Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:14):
Hey, Sabrina, Hey will what was the best Christmas present
you ever got?
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Present?
Speaker 1 (00:21):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (00:22):
Oh, I could go real cheesy on ya.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
Was it the steak eating hot tub?
Speaker 2 (00:28):
No?
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Okay, I don't know if that was a gift or not.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Uh No. One year, well into dating Jordan, I had
to do Chris a show I went to. I went
and performed a show for like a week or so,
and it was going to actually be over Christmas. So
we had a Christmas Eve show and then we had
a day after Christmas. It was all the way in Florida.
And I was so sad because we really hadn't spent
(00:55):
that much time away from each other. And so he
ended up surprising me and coming and like missing Christmas
with you know, obviously his family and everything to be
with me on Christmas, and I like that was like
the most magical and romantic thing. I was just so overwhelmed.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
Oh my god.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
They also I do also do remember when I was little,
when I got the year I got my roller blades,
was like came out and my roller blades and blades
that year they were white with pink and teal, like,
oh they were so hot. I love them. I was
so stoked. I don't think I need home inside like
the house. After I opened them, I was done for
(01:33):
the day, just outside for you. What about you will?
Speaker 1 (01:36):
Mine's kind of similar, Susan and Night. No, I'm kidding.
It was the G I Joe Uss Defiant, which is
the best thing I ever got. It was the big
space shuttle that G I Joe made, and it was
the coolest thing I've ever had. I still have you do.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Do you have a lot of your stuff like that?
Speaker 1 (01:49):
I still have my first car.
Speaker 2 (01:52):
Well that's really cool.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
Yeah, Like I don't throw anything out, so I still
like all the stuff I have. I basically still have
now some of it is beat to hell, right, But
I mean, like.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
You made fun of me for having Kidget still my Dolly.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
You're demonic doll that is responsible for the deaths of
several people. That's different. Yikes.
Speaker 2 (02:13):
So it's interesting though, a gift like that, especially with
little kids, like I try so hard to hold on
to stuff, but like letcher just like beats the hell
out of these things. I don't know how I'm ever
going to keep anything that you like.
Speaker 1 (02:27):
They don't field anything to last anymore. The toys in
the seventies would kill a kid and they were great.
Remember you were you were too young for lawn darts.
Lawn darts were just giant spiked darts that you would
just throw into the air and you're supposed to hit
a thing, but you're just throwing them at your friends.
So they had they literally discontinued them because they were
just killing kids all over the place. They were too
(02:47):
lawn darts. We used to have the most expensive, most
most dangerous toys ever BB gun fights. It was awful.
So yeah, these is it's it's thank god. That's why
they did make things that don't last anymore, because when
you go hit kid over the head with it, it's shatters.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
Yeah, and that's all Ledger does.
Speaker 1 (03:04):
Yeah, my Transformers, my original Transformers were metal, the metal.
Speaker 2 (03:08):
Yes, the transform Metal Transformer.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
Eight seven eight, No. I was eighty four, So that's
when the show came out from Yeah, metal thing never
that's how the toys were built. Yeah, your matchbox cars
all the week, everything was metal.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
I don't even let him have like any of his
balls that aren't like NERF like type material, you know,
like the like squishy because he just threw I mean
he's destructive, like he's just insane. Boy, energy is crazy.
Now Monroe will sit in color she's cool. Led His
mission is to destroy it, like.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
Well, yeah, that's what you're supposed to do.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
Use it to destroy something else in the house. It's insane.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
Yeah. Well, anyway, that's going to lead us to I
think probably the next kind of chunk of movies we're
going to be doing. Because we did all hollows.
Speaker 2 (03:58):
Look at your favorite. I didn't even really street, Yes
we are.
Speaker 1 (04:04):
I didn't do that. We didn't do that on purpose.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
No, I mean I wore this shirt this purpose. This
gets me into the holiday spirit like no other. And
anyone who can see this knows this is like from
the nineties, early nineties.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
That was crystal methbear. I remember that. That's how they
used to smuggle things into the country, was in crystal methbear.
That's so cute. Did you not know that? No?
Speaker 2 (04:26):
Are you being serious?
Speaker 1 (04:27):
Yeah? So that's specific bear kittens and yeah no, but
that specific bear was known for. They used to cut
the back of it open and just fill it with
drugs and ship it in. I'm kidding. Yeah, it feels
like Christmas. Yes, I love it. Oh, I love it. No. Well,
(04:50):
first of all, welcome back to Magical Rewind, the show
that makes you want to grab your friends, your pj's,
and your popcorn and go back to a time when
all the houses are smart, the waves, tsunamis, and the
Teddy Bears held drugs. I'm Wilfred Dell.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
And I'm Sebrien to Bryant, he got me again.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
I did. I did. It's very good again. I did.
Hang the stockings, settle the mistletoe, leave out the cookies
of the milk, and spend your last dollar on gifts
because we're celebrating the holiday season here on Magical Rewind
and now reviewing the two thousand and one Christmas d
com Twas the Night. It's a good title. Originally released
on December seventh, two thousand and one. It's part of
the channel's popular holiday programming Something we Know includes a
(05:26):
whole lot of hocus Pocus in Christmas theme TV episodes.
You have a favorite Christmas movie? What's your favorite Christmas
movie of all time? Do you watch something every year
every year?
Speaker 2 (05:35):
I have two and you can't get me to try
to like.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
I'm guessing one of them's Elf Elf is the is.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
The movie we play every year while we're while we're
putting the tree up. Okay, career and then The Grinch,
and the Grinch is now one of Monroe's favorite movies.
Speaker 1 (05:53):
Original Grinch, like the animated one, or like the did
Jim Carrey car Okay, never.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
See I haven't seen the animated one?
Speaker 1 (06:01):
Oh yeah, the original? You know I've got one. Yes, yeah,
that was.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
Jim Carrey just I mean him and then Will Ferrell like,
oh yeah they killed those movies.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
Just so good good.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
So that both of those I watch them every year
every year. I know, you watch a Christmas Story.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
Christmas Story every year by myself in my theater room
with all my gifts. So I do my wrapping to
the Christmas Story every single year. That's just my things.
Who's like, go do your thing. So I've been doing
that since I think since the year it came out,
I've watched Christmas Story every single year.
Speaker 2 (06:39):
Wow. It is a perfect So it was a VHS
tape well.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
I think originally. I think the first time I saw it,
I probably saw it in the theater, right and then
and then it was VHS yeah or no, and then
they started playing it on TV. Every year. You could
always find a Christmas story. Oh yeah, now it's everywhere,
but even before streaming Christmas every Yeah. This is actually
the second ever Christmas d com, the first being an
(07:04):
old favorite of ours, The Ultimate Christmas Present, And much
like that movie, Twas the Night gets frequently replayed on
the Disney Channel during December's even to this day. The
title of movie, of course, is a play on the
eighteen twenty three poem A Visit from Saint Nicholas by
Clement Clark Moore, something that has lived numerous lives and
is still read today. And no shock here. The movie
(07:24):
was filmed in Kenyata. That's right, Canada, Canada.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
Toronto of course.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
Yeah, well it's Toronto, Kanyata. Everybody knows that now, make
absolutely no qualms about it. Twas the Night is basically
a lower budget version of another Disney movie, The Santa Claus,
which was released seven years earlier, and this film is
nowhere near as successful. But that's not to say it
can't become one of your favorite new holiday traditions. We
don't want to sour it for you. It's just worth
pointing out this is hardly an original premise for the studio,
(07:50):
and by that I mean it was basically a directorpuff
and you can make up your own mind twas the
Night is available to watch right now in Disney. Plus,
maybe Pairrott with a lit fireplace, some h Coco and
a festive Christmas tree, or just mindlessly scroll on your
phone while it plays in the background. Doesn't mean a
thing to us, up to you Stop being so codependent, geez.
Disclaimer not to listen to this with little kids who
(08:11):
want to find out. Oh yeah, yeah, So did you
know anything about this movie before we were assigned our homework?
Speaker 2 (08:18):
I did not. I did not.
Speaker 1 (08:21):
I'm amazing. Really, thousand well two thousand and one is
kind of right in your wheelhouse, isn't it.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
It is it is to be honest. I mean when
when the fact that the channel had Christmas movies at
all shocks me because I don't. I literally, for the
longest time just figured they just didn't touch like the holiday.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
Oh gotcha ration right.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
Because I have never seen Yeah, and I watched so
many decoms and I had just never seen one. I
just figured they just never had them. So we've now
watched too, which is crazy.
Speaker 1 (08:54):
I obviously knew nothing of this film and have now
seen it and still don't really know much of this film.
The eggnog is getting warm, so let's hack into the
sleigh hard drive and get our synopsis. A mischievous teen
and his slacker uncle accidentally knock out Santa and are
forced to deliver presents in his high tech sleigh. What
were your early thoughts on Twas the Night? Did you
(09:15):
like this movie?
Speaker 2 (09:16):
I thought, honestly, this was, like you said, a lower
budget it was. It wasn't, you know, remaking it, reinventing
the wheel as you say. It wasn't anything like that.
But it wasn't. It was an easy watch, and it
was a festive watch. I love Christmas time. I'm always
down for it. I love Santa Claus, I love all things.
And it being on the Channel, Like I said, I've
(09:38):
never really even realized the channel had Christmas movies, so
it was nice to see that this is what the
channel would make of a Christmas movie. Oh okay, what
about you will?
Speaker 1 (09:50):
Honestly, I don't know, you don't know, I don't know.
I am a huge Brian Cranston fan, so I think
I have a soft spot for anything he's in.
Speaker 2 (10:01):
I literally, out loud said, oh my god. When I
I was so excited. He was gonna I was gonna
be watching him for the next ninety some minutes.
Speaker 1 (10:10):
But a lot of this movie doesn't make a whole
lot of sense. Some of it's weird. I didn't dislike it,
Like I didn't come out going like man, that movie
was terrible. But I also didn't come out going like man,
this movie was really good. It was like I felt
like I saw a movie.
Speaker 2 (10:25):
Yeah, that's that's how I feel. I mean, the end
is the the was kind of the worst, like ah, yeah.
It also for me, it was the end, the stuff
in the middle. The beginning, I felt like it started
off so strong, like so strong, and then it just
kind of just kind of plateaued for me, you.
Speaker 1 (10:44):
Know, me too. I also get into the how does
this work rules of things.
Speaker 2 (10:48):
There are a couple of the rules. The rules were
not set in place, did we Yeah, some of them.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
But again, I love it. I love Brian Kratzen, I
really do. And I thought it was great. I thought
the act was really good. Kerman was great, Josh. You
know who else was phenomenal was the sister. Yes, she
was really really good in this movie.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
So watch that.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
I went and googled her. I googled her because I
was okay, so she's really good.
Speaker 2 (11:15):
For the chance, I did not did she end up
working for the Channel a lot? Because I'm like that,
I don't. She's not a face that is really recognizable
to me of the Channel of that era. Why, well,
was the reason? Because she was a great Disney kid?
Speaker 1 (11:30):
I thought so too. She was very very good in
this movie. You could just tell when a child actor
is working at a different level than other child actors
around them, and she, you know, Josh was obviously great,
but there was a couple of little stumbles that have
nothing to do with him. But she, I thought was
was really good. So yeah, my honest answer is I
don't know. I do not know how I feel about
(11:50):
this movie, and maybe going through the synopsis maybe will
help me more.
Speaker 2 (11:54):
Yeah, I think so. I mean, I you know, again,
it wasn't in no way was it like some of
the movies that we have been watching lately that were
like no.
Speaker 1 (12:04):
But I also feel like, and there's a couple of
people that I'd love to get on the show that
are like the quote unquote dcom experts. I mean, Lisa's
one of our producer, Lisa's one of them where there
seems like a real time in the dcom world pre
we've called this pre Cheeta Girls. I would say post
Brink pre Cheetah Girls in that ninety nine, two thousand
(12:26):
and two thousand and one era where you can tell
they're pumping them out where some of them just kind
of miss the mark. They seem a little cheesier, the
writing isn't kind of on point for some of them,
and this this fell a little into that category. For me.
This feels almost like there's a two or three year
stretch of dcoms where they kind of don't know what
they're doing yet because they're not doing Brink and they're
(12:47):
not doing Cheetah Girls.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
Well, but they're doing them every They're they're coming out
every like you said they're they're just a much so
they're just not being as like the Nest or something right.
Speaker 1 (12:57):
Maybe that's what it is. Maybe I feel I don't
know if this movie he felt rushed or it felt
I mean, I don't know, anyway, we'll get into it.
So we have now been reviewing d COM's for approaching
two years now, and I'm not sure we've had a
more surprising credit in the history of the show than
who directed Twas the Night. So, Sabrina, does the name
Nick Castle ring any jingle bells for you?
Speaker 2 (13:21):
It doesn't until I read it, until we read Okay,
so we read what our producers put in our hands.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
Yet ready for this cow? So Nick Castle, who directed
the film, is best known as Mike Myers, Yes, Michael Myers,
in the original nineteen seventy eight horror classic Halloween. The actor.
He played Mike Myers in one of the scariest characters
in the history of film, one of.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
The most terrifying rions your dreams at night, Yeah characters.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
He'd also revisit the character in three modern day sequels
by Danny McBride and David Gordon Green. But talk about scary. Yes.
He's also a director, most famously for the cult kids
movie Oh My God, Oh My God. This movie. I
can't even say the title of this movie without putting
reverence behind it. This movie meant so much to me
as a kid, so much to me as a kid,
(14:12):
The Last star Fighter. Oh. He also directed The Boy
Who Could Fly, Major Payne, the Ellen de generous wedding
movie Mister Wrong. I mean, this guy's so talented. He
also has writing credits on two of my other favorite
films of all time, John Carpenter's Escape from New York,
Blisken Snake, Bliskin oh Man, and Hook.
Speaker 2 (14:31):
I mean one of my favorite movies, some movie that
I watched on repeat.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
This guy's career is b a na nas Bananas. I'm
telling you it is amazing. So he's connected to all
these kids' movies, but also a character is synonymous with fear.
He is a regular at horror conventions these days. He
is an icon. But can we seriously it's like finding
out that Rob Zombie directed Brink.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
Yes, so just kind I am begging our producers to
get this man on, just so you can see me
turning ano eight year old.
Speaker 1 (15:07):
Kid watching talking about The Last Starfighter? Have you seen
The Last star Fighter? No?
Speaker 2 (15:12):
I haven't.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
Oh do you You don't even know what it's about? Right?
Speaker 2 (15:16):
No?
Speaker 1 (15:16):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (15:17):
God imagining it's somebody start fighting nineteen eighty.
Speaker 1 (15:20):
Four, nineteen eighty five. Oh, it's this kid at a
trailer park. That was good. Come on, that was good.
This kid at a trailer park starts playing this video
game that was just left there called The Last Starfighter.
When he beats the game. You find out it's basically
an audition to become a starfighter pilot in this intergalactic war. Awesome.
And so an alien essentially comes down to Earth and
(15:42):
picks him up and brings him there right as the
base is destroyed and there's one special ship left that
he has to fly. It is the same as an
eight year old boy. It's the sickest thing.
Speaker 2 (15:52):
Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
Ever, so it was just I can't we got.
Speaker 2 (15:56):
To do that has to be so many guys like age.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
It was huge, It was huge.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
Favorite movie.
Speaker 1 (16:04):
It is just wow. Uh yeah. So I'm gonna talk
about that quite a bit. And twas the Night stars
a very familiar name. Yeah, an actor who was the
star of arguably a top five television show of all time.
And I'm not talking about Malcolm in the Middle. It's
Brian Cranston as Nick Wrigley. Cranston began his career in
(16:25):
the early eighties working as a character actor with breakout
roles on Seinfeld and in Saving Private Ryan, but it
was in the year two thousand that he entered the
mainstream as Hell the Dad on Malcolm in the Middle,
a job that landed him three Emmy nominations, but it
was his next job that no one saw coming. He
went from lovable comedy goofball to high school science teacher
turn meth dealer as Walter White on Breaking Bad, one
(16:47):
of the medium's greatest roles ever, winning him four Emmys
and becoming a true critical darling of the century. Amazing.
He was also Oscar nominated for another movie, I Love Trumbo,
and appeared in other films like Argo, The Power Rangers,
A zord On, Little Miss Sunshine, and Drive. And he
is still at the very tippity top of his game,
winning the Emmy for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy
(17:07):
Series this year for seth Rogen's The Studio. So I've
already asked this a few times, but is Brian Kranton
the best actor we've ever seen in a dcom? I mean,
we got Zendaya, Shaia, Debbie Reynolds, but it's freaking Brian Cranson.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
I mean, it was just so shocking. I had no
idea he was in this movie, nor would I have
ever in my life guest that he had a guess
that he actually was in a dcom. Ever ever? Right?
Speaker 1 (17:36):
I mean yeah, But I mean again, then I look
at like the fact that he was zored on. Yes,
when you start looking at it, he just wants to
do fun stuff.
Speaker 2 (17:44):
Yes, yes, And to be honest, like going back to
like kind of just thoughts on the movie. This movie
would be a completely different movie had he not been
in it.
Speaker 1 (17:54):
It would not. I bet you I could have answered
the question of whether I liked it or not had
it not been Brian Kranston. Yes, he destroyed me because
I love him.
Speaker 2 (18:01):
He made this movie. I mean, he really held this
movie because it could have been because he's just so good.
He's and he leaned into his character. He was a
nasty man.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
He was. It was God, It's great. I would love
to hear what he thought when he read the script.
But I love it.
Speaker 2 (18:20):
I know, I know it's crazy. So yes, I was
shocked and but.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
Appreciated it the same same. And then we have Josh
Zuckerman playing Danny Wrigley. Josh had already appeared on TV
in The West Wing and The Amanda Show before Twice
the Night, and would later play young Doctor Evil in
Austin Power's gold Member. He also has been seeing a
ton of other movies like Surviving Christmas and Sex Drive.
He also appeared on TV shows like Kyle x Y,
(18:46):
Desperate Housewives, and nine to two and zero. He was
also in Freaking Oppenheimer. He's been in everything. We can
also let you know, and I'll announce it again at
the end, but he's gonna be our guest on our
Poor Copper episode. We're very excited. We had a great
conversation with him and it was really cool. And so
director Nick Castle might be a horror legend who has
terrified millions of people over the years. But you know
what's the scariest thing of all the length of this movie.
(19:08):
So how long was twas the Night? It was eighty
seven minutes? All right? Sorry, that was nice. That was
me being horror. So it's three off target, but on
the shorter side of history, which we love to see.
It's a true Christmas miracle. Thank you everybody involved. I'm
sure Tiny Tim had something to do with that himself.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
More like a bed movie.
Speaker 1 (19:31):
Where is your head going? It's Christmas? I was trying
to imagine stabbing somebody, not having sections though. God it's true,
but nice. Too many jokes, too many jokes, I know.
And on the writing side, we've got three credits. TV
(19:51):
writer Jim Lincoln, who'd worked on Honey Ashrunk, The Kids,
The TV show, Weird Science, The TV Show, and Desperate Housewives,
and his writing partner Dan Studney, who also wrote the
movies Jack the Giant Slayer and Reefer Madness the movie musical,
which great movie. But it's the final writer that caught
my attention. That's Jenny Tripp. And she doesn't have many
credit story name, but she did contribute quote additional story
(20:13):
material quote to a big Disney Milestone film, The Lion King,
which is probably the reason she got this movie, but
she didn't work again after. I'd love to hear a
story because something feels weird here, so I want to
know what it is.
Speaker 3 (20:29):
I'm Kristin Davis, host of the podcast Are You a Charlotte?
The most anticipated guest from season three is here the
Tray to My Charlotte. Kyle McGlaughlin joins me to relive
all of the magical Tray in Charlotte moments. He reveals
what he thinks of Trey giving Charlotte a cardboard baby.
Speaker 4 (20:51):
Why would I bring her on cardboard baby? I was
literally I was like, this doesn't track for me at all.
Speaker 3 (20:56):
When he found out Trey's shortcomings.
Speaker 4 (20:58):
I'm kind of excited to talk, but you know, I
think he's a guy spends time in Central Park. You know,
he's probably be some surgery stuff, you know.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
And I was like, all this.
Speaker 4 (21:06):
Kind of stuff going on, and they were like, yeah, yeah, yeah,
and they said, but he's impotent, and I was.
Speaker 3 (21:11):
Like, he's impotent, and why he chose not to return
to ingest like that.
Speaker 4 (21:15):
They came and presented an idea and I was like,
I get I see it.
Speaker 2 (21:19):
It's so kind of a one joke idea.
Speaker 5 (21:21):
You don't want to miss this.
Speaker 3 (21:23):
Listen to are You a Charlotte on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
And now hark the Herald Angels sing, Let's break bad
and save Christmas. It's time to recap Twas the night
we opened. During the holidays. Outside the suburban Wrigley family home,
we see snow in Christmas lights, and a young narrator
recites the poem for which the movie is based on.
But when it gets to not a creature was stirring,
not even a mouse, we hear a girl scream, and
(21:53):
when he mentions the stockings hun with care we see
them being pulled down in haste, and when Saint Nick
gets name checked, we see color lights being pulled off
a Christmas tree and used to tie Santa Claus to
a chair. Our narrator can't believe the real Santa exists
and is in his house, and then we flash back
to the day before Christmas, John, the workaholic father the
Wrigley family is rapping presents, while Abby the mom, is
(22:13):
burning cookies in the kitchen. The obnoxious genius sister Caitlyn
is upstairs reading in advanced trigonometry textbook, and a beloved
little brother, Peter, is a I don't know why I
said it like that, Peter. Weirdly British Peter is aimlessly
roaming the halls. Very straight hook Peter, how about just
Peter is roaming the halls, prohibited from entering his big
(22:36):
bro's room, and that's where we find out our narrator, Danny,
who is playing a flight simulator video game, has a
real Ferris Bueller kind of vibe to him, and then
he realizes something he's totally neglected. It's Christmas Eve. He
checks his wallet and he only has a dollar. As
he tells his family, he doesn't have enough money for presents.
He narrates his own poem about having no money, disliking
his dad, his sister's being too smart, and now he'll
(22:58):
force his little brother to buy him of his old junk.
And while Danny counts his manipulated brother's money, his parents
are furious. Despite his no returns policy, Danny now must
give Peter. Somebody keeps saying it a full refund. Danny
argues it's like their Uncle Nick says he's just sharing
the wealth. Uncle Nick is considered a bad role model
slash con artist, and the mention of his name alone
(23:19):
doesn't excite Danny's dad, But Danny defends Nick by calling him,
quote unquote, the bomb, which in two thousand and one
might be one of the first of the bombs we've gotten.
While they argue, Peter walks off to get a cookie
jar and in the kitchen ends up breaking into a
million little pieces, spilling tons of change to the floor.
He was getting the money to give it to Danny.
What a sweet little kid.
Speaker 2 (23:39):
You know, says it's money for family right now.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
Upstairs in his room, Danny looks at a picture of
him and Uncle Nick and calls him the coolest person
in the family, though Peter thinks Danny is the coolest
person in the family, and we might have a best
Little Brother award in a d com What a twist,
like a good little brother. Never thought we'd see that true.
Danny bets Uncle Nick is somewhere making a big business
deal right now. And then we get a Podmets World
(24:02):
patented optical flip because Uncle Nick is actually blindfolded, tied
to a chair and begging for mercy. And when he
wrestles off the blindfold, we see it's just two young
nerds yelling into a mug, claiming they were a swindled
by Nick's phony website, realfastdough dot com, which, as our
producers like to do, they actually check stuff out and
is not currently a website. Okay, how did they get
(24:25):
him tied to the chair without knowing who they were?
Speaker 2 (24:31):
Number? This is our first what.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
Okay, there's a lot of people tied to chairs where
I didn't understand how they got tied to chairs, correct,
and so we'll get to that. But this is the
first half of how did this guy get Yeah, okay,
so Nick can't believe it, But these dorks Bill and
Harry are furious about the thirty thousand dollars they lost
and they want it back. Nick claims he made investments
(24:54):
with the money and then lost it all, and so
the nerds threatened to pour hot coco on his beloved laptop,
which he calls, but instead they passed Nick off to
their vice president of collections and intimidating henchman named Elliott,
who grabs the con man by the nose. If Nick
doesn't return their money by Christmas morning, Elliott will hurt
a lot more than just his nose. They untie him,
and as soon as they leave, he's running down the
fire escape to skip Town, lappy in hand, but Elliot
(25:17):
spots him leaving and it becomes a chase tide. Nick
finds a building next to a long line of impatient
children and parents waiting to take pictures with Santa. He
goes through the line. He sees all the kids waiting.
He knows all the kids are waiting. He hears the
kids yelling, we want Santa Claus. So what does he
do to escape? Escape unnoticed? He bumps into Santa, steals
(25:41):
his clothes, and becomes mister Claus. Because that guy was
taking a dump in the bathroom, so he steals his costume.
So now he's dressed like Santa. That's the worst way
to escape all the people waiting for Santa.
Speaker 2 (25:55):
Well, he was gyant. It was like a disguise, disguise
everyone's waiting for right It's it was like, it was
like why what?
Speaker 1 (26:05):
So I get why they had to do it because
they needed him to be in the Santa pants for
the rest of the movie, but still it was very strange.
So he's able to fool Elliott and jump on a bus.
We are back at the Rigleys. The family has gathered
to read the actual visit from Saint Nick. When their
doorbell rings, it's Uncle Nick, still dressed as Santa Danny.
The kids are happy to see him, but John knows
something's up. But before he can even question his brother,
(26:25):
he's been called to the hospital. There's been a major
outbreak of reindeer flu. Of reindeer flu.
Speaker 2 (26:33):
Gonna say again, I mean, I guess we didn't really,
I had no idea what their occupation was.
Speaker 1 (26:37):
No, we had no idea what it was.
Speaker 2 (26:39):
So it was kind of like, oh, first of all,
I mean, obviously the reindeer flu thing was like what absurdity.
Speaker 1 (26:46):
Of course, it's.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
Like, oh, he's a doctor, and then it's like, oh
and she's a doctor too.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
Like they're all doctors. Okay, all right, So I'm gonna
ask just a very simple question. Is it just a
creative name or we supposed to believe it's real? What
the reindeer flu? As? I guess there's.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
Another one that comes on and I actually is just
looking into my notes and I didn't write it down.
It's something else that comes up later on that was
like a really weird situation too.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
Yeah, I think it's member. I think, well, it's another
reindeer flu. They talk about it again, but anyway.
Speaker 2 (27:17):
It's another situation like reindeer flu. It is, yeah, and
I'm like, what are these like? And he said it's
so noginal, like oh like the reindeer flu, Like oh,
like yeah.
Speaker 1 (27:26):
We get it every year common. Yeah, that's why Rudolph's
nose is red. It's because of reindeer flu and you
know some ha. So this covid like emergency forces them
to leave the kids with Uncle Nick, which terrifies John
of course, but Nick seems to be doing pretty well
so far. He's now reading the poem as the kids
argue about if Santa is even real, and Caitlin's being
(27:47):
a real torp about it. She doesn't think it adds up,
but Peter still believes thanks to Danny. But it's like, dude,
you know your little brother still believes. Give the kid
a break and let them be even Santa Claus for
a little. It's like, come on, it's.
Speaker 2 (27:59):
Such a thing that parents do have to navigate at
some point when the older kids start to It just
actually happened with Monroe with an older kid when right
before we were going to Disneyland and the older kid
told her that those that Cinderella wasn't really Cinderella. She
has a wig on and Jordan I have never seen
(28:22):
him get so said about another old kid. He was like,
she can't play with her anymore.
Speaker 1 (28:29):
Yeah, no, that's me.
Speaker 2 (28:29):
You can, come on, you can't. It's and it's her.
It's her friend's older sister. And she's like, why does
why haven't they talked to her about not like ruining
the magic for the little kids?
Speaker 1 (28:38):
I remember, I was like, I.
Speaker 2 (28:39):
Don't know, she's not our kid. We will know to
do that with Monroe and Ledger like that's not our.
Speaker 1 (28:44):
Kid, kid around, that kid, Come on, the kid's bad news. Yeah,
that kid's bad news in trouble. I'm completely on Jordan's
side with this one.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
By the way, it's a whole horrible thing. Like your
little sister, little brother live in the magic for a
little bit longer.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
It's part. It's it's a very specific part of your
your life that changes when you find out that Santa
isn't real it really is. And I remember I remember
literally screaming and crying at the top of my lugs,
begging my parents to tell me because I wanted to
know as he real? Is he real? Is he real?
I know he's not.
Speaker 2 (29:17):
Really your brothers that were really.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
So I just figured it out. It's kind of logistically impossible.
So I was like, unless he's a wizard, and then
if he was a wizard, because those are real, he
would be doing.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
My big here is is that the kids finding out
that we're lying to them for so long? Like, how
has that got to backfire?
Speaker 1 (29:39):
Yeah? Exactly.
Speaker 2 (29:40):
I don't remember beings at my parents.
Speaker 1 (29:42):
My dad hated to have to tell me. We still
talk about this story of this days like it would
crush me that I had to tell you because it's
I was the youngest and that's the end of it,
Like that's for them until you get grandkids back and
then it starts all over again. But anyway, reindeer flu,
which I think is what I have right now, Yeah,
it sounds like it. It does right, Yeah, So she
(30:03):
doesn't think it adds up, but Pete still believes thanks
to Danny. And before John and Abby leave, they send
the kids off to bed, even teenage Danny, and it's
not even nine pm yet, but his dad does not
want him hanging around with Nick. And now with the
doctor's gone, Nick goes to work on Lappie. He's trying
to get Alan, but it's immediately hacked by Elliott and
the nerds. They're real time tracking his location. So Nick
sends them a supervirus that scrabbles their hard drive and
(30:24):
will mess with any computer within fifty miles. And that's
when we look to the skies and here's something to
sending fast to crash on Earth. Then there is a
loud thud and some footsteps on the roof. Danny shows
up downstairs to investigate, and Nick assumes it is a
huge squirrel, and that's when everything freezes. Tons of molecules
that look like gray killer bees come flying out of
the fireplace, eventually combining to reveal Santa Claus with a
(30:47):
huge bag of gifts. The special effects aren't very good,
so I mean, let's be honest, the special effects aren't working.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
They yeah, they were the budget. They were the special
effects of this budget.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
It was.
Speaker 2 (30:56):
But I will say that was a cool way to
do it. It wasn't him shimming down the chimney a
creative way that I haven't seen before In additional movie
of How Santa Gets, I thought, so it was. It
was creative to me, So I let it go.
Speaker 1 (31:14):
I agree, great, but I let it go. He's also
a good movie version of Santa. He's a great he
really is. He is played by Canadian actor Jefferson Mapin,
who's best known as Fatty Rossiter in the movie Unforgiven,
And I remember that role. He was great. Yeah is
oh man, but it was he was great. Santa is
(31:35):
talking to an elf named Albert in his earpiece and
is led to Lappie with uncle and nephew still frozen
behind him. Yes, they are frozen, and we will get
into that because anyway, Albert instructs him to put the
virus in the computer trash, which apparently Santa had to
use computers on his sleigh this year because the reindeer have.
The reindeer flew again.
Speaker 2 (31:54):
This is real.
Speaker 1 (31:55):
So this is real. Now, this is an epidemic. This
is something we're gonna have to get another whole thing
of whether you have to get shots or whatever because
of reindeer flew. But I here's okay. I get why
they needed to do this, because they needed to steal
the sleigh and all that stuff. But I did not
like some of the changes to Santa. I don't like
Santa without his reindeer. The reindeer important part of Santa.
(32:15):
So I even if it's one rogue reindeer, give me
a reindeer. Okay, I don't like. I don't like this
thing that flies itself, because then why does he need
the reindeer. Santa doesn't need the reindeer. He can just
do this all like digitally. Yeah, it was. It's very strange.
Speaker 2 (32:31):
Well, and it's strange too because it's like two thousand
and one when I don't feel like our internet and
all that stuff was really like that savvy.
Speaker 1 (32:40):
No, but I guess in Santa land. It is also
at one point he says in the movie, which freaked
me out. He's like, I just should be lying on
a beach somewhere letting one of the reindeer rub lotion
on me.
Speaker 5 (32:52):
I didn't get that.
Speaker 1 (32:53):
Why not missus clause. Why wouldn't the line be missus Claus. Well,
one of the reindeer is rubbing lotion on him, and
just I still, I couldn't sleep last night because the
visuals too much for me.
Speaker 2 (33:06):
I could sleep last night. I was wearing a red
jump like a red sweater with red pants yesterday out
shopping for stuff, and this man called me missus Claws
and that really like.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
Rude. Wow.
Speaker 2 (33:26):
He's like, oh, let me guess missus Claws. And I
was like, sir, excuse me, sir, I know that old.
Speaker 1 (33:34):
Jeez Loly, Missus Claus is timeless. She's not old.
Speaker 2 (33:39):
She is an old woman with gray hair and.
Speaker 1 (33:42):
A red body. She's timing. You know, you know all
this Santa Claus, by the way, was invented by the
Coca Cola Corporation. Have you actually read that?
Speaker 5 (33:50):
No?
Speaker 1 (33:50):
The Santa Claus that we know, the big cheeks, the
ruddy cheeks, the white beard, the red suit. All of
that was invented in like the twenties by Coca Cola.
There is not a single Santa Claus like that before
the Coca Cola company invented it, Like was.
Speaker 2 (34:03):
It like their advertisement or something.
Speaker 1 (34:06):
They wanted to know. They wanted to brand the holiday
and they wanted people to associate Coca Cola with the
winter holiday. So they literally invented that Santa Claus that
we now know. Wow, it's all all invented by Big Soda,
Thank you very much. Okay, now ready once again for
(34:28):
the sky. Santa decides to start with the Wrigley House.
While he's there, Peter and Caitlin are on the nice list,
but Danny's on the naughty list. He blames Nick, who's
on the naughty list for life. Santa goes to his bag,
picks up some tiny rat presents and leaves him under
the tree. This was brilliant to me, by the way, Yes, great,
great idea for how Santa can do all this stuff,
(34:49):
and then I made it. Even in my head it
was like if they did it nowadays, it's just a
big bag of sand, because every grain of sand is
a present from around the world. So it's just the
idea that they're tiny and you can leave him, because
then he could carry him all. Genius. Genius, genius. He
reveals a magical gold ball from his pocket, presses a
button and the tiny presence quickly inflate to regular size. Now,
(35:09):
as genius as that idea is, the gold ball is
really stupid, because of course you can lose it. It
should be a watch or something that's.
Speaker 2 (35:16):
On Santa, because you don't.
Speaker 1 (35:19):
You don't do it. You don't you have your most
important thing.
Speaker 2 (35:22):
Read all but that.
Speaker 1 (35:25):
Which is what he does.
Speaker 2 (35:27):
He lost it right along with it because I was
so like, no at this point, that's what I said.
I kind of went up and down. And you know,
at the beginning, I felt like this had so much
steam because I loved these creative ideas of Santa that
we have not seen before. So I let the ball go.
Speaker 1 (35:44):
I would have I would have made it a thing
that he wears on his wrist. And as Brian Cranston
is checking his pulse or steps on his arm by accident,
he makes the guy smaller and then he realizes it
and he literally pulls it off of Santa Santa's arm.
Because the idea that it's just something you can lose
is really yeah, anyway, this is just these are the
way my brains work. So he pulls the ball from
(36:05):
his pocket, presses a button, and the tiny presents quickly
inflate to regular size. But as the big jelly Man
readies himself to leave, he drops the gold ball, accidentally
releasing Nick and Danny from their spell. This is some
of not okay. One of the easiest things to do
in movies is freeze the frame so the characters don't move.
(36:26):
These were actors that were just told the freeze that
are clearly sitting there and moving moving because it's bad.
Freeze frame. It's really bad. It's because it's just like,
just freeze the frame. Don't don't make the actors stand
there for forty seconds try because they're shaken all over
the place. Nobody looks frozen.
Speaker 2 (36:43):
Yeah, and how many takes did it take to even
get what they have?
Speaker 1 (36:47):
I know? It's great, terrible And.
Speaker 2 (36:49):
So it's like and at that point, for most of
the time, at least he wasn't, the Santa wasn't in
frame with them.
Speaker 1 (36:56):
No, they're just so easily shoot around that it's that's
such an easy fix that. It's weird that they don't
do that.
Speaker 2 (37:03):
It is strange. It's just weird, very strange choice.
Speaker 1 (37:06):
So Nick and Danny are released from their spell. The
two are scared by the side of Santa, who tries
to convince them that they're hallucinating. Santa tried to foot nice.
Santa tried to fool them with the old look over
their trick, but slips when he makes a run for
it and knocks himself out. As he lays there on
the floor completely still, Nick and Danny poke them with
a stick and realizes this is the real Santa. Danny
grabs a golden ball, accidentally pressing the button and shrinking
(37:27):
Nick to the size of a thumb. What And when
Danny presses the button again, Nick returns to normal height.
So it's I guess you can do it with people too.
Danny quickly realizes an unconscious Santa on Christmas Eve can
ruin everything, but Nick insists they do nothing. It's not
their problem. And when Nick now accidentally hits the golden
ball button, it freezes Danny. Wow, this thing is very powerful.
(37:49):
When he tries to unfreeze his nephew, quot unquote because
nobody's actually frozen. They're shaking all over the place. He
instead turns himself into floating molecules and floats out the
chimney and into the sleigh on the roof. Nick has
no way what to do when he wakes up in
Santa's mode of transportation, but figures this is the miracle
he needed. He fidgets with the stick shift. Who anybody
who jumps into a new vehicle that's perched precariously on
(38:11):
a rooftop is gonna start pressing buttons? Sorry, it's like,
what are you doing there? It's like, I'm gonna grab
this joystick and start pressing buttons. What are you thinking? Yeah,
fidgets with the stick. Nothing happens. He presses the gold
ball button once again, sending his molecules back into the house.
He can't believe the possibilities. He unfreeses Danny and now
suggests to his nephew they pick up the gauntlet and
(38:31):
take over for Comatos Santa. Since Danny is so good
at flight video games, he can control the sleigh while
Nick can deliver the presence. Danny surprises Uncle changes his tune,
but they shake hands and become heroes. Danny wonders about
his brother and sister. They can't just leave them home alone,
but Nick argues they aren't alone. Santa's there, even if
he's unconscious, and just like that, they're off flying over
(38:51):
the city in the sleigh.
Speaker 2 (38:53):
Okay, who tied him to the chair, that's the next.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
What Who lifted this giant man man, giant uncus man.
Speaker 2 (39:07):
Yes, he's a big guy. He's a huge dude, and
all we have is a sister.
Speaker 1 (39:15):
No, because it's that's it couldn't have been the two
little kids.
Speaker 2 (39:19):
Oh they were sleeping still.
Speaker 1 (39:21):
Right, are we supposed to believe that they picked this
man up and they put him on the chair unconscious,
this huge dude, and then tied him to the chair.
It's like I didn't get that. Who tied him to
the chair anyway?
Speaker 2 (39:37):
And to use lights from the Christmas tree doesn't seem
like a decision, like an adulthood wake.
Speaker 1 (39:43):
Yeah, I don't know any of it is. It was
just these these again. Everyone's like, you're nitpicking. Yeah, it's
literally my job. Nick is still in Santa's outfit and
suggests they start in the rich area of town, making
up some excuse about lightning. The sleighs load. Back at
the Wrigley House, Peter is awake at and downstairs. He's
very surprised when he sees a passed out Santa, but
assumes it's his uncle Nick. When he goes to pull
(40:04):
off his beard, he realizes this is an Uncle Nick
at all and screams at the top of his lungs. Meanwhile,
in a nearby mansions roof, Nick realizes you can put
your hand in Santa's bag and magically pull out Presence Brilliant.
While inside the house, Uncle Santa has a completely different plan.
He's frozen time as expected, but instead of delivering gifts,
he's stealing expensive items and using the gold ball to
shrink them into pocket size for travel. This guy's ayah.
(40:27):
And when Nick Nick does return to the sleigh, Danny
uses Santa's database and sees who's on the naughty list,
and well, it's him. Danny's on the naughty list. Nick
doesn't care who is this Santa to judge anyway, it's
their turn to call the shots and decide who's naughty
and who's nice. Back at the rig Leads, we return
to the start of the movie, where someone has tied
Santa to the chair again, it's Peter, who's now woken
(40:50):
up Caitlin to help, and then Santa opens his eyes. So,
I don't know who tied him the chair, but I
can tell you even the four of them wouldn't have
been able to move this dude. Yeah, he's so big,
he explains, he's the reels also, So, I don't know
if you've ever tried to pick anybody up who's not
like passed out or unconscious. It's just dead weight. It's
so difficult to do. Don't ask me how I know that,
And then Santa opens his eyes. He explains he's the
(41:12):
real Santa improves it by mentioning the one time Caitlyn
cheated in the third grade. Now convinced and with Santa untied,
Katelyn notices Santa's sleigh is gone. Santa suggests someone decided
to be charitable and help while he was incapacitated, but
when he realizes it was Nick Wrigley, he knows this
can't be good. He tries to communicate with the L's,
but he needs the sleigh for that to work, and
then he sees Lappie. Since that's what brought him down
(41:34):
to earth, he asked Kitlyn for help, and she has
a plan. She'll hack into the sleigh and override the
flight plan to bring it home, but she needs a
stronger signal, so they're off to the computer shop, with
Santa driving terribly behind the wheel of Mom's car, which
also noticed was bright red like Santa Santas.
Speaker 2 (41:49):
I did notice that Yah interesting.
Speaker 1 (41:52):
Now in a new rich family's home, Uncle Nick is
stealing and shrinking stuff, but is surprised by Danny, who
has now entered the house to change a naughty kid's gift,
so wonders why his uncle's taking so long. Using the ball,
Danny delivers a punching bag because the naughty boy's been
fighting at school and maybe he'll get his anger out
on this instead. Nick is impressed with Danny's thoughtfulness. He says,
when he was a kid, he always wanted a very specific,
(42:13):
beautiful Jimmy Hendrix's guitar. He asked for it every year
but never got it. But his brother, Danny's dad got
everything he wanted. It was just naughty versus nice. But
maybe if Danny was around back then, Nick would have
gotten the guitar and he turned into something, so it
was like he was noticing good things about his nephew. Yeah,
and then before they leave, Danny notices Nick is a
little lumpy, but makes nothing of it, at least for now.
(42:37):
The real Santa and the Wrigley siblings have made a
wrong turn and found themselves in a very sketchy alley.
We hear rap music and see guys spray painting the walls,
so we know that's trouble. Santa yells out and politely
asks him to move, but when he honks, they don't
seem very happy about it. The thugs surrounding the car,
and they're quickly annoyed by his Santa ways, But weirdly,
when Santa does get out of the car, exposing his
full outfit and belly, the dozens of thugs are scared.
(43:00):
Why would they be scared of him?
Speaker 2 (43:01):
First of all, but like also like he's an old man.
I mean, he's an old man's dresses? Santa? What are you?
What are you worried about?
Speaker 1 (43:09):
Yeah? It's also what kind of hooligans are out spray
painting at like midnight on Christmas Eve?
Speaker 2 (43:15):
It's poligans, thugs. I believe that. I believe that. I
just don't believe they'd be intimidated it and anyway by
an older man dresses Santa.
Speaker 1 (43:25):
But the thugs are prepared for a fight, and Santa
says he didn't want to do this, but then gets
into a praying mant this defensive position, but instead of brawling,
Santa starts feverishly tickling the gang leader, then define gravity
with parkour, which did not look good, and tickling the
man even faster, resulting in an all out surrender. The
leader realizes Santa is a mean tickler and offers him
(43:46):
a spot in his gang, because that's what every gang needs,
is a good tickle guy. But Santa's in a hurry,
and so to help, the gang escorts the family to
comp you smart in the low Rider while listening to
rap music. Santa thanks Pap and promises them good stocking stuffers.
Inside the computer store, which is for no reason anyone
(44:07):
can figure out whatsoever open in the middle of the
night at like two o'clock in the morning or whatever
it is on.
Speaker 2 (44:14):
Chrismas Eve, who would need to go in there my.
Speaker 1 (44:17):
Mousepad at three am. The store manager's obviously upset Santa's
apparently late. He was supposed to be hired as a
Santa for the shop this afternoon, but that guy didn't show.
Caitlyn doesn't care. She's looking for the computer. We're now
back in the sleigh. Nick has shrunk a sports car
and Danny suggests maybe stopping by a homeless shelter to
do some charitable work, but Nick leads them to a
nearby mansion. Even though they don't have kids. Nick continues
(44:40):
to hide his real plans by saying his goal is
to switch out their dinner and force them to know
what the other side eats like. And even though this
idea is terrible, Danny loves it. Back at the computer shop,
Caitlyn and Santa are working with a high tech computer.
When an employee approaches Peter and he keeps saying it
like that, their lookout jumps into action. He blocks them
in and asks for the bathroom or he'll pee in
(45:00):
the aisle, and it works, just as the computer boots up.
Peter is the unsung hero of this movie, and when
we return to the sleigh, Nick is loving life. He
suggests they do it again next year, but Danny notes
that Santa will obviously be back by then, but Nick
explains head injuries can be serious, you never know, and
then they arrive at the mansion, which is as big
as Harry Potter School, and as they approach the landing,
(45:21):
they lose control of the sleigh. It's been commandeered and
they're descending fast. It's Caitlyn at Copy Serve. She's steering
them in circles and sending them back to her house.
Danny thinks on his toes they should turn off the
slay to reboot it and disconnect the hack. It might
damage the hard drive, but Nick loves the idea. Once
they shut it down, they start a free fall to
the ground and can't restart it. By the way, this
is how you fix all computer programs. Unplug it, plug
(45:42):
it back in. As they panic, they get it to
reboot just in time and land in front of again
what has to be Hogwarts. And now sat and the
kids are depressed outside the computer store, which again is
still open. Kitlyn can't believe she had them locked in
and then lost control. Santa realizes that Danny is helping
his evil uncle and banishes him to the naughty list forever.
He may even tell the Easter Bunny about this, But
(46:04):
Peter It's great little brother. Peter tries to defend him,
and that's becoming more and more difficult to do. Unfortunately,
we're now back in the mansion and there's literally people
in tuxedos and tiars. Is this is this a weird
Christmas Eve party?
Speaker 2 (46:16):
Or is this normal weird Christmas feed party? All right, good,
I'm glad that wasn't just me the tiara's.
Speaker 1 (46:21):
I mean, is that your Christmas tiara?
Speaker 2 (46:24):
Yeah? Like, you know, I guess you could have kind
of like a really fancy Christmas party, But it was
the tiaras that were just like.
Speaker 1 (46:33):
Do you own a tiara? An actual tr not a
fake one? Like, do you own like a nice tir? Beyond?
Speaker 2 (46:39):
Come, no, I don't.
Speaker 1 (46:41):
You wouldn't sit in the hot time eating steak with
a tr on just checking?
Speaker 2 (46:51):
No, I don't. I mean, I'm not gonna say I would.
Wants funny.
Speaker 1 (46:56):
My wife says the same thing. She's like, god, tirs
are so stupid. But I mean, if I were to have.
Speaker 2 (47:02):
One, I know, wear an extra one, she can just
like throw wear a tiara. I don't know, I don't know. No,
A lot of women, I mean what a lot of
women wear them for their wedding, like.
Speaker 1 (47:18):
We t at their wedding.
Speaker 2 (47:19):
Really, I feel like sometimes like tirs are like with
like a like part of the veil, Like it's like
a beaded kind of Tiara.
Speaker 1 (47:29):
I said Tiara this much in my entire life, and
now it just sounds weird.
Speaker 2 (47:33):
No, but yeah, I mean I would love to have
a real one. Oh my gosh, that'd be so cool.
I just don't know where i'd wear it.
Speaker 1 (47:41):
I guess at Christmas party exactly. So yes. Now we're
in the mansion. Nickas frozen a big high society party
to steal some jewelry, eventually landing and swiping a massive
diamond from Missus Vanderlip, who he also has kiss her cheek,
which was weird. Meanwhile, in the kitchen, Danny is traying
out the fancy food as this terrible plan plan is
taking Place's srinking a plump turkey and replacing it with
(48:02):
a store bought underwhelming bird. But when he eventually walks
out into the hallway, he stumbles on his uncle. Mesmerized
by the diamond, he puts two and two together and
calls him out for stealing stuff, using the gold ball
to enlarge all the shrunken items in Santa's coat and
we get a very cool kind of effect here. Now,
with Nick balancing on top of a huge pile of things,
including a ferrari at, a piano and a piano and
(48:23):
everything else. Nick quickly tries to cover his track, saying
he's collecting stuff for charity Bud. Danny shrinks the items
back down and knows the truth. It's all been one
big scam. Nick changes his tune, now pitting himself as
a Robin Hood type, suggesting he cuts his nephew into
the deal, but Danny says they're done, not just with Christmas,
but their entire relationship. Danny makes his way to the
sleigh and his uncle follows close behind. Nick admits he
(48:45):
has a cash flow problem and says that this was
a once in a lifetime opportunity to fix it. He
apologizes and pretends nothing is wrong. Then Danny demands they
go back home to actually help Santa, and even though
Nick pretends it's a good idea, he swipes the gold
ball and stays at the mansion. Danny takes off the
sleigh and doesn't even say goodbye. Sanna and the Wrigley
siblings are on the couch back home, depressed, without any
(49:05):
idea how to fix things. Sanna doesn't even know how
he'll get home, and that's when they hear a crash outside.
Danny has returned. Caitlyn gets to work fixing the crash
sleigh because for some reason now Danny couldn't land it
when he could the first time. It doesn't make any
sense but anyway, but she's not sure what she can help.
In time, Danny apologizes to Santa he wasn't trying to
steal his sleigh, but Santa doesn't know what to believe.
(49:26):
Danny also tries to defend Nick, claiming he was just
in over his head, but Santa knows the truth. Nick
is a scammer and Danny has been scammed, and that's
when Caitlin finally admits defeat. The sleigh's hard drive is fried,
and although the computer store was open at eleven, it's
now closed at eleven forty on the other side of town.
Nick is waiting for the boss, coping with his actions.
He thinks Danny will forget all about this in a week,
(49:47):
especially when he sends him an expensive gift, but it's
obvious that this is affecting him, and that's when the
two nerds and Elliot from the beginning of the movie,
Remember them, Yeah, Well, they pull up. They're looking for
the tracked location of their scammer, Wrigley House. Nick, who
is still disguised as Santa, hides his face and lets
him drive off, but quickly realizes the kids are now
in danger. Then the bus arrives. Santa is having a
(50:10):
mental breakdown. It's the first Christmas he'll ever miss, and
now he's starting to spiral. Maybe he'll just retire to
Florida and work in his tan. This is where he
talks about Rudolph rubbing motion a little. He admits he's
just depressed. Everything has gone wrong. Oh god, I'm seeing
Rudolph in like a little like Italian kind of what
a little speedo kind of thing, and he's, oh my god, Yeah,
(50:32):
it's awful. It's awful. And I blame Mary, thank you,
it's not me, it's them. Yep, everything has gone wrong.
And then the Nerds pulling into the driveway looking for Nick.
Danny reveals he's not home, but the Nerds don't believe him.
They want in the house, and Thug Elliott is willing
to go through Santa to make it happen, so Santa
steps up, but guess who isn't ticklish? Elliot? Oh, this
(50:55):
is a problem, and just as Elliot starts cracking his knuckles,
they're interrupted by Uncle Nick. He's now returned, and though
he has very expensive items in his bag to pay
off the debt, he's not handing him over. The stuff
isn't his to give. Maybe he's learned something. He'll be
returning it all to their rightful owners, and so Elliot
slowly approaches for a butt kicking, but Nick is one
step ahead of him and uses the gold ball to
shrink him down to an action figure. I thought he
(51:17):
was the next step if it wasn't a dcom was
he was just gonna crush him under his foot like
a little aunt. But he didn't, and with the Golden
Ball's power exposed the nerds an Elliot, now back to
human size, leave in a hurry. Nick has saved everyone
and hugs the kids. Even Santa is impressed when Nick
gives him back the gold ball. Caitlyn is touched, but
this doesn't fix the sleigh. Peter said it like that again,
suggests they use Lappie, and though Nick is hesn't in
(51:39):
at first, he allows it and it works. SAA says
this is a great first step to rehabilitation for Nick
and will return all the stolen items for him. Santa
also makes the Wrigley family promise to keep all this
a secret, and he emits the whole knotty versus nice
thing might not be as black and white as he
first thought, and with that, Santa flies away. Later that night,
when the Wriggley's parents return home from crying the rain flu,
(52:01):
remember that Uncle Nick is asleep on the couch, and
John admits he may have been wrong about his brother
after all. He even calls the surprise visit his big
present this Christmas. The next morning, Uncle Nick is awoken
by the family rushing in to see their presence under
the tree. He seems to appreciate the love he's seeing,
and then Caitlyn finds a present for Uncle Nick. It's
the Jimmy Hendricks guitar he always wanted, and the card
(52:23):
reads to my favorite naughty boy, Sorry for the delay,
but better late than never, Love Santa. The family, completely
unaffected by a random gift being under the tree, encourages
him to play it, but Nick reveals he won't be
keeping it. He has to sell it off to pay
his debts, but Danny says, it's not like he's returning
it today. Just play it while he can, so Nick
puts it around his neck and begins the strum. He's
(52:43):
terrible and not of tune at first, but then turns
into Eddie van Halen with a superstar riff of jingle bells.
The family applause as Danny finally finishes that custom Christmas
poem from the start of the movie. The overall thesis
is to spend time with your family, whether you're naughty
or nice, and Merry Christmas everyone. And that's our movie.
Whow I still don't know if.
Speaker 2 (53:04):
I like it or not.
Speaker 1 (53:04):
I honestly don't.
Speaker 2 (53:08):
Hey, it's Wilfred Dell and Sabrina Bryan.
Speaker 1 (53:11):
From the podcast Magical Rewind and we have a very
special guest on this week's episode. He's the mastermind behind
some of your favorite movies like Hocus Pocus, Newsy's The Descendants,
and of course High School Musical. Yes, it is the
one and only a living legend director Kenny or Tega.
Speaker 2 (53:27):
We sit down with Kenny to talk about his incredible
career and the legacy he's created with his choreography and films.
Speaker 1 (53:33):
You seriously will not want to miss this one.
Speaker 2 (53:35):
Listen to Magical Rewind on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 6 (53:40):
Hi, it's Jenny Garth, host of the I Choose Me podcast.
This week, I'm so excited to welcome my friend Gabrielle
carteris the Andrea Zuckerman from Beverly Hills nine o two
ONOH to the pod.
Speaker 5 (53:53):
We're choosing to get real.
Speaker 2 (53:55):
I applied to the networks about my age in contracts.
They never would have hired me if they had my age.
Speaker 5 (54:00):
We're choosing to be honest.
Speaker 2 (54:02):
She looked at me, and she said, this business is
about the mask, which you have.
Speaker 5 (54:05):
Neither of, and we're choosing to get nostalgic.
Speaker 6 (54:08):
Listen to I Choose Me on the iHeartRadio app, Apple
podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (54:17):
Final reviews. Let's do some real reviews. Please, here we go.
I have the five stars. I'm very excited, and it's
by our old friend who named h This is a
great television film. I love the concept of Santa being
able to stop time, not only as a gimmick for
the plot, it's also the only thing that could explain
how Santa does everything he does in just one night,
and it would explain why nobody sees him. I mean,
(54:39):
that's it, That's how he does it. Thank you movie
five stars. He's not wrong or not is not wrong.
Speaker 2 (54:46):
It's great.
Speaker 1 (54:47):
He got Sabrina, I got.
Speaker 2 (54:48):
The one star. And this might be one of my
favorite names user names of that we've had one star
review by you talking to Me three forty five.
Speaker 1 (55:00):
Yeah, I love it.
Speaker 2 (55:02):
It's good this movie, but the whole Disney company to
shame Santa is very soft, dull and stupid. Also, you
may notice when the people are frozen, you can see
them shaking.
Speaker 1 (55:16):
Yes, thank you.
Speaker 2 (55:17):
A few bucks could edit that you're talking to me
three forty five is not wrong.
Speaker 1 (55:22):
It is not right.
Speaker 2 (55:24):
You could it didn't make sense. Well did they do that?
Speaker 1 (55:27):
It didn't. And now we are approaching Sabrina's favorite part
of the program.
Speaker 2 (55:31):
That is, of course it's actually starting to because I
say it, because I'm getting better and better.
Speaker 1 (55:35):
You're loving it. We've got I wonder what our record
is at this point, but you've been killing it lately.
But this one is called poetry in motion pictures. Oh
on Wordswas the Night is a rare movie that was
based on a poem, but it's not the only one.
We'll be given a movie title and we'll have to
guess what was based on a poem or not. You
got a fifty to fifty shot here in three out
of five wins?
Speaker 2 (55:54):
All right?
Speaker 1 (55:56):
Number one? Was Little Women a poem or not? Sabrina, Yes,
is it a poem? I thought it's just a book.
Speaker 2 (56:05):
I know it was a book, but did the book
start with the poem? Who are we playing with?
Speaker 6 (56:10):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (56:10):
That's why it's a good question. Who's with us today?
Speaker 2 (56:12):
You got producer MICHAELA Hey, he's good luck.
Speaker 1 (56:17):
All right, here we go. I think Little Women's just
a book. I don't think it's a poem.
Speaker 2 (56:21):
Really, I don't know poem.
Speaker 1 (56:23):
I'm gonna say book.
Speaker 2 (56:24):
It's not a poem, damn right.
Speaker 1 (56:27):
Number two Brave Heart, which is one of the funniest
movies to watch because I love it so much, but
it's one after another of just horrible problems in the movie.
My new favorite one that I just bought it is
there in the scene in the woods and they're all
from Scotland in the thirteen hundreds and literally in the
background with all the actors. Just a dude in a
(56:49):
baseball hat just walked by, like somebody from the crew.
It's great. Oh you see airplanes in it. There's it's
just are you serious? It is considered the most historically
inaccurate film of all time, like to the point where
kilts weren't even a thing at that point in Scotland. Oh,
it's great, it's great. But yeah, no, they're wonderful. But anyway,
Braveheart based on a poem. I think it is a poem.
(57:11):
I think it's about William Wallace.
Speaker 2 (57:14):
I think it is will is correct, it is a poem.
Speaker 1 (57:17):
Yeah. Uh. Number three over here dangerous Liaisons.
Speaker 2 (57:24):
Sure, poem.
Speaker 1 (57:26):
I think it's a book.
Speaker 2 (57:28):
It is not a poem.
Speaker 1 (57:33):
You are for three.
Speaker 2 (57:36):
I can't even win at this point.
Speaker 1 (57:38):
Number four Troy poem or not a poem?
Speaker 2 (57:42):
Definitely a poem.
Speaker 1 (57:44):
It is a poem. It's based on the Iliad by Homer.
Speaker 2 (57:48):
Correct.
Speaker 1 (57:49):
Okay, Number five Mulan Oh I won, by the way,
for the record, But yu was mulan a poem or
not a poem?
Speaker 2 (58:00):
I could see it being a poem because.
Speaker 1 (58:02):
I think I think it's a Yes, you.
Speaker 2 (58:05):
Guys are corrected to I went five for five. You
did well.
Speaker 1 (58:13):
Myself on the back. Can we do a Sabrina C's please.
Speaker 2 (58:19):
We can. I'm gonna start off with this one, and
I feel kind of bad about it. This isn't necessarily
a dig on like the acting. But we really didn't
talk about Peter.
Speaker 1 (58:35):
I didn't. I didn't want to.
Speaker 2 (58:36):
I'm not gonna talk about the acting. What I'm gonna
say is I wish that they had actually it felt
it felt a lot like Ocus Focus, where we talked
about the word the voice coming out of the actor
is not the this is I felt the same situation.
(58:58):
I wish because I did like his character. I wish
they actually cast somebody who was very young, like younger,
because he was playing, Yeah, he was playing it's so young,
you know. He was like the way he was like
using his words and stuff felt like a little little kid.
Speaker 1 (59:17):
Do you think that was an act or do you
think that was him? I think that was him because
that was an act. If that was an act, then
he's a genius.
Speaker 2 (59:25):
I thought he that's that was an act. I really
I was saying, if they or regardless, if they liked
how young his voice sounds, which would have been fine
had he been younger to me, and so he threw
me anytime he had a part in the movie kind
of threw me off that I started to kind of go, yeah,
(59:46):
it just didn't make sense.
Speaker 1 (59:47):
It also, I think being next to the other kids
who were so good, so good. I mean, Josh was great.
But again I can't get over the girl who I
gotta find her name, the girl who played Caitlyn, because
I kept going back to her, like, man, she's she's
damn good.
Speaker 2 (01:00:01):
And it was crazy for me that she wasn't all
over the channel. She was like a pure yep, perfect
Disney kid.
Speaker 1 (01:00:09):
Anyway, Brenda Great. By the way, it's her name, Brenda Great, Brenda.
Speaker 2 (01:00:14):
Great, I be she was that she had done more
stuff on the channel.
Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
She's known for Twas the Night as Caitlin, and she
was in Tarzan two.
Speaker 2 (01:00:21):
Ask oh, okay, and that's it.
Speaker 1 (01:00:25):
I think so yeah, But she was Disney. Yeah, she
was a Disney kid.
Speaker 2 (01:00:29):
Moving on, that velcro wallet got me. Did you have
one of those?
Speaker 1 (01:00:35):
Yes? I don't even remember.
Speaker 2 (01:00:37):
I had so many of them. I loved those things.
Those velcro Well, there was nothing better than the feel
and the sound of a velcro wallet before you pulled
out your cash, you had it.
Speaker 1 (01:00:49):
Susan. Susan does not allow Velcrow anywhere in the house.
She thinks it's a cheat. So velcrow shoes or velcro.
She's like, no, no, we don't. We don't do velcro
in this house. No, Belcrow.
Speaker 2 (01:01:01):
That's that's an interesting thing. I might need to I
might need to dive into her psyche, Like I have
to ask you about this because, by the way, I
live with Belcrow. With my kids, I'm not tying their shoes.
Speaker 1 (01:01:15):
Oh no, She's like, you're going to learn that. She's
like kids, She's like, that's a cheat. You're gonna learn
to tie your shoes.
Speaker 2 (01:01:20):
It's not for them. It's not for them. It's for me.
For them, but those there's no there's no way for
me to even double knot that. Ledger can't undo like
he is, so he'll.
Speaker 1 (01:01:35):
Hole or whatever it is.
Speaker 2 (01:01:36):
He'll sit there in his car seat and just get
it until he finally gets that thing out. Anyway, Okay,
Lappy killed me. That name of his computer killed me.
I just I felt like it was like, I don't know,
it gave.
Speaker 1 (01:01:52):
Me the I know what you mean. It's it's such
a it's such a basic trope. Yes, where it's like, hey,
this is my favorite shoe shoey Like it's like, you know, okay,
that's I get it. Like they should have named it
something else, like chuck something so weird.
Speaker 2 (01:02:08):
Yes, but Laughy was like I don't know it just
I yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:02:12):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (01:02:12):
First of all, I love the little Easter egg of
Splash Mountain, like this is its Splash Mountain.
Speaker 1 (01:02:17):
He didn't you hear that?
Speaker 2 (01:02:18):
Yeah, he mentioned it at some point when they're in
the sleigh. Then the next thing happens, which was so weird.
The soup in the hands when he's got like the
dinner and he's holding it in his hands while there,
and then the sleigh starts free falling.
Speaker 1 (01:02:30):
Yeah, where does it go?
Speaker 2 (01:02:32):
Because he's holding on for dear life and then he
picked it back up. I thought you were you would
like fully be annoyed with that because it was like
you can't lose it, or you lose it forever and
it's gone.
Speaker 1 (01:02:44):
It was weird, you know, it was weird.
Speaker 2 (01:02:46):
And then though second to last thing is okay, I
thought you were gonna say this too. The last time
the like villain nerves right, see him go, he's in
a Santa suit at a bus stop and he jumps
(01:03:10):
on the bus. That's the last time they see him.
Then the next time they see him, he's at a
bus stop in a Santa suit. How were they not, Like.
Speaker 1 (01:03:23):
I don't they know he's somewhere around just the one,
the one villain was supposed to have seen him in
the Santa suit, but he didn't see him get on
the bus. I don't think. I think that's how they
were trying to shoot it. Okay, yeah, I think that
that was Like, no, no, I get it. It's still
the last thing.
Speaker 2 (01:03:41):
What was with all the knuckle cracking at this movie?
Speaker 1 (01:03:45):
There was a lot of knuckle cracked, because that's how
you show you're a bad guy.
Speaker 2 (01:03:47):
How do you show you're a bad guy? And I've
never understood that. Why your knuckles tough? No, I don't
crack at all, No, not at all. She also his
little sister cracks her knuckles when she's getting serious about yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:04:02):
Because that's like the whole that's like the that's like
the I'm prepared, Yes, there you go. I'm either going
to beat you up arms.
Speaker 2 (01:04:10):
God, there was just so much, too much anyway, that's
it for Sabrina.
Speaker 1 (01:04:13):
Says, well, thank you, and now it's time to rate
our film. God, I don't even know I'm gonna rate
this movie. I don't know. I still don't know what
I think. But anyway, let's do one to ten. Okay,
let's make five the middle they there, you go, like,
we can do one to ten bomb Uncle Nick's Sweety Decom,
(01:04:34):
Little Brothers. One to ten, Santa's taking a dump, don't
pick that one. One to ten Reindeer Flues, Gray Killer Bees,
Santa Gang Fights, one to ten twenty four hour computer
shops except for the one hour that they needed to
be open when it wasn't one of ten Hogwart homes
(01:04:55):
or one out of ten Vanderlip Diamonds. What do you
want to do?
Speaker 2 (01:05:00):
Reindeer flu We gotta do it.
Speaker 1 (01:05:01):
It's gotta be gotta be I think first last time.
Speaker 2 (01:05:06):
I'm okay to go first this time. So, like I said,
I was so in. I love Christmas movies. I loved
the creativity of something that I've never seen done before,
as far as explaining how Santa actually can fly around
the world and get all of the kids their presence
(01:05:26):
for Christmas within such a short period. I loved that,
and then it again, like I said, it kind of
just plataued, And I feel like for me it plataued
around the time we saw the Gangsters and the low Ride.
Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
It was just kind of like weird.
Speaker 2 (01:05:43):
Yeah, now the choices are feeling weird. And then for
sure at the end, just the he comes back. I
guess I was like looking for like some fist throwing
or something. I don't know, like there was like nothing
really like that about how the movie ended for me.
(01:06:03):
And then really, oh, that was one of this. I
didn't write it down. The guitar playing at the end weird.
It I found it weird. I don't know if well.
First of all, I wanted to ask you, did you
feel like it was good guitar playing? Like does he
know how to play? Is that a thing like he's
a guitar guy.
Speaker 1 (01:06:21):
Yes, I guess able to do that. But it didn't
look good. The fake guitar playing didn't look good. It
was a very odd choice.
Speaker 2 (01:06:31):
Well, I meant like that's what I was saying. Was
it good? Did it look good? I don't know what
it goes bike. I don't know what good guitar playing
looks like or not.
Speaker 1 (01:06:38):
I can't, Well, you do you do know that the
one we saw in poof points point that was bad.
Speaker 2 (01:06:44):
Guitar, I was I could tell that that was bad.
This I felt.
Speaker 1 (01:06:48):
I bought it. It just seemed weird.
Speaker 2 (01:06:52):
Like I said, like the end of the movie was
just kind of like but it started off so strong.
So and because I feel like the actors they really
did drive it for a lot of it. I'm gonna
just sit on a six point five reindeer flues. It
was not a great movie. It wasn't a terrible movie.
(01:07:14):
It was just kind of like right in the middle.
Speaker 1 (01:07:16):
For me. I think I'm gonna be kind of right
there with you. I agree with everything he said. I
love I mean love Brian Cranston. Love some of the
lore they added to Santa Claus, to the character. I
was cool. I do like cause again, if he hung
out with them all night long, essentially Santa's there for
like four or five hours, right and can still get
(01:07:37):
everybody in the world their gifts right near to me. Yeah,
so I didn't. I mean, I guess he has to
freeze time. I don't know, the not not actually freezing
the frame and everybody like shaky is just a strange choice.
Speaker 2 (01:07:55):
Just a crazy choice.
Speaker 1 (01:07:57):
There was no real resolution. The movie just kind of ends.
Any Maybe I won't steal anymore. Yeah, I'm gonna go
a little lower than you, but not much. I'm gonna
give this a six Reindeer Flues. I just I didn't.
I still don't know if I might have hated this movie.
I don't.
Speaker 2 (01:08:14):
I don't think you hated it.
Speaker 1 (01:08:15):
I don't think. Again, I can't had this been anyone
but Brian Cranston, this is what I would have been.
This would have been at four or three. But it's
Brian Cranston. So it's like, I'm gonna I'm gonna give
three spots just because it's Brian Cranston. And again, the
other kids weren't bad. Josh was not bad, Josh was good.
The sister was great. Yeah, it was it just the
(01:08:38):
story at times didn't make a whole lot of sense.
But it's Christmas, so six and a six point five
are pretty fair. Yeah. Uh, And now we get to
announce our next movie, which I'm very very excited about
because it brings us somewhere we very rarely go, and
that's current day. We're gonna be watching, so our producers
(01:09:00):
can't stand these people. They hate they hate this trio.
They hate this trio like you have never heard. But
we're gonna be watching. I'm lying.
Speaker 2 (01:09:08):
By the way, the west one has literally known this
trio since the beginning of their careers, and the other
would do anything in the world to marry any one
of them even matter.
Speaker 1 (01:09:24):
Yeah, by the way, we got I'm guessing this is
MICHAELA who wrote pick Double Teamed over this movie. And
you know what, so would I? Oh, double better than this? Okay,
they even know what I rated Double Team. I don't
even know what. I don't even remember what I read
it too. No, I didn't give it a two, but
it was I Yes, this movie Double Teams was better
(01:09:46):
than this movie. But it's Brian Cranston. Put Brian Cranston
in Double Teamed. Oh my god, forget it. If he's
both twins, he's both twins. Forget it? Best movie ever? Yes,
but back to the movie. Yes, it's the twenty twenty
five holiday release, a very Jonas Christmas movie. This just
dropped on Disney Plus and marks the return of Nick,
(01:10:06):
Joe and Kevin to the original Disney movie. And it's
got a bigger budget than we're used to. That is
for darn sure. So go watch it and follow La
la La La La. Come back next week and we'll
find out what we thought. But first we've got a
pretty cool park Opper episode which we teased, and by teased,
I mean told you exactly who's coming on. We interviewed
the first Jesse Pinkman of Twas the Night. It's Josh
(01:10:30):
Zuckerman aka Danny Wrigley. We talked all about his time
working alongside Brian Cranston and helping to save Christmas. Let's
get a little preview of what you're in for. Brian
christ was probably already cast, okay, and so probably said
that I didn't meet, but I didn't meet anyone. It
wasn't like I did a chemistry read or anything. I'm
pretty positive I meant everyone. And yeah, we definitely filmed
(01:10:50):
in Toronto and probably had a table readed and that's
where I met everyone, and including Yeah, you know, I
may have auditioned with Nick Castle though. He was super
cool and it was a lot of fun to talking
him and we got to talk about so many of
his projects. Oh my god, you you won't be a Yeah,
absolutely shocked to go on IMDb. This guy, he's been
in freaking everything. It's really amazing. But yes, that's gonna
(01:11:13):
be available on our dedicated feed this week. So all
you have to do is search for a Magical Rewind
on Apple Podcasts, the iHeartRadio app, or wherever you get
your podcasts, and for more info, you can follow us
at Magical rewind Pod on the Instagram machine, on your
telephone cranker thing. You can go and do that now,
Thanks everybody, goodbye bye