have the gem that's one of the first videos. Okay,
when Gemini started dating, here we go. There's a little insight. Guys.
When Gemini started dating and we were texting and flirtating, hey, flirtating,
you were like, all right, let's do it quiz or
like whatever. We were texting. I'm all right, but and

(23:05):
you were like, uh, this show or that show, like
this food or this food, Like you were like asking
me questions like that, and I remember one of the
things you said was like the OC or this and
I was like what, I was just like neither. I
don't know. I've never known any of those because I
know that it was a big, like huge thing, but
I never got into that were like gossip Girl, the OC.

(23:28):
I was not, so I wasn't pretty Little Liars.

Speaker 3 (23:31):
Yeah, I never got the gossip girl, pretty little Liar's bug,
No many of it.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
But you did watch the OC? Did watch the OC?
I loved THEOC. No, I feel like, who does it
love Adam Brody? I don't. I don't know what you're
talking about Adam Brody. I want to see the pussy.
I love his brother? What's something Adrian.

Speaker 3 (23:50):
Brodie, Adam Adam Brody, Adrian Brody's brother is in it?

Speaker 2 (23:54):
Fuck Adam Brody, Adie and Brody. She loves his I do, yeah,
she's you love him? Him and his nose? Yeah, I
don't know. When I was, when I was straight, I
had a little crush. Well I loved that. Yeah, No,

(24:15):
I feel like that was a whole era of television,
that whole OC gossip girl thing.

Speaker 3 (24:20):
Do you want to know something that wasn't my era
of television? That was more like my sister, like a
couple of years younger, but I later on in life
joined it was that Wizards wayfully Place. My first summer
of college, I watched the entire series. No, nope, tire,
I can't even tell you what it was on or

(24:41):
who was in it.

Speaker 2 (24:42):
Oh, what about you like that wizard shit?

Speaker 1 (24:47):
Though?

Speaker 2 (24:48):
I like any sci fi anything that's not like the hundred. No,
but sci fi? You liked that? I love sci fi.
I love sci fi.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
I love period pieces only, And I watched a lot
of shows separately because of that.

Speaker 2 (24:59):
She's she likes horror. She likes Gore, which I also
like Gore. What babe?

Speaker 3 (25:06):
All the shows that I maybe, all the shows that
I watch that are like sci fi viking killing each other,
they're just.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
For what's your problem? I don't like horror like.

Speaker 3 (25:14):
I don't like like scare. I don't like jump scare.
I don't like like Surprise. I don't like paranormal shit.
I do like paranormal shit to a degree, like, but
I don't like I don't like Yeah, I don't like
scary like I don't. I don't like thrillers in that way.
I'll take a psychological thriller.

Speaker 2 (25:31):
Oh god, Well, see, here's the.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
Thing I don't like horror. But because honestly, I have
so many stressors in my life, I tend to go
gravitate towards like thinks.

Speaker 2 (25:43):
It just relax me. That's why it makes me feel
better about my life because I'm not my ghost face.

Speaker 3 (25:50):
But you helped me like ease into American horror story
because of the artistry it. Yeah, it's good, the cinematography,
the stany Yeah, or ratchetry.

Speaker 2 (26:07):
We saw Ratchet first.

Speaker 3 (26:08):
Ratchet was amazing, but Sarah Paulson, Hello, yeah, lets be
an icon lover.

Speaker 2 (26:12):
That's the thing I feel like. Also, we transitioned a lot,
Like back when we were watching these shows and there
were networks that just produce these shows, yeah, there were
less of them and everybody was more aware, you know,
and now there's a lot of oversaturation of shows, which
also it's a plus. Like look at Squid Games right like,

(26:33):
which that was in development way before it was ever
and talks about being such a big thing on Netflix.
You know in Korea it was already making waves. And
you know, there are so many things that we've been
able to have access to, Like I remember a lot
of foreign shows like Chikasa so good, you know, or
shows novelas or things or velvet that people have had

(26:56):
access to, which is great, but there is a lot
of stuff out there, like well, soap operas in general
are a whole thing.

Speaker 3 (27:06):
Daily soap operas, there's a massive there's a massive demographic.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
There's a huge audience for Latin operas. No, but also
American like Young and the Restless. Grey's Anatomy is technically
a soap opera. That sh it's still running. How many
things are they going to do? They have weekly shows?
Oh you're saying daily, Yes, I'm talking about daily shows.
You're right, that's crazy.

Speaker 3 (27:28):
Daily soap operas that have a show every day. Well,
look at Lily, your freaking cousins. No, it's a it's
a live show, but it still happens every day. Yeah,
that's crazy.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
Ship.

Speaker 3 (27:43):
Imagine being in the studio every single day to record
a live episode.

Speaker 2 (27:46):
Yeah, that's that's rough. That's that's that's a lot of work.
It's a lot of That's what I mean. TV has
changed a lot, And now, you know what's something that
I love.

Speaker 3 (27:57):
Just to circle back to the saturation that you're making
or point that you're making, I agree with you completely
because all of these competitors are now like overcreating shows
and you can see the quality dwin the lin in some.
But I will say something has become more common ever
since we've been streaming television more and something that I
love personally because I see them as more complete works

(28:19):
of art.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
I love multi season series, but I do feel like
there are.

Speaker 3 (28:24):
Certain seasons that have like ebbs and flows where you'll
be like, oh, they kind of like like the storyline
falls or you start to see the same repetition of things. Okay,
how many times are you gonna kill this person? Like
you Yeah, I gonna say that you he kills every
fucking girlfriend? How does the storyline know that he finds
a wife and the wife not enough?

Speaker 2 (28:43):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (28:43):
Yeah, yeah, like yeah yeah after the third or fourth girlfriend,
Like you know how I can't get I can't continue
to be.

Speaker 2 (28:49):
So you want to be emotionally invested in some way.

Speaker 3 (28:52):
Right, and it's like it's enough, you know, Like it
doesn't you you're beating the head, You're beating like this
is it's no longer a novel concept, it's no longer
as entertaining. So something I love or mini mini series
or limited series sorry, limited series that's the phrase limited
series like a queen.

Speaker 2 (29:12):
Scambit behind her best amazing freaking television, and I don't
want to see anymore. That's it.

Speaker 3 (29:25):
The story, it's complete, there's as it is a work
of it is a work of art.

Speaker 2 (29:31):
Project. It is so good behind her eyes. I don't
even let's just say it involves I don't even just watch.

Speaker 3 (29:40):
Or Little Fires Everywhere. Another incredible limited series. Yeah, Kerry Washington,
Carrie Washington, Carry Washington.

Speaker 2 (29:50):
There's a phenomenal scandal.

Speaker 3 (29:52):
Scandal was great, But that's not one that I was
like after a while. You know what show I watched
beginning to end One of the first shows that I
was like, I really loved the whole process of Weeds.
That was like six feet under one of those I
never saw six feet on there. Yeah, you know what
badmag And I also missed Breaking Bad.

Speaker 2 (30:08):
Oh, that's what I'm saying. They were like Apple guys,
They were like moments. They are like cultural moments. Yeah,
like the show was defining a large part of like
that that moment in time, like twenty four I was
really young for that shit. But I remember twenty twenty
where I watched twenty Things. Yeah, it was like oh

(30:28):
I watched it. Yeah, you know what was huge.

Speaker 3 (30:31):
If we're talking about cultural a cultural effect that you
and I also avoid, this is gonna be this is controversial.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
Game of Thrones. Oh God, I like it more than
you do. See, Like I am a horror bitch, like
I will watch horror scary scare me, like scare me
again and again and again, blah blah blah blah blah.
To me, that kind of thing, like it has this darkness,
like I feel like, you know what's funny, you want
to laugh? Going to dissect it right now? Even the

(31:01):
best horror show or horror movie or whatever can't be
that without some kind of heart in it, Like there
has to be some kind of marriage that needs to
be saved, or you know, some kind of father trying
to save his daughter, like look at Last of Us
or like all this shit, like there's always some kind

(31:22):
of heart in a horror movie. Game of Thrones to
me is just darkness. Like it makes me feel icky.
It makes me feel dark. I don't find any deeming
qualities the moment you like someone, they're fucking dad, I'm
not with it. I'm not with it. It was dark,
it's shot dark. I don't like it. I don't know.
I'm sorry it is controversial. I'm so sorry out there,

(31:43):
Like I even think that horror movies just like they
have heart. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (31:47):
I think that Game of Thrones has a lot of heart.
I do, I do, But there is something about it
that never got me. And that's weird because it's such
a show that I would fall for, considering that I
love like anything sci fi and anything that era.

Speaker 2 (32:01):
I don't know, I don't know. Maybe I'll give it
another try.

Speaker 3 (32:05):
Yeah, I would love I would love to know Outlander.
Oh oh er If I ever were.

Speaker 2 (32:12):
With Yeah, if I ever were with a man, it
would be Jamie Colum, Jamie, Jamie Wait jam the jazz guys.
Jamie Cullum is like what's his last names with the
C two Jai. Jamie Cullum is a freaking jazz musician.

(32:33):
Oh damn, I'll think Jamie.

Speaker 3 (32:35):
Fraser Fraserer, whoa not Jamie Cullum, Sorry, Jamie Cullum, Jamie
Fraser ever against jam No, nothing against sam No, It's
just it was who I was referring to. Think you
make Edward colored color, Jamie Colum and Jamie Free.

Speaker 2 (32:55):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (32:56):
Yeah, that was like a Grace and Frankie. That's another
show that you and I watched beginning to end.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
Okay, so good. I loved their dynamic. I love their dynamic. Yeah,
their dynamics amazing. Okay, speaking of amazing roles, because it
looks like they're great friends outside and everything. If because
I think you would be a great actress, I'd love
to I'd love to see you on freaking TV. I
think you'd be great. That's sweet thing. You're being amazing too.

(33:21):
You're scary. I could be scary. But anyway, like if
I could, if you could pick a show to act in,
what would it be my dream role?

Speaker 3 (33:37):
Like one of I have many dream roles, but like
the first thing that always comes to mind when I
think about this is like I would love to be.

Speaker 1 (33:48):
Like Aim.

Speaker 2 (33:48):
Some okay like Sabrina, and some like.

Speaker 3 (33:53):
High school at least at this age, well, I can
still sort of play off as a high school student.

Speaker 2 (33:59):
Wow, wow, who needs friends like me? I mean, you're
a little long in the tooth, Floord. I'm not long
in the tooth. My teeth are short genetically sure, no,
I reject that. If you guys can hear her, over

(34:19):
the world. I reject that. I reject that you could be.

Speaker 3 (34:23):
I mean, well, anyway, as I was saying, while I
can still yeah, you can do it. John Recipes, by
the way, played Sandy a high school student Airty.

Speaker 2 (34:34):
They all looked thirty.

Speaker 3 (34:35):
Okay, but it doesn't matter, okay, because the point is
the story. The story sould did you think they were
in high school?

Speaker 2 (34:41):
Yes, you did. Listen while I can still pull it off, Jesus,
I can blur your young girl while I can still
do that.

Speaker 3 (34:54):
I would love to be like in some kind of
high school sci fi television show, like as a vampire
witch Sabrina sounds like a great like or a vampire diary, one.

Speaker 2 (35:05):
Of those Elliott Page Umbrella Academy, Umbrella Academy would love
to be, but they're already adults more age appropriate shadow.
I want to be an American horror Sorry, I would
love and I want to be like the cute, like
innocent thing the whole time, and then at the end,
I'm the fucking killer. I kill everybody. Yeah, yeah, that

(35:29):
wouldn't surprise any of us. By the way, another spoiler alert,
because I've been trying to get gem to watch the
first season of American Horror, and to me, that's the
one it has a ghosts. It's too scary. I won't
do it. Well, the thing's been scared of it since
it came out. But you said you'd like mind and everything.

(35:49):
I think, really, let's agree on this. I think a
really well rounded TV show, whether it's comedy, horror, drama,
whatever it is, it has to hit on certain elements. Yeah, Like,
for example, like you mentioned about certain shows like You
or whatnot, if they keep repeating, repeating and recycling the

(36:10):
plot and there's no character development and there's no story
that you're following, of course, you're gonna get sick of
that shit, of course, right. And that's what I love
about this new kind of format that people are trying to,
like Black Mirror or American Horror, where you can continue
the same feeling and even some of the same actors,
which I think is really cool. But the story completely

(36:33):
changes every season, right, which is super cool because you're
watching something about a ghost story and then the next
one they're vampires, and then the next one it's Lady
Gaga and you know what I mean. It can continue
to evolve. But I will say that I think that
the simplest things are the most effective. That's why things
like Friends work. That's different. Those are just like but

(36:57):
if you look now, right, that's a you know, but
there's a reason so many genres. But let's talk for
a minute. Name shows, right, Like that era of sitcoms, right,
those sitcoms were running ten plus years, the Seinfelds, the
Will and Graces, the Friends. That was a fucking movement.

(37:17):
And you know, my parents and my family are a
little bit older. Well the offices were recent, but yeah, right,
and look how long it rang. Hold on? So my
point is that name a show now other than like
Grey's Anatomy or whatever, that really is having that kind
of an impact or standing Oh oh no, I don't

(37:38):
think oh for a while there, hold on? How I'm
at your mother? How I Am at your mother? Yes?
And I will say this day that I think they
took too many twists and turns. They took too many
liberties with the writing. The ending was not happy. That's
what I didn't the end, I didn't think. That's what

(38:00):
I'm saying that Friends. Okay, you know what, you know,
what's her show that I'm like, how do people follow
this forever? Hoverever Gras anatomy. That show is so freaking
like a soap opera. That's the thing, Like, how many
times are you gonna kill Meredith? How many times are
you gonna kill Meredith Graat in icicle, She's drowning, she's
been in a pain class, she lost her husband, she
lost her sister, she lost her lover. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

(38:24):
At this point, chops around the legs off from call
of It.

Speaker 3 (38:26):
That's why I go to YouTube and I watch my
Cheeta in the wood in the forest. Dion, she Dion,
I'm gonna butcher her name, Dion, Dion. She's Chiaga, I
want to say. They call her Peji on the show.
She lives in like rural mountain mountains of China, I
think in the province of view Non and she basically

(38:48):
has these incredibly shot videos. This should be considered television.

Speaker 2 (38:53):
Well, so it's are like eighteen ap That's what I'm saying. Yeah,
YouTube is television in a way.

Speaker 1 (38:57):
It is.

Speaker 3 (38:57):
They're like eighteen minutes long, beautifully shot. She go around
her village or like neighboring villages and harvests whatever ingredient
she's focusing on that given episode, and then She just
prepares it in the most traditional way, cooks multiple dishes
out of this centered around this one ingredient, and it's

(39:17):
like incredible. She chops everything with a cleaver and does
everything like in these very traditional methods, and at the
end of it, she's with their family, she eats it.

Speaker 2 (39:24):
I fucking love it and it's amazing.

Speaker 3 (39:26):
I were going to be anybody in her life and
her show, but that's real, I'd be the grandpa because
he doesn't do shit, just sits there and just sits there, smokes,
and then he eats.

Speaker 2 (39:39):
Honestly, Jim and you you've been witnessed to this YouTube
is to me considered TV. When I see younger kids, Sasha,
even me, I find myself following creators or following certain
channels as if it is the new age of television,
and they treat it as such. They have different videos

(40:01):
that come up every week, and that's how they're able
to keep people interested. Look at mister Beasts, I mean realistically,
just being real right now. You know even Nikki Tutorial's
makeup channels that have massive followings that you sit there
and you're learning and you're engaging and you're getting to
know the person and you feel invested and sometimes even
more so because I think a component of it does

(40:24):
involve some kind of a character or acting, but it's them.

Speaker 3 (40:27):
Hello. You know mister Kane Kerner King last from last week.
That's right, every single day he goes online for a
few hours.

Speaker 2 (40:34):
I mean it's a show. That's a show. Yeah, that's
a show. And the commitment to the show and it's
a different level of production and now thank god, Like
if you really think about it, we'renn out of space
right now. But the same computers that sent the first
people into space were the ones that were used in
the first iPod, right, So if you think about it,

(40:55):
you know Lucille Ball who actually invented If you guys
don't know this, I love Lucie. She invented the multiicam
live DV system. She's the one that forged that whole
thing forward and invented it. And you know what we're
doing right now exactly literally multicam with a camera switcher
and all that stuff right behind our cameras right now

(41:16):
in this podcast, Like you mentioned, we have a camera
switcher you know, near the size of an iPhone that's
able to do and replicate the technology and the theory
that Lucille invented back there that could only be done
with the backing of a studio, with a producer, with
other actors, with a set designer, with whatever. A lot
of people that we've had on this podcast, Jenny Lorenzo,

(41:39):
you know, they are full blown production studios on their
own because we do have the technology, like the iPhone
that sent us to the moon, and we're not to
be able to but you know what I'm saying, to
be able to if you really do it right, create
amazing quote unquote television shows right from your house, from

(41:59):
your bathroom, from your studio, you know. Which That's why
I think, like YouTube is amazing and it's scary and
I don't know what's gonna happen because music same way
music videos. I go on YouTube to watch music videos.
Yeah it's true. I go on YouTube to watch even
play music videos. I have no idea. I have no idea.

(42:21):
I don't think so I don't know. I couldn't even
tell you. It's it's just been ever since Apple TV
and like you know what, I missed old Netflix. I read.

Speaker 3 (42:29):
I read an article the other day, like I want
to say, a week or two ago that said that
Netflix sent out its final DVDs.

Speaker 2 (42:34):
I didn't even know they were DVD system. We were
talking about that the idea. I feel like I predicted it.

Speaker 1 (42:41):
We know that.

Speaker 2 (42:42):
I thought that was gone forever. That was how I
originally started to use it. Netflix.

Speaker 3 (42:47):
They had the greatest and probably do somewhere in the warehouses.
I would love to get in touch. I wonder what
they're gonna do with all that shit. It's not gonname forever. No,
they still have, Hello, Blockbuster, where's all that shit?

Speaker 2 (42:56):
They sell it? They have like they sold it. Blockbusters
would have sales. What are they gonna do with all
those cvds? Netflix?

Speaker 3 (43:03):
Netflix has the most impressive catalog of foreign films.

Speaker 2 (43:08):
Oh they did not anymore? And yeah they don't anymore
or they because now everything is in network and Netflix
is a production studio, right right right? You know what else?

(43:33):
You know what else?

Speaker 3 (43:34):
I love that was such a part of my childhood.
Comedy Central, Oh Central, I think he's still going.

Speaker 2 (43:41):
Comedy Central is still kicking. No, I think it's called
the Comedy Channel. Now what yeah goes to show? You see?
I don't even know. But anyway, if you could make
a show, come back, Oh that you were like, no
doo quickly, yes, what could you? I know one show
that I would say right now off the bat that

(44:01):
they ended way too soon. Oh my god, that's Lovecraft
Country One season. Yeah, but you know what, I disagree
because I think that's one of those things that if
they would have kept going, what it would have they
had just started creating that world. Yeah, what do you
mean we were left? Not too mad about that because
I'm not too mad about that because I don't know

(44:22):
what I feel like. Are you sure because I remember
you being pretty made?

Speaker 1 (44:25):
Maybe?

Speaker 3 (44:25):
Yeah, I know it's a Lovecraft Country got one season.
Just such a word the first show that was that had.

Speaker 2 (44:31):
Magic and sci fi and a mostly black cast. Oh yeah,
no doubt. Yeah. And also it was incredible writing. No, no, no,
it was amazing. I just I'm traumatized, to be honest,
because like, there are certain shows that I've been like
like traumatized. Were so invested, no, like Loss. I never
saw the last okay, so Lost, I was like this amazing,
it's so good. I'm so invested. I want to know

(44:53):
what the smoke monster. No, and then literally they just
ruined the whole show with the ending so I could
bring a show back. I'd bring that one back, delete
the last season and have them refinish it. You know,
when I heard that about a lot and I never
saw it either, Dexter. I heard that everybody was very
upset about the Dexter. And see, I didn't even watch
the show. I know, I know, you just struck a nerve,

(45:16):
so sad I'm living it again. Oh no, it was
really bad, ending, really messy and gross, not like gross
in the way you think, okay, because the whole show
was bloody. It was beautiful bloody.

Speaker 3 (45:32):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (45:32):
He was such an artistic killer. Like his whole thing.
Well I told you, but his whole thing. For those
of you that hasn't seen Dexter, it takes place in Miami,
number one, does it does?

Speaker 1 (45:45):
How do I not know that?

Speaker 2 (45:46):
And he lives on Miami Beach, So there's like all
these crazy shots of like maybe beach and whatever, which
I love, Okay, And he's a detective and he has
a murderous hunger ever since he's a kid, and his
dad clocked him and he's like, oh, I know that
you have to kill so ever since he was a kid,

(46:06):
he trained him because that was a cop too, Okay,
Santa Clarity diet to only kill killers, only kill the
bad guys. That's another thing that I feel like we
have to address, Like a lot of TV shows, like
writers change and I didn't actually know this. We were
talking about it the other day, because there are certain
shows like this that I followed for years that all
of a sudden, I'm like, why do I not like it?

(46:27):
And then upon talking to people and looking it up,
they've changed writers or they had like something happen and
they changed whatever. You can definitely see that in certain shows,
which is interesting, right because like, how do you carry
that story forward if you've been in.

Speaker 3 (46:42):
I feel like there's a big hole in my memory
right now for a show that you and I both
love that we're not thinking.

Speaker 2 (46:48):
Of right now. Yeah, yeah, And I'm trying to think, like,
what is this Love on the Spectrum? I love? Oh,
I love Love on the Spectrum. Yeah, but that's not it. No, no, no,
no no, although I will say Euphoria Euphoria is some
of the greatest television of our generation too. Right now
that show is it's good, incredible, it's good, it's good.

(47:12):
What's this other show that.

Speaker 3 (47:13):
We just saw the second season of Just Now, and
we're like, oh crap. They were in the middle of
recording season three, but they had to stop. Let me see,
let me do a quick Google search.

Speaker 2 (47:22):
You know what while you're researching that, babe, A little
PSA for people out there now that we were talking
about Survivor and all those shows before. One of the
contestants on Survivor, Mark white is the guy who wrote
and created White Lotus. Did you know that?

Speaker 1 (47:42):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (47:42):
I didn't know that, yes, which is really fucking interesting
because White Lotus is an example of a show now
that I think is super artistic, super weird and edgy.
And to think that he came from that whole television
world of Survivor and like that was in his brain.
That's what probably led him to help create something like
White Loads whoa Yeah, Mark white Man. Oh Wednesday was

(48:07):
another one that was like amazing. Yeah, I wonder why
that show resonated so much of everybody the way that
it did. It was a cultural moment. I mean, I
think that because it brought two three, four generations together. Basically,
that's what they're doing now. They yeah, they are, they're
making TV for us now, but for everybody, right They're like,

(48:30):
we're gonna get your kids to like it again and
you're still gonna like it. Yeah, I feel like you're right.
Like there are a lot of remakes and stuff. What's
another TV show that they just remade? They do Full
House again? Oh Fuller, that's so raven. They did that
after one all this stuff that were like, I didn't
even watch that's so raven. And I was watching the
sequel with you. I know, I just wanted to put

(48:51):
something on.

Speaker 3 (48:51):
Well, they're doing all those star Wars and all of
those like franchises are now having.

Speaker 2 (48:56):
Like Law now Orian as his own show. Now we
eat that ship up. I don't want division who. We
never finished that. I know we really should. Oh you know,
what's the other show we started? We didn't finish. But
to be honest with you, that was like a.

Speaker 3 (49:11):
Conscious unfinishing Handmaid's Tale. It was too stressful for me.
That's like Black Mirror.

Speaker 2 (49:18):
No blacks are made. I binge binge binge, b awful,
but it kills me. Go watch the first episode is
Black Mirror. Yeah, that is incredible.

Speaker 3 (49:27):
But that's what I'm saying, like that is it's too
relevant for me. It is so stressful. And so I
just feel like all of the dystopian worlds that they
paid in that show are such a probability.

Speaker 2 (49:39):
That's why they do it. I think it's meant to
be a warning. And also I'm not.

Speaker 4 (49:45):
I'm not.

Speaker 2 (49:45):
I don't want to get like, I don't want to
get sued. I don't wanna get sued. So I'm gonna
be careful with what I say. But I will say
that it has been either it has been proven after
the fact that one of the episodes of the new
season in a Black Mirror has been tried to be
stopped from being made for a really long time because

(50:09):
it says something about AI and owning AI voices and identity,
et cetera. That's awful. This is crazy, this is outrageous.
This is never gonna happen, except it's all already happening.
It's already happening. It's already happening. In the film industry
and the television industry.

Speaker 3 (50:31):
People are not reading their contracts that we can verify
from a primary source, so we will not specify that
they have to sign over their rights yep in perpetuity,
so meaning a network or a studio will own a

(50:52):
famous person's face or their voice their right, and even
if that person doesn't want to participate any longer, not
only do they not pay them a dollar, but they
continue to use this person's likeness and voice without their consent.

Speaker 2 (51:12):
Yeah, and it's wild. It's actually like what I believe
one of the reasons why people were just striking. Yeah,
and then that's where we have to be careful, because
there's a reason why we also talk about, Oh, we
stopped watching this show. We stopped watching the show because
of the oversaturation we're talking about because of everything, because

(51:33):
of the fact that now it's getting completely out of
hand and people are owning their likeliness and video games.
And that's not why we stopped watching it though. No,
we were traumatized, but yeah, we were traumatized, my handmads.
But there's so many shows like we haven't finished Outlander,
we haven't finished Manifest Life. Yes, yeah, but I'm saying
I don't know. I feel like back in the day
to make the Circle Whole, you were kind of like

(51:56):
eight o'clock on Thursdays, that's my show, Like, yeah, you
know what I mean, And no, I don't know. I
guess I never had one of those Oh, I had
a lot of those. Okay, like I told you, like
American idol. Oh okay, okay, Yeah, I never know, like
I would see sometimes, but no, I.

Speaker 4 (52:14):
Never really like next week on Yeah, hello the Bachelor
a couple of days ago, although I do miss that,
and sometimes you get that like on the Bachelor, like
I missed that about television shows, I would be like
coming up.

Speaker 2 (52:30):
Yeah, you get excited. I can't wait till the next week.

Speaker 1 (52:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (52:36):
Well, look, take this as maybe we can start to implement.
You know, you take some friends, you pick a new show,
and you decide not to watch it together, because that's
what's happening to everyone was like, oh, wait for you.

Speaker 3 (52:48):
To watch and then you watch it anyway, one of
the one of the biggest causes of breakups today.

Speaker 1 (52:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (52:54):
I kept watching couples.

Speaker 3 (52:55):
Who agree to watch TV show together and one couple
watch one person a couple of watches without the other person.

Speaker 2 (53:01):
Bad bad, bad pat But yeah, I think, look, they're
pros and constant TV. It's always going to entertain us. Yeah,
because we don't want to watch it too much. No, no, what, Yeah,
I guess in any way, shape or form, if you're
a part of the freaking world and generation. In the
last three decades, TV has been a part of your

(53:23):
life in some way, for sure. Yeah. Absolutely, so. There's
just there's a lot of there's a lot of good
stuff out there. There's a lot of great educational stuff
out there. Chef's Table. Oh I love Chef's Table, work
of art. You wouldn't have Knives Out without Chef's Table, right, No,
just kidding, you wouldn't have that movie. What is that movie?

(53:44):
It was a knives Out movie? No, no, no, yes,
no baby, Yes, it's called no Baby. You're thinking of
two things. Knives Out is the murder mystery. Oh, Chef's
Table has nothing to do with that. The Menu, that's
the movie. It's called The Menu has nothing to do
with Knives Out. Yeah, yeah, yeah, Chef's Table did the menu?
Or the people from Chef's.

Speaker 3 (54:04):
Table did the many We so art you know keeps
inspiring or well, I mean yeah, they literally worked on right.

Speaker 2 (54:10):
But one is an informational cooking like artistic thing and
one is scary. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, so much out there.
This is what we're gonna do. That's on social media.
We're gonna ask people what they're watching. We're going to
show to us. Yeah, we're going to choose one. We
chose two.

Speaker 3 (54:28):
How's that that we haven't seen before? And we'll watch
it on a future episode. We'll give you our honest opinion.

Speaker 2 (54:34):
That's fair. We've given you a lot of shows that
we have watched, so it's only fair that I let
us know what you think if you see any of them. Yeah,
he's mentioned a lot. We have good ones too.

Speaker 3 (54:43):
Yeah, well we haven't mentioned plenty. Please don't don't consider
this like an absolute list of the shows that we watch.
We watch plenty that we didn't even mention. I'm sure
ones that you guys are super fans about, like Stranger Things,
et cetera.

Speaker 2 (54:56):
What we have to watch the last.

Speaker 3 (54:57):
Season of Oh my God, we're so behind, I know,
like the whole concept about the season and everything already.

Speaker 2 (55:05):
We just don't have enough time, that's what it is. Well,
we could take the rest of the day to day
to maybe watch a little bit more, but no, before
we do. Do you want to find out with a
any and out of space and everybody's favorite news network
spaces All right, ladies and germs and earthlings and earth loans,
NASA plans to dudes sorry, you keep forgetting them. That's right, sorry,

(55:27):
and Earth loans. NASA plans to Bill's houses on the
moons by twenty forty. That means that I now have
two thousand forty reasons to want to be dead before then.
Your Amazon order has been placed and the arrival was
in one point three light years. No, thank you. I'm
staying away from the forking moon. Thank you. A spacewalk
on the International Space Station has been delayed due to

(55:47):
a leak. Literally, an astronaut had to do peepee and
they stopped the spacewalk. Hopefully everything came out all right,
Wait is that real? The leak part, but not the peepee?
Oh you know better than you believe half of space?
All right. And lastly, guys, this is a financial opportunity.

(56:10):
Please listen up. Ring is now offering a million dollars.
This is one hundred percent real, guys. Ring is offering
a million dollar prize for people who can record alien
activity on their ring. But don't worry because if you
want more than that, Zing, the alien equivalent of Ring,
is offering two million dollars if you let them probe
your asked. And this has been space this I love

(56:37):
that that was fun. I honestly would kid right now
to just snuggle up and watch TV. I'm always gonna
say I'd killed to be probe for the two mil
you baby, you go, I do it for free. Well, anyway, guys,
that has been today's episode. I hope you've enjoyed it.

(56:58):
Thanks for flying with us. I love you bye.

Speaker 3 (57:04):
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Gemeny Hernandez

Gemeny Hernandez

Emily Estefan

Emily Estefan

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