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March 18, 2020 48 mins

Movie Mike comes on to talk about his top 3 music movies which include Spinal Tap, La Bamba and Straight Outta Compton. Bobby and Eddie also talk about some of their favorites. We talk to Jana Kramer about how she flew to Canada to film a movie during the coronavirus epidemic and ended up getting rescued to come back. She also gives her 5 songs in her quarantine playlist.


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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Welcome to episode two thirty. We will talk to Janna
Kramer coming up a little bit, and Eddie's back again. Yeah,
like we have nothing to do except do this. I
don't really. I mean, this is the time to come
over whenever I want. Traffic fine, zero traffic. You know.
I made the observation this morning that finally you all

(00:22):
get to see what Christmas is like for me. You
did because sat a little bit. I mean your explanation
was pretty sad because I don't no offense, but I
mean you're I'm busy doing my Christmas. I'm not thinking
what you're doing. So here's this kind of just alone.
The streets are empty, most things are closed, but you
got to google and see what's really happening. You can

(00:43):
move around pretty easily, but again you kind of gotta
piece it together what's available and what's not. So, yeah,
this is what Christmas feels like for me. Yeah. It's
not good. Sorry, especially when I'm alone. Yeah. Any more
that you have a girlfriend, yeah yeah, I told her
that later today. I was talking to her because she's
here and I was like, hey, um, that's kind of

(01:05):
what Christmas fells like to me. She was like, stop
it you'll never spend Christmas alone again? Oh? Nice? And
I was like, well, I spend it with. You're like,
I can't think of anyone for that was spend Christmas with? Uh?
So I will talk to Janna Cramer coming up in
just a little bit. Um. I wanted to talk about
music and movies. And it also gives us away to

(01:25):
promote Mike ds podcast called Mike D's Movie Podcast. If
they what's the easiest search on that movie mikes? Oh,
that's what it's called podcast. There's movie Mikes chose up
anywhere movie Mike's Movie Podcast. And so what you have
here at your top three music movies and what did
you base this on? I based this on movies that

(01:45):
impacted me the most and just ones that I think
stand alone and anybody could watch and get to know
like about these artists. Okay, the top three movies, and
you've seen all three of them? Have seen all three?
Did you watch them recently? I rewatched one of them
just to kind of get a night again of how
it affected me when I first watched it. And then
the other two I've seen probably like a year or
two ago. All right, coming in at number three straight

(02:07):
out of Compton. So it's the story of n w A.
And I think it's one of the best biopics that's
ever been done on like any group, just because I
love it when they showed the rise and fall of
an artist in a biopic, and you kind of get
nw A from the very beginning when it started with
Easy E to how he found everybody, how they got
screwed over all the way leading up to where everybody

(02:28):
else kind of started branching off and having their solo careers.
And their story is pretty crazy. Like the guy their
their record label, guy who found Easy he was essentially
just trying to make him the star of the group.
So he treated him so much better and cut him
like his own record deals and was kind of like

(02:49):
like a jerk to everybody else and taking their money
from them. And I didn't know that about them. I
didn't know that about Easy how like he was like
the face of the group. And I think it was
just crazy to see. Did you see strategy content? No?
And I saw that it was for free, I think
on demand this week while I'm looking through a video
through like movies on the list, so I will see

(03:10):
this now. Where can you watch it now? You can
watch it on Hulu, and I think they just made
it on demand on some other places, but Hulu, if
you have it there, you can watch it free. And
what's the Throat and Tomato score. I liked it. I
felt like it was very glossy because all of a sudden,
they're like, we're gonna get the good together, We're gonna
do a record deal. Smash cut sold that show in Detroit.
Didn't happen that way. It was a little Hollywood for me,

(03:32):
um because again, I was just on the end of
n w A. Miked really didn't cross over the w
at all like the real life version. I was just
on the end and when ice Cube was starting to
blow up, but ice Cube Sun plays ice Cube in
this movie too, which is interesting that you'll like it
as long as you go into it annoying. It's a
Hollywood version of n w A. And if you're someone

(03:54):
who didn't actually see all that happened, because it was,
it's a pretty and I say this in the most
complimentary way, it's a pretty amy story. Yeah, and so
watch it. I think you'll like it if you do
know anyth about him. It's an interesting movie. And I
don't know anything about him really so, but it's um
Dr Dre produced it. So the issue whenever you have
somebody producing it that was in it is they packed

(04:15):
it up real nice to make everybody look real good.
It makes him look pretty good too. In it. Dr
Drey is like the kids. He's guys just doing the
beats like a good kids. And I wish it showed
some more about like Dr Dre because he had like
a whole other music career even before he got into
this stuff. He was doing like funky like jazz stuff
before and they don't show that. What was his role
in He's the beat guy. He's the beat guy, and

(04:36):
then he wasn't the rapper and then he started rapping.
He was actually pretty good. But he's never really been
a big rapper. I mean he's only put out what
to like albums and he's done some was a big
album though, Uh, but like the Chronic Chronic was huge.
But he's also done a lot of features on records.
So but do you know who is in w a

(04:58):
easy like Mike said, go ahead, um ice Cube, Yeah,
and then um there's three more uh Flavor, Flavor and
the Public Enemy. So Dr Dre DJ Yella, probably the
least famous of all of them. H M c wren,
who's the second least famous? One ice cube and Easy

(05:18):
Easy out of aids. Yeah. Really, you see this the
end of the movie, right, I didn't know that. So
I also liked it. I want to put it in
my top music movies because again, whenever someone's producing it,
you know, it's it's almost like, do you have Ahemian
rapsy in your list? Okay, I like what raps? Fine?
There was that smash in that movie too, where they go, man,

(05:40):
we just got together. Is this band ever gonna make
it boom? We're playing the huge stage on the tops
of the pop TV show or you're like, man, I
get it. You only had an hour and forty five minutes,
two hours to make a movie, but at some point
you have to jump it. But these the guys and
queen were producing the movie, yeah, and they wanted it
even different than it was made. They wanted Freddy mcady
to die in the middle of the movie and then

(06:00):
be about thee Yeah. So um. My point is when
someone is doing their own biography, it's really going to
shine a positive light for the most part and net
gain on the person. That's producing the movie. And to
that point to you, um, I believe Johnny Cash's son

(06:24):
was behind Walk the Line and Johnny Cash's son with
June June's son as well, not the first wife's son.
So that's why kind of you see the story based
on john and Johnny versus his first wife, you know,
and that's an interesting not story, but it's an interesting
like substory between those two because we think it Johnny
and June is this big, romantic, loving couple, but there

(06:45):
was some some cheating going on, big time. I mean,
Johnny was cheating with June on his first wife and
she knew it. Yes, And you watched the movie and
you don't even pick that up because you're like, oh,
they have such a wonderful love story, but no, he
was married with three kids. You know, like this should
you bad, But we don't even see it that way
again when you have those people producing it. But I
will also say this as a macro view at the world.

(07:07):
In stories in history, the winners always tell the stories.
History is told by the winner. So that's that's stories
of wars, that's producers in movies telling stories like because
Dr Dre and Ice Cube are so famous. Not Yeah,
because they're so famous and they have the power to
make this movie. They won. They get to make the

(07:30):
movie and put it in the image they want to
put it. Same thing with war stories that we hear
about World War one two, the winners tell the stories
civil war. So just know that in general, the stories
that get passed on through generations be ice cube or
you know, the War of eighteen twelve, the winners tell

(07:50):
the stories. Great point. Me a good one, dude, I
don't even know I was gonna make it today. All right,
that's your number three movies straight out of content. Number three,
al right, go ahead. Number two. Move Mike's favorite music
movies at number two, starring Lou Diamond Phillips. I Got
a Love Bamba. Yeah, you love this one. I love it.
I grew up with us. Why did you like that
with Mike Samizettie. I mean, I think it's the Mexican factor.

(08:11):
First of all, I've never been able to identify with
like a character before, and I didn't know much about
Richie Vallen before I started watching this. But as a kid,
I saw it and I was like, oh my gosh,
there's somebody actually like me who did something like this
who was so big and just the his like him
what he was to Mexican culture and like Mexican American culture.
I think that kind of resonated with me more. I

(08:33):
also love the time period, like the fifties or like
my favorite time to kind of set a movie in.
And I think at the end of the movie it's
more so a story about brothers than it is almost
about the music, but that kind of ties everything in together.
So I think that's kind of why it stands the
test of time of kind of going back to a
movie you can watch more and more that it's not
just about like the story of like Richie Vallen, it's

(08:54):
like him and his brother. Yeah, it's good. I kind
of felt that connection too, because I have an older
brother and a lot of times we we felt the
connection between Bob and Ritchie with him and I and
we would compare ourselves a lot. You know. He would
have a little bit of jealousy with stuff, even when
I went to college and he's just like, oh, wow,
you went to college, like doing big things, and I'm
still over here in our hometown. He's like, I'm kind
of like Ritchie, You're like, I'm like Bob, You're like Ritchie.

(09:16):
A lot of comparisons from a movie that we were
just raised with. I didn't think that that movie would
have such a big impact in our lives, but it does.
I love that movie. I've never seen it. Oh it's
so good. It's it is, Yes, so you can watch it.
I wonder if this is when I got to get
the kids to watch too. Guys, there's a movie about

(09:37):
our culture. Play How long is it? I like back
in the old days in the movies are a little
shorter than they. I wouldn't say yeah, I wouldn't say
it's over an hour forty. I'd say brighter, an hour
and a half. I like the Joe You ever see
that movie? Joe's our video? Yeah he's editing. So in
my young college film careers, I made a movie in
college and I got to go to different film festivals,

(10:00):
and this one film festival, the director that directed LaBamba,
he was curious or he was a guest or whatever,
and I got to go to an after party and
oh my gosh, I had a few beers in me,
so I like bugged the crap out of about Like
I started doing lines to him, like dude, so did
it really wasn't really Like Richard, He's just like, I don't.
We don't know if it really happened that way. We
just kind of went with it. I know. The sub

(10:21):
story of that Buddy Holly, Yeah, like I mean of
the LaBamba sub score would be because that's about his life.
But how you know it ended with him in a
plane crash. But I mean, I'm very familiar with that
as a main story more so than what happens at
the end of I'm assuming it's the end of the movie.
It's his whole life and then at the end. Yeah,
so like I know all of that put it on

(10:42):
your list with with everything on Netflix and all the
streaming services. Watched that one Rotten Tomato score it is Yeah, Um,
the director Louis of all this, I have a bunch
of movies. No, that's the only head. He did one
movie before this and then after that. Yeah, I think

(11:03):
the one he was doing at that film festival never
did anything. So by Miss American through Mischief it to
the Levy, But the Levy was dry. The good old
boys were drinking whiskey and right singing this will be
the day that I die, This will be the day

(11:24):
that I die, and ten minutes later you're still going.
And your number one music movie, My number one music
movie is this is Spinal Tap. Wonderful and and and
then this is my right down My Lane because this
inspired everything that I love about TV and movies. Now,

(11:45):
there wouldn't be The Office without Spinal Tap. There wouldn't
be all of those Christopher Guest movies his name right,
all those movies that I love from umstin shows, Waiting
for Guffman, in all those mock it just wouldn't have existed.

(12:06):
And I love them so much. Is that Rob Reiner? Ye?
Rob Reiner? All right, why is this your number one movie? Well?
The thing with me in Spinal Tap is I was
a kid and I remember watching The Simpsons and they
were in an episode of the Simpsons and I was like, Hey,
that's a real band. And I remember seeing this movie
on VHS at like at the video store. I mean like, oh,
Spinal Tap, Like that's a documentary and a band, and

(12:26):
watching it the first time, I was like, Oh, this
that's not what it is at all. And I think
over time it's become kind of my basis of like
of comedy, like everything in that movie. It's just I've
never seen anything done like that before, and I just
think it holds up and it's it's just funny, man.
It still holds up a little bit. I mean, the

(12:46):
quotes still live forever, and even the you know, we
were thinking about doing a scene last week with Derek
Spentley's band Hot Country Nights, and we were kind of
riding opening sketch for the operay show with them, and
someone had thrown out, why don't we do the spinal
tap where they can't find the stage? Love it? But
that's still a thing. Yeah, you know the fact that
we're sitting in a riding room going why don't we

(13:07):
do the spinal tap thing? And we didn't do that,
but it's you know, that's the thing. It's still the thing.
I take a left and there in the closet and
back and the same did you end up here? We
did that once in Austin because there was a trap
hole or something. They were playing a bar for a
benefit sea Yeah, and they said go that way, and

(13:27):
it was really just out of the movie. I got
my guitar, Bobby has his guitar, and let's go boys.
This is let's go packed house, and then the hallway
just stopped. They're like, okay, back it up, back it up,
and then went somewhere else and there was like a
door the halfway open, and it was only the top
part of the door that opened to get to the stage.
We couldn't get to the bottom part. So then we

(13:48):
had were like, all right, this isn't gonna our guy there,
so we're just searching for the stage. Um rotten tomato
squaw on spinal tip. Wow. And the movie was an
eighties movie, yes, like like early eighties too. I think, right,
do we have how do you watch this? Now? You
have to rent it, so it's like four bucks on
like iTunes. Well, I think it's worth the rent. If

(14:10):
you're a music or a comedy nerd, this is music podcast,
so maybe it's for you. I think it could be
a struggle to watch in the same way that I
love and I make this reference a lot. I love
watching The Fresh Prince of bel Air. But if you've
never seen The Fresh Prince, or you're not a fan
of Will Smith and didn't go up in the nineties,
you may watch this ago. This show is dumb. You're

(14:30):
not getting that connection. I mean with spinal tap. I
try to get my wife to watch it a long
time ago, and she wasn't interested. So and she loves music.
Is just I mean, for a guy you know that
loves music and that plays music, I think that's it's
automatic that you love this movie. I want to pull
up Christopher Guest movies because I think I've seen them all,

(14:52):
because once I found out that he made a ton
of movies, I think I just started walking down all
Christopher Guest lane. Okay, we have spinal taps, seen it,
loved it. Waiting for Guffman, do you ever see it?
For the local productions, they keep waiting, and so they're
doing this fantastic like a video. It's a mock. Um No,

(15:13):
it's a play, like a community play, community theater. And
they were waiting for the big reviewer to come from
I believe New York. And but it's them getting ready
and being pumped for him. And but again it's a
it's a mockumentary. It's that you'd like to keep watching
a documentary. Best in show, fantastic, A mighty Win, very underrated.
It came out later, but I thought A Mighty Win

(15:34):
was great for your consideration. Pretty good. Not my favorite
of all of them. Um, but the Princess Bride. He
did that movie, not a documentary, regular future film. And
then Mascots, which I never saw mascots came. Have you
seen mascut Mascots? I feel like it's a fraud. I'm

(15:56):
not coming. It's like me going, wait, there's another John
Mayor album that I don't know about. H Whenever MIKEA
was gonna come on and talk about these movies. Mine
is not a rating, but I think about my favorite
music movies because I know we've talked about favorite biopicks before.
But if I could recommend one that's Searching for Silverman fantastic.

(16:18):
Why do I get to Silverman thing searching for Sugarman
and it's on Netflix? I think, yeah, I should still
be on there. You know. It's a documentary about a
guy who was from Detroit, was like a you know,
rock blues kind of guys, sixties guy, and just stop
making music. But then he found out that they took
his music to South Africa. He didn't know about it,

(16:39):
and he was wildly famous, but the people thought he
had died. They had told him he died, so yes,
they had a made up story about him that he
had committed suicide, and so I mean, I'm sure that
added to the to the fact the admiration of this guy, like,
oh my gosh, this is great, this is look listen
to his music and we don't have him anymore. And
that one album was You So while he was living

(17:01):
in Detroit, poor, in poverty. So the guy's wildly famous
in South Africa. Doesn't know it. They worship a Dore,
They're all massive fans. There was no social media for
him to be connected back through. Their story of him
was all wrong and they couldn't get ahold of him.
So it's that story of his music blowing up, how
he got robbed his life, and then what happens at

(17:24):
the end. The ending is fantastic. I would put that
as a really great music movie. Um, I would put
Ray up there, such a good movie, and Jamie Fox
is so good and Jamie Fox is so talented. And
the fact that Jamie Fox blindfolding himself two like live
in character for that movie crazy. I mean, that's some

(17:46):
dedication to a character. And the hardcore drugs that Ray
did did something I didn't know. You don't think about that,
you know, And how he treated certain people too. Yeah,
not always a wonderful story, meaning not warm and fuzzy
all the time. But I think Ray is fantastic. Um

(18:07):
searching for Sugarman Walk the line is pretty good. Again
when you have people that are involved at protecting the
image of something that they're connected to. I thought the
movie was good, but I didn't go into it like
that was completely one believable. I think on your list
definitely was eight Mile. Yeah, as a like a bio,

(18:30):
but that's not really a bio pick, but it's loosely
based on a minute. I had one other one I
wanted to bring up. Let me see what it was. Um,
do you like a stars not in mine? Would you
like a Star was Born? I did, like a Star
was Born? Yeah, But but again I'd seen all the movie.
I've seen all the versions of Stars Born. I started

(18:51):
watching Stars Born with the ninety version. That's the one
I saw first. And then I saw that Chris Christofferson.
I love the movies, and so then I saw the
Chris Christofferson one. I'm like, that's really good. It was
Chris Christofferson and Barbra Streisan, and it was like, this
is such a cool story. So When I went into
the new one, I knew the story and I knew

(19:12):
how it was going to pan out, So it wasn't
as exciting to me as most people said it was
because I knew the storyline. But still I thought they
did a great job. The other couple that I made
a note on was that thing you do, not a
bio pick, but the story of fictional movie music movie
The Neaterers, but the Wonders, but they spelled it one. Oh,

(19:34):
any the o Needers. I quit, I quit, I quit.
That was good. In the Blues, Brothers, which is a
great one, had a number one album at the same
time that John Belushi had a number one TV show
sn L at the same time he had a number
one movie at Animal House all the same time. Crazy

(19:55):
just blowing up. You imagine his career just flying at
that point. Yeah, that's why he died. It's just a
lot at once and freaking odeed. You're just supposed to
be in Ghostbusters. Oh wasn't Bill Murray take that spot?
They ended up? Yeah, he was gonna be Bill, they
ended up. That's what they made him slimer, They made
him look like him. The homage the Bill. Because I

(20:17):
saw the movies that made us on that I think
it's Bill Murray right, and that it was like the
day before and they still don't know Bill Murray was
gonna show up like even there the same as he
is now. It's not like he just turned into this weirdow.
He's always been that weirdow. And they were like, Bill
even gonna show up, and then he showed up like
the day they started filming. Have you seen the Bill
the Bill Murray Stories, Well, I've seen the like, don't

(20:40):
know what's it called. The I don't know the official
name of the documentary, but this is where people just
tell the stories of how they met Bill Murray. It's
so crazy. The one of the guys in Austin that
it was like it was some bar or something and
Bill Murray's in a bar and they're like, hey, we're
playing music. And then he just goes to that house
and like chills and there's like a little house music
and he's playing like drawing. Do you remember that band
that's in that. I don't know the like they would

(21:01):
come to our studio all the time at my television
We will work there. Yeah, Yeah, they were really good.
Three girls called the like and I don't know if
they're still together, but they were really good back then
and and we I don't remember where they were from.
I think they were from the Northeast, but every time
they were in Awesome, they would stop by the studio.
So when I saw that documentary, like, I know those
girls and they're hanging out with Bill Murray. Yeah, he

(21:22):
would just be random places. And I guess he lives
in South Carolina, I think so. Yeah, and that's why
he's a big South Carolina Minor League baseball person. I
think he's part owner of that of that team. And
then he has a big red phone that you just
call and leave a message and you may get to
what he may not no cell phone, And I think
when those stories first started coming out that that was
just his thing. And he's being crazy Bell mur right now.

(21:45):
But No, apparently has always been like that, even on
that movie he did with Scarlett Johansson in Japan. It's
such a good lost in translation, but that was a thing. Well.
I don't think they got along that well because he
was so weird, but I'm sure she was weird to France.
What's her name, who's the director of that Sofia Coppola,
which is Francis Ford Coppola's daughter. Have you never seen

(22:07):
that movie Bones? It's really good. I think, weirdly, it's
your style where it's very it's very sad. It's got
a sad kind of feel to the whole thing, lonely feel. Yeah,
but I'm not lonely anymore, like we said earlier. Girlfriend
now yeah, she's been ever like a week and a
half now, I think, Um, Mike appreciate that. You can
check out Mike D's podcast. He was talking music movies here,

(22:28):
but he talks movie movies all the time. And what
are you talking about on this latest episode? I'm going
through how movies make money so overall, like at the
end of the day, what they have to do to
make money and then how all that revenue comes back
to them, Like what do they have to do? I
don't understand, like that you put it on, then you
make money to the box office and there you go. Well,
it's like all the cost in between of them, like
having a like make the actual movies that go to

(22:49):
movie theaters that they put in there, all the promotion
that goes into it, like all the hidden costs behind
when you hear like the growth income that a movie makes.
That's not really what they end up taking away, what
it seems like. So there's a bunch of other stuff
in there. I've always wondered if the theater has to
purchase the movie just knowing, just not knowing if it's
going to be a hit or not. Can I speculate
because I don't know the answer to this, Okay, I

(23:09):
can tell me if I'm right or not. What I
think is that theaters only make money off concessions and
food and things inside the theater and make no money
off the tickets. They the movie, the production companies that
the movie companies they send movies to theaters, so it

(23:31):
serves kind of like a venue or help me out
sort of. They do pay a little bit to actually
rent the movie. They do. Yeah, so they get a
big hard drive that the movie is on and they
take that hard drive out your kids. They take that
hard drive and they you know, they play it and
they factor it out based on the demand for tickets
for that movie. But really where they make money is

(23:53):
concessions and all that stuff. Does the theater make any
money off a movie? Yes, it's it's maybe like of
what they take home so very little. Yeah, but really
what they make is like people coming in and buying stuff.
That's why stuff is so expensive interesting, and why they
don't want stuff to move straight to streaming, and why
all the lobbies are full of video games and dance

(24:15):
dance revolution anyway to make money. But then another level
on that of what I go into is like some
movies are basically just a commercial for other things. So
like Disney movies, while you see them, it's like, okay,
this is a you know, a Disney movie for kids.
What really they're pushing towards is selling merchandise. Like those
movies are basically just hour and a half commercials. They

(24:35):
make the money, make as much money on a big
movie as they will selling craping, but like like a
toy story will make so much money. But when they
really kill it is in the merchandise after like with
the Star Wars movies back in the day right now, Yeah,
like those movies, they would only sell that amount of
merchandise win a movie was out. When those movies weren't
in theaters, they weren't making as much. So check it out.
You like movies, just learned something to movie mix movie podcast.

(24:59):
Check it out. You can just start movie Mike and
put it on your podcast. Listen, let's be honest. You're
all quarantine in anyway. Look at my stuff to do,
and you're not gonna play video games? And this is over.
I saw and my man, I are going to get
into headset Call of Duty soon. Have you played? Though
I haven't played, haven't. I haven't opened it. I downloaded
it took like eight hours. I saw. You know, my

(25:21):
internet kept going out, so it took me like four
days download. It's like how the Pilgrims just download games. Yeah, yeah,
the Shore they download a lot of games. I'm worried
about the time you guys are gonna be wasting who
you guys doing what playing one game of Call of Duty?
I don't waste time, like, for example, our basketball game,
Like it was fun. I had a blast minutes before

(25:43):
you know, that was almost an hour and we're like, wow, yeah,
I need that stuff because I have a lot of
goals during this break, Yes you do. I got I'm
gonna write like twenty words for a new book. Hopefully,
I'm gonna you're gonna get two workouts in a day.
When I started doing this show from this House because
it's gonna happen. At some point, it's gonna happen. I
was just watching the news and uh, the doctor that
works for the White House just said, most likely we'll

(26:05):
see a peak in corona cases in forty five days
a peak. So we haven't seen anything yet, almost nothing yet. Yeah, yeah,
so that's five weeks for the peak, So you're talking
about eight or nine weeks. I don't peloton a lot
twice a day. So um, all right, check out Movie
Mix Movie Podcast, And if there's ever something you would
like us to talk about on this, because this is

(26:26):
a music podcast, go to the Bobby Cast Instagram page
or Twitter and send us a note and say, hey,
be cool if you guys talked about this, because it
was like talk about and you know, we bring people in.
I don't know if I'll be able to bring guests
in for a while. I have to do them on
the phone because nobody wants to get the corona. Not
that we will, but nobody wants to get it in
and then not get sick and past it to somebody else.
Do you think it'd be easy to get guests now

(26:47):
that they're all quarantine and not touring and phone. Yes,
I do. I think it'll be a lot easier just
to get somebody pick up. So you're gonna aim high?
Well yeah, so later on Tony, Yeah, how wasn't gonna
go out? I was going rolling stones. Mick and Richard
would be you gotta protect them. They're like a hundred
Oh gosh, there very was suspect susceptible. All right, there

(27:11):
you go, Thanks Mike, Jannet phone, Hey it's Bobby. Is
this my I need someone to answer my phone for
me like that? Hey, Michael's happened to slash cook? Hey

(27:33):
do do you cook? Oh boy, there's just like a
whole family thing like my house. Hey, what's happening? I'm
gonna go hide in my closet. How are you? We're good?
I was. I just hit your Instagram story because I
wanted to be caught up on what was going on.
I had no idea that this whatever just happened where
you were flying back from a movie. I literally was

(27:54):
gonna I like to talk to Janna whenever we have
nothing to talk about, because we're bringing people on to
do their five uarantine songs. And I had a friend
on yesterday that's not a music at all named Matt Jones,
who was so funny. I was like, you know, you
go to talk to us, Janna, and then wait, give
me like a thirty second story of what just you
came back from Canada from a movie? Okay, thirty second story. Um,

(28:15):
I booked a movie. I was supposed to leave on Saturday,
and I, you know, everything was kind of happening here,
but everyone in Canada. Producer said everything signed in Canada,
like let's go, like you need to be here. So
I was like, all right, So I got on the
flight with my family and the kids because I was
advised that everything was sign there. And then some more

(28:35):
cases started popping up in Canada, and then I started
to get really nervous and they started talking about border closes,
you know, the borders closing. And then we shot our
first scene on Monday, and then the second scene, the
producer said, we're pulling the movie and you have to
get back to the State's asap. And I just freaking out.
And so forty eight hours later, packed everything back up

(28:57):
because we had packed about a month's worth of worth
of clothes and bags, so packed it all up and
then all of our flights were canceled. But then my
best friend, her dad had a plane and then she
sended up to Canada and they got us, really, is
your best friend super loaded? Is she famous? Tells more, No,
she's She's just her dad just you know, they're very

(29:19):
fortunate people. And I called their bawling my eyes out,
and she's like, don't worry, we'll figure it out. We'll
get you out of there. So I was going to
ask you about how you got back into the States
because as I watched a lot of these people coming
back to America that are Americans, they can't get back
through customs. But if if you fly private, you don't
have to go customs, right. Well, so actually what we
had to do is we had to cross the border

(29:41):
through New York. So we had to drive about an
hour and a half to Ogdenburg, New York, and then
we that's where we caught the plane. But the border
people there was it was just us crossing the border.
At the time, I thought it was gonna be crazy,
but they, you know, they let us go through. But
they asked a bunch of questions, you know, if we
were running a fever and everything else, But we got through.

(30:01):
They just asked you. You're sweating. God, I swear I'm fine,
just vomiting, and trust me, I'm all good. So you
guys are back in Nashville. Yeah, we're back. So we
got back last night. And who's quarantined in your house? You?
Mike and the two kids? So me, Mike, Yeah, and
both kids. And so you got like, what is it

(30:24):
gonna be five or six weeks where you're doing this?
What are you gonna do with the kids that long?
Think it's going to be five or six weeks? Oh? Yeah,
I think it would be more than that. I mean,
I was watching again. It's so fluid that every day
it changes. But every day also they're shutting us down
more and more, meaning they're going northern California, you're about
to be locked down. New York has about to be
locked down. And everything is coming from the coasts and
coming inward because there are more people in no spots, right,

(30:48):
So the more people, the more cases, and it is
slowly closing in. We're eventually they're gonna have to go
all right, We're just gonna tell everybody to sit down,
shut up, and stay in your house for a bit.
But so, yes, I think we're all feel a little
silly that I was so naive about it. I don't
think you're the only one that was naive, though, because

(31:10):
I really felt like I was. Like I even went
on my Instagram and was like, oh my gosh, like
I'm not going to live in fear, I'm going to Canada.
And then I look back on that, I'm like, you're
an idiot. It's so fluid. But here's what I'm gonna say.
It's so fluid that you had people saying even three
days ago, hey, go out to a bar or club,
who cares, like, go live your life. But now they're going,

(31:32):
if we're wrong. And I was watching Fox News yesterday
because I will, for the most part, watch the nn
I feel like it's the best in the middle. I
can't watch Fox. They're way too far on the right.
MSNBC is way too far on the left for me
to believe that their narrative is true. Like I think
they're both trying to protect what they feel is sacred
the most, and I get it. But even on Fox
News yesterday, they were going I was watching The Five

(31:54):
and they were going, yeah, we're wrong about going out
to places like you should didn't go to places we
were wrong, and so to see them even say that,
My point is I think we were all we were
all becoming less naive as we're told to be less naive,
and so no, I don't. And if you did it
now after being told that, I would feel different about it.
But you did. The West Virginia governor today was telling

(32:17):
their people, hey, go eat dinner. They don't have any
He was, but they're gonna lock us all down. I mean,
I just want people to be safe because I start
thinking about my grandparents and that's where I just start
to feel real um guilty about the choices that I
made a couple of days ago, because I'm like, I
just don't want to affect people that could really hurt

(32:39):
from this. You know, well, we're gonna be quarantined in.
We're lucky, We're gonna be fine in the end. We're
all going to do our our best to make sure
that the people that would feel it the worst, don't
you know. I was talking to one of our best
friends whose wife is Amino compromise because she's had some
some some stuff happened recently and he's thirty three years old,

(33:02):
and she's you know, in thirties and early forties, but
he doesn't leave his house because if he leaves his
house and he gets it and doesn't even know he
hasn't takes it to her, then it could really affect her.
Um and I was watching watching the Doctor today say that, hey,
young people anybody below, like, yeah, you're probably gonna be okay.
You may not even know you got it, but if
you have it and you pass it to somebody that

(33:22):
isn't okay, Like, that's where the bad news is going
to happen. So as we quarantine ourselves. I brought Jana
on because once, she's just great to talk to, and
two I thought it would be fun too. Um one
in a second, well, talk about your podcast, also talk
about good enough. But here what your five quarantine songs
would be? You're locked in your house, you're gonna add

(33:42):
it to our quarantine playlist? What is song number one? Okay?
So it's my go to for any time I have
an anxiety attack. It brings me right back to home
Fire and Rain. James Taylor. It's a good one. Good
You ever see James Taylor with long here before he
started losing his hair. No, it's crazy because we only
know James Taylor is bald, old man James Taylor, but

(34:05):
like sixties and seventies, cool looking long here good right after,
not the old bald guy with glasses I've seen fun
jamp this is a good one, which is brings me
to the question, oh wait what why do you say that?
It just reminds me of being up north camp fire

(34:28):
where you know I was a kid, nothing was wrong
and just I don't know. It's like anytime my therapist
ever says, okay, picture the place you know, your safe place,
and up North, Michigan is always my safe place. And
that song one of your last Instagram stories had um
you have mentioned something about going to couples therapy. I've
been in a relationship for four months or so now,

(34:49):
so no, I'm so happy for you. Congratulation, Thank you
very much. So you guys see, I just want to
say a side note. I know you don't like no, no,
I'm no no, no, go ahead, I'll sit back ahead.
Oh I like it, okay. Side note, I have never
seen you authentically as happy as you look right now,
Like even when I watch your stories, there's a difference
in your eyes, there's a difference in your just how
you interact, how you talk. You just seem so happy, Eddie.

(35:12):
Do you feel that way, yes, that you feel that way? Yes, yeah, absolutely,
I feel like you're a lot happier. I feel just
the way you're demeanor is every day, like I think
you're truly happy inside, interesting, all the fields right now, Okay,
I I mean I am happier. I just wonder if
it's because you know I'm in a relationship, so you

(35:34):
look for that and you kind of make your own stories,
tell how you interact and like even like the games
you do and when you do the you know, the
review of the movies. You're just you have that cute
like Bobby smile, like inside you're like, I'm really happy
right now? Well thank you? What are we right? Yeah?
I mean I'm definitely happier, yes, But but I want
to because you're from you're coming from two different places,

(35:55):
because she is from someone who we see each other
at times through the year in person. We talked more
on Instagram through text, but we don't see each other
that often because she's working and I'm working. Were you
and I see each other basically every day? And I
wondered if you both had the same feeling. Absolutely Okay, alright,
that means something, you know what I mean? Well, what

(36:15):
was my point? I don't know. I don't love a
couple of therapy, that's my questioning. No, no, not yet.
We've only been together four months, but she doesn't want
to scare her yet. When do you suppose you start going? Um, Personally,
I would say the sooner the better. I mean, I
think a six month mark is is a pretty good

(36:39):
point to go. Interesting, are you there? But well, we're
not six months yet close four, But I mean it
just depends like how fast. I mean, Mike and I
obviously went sooner than six months. We went around the
four months mark. But it's just it's just a kind
of depends, you know, how far along the relationship is

(37:00):
on that level. Well, let me ask you this question.
Because I go to a couples therapists, I just go
alone and I'm her first solo clients. You need to
go see someone else then, that's my recommendation. You should
have your own one and then you all should go
to one that's neutral parties. So like our couple of
therapists will not see a solo Well, my question is

(37:20):
because in when I will play ball. The coach's son
was always one of those treated the harshest. I'm afraid
to go into her with my girlfriend because she was
like cracked down on me all the time, trying to
prove a point. It's the best when that happens. But
um yeah, I just I would say keep that one
to yourself and then have the neutral because she will

(37:41):
probably go more her side, just to to show her that,
like she's not just team Bobby, you know. Well, I
wish anybody would be team Bobby these days. I'm all
news now, all right, what's your second quarantine song? Janna? Um? Okay,
So what we do in our family we have dance parties.
So one of the songs that we danced too in

(38:03):
the house is never Enough, Like the Greatest Showman soundtrack
is our jam right now and never Enough is up there?
Have you seen Greatest Showman? Yes, I've seen the movie.
I don't know the song though, Okay, here is the
Greatest Showman never Enough. Can you hear that? Janna? Oh?
I can hear it? And then my daughter does never

(38:26):
it's the hard park to dance to right here? Who
is this singing? You know? I promise you it's like
it's like a lyrical dance, and my daughter it's so cute,
and we just go, oh, you do a lyrical dances?
Does it ever bump up? It does? I promised you
with some up and like the middle to the end.
Who is this singing? Is this Sandia? I honestly, I
have no clue. Mike Lauren al Red, I don't know

(38:48):
who that is? All here we go. But I liked
this movie and I watched it with no hype. It
was just on it is early. I bought it, watched it,
and some people said it socks and people said they
liked it, but it ended up being I just remember
from Dance on the Stars. I danced to it as

(39:10):
my final you did see. I had no desire to
watch it at all, But then Mike kept playing. He
he always things like the Hugh Jackman songs on the album,
and I started to love the music. So I'm like,
all right, I gotta actually see the movie now. And
and I because I love the soundtrack so much, I
thought the movie was great. All right, what else you
got over there? Um? Cinderella Man, eminem Man. This was

(39:31):
the song that I would listen to before I had
any big appearance. It was Riley. Yes, I love this
song because it's like the underdog stories to hype you up.
You're listening, well, I would listen to this song all
the time. I remember before I went on read this
or I wanted to guess what's that show? And I
listened to this all morning long before I went in,
because it's like it's just so good. It hyped me

(39:52):
up before I just I'm like, okay, like let's just
do it. Stop the panic, stop the anxiety, and just
like go because the Cinderella Man red for instance, Well
there's a boxer right the movie Cinderella Band. But it's
like what Cinderella is. It's the underdog, the person you
don't expect, the the the working class person that is
now going you know what, I am the Cinderella story.
I'm not supposed to make it, but I'm about to

(40:14):
amen to that. Bobby, Was this song made for the movie? No?
Okay now, but yeah, this is one of my favorite
hype songs too, of all time. That's a good one.
That's a good one. That's a good one. Are you
a big imminent fan because you're Detroit one thousand percents?
Have you ever met him never, but I know where
his house was in so in high school we'd always
like to drive by his house and kind of stop
them to see you outside. He's never where he lived then,

(40:37):
or like eight Mile house. So I mean, like the
real pretty mansion had the guard out front, was a
huge danna. It was ginormous. I don't know if you
still live there or not. But of Michigan, I'll give
you the address. A mile pretty bad place, like heart,
like crime. I mean, I wouldn't want to go there. Yeah,

(41:00):
I mean, it's it's um And I was born in Detroit,
but I can't say I'm from Detroit, even though I
like to give me like some street cred, but I'm
from Importing minutes northeast. So it's yeah, it's it's not great.
But I mean I feel like any big city kind
of has struggles with with crime and stuff. I feel
Nashville is getting bad parts of sure, parts of anywhere

(41:21):
it can be. I went to Watts on American. I
don't like, they were like, would you go to what
she's been in gangs? And she lives with Watts And
I was like, I knew they weren't gonna send Ryan
he's worth too much. I wouldn't send Ryan either, I
wouldn't send the Superstar. And so we packed up a
van and drove into Watts whatever either here. The general
rule is in life, the same as it is in

(41:43):
bad neighborhoods, the same as it is in the woods.
You don't mess with things that you that you shouldn't
mess with. They're not gonna mess with you for the
most part, unless they're hungry or really really really bad timing.
For the most part, you don't mess with people. Doesn't matter,
they're not gonna mess with you. It's like a snake.
You know. People always get that people are right of snakes.
But here's the thing. If you if you do a

(42:04):
step on a snake or the snakes not in the
odd may, you're fine. What was your thing, Jenna, Well, no,
I just this is the weirdest thing. And I don't
know why, but I've always wanted to, Like when I
was in high school, I always wanted to do like
the say the Last Dance, you know where she goes
to the school. And I don't know why. I like,
I don't know why I wanted to with the Michelle Peiffer,
a movie which is what's that one? Mike? Oh my god,

(42:28):
that was Yanks. Paradise was the song. Yeah, Like I don't.
I'm like, I don't know why. I'm like, I just
like just for one week, I just want to like
be there. I'm not sure why. Yeah, you know, I
come from kind of like a small town version of that. Um. Yeah,
maybe for like a day. My high school is bad.

(42:48):
People got stabbed there. They gang kids from all the
other schools to our school because we would take them.
So we only had some of that. Did breath knuckles,
But you know, come on, we all had brass at
our school. You got brass, n you can go to
school without it. Yeah, they gave up. Okay, what's your

(43:08):
next song? Janna? Okay, I'm going back down. Come away
with me. Nora Jones, that's my chill in the bath
glass of wine. At the end of the day, I
saw her at what was the outdoor venue in Austin backyard. Backyard. Yeah,
we all set in white fluffy chairs and watched Norah
Jones and something so relaxing about her voice and that

(43:29):
song just piece. I just remember being really small, really
always good. But I went to meet her afterward. No, no,
small isn't like her stature or physical stature. Small because
she's up and she's so good and just doing her
little jazz thing. And she only had two songs that
we knew at the time, Come Away with Me and

(43:50):
the Big One. I don't know why you didn't call
that one and yeah and your final song, Janna Okay.
Because of everything going on, it's probably one of the
best written songs I've ever heard. Wash your hands okay,
Number one kids, You're crazy, number one kids song. I'm

(44:11):
telling you, it's so good. I played for the kids,
and there's thank you. We're pretty listen. That one came
back out of nowhere. Yes, did you know that we
took on baby Shark and we beat it? That's right,
I mean, guys, that's a huge accomplishment. Thank you, Thank
you Baby sharks scared of us? Amazing? So is the

(44:32):
car shark one? Right now? What's baby car room room
boom boom? They have a baby car that is that?
Like the same people that did that. I had no
idea baby car room broom, broom room that what it is? Yeah,
it's no baby car room room boom boom, baby car
room room boom boom, And it Grandma, Yeah, and then

(44:55):
it goes in monster chuck, monster chuck, boom boom room.
I guess you guts do all those huh all sounds
all things. Yeah, should we start coming up? Well, no,
we can't because we didn't write that melody. But hey, Janna,
I'm gonna play a little bit of good enough. Here.
Here is Janna song good Are You So Sweet? There
we go? This is her latest single. Tell me about

(45:33):
the song, Jenna um I was writing a song about
because I always feel like whenever relationships end, it's like
I always go to why wasn't I good enough? Why
did he leave? Why did this happen? And it's such
a reverse way of thinking. And when I was writing
the song, I'm like, why am I writing a song
about why I'm not good enough for someone else? Like
I just should be good enough for myself and then
maybe that's when I'll find the the great love I've

(45:56):
always kind of looked for. And so that was just
kind of one of those female and power meant, you know,
wanting to be like, hey, just be good enough for
you and you know everything else will will be okay.
But I almost feel like right now I should up
I have a song coming out in April. It's called Untouchable,
so I feel like maybe that should come out now
since we can't really touch anything. So oh, I get it.

(46:17):
There you go, Thank you folks. You'll be here all
the way. Um uh. And and are you still doing
the Moms and Babe box? Yeah, I am. It's man,
It's it's a hard business, so I'll play you up.
But I'm just you know, I'm just throwing darts and
stuff and just cranking away and trying to, you know,
um do what I can and support the family. And

(46:39):
the podcast has been really fun, you know, obviously I
do you know that. And then we've did some touring,
which is obviously I'm told right now, but it's you know,
just trying to grow as much as I can and
support the good old family on the Wine Down first
of all our podcasts called Wine Down, w h I
and The wind Down with Jana and Mike. And so
when you do the tour though, because I'm curious if
people want to come out to a show you do,

(47:01):
like a podcast, a talk, but then you do music too,
so it's more of like an evening with so this
when you come like we have a right now are
u l A dates are rescheduled to May. Um hopefully
it's still Sands, but UM, it's yeah, it's more it's
like an evening with Mike and I. We cold, you know,
we go out there and we talk. We UM. We
have a few things that we touch on, UM, some

(47:23):
really good communicating tools that we've learned in therapy. But
then it's also funny too, so it's not just we
We kind of share two things that we're really imperative
that we learned in therapy, So we share those UM
and then we you know, we say a few jokes
and we laugh, and then we answer questions. So we
do that for about like sixty to ninety minutes, and

(47:43):
then I'll sing for about thirty minutes, and after that,
well we'll sign and and need everybody. So it's it's
a really really fun time, and it's nice to hear
people's stories because sometimes you know, it's hard to put
your life out there and receive criticism. But then you
also and I'm like, man, I sometimes regret doing that,
but at the same time, it's nice to meet people

(48:04):
out there that it's actually helping. We'll go check out
the tour when it's back up, and it will be
back up. We will together beat Corona and we will
we will get back on the road, all of us
get back to work. He crossed. I'm kind of wanting
to do some kind of virtual reality game hang where
we can all just hang out, you know, do something
you can follow Janet when she announced our virtual reality

(48:27):
tour at Cramer. Girl, thanks for spending some time with Shanna.
You know we love having you on. No, you're the best.
Thanks for having me. Love you both all right, Bye, Janna, Janna. Okay,
By guys,
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