Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:02):
Welcome to the OGS and Their Remakes, the podcast where we
ask life's most important questions.
Why remake perfection? Each week we put originals in
their remakes head to head. So grab your popcorn, your VHS
tapes, and your streaming subscriptions, because we're
(00:23):
about to settle the store, 1 remake at a time.
Hello, this is DJ. And this is Aaron.
And this is a retake of the OGS and the remakes.
Yeah, something like that. We had technical difficulties.
We got some new new equipment and sometimes you just got to
(00:47):
play around with it till you figure out how it works.
Yeah, we're playing around with new equipment.
Equipment fun fact we're going to start this fun fact.
Every single vehicle, believe itor not, has four linky things.
(01:09):
These are called turn signals. You know you might have to fill
up your blinker fluid every day.They're they're orange or
yellow, whichever side of the fence you decide to go on the
(01:30):
right when when the right blink blinks it, it means you're going
right. If the left blinks, it means
you're going left. If all four are blinking, it
either means slow the fuck down because we have stopped traffic
ahead. Would you see truck drivers use
these lights all the time? Yes, yes.
Or if they're all for going and they're veering off the road,
(01:55):
they're having vehicle problems and they're getting off the
road. What you don't want to do is use
all four of these blinky things to get back on the road like
that. No, that would be your left or
your right turn signals that youuse to get back on the road to
let everybody know you're comingback on.
(02:15):
I saw almost a, a complete pile up of about four trucks because
1 Dum Dum decided that he was going to have all four blinkies
on as he's getting on the road and not even using his mirrors.
You know how many mirrors we have?
A lot of mirrors. 123. 45 and hesomehow didn't see all these
ducks coming up on him. He just decided he was going to
(02:38):
do whatever he wanted. That's a.
Pepsi. If you heard that, that's a
Pepsi. I promise it's a Pepsi.
Not really, but it's a brand. New technology.
Lovely, lovely. But you know what?
How do you operate your turn signals?
That's that's for another story.I mean, there's this little
thing on the left side of your steering wheel, probably behind
it. We call that the magic stick
(02:59):
because when you move it up or down, it does magic like other
people know. I thought the magic stick was on
the manual. It is never mind, but OK, OK, so
this is episode 6. I think we we did that and so
(03:20):
we're going to do it is True Grit is the one that we're doing
today and. What are you playing with now?
You. Know I'm trying to get trying to
get this thing together and it'sjust not working.
So we're going to yeah. So OK, my bad.
Yeah. That's great.
(03:40):
New toys and all of a sudden he's got to play around with
everything. Yes.
You do know that doesn't come across all the time?
Are you trying to have us? Redo it again.
Yes, True Grit 1969, 2010, 2010,yeah.
(04:06):
We did the 1969. John Wayne.
Who directed it? That guy.
That guy, well, it was a guy. It was that guy I.
Don't know about that guy, but it was a guy.
(04:33):
Let's see, how do you know they had John Wayne in the original
of 1969 and 2010 they had Jeff Bridges.
Director Henry Hathaway. Hathaway, Hathaway.
And they actually made a sequel to that one called Rooster
Cogburn that just went a little more with whatever he was.
(04:54):
Doing Rooster. Rooster.
Yeah. John Wayne did 1969.
Jeff Bridges did 2010. Maddie Rose was Kim Derby Darby
in 1969 and Hailee Steinfeld in 2010.
And God, they didn't list any ofthe other people on here, did
(05:16):
they? Wow.
Matt Damon did La beef, La beef,La beef.
And I don't remember the other guy's name who did it in 1969.
Man, you know, you look stuff up, you you think that have all
(05:38):
the stuff together, but apparently not, because why
wouldn't? Glenn Glenn Campbell said 1969
LA Beef. LA Beef.
The Texas Ranger. Love beef.
He thought he was the beef. He thought he he thought he was
very impressive to a 14 year oldlittle girl.
(05:59):
In both movies. Yes.
Can we stay? Pedophile.
Well, I mean more so in the 2010considering he he meets her for
the very first time in her bedroom while she's in bed.
Yeah, and the original 1, he wasalready in a room and was back
out waiting on her. The orig, yeah, the original one
(06:21):
was on. They talked in the in the dining
room dining area. Yeah, but he didn't say anything
about kissing her until he seen her the second day on the front
porch. He's in the front porch looking
pipe. Maybe she goes walking up and he
says you must be Maddie. And how do you know?
That was in the 2010, no? No, that was, that was, that was
(06:43):
the 60. 9 No, it wasn't. Watch the movie, you'll know
anyway. He was not in her bedroom in
1969. No, he was on the front porch.
He. Was not in her bedroom.
That is the point. The point is.
He still talks about kissing a 14 year old child, you know, I'm
(07:04):
sure he's in his 20s anyway. Anyway.
Anyway. Since you like to do that, no.
No, you go right. Ahead.
No, you go right ahead. You know what shots fired.
I got you. I got you.
Y'all can't see my face but there might be some issues later
there's. Going to be some subtitles.
(07:25):
Lots of subtitles across my faceanyway so they don't make a
reference to her age except for once in the 1969 and the 2010.
They constantly put it back in your face if she's only 14.
Also in the 2010 you physically see Matt Damon puffing out his
little bitty chest trying to show off his Gold Star because
(07:48):
he is a Texas Ranger. But he's not Walker, Texas
Ranger, so you know. So she don't care.
Right. Exactly.
All right. It's the True Grit was based off
a novel by Charles Portis in 1968 and pretty much the
original from 1969 and the 2010 version.
(08:10):
They pretty much fix the same exact strip.
Almost everything is identical. The the intro to each movie is a
little different. The ending to each movie is.
Really different. Well, in 1969, they walk you
through, they show you on on camera what happens and what
leads up to her finding Rooster and getting up with him to go
(08:32):
find the killer of her father. Right.
They walk you through every single thing that she has done
in the 2010. Maddie is narrating in the very,
very beginning and it opens up to the first scene of her being
(08:53):
there to identify her father andfind somebody to hunt down his
killer. Yeah, but I mean, they're,
they're both really good movies.They they really are, and we
talked about this in the other failed attempt to record this.
Bring that up. What?
They do it. If you've never said anything
(09:14):
about a failed attempt that we've made, they would not have
known. All right.
My apologies. We did not have a failed
attempt. We had a glitch.
Big ass glitch. A glitch, The phone said.
Nope, not today. The RoboCop is kicking our asses
right now because we had a glitch.
It just, OK, it was pencil. It was pencil visual supposed to
(09:39):
nuke in which you smoothly snooped.
OK, OK. So. 1969 is a more classic
Western film, kind of heroic, somewhat melodramatic, a lighter
(10:00):
tone with some Comic Relief. John Wayne actually did a pretty
decent move job at some of the comics and, and we'll see.
If you weren't, I won't say weren't raised in the South,
your grandparents didn't talk insome of the ways that you're
listening to on 1969, you wouldn't understand some of
(10:22):
these phrases. I mean, just the way they say
certain things, the way they talk to you, the way they
interacted it just now you're watching, you're just like,
what? What in the hell are they
saying? What, what are they?
What do they mean when they say that?
That makes no sense. My favorite scene in both of
these was the courtroom when he is answering the question, yes
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quite literally, that the lawyeris is directing towards him.
You know which direction were you moving when you were moving
backwards. When you were backing up.
Backwards, like that's where we go usually when we're backing
up, that's backwards. Typically how I move when I'm
(11:07):
backing up. Like, you know, like he's being
a smart ass and he's answering the question, but the lawyer,
that's not the kind of answer hewanted.
So he accuses them of not answering the questions.
Right. How?
How did the hand get in the fire?
(11:28):
I don't know. I might have moved it.
I mean, there, there was, there was picked down there.
He did have hog. Hog probably dragged the body.
I don't remember. I mean, you know, it's like,
wow. But yeah, that's both movies are
just really good movies. The 2010 version is the more
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darker, grittier. There's some say it's some more
realistic movie. It's closer to the bleak, dry
humor of the novel. It emphasizes moral ambiguity
and violence in a less romanticized way.
(12:14):
I'm going to disagree with that like a whole bunch.
That was just a mouthful. Felt like that was back in
college for a minute. The Western, the the actual true
Western, the 1969 Western was the one that felt gritty to me.
(12:38):
That was more of the time versusthe 2010 attempt at becoming a
Western. It's, it's too clean, it's too
Polish. Like they're trying to, they
tried to make everybody in that little bitty town look like they
had a whole bunch of money. Yeah.
(12:59):
And that's just not how it was. Well I mean just because the
original was all dirty, dusty and nasty.
Made you feel like you could take a shower because you were
dusty after watching it. But it was a small, itty bitty
town. It wasn't a big city.
Well, yeah. And you look at the 2010 version
and they try to make it look like more like a polished big
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city feel, especially in the courtroom.
Well, I mean, it was Fort Smith,so I mean, that was kind of that
was the major hub. Anyway.
She is right. Just saying I'm not sleeping on
the couch. She's right.
He's right. It is.
Yeah. So John Wayne's plays a larger
(13:42):
than life charismatic Rooster Cogbourne and is one of his more
iconic performances where Jeff Bridges purchase a a rooster
Cogborn as a grizzled drunk and rough edged man.
I mean, they're both drunkard. Yeah.
(14:05):
Rooster, the the Jeff Bridges. He always, always has facial
hair. Always.
I don't think I've ever seen himwithout facial hair.
Yeah, fear, Fear and loathing inLas Vegas are days.
Confused. Whichever one it was, replace
(14:25):
the dude like I. Said I haven't seen, Yeah,
anyway. But in the 1969 version, Maddie
meets Brewster, somewhat ideal circumstances, I guess.
He's escorting his whole batch of delinquents that he rounded
(14:50):
up, rounded up. And in the 2010 version, because
it's 2010, her first encounter with him, he's on well in the
shooter. He's in the nail.
House. Yeah, so he's taking his morning
dump and apparently that was a good time to talk to him.
(15:13):
Rooster, go away, I'm shooting. Like you see her knob and you're
like, OK, she she's knocking on this door.
No, she's knocking on the dag onour house.
Yeah, I mean, for real. Oh, anyways, anyways, Kim Darby
(15:37):
plays Matty Ross in 1969, and Hailee Steinfeld played the same
character in 2010. Both did a great job.
Just one like I said, the 1969 version of Mattie Ross did seem
like she is more of a child. She was rough and tumble.
(15:58):
She was the the the oldest childin in both movies and they both
played rough and tough. But there's instances in the 69
movie that the more childlike features came out at different
times, where in the 2010 versionshe seemed to still have that
kind of grown up, grown up mentality throughout the whole
(16:19):
film. Yeah.
So, I mean, but they do, they both did a great, great job.
What else? There was a few slight
differences. Then you got the hanging scene
where in 1969 they sang Amazing Grace, the whole thing all the
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way through, and then they put hoods over the head.
That's kind of like last rites almost.
And they let them swing. And the 2010 version, we're
going to let you tell us after you've been convicted, your
whole top story before we hang, like, why nobody wants to hear
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the top story. And then it's not even, you
know, this is my fault. I put myself here.
No, this is this is all well This is why this happened and
it's not my fault And you know y'all don't need to be following
what I'm doing and Oh no shit nobody wants to hang.
I was drunk and they were teaching me at cards and I lost
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all my money and I shot him. I killed.
Him it's not my fault because I was drinking and that that's why
that happened, really. All you youngsters out there,
you listen up, you listen to your Mama, you go to church, you
go to school. You don't be like me.
You, you don't drink and play cards.
Don't them get well, they will. There was no, you know, I'm
sorry for what I did. It was.
(17:47):
This is why this happened. I was I was done wrong.
You know, just. The 2010 version, you know, well
that's what we're talking about.The 2010 version, they got the 2
white guys and Native American up there and the 2 white guys
are just talking their story andjust Oh my God, this is me.
And I'm so, you know, like they're giving their, you know,
having the last words and they're saying their last words.
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Then they get to the Native American.
Don't even ask him if he got anylast horses.
I'm a proud people of a proud inthe through the hood on his
face. His whole Bible language is like
these motherfuckers right here. Yep.
They just shut up the Redman. Which that that's of the time.
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They didn't. Want to hear anybody that looked
different? Anybody acting different they
don't want to hear? It he's a Redman, he must be a
savage. Yep.
He's an Indian, I'm sorry. I mean, all those, all those
Westerns always portrayed the Native Americans as a savage,
violent, savage individuals which scared everybody.
We're going to take your White Ribbon and we're going to rape
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them. Like, are you for real?
Oh, they want your horses, they don't want your women.
They just put your horses and your scalps.
I mean don't piss them off because they will give you a bad
ass haircut. I.
Mean you don't need that here, yeah.
It's what I'm just saying. They're going to nail it in
their wallet. We do, you know, horse heads and
(19:12):
Beaver belts. But it was, I mean, you know, it
was a pretty good movie. And there again, they everybody
runs off to the Comanche Badlands.
And in the original movie, The only Native American that you've
seen was the Barber and whoever the other guy was.
(19:32):
Yeah. For the 22.
Version in the heart of native of Comanche country, but not one
can be found. Yeah, Fort Smith.
I don't remember where Fort Smith is this like Nebraska,
Wyoming, somewhere in that general area.
(19:54):
And there's there's Indians, there's Native Americans
everywhere. But for the 69 version you don't
see Naran one except for the theBarber slash.
Nobody running around trying to kill you.
Nobody running No. No packs of no nothing.
(20:14):
That's just, yeah. Now the 2010 version, you only
have the one guy that comes through and picked up the dead
guy that was hanging. Yeah.
Totally different set of hangingguys.
I'm sorry that they were right along Rooster and Maddie and
they come across the guy hangingfrom a tree and they cut him
down. Native American comes along and
just looked at him like just kind of points like this yours
(20:37):
and they're like, he's like, OK,cool, I'm gonna take you.
He ends up trading him to some other guy or some other stuff.
Trading a dead body for coffee. No, that is, I mean, if I could
trade dead bodies for stuff I need.
(20:59):
I mean, I got a couple of grandparents.
I'm just saying that's. Nancy.
Daddy and Mommy needs a new car.I mean, I got a couple of
grandparents, dude. You know, we'll do some trading
here. Bones for bones.
I need some wheels. What you got?
(21:20):
Wow. But LA beef, Oh my God, La beef
is not the beef. No.
He tries to be the beef. I mean, his Mama said he was
special. He is the extra in the special.
Didn't say how extra special. The extra when.
She told him you're #1 She didn't say which one.
(21:46):
Which he thought he was truly awesome if he was.
He thought. He thought a lot of things.
He thought very highly of himself.
Yeah, but the 1969 version, I mean, he gets hit on the head
with a rock. He helps Maddie get out of a
snake pit, gets her up, gets outof the hole.
(22:07):
That just kills over. And then just die.
Concussions are real. I mean, there's a lot of things
we can do when you've had a concussion.
But yeah, look at football players.
I mean real football, not soccer.
I mean real football, the American football.
(22:28):
If you want to know what happensif you have a concussion and you
make bad decisions, look at rugby players.
I'm just, I'm just saying. You know, look at look at the
time when they invented the cup versus the time they invented
the helmet and then explained somuch.
Oh my God, 1920s football. They had a leather helmet, but
(22:49):
they had actual cups. My balls are more important than
my brains. That explains a lot.
It does explains why women live longer than men.
It's a proven fact. If I said the wrong thing right
now, I'm not going to live through this night.
I got it. Those are facts.
(23:11):
That's not the, that's not the problem, no.
Those are just facts. It's when you say this is a good
idea, and then halfway through you look at me and why'd you let
me do it? Like I could stop you.
You were going to do it. Regardless, so anyways back to
the movie. So the ending of the 1969 versus
(23:33):
Tim jumping A4 post fits there at the end.
Like Kim and Maddie had this real heart to heart that her she
buried her dad at the home plot,talking about how she's got a
plot for her brother and his family and his other sister and
her family and then a spit a spot for her mom.
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And then she's going to be buried on the other side of her
dad. And she looks at Rooster and
says, there's another spot here for you.
Being that you don't have any family, you have nowhere to go,
you know, so when you do pass you, you've helped me out.
I want to stay here in the family plot.
And he says, Oh, well, that's going to be for your husband and
your family. And she kind of says something
(24:17):
along the lines of why I really don't have time for that.
But I understand back in that inthat movie during that time,
that was more the the, the the better way of saying, hey, I
appreciate what you've done. You know, I'm giving you this
now. In the 2010 version, Maddie gets
(24:38):
there again into the snake pit. She gets bit by the snake.
He rides the horse, which I thought was the strangest thing
because they were on this littlebitty, this little horse and the
whole time and both movies they're talking about don't
override my horse. But my little horse Blackie is
like, this is my worst. The shit don't kill my horse
(25:01):
because this held me through everything since we've been out
looking for my dad to kill her. So in the 69 version he is
beating the hell of this horse trying to get to run faster and
just kills a got it 2010 version.
You think he's beating this horse, but it looks like he's
got a knife and stabbing it in the time quarter.
(25:21):
I'm like what the? Hell, I mean, I I get it.
You want the horse to run fast. You want to keep going because
you don't want her to die because you got to think that.
I got it. It's like damn dude, you go stab
a horse, run faster, bitch. Stab stab stab.
Would you run faster if you got stab?
No, I'm going to hit it with my strong hand, My strong hand and
(25:43):
he's we going to. Run.
We we're. Going to get at it.
But but in the 2010 movie, you know, she, she gets to the
doctor and and then it picks up to her later on in life where
she's older, like she's in her 20s now.
And she says she gets this thingfrom Rooster saying, hey, come
(26:03):
see me. I'm with the Buffalo Bill
Hitchcock Wild West traveling show.
I'll be close to your area, comeout and see me so we can catch
up. And she takes, takes the train
wherever they're going, gets up there only to find out that when
she's talking to the 2 old guys who's like, can I help you,
ma'am? Yeah, I'm looking for Rooster,
(26:24):
right? Oh, we've been expecting you.
He passed away three days ago. So she was kind of taken back.
But the old guy's like, you know, we, we had some really
lively time. How well did you know him?
She goes well, I didn't know himwell, but the time I do had the
(26:44):
time I did have with him, we hadsome very lively times.
So she isn't taking the body, but they already had him buried.
So she had him dug up, put on the training and sent back to
her family ranch to have him buried in family plot, which I
thought was awesome because you didn't see that in the other
movie. He just rides off like OK, you
have a good one, see you later and we'll jump a fence with this
(27:05):
horse in my old fat ass. Yeah, well, because she called
him Old Fat Man. Yeah, old fat man, you can't
drunk A4 rail fence. The old fat man, he goes, watch
this and he did it. That was pretty awesome.
But in this movie, you know, it shows what happens.
Then she talks about LA Beef, which is, you know, I'd like to
go catch up with him. I know he retired as a Texas
(27:26):
drinker and he started working on something else.
She goes, he's got to be in his 70s or 80s by now.
So I just kind of harped back toif she was 14, she's down in her
20s, that means he had the B or in her late 20s, early 30s.
(27:47):
But he was probably every bit late 20s early 30s hitting on a
14 year old. Yeah, was back then.
I understand wasn't uncommon butI'll just it.
I just know. So for the lack of fisting a lot
of people off, we're going to stereo.
I will stereotype you. OK?
We will stereotype. I wonder if he was Catholic.
(28:11):
You just had to go there. Didn't you?
Yes, I did. Well, he did say he was.
Wait, raised What? Protestant, Presbyterian,
Presbyterian, somewhere in there, something like that.
When this I mean, at least it wasn't Mormon.
Yeah, very true. 18 wives, 300 children, just I'm just saying
(28:33):
and. Through the whole thing, Rooster
is calling Maddie little sis. Little sis, little sis, little
sis. Not young and not half pint.
Not trying to make her feel likesmaller than what?
She is just little sis, little sis.
And I loved it. Yeah, because he he did end up
(28:54):
protecting her like she was his little sister.
Yeah. And then he gets jealous when
she gets like he thinks it's toomuch attention.
To LA Beef. La Beef.
And they just had a little upsetting at the time.
It's like, wow. And see LA Beef in the 1969
version as more, I'll say a Manley's man.
(29:15):
But he took pride in his appearance.
So he always had to look good. But he was great.
He was quick to fight, he was quick to work.
He was quick to just there you go, the 2010 version, even
though like, like we said, the script pretty much went from one
movie to the next through the years, the same damn word.
(29:41):
But the 2010 version is like theway he portrayed him.
He wasn't as manly, like he's a Texas Ranger.
He uses his brains more than he uses his bronze.
He's going to outwit his whoeverto to find, you know the man
(30:02):
that he needs so he don't have to be this big brawny, just like
for I'm a big. Burly man he considers himself
to be above. Everyone else.
Everyone else. Like he has to look down his
nose because. Yeah.
And of course, Rooster, just like, well, I, I was a Texas
Ranger, I guess I wouldn't have to.
So what was it? If I hear another another Texan
(30:24):
tell me how much dirty water they've drinking from a.
They left up almost. Horse footprint.
Yeah. Because it's so dry in Texas,
Because I've never met another one.
I'd shake his hand. Never met one that never drunk
dirty water from a horse footprint.
I'd shake his hand. That's all you guys ever seem to
(30:46):
do. I mean, you know.
I mean, they do say everything'sbigger in Texas.
I guess they meant the exaggerations as well.
Well, you know, at least they'renot trying to eat, you know,
wheat grass out of cow shit, saying you're drinking water out
of a hoof print. I mean, some wheat grass from
(31:06):
cow shit. It's organic.
Oh, my God. Yeah.
I mean, both movies are actuallyreally good and, and, like, you
know, it doesn't matter which one comes on TV.
I watch them both. Yeah, I'm just looking through
(31:28):
the channels like, hey, look, crew Grit.
I pick it up wherever it starts or wherever I, you know, turned
on it. I think I'm more partial to the
1969 just because I grew up withit.
I mean, I grew up with them too,it's just I think I like the
2010 version a little. Better we grew up two totally
different ways you're faced on. Trees like that.
(31:48):
And I already have an RBS, can Igive a damn?
I mean, I know you don't, but I'm just saying on a freeze like
that, I'm going to post it on this website here for this.
I'm going to put it in the comments.
We're going to put it as our. Cover page, right?
But yeah, now what? So I mean, in this this Western
(32:14):
here, especially 69 version is something totally different than
what you've seen from like, I don't know, 2 mules for sister
Sarah and the the 110 to Yuma and a lot of the other spaghetti
westerns. I mean this was, this would be
not necessarily my all time favorite, but I'd rather watch
(32:35):
this versus some of the other westerns that was done during
that same time break just because of way it was.
Done, Yeah. But yeah, we watched we we
pretty much get all of our movies between.
Amazon, Disney Plus, Pluto TV, Tubi and Pluto are free apps.
(32:58):
Completely free. All you got to do is put your
e-mail and password in and just.Signed up, apparently I got
help. They've got Tubi has a lot of
old stuff on it, old old stuff from the 90s, eighties and
(33:20):
Netflix to use that. So we have five sources that we
get all our movies off of. If we can't find it for free, I
go ahead and rent it off Amazon.No big deal.
Just like Netflix to be Pluto ismore of ATV channel type setup.
(33:41):
It's kind of like DIRECTV, just free.
Yeah. And to be is set up just about
like Netflix where they cycle everything in.
It's on there for three months or six months or whatever and
then you know, they bring in another batch of whatever they
(34:03):
haven't seen for. A while Pluto, I mean you go to
the search bar, you type it in. And for the most part so far
with Pluto, we type it in, we pretty much we find it.
So it's not to say it's not always going to be there because
they do rotate their stuff out quite say frequently about once
a month. It's something new, something
different. The same way with their
channels. They always have a channel for
something, and unless there's something really, excuse me,
(34:27):
something really, really popular, they tend to rotate the
channels out quite frequently. I.
Think CSI stays on there? The CSI Dateline and.
Yeah, there's some things that stay on there and I don't think
they're going anywhere. But that's our movie sources.
I mean, if you ever want to get nostalgic and watch some of
these old movies, or if you wantto say, hey, you know what?
I don't think I've seen that oneyet.
(34:50):
These are, you know, these are the places where we go.
And if you like what you've listened to, make sure you
follow Subscribe Drop. Them comments.
Leave some comments. I've been getting private
messages from people laughing their butts off, but it doesn't
(35:10):
it doesn't sound as real when I say I've we're entertaining it.
It sounds a lot more real to people that are scrolling
through and trying to find something to listen to when they
see the comments and they see that people actually are
enjoying the show. Yeah, so, so you know, so if you
have a question, have a comment.I know I said once before I'll
(35:32):
read the comment. I probably won't really care.
But yeah, for real though, leaveleave a comment, you know?
I'll get back to you. I will make sure I get back.
To you, if you have questions, comments, concerns, please drop
it in there. If we get something wrong, hey,
correct us please because I havebeen known to be wrong.
I'm married. I'm reminded of this daily.
(35:54):
Whatever, it is not that bad, good Lord.
Plus anyways, so if you have anyquestions or or if you just have
comments like hey, you guys suck, what have you talked too
much? The other one doesn't talk
enough. I.
Hate the sound of? His voice, OK 'cause we've got
(36:15):
other voices that are coming. Dude, I got you.
We are on this. We are on this.
Oh my God, yes. When we come.
Back over here and when you hearair.
Talk, talk, talk. Why sleep perfect?
And then of course, you got thisright here.
(36:36):
Oh my God, yes, we will use thatagain.
Oh yes, for a whole episode. Anyway, until next time, we'll
see you later. See you guys.