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March 17, 2024 90 mins

We're back! And we've got a super sized episode to make up for our absence! Learn about Ariel's Wacky Canadian Adventure! And Jonathan's attempt to remember the title of the film "Immaculate!" (Spoiler: He doesn't remember it)

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Hey, everybody, Welcome to the Large Nerds on Collatter podcast.
The podcast it's all about the kiky things happening in
the world around us and how very excited we are
about them. I'm Ariel Caston, and with me, as always
is the shaking his head at me because I was
goofing off when I should have been starting Jonathan Strickland.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
I was turned into a chicken nugget.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
Oh that wait, No, that's how do we tell you
apart from other chicken nuggets?

Speaker 2 (00:35):
So we don't eat you. Oh it's okay, because I
got better. Oh that's good.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
Yeah. We originally had in our lineup a movie called
Chicken Nugget, where a woman turns into a chicken nugget,
but then we both decided that the only thing we
could say about this movie is that it sure does
look weird.

Speaker 1 (00:55):
Maybe in a good way, but yeah, yeah, it just.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
Like yeah, yeah, not necessarily like weird, as oh that
looks weird, but more of a that looks weird. So
if you are curious about a film about in which
a woman has turned into a chicken nugget, there's a
trailer on YouTube. You can look for it. But we're
not going to really talk about that today. Instead, we're
going to talk about a bunch of other stuff, including

(01:19):
things that we've recently watched and or read or listened
to or whatever.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
Yeah, and because it's been almost a month, we're so sorry.
Just between travel and travel and family, we had to
take a short hiatus. But it's been like three weeks,
and so that's been a lot of stuff for me.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
I'm sure it was a lot of stuff for me,
but it didn't keep track of it while it was happening,
so I only remember one thing. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:50):
Well, and like you know, I work from home, so
some of it was kind of half in the background
or like when I'm walking on my treadmill. All watched things,
so it was it was always almost always, uh like
pulling double duty with something else. But yeah, for me, well,
first of off, First off, you know, I traveled to

(02:11):
Halifax to watch Rosencrantz and Gildenstern Are Dead with Billy
Boyd and Dominic Monagahan, and it can't replace my love
for the movie with Gary Oldman and Tim roth In
Richard Dreyfus, because that is just such a phenomenal piece
of work. But I think that it was maybe equal
to at least maybe a little better, because when you're

(02:32):
watching the play, they they have to transition more logically
between scenes for it to make sense.

Speaker 2 (02:42):
They can't make that sort of dreamy scene change where like,
which actually adds to kind of that unrealistic, uh somewhat
like unreliable approach that the story has. But you have,
you know, you have to deal with actual practicals, uts
and things in a stage, which in the case of

(03:03):
a live performance.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
Yeah, the costumes were amazing, the set was amazing. I
would have posted a whole bunch of picks, but they requested,
you know, no cameras, so I have one picture of
the set. But I was kind of waiting for the
end of the Toronto run because they're in Toronto right now.
If you're in Toronto, I know we have a couple
of Canada listeners. If you're in Toronto and there are
still tickets, I highly recommend it.

Speaker 2 (03:23):
Yeah, as I understand, you saw the very last performance
in Halifax, right I you weren't scheduled to see the
very last one. We were scheduled to see the second
to last one.

Speaker 1 (03:33):
Yes, yes, thank you, Jonathan, because I need to give
you mad props because we were there closing weekend. We're
supposed to see it Saturday. Closing night was Sunday, and
then we're supposed to fly back Sunday. But Saturday apparently
was a weird global warming weather pattern in Halifax where
it rained a whole bunch and then temperatures dropped below freezing.

(03:58):
I was actually talking with a couple of like the
people at the restaurants and like people that we interacted
with in town. I was like, yeah, this is actually
kind of like Georgia weather, and they're like, so it's
your fault, huh. But it wasn't even so much that
we're worried about like roads per se, although that was
definitely a concern. It's that when the metro system closes

(04:20):
down in Halifax, which it did because they didn't know
what to expect, the theater also closed down. So at
that point where like my husband, who this is the
second time he's bought me tickets to see a play
out of town that we've had issues with, was like,
I'm never doing it again, and I'm like, it always
works out, and even if not, I really enjoyed Halifax.
It's only you know, it's a small town, so like

(04:41):
a day or two will do you there and then
you can explore the greater nova Scotia. But it was delightful.
It had some really good food. We went to see
a lighthouse in this note was brilliant and hoow, I'm
getting sidetracked. So we're trying to make the best of
our now snow day and find places that are open
because everything's closing down because of the weather in Halifax.

(05:02):
And I had briefly thought, well, maybe we could see
the Sunday show, but I looked online and it was
sold out, and so I was sitting, you know, I
told the friends that knew that we were going there,
like Jonathan and a couple of my other friends, that
what had happened. And Jonathan super amazingly and Beco were like,
maybe our tickets are for closing night. Let let us

(05:22):
see and if they are, we'll give them to you,
which is incredibly wonderful, and I still need to pay
you back for them. But they were, and so we
were able to get everything else changed so that we
could stay till Sunday and see them, because otherwise it
was a very expensive trip to Halifax for some good
seafood chowder.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
Yeah. Yeah, we Becca and I had Becca had bought
those tickets for me as a president last year, and
what we did not know last year was that between
last year and the final performance of Rosacatza Gillenstern are
dead in Halifax, Nova Scotia, I would nearly die, and

(06:03):
that as a result, I was going to be going
through a whole bunch of different medical visits and things,
and a lot of stuff would be thrown up in
the air and be uncertain, and that included things like
plan travel. So we had decided that out of an
overabundance of safety, we would have to skip this opportunity,

(06:26):
which really broke my heart. But on the flip side,
I'm so happy that it meant that those tickets got
to go to you, Ariel, so that you got the
chance to actually see it. Because, as you and I
both know that trip, it takes a lot of work
to get to Nova Scotia from Atlanta, Georgia. Yeah, and
it's not inexpensive, no, No.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
It took more work because we took the cheaper flights.
So you can take either very expensive flights to Nova
Scotia and get either not a layover or small layover,
or you can take still expensive but not backbreakingly expensive flights,
which means that you know, on the way there, I
had like a six hour layover, and on the way back,

(07:12):
I had an eleven hour layover and I had to
leave for the airport at two am Eastern time.

Speaker 2 (07:18):
Yeah get home.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
Yeah, totally worth it. So thank you, thank you, thank you. Jonathan,
Billy Boyd and Dominic montag Hand were great. The rest
of the cast was delightful. I really liked all the
artistic choices. There was a really good like camaraderie, like
both that I can't stand you and also you're my
best friend thing going on that is integral to rosen

(07:40):
Krantz and Guildenstern. It made me cry a little bit
at the end, even though I've seen it and I've
read it, and I've even done bits from it, and
I've been Rosenkrantz and Hamlet. But then I got to
meet like the director briefly afterwards because he was in
the lobby and tell me, you know, I liked his work.
And then I got to Dominic Montaingaghan and Billy Boyd
were both at the stage door, so I got to

(08:02):
briefly meet them and get a picture with Billy Boyd,
who I just absolutely love his work. I think he's
incredibly talented, and he was very kind and generous in
taking pictures and giving autographs. I didn't get an autograph
because he wasn't hurry, but I did get a picture. AH,
absolutely delightful. I loved it. Thank you so much.

Speaker 2 (08:21):
You're welcome. But that's not the only thing you saw.
In the weeks that we were offline.

Speaker 1 (08:28):
I watched all of the second season of Star Trek's
Strange New World. I have thoughts about the musical episode. Mainly,
I liked the music, but it felt and I like
the music, and I like the fact that they listened
to each actor and wrote music specifically for their voices
to showcase them in the best light possible, but it
meant that the music in the episode felt disjointed to me.

(08:49):
But I still enjoined it. Good season. It was better
than the first season.

Speaker 2 (08:53):
I think.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
I watched the first episode and a half of Monarch,
which is the Godzilla show on Apple TV, because it
was on the plane. But I think that's the one
that's gonna gonna get me to get Apple TV next
month when I'm done with my Paramount month because it
gave me like real lost vibes, and I enjoyed Lost

(09:16):
a Light a lot. I watched Life in Bath season two,
which is a semi autobiographical story about Amy Schumer's life. Brilliant,
just brilliant work. It depicts life with people on the
ASD spectrum incredibly well. It's funny, it's thoughtful, it's heartening,
it's wonderful. I highly recommend it, even if you're not

(09:36):
a big Gamy Shumer fan. I watched Dune two also
thought that was better than Done one. They did miss
out on the opportunity to call it Dune Dune, so
that the third one could be Dune don dudeen, But
that's okay.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
It does seem like, does seem like a missed opportunity, You're.

Speaker 1 (09:53):
Right, yeah. And then I watched like the first episode
or two of Avatar the Last Airbender on Netflix.

Speaker 2 (10:02):
Cool for me, Well, first of all, why did you
think of Why did you think of Avatar? Because I've
read mixed reviews, but I haven't started it.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
So it's kind of I have kind of h I
don't want to take up too much time because I've
already taken him so much time in the introver episode.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
But it's okay because you've watched way more stuff than
I did, and most of the time I provide about
twice as much vocal content as you do, So this
is good. You're catching up. Okay.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
So I enjoy it so far. I understand that they
made some changes to like the source material, and it
might have made the story or characters weaker in some points,
according to various friends I have that watched it because
I enjoyed the cartoon a lot, but because I haven't
seen it in a while, I was able to kind
of separate myself from it and kind of watch it

(10:57):
as a standalone thing.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
M hm.

Speaker 1 (11:00):
And so I'm enjoying it so far. Of course I'm
not very far in, but I think it's good. But honestly,
the thing I was going to say is it's similar
to my reaction to the Dark Tower movie, which is
I haven't read the Dark Tower books, so it was
a fair to middling movie. Sure, yeah, but I think
that's still generous because it was the movie was dark

(11:21):
toar was a little bit of a slog I'm not
finding that as much with Avatar. I think the actors
are very charming.

Speaker 2 (11:28):
Okay, Well, for me, the only thing that I can
remember watching that really falls into our purview is The
Completely made Up Adventures of Dick Turpin on Apple plus,
Apple TV plus someone and Noel Fielding. And Dick Turpin
was probably a real person. He was a highwayman. But

(11:51):
I say probably because most of the stories about Dick
Turpin date more than a century after his record to death.
So it's kind of like Robin Hood in that it's
more of a figure of legend than any sort of
historical actual character like that. Very well may have been

(12:11):
a Dick Turpin, but certainly he didn't do the things
that are attributed to him, which is why the series
is called The Completely made Up Adventures of Dick Turpin.
It's very silly. Silly is the best word I would
use for it. There have been people I've seen who
have compared it to Our Flag Means Death because it
has a lot of like anachronistic moments in it, you know,

(12:34):
But I don't really. I don't otherwise see a good
analog there, because our Flag means Death while having silly
moments in it, a lot of the humor gets to
be a lot more dry in that series, and Dick
Turpin is just playing out silly, but I enjoy it.

(12:56):
And a lot of folks who are in a lot
different English comedy show up, so like Rich Fuller who
is in The Mighty booshe shows up, Greg Davies and
task Master like he shows up. There are a few
that have appeared. And Mark Heap is playing Dick Turpin's dad.

(13:17):
I love Mark Heap. I think of him from space.
So I'm really enjoying it for what it is, which
is lighthearted, silly comedy that has a highwayman a would
be highwayman as the protagonist.

Speaker 1 (13:37):
Interesting and that's interesting to know because I feel like
in Our Flag Means Death and I haven't watched Dick
Turpin yet, but it is very high on my list.
I feel like in Our Flag Means Death that I
really like when they're more serious and dry, but when
they try to be funny, it almost feels too hard
and too basic or basic.

Speaker 2 (13:59):
I didn't I didn't really click with Our Flag Means
Death until about episode four. The first two episodes in
particular just didn't really work for me, and I was
kind of bummed because I had been looking forward to
the series. The introduction of black Beard definitely helped considerably,

(14:20):
and then by episode four, when black Beard's like a
character in the show, I thought, now the show is
clicking for me. And it wasn't just the character of
black Beard, it was everything seemed to be working better.
Like it wasn't just because Taika Waititi was there being silly,
but the fact that everything in the show seemed to
work a little better.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
Yeah, I felt like, I agree. I feel like the
first two episodes, especially a little bit still here and there,
but I feel like, especially the first two episodes of
season one, the comedy felt like a bunch of just
barely oksn nel skits stitched together with a thin storyline
to me, which is, yeah, probably going to upset some

(15:03):
of our friends. But I did end up really enjoying
the series. I've watched a couple of episodes of season two,
but I haven't finished it yet.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
I haven't even finished season one because I fell off
of it and it's not again like I know, like
we do. Ariel and I have friends who are deeply
invested in our Flag Means Death, a lot of them
in the LGBTQ community, because there's a lot of representation
in that show, and I totally get it, and that's
awesome and I love it them for it. But yeah,

(15:32):
I'm the same way where I kind of like I
was enjoying it and it did click with me, but
other stuff just came up and I never felt the
strong enough pull to go back to it. I'm sure
I will, but it's kind of joined a list of
increasingly long amounts of content that I need to get
to that I just haven't yet.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
Yeah. Oh, I it's sad because you know, conceptually I
can really like a thing, and then in actuality I don't.
But some people like conceptually you can carry them through
more too, and everybody has different things that they enjoy.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
So sure, so I yeah that I'm sorry. Go ahead.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
I didn't watch one more thing that I forgot to mention.

Speaker 2 (16:14):
Oh god, Ariel, come on.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
No, I was gonna watch it on the plane during
my travels, and I'm really glad I didn't, because that
is not a movie you want to watch with anyone
around if you're me, which is poor Things.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
Oh yeah, no, I still haven't seen Pore Things, but
I've heard enough to know that that is definitely for you.
Ariel A movie that is best watched not on the
back of someone else's seat with people sitting on either
side of you.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
Yeah. Yeah, it it gives you a lot to think about.
It is very interesting. I love like the costume choices
and the art style and all that. You know. Could
I say it left me feeling good? No, but you know,
I understand what they were trying to get out, and
I think it was beautifully executed, but a good at

(17:11):
least third of the movie is like very explicit scenes
in a sexy fashion, and that it got to be
a lot for me. Yeah, it got because there were
so many of them back to back that I'm like,
this is just another.

Speaker 2 (17:28):
Way to show h and some of them really are
back to back.

Speaker 1 (17:33):
This is just another way to show nudity essentially in
a scene. And I was like, I'm you know, but
if you're not as puritanical as I am, you might
like it. Yeah, I'd like I said, I thought it
was very well done, but it was. It was, it was,

(17:55):
but subject matter wise, it was hard to watch too.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
Sure, Yeah, I mean it's it's It's one of those
that was high on my list still is high on
my list to watch. And I'm still hoping to catch
that sooner rather than later. I think it's streaming on
Hulu at the moment, which of course is the one
service I don't yet have. By the way side, rant

(18:17):
if I'm allowed, just really quickly, so.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
It's our podcast. Do whatever you want.

Speaker 2 (18:22):
Yeah. I was excited to be able to finally bundle
Hulu with Disney Plus because I was already a Disney
Plus subscriber and I looked into it, and the problem
is I had opted to save money by paying for
Disney Plus on an annual basis rather than a monthly basis.

(18:44):
In order to subscribe to a bundle with Hulu, you
have to be on a monthly basis, So then I
switched from annual to monthly. But because I've already paid
for a year, that monthly fee doesn't start till November.
I can't bundle Disney Plus with Hulu until November, which

(19:05):
means I don't have an incentive to get Hulu now
because it'll be cheaper to bundle it in November.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
So I would say, call them and see what they
could do, because I bet they would want you to
be able to They want you to pay more to
bundle Hulu but you know, I haven't. I don't you know,
that's ten years ago me saying call them, they'll work
with you, because that's the experience I've had. I don't
know if there is even a number to call right now.

Speaker 2 (19:34):
Well, and I don't know how they would do it
because I am paid through for Disney Plus until November.
So would they just charge me a smaller amount per
month for Hulu by itself and then? But I don't
know it's possible.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
And Hulu is like the one subscription that you really
can't share with anybody. They're super particular about.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
You and I don't share anyway. Because I work in media,
I understand stand that whole model, Like I understand both
sides of it. Don't get me wrong. I understand like
folks who you know, they're like, there's so many streaming
services out there, and they pile up like those fees.
Get they I mean, that's why I'm not a subscriber

(20:16):
to Hulu now. It's because I'm already subscribed to so
many other things. But so I totally get that from
an economic perspective, But I also get it from the
company's side, and I understand, and we both have talked
about how challenging it is for streaming services to be
profitable and still make content that folks want to see.

(20:39):
It's hard and we haven't really figured it out yet.
So I totally get both sides. And maybe I'll break
down and subscribe to Hulu on a month by month
basis and then just bundle it in November so I
can finally watch all this stuff that's only available on Hulu.
But I've held out so far.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
Now I get it, And I'm not saying that, you know,
people should share their Internet stuff because also in the industry,
and yeah, like that's why shows get cut or streaming
networks go under it, or they raise their prices. It's
because people are sharing instead of subscribing. Yeah. I recently

(21:18):
bought a few months worth of subscription for a family
member as a gift instead of sharing my log in.

Speaker 2 (21:24):
So well, like, now that we've covered stuff what we
have seen, and you know we've been talking for more
than twenty minutes, how about we get to some thirty
seconds or less.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
Cool. I would say I'll bring them down to fifteen
seconds or less, but I know that will mess up
your editing.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
Yeah, I've already and I've already well one that music
clip will just keep on playing the whole way through
and to to I script mine out, so I'd have
to read them twice as fast.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
You're so much better, You're so much better than I. Okay,
So this first story, it's so also full disclosure. We're
covering a lot of stuff that, like, we were going
to talk about last week and weren't able to record,
so we weren't going to be back last week. So
we've kept some of that in because it's fun. And
the first of which is there was a giant costume
sale in London or auction in London recently, and one

(22:19):
of the things that sold was the shirt that Colin
Firth wore when he was dripping wet in Pride and Prejudice.
It sold for twenty tho pounds, which was way more
than they thought they were going to get for it.
I think they thought it was going to get like
ten thousand macs. I had a friend who, when I
told them about this, said, I'm pretty sure it's dry

(22:42):
by now, the shirt, I hope, so let's say keep
it in constant state of like missing it. But I
don't think it would hold up if that were the case.
To me, the really like the most cool thing they
auctioned off was Drew Barrymore's costume as Danielle in Ever After,
which also went for more than they thought they were

(23:03):
going to get for it. That's what That's what I
would have bought.

Speaker 2 (23:06):
Wow, all I can say is a twenty thousand pound
shirt sounds very heavy. Okay. The next Superman film is
in production, with at least some filming happening in our
own city of Atlanta. But meanwhile, James Gunn revealed that
the film title has lost a bit of weight. Instead
of being called Superman Legacy, it's just going to be

(23:26):
called Superman. It's still scheduled for release on July eleventh,
twenty twenty five. And I was surprised to learn that
a character originally created for the nineteen seventy eight Superman
film and this test Macker, is actually going to be
in this one, because that's not a character from the
comic books, that's a character from Superman the movie.

Speaker 1 (23:46):
That is interesting. They've got a few interesting characters they're
bringing into this movie. It'll be I'm intrigued to see
how it'll turn out.

Speaker 2 (23:54):
Yeah, a whole bunch of villains in it, which should
be and heroes villains and heroes in it, so it's
not to us Superman. But anyway, we'll talk way more
about that as we get closer.

Speaker 1 (24:04):
Yeah, speaking of superheroes, Disney CEO currently Bob Eiger is
pushing back against the idea that people have superhero fatigue,
which I think is something that even Kevin Fai said
is that people were having it, saying that it's not
that people have superhero fatigue, it's that they have bad

(24:26):
movie fatigue. I kind of agree with that, but also, like,
when you're in a market so super saturated with superhero movies,
you really have to be exceptional to get someone excited
about it, because it's just the content they've been trenched
in for years. And I like superhero movies still, but
you know, he is saying that with making less movies

(24:48):
that they'll be able to focus on making each one better,
and that has kind of been a hope and maybe
we'll have time to actually look forward to superhero movies again.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
Oh gosh, I sure hope. So Okay. Paramount Pictures gave
us some release dates a couple of weeks back that
we're really excited about so. For example, a new Naked
Gun film is coming out on July twenty eighth to
twenty twenty five. Liam Neeson will take on the role
that Leslie Nielsen made famous. We'll sort of keeping it
in the l in territory. Paramount also announced that the

(25:19):
next teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles animated film has a premiere
date of October eighth, twenty twenty six, and I'm super
excited about that. I really enjoyed the first one.

Speaker 1 (25:29):
Yes, yeah, If you enjoyed the first one of The Sandman,
then hopefully you'll enjoy season two, which is not called
season two, but we finally got some details about it.
Kirby Hawi Baptiste, who played Death in season one and
was my favorite heart and maybe my favorite episode of

(25:50):
the entire first series, we'll be back a whole lot
more in season two, giving me some actual excitement about
the second season. It didn't hit me as it was
one of those other things that conceptually I was super excited,
but didn't hit me quite as well as I wanted.
But I'm gonna give it a second chance now.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
Cool. Okay, y'all might remember that Scream seven has been
through a lot already. The original director Christopher Landen left,
Actress Melissa Barrera was fired, Actress jennat Ortega pulled out
of the movie. Well, things are back on a different
track now. The director of the original screen film, Kevin Williamson,

(26:30):
will be coming back to the direct and star nev
Campbell is back on board. You might remember she skipped
Scream six over pay disputes, So the question is, do
you like scary movies? Noay, you you can skip Scream seven. Then, okay, I.

Speaker 1 (26:50):
Watched the first I've seen the first two. Now, speaking
of things coming back, the Warner Brothers game Multiverse, which
was like the DC comic game of Throne. The WB
version of Smash Brothers is back. Apparently it was in beta.
It went offline for a year, and they took a
whole bunch of feedback into account and are making it better,

(27:13):
included as well as PvP. They're going to do a
PvE option online. It's free to play. The trailer for
it is actually really cute now and the game looks better,
so I'm kind of on board. Watching Black Adam punch
a gremlin in the face was kind of fun.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
Yeah, it's sort of like the end of Space Jam two,
where all those studio owned characters all show up at
the very end, whether it made sense or not, like,
why have the characters from Clockwork Orange feature in a
film that's for kids? That's just to us anyway, The

(27:51):
next film featuring Robert Pattinson's version of the Dark Detective
will take a little longer to get to screens. The
Batman two was originally inked to a mirror in October
twenty twenty five, but now it's looking like October twenty
twenty six. The reason for the delay mostly has to
do with the writers' strike last year, and it means
that Superman and Batman won't have to share the same

(28:13):
year as their respective films come out.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
Uh, that's good, I think the next.

Speaker 2 (28:21):
Well, yeah it's good. Did you not see Batman versus
Superman when they have to like share screen time? It's bad,
not just like not just like a fight. It's a
bad movie.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
I think it's My response was really just I'm not
that excited about it a Batman movie.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
Yeah, I remember you didn't like the first one.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
Yeah, No, there were moments, there were things I liked
about it, but as an overall piece of art, it
just didn't impress me as much as I hoped it would.

Speaker 2 (28:48):
I totally understand.

Speaker 1 (28:50):
So something that I hope will end up being a
lot of fun because it sounds pretty cool is that
the podcast Hello from the Magic Hello from the Magic
Tavern is getting turned into an animated series by play
Hooky Productions and Starboard Industries. So if you don't know
who those are. Starburnt Industries is a company Behindrigin Marty

(29:11):
and play Hooky Productions is a production company owned by
Mark Berger and Sam Rockwell. Yes, Sam Rockwell, who was
the villain in the first Charlie Angels movie, who is
in Argyle recently, who I saw Broadway. It just looks
like it's gonna be a lot of fun, and they've
got a lot of fun like guest stars lined up
for it.

Speaker 2 (29:30):
So yeah, that's cool. I enjoy that podcast and I
look forward to people reacting when you Store inevitably gives
his full name, which takes takes about two minutes to say,
it'll just be.

Speaker 1 (29:47):
One episode that the whole episode will.

Speaker 2 (29:51):
I actually have a T shirt that has his full
name on it, and it's surprising to me that they
were able to fit it on just one side. All right, Well,
it's pretty for us to talk about a project that
gets uncanceled, but that seems to be the case with
Patty jenkins Star Wars project. So back in twenty twenty,
Patty Jenkins was slated to direct a Star Wars movie
about the Rogue squadron of rebel pilots. But then in

(30:14):
the wake of the Rise of Skywalker movie, that project
was kind of shelved. It fizzled out, and now it
looks like it might be fizzled back in, at least potentially,
because Jenkins revealed she ows quote a draft of Star
Wars and we will see what happens there end quote.
So it doesn't sound like it's a sure thing, but
it does sound like maybe something that was considered to

(30:36):
be dead was only mostly dead.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
Oh I love it speaking of old movies, which hurts
me to say that it's an old movie. Shrek two
is coming back to theaters because it's hitting its twenty
year anniversary. Oh my goodness. So it'll be returning to
theaters on April twelve. If you like the Shrek movies,

(31:02):
go for some nostalgia. If you're not familiar, the jokes
probably won't land because they're time sensitive.

Speaker 2 (31:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (31:10):
Large.

Speaker 2 (31:10):
Now, that was one of the big differences between the
DreamWorks approach and Pixar's approach, right, was that DreamWorks jokes
were a lot more topical, and so you might watch
and you're like, oh, these are all references to stuff
that happened in the nineties, Like I don't yeah, not
really relevant anymore. Okay, Well, Finally, Netflix's live action adaptation
of Avatar the Last Airbender, which we mentioned earlier, is

(31:32):
going to get two more seasons of episodes before it
calls and quits. I have not yet watched the series.
I have, as I said earlier, have seen some mixed reviews,
but none of them were as critical as the reviews
about the m Night shaml On version of the story.
I'm glad the Avatar is going to get a chance
to tell a full story. It's not going to suffer
the same faith as Cowboy Bebop.

Speaker 1 (31:54):
Yeah. Yeah, I'm glad it got enough viewership to cross
that hurdle. So that's it for thirty seconds or less.

Speaker 2 (32:03):
Who Yeah, Now, we've got like a ton of actual stories,
like so many trailers, and we even cut quite a few.

Speaker 1 (32:13):
They're just trailers, so we might get through them kind
of quickly.

Speaker 2 (32:16):
Yeah, like the first one here here. The first one
is the trailer for the Wild Robot, which is from
dream Works, and I'll save you time. It's it's uh,
it's it's Wally meets Iron Giant.

Speaker 1 (32:29):
I never saw Iron Giant.

Speaker 2 (32:30):
Oh my gosh, it's so good, Ariel, It's.

Speaker 1 (32:33):
So good, so sad.

Speaker 2 (32:34):
It's sweet. It's like it's sad in the same way
that ET is sad.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
E T is sad.

Speaker 2 (32:42):
Iron Giant sad like ET is sad. It really is
like Iron Giant is like ET. But if e T
were a two hundred foot tall Mega Death Robot, So.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
I mean, you know, just you just give them the
right outfit. Uh. This trailer, I thought, well, it gave
me like kind of like goosebumps watching it because it's
so beautiful and it's so like emotional kind of from
the get go. And I want to watch it because
I want to support you said, it's kind of like

(33:15):
like Iron Giant and all that. I want to support
semi original movie ideas, right, beautiful art, But it looks
like there's going to be some animal endangerment in it
even though it's animated. That's going to give me, like
it gave me stress in the trailer, so I want
to watch it and support it.

Speaker 2 (33:35):
Well, if it makes you feel any better. None of
those animals ever existed, so.

Speaker 1 (33:40):
I mean, no, no, I have a horrible it's like that.

Speaker 2 (33:44):
It's like that imaginary character from inside Out. I felt
nothing when he died because he never existed.

Speaker 1 (33:50):
You felt nothing when Bing Bong died.

Speaker 2 (33:52):
No, I didn't care at all. It didn't bother me,
even like to the point where I was like, why
are people sniffling? This is literally a character who was
only imaginary. I mean even in the context of the movie,
like they're all imaginary because we're watching an animated film.
These are all imaginary characters, but this one's extra imaginary.

Speaker 1 (34:14):
Ryan Reynolds would disagree with you with the movie.

Speaker 2 (34:17):
If yeah, well he can take it up with me,
except he's too busy running a football club in Wrexham, Wales.

Speaker 1 (34:25):
Whatever the whatever House of Imaginary Friend, Dexter's House of
Imaginary Friends or whatever that's not I don't think that's
the actual name from Nickelodeon that you were too old
to watch. No, it doesn't it doesn't help. They're ill
enough to me I'm invested in their little cartoon lives.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (34:45):
Well, also, Bing Bong's death was played for comedy a
little bit.

Speaker 2 (34:50):
I have to watch it again to be to be
able to chime in on that. But like this trailer
I thought was I thought it was a good trailer.
I don't know that i'll go see because I feel
like I've already seen the movie just from the trailer.
Like again, it's wearing its influences on its sleeve, in
my opinion, and so I kind of can see where
everything is going. Doesn't mean that it won't be told

(35:12):
beautifully and it won't be a beautiful version of that story,
but it's just like you know, sometimes you come across
a book where you already kind of know where everything's
gonna go before you even open it up. So you're like,
do I even take the time to read this book
because I kind of already know. But that's not to
say that this was a bad job with the trailer

(35:35):
or a bad job with the animation. I think the
animation looks great. So maybe it'll turn out that I'm
just completely off base and I'll end up seeing it
and it'll become one of my favorite animated films of
all time.

Speaker 1 (35:46):
I don't know, maybe maybe probably better than The Good
Job The Good Dinosaur.

Speaker 2 (35:51):
Well, okay, sure, yeah, I saw that film. That's one
of the movies I saw on a plane and I'm
barely remember it. That's how unmemorable The Good Dinosaur was interesting.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
Well, you know, sometimes you know when you pick up
a book where it's going to go, and sometimes you
have to read through, like the first chapter.

Speaker 2 (36:13):
Aha, cute segue, Thank you for the Strangers chapter one.
So I'm going to make a wild guess here, Ariel,
that you never saw the Strangers.

Speaker 1 (36:25):
I thought this was the first one.

Speaker 2 (36:27):
No, this is a prequel, is chapter one. So okay,
let me give you a little history lesson. Several years ago,
there was a home invasion horror movie called Funny Games
that was gosh, I can't remember what country of origin

(36:48):
that was for the original, but it was remade in America,
so there was an English language version that was made
as well. Same script though Funny Games, where in this
home invasion movie, these essentially young psychopaths terrorize a couple
and they're just doing it for laughs. Funny Games was

(37:08):
a weird film because they would break the bad guys
the Psychopaths would break the fourth wall and would address
the audience directly, because they would say that the audience
is complicit because they came to see this film, that
they are somewhat responsible for the terrible things that are
happening to the victims. It's a really interesting kind of

(37:31):
idea about the relationship between an audience and art. Then
you get to The Strangers. The Strangers is far more straightforward,
but it's another story about a couple that then gets
terrorized and tortured by young home invaders, who explained the
only reason they're doing it is because they were there, Like,

(37:54):
the couple was there, and that's like, that's the only reason.
There's no other deeper meaning to it other than just
it was opportunity and they decided to torture them. So The
Strangers Chapter one is supposed to be somewhat of an
origin story, but really, to me, based upon this trailer,

(38:14):
while it's supposed to be an origin story, mostly to me,
it looks like a reboot or a remake of The Strangers.
I'm like, this is the same movie.

Speaker 1 (38:24):
Yeah. Yeah. When you were describing the movie, I'm like,
are you just describing the trailer I just watched because.

Speaker 2 (38:31):
It's why I put it on here, because, like I said,
it was interesting that these home invasion horror movies like
The Funny Games came out a year before The Strangers did,
which is not long enough for you to necessarily say
The Strangers was copying Funny Games, right, because when you
think about film production schedules, likely The Strangers was already

(38:54):
in production by the time Funny Games came out. But
it just felt like these two very similar ideas. Now
it looks like we're doing that same idea again, and
it doesn't seem different enough to me based upon this
trailer to make it feel like it really is a prequel.
It just feels like it kind of feels like how

(39:19):
The Grudge has been retold multiple times. There are like
so many different versions of that film and they're all
the same movie.

Speaker 1 (39:29):
Yeah, yeah, I say, yeah, I haven't watched The Grudge.

Speaker 2 (39:33):
Oh it's so good, but no, it's not for you.

Speaker 1 (39:36):
It's not for me. By the way, Google says that
the first Funny Games was Austrian.

Speaker 2 (39:42):
Okay, Austrian. Yeah, I knew it was European, but I
was like, it's not French, it's not a French horror movie.
I could not remember. It was Austrian.

Speaker 1 (39:49):
Yeah. Our next trailer is for uh, I think it's
a Netflix movie. It's it's for a streaming movie called
I Saw the Glow that I Saw the TV Glow,
which which is not about the all female wrestling show.

Speaker 2 (40:04):
No, it's not that glow. It's not the gorgeous Ladies
of Wrestling.

Speaker 1 (40:08):
Yeah, it's kind of about these kids who watched like
in Are You Afraid of the Dark goose Bumps esque
kind of series as kids, where there was like a
Monster of the Week that the main characters had to defeat,
and now that they're adults, they feel, I guess, strangely
drawn to it and then maybe get sucked inside the

(40:28):
TV because it's actually real and maybe there are other
people that's it looked interesting. But I had a slightly
hard time following the trailer.

Speaker 2 (40:38):
Yeah. No, I think the trailer has purposefully made a
little a little hard to parse, so that it's hard
to tell like is this going to actually have elements
of the supernatural the paranormal or are the moments that

(41:03):
we're seeing really just within the imagination of characters And
it's kind of like a reflection of what their imaginations are.
It's hard to say, and I honestly don't know if
it's if it's true or not, like if or which one,
which version of that, or if it's something totally different

(41:23):
from what we're guessing. I thought it was interesting. It
actually made me think of a creepy pasta, which I
can't remember the name of anymore. I'll you probably never
dove into creepy pasta, did you, Ariel. It's like like
fan written horror stories on the Internet.

Speaker 1 (41:43):
I don't think so, I'm doing.

Speaker 2 (41:45):
Like like slender slender Man. Slender Man came out of
creepy pasta, that kind of stuff.

Speaker 1 (41:50):
Oh, I didn't. I didn't know that. I've seen like
some slender Man clubs that so probably I've seen some
creepy pasta, but I haven't attributed to.

Speaker 2 (41:57):
Sure, absolutely there's one, and I don't remember the name
of it. Maybe it's like I can't remember the name
of the Maybe it was Candle Cove. I think it
was Candle Cove, where there was a creepypasta about some
mysterious children's show that both existed and didn't exist, like
kids saw.

Speaker 1 (42:17):
Really weird and bizarre. Yes, and it's like a smiling
son in a puppet probably.

Speaker 2 (42:25):
H It has been a very long time since I've
gone through that. But this is what kind of made
me think of it. When I was watching this trailer
was I was like, oh, is this going to be
like an adaptation of that concept? But it seems like
this is while pulling from similar ideas, It's not that gotcha.

Speaker 1 (42:48):
Uh. I don't know if I've seen Creep Candle Cove, Uh,
it looks it looks interesting to me. The thing that
I found really interesting about it is that the trailer
played almost like a Billboard magazine. In fact, they said
this is has like an instantly like iconic soundtrack.

Speaker 2 (43:10):
To it, Yeah, which feels very Garden State to me.

Speaker 1 (43:15):
Yeah, yeah, it was. It was a weird call out
for a streaming movie.

Speaker 2 (43:20):
I think, Yeah, it's not the kind of thing that
I would immediately start to. I wouldn't look to a
movie like this to have like an iconic soundtrack. It's
not like the movies I think of that have that
sort of vibe to them typically are movies where the
music plays a big part in the film itself. So
Garden State's one example that's very like hipster kind of

(43:44):
tweet sort of thing. But like high Fidelity would be
another example, or to name another John Cusack movie, Gross
point blank would be another one. Those are ones where
I think like the soundtrack plays a big part because
it's almost like the soundtrack is another character in the
film that you're watching.

Speaker 1 (44:01):
Or you know, Garden Guardians of the Galaxy or Hudson.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
Hawk or other good examples. Yeah, Hudson Hawk because it's
part of the plot, you know they use they use
songs to keep time during heists. Because that makes sense.
Watches don't need to exist.

Speaker 1 (44:16):
Such a good bad movie.

Speaker 2 (44:18):
I listen. I love Hudson Hawk. I actually don't think
it's as bad as a lot of people say it is.
It's not good, it's very very schlocky, but I don't
think it's as bad like it got a reputation for
being one of the worst movies ever made, and I
don't think it even comes close, because as weird as
that movie is, it's never dishwater dull, and I think

(44:42):
the worst movies fall into dishwater dull.

Speaker 1 (44:45):
It is. It is satirically over the top, yes, but
I feel like that's on purpose.

Speaker 2 (44:51):
Absolutely, Yeah, No, I mean there's no way that was
an accident. Anyway. I saw the TV glow. Interesting trail,
check it out, but yeah, I'm not sure what to
think about that yet.

Speaker 1 (45:05):
This next trailer, I'm gonna say I watched it. I
didn't watch it because you put it in here. I
watched it because I was doing laundry and watching some
critical role while putting away laundry, and the TV in
my bedroom is on top of my like my sock drawer,
and it came on and scared the Jesus out of
me while I was rolling and putting socks away.

Speaker 2 (45:26):
Yeah. So the trailer the aerial is alluding to is
the trailer for the new Inside Out movie. No, I'm kidding,
I'm kidding. It's the trailer for the First Omen, which
of course is a prequel to the classic horror movie
The Omen. So the First Omen is set before that.

(45:47):
There have been six films in the Omen franchise over
the course of like five decades. So the First Omen
details sort of a almost like a It almost like
it's like a conspiracy slash mystery horror movie where apparently

(46:08):
people like figures in the church, meaning the Catholic Church,
are orchestrating the birth of the Antichrist for reasons that
I don't understand, but that seems to be the gist
of what the trailer suggests from what I from my reading.

Speaker 1 (46:24):
Anyway, Yeah, I I didn't super follow. I honestly at
first thought it was a part of the Nun franchise
or the other the other one that's weird and creepy,
that's had a bunch. There was a trailer we watched
recently that had like a nun in some magazines on
a subway station. That's what I thought it was.

Speaker 2 (46:44):
Oh, yeah, that one. I think that one was the Nun.
I think that was one of the nun ones or
hereditary year. I think it was. I think it was
the Nun too. None of your business is what that
one was? So or Ariel ain't have a none of that.
I think that was the one you mentioned. I was
at first thinking you were talking about that other religious

(47:07):
themed horror movie trailer we watched recently, and that title
I can't remember at all at the moment. I just
remember there was like a dramatic scene where you see
one one woman just steps off and alleged and falls
to her death and like I.

Speaker 1 (47:24):
Can't is that good or Poor Things?

Speaker 2 (47:26):
Because no, it's not poor things. It's not poor things?
Is it?

Speaker 1 (47:31):
Is it the Russell Crowe does the Da Vinci Code movie.

Speaker 2 (47:34):
It's not the Pope sex or syst either, now, Colly,
I would have to go back and look at our
our various uh lineups to find out which one it was.

Speaker 1 (47:49):
So was it the Suicide Squad? Is the Aki is?

Speaker 2 (47:53):
No? Because That'szekai, because that's that's in that's into Why
don't you talk about that because that's in today's that's
in today's lineup. I'll look over our previous episodes to
see if I can find out what I'm what's bugging
my memory? So tell us about the Suicide Squad trailer.

Speaker 1 (48:10):
Oh yeah, so this is an anime I think based
off it looks like it's it's an actual DC property,
and it's based off of James Guns. The yes, James Guns,
the Suicide Squad, so like peace Makers in there and uh,
you know the current DC version of Harley Quinn or

(48:33):
the most recent DC version of Harley Quinn, et cetera.
It honestly looks kind of interesting to me. I like
DC animated stuff, and it looks like a It looks
like it definitely hits the anime anime vibes, and it
looks very self referential, so almost like they're putting a
Deadpool spin on it. But I'm gonna watch it.

Speaker 2 (48:55):
Cool, Yeah, I uh, I thought I thought it looked
actually impact. I don't know if I'm gonna watch it
because it like, I mean, so the version we saw.
The trailer we saw was subtitled, right, because it's all
in Japanese, and so it's subtitled in English. And I

(49:15):
don't mind subtitles. I know some people do. I don't
mind them. But this animation style is so fast moving
that I felt like I was missing a lot of
the cool stuff happening in the trailer because I was
busy trying to read the subtitles to see what people
were saying. And if that's the experience I'm gonna have

(49:36):
while watching the show, Like, I much prefer subtitles to dubbed,
don't get me wrong, but I don't want to have
to watch this thing twice once so I know what
everyone's saying, and once so I can see what the
heck they're doing.

Speaker 1 (49:51):
Yeah, yeah, you know what I like doing? I like
watching the dubbed version with subtitles because they don't match up.

Speaker 2 (49:59):
Yeah, which, by the way, that starts to make you wonder,
like which version is more true to the original.

Speaker 1 (50:08):
Yeah, yeah, thankfully. I have a lot of friends who
are learning foreign languages that could probably tell me or
speak the natively. I suspect we'll get a dubbed version
of this.

Speaker 2 (50:21):
Probably at some point. Probably a lot of people prefer
dubbed to subtitled. I think people who identify themselves as
quote unquote true fans often will dismiss dubs because they
want to hear the original actors. But let me tell y'all,
there are cases where I've heard the original actors of

(50:41):
stuff like Japanese animation. They're not always superior. They can be,
but it's not always better.

Speaker 1 (50:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (50:52):
Yeah, Sometimes you're like, well, that's someone who's clearly putting
on a voice, because it doesn't sound even remotely.

Speaker 1 (51:01):
I felt that way about the dubs in Squid Game.

Speaker 2 (51:05):
Yeah yeah, I didn't care for the dubbed version of
Squid Games. So, like, the same thing can be true
of dubbed versions, obviously, Like, occasionally you'll get people who
are phenomenal voice actors and who are you know working
with material and will do a really good job. But
other times you get like the worst dubs where you're

(51:25):
getting incredibly inappropriate emotional reads onlines and things like that.
Sometimes you wonder if they even were given the film
footage to react to.

Speaker 1 (51:37):
Yeah, yeah, I'm sure some of that has to do
with you know, they do try to line up what
you're saying with the mouth.

Speaker 2 (51:43):
Yeah, speaking, that is true, Yeah, like it's otherwise it
can be a little distracting.

Speaker 1 (51:49):
Yeah, yeah, something that I don't I don't have a
good segue. I was going to make something up and
then I was like, no, that's a poop said segue,
and I'm not going to say it. We got a
new trailer for Fallout though, and that looks I think
really cool.

Speaker 2 (52:07):
Fallout does look pretty cool, Like I would probably put
it behind The Last of Us as far as an
adaptation that has me excited like the Last of Us.
When I saw the trailers for that, I was taken
by how well they had captured the spirit of the game. This.

(52:29):
I feel like they're doing a pretty good job. I
feel like they're closer to the spirit of Fallout than
the Borderlands movie is to the spirit of the Borderlands games.

Speaker 1 (52:39):
I agree, And and Fallout does this weird thing, Like
I know, for some people, some of my friends, the
Fallout games don't stylistically hit them, even though like on paper,
they entirely should. And I think it's just there's a
in Fallout, there's a like a sometimes it's really funny
and sometimes it's really serious.

Speaker 2 (53:00):
Yes, yeah, it does tonal inconsistencies. Yeah, you can come
across a scene where it's absolutely horrific, followed immediately by
goofy robot making, you know, making humorous statements. Yeah, it,
Fallout is totally inconsistent, And I get that, Like I
feel the same way, but the esthetic really appeals to me.

(53:23):
I've always found it esthetically very pleasing.

Speaker 1 (53:27):
Same, And I think that this trailer at least smooths
out some of that tonal inconsistency that I've felt in
the game. At least in the trailer. You know, when
they're telling a longer story, it may not hold true.

Speaker 2 (53:38):
And Walton Goggins looks fantastic as a ghoul, and his
performance looks like it's going to be one of the
really like the compelling anchors of this show.

Speaker 1 (53:52):
Yeah, yeah, you know that that is one of those
actors that like does such great work and oftentimes lies
under the radar.

Speaker 2 (54:02):
Yeah, he also plays a lot of terrible, terrible people,
like like in The Hateful Eight. Like he's he's a
real I mean, everyone in The Hateful Eight is terrible.
That's kind of the point. But his character is really
awful and he does such a good job with it.
And yeah, I really love his performances. He commits so

(54:25):
much to whatever role he's doing, and they're not as
as often as he plays awful people. They are awful
people who are very different from each other. It's not
like he's playing the same character no matter what film
he's in, right, Like, it's very distinct.

Speaker 1 (54:42):
Yeah, yeah, I like, I like watching his work. I
look and this in particular, I'm like, I cannot wait
to see him do this role.

Speaker 2 (54:49):
So well. Next up, we've got the trailer for the
Inside Out sequel. This is a story about a nun
who goes to Rome in order to stop the Catholic
Church from bringing about the birth of the Antichrist.

Speaker 1 (55:06):
Or I might have clicked on the wrong link, it
sounds accurate.

Speaker 2 (55:11):
Pixar is fun filled anti Christ extravaganza.

Speaker 1 (55:16):
Sometimes that's what it feels like when you're going through puberty,
if I remember.

Speaker 2 (55:20):
Yeah, so obviously, the inside Out sequel is returning us
to the beloved emotions in control of a character whose
name I don't remember anymore. Do you remember the name?
You don't remember her name?

Speaker 1 (55:38):
It's Riley?

Speaker 2 (55:38):
Okay, so I didn't even have to look it up,
but you almost did. Yeah, So, like, let's not give
you too much credit. I deserve no credit at all.
I couldn't remember Riley, but yeah, So it's it's the emotions.
And of course, as Riley is going through puberty, new
emotions emerge and like things like shame. And in the

(56:03):
trailer we see the new emotions kind of lock away
the old emotions, claiming that their old emotions are too
simplistic and not not relevant anymore, and that appears to
be the based upon this trailer, the central conflict of
the movie.

Speaker 1 (56:22):
Yeah, I'm not. I do like the sar. There's a
point in the trailer where they speak across a sarcasm yes,
which is very funny. I like Pixar sequels don't always
hit me super well. I'll I don't know if I'm
gonna watch it, but I am excited for one thing,

(56:45):
which is it's so dumb. But I was doing like
like an emotional improv game at one point in the
last five years, and I said Onui, and nobody else
in the improv circle knew what that was.

Speaker 2 (57:05):
Yeah, they need to just so they need to go
visit Paris. If you visit Paris, you will experience on
Wei firsthand. Maybe not personally, but it'll definitely be all
around you.

Speaker 1 (57:17):
Well, and then I followed up with Twitter painted, which
nobody also understood, and.

Speaker 2 (57:20):
I was like, you gotta gotta, you gotta watch Bambi. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (57:25):
I figured that kids nowadays still did, but maybe that's
not the case.

Speaker 2 (57:30):
Yeah. Uh so, yeah it looks cute. I mean, I
kind of I understand where you're coming from with like
the whole Pixar sequels thing. I think Toy Story two
is maybe the only Pixar sequel that I really clicked with.
I thought Finding Dory was okay. I hated the Cars sequels.

(57:55):
Actually I should just say I hated Cars too. I
don't think I even saw Cars three, So I totally
get what you're saying. I think this looks fine. Honestly,
when I watched the trailer, I thought to myself, this
feels like a premise that could have been done in
a short as opposed to a feature length film.

Speaker 1 (58:18):
Yeah, yeah, I agree, But shorts don't Shorts don't bring
in the money.

Speaker 2 (58:26):
So they don't pays the bills, as they say. One
person who should have very little problem paying the bills
is Nick Cage because he's been encast in every single
project that's ever been made.

Speaker 1 (58:38):
Except for He also buys a lot of really expensive things.
He's a collector.

Speaker 2 (58:42):
I want to say that he actually had tax issues once,
so maybe I shouldn't make the joke that he can
afford anything. But no, the reason why I made that
stupid joke is because our next trailer that we want
to talk about is Arcadian, which features Nick Cage. Is
he is not like the main focus of the movie,
but he is an important character in the film, and

(59:05):
it's a horror film, which was giving me vibes of
a quiet place, a lot of like a quiet place.
But it's also, from what I've read, really akin to
James Cameron's Aliens.

Speaker 1 (59:21):
Oh interesting, it gave me like m Night Shamalion's signs. Yeah,
so vibes, which I actually enjoyed that movie.

Speaker 2 (59:30):
So the premise is it's set in a let's let's
all say it together, a post apocalyptic.

Speaker 1 (59:37):
Or the utopia.

Speaker 2 (59:40):
No, not quite there. I mean, yes, we both hate people,
but no, not a utopia. No, it's a post apocalyptic
landscape where at night these creatures come out. They mostly
come out at night, mostly uh. And then they they
like absolutely lay waste to anything that's caught outside at night.

(01:00:02):
And so every night you have to board up your
home and be real quiet and just kind of hope
you can make it through. And so the story takes
place with Nick Cage playing a character who has two
teenage sons and the events of the film are happening
like fifteen years after whatever event caused this to start

(01:00:23):
in the first place, and one of his two sons
gets caught outside at night, and then hilarity ensues or horror,
one of the two horror.

Speaker 1 (01:00:34):
I actually read after watching the trailer. I read an
article about it because I was really curious to see
what the aliens are the monsters. Yeah, you said it
was a kid to aliens, and that's what got stuck
in my brain. Yeah, And I figured they were just
going to be like creepy, dirty pollution people. But apparently
that's not the case. But apparently the kids like to

(01:00:58):
play what brought on the Apocalypse game in the movie,
and I think that that's a delightful touch. This actually
looked really interested to me. This is this is one
that I'm I'll have to watch. I'll have to like
read the spoilers about it first, but I might actually
watch it.

Speaker 2 (01:01:15):
For one thing, you need to find out if the
dog lives.

Speaker 1 (01:01:18):
Yes, that is very, very true. I had that thought
when I was watching it, and I forgot till now,
so thank you for reminding me.

Speaker 2 (01:01:23):
Yeah, because there's a dog in the trailer, so it's
a pet dog, so obviously I immediately I'm looking out
for you, Ariel, although I'm the same way.

Speaker 1 (01:01:34):
Yeah, but maybe the dog belongs to the others.

Speaker 2 (01:01:39):
In which case he's just the family's just cool with
him being in the house because he's in the house.

Speaker 1 (01:01:46):
He's a spy, he's like undercover.

Speaker 2 (01:01:48):
I got he's Yeah, he's a century he's vanguard.

Speaker 1 (01:01:52):
But I don't actually want that to happen because I
don't want the family have to have to harm the
dog either.

Speaker 2 (01:01:56):
Yeah, it's a it looks, it looks, it looks interesting.
The review I saw gave it three stars, but I
don't know how many stars is max. I think five,
so three out of five it's better than average. But yeah,
it looked to me like like I kept having a
quiet place thoughts about it, because again, a quiet place,

(01:02:17):
post apocalyptic monster threat, family trying to keep itself protected.
Like it just felt very similar. And from what I understand,
that's the biggest weakness of this film is not that
it tells a story poorly, but it tells a story
that's been told a lot in recent years.

Speaker 1 (01:02:37):
Gotcha, And here I was looking forward to a more
grounded version of nix Kid's Cage's performance and color out
of Space.

Speaker 2 (01:02:45):
You know, I still haven't seen that, but it keeps
getting recommended to me.

Speaker 1 (01:02:48):
It is. It's a lot, Okay, I mean you're familiar
with this story. It's a lot, and Nick Cage goes
off the rails, but in a very good way. Like
I can't say I recommend the movie because a lot
of people that might watch it that I know wouldn't
enjoy it, but you probably would.

Speaker 2 (01:03:09):
Okay, well, maybe I'll finally do that after I watch
everything else that's on my list, So.

Speaker 1 (01:03:17):
I actually I actually bought the DVD of it. It
was like three dollars at a Walmart bargain bin. But
then I gifted it to a friend for their birthday.

Speaker 2 (01:03:26):
Well, speaking of things that were on my list for
the longest time, the Crow was on my list. I'll
talk about the original one. But then I saw it
in the theater, and then I watched one of the Terrible, Terrible,
Terrible sequels. I can't remember which one, but I did
it for a different podcast many years ago, and I
remember it was horrible. But The Crow is one of

(01:03:48):
those guilty pleasure movies for me because it's, you know,
essentially just a revenge film, is really what The Crow is.
It's based off graphic novels and stuff. And now we're
getting a reboot of the Crow series, or really it
doesn't even have to be a reboot. It could literally
just be another chapter in it, because The Crow follows
different characters who take on the persona of this sort

(01:04:11):
of revenant, undead vengeance machine called The Crow. And we
got a trailer for it. What did you think of
the trailer for The Crow?

Speaker 1 (01:04:22):
So I didn't watch the original Crow until I met
my husband. He introduced me to it and I enjoyed
it. It was fun. It was like, you know, I like
Van Helsing, I like Dylan Dog Dead of Night. It
kind of fell into it was more serious, but it
fell into that realm of realism. To me, this trailer

(01:04:43):
it didn't grab me at all in any way.

Speaker 2 (01:04:48):
Yeah, I hear you. I want to say that, like
I'm intrigued, but I'm not really because again, like if
you if you're familiar with the source material at all,
what or that's the earlier films or the actual graphic
novels or whatever. Again, like you know where this is
going to go. You know where this film's going from

(01:05:09):
the beginning. It's just a question of how does it
get from point A to point B? And esthetically, it
didn't really appeal to me the same way that the
original Crow film did.

Speaker 1 (01:05:24):
Yeah, yeah, it's got more of this is this is
quoting a friend of mine who said it's got more
of an Edgeloord vibe and than a goth.

Speaker 2 (01:05:33):
Vibe and his Crow makeup. When we finally see it
toward the end of the tailer looks made me think
more of like.

Speaker 1 (01:05:44):
Like Uh, the wocking Phoenix is the Joker.

Speaker 2 (01:05:48):
Yeah, that's exactly what I was going to say. It
does feel much more joker esque than Also, it's weird
because this is a tangent honestly. So, the professional wrestler
Sting took on a Crow like persona when he wrestled

(01:06:09):
at WCW way back in the day, and then he
did it a little bit in WWE before he got hurt. Well,
he recently had his retirement match, his last match ever,
and so he had made the Crow make up really
iconic in the wrestling world, and it was interesting to me, like,

(01:06:31):
you know, he clearly took it from the Crow, like
there was no denying, there was no there's no mistaking it.
It was very much inspired by the original Crow film,
and so it was interesting to me but not compelling
to me that they decided not to go with a
look that pulled from that same esthetic. Like there's little

(01:06:52):
elements of it, but it's mostly like Runny Mesquerra, it's
not I don't know, it just didn't hit me.

Speaker 1 (01:06:59):
Yeah, yeah, I agree, which is sad. But also I
didn't think The Crow needed a remake.

Speaker 2 (01:07:07):
So yeah, I mean, I don't necessarily object to a
remake because it's one of those stories where like, if
you were to go back and watch the first Crow film,
there's no question about it. It's a very dated film, right,
Like it's gonna look dated, and that's not necessarily a
bad thing, but it may not have the impact that

(01:07:29):
an updated version does. But again, without the really dramatic aesthetics,
I just don't think it. I just don't think there's
enough there. It's it's just another like ghostly revenge story.

Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
Yeah, and we have plenty Constantine and John Wick that
has flooded the market in recent years.

Speaker 2 (01:07:48):
Yes, Yeah, like there's no shortage of this is an
unstoppable killing force out out for revenge type movies like that.
We've had plenty of those in the last decade. Ye
One thing we had a lot of for almost twenty
one years was content from an online media company called
Rooster Teeth, which started back on April first, two thousand

(01:08:10):
and three, with the launch of their flagship animated series
machine animated series Red Versus Blue. And now Warner Brothers
Discovery is shutting down Rooster Teeth. The story is that
the studio has not been profitable for a decade, interestingly enough,

(01:08:34):
if you go back a decade, that's right around the
time Rooster Teeth was acquired by a company called Full Screen,
and before that, Rooster Teeth was an independent company. So
draw your own conclusions. But very sad story. A lot
of very talented people who have worked at that studio
over the years and who currently work there. It's not

(01:08:54):
shut down yet, but it won't be long before it is,
and there are a lot of questions up in the
air about what will happen to the various properties that
belong to the studio, whether or not they'll continue under
some new ownership, or if they'll just kind of fizzle out.
On one side, Red Versus Blue was already scheduled to

(01:09:15):
have to publish its final season, which has already written
and produced and everything, so that story will be finished.
But other series, like Ruby, it's not as certain.

Speaker 1 (01:09:31):
Yeah, WB is saying that they are going to release
a bunch of stuff that hasn't been released, but as
in the works, we'll see if they actually hold to that,
because we know what that parent company has done with
some other properties recently.

Speaker 2 (01:09:44):
Oh yeah, WB is very good at not releasing things
that are finished.

Speaker 1 (01:09:50):
Yeah, so you know, maybe maybe a like another independent
platform like Dropout or something will collaborate, who knows. But
don't worry. We're losing original content, but we're getting a
reboot of old, old, old content. There's a refer Madness

(01:10:12):
revival happening in La on May thirtieth. It's an all
star team doing it. It's Kristen Bell, Christian Campbell, Allen
comming and then like a choreographer from Spencer Lift from
So you think you can dance since Bring Awakening. It's
it's probably gonna be a very good performance, honestly.

Speaker 2 (01:10:34):
And to be clear, this is refer Madness the musical.

Speaker 1 (01:10:38):
Yeah, yeah, not the old thirties anti drug film.

Speaker 2 (01:10:44):
Yeah. Instead, it's the musical that makes fun of the
old nineteen thirties anti drug movie. Yeah. So I was
unfamiliar with refer Madness the musical until Showtime did a
filmed version of it, like an actual movie version of
the musical. And when that I saw that, I thought, wow,
this is really entertaining, Like there's some great songs in here.

(01:11:06):
It is very silly in how it's sending up that
original film. If you've never seen the original film, is
just full of hysteria. Around marijuana, and it is hilarious
because it's it's treating marijuana like like it will drive

(01:11:27):
you in crazy and you will become the murderous psychopath.
It's so weird and over the top. So the musical
makes fun of that, right. And now, these folks like
Kristen Bell and Christian Campbell were part of the original
cast when this was just a show in Los Angeles,
before it ever became anything else. Kristen Bell would then

(01:11:49):
they would end up being Christin Bell would be in
the film version as well. Actually, Christian Campbell did too.
Christian Campbell, brother of Nev Campbell, who also appeared in
the film in a part that was made just for
her for the purposes of the movie. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:12:08):
Yeah, so that should be fun if you're in that area.
That's probably not one that I'm going to travel for,
but I'm sure it's going to be a great, a
great time.

Speaker 2 (01:12:20):
I wish I could travel to go see that because
it is such a silly show. And I love Alan Comming,
and I love Kristin Belly, and I would love to
see this. It's like the piece that we pulled from
the Hollywood Reporter piece. Obviously, all these folks are involved
in the production. I'm still not clear if they're starring

(01:12:43):
in it because it's twenty five years later and they're
playing like Kristin Campbell and Kristen Bell are were already
older than the characters they were playing, which are supposed
to be like these high school sweethearts. Now they're twenty
five years older than that.

Speaker 1 (01:13:00):
So I don't know, probably funnier if they play the
original character.

Speaker 2 (01:13:04):
I think so too. I just don't know, like you
could make it a whole thing. I think it works
better on stage anyway, Like it's not going to be
a Dear Evan Hanson where everyone looks at Evan Hanson
and say says, why is this thirty five year old
man going to high school?

Speaker 1 (01:13:20):
Yeah? Yeah, speaking of old men playing children, Yeah, this
one's all you. So there's this children's book called Harold
in the Purple Cran that apparently Jonathan never read as
a kid. Nope, about this little boy who had a
purple cran and could draw things and they'd kind of
come to life. Adorable story. It's adorable children's series. It's

(01:13:47):
actually I played a changeling game when I was a
young adult. Like the Changeling RPG, where I was playing
a character who had a purple cran and would go
around and draw things because they so loved that book
growing up that when they became a fairy person, they

(01:14:07):
did that. So that tells you my love for the IP.
But in this Zachary Levi is playing Harold, a grown
up Harold with some friends, and I guess he draws
purple things. I forgot that this is gonna be a thing.
I feel like maybe we briefly talked about it at
one point, because that I saw they released a new poster,

(01:14:29):
which is why it's coming up again. But then I
looked at the original poster. I'm like, maybe I did
see that this was happening.

Speaker 2 (01:14:36):
Yeah, the original poster was not a good idea, No, no,
I saw when I saw that original poster, it looked
like there was something else being held in that hand.

Speaker 1 (01:14:47):
Ah yep, yep, yep, I see it. Anyhow, they were
probably trying to avoid having to pay like royalties to
Creola for having like an id identifiable like cran paper
on it. But it does hurt it, so anyhow, that's happening.
Zoey Deschanel is also in a Little Ray Howry and

(01:15:10):
Jamaine Clement so great cast if you ask me, if
you ask Jonathan, he'll probably say, like, semi great cast.

Speaker 2 (01:15:18):
And I mean they got Jamaine Clement, so that's that's
a big plus. But Zoe Deschanel, that's a huge minus.

Speaker 1 (01:15:25):
I still hold that if you ever get into New
Girl and give it a couple episodes, you know that
you would change your mind about her.

Speaker 2 (01:15:35):
Yeah. Yeah, ten Man just did a number on me.

Speaker 1 (01:15:41):
Ten Man is not like ten Man and one hundred
or sorry, tin Man and Elf are not a good
example of her acting prowess at all.

Speaker 2 (01:15:49):
Yeah, at all.

Speaker 1 (01:15:50):
Well, those were bad things for her to be. And
I and again, it's really good to give New Girl trying.

Speaker 2 (01:15:55):
It's only fair that I do because clearly, like Alan
Cumming is also in ten Man, and I still love
Elan cummings work, so I should give her another chance.

Speaker 1 (01:16:06):
I think, I think, I really think that New Girl
is where she was able to be her like a quirky,
as you put it, tweet personality that just was absolutely
charming and delightful and relatable and maybe more relatable to
me than to you because an awkward school teacher. But

(01:16:31):
give it a shot. At some point add it to
your ever growing list of things you won't watch.

Speaker 2 (01:16:38):
Okay, I'll do that.

Speaker 1 (01:16:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:16:42):
So our last one, our last story. This one's actually
a little outside of our normal purview in a way,
which is that we got some cast additions to the
upcoming film SNL nineteen seventy five, which tells the story
of what was going on leading up to the very

(01:17:03):
first broadcast of Saturday Night Live for the very first episode.

Speaker 1 (01:17:08):
Yeah, I put it in there because I don't know.
In my brain, Saturday Night Live often rides like a
ligne with like Broadway stuff. Sure, and it's creativity because
well it's also in New York.

Speaker 2 (01:17:21):
But well, it has a big impact on pop culture
in general. Right, Like, there are eras of Saturday Night
Live when the show was really going well where it
would not just shape humor in many ways, but it
kind of set people up to becoming the next wave
of comedic powerhouses in Hollywood. Right, So, like Will Ferrell

(01:17:45):
comes from there, Steve Martin and Chevy Chase, like dan Aykroyd.
You're talking about folks who got really got their start
at Saturday Night Live and then went on to become
these huge forces in not just comedy, like some of
them have done drama as well. But like that's Bill
Hayter's another great example, right, Like there'd be no Berry

(01:18:07):
without Saturday Night Live. Yeah, So like I can see
why there's that importance. And this is interesting because it
is going to be kind of detailing the convergence of
stuff that had to happen for that first show to
even be a thing. And I expect this will be

(01:18:28):
very high energy and we'll probably see characters indulging in
illicit substances because at least a couple of them were
very well known for that.

Speaker 1 (01:18:39):
Yeah, probably especially in the seventies. It is it's based
off a bunch of interviews, and the reason I included
it is because there are a lot of geeky people
working on it. Finn Wolfhart was just announced as cast
a cast member from Stranger Things and a bazillion other things,
including including Ghostbusters Afterlife and Ghostbusters.

Speaker 2 (01:19:03):
Let Go Yeah, Ghostbusters, Baby It's Cold Outside.

Speaker 1 (01:19:09):
Baby It's Cold Outside, which, interestingly, Jason Rightman and Gil Keenan,
who are who wrote the script for this movie SNL
in nineteen seventy five, also are the team behind Ghostbusters
Afterlife in Ghostbusters, Baby it's cold outside. Yeah, So I

(01:19:29):
this actually it sounds interesting to me and I might
watch it.

Speaker 2 (01:19:32):
Well. And I so, I was born in the seventies,
but I was I was now, I was far far
too young to watch Saturday Night Live when I was
a little kid, But like, subsequently there would be reruns
of old Saturday Night Live shows that would be on
various channels. So I watched a lot of Saturday Night
Live from the original nineteen seventies era. These would usually

(01:19:56):
be edited down episodes like often they did include the
musical guest, for example, and they would probably cut some
of the more like some of the some of the
sketches that bombed totally, they would cut until you would
get to the early nineteen eighties where that's just the
show everything bombs. Once Eddie Murphy left the show, things

(01:20:19):
really went downhill. But I watched a lot of those
and so I have some curiosity about this. It's interesting
to me that this movie is even being made because
like I would only think that people around my age
or older would even be familiar with the nineteen seventies

(01:20:41):
era of Saturday Night Live. So the audience is kind
of limited, but they are casting a lot of you know,
very young actors to play age appropriate versions of the
real life people who were you know, putting together Saurday
Night Live. So maybe that will draw in younger audiences.
Just spoke who are fans of these younger actors and.

Speaker 1 (01:21:03):
Like current SNL, not all of the cast members. A
lot of the cast members of SNL tend to be
very young because they're comedians and writers that are trying
to get their start. Yeah, so if you're a fan
of Current SNL, then you might go, oh, I like SNL,
so I've watched some of the classic stuff, right, or
I want to check out and see how it got started.

(01:21:25):
I will say, like I still occasionally watch SNL. It
depends on the guest, you know, and so some of
it's really good and a lot of it's But I
still hold that Colin just and Jos and Michael ja
are the best Weekend Update presenters ever.

Speaker 2 (01:21:42):
They're incredible. They're incredible. Yeah, Seth Meyers was really good
back in the day. But those two together, the chemistry
they have and the fact that they annually have that
thing where they'll write the jokes for the other person
and they aren't out to see what the jokes are
until it's live. That's an incredible bit, and it's like

(01:22:06):
it's so high pressure, high risk, high reward, it's it
really is incredible, so they hit on something really special.

Speaker 1 (01:22:16):
Yeah, it's my favorite part of the show unless Adam
Driver is a special guest, because man, he commits to
those skits so hard.

Speaker 2 (01:22:24):
I also really like Pedro Pascal. I felt that he
was like, I mean, he did break pretty regularly, but
apart from that, like his mushmouth la speak stuff is hilarious,
which I've actually seen him do on late night TV
as well, and it's still just as funny. But yeah,

(01:22:44):
I'm curious about this, Like I hope that it will
be entertaining and funny in parts and not just dramatic.
Like I get that there's a lot of drama happening too.
You've got a lot of egos as well, Like this
isn't just a bunch of friends putting a show together.

(01:23:06):
These are a bunch of ambitious comedians and writers, and
so there's a lot of egos at present, and I'm
sure not everyone got along, so that I'm sure will
be a part of it as well. But yeah, I'm
curious about this. Yeah, before we sign off. One thing
that we did not talk about, but it was on

(01:23:26):
our lineup and we just kind of skipped over it
was that, you know, the Oscars happened while we were
on hiatus, and I know that you didn't watch the ceremony.
I didn't watch the ceremony when it was actually happening.
Have you caught any of the segments or anything since then?

Speaker 1 (01:23:45):
Yes, So I watched bits and pieces of it. I
had family in town, so I wasn't able to watch
a full thing. I did watch the Best Original Screenplay
portion because one of my acting coaches and dear friends
was in one of the dominated movies made December, and
the clip that the Oscars was using like on TikTok

(01:24:05):
and social media where they would show like some of
the script and they'd show the scene above, it was
her scene in the movie. So I was super, super
excited to see her be on the Oscars because she's
a phenomenal actress and a wonderful person. Julie, I know
you don't listen bit you rock and uh they changed
the they changed the scene, they changed the Oscar show. Yeah,

(01:24:28):
I was so upset, but but I did. I watched
the bit with Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny DeVito.

Speaker 2 (01:24:35):
That's fantastic, a great bit, and Michael Keaton.

Speaker 1 (01:24:38):
And Michael Keat doesn't I thought it was going to
be a Twins reference, but it was.

Speaker 2 (01:24:41):
Yeah, that was the whole joke, right, Like they set
it up to make it seem like it's going to
be a reference to Twins because we also know, you know,
the work on the sequel for Twins, and instead of
it being about Twins or its sequel, it ends up
being a joke about how they both were beaten up
by Batman. Yeah, that was great. I love that, and
I loved I watched the I'm Just Ken performance.

Speaker 1 (01:25:06):
Did you watch John Cena present the Costuming Award.

Speaker 2 (01:25:10):
I am aware of what happened, but I have not
actually watched that.

Speaker 1 (01:25:14):
Segment apparently, and I only found this out after the fact.
It was in solidarity with like costumers asking for better
pay and such like.

Speaker 2 (01:25:26):
Yeah, the idea being that you're naked without us, right
like that.

Speaker 1 (01:25:30):
Yeah, Yeah, it's a it's a very funny bit. I
suggest you watch it. Also, if you see the behind
the scenes pictures, John Cena is not actually naked. He's
in a strapless thong. It's not even a thong, He's
in strapless underwear, so it's like a big padded piece
in the front, and then a horrible, like unflattering, giant

(01:25:51):
flap of fabric that's taped to his backside, so you
don't see anything untoured, not even butt crack. But even
I can't make that piece of clothing look sexy.

Speaker 2 (01:26:04):
Yeah, so the things I heard about the oscars were
largely positive. Oh I also saw the bit between Emily
Blunt and Ryan Gosling where they're razzing each other over
Oppenheimer and Barbie. Oh you didn't, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:26:21):
I didn't, but I am looking forward to seeing them
both in Fall Guy, so I'll have to check.

Speaker 2 (01:26:25):
Yeah, no, you'll have to watch the little segment between
the two of them because it's scripted, obviously, but it's
scripted as they're insulting each other over Barbie and Oppenheimer
and like they're sniping a bed at each other and
it's just very funny. And then like the Margo Robbie's
reaction shots are fantastic too, So yeah, that's definitely worth seeing.

(01:26:48):
So I heard like most people seem to have a
good time I don't know what the general reaction is
as to the outcome of the Oscars, because obviously I'm
getting seeing some people were probably upset that, you know,
over some of the winners that happens every year. There
was at least one that surprised me. But I would

(01:27:11):
have to look them all up now to be able
to tell you which one it was. I just remember
looking at them and I'm like, oh wow, really.

Speaker 1 (01:27:19):
Yeah, I'm sad I missed it. I loved spending time
with family, so I'm not I don't regret that at all,
but I do. I do enjoy watching them because I
like watching the people who make all of the stuff
that we enjoy all year kind of get to have
fun with it, which is what they've been trending towards lately.

Speaker 2 (01:27:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:27:38):
So, but this has been an incredibly long episode that
will lead me little to know editing, So we should
probably wrap it up. Yes, yes, so, Jonathan, if they
want to reach out to us about one of the
myriad of things we've talked about today, how should how
should listeners do that?

Speaker 2 (01:27:57):
Well, what you need to do is you need to
go back and listen into all the ways that I
have described getting in touch with us all those different methodologies,
and you're going to need to make an animated series
about that, and it's going to be cast with a
guy from Chicago, a wizard, and a shape shifter who,
let's face it, more times than not, is a badger.

(01:28:19):
And these three characters are going to go on adventures
that are all related to the various ways that I
have described as to how you can get in touch
with us if you want us to answer your questions.
And once you get that animated feature finished and you
publish it on some platform, you're going to see a comment.
And the first comment that pops up is going to

(01:28:40):
be some rando that says first, but right under that,
it's going to be me, and I'm going to say, Hey,
saw this good job? What's your question?

Speaker 1 (01:28:50):
Yeah? And if you don't want to risk getting sued
for stealing ip from Hello from the Magic Tavern, you
can reach out to us on social media in other
ways on Facebook and Instagram and threads. We are a
large neurdron collider. We're also large neur drunk collider. On discord.
There is an invitation to join our discord, which has
been a little quiet, but hopefully we'll pick back up
now that we are back to recording on our website

(01:29:15):
www dot Large nurdrun collider dot com, on Twitter slash x.
Yes we are still there. We are llenc underscore podcast.
If that's how you've got to reach out to us,
and you can also email us. Our email is Large
Nerdron Pod at gmail dot com. Thanks for listening as always,
and thanks for being patient while we were off traveling

(01:29:40):
and stuff. Until next time. I am Aeriel. Nothing to
instart here.

Speaker 2 (01:29:50):
Casting and I've been Jonathan Oop summon chicken nugget again
Strickland who no, oh Jonathan that sescheuon sauce. The Large
Nerdron Collider was created by Ariel Caston and produced, edited, published, deleted, undeleted,

(01:30:13):
published again. Cursed That by Jonathan Strickland. Music by Kevin McLeod,
Loving comptech dot com
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