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November 18, 2025 56 mins

Unwash your brain for sister assassins, parental operatives, and really red rooms. The person most confused by the film this week was: Siena but also, honestly, those pigs.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Toss Popcorn is a production of iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
I'm Sianna Jakole and I'm Leana Holsted, and welcome to
Toss Popcorn, the podcast where two idiots watched every film
on the AFI's one hundred Greatest American Movies of All Time.
You can go listen to those, by the way, if
you want. We watched all one hundred. We really did
the very slightly less racist tenth anniversary edition of the list,

(00:33):
and we are now watching films directed by women. Yay.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
This podcast is a safe room for people who don't
know anything about movies. Today we are watching Black Widow.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
Why do I do that thing?

Speaker 1 (00:51):
That thing you do when you're fighting, and then like
the this this thing you do when you would be
when you're fighting with the arm in the hair. I'm
like a fighting bulls and it's a fighting bows. You're
a total boser.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
Warning there will be spoilers about this marvel trying to
save its own ass. Recent film that makes a lot
of sense, That makes a lot of sense.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
Warning, we're both a little sick.

Speaker 3 (01:26):
Yes content Warning, we are sick.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
We're sick.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
We're both so this will be an interesting app Yeah,
I keep oscillating between being very cold and then being sweaty,
and then my back hurting, and then I am nauseous,
and then I am I But the spookiest part of
all of it is that I have no appetite. And
that's how I know something's really wrong.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
No, No, that's no snack. No snack on my snackshelf
has called to me for like a day and a half,
and I'm like, that's crazy. That is not good, because
you know, serious love a snack. I'm gonna have to
call the doctor and say, I'm not snacking. What's your diagnosis?

(02:12):
Will I never snack again? Oh? God? Well, before we
talk to each other, should we do our predictions about
Black Widow?

Speaker 3 (02:20):
Oh? Yeah, I guess I should go first because I
have seen it before. That feels like a good policy.

Speaker 1 (02:28):
It's good for us to develop some policies.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
Yeah, we need some policies in place. We have segments
and then we need policies.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
Sorry, I'm about to watch Black Widow. I've seen this before.
I predict I'm gonna have gripes again with how they did.
Scarlett Johansson's character is so dirty in this dumb cinematic universe.
But I also predicted that will being due to modern circumstances,

(02:56):
and also is gonna be perfect and hilarious and badass.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
And I love her so much.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
I still I still don't know the modern circumstances. I know.

Speaker 3 (03:04):
I can't wait to brief you on the modern circumstances. Okay,
Well before that, could I please hear your prediction?

Speaker 1 (03:09):
Yes, of course, here you go.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
Hey, Leanna, I'm about to watch Scarlet Johnson place.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
You don't remember this woman of the I'm sorry, that
is what You're right. You're right when you're.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
I have literally no idea who this hero is.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
Which universe she's from? Batman? No, sorry, that's not Marvel.
I'm really sorry. No, it's okay. I don't know. I
don't know.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
Maybe she's Is she a bad guy Black Widow? Is
she a good guy?

Speaker 1 (03:49):
I don't know. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (03:50):
I love you. Goodbye.

Speaker 3 (03:51):
Well that's a big question, isn't it.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
About halfway through one of her main questions.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
About halfway through the movie, looked up Black Widow about
and I realized, we've seen her before, right, did we
see okay in Captain America? Yes, But I realized that
in the Winter Soldier I realized that because in the
when I looked it up, it said following the events
of Captain America, and I went, what, I think we

(04:18):
watched all three of those? Yeah, we did my long
on you. I remember, I remember, yeah, coffee. Unfortunately, I'm
obsessed that we're both so unwell during this film about
like the most badass women who just like absolutely pushed
through healthy were like, I don't know if I can
do the podcast.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
I don't know if I can do this podcast.

Speaker 3 (04:40):
I don't know if I can sit down and chat
in my pajamas and under a blanket is their way
to do it? Lying down? Well, should we, hay girl?
Or should I give you context for the modern circumstance?

Speaker 1 (04:56):
Give me context first and then we'll Okay, let me
give you context for the modern circumstan dances. So the
modern circumstances are you know David Harber is in this movie.
He plays the dad character m HM, and he's also
in Stranger Things. Oh yeah, the new season of which
is coming out at the end of November. Okay, the

(05:17):
modern circumstances are he was previously married to a woman
named Lily Allen, who's a musician. That's why I recognized
him recently because I haven't been completely up on this,
but so many things were telling me about Lily Allen
absolutely roasting her new album. In her new album album,

(05:39):
I was getting information about on my but I went,
I went, this must be going crazy. I didn't even
I didn't even ask you. I went, this must be
going crazy in the UK because losing their mind. And
I looked up who her I looked up who her
ex was. Yeah, or maybe I just I saw a
picture on the internet or something and I was like,
isn't this an American actor? Yes? It is, Yes, it

(06:02):
absolutely is. Oh my gosh, Okay, tell me more, because
I just I just like, it's it's funny that this
is I've just looked at pictures and gone, wow, this
seems like it's a big deal for the Brits.

Speaker 3 (06:13):
It's a big deal for the Brits. The Brits are
losing their minds about it in the British way where
they're not being crazy about anything, but specifically the gay
British community is going because this album is like fourteen
songs or something like that that she wrote in like

(06:33):
ten days following the breakdown of the marriage. Oh my God,
it is so literal and so detailed about what led
to their relationship falling apart, which is that she got
offered the lead role in a play on the West
End and her husband David Harber took umbradge with the

(06:57):
fact that it was offered to her and that she
didn't have to at audition. Remind you, we hear all
of this pretty much verbatim, but just like kind of
to a tune on.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
The album.

Speaker 3 (07:09):
This is it good music? That's not for me to decide?
Is it excellent gossip?

Speaker 1 (07:15):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (07:16):
And we are grateful. And so she came to London.
You're literally yes, you're getting the literal tea. Lily Allen
came to London for a number of months to do
this play, and David Harber was jealous that she had
been offered the role instead of having to audition for it,
because he's the actor. She is a musician, and they
live in New York. They have a deeply cursed architectural

(07:37):
digest tour of their New York apartment that is on
YouTube that I have not been able to revisit since
all this news came out, because the vibes in it
are again cursed and while she was in London, he
and again this is all literally said on the album
called her and was like, I want an open marriage

(07:58):
because I need to be winking.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
Are you kidding me?

Speaker 2 (08:02):
He's like punishing.

Speaker 3 (08:02):
She has a song on the album that sorry to
our dads who listened to this, but this is the
title of the song. This is simply me being a
documentarian and reporting historical facts. She has a song on
the album called Pussy Palace, which is about how he
kind of like in the you know this is this
is her telling of the story. But according to her,

(08:25):
he like broke the rules that they had agreed upon
for the open marriage and like had people in their
apartment and was sleeping with people in their apartment. And
she comes home and she finds like a bunch of
butt plugs, a bun like a bunch bundldos condoms and ew. Yeah,

(08:47):
it was like song, it was like a pussy palace palace.
It was a pussy palace. It was a pussy palace.
Eliza Wenna's a pussy palace for Halloween. It was incredibly funny.
So it's it's just been all the rage here. Everybody's
screaming about it. So to watch this with David Harbor
was very, very wild. Oh because I did, of course
listen to the full album the other like a couple

(09:08):
of days after everybody had been screaming about it, just
to be up to date on the gossip. There is
a really good song on it that I like a lot,
called Beg for Me. I think it's a banger and
I think it's a vibe. And you want just like
specific gossip, specific love literal, no imagery, no metaphor, no society. Girl,

(09:31):
you know you can listen to that album, you know
that's what I want. It has taken London by storm.
I am so everybody's going insane.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
This is my preferred way of learning about all this
because the only reason I know anything is because I
was getting sort of cryptic references to it online. It
would be like imagine being imagine being the boyfriend Lily
Allen being a husband, blah blah blah, like a pop
star whatever. Yeah, yeah, why there you go. That's who

(10:01):
it is.

Speaker 3 (10:01):
And honestly that's my hair.

Speaker 1 (10:02):
Girl love it.

Speaker 3 (10:05):
That's the main thing going on when you're sick, and
there's that. I'm sick and there is gossip and so
Thank goodness. I still listened to the album again tonight.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
I'm going to listen to it. Hey girl, well my
hair girls, that I dropped to my laptop on my
nose yesterday. As we know, here's what happened. I often
work in my bed lying down. I'm sorry, that's what
I do, lying down with my laptop on my lap.
My my feet, my feet season Yeah, my knees are

(10:35):
that was meant to be.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
Yeah, my laptops on my lap.

Speaker 1 (10:37):
But the angle is not the safest because as I found,
and I'm so shocked, this has never happened to me before.
But I sort of I readjusted, and a second later,
I felt a sharp pain smashed into my nose and
I went to the top of the bridge of my
nose and I went, what was that? What was that?

(10:59):
And I realized that my laptop had tipped, just a
simple tip, and it's very heavy laptop.

Speaker 2 (11:04):
It's very heavy.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
Oh, and it just smashed in my nose. And I
was when I that night, this is a couple nights ago,
when I when I was falling asleep, I was like
so positive I was gonna wake up with two black eyes. Oh,
because it's just I didn't know where it hit, and
there is I do have a mark. But the next
day I was getting gas at the gas station and

(11:27):
a woman walked by me and she said, you look so.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
Pretty, And I went, hold on, what's going on?

Speaker 1 (11:40):
Because no one has given me a such a sincere
compliment about like how my face looks, maybe since high school.
And it was so sincere, and I'm like, this is
the day after I smashed my face with my laptop.

Speaker 2 (11:57):
What does it mean?

Speaker 1 (11:59):
What does it anyway? You you had a glow of resilience, Yes,
a glow of resilience.

Speaker 2 (12:07):
And speaking of a glow of resilience.

Speaker 3 (12:09):
Yeah, and speaking of somebody who smashes their nose, yes,
could you please Yeah, you severed the nerve. Could you
please give us a synopsis? And my best to you
and best of life?

Speaker 1 (12:23):
And I started typing. I started typing Haley on as
you want to do the summary today? And then I went,
she's sick, I'll just do it.

Speaker 3 (12:30):
Oh that's so nice. Well, I'm if you have any
questions while we're while it's happening, well feel free to ask. Okay,
but Sienna, could you please have a go at a
synopsis of the film black widow.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
Yeah, black widow. We start on a family turns out
later on we find out they weren't a traditional family
born out of love and devotion, but indeed a family
put together for Soviet control reasons. Are the Soviets really
like the presence in this or is that just imply? Ye?

Speaker 2 (13:03):
Do they ever say Soviet?

Speaker 1 (13:04):
Okay? All right?

Speaker 2 (13:05):
Termed Russia?

Speaker 1 (13:06):
Yeah, the little girls were trained as fighting machines. One
of them, Florence Pugh, just recently became unbrainwashed at the
beginning of the movie. Uh. And the other, Scarlett Johansson,
is black widow, a former Soviet spy turned good. Yes right, yes, okay.

(13:26):
In this movie, after Florence Peugh is freed, they are
trying to take down the big bad mind control guy
who is their mom's dad. Like, oh to me, no, okay,
all right, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
Maybe kind of like they raised whoever raises?

Speaker 1 (13:44):
Yeah, I mean in the sense that he does that
for all of them, but I guess he's everyone's dad
because he ying them exists. Yeah. Uh, the big bad
mind control guy what was his name?

Speaker 2 (13:56):
There's no ice?

Speaker 1 (13:57):
Okay, great, great, great, perfect, and save the other widows
from their mind controlled fate because there's a bunch of
these girls who they make my people the end? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (14:10):
Is that about right? That was really good.

Speaker 1 (14:12):
As I was writing it, I was like, oh my god,
I know what happened. Yeah, and see this is the
thing where one one prop I will give the film
is I do think it stands on its own pretty
well because most of the characters in it we've never
seen before. Oh yeah, the universe, so it works as

(14:35):
its own plot without relying too heavily on like, wait,
who is this and what is their relationship?

Speaker 3 (14:40):
And what are their powers? And what's their origin story?

Speaker 1 (14:43):
I didn't know who anybody was, so it worked for me. Yeah.
And her dad, yeah, the dad like has a relationship
with Captain America.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
Yes, the reichos parasocial a parasocial relation.

Speaker 1 (14:56):
Oh okay, yeah with Captain mar Yeah, which, hey, don't
we all the most relatable guy in the film lily.

Speaker 3 (15:09):
Oop oopsie, sorry, everybody. My sister is choking me with
a curtain, so I'm going to have to call the
truce with her for a few minutes.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
We'll be right back. Should we move on to our
phone notes and discuss it?

Speaker 3 (15:28):
Of course, this is the section of the podcast where
we read the notes the other person on their phone. Well,
watching the film, Sienna, you didn't bold this, but the
first thing you wrote is correct. You wrote gay siblings,
straight sybilings.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
They start have to say one of us has blue hair,
one of us has blonde, one of us has blue hair.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
Take a guess. Weirdly they kind of switched by the Yeah,
that's true. Okay, Leanna, your first note is uh rip, Sienna.
I fear this will make very little sense to you. Yes,
I almost didn't even bold. Almost all of my notes
were questions, and at a certain point I was like,
I don't even need to bold those. When it started,

(16:09):
I will say they chose fantastic actors for this, so
things ended up At a certain point I went, Okay,
I get what's happening, and I'm and I'm watching it.
But at the beginning there were so many guns and
explosions that I was just like, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
What so valid? Yeah, very valid? It was boom boom,

(16:32):
boom boom. I'm really interested in your thoughts on this
movie though. In the especially because you know about the
Marvel universe generally, you're saying, so this is the one
that they said we need to make women they said,
ooh movie, yeah.

Speaker 3 (16:45):
And the thing I feel, I feel many things about
this movie all at the same time, one of which
is I'm really glad it exists because it's the first
Marvel film with a female lead. Like about that it's
about a female character. What's really frustrating about it is

(17:09):
it came out after the movie Avengers End Game, which
is the movie in which they killed Scarlett Johansson's character,
which was fully bullshit, like it was such a stupid
decision and didn't and everybody was like what And it
literally was a scene where it's like between her and
Jeremy Renner, who's gonna die? And all of us were like,
why why would you not kill Jeremy wren always kill

(17:35):
Jeremy renn Our podcast has that same ethos.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
She begs, we begged, we begged. Please between the two
of these, don't don't bump us for Jeremy Renner and
yet and we and Scarlett Johansson got bumped for Jeremy Renner.

Speaker 3 (17:52):
For Jeremy Renner, God damn bullshit. So it's I don't
know what happened in terms of like the schedule of
the movies, but this movie comes out It came out
after that, but it takes place obviously before the events
of Avengers Infinity War, in which she is blonde, which
is why at the end of this movie she has
a stupid blonde bob. Also again for no reason.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
I so, yeah, that's so funny. As someone who knows
nothing about this, by the end, I was like, Okay,
she changed her hair up, okay, work and then and
then but I just kind of accepted it, like, Okay,
time has passed. Sure.

Speaker 2 (18:28):
And then at the very very end there's a the.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
Watch the credit scene.

Speaker 2 (18:35):
Yes that I know about Marvel, that I know.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
I was over the moon to see Julia Luis Dreyfus,
so happy to see her. She is so entertaining.

Speaker 3 (18:48):
I love her so much good instantaneously in everything.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
She's a dream come true. Perfect, She's the best actress
in the world. But yeah, then she we're looking at
a grit and I went, hmm, this can't be real
because I just watched this whole movie.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
This woman can't be dead.

Speaker 1 (19:06):
Mm hmm. But then yep, she goes, look, I want
you to avenge your sister and holds up a picture
of Jeremy Renner and I go, okay.

Speaker 2 (19:16):
Yes that happened.

Speaker 3 (19:17):
Finally, someone is killing Jeremy Renner.

Speaker 1 (19:19):
I know he's the guy with the bow and arrow
because he's now been I've now been instructed to watch.
You've been indoctrinated multiple of these films. There's so many,
specifically because of Leanna. Otherwise I never would have seen them.
That's again, my bad. It's all right, I'm i'm I'm
accepting your culture.

Speaker 2 (19:36):
Thank you. I like the parts where things aren't blowing up.

Speaker 1 (19:41):
That I agree.

Speaker 3 (19:43):
I left the room, I like took a long pin
while during a fight scene.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
They really are.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
You can just you can just.

Speaker 3 (19:51):
I think it's one of those movies like if you
kind of really hoe out for fight choreography. It's enjoyable
to watch because there's a lot of intricate like hand
to hand combat, which is cool, right, so slay the
stunt doubles who did all of that. Yeah, But then
there is also just like stuff is blowing up.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
It is just blowing up, and.

Speaker 1 (20:10):
That's what you know, Leanna. I have to read some
of your notes, especially because you're talking directly to me,
and some of them. So first you say, I love
Florence's Russian accent. Oh did you have opinions about Florence
Pew in this? I love Florence Pew. She's fantastic. She
there were moments where she was doing things where I
was like, her acting choices are just so engaging. I
don't know.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
She was just kind of.

Speaker 1 (20:32):
Like supposed to move the move the helicopter lower or
the jet, I don't remember what she needs to just
fly it somewhere. And the way she was handling the buttons,
I was like, this is an actress.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
She really she really love her?

Speaker 1 (20:48):
Yeah, I love her too. I think she's amazing. I
was grateful that they were amazing actors in this, but
I was like, they are not giving you much to
work with. These are some very boring characters, which which
I they it warmed up for me. I think the
beginning was just so much explosion and exposition, and I'm
used to kind of zoning out the beginning of Marvel

(21:09):
because I'm like, what are you guys talking about?

Speaker 3 (21:11):
Which is tough? Yeah, you gotta stay sharp. At the
beginning of this one.

Speaker 1 (21:16):
Leanna, you said, Sianna, I can't think of a single
thing in uh this movie has that you will enjoy then,
you said, Sianna, you wouldn't know it. But this is
such an improvement on the previous male gaze of her character.
Is that true? Yeah? Yeah, oh god, okay, yeah, that
is not that did not feel present in this one.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
I did not feel like it was.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
Making the women out a pervy energy. Yeah, but that
makes so much sense. And she was she is introduced
in Iron Man two is where we first meet her.
And yes, her suits in this are still like skin tight,
but the suit that she is in in that is
somehow even tighter, and there's cleaving, and her hair is

(22:01):
in these like slutty curly ringlets for no reason, and
she's got like a smoky eye, like it's all a
little bit over the top, showing her with like very
little to no makeup on a practical French braid to
keep her hair out of her face, right, you know it,
just there is a a woman was at the helm

(22:25):
of this in a way that was never before seen
for the character of Black Widow. That is again the
biggest shift when things are directed by women is they
just know when women are wearing makeup or not.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
Yes, and they let them do that.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
Yeah, they let the girls be glam when they're glam,
but they're not all the time. You don't have to
be glam when you're like descending from an air duck. No,
especially when you're already like superhuman gorgeous. Also, by the way,
I know, oh my god, it's so beautiful.

Speaker 3 (22:54):
So that was one thing where it's like, okay, yeah,
this compared to the other stuff is such an improvement.
And it really does stand out in that way, and
that makes it feel even better as a piece, because
you know how bad it has been.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
Right.

Speaker 2 (23:10):
Yeah, I wasn't a character.

Speaker 1 (23:11):
I wasn't really like, there was never moments where I
was going, this is actually something, this is a positive thing.

Speaker 2 (23:16):
There weren't moments where.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
I was like, oh god, like classic woman character sexist.
If anything, I was going boring guns, which is what
I do in the Boy movies. So they did find
equality in a certain way. Totally, totally. Yeah. I was
saying exactly what I do and all the other the
Boy versions, which is too many explosions. Yeah, and that's

(23:41):
just this genre is not for you. That part, Okay.
But halfway through the movie they go and talk to
their family and I went, hello, yeah, he did Leanna.

Speaker 3 (23:52):
I literally just clocked that this is her sister.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
So I realized they were sisters. I really realized they
were sisters. And I couldn't believe this, but this is true.
This is true. I was like, okay there, because they
did the whole thing with all the girls, and I
like figured they were all they all knew each other,
and I just didn't clock that this was like the
other girl there. I don't know why.

Speaker 3 (24:15):
I just thought, like, did you know at the beginning
that that was two sisters.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
Yes, at the beginning, okay, with the little girls, the
little girls, I thought they were two sisters. Just for
some reason. When Florence Plu came on, I thought that
they were about to go like save a bunch of girls,
and she was gonna be like one of the widows.

Speaker 2 (24:32):
I don't know what.

Speaker 1 (24:33):
My brain just did something, but I didn't realize that
they were sisters, which makes way more sense until they
get to the house and they're talking about being raised.
And it was when she went, no, don't say that,
it was real to me and I went, oh, oh,
you guys were raised by the same adults.

Speaker 2 (24:52):
Who were right here.

Speaker 3 (24:53):
Oh man, that is more than halfway after the film.
I know, I know because I had deposit to go
see my physio about my hips and then come back.
I were not picking up on the sister dynamically, and
she was like, do you like my vest? And then
Scott Johnson was making fun of her.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
I'm confused at what happened to my brain because I
accepted that they were like main relationship characters, important to
each other hm, but that they were the ones from
the childhood. I don't know what happened, but it clocked
and then I went, Okay, this all makes even more
sense now, Yeah, it really I thought they were just
so many people in Marvel movies meet up with each

(25:32):
other and are like they did a mission together before.
So I think I just kind of like slotted in,
like they're both professionals who everybody knows as characters, and
I don't know these I don't know these super professionals.
I don't know these professionals. I don't know these professionals,
but they know each other. They're not familiar with these professionals.
So I just accepted that and put it in that

(25:54):
category so fast that once I figured out, oh, she's
the blonde one from when they were growing up.

Speaker 2 (25:59):
That makes so much sense.

Speaker 3 (26:00):
It's really fairy, very fair, very fair. I cannot fault
you for that logic. Leanna, did you like the sister dynamic?

Speaker 2 (26:07):
I did?

Speaker 1 (26:07):
I did like that. Okay, I did. I like the sisters.
That was a nice element to this, Leanna. You said
me playing Lego Indiana Jones. Please tell me what I'm
talking about.

Speaker 3 (26:18):
The scene where they're in Budapest and they're on the
motorcycle and a tank starts following them and is just
smashing everything in front of it, like that's on the side,
like parked cars, carts, et cetera. That is how I
play Lego Indiana Jones because in order to get that,
to smash everything, come visit and we can play. You

(26:40):
smash everything, I smash everything. I'm a tank. I'm like
a tank in that game.

Speaker 2 (26:46):
That is so awes that's awesome.

Speaker 1 (26:50):
Thank you, Leanna.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
You said you but slay.

Speaker 3 (26:57):
Kind of a lot of the stuff. But I think
that's when she breaks her own nose.

Speaker 2 (27:01):
Oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
Oh yeah, like the same way I went as well,
slay gross, but slay that also. Can you imagine the relief,
the relief right now when we both feel uncomfortable. Imagine
I could just go and fix everything.

Speaker 3 (27:14):
If I could go and fix my cold or fever
or what the death knell that's going through my body,
I would LENI so you said, you said, where are
the women?

Speaker 1 (27:25):
Oh, there they are. They were getting to the end.
Then I'm like, so, by the way, what happened to
the twenty girl girlies? Yeah? Yeah, and then they immediately
appeared in the ship and I said that was fun. Yeah, nice.
I was happy about them. It is fun to watch
a horde of women running around. It's love that in
a non pervy way. Yes, they're going come on. Then

(27:49):
it's very men, it is very the ensemble from King
Kong nineteen thirty. Yes, yeah, they have the exact same energy.
Oh my god, I love it. Yes, men, come on.
Then Leoni said, everyone is slay tinta.

Speaker 3 (28:11):
Tinta latinta. It's true, everyone was slaying.

Speaker 2 (28:14):
Leoni.

Speaker 1 (28:15):
You said, it's giving environmental impact, which thing when everything
is exploding and falling to the ground, which is also
the exact same ending as Captain America the Winter Soldier,
which is where they're in there again on a ship
in the sky, and it's Steve and Bucky and Bucky

(28:37):
is just like beating Steve to a to a crap.
You from many episodes ago, he beat him to a crap.
Bucky has beaten Steve to a crap And the ship
is falling and it all falls into like the Potomac
River in Washington, d C. And you're like, well, that
can't be good.

Speaker 3 (28:58):
And in this one, it's this massive space station that
falls out of the sky while exploding and lands in
like kind of a beautiful field, and I was like,
we One thing that is never discussed in these movies
is the unbelievable environmental impact of all these explosions and
detritus and also those ships and crafts existing in the

(29:20):
first place.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (29:22):
The emissions, Yeah, the carbon emission. The carbon footprint of
the Avengers is crazy. It almost might be better if
they didn't exist, because them saving the world is maybe
not worth it, given how much carbon emissions it is
taking them to save the world.

Speaker 1 (29:39):
One of those Avengers would certainly uh care about the environment.

Speaker 3 (29:46):
You would think, No, we absolutely need somebody who's like
whose superpower is just like sucking up co two yeah
and spitting out flowers.

Speaker 2 (29:55):
Actually what would save the world.

Speaker 1 (29:57):
Unfortunately, sadly. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (29:59):
Yeah, or somebody who just swallows billionaires like Kirby. I
bet Kirby could do that, but then Kirby's thing is
that then they take on the profession.

Speaker 2 (30:07):
Of oh God, that would be horrible.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
No, maybe not, Leanna. Your final notes are sisterhood, sister
and related.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
Elena got a dog.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
Yeah, I was so happy for her. I was happy
for her too.

Speaker 3 (30:25):
And your final note is I like the part where
she's talking to her friend at the end.

Speaker 1 (30:30):
I think that was my favorite part. Yeah. Well, I
was just like, yeah, this is what I like. This
sort of slow paced just talking to your friend in
a field. I like that more than all the fighting.
Mm hmm. That is valid. But I will say, like,
you know, I mean, the Marvel's whole thing is that
they're like borrowing from this canon of boom pow fight power,

(30:57):
and then they insert in there a little bit of
like goofiness and personality and banter. Yeah, the banter. Yeah,
that's exactly how I just felt. I was like, we're
taking a sick break, sick break, Come on, girls, we'll

(31:21):
be right back. Well, we got through our notes, Leanna.
Should we do our next segment, which is of course
badges and trages where we'd give badges for black widows,
black widows, and trages for tasers that you can split

(31:45):
in half and use to crash a billionaire's plane. Yes,
that was so slight. When she goes this was fun
and then she crashes the plane. That was awesome, freaking awesome.
I have a lot of badges. Oh, I'm like most
of my were badges, go for it. My first badges
for the music. I thought the sound choices were really good,

(32:07):
like how baby Yolena's favorite song is American Pie singing
in This Will Be Die and then the slow version
over the credits, the opening credits of UH smells like good,

(32:29):
effective and good.

Speaker 2 (32:32):
Good and effective, good and effective.

Speaker 1 (32:36):
Wow. My first badge is from very late in the movie.
Badge for that vile bomb, the bomb of vials that
sadows I wrote, vile bomb is genius.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
I love that.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
I love that.

Speaker 3 (32:48):
I said was putting an antidote on a grenade. The
grenade boom boom. It was efficient, efficient, and good. Yeah,
efficient and good badge for Yolena. Talking about Natasha's fighting pose,
there are a couple of moments where the movie goes meta,
and that's a little bit like fan service and nice

(33:09):
uh huh. Where throughout Marvel the heroes always like land
on one knee in this really epic pose, and Yolene
is like, why do you always do this thing where
you land on like one knee and you land like
this and it was so funny?

Speaker 1 (33:22):
Huh, I have a badgelors when the mom says I
am clearly injured. I am clearly injured. Are you okay?
I am clearly injured. I found that to be a
very relatable statement. Yeah, well I'm clearly like this.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
How am I? I'm clearly like this?

Speaker 3 (33:43):
But thank you like you saw me, you watched me
hobble twenty yards to get to you. A badge for
going right off my previous badge when Yolena lands in
the hero pose that she was making fun of before
and then squirms out of it and goes, oh, that's
what's gross's fun disgusting.

Speaker 2 (34:05):
Badge for sisters. They are sisters, sisterhood, sister. I love it.
We love that.

Speaker 1 (34:10):
Sters badge for I love when Natasha Romanov says, thank
you for your cooperation. Now this is hearkening back to
a previous film, which is the first Avengers movie. Where
she is.

Speaker 3 (34:24):
This won't mean anything to you, and you won't really
care about it.

Speaker 1 (34:27):
That's okay.

Speaker 3 (34:29):
She's talking to Loki, Tom Hidleston's character. I remember Loki,
who is being held in a big tank that was
initially meant to hold the Hulk, and she basically like
emotionally manipulates Loki into admitting his secret plan for world
domination by like pretending to get very emotional and like

(34:50):
pretending like he's gotten inside of her head. And then
she turns around completely stone faced and says, thank you
for your cooperation.

Speaker 2 (34:55):
Oh love that awesome?

Speaker 1 (34:57):
I do love that. Great BDE is for Julia Louis Dreyfus, So,
oh my god, I have two more. One badge for
flattering lighting. There's lots of like warm lighting or red
lighting in the movie, and everybody looks great. And I said, womanhood, womanhood.
This is a woman steering the ship. And my final

(35:21):
badge is Julia Louis Dreyfus Iconic Forever is she in?
I love her so much. She's just so entertaining.

Speaker 3 (35:27):
Yeah, she's now a recurring character in the MCU. I
think she's in Hawkeye. I think she was in Captain America. Four,
which I simply could not stomach an unpalatable film. But
then Julia Louis Dreyfus is in the movie Thunderbolts, which
is the new one that came out this year and

(35:49):
was actually good. And Florence Pugh was in it too.
Oh and Sebastian stan and David Harper.

Speaker 1 (35:53):
Oh my gosh, Wowie Bill Pullman's son h Jack Pullman,
the puppeteer, No Lewis Pullman absolutely not Wait did we
watch it? Did we watch Thunderbolts? Where were we talking
about the Pullmans? Oh? Because of a league of their own?

Speaker 2 (36:08):
Okay, yeah, oh my gosh, good memory.

Speaker 1 (36:11):
Wow that was frightening. I guess when I'm sick, my
memory works. Everything else has shut down. So just your
memory is there's space for me to have memories? Yeah,
full throttle t is trag is I don't have that many.
I mean, yeah, a trage for there's no body diversity

(36:33):
among the black widows. I totally get that they're all
like badass, very athletic, really skilled fighter fighting people, but
you'd think that like some would be taller, someone smaller,
some would be larger, just built digger. Yeah, there's there's
just the same body type over and over again, which
I was like, Oh, that's kind of a missed opportunity

(36:55):
to be slet, right, But I guess if you're being
collected by an evil man, it does make sense he's
gonna collect just one type pretty much. I pretty much
have one tragh and it is this movie has no
business being over ninety minutes long. I agree.

Speaker 2 (37:13):
I there were parts of it.

Speaker 1 (37:14):
I was like, Okay, I liked that, but I was
just like, yeah, and the storyline was was uh was clear.
I realized by the end I liked the family aspects,
and I was just like, this did not.

Speaker 2 (37:27):
It was a choice.

Speaker 1 (37:28):
You said, let's try to bump it up to two
hours seventeen minutes, and that was n'tnecessary to me. But yeah,
but fortunately in Marvel movies there's about ten minutes of credits,
so that's.

Speaker 3 (37:37):
True, and ten minutes at least of explosions. Yeah, I
hear you. I think it's kind of a lose lose
for the film, where if it had been ninety minutes long,
we all would have been like hooray. But then also
people would have been like, oh, you're giving the first
film with a female character lead, right, only an hour
and a half of screen time totally.

Speaker 1 (37:57):
But they're like, we don't want to make we can't
come up with a story that needs to be any longer.

Speaker 3 (38:02):
We're gonna nothing needs to be Unfortunately, nothing needs to
be only more than ninety minutes long. Oh a trage
for that, she goes blonde all of a sudden. That's
I think just personal, like within the red Head community.
Within the red Head community needed to do that. You
lose them for that, no need for all that. Oh sorry.

Speaker 1 (38:20):
The tragedist gave reminded me of a badge that I
should have given, which is at the very end she's
about to fight. She's like, everybody, you know, go ahead
and I will fight right now. And then is that
what she was gonna do? She was like, I'm gonna
take them, and then it cuts and I went, I
love that.

Speaker 3 (38:37):
Oh yeah, she was gonna like talk to the US,
like federal guys.

Speaker 1 (38:41):
Yeah, there was just so she was like, I'm gonna
go do this thing, and they just they cut it.

Speaker 2 (38:46):
They don't show us that.

Speaker 1 (38:47):
They say it's implied, and I went, oh, you love that.
If that's what they did for every single one of
the boring scenes, I would love that.

Speaker 3 (38:53):
Oh yeah, I loved They did a similar thing after
they broke in the dad character out of prison. Florence
was like, I don't think we have enough fuel to
get to Saint Petersburg, and then it just cuts straight
to the plane like kind of crash landing in the
field instead of doing the whole like, oh we're crashing.
I love the you know fine. I was reminded of

(39:18):
a badge that I need to give, which is this
movie handling the concept of involuntary hysterectomy, Oh my god,
much better than the film Avengers. Age of Ultron did,
again because they both deal with every black widow. So okay.

Speaker 1 (39:36):
Age of Ultron directed by noted terror on set and
in Hollywood Joss Whedon bad guy. As it turns out,
Scarlet Johanson's character has this whole scene where she's talking
to the Hulk as human Bruce Banner about how there
was this like graduation ceremony quote unquote when you come

(39:58):
of age in the Red Room where they give you
an involuntary hysterectomy, which is not what they called it
in that film, And what is such bullshit about that
scene in Avenders Age of Ultron is. She is like
really emotional about it, and then she's like, so, who's
the real monster, because Bruce Banner is like, I am
the Hulk. I am a monster, and she's like, but

(40:19):
I can't have kids, so who's actually Oh she was
talking about herself being a monster about herself.

Speaker 2 (40:24):
Oh I thought they were saying.

Speaker 1 (40:25):
Everybody was like, voluntarily, no, no, okay, no, a woman
who can't bear children is a monster. He's the real monster. Also,
a woman who has to get a hysterectomy, which is
common crazy, and everybody was like, oh, for fox sake, kidding.
So film again, it's like they're trying to kind of

(40:47):
backtrack on some absolute nonsense that you've done over the years.

Speaker 2 (40:50):
That's insane.

Speaker 3 (40:50):
That do you remember that playing conversation that they have
I do where she's like, I don't get my period,
I don't have I don't have a.

Speaker 1 (40:57):
Uterus or ovaries. Yeah, that's what happens when you get voluntary.
Direct to me, I was like, okay, Sleigh, conversations like
that are cool because that actually is very people with uteruses.

Speaker 2 (41:10):
Do talk about stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (41:12):
Yeah, yeah, totally okay. And then my last trage is
a trage a big overarching trage throughout the MCU for
such a bullshit ending to Black Widow's storyline. I stand
firm in my belief that she should not have died
in Avengers End Game. Maybe Scarlet wanted out of the contract,
in which case, happy for her. But oh my god,

(41:35):
oh my god, that is such a bummer. Just the
way they ended it was so absolute nonsense. Boo boo.

Speaker 2 (41:45):
Well, should we.

Speaker 1 (41:46):
Move on to our next segment, which is, of course,
how to pretend you've seen this film?

Speaker 3 (41:50):
Yes, this is for you are camping. You are camping
in Norwayang love that.

Speaker 1 (41:58):
Oh my gosh. You're in your little trailer watching a
film on your laptop and then the power goes out
and uh, oh god.

Speaker 3 (42:10):
Jeremy Jeremy Renner knocks on your trailer window and goes, sorry,
I actually have to I have to jump in before
you can.

Speaker 1 (42:23):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (42:23):
This whole thing, this whole setup really reminds me of
a film that I weirdly wasn't in but then had
a much bigger role later in in shows directly related
to it. And I'm gonna tell you all about it,
but mainly I'm going to tell you about what I
think my character was doing during this movie, and in.

Speaker 1 (42:46):
Order to shoot Jeremy Renner out of a bow and arrow,
a bow like an arrow. Here are a few things
you can say to pretend you've seen the film Black Widow.
I just realized he was in an accident, so I
didn't want to say anything too crazy. He was Jeremy Runner.

Speaker 2 (43:10):
M he was in like a famous snowmobile accident.

Speaker 1 (43:15):
Was it recent?

Speaker 2 (43:16):
I think we must have talked about it.

Speaker 1 (43:18):
January twenty twenty three, critically injured in a snowplow accident
near his Lake Tosso snow plow, not a snowplow. He
broke over thirty bones.

Speaker 3 (43:29):
My god, oh my god. All right, sorry, Jeremy for
everything we said about you. We're glad you're okay.

Speaker 2 (43:36):
But we checked in Jeremy Runner. He's still the guy
in this Jeremy Runner is okay, so we're gonna keep
making these jokes.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
We checked.

Speaker 3 (43:46):
Yes, Jeremy, I've seen Black Widow, and if you stay
quiet for the rest of our interaction, I will be
able to say to you what Elena said during the
prison break sequence.

Speaker 1 (43:58):
We're both doing a really good job. I love that
love her. Yes, Jeremy Renner, I have seen the film
Black Widow. Leanna, you were earlier talking about in Badges,
that little scene where they they're making fun of the
posing they do. And apparently Florence Pugh was teasing Scarlett

(44:20):
Johanson about Black Widow's iconic post during filming, so the writer.

Speaker 2 (44:26):
Put it in the film.

Speaker 1 (44:27):
No way, apparently that's love that.

Speaker 3 (44:33):
Yes, Jeremy Renner, I have seen Black Widow. Here's a
little fun fact about me is I once met Rachel
Weiss and she was so beautiful in person, so nice.

Speaker 1 (44:46):
Yes. Wow.

Speaker 3 (44:47):
I was on book while people were rehearsing for a
play at the Public and she was one of the
actors in it. She was standing right in front of me.

Speaker 1 (44:53):
I sat down.

Speaker 3 (44:54):
She was standing right in front of me in the
house of the theater talking to another act during the play.
And then she turned and she said, oh, I'm Rachel,
by the way, and I.

Speaker 1 (45:04):
Said, posture is amazing.

Speaker 3 (45:09):
Ah, She's so beautiful and so kind.

Speaker 2 (45:14):
Okay, this fact is what.

Speaker 1 (45:18):
Uh. Yes, Jeremy Renner, I have seen the film Black Widow,
so so back off. And I also know that Scarlett
Johanson asked her husband Colin Jost who's a big Marvel
Universe fan. Sorry, he's a big Marvel Universe fan, to
rehearse lines from the movie with her, but he refused
because he wanted to avoid any spoilers. No, Scarlet Johansson,

(45:43):
I will not run lines with you. I love the
Marvel Universe too much, Okay.

Speaker 3 (45:48):
I have nothing nice to say. I don't have anything
nice to say, so I just won't say anything.

Speaker 1 (45:53):
I think it's okay to make fun of Colin Jost personally.
I once saw him in Scarlet Johansson at a restaurant.
What hey, I know that's crazy. I've I've been peeping
members of the cinematic they were. It was a restaurant
that my hottest friend used to work at and still

(46:14):
got to like go to and drink for free, so
she would take me there as a treat every now
and again. And it was this like cool place in
silver Lake, and the word on the street, and by
on the street, I mean among the bar staff, was
that a big A list celebrity was coming in that night.
And then it was Scarlett Johanson. Wow, oh yeah, damn
fair enough.

Speaker 3 (46:37):
Oh yes, Jeremy Renner, I've seen Black Widow. And then
I look out and the northern lights are being very
gorgeous in Norway, and I realized that the trailer that
I'm in might be perhaps about to explode because I
rigged it incorrectly. But it's so beautiful with the northern
lights that I say, this would be a cool way

(46:58):
to die.

Speaker 2 (47:00):
This would be a cool way to die.

Speaker 1 (47:06):
Uh. Yes, Jeremy Runner, I have seen the film Black Widow.
Florence Pugh said that she was very nervous to meet
Scarlett Johansson for the first time, since she had been
in planes and airports for hours and was afraid that
she smelled like quote old suitcases.

Speaker 3 (47:19):
Oh that's such a relatable circumstance.

Speaker 2 (47:24):
Oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (47:24):
And the first scene they did together was their first
fight scenes, so on their first meeting, Q had to
choke Johanson. Wow, I know that is so relatable. Do
I smell like an old suitcase?

Speaker 3 (47:38):
I've only been on in vehicles for many hours? Oh okay, Cianna.
Let us take the jet into our next segment. Should
you watch this or in which we tell you our
beloved listeners, Hello, if you should watch this movie, or
if we think you should do something else with your
time in between movies that have already come out. Yeah, yeah, Seanna,

(48:04):
I'm curious to hear what you would say.

Speaker 1 (48:08):
I mean, I don't think you have to watch it,
but it was fun watching a movie with Florence Pugh
and Scarlett Johansson.

Speaker 2 (48:15):
They did great.

Speaker 1 (48:16):
Yeah, yeah, they did great. And also like, yeah, it
was a movie directed by a woman, and so I
don't know, it was it wasn't it wasn't annoying. I
feel like either of them can be used really annoyingly
because everyone loves them. Yeah, even boys, unfortunately.

Speaker 2 (48:32):
But it was.

Speaker 1 (48:33):
It was nice as far as Marvel movies go. I
just if they could have cut out all the explosions,
but there were so many, unfortunately. But I would say
that you don't have to watch it. What would I
have you watch instead? For some reason, I just feel
like i'd really like both of them as people. There's

(48:53):
some sort of stars that are like such huge stars
that I'm like, you've had to learn to be really
gracious with fans and just have your own and I'm like,
like Scarlet or Handsmen. For some reason, I feel a
respect and reverence. I'm like, you've done, You've had to
be a celebrity through the two thousands, and you're still
a celebrity now and you have a husband who you
seem to like.

Speaker 3 (49:14):
And yeah, she seemed very They seemed really enamored with
each other when I watched them, when I peeped them.
That's good, that's good. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (49:23):
So I'm just like, good for you, because you could
be really like she's been in Hollywood for so long,
it could have destroyed her.

Speaker 2 (49:29):
But true.

Speaker 1 (49:30):
But they're very strong, healthy women, these two, as we
saw in the movie. I saw that in the movie.

Speaker 3 (49:37):
But no, I'm sorry to creepy adjective really always creepy.

Speaker 1 (49:44):
I don't think you need to watch it. I'll just
recommend what I wanted to be watching. While I was
watching it, when all the explosions were happening, I went, oh,
what if I could watch one of those Have I
ever told you about Crocum Miss Crocumuh. She's from the
the like British Heritage Museum YouTube series where they make

(50:04):
love where they make like Victorian pastries and she'll be.

Speaker 2 (50:07):
Like, hello, today, we're making pigeon pie.

Speaker 3 (50:10):
Yes, yes you have now is specifically that rendition of
that line has jobbed my memory?

Speaker 1 (50:17):
Yes, find a pound of suet and mix it with a.

Speaker 2 (50:22):
Flower from the garden. Yeah, I love her.

Speaker 1 (50:26):
And while I was watching this, I was like, I
want to watch I want to watch a real feminine
piece of media, and that's what that is interesting.

Speaker 2 (50:35):
So you could watch Crocum on YouTube.

Speaker 1 (50:38):
Leanna, what about you?

Speaker 3 (50:40):
I would say, honestly, I think Black Widow is a
fun watch. And if you're not in the MCU, if
you're not tapped into it, you really don't have to
be to understand that's true.

Speaker 1 (50:50):
What's going on in the film.

Speaker 2 (50:52):
I can't confirm that.

Speaker 3 (50:54):
Yeah, yeah, which I think is honestly an achievement, because
so much of the MCU stuff got so twisted up
in its own like lore and history that it became
really hard to follow if you weren't staying completely up
to date. But this one stands on its own.

Speaker 1 (51:07):
Well. You also, I'll do a should you watch this?
And I would say you could watch Black Widow and
then you could watch Thunderbolts because Florydcep was amazing in it,
as is Bill Pullman's son, Lewis Pullman. And it's fun,
it's got banter. It feels like the early days of Marvel.
Which I loved and a lot of people did, and

(51:29):
we are remaining optimistic that they're recapturing the magic and
Julia Louis Dreyfus is in it. Oh, I mean that
doesn't make me want to watch usibly need? Yeah, Leanna,
what would you rate the movie?

Speaker 3 (51:43):
I would give Black Widow for Yolena's dog at the
end of the movies out of five. I enjoyed it
a lot. I think, why am I taking a point
away from it? It's a little too long, it's a

(52:04):
little bit This is hard because it's not this movie's fault,
but the MCU overall did Black Widow so dirty?

Speaker 1 (52:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (52:14):
That that will just tarnish anything. So it's more for
like the circumstances, I guess, than the film, which maybe
isn't really fair, but I also think it might. It
just kind of feels insane to give it five.

Speaker 1 (52:27):
Yeah, I get that. So, yeah, that's what I would say. See,
I know what we.

Speaker 2 (52:31):
Heard a film.

Speaker 1 (52:33):
I'll give it two point three shots of woodca out
of five. I want to make sure to give it
more than two because I fear that I gave one
of the you know, I maybe threw you a bone
for Captain America. I don't know what I gave them,
but it should get more than that, because it's thank
you for that bone, thank you for my bone. I
don't hang, hang, hang hang, thank you for my bone.

(52:57):
I think it's as far as Marvel movies go, there
are things I liked about this one for sure.

Speaker 2 (53:05):
Yeah, sisterhood Sister and Florence Pugh, come on, come on.
So yeah, I wasn't like it.

Speaker 1 (53:13):
It's just the things I didn't like were the things
I always don't like about Marvel movies.

Speaker 2 (53:17):
So that's good.

Speaker 1 (53:19):
Yeah, it's good.

Speaker 2 (53:19):
It wasn't It didn't feel sexist, which is a real win.

Speaker 1 (53:21):
Apparently, I know, apparently, Apparently I'm learning about society.

Speaker 3 (53:26):
I know the bar is so low, but it did.
It did pass it.

Speaker 2 (53:30):
It did pass it, which is awesome. That is awesome.
That's an achievement.

Speaker 1 (53:33):
Yeah. So anyway, keep it up, ladies, even though Scarlett
Johansen can't because her character died. Her character died not
only immediately, but in fact before the movie came out,
before the movie even came out before somehow more than immediately.
This character died literally dead on arrival, Yes, super immediately.

Speaker 2 (53:55):
That's crazy. That is really crazy.

Speaker 1 (53:58):
Well, we've done it. Yay, we watched Black Widow. I
never thought I would see this film. Congratulations to us, uh,
you know, thank you so much for listening to this episode.
You can go listen to our old episodes of the
one hundred Grades movies. I was reminded of this recently.

(54:19):
My mom was like, just so people, people do people know?
It's all out there.

Speaker 3 (54:24):
You can also listen to our my series of pranks
that I pulled on Ceno where I made her watch
all three Captain America films in a row.

Speaker 2 (54:30):
If you're interested in.

Speaker 1 (54:31):
Any of the Marvel stuff, I'd I'd be right there
with you figuring it out. That's one of the funniest
things I've ever done.

Speaker 2 (54:37):
Even now that I've seen a few, it's not enough.

Speaker 1 (54:40):
Knowing that there's thousands out there, millions makes me go,
there's I never quite understand what. I always assume. There's
more knowledge than I have, which I already assume in
life generally, So that's true with me.

Speaker 2 (54:54):
Yes, we are Toss Popcorn.

Speaker 1 (54:56):
You can find us at Toss Popcorn on Instagram or
we post memes and posters of our stuff and on
Patreon dot com. Slash toss Popcorn where we like to
post where we do post a little a review of
a movie that's come out recently, and you can see
our faces because that's video. Yes, and join us next
week when we will be watching Lost in Translation. Oh Scarlet, Scarlet, Scarlet. Well,

(55:24):
we'll see you then, Thank you, We love you.

Speaker 2 (55:29):
Bye.

Speaker 1 (55:34):
You can find us on Instagram as at Sienna Jaco
and at Leona Holsten. Please check the description for the
spelling of our dumb names. We put on episodes every Tuesday,
so make sure to subscribe so that you don't miss
an episode. See you next week on Tossed Popcorn. For
more podcasts from my Heart Radio, check the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 3 (55:55):
Did somebody just try to explode you? But it didn't
work and instead you've got turned into a murderous sort
of robot. Hey, take these three minutes to calm down, yea,
and then we'll get back into it.
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