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November 5, 2023 27 mins

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Strap in folks, as we embark on a journey back in time, revisiting the comedy gold of Seth Rogan's Pineapple Express. It's more than just a movie; it's a cultural phenomenon that left an indelible mark on the cannabis comedy genre. We'll be dissecting the iconic performances by Seth Rogan, James Franco, and Danny McBride, and pay tribute to the surprising standout role of Raiden from the Mortal Kombat films. Let's take a walk down memory lane, reliving the laughs and the moments that have kept this film a favorite among audiences worldwide.

Synopsis
 Dale Denton's played by (Seth Rogen) enjoys a rare strain of marijuana that may prove fatal when he drops his roach in a panic after witnessing a murder. When learning that the rare strain of weed can be traced back to them, Dale and his dealer played by (James Franco) go on the run to avoid a dangerous drug lord played by (Gary Cole) and crooked cop (Rosie Perez) hot on their heels.

1. Your first impression of "Pineapple Express"  ?
Charles and Ralf give their opinions. Discussing the first half of the movie.

2. Is "Pineapple Express" considered a cult classic in 420 culture ? 
Charles and Ralf give their opinions.

3. Did Seth Rogen showcase a lot of comedic talent in this movie ?
Charles and Ralf give their opinions.

4.  Favorite character in this movie ?
Charles and Ralf give their opinions.

5. Things that you thought were hilarious about this movie ?
Charles and Ralf give their opinions.

6. If "Pineapple Express" was a strain of bud how many puffs on a scale of one to five would have to hit before passing to this next person hit ? 

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
What's up?
What's up to all the bleaks outthere.
I'm your host, charles, andyou're now listening to a tribe
called Bleak Podcast, and I havemy great co-host, ralph, with
me.
Hey, and as you guys alreadyknow, this is a 420 movie review
season.
Everything 420 as far as theclassics, the movies that you
guys know and love either thebleaks who like to roll some up

(00:21):
or, if you just like to be soberand watch these still in the
classics, ralph and I are goingto discuss them with you.
Just a little bit of info too,guys.
I've already created this site,still under development.
Some of you guys have alreadychecked it out.
I appreciate the feedback.
There's a lot more things tocome with it, just bear with me.
But I will let you guys knowthat it is out there and I'll

(00:42):
have the information posted.
But for today's episode, we'lltalk about a movie that just
really has stood to me, like now, the test of time.
It's one of my favorites.
Even if you're not even 420friendly, like it is just a,
it's a damn good comedy.
Yeah, oh yeah.

(01:05):
And we're gonna go ahead andtalk about Pineapple Express,
seth Rogan's movie.
It's no stranger.
He's no stranger in the worldof cannabis.
In fact he, you know, haswritten this movie.
So some of your bleaks arealready aware of this and I'm
just gonna go into a quicksynopsis for the police who
might have not seen the movie.

(01:26):
And what it is is a characterDale didn't play by Seth Rogan.
He's enjoying a rare strain ofmarijuana that might prove fatal
when he drops the roach andafter witnessing a murder, I'm
learning that the rare strain ofmarijuana can be traced back to
him.
Saw his dealer play by JamesFranco and him gone is crazy ass

(01:49):
adventure.
And let me tell you it's almostlike it's actually good bro it.
To me it's almost like die hardmeets, like a cannabis movie,
because this is so much going onwith it.
But we're gonna just go aheadand get right into it.
And for the first question foryou, ralph, your first

(02:11):
impression of pineapple express.

Speaker 2 (02:14):
I thought those, I thought those crazy, like you
could tell that the actors inthe movie was just having fun,
like it just seemed like a bunchof friends got together was
like, hey, let's make this movieabout pineapple express and
then see it, see where it goes,and like there's like a scene
where the the warehouse thatthey went to where they had all

(02:35):
the drugs like explodes and thenlike Saul escapes and then like
he's like he's being carriedout by Seth's character Dale did
, and then whenever he like laysthem in the grass.
If you look at Saul's face itlooks like Saul is legit
laughing and it probably justtook it out of San.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
Francisco.
Okay, all right, I'll say thisman for that movie.
One of the things that stoodout to me in the intro was that
they were testing marijuana onone of these soldiers.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
Yeah, like that facility that you're watching a
different movie.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
Yeah, because they had like a whole serious
aesthetic and then it was likeitem nine.
Yeah, I was like illegal andthe guys like so how do you feel
right now?
The soldiers like smoking buthe's like, well, I feel like
butter and flapjacks, yeah, okayokay, so yeah and he was
speaking his mom because he wasjust like military lots of dudes

(03:38):
, murder movies, like justsaying things like that she's
like how do you feel about yoursuperiors?
you're like jazz solo and youknow I'm gonna pull up some to
cast on here because it'sthere's actually quite a few
people like convenience actors,like there's a lot of people in

(04:00):
this movie oh well, another.
Okay.
So here's a person that stoodout to me right, he wasn't even
in the movie for that long.
I'm gonna pull him up.
He played Raiden, I believe, inMortal Kombat, one or two, I
just can't remember, but he wasin the Warriors.
He was one of the guys who wasmessing with the fake prostitute

(04:23):
who was a cop.
I'm gonna pull him up right nowbecause the name is like it
escapes me right now.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
But okay, yeah, cuz I couldn't even picture it
raiding, cuz I raided was played.
You look like some white dude,play right no, no, but he played
him too.
He played and he played.
Yeah, I remember about raidedin the old school.
Mortal Kombat is he was like awhite guy.
Even then, as a kid I thoughtthat was different yeah, I mean
before the bleak stuff there.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
If you guys haven't seen the movie, the cast has
Seth Rogen, james Franco, dannyMcBride which, for Danny McBride
, to me it's interesting to see,like all of her youth, but
especially his, because hedoesn't sound or look the same
as he wants today.
Right now, because you knowwith the beard and the deeper
voice and everything else.

(05:11):
It's crazy different any soundscompletely different and I was
just I said, damn, that's DannyMcBride, but they back, it's
like.
Oh, like now I feel like he'slike the serious, funny asshole
in movies.
Yeah, it's also done for right.
Yeah, well, he was in the movie, I believe, alien Covenant or
Prometheus or something likethat.

Speaker 2 (05:30):
Yeah, but didn't also help with Halloween ends
probably.

Speaker 1 (05:34):
I mean he's.
He said quite a few things.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
He's right.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
Oh yeah, I'm quite sure of it, and that's the thing
, like the whole cast itselfreally just grabbed my attention
.
And the first time I had everseen this movie I was when I was
deployed overseas.
I had never heard of it, I hadnever seen it, and I remember I
was on the mess deck on ship andI just remember everybody was

(06:00):
laughing.
I was like what the hell isthis movie?
And then, you know, I think atthat time it might have been
like there, you're too old, orsomething like that, because I
think it came out nose seven, ifI'm not mistaken.
No, no way.
Oh wait.
So for the bleak south there.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
It's away.

Speaker 1 (06:16):
Oh wait, Now during the election of Obama right, and
it was just um, I the thing isabout the movie, one of the
parts, I think, in the trailerright, I could be wrong the part
that got me, I think and Ithink this was the beginning of
the trailer, right how Dale istalking on the payphone with his
girlfriend at that time andhe's like you know, you're it,

(06:40):
you're everything, blah, blah,blah, and his girlfriend's like
dude, I just I love you, I wantto marry you.
He's a Clearly.
And another part to me aboutthat movie too, because it's
just so like for the police.
Y'all hear us laughing.

(07:00):
It will have you like that,like this movie will get you
like that for 420.

Speaker 2 (07:06):
You be laughing, like you are, like you're high
office something if that moviewas just done so well.

Speaker 1 (07:13):
But the part where like he's like driving right and
he's like serving papers as aprocess server, and then he's
like he's on the radio and thenthis woman's talking to him, he
goes like well, some peoplemight think me dating an 18 year
old, is there man?
Or something like that.
And she goes like the lady onthe radio is it was long as this
consistent he goes.
So I like how I had tointellect.

(07:37):
And another thing too I liveabout the movie the Electric
Avenue scene.
Oh, he's like.

Speaker 2 (07:45):
Vertical walk down to .

Speaker 1 (07:48):
Avenue and you know, and he's just like serving all
these papers and people getpissed off.
Don't get a fucking job, youasshole.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
Like well, that was interesting, though it's like
the movie looks like it takesplace like over four days, if
not three days, if you like.
Sit there and look at the movielike how many times it hits
night, how many days is spent inthe movie, and throughout the
whole movie delt in this wearingthe same exact thing.
The only wardrobe change doesis in the beginning, whenever

(08:16):
he's doing the process.
Oh yeah, that's the only time,but the rest of the movies Same
with the pothead.
The only one who does the mostwardrobe changes is Ted.

Speaker 1 (08:28):
Ted and I think it.
Yeah, I think yeah it's 72hours because, um, I Think, like
is he gets high at Souls playsand it sees the murder and a
hideout camp out, and then ohyeah, but like it Opens up, then

(08:53):
runs away with, so they go stayin the damn woods.

Speaker 2 (08:56):
They try to get a caterpillar high.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
Yeah, yeah, that shit was Then.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
Then it's the next day, so you got day two already,
like there's been that daytrying to figure out what to do.
They're looking at the time andhe's like three already.
They like Can't be 3 am.

Speaker 1 (09:17):
They went forward an hour.
It was like in the spring timewhen this movie was taking place
.
So let's go into the secondtalking point.
Question for you Is pineappleexpress considered a cult
classic and 420 culture?

Speaker 2 (09:33):
I believe so.
I believe so.
I believe it's up there withall the other classics, with all
the teaching tongue movies.
How high the like, all the alldifferent classics that's out
there.
I believe it's up there withthem.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
I say so too.
You know what one thing I canappreciate about about that
movie is that, oh, you know,like you had, like we talked
about in a prior episode ForFriday right, like, oh, that was
more catered towards us, eventhough, like, a lot of people
love that movie.
Yeah, I felt like whatpineapple Express?

(10:07):
It was like Like it didn'tmatter if you were black, white,
like the comedy Worked forevery like.
Yeah, yeah, sir, it's a racewhere you were you could not
help with to laugh, because I'mthinking about Seth Rogen.
He was on the 420 episode.
Was Snoop Dogg to Snoop,invited him Right on her to get
high and talk about, becausehe's a he's a fan of Seth Rogen.

(10:27):
Seth Rogen has had some very,very funny movies.
He's written lots of successes.
Yeah, uh, there's a lot of, youknow, black entertainers who are
fans of Seth Rogen.
Yeah oh, and One thing aboutSeth is that you know I like how
he genuinely wants to makesomething that makes people
laugh.
Yeah, he makes it work.

Speaker 2 (10:50):
Behind the boys.
Yes, yes, he's actually one ofthe screenplay writers for that
and, like he was also behind newNinja Turtles movie.

Speaker 1 (11:00):
Yes, and it was just as the more I learned about him.
I was watching an interviewabout how from Tyler, the
creator.
Yeah and how he was on the showcalled freaks and geeks.

Speaker 2 (11:15):
I've heard of the show I just never watched.
It didn't seem like they knowinterests me.

Speaker 1 (11:19):
But I, yeah, like for Tyler, that was one of his
favorite.
He was.
He's such a big Seth Rogen fan.
Yeah, he interviewed him.
He's a yeah, but I see all yourmovies and the shows and I just
love your work.
So I you know, I think Seth isvery talented, which you know
goes into our third talkingpoint, which we've already

(11:39):
answered a little bit, but wecan elaborate.
Yeah, did Seth Rogen showcase alot of comment comedic talent
in this movie for you.

Speaker 2 (11:47):
Yeah, yeah, he did.
But I mean I mean he's just,he's just that guy, he's just to
me he's just fun.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I feel like this forcertain comedians you have
comedians who do great at standup yes, and only stand up like
you put them in a movie and youknow, yeah, man, he has
somewhere great with movies.
Yeah, you stand up for shit.
And they have very few, or goodat both, who can balance both
extremely well.
One person I always thought wasperfect for that at that was

(12:20):
Eddie Murphy.
Yeah, it was still already onlyfew who could just he's only
got two stand-ups though butthat's all you ever need.
But it's just enough for me tobelieve that, hey, he can do it
if he wanted to, because peoplewould pay to see Eddie Murphy,
oh yeah.

Speaker 2 (12:37):
Oh well, like most stand-up comedians dreams is to
have like a hit TV series.
Oh yeah, like a comedy movie orsomething that they get into.
So that's usually like thehopes of a lot of Stand-up
comedians.
But like like what you said,though there's stand-up
comedians it's real good atstand, but then you put them in
a movie, oh dude, it's just like.

(12:58):
It's kind of like.

Speaker 1 (12:59):
It's kind of like battle rappers, like yeah, but
they can't do a commercialsuccess.
And that's fine, you know, andit's not.
Look, everybody has a forte.
Yeah, not all this are gonna betalented in all avenues.
I just felt like and again itmay be set, this don't stand up,
I haven't seen it.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
I haven't either.
I don't even know.
Yeah, I'm not familiar.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
If he has, but I will say that he Really showcased a
lot of comedic talent for thismovie.
I think he's written super bad.
Yeah, yeah he did that one and,if I'm not mistaken, I actually
hell.
He was in it to play with cops.
So you know, he's really just.
I have really big talent.
But I'll say this though I feellike his time of his prime

(13:45):
comedy movies that you know,starting he wrote we're like
2007 to 2012, that was kind oflike that.
You know Super bad andpineapple express.
You know, you know all the typeof movies that yeah, you know
I'm not, that was like another.

Speaker 2 (14:03):
Yeah, you know what?

Speaker 1 (14:04):
I mean, yeah, they did, they were, they were good,
but that was like really thatera of that comedy and you know
it's crazy to say this and youcan tell me how you feel about
this.
I was talking to someone aboutthis the other day.
Right, I feel like now, but soit's hard.
I feel like our is, like yousaid, become a more thriller.
We're gonna see more thriller,but I feel like now I'll be

(14:27):
honest with you, man, comedy isnot a genre I've really see
promoted like that anymore.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
It's not and I believe the reason why is
because I had to go this routewith it.
But a lot of people say it likemore people seem to be more
sensitive, like you got itpolitics Culture yeah, or
comedic wise back in the day,than what you do now.
Now it seems like it'd be hardto do like it, like you can't do

(14:56):
a Don't drink a juice in SouthCentral or what it was.
It Don't be missed minute, I doall the juice and you couldn't
do that nowadays.
You couldn't.
You couldn't do the airplane.
Oh, yeah, yeah oh yeah, it'slike there's a lot of movies
like you couldn't do that now.
They're like there's a wholescene in the airplane movie

(15:17):
where they were trying to figureout what these black people
were saying.
And then, like the white Lady,I think she was either the mom
off the Brady bunch or she was amom off the family ties.
She was often one of them whitefamily shows.
But like she was like oh, Iknow how to speak, jive Can't
get away.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
No, yeah, it's one of those things like you not
discussed, like I feel like now,if they were to do more, I feel
like now, honestly, stonermovies are like just mostly the
comedy, really the comedies thatyou see, because I can't think
of a comedy that has reallystood out recently because,

(15:56):
everything's been so.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
Marvel, sci-fi, action, spy John Wick, if you
want like straight comedy, youwould have to just see a
stand-up form.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
For a sitcom.
I feel like sitcom has the onlything to do when they see
comedy.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
But I'm talking just like comedy, just through and
through, like sitcoms.
There's comedy there, there'scomedic sitcoms, but then
there's points where there's apause, you know, where they got
to focus on whatever the storyis or whatever.
Like, what I'm talking about islike have you ever seen?
I'm going to get you suckered,yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like comedy is like where justevery scene is just something

(16:32):
ridiculous and it's just off thewall.
I don't think we're going toget that type of comedy.
No, no, I yeah.
The closest we're going to getto that is something that's so
zany off the wall that it's noteven funny, it's just stupid.

Speaker 1 (16:43):
Yeah, I really.
And that's the thing withPineapple Express for Bleaks out
there.
Some of the scenes again werestill ridiculous, but it worked
with the action story that theywere.
They were making out of thatmovie which made it to me makes
so much.
And here's the thing we aregoing to review Harold Bukumar

(17:06):
Go To White Castle right.
And one thing about that movieit has action.
It definitely has action asadventure.
But this action had moresomewhat of a serious tone with
some of the stuff.
It was like blurred between thelines of comedy and like
seriousness, which I reallyenjoy.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
because some stone movies, yeah, because the
violence was actually vital,like like when he lost a piece
of his ear and he tried toconnect it.

Speaker 1 (17:36):
He's like oh, he's like, oh, oh, he's like you know
, it's effective so you know,and that's the thing about that
movie.
But let's go to the fourth talkof our question.
For you, favorite character inthe movie.

Speaker 2 (17:53):
Oh, that's a hard one .
I'm between Matheson and Red.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
Okay, okay.
Why was it?
Why was it?
Because?

Speaker 2 (18:02):
like Matheson was just twisted, like he was a
weird character, like he wouldjust kill people on the spot
without even thinking about it.
Like kill him, he'll just shootthe gun off.
Like that's it.
The only person that he talkedany noise to was Saul, but
everybody else he just shot justpoint blank and then, like
person that crazy is outside ofthe house that that Dale did

(18:22):
goes into for that dinner he waslike to with his girlfriend.
And then, like he said, he'slike parks outside him and the
other hitman so excited, soexcited and what.
And then when he goes in thehouse, he's like yeah, he puts
his hands in the phone.
And then he was like yes.

Speaker 1 (18:42):
It was like almost like some sadomasochist like
killing his stuff.
For the bleaks out there, if youguys don't know, matheson was a
hitman played by Craig Robinson.
Yeah, so he's definitely workedfor the role.
And I'm going to say for me, myfavorites.
I'm going to say three oh shit,there's so many men.

(19:05):
Okay, I'm gonna have to sayfour.
Okay, definitely Seth Roganbuild, because he was the only.
It's the intelligent one out ofsoul.
Right, I did like red.
I thought red was funny.
So, with the fight scene in thehouse, get hit upside.
You know man with a bomb.

Speaker 2 (19:22):
You're bomb.
You have, oh, boy off ofLackening.
I don't know if any of y'allbleak seen that movie or whatnot
, but there's his brother in theblackening.
I forgot his name, sorry aboutthat Light skin brother with an
afro.
You'll know who I'm talkingabout if you ever watch the
blackening he.
He actually kind of looks likeshock G.
I probably shouldn't say thatI'm not meaning as a diss.
He just he looked like a youngshark anywhere.

(19:45):
That brother in the movie likewas a survivor, just like.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
One person I really liked when she got mad and I
thought it was when it was RosiePerez.
Yeah the cut corrupted copbecause like when she's like oh.
She's about to shoot.
She's about to shoot.
Oh soul, she was like yourstupidity amazes me.
And then, cuz they're New Yorkaccent and she's like she's a hi

(20:16):
, well, I'll be back in an hour,I'm gonna find out who's mother
Scrolling, that's sort of.
And then the chase scene washer in the cop car where she
shoots the civilian.
It's.

Speaker 2 (20:29):
So stupid though I thought it stops the car, trying
to screw it out of it, and thenlike they'll just Window, and
then like a hit, like oh, yeah,again, oh.

Speaker 1 (20:51):
So if I had to say those are my four favorite
characters and the moviepineapple express, and for Hell,
let's, let's get into thisright here.
So we're already talking aboutso many things, things that you
thought were hilarious about themovie, any scenes that you can
think, I mean there's so manythere's a fuel.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Like there's sayings that didn't catch on, like the
one saying that they had wasBFFF, which was like best
fucking friends forever.
Never caught on, but it wasfunny in the movie.
And then there was somethingelse that that grabbed my
attention.
That movie my mom's blank onright now, like Like no, there

(21:32):
was a few scenes in there thatlike that was just like what the
hell.

Speaker 1 (21:36):
Especially the scenes were red, red Was just oh, bro,
late red, but he got shot andhe was like fish tacos.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:45):
But he was like he says math is a.
Yes, I'm pretty sure that's whyI ain't seen this 70s shot.
And then he's like he's like Ilove it when apart, where he's
making the cake, right, he'slike hey, guys, just chill
making the cake.
Oh, no shit, he goes like it's.
Uh, he goes to my cat'sbirthday.
He goes.
I don't see a cat here.
Did you let it out by chance?
He's like no cuz, my cat diedthree months ago.

(22:07):
Now, who's the funny guy?
And he was like.
He said uh, he was like there'slike no cells, like, hey, you
know, let's just ask them.
Does that ask me what?
Because that's red.
He's like uh, well, you'regonna come in my house, keep
secrets will.
Almost makes you look like adumbass.
Yeah, he goes.

(22:27):
Look at my arm.
Yeah, I'm on my arm.
He's like what I got?
No hair.
What's the significance?
It makes me aerodynamic when Ifight.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
Because I can handle danger.

Speaker 1 (22:42):
Find out what's right , sir, anything.
That's what we need to know.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
Uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh, oh okay, scene.
It came to me the scenewhenever he goes to the high
school uh, dealt it.
He goes to the highest, yeah,to talk with his girlfriend, his
high school girlfriend, yeah.
And then like that one dudecomes, he's like all playing
everything and like look like hegot done, leaving football
practice something.
And he like there's all talkingand laughing, they're all

(23:10):
comfortable together.
She was like, oh, you'repressing, the gold bloom was so
funny, oh my gosh.
And then like he was like, oh,yeah, but hey, you know, he's a.
You see, dale, just looking atboth of them, like really y'all
want to get a room, likeseriously, y'all, y'all talking,
would be something like that.
And then wherever he walks offand he says let's suck, let's
suck today's dick, wait what?

Speaker 1 (23:32):
I like to see where he comes by Dale's place, where
Dale throws my salt spot.
He's like.
He's like um, hey, let me askyou something.
Um, if you had to pull the plugon somebody, would you do it?
He goes, uh, I don't know manI'm talking about, I don't want
to go down that road.

(23:52):
He's like I just came here forthe weed.
Yeah, yeah, let me, let me getyou.
He's like all right, got theweed.

Speaker 2 (23:59):
Hey.

Speaker 1 (24:02):
And he said you're gonna smoke and run, like I
can't like this doing them alland I need your help.
He's like fuck it, why not,let's see?
And he gives the highest shit.
And he's like what is it thatyou do?
I'm a process server, so youlike serve people Like we're
borrowers.

Speaker 2 (24:18):
Yeah, it's talking about it.
He was all like no, this thingis sir?

Speaker 1 (24:25):
No, because I give out documents from attorneys to
people who don't want those, sothey don't know who they are.
Yeah, this sounds like fun, hegoes.
Oh, that's an interesting job.
I had a job where I could justsmoke all week, smoke weed all
day and do nothing.

Speaker 2 (24:40):
You do have your own, it's like you did, you got the
easiest job in the world.
I didn't think you found outfrom the movie it wasn't the
easiest job.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
He seems to be.
He was quite the bud man.
I'll say that he was quite thesalesman.
I love the chemistry with thesetwo.
And one thing I have to say,and I know James Franco is going
up to a lot of legal trouble.

Speaker 2 (25:01):
Yeah, with those accusations that he where he
went into a mistake and was like, yeah, we could watch weird
stuff on the internet.
That hits different now.

Speaker 1 (25:10):
I guess.
So my thing with James is thatI only really remembered him off
of the Spider-Man we're talkingabout why, you know?
Because I, you know, with thosemovies right there and I
thought it was really good forcomedic relief in this movie.
He actually did like watchingit again.
He really convinced me that hewas a real pothead, like I was.

(25:34):
Like I said, no, this dudeprobably really smokes.
but like that he was andeverything, but it was just cool
.
Just to you know, watch thismovie for the Blinks.
I highly recommend it and youknow we're going to go into our
final point with this.
And for the Blinks.
You already know this is theactual strain of bud, but we're
talking about the movieperspective.

(25:55):
The movie was pineapple,expressed at the actual bud
itself.
For you, ralph.
If it was a strain, how manypuffs would you have to puff on
it on a scale one to five,before you pass it off?

Speaker 2 (26:09):
I'll be fine Puff.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
Okay, I'm right there with you, brother, I'm right
there with you.
That movie again.
It's one of my favoritecomedies.

Speaker 2 (26:17):
Yeah, comedy action, yeah, a lot of stuff.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
You know, and it's a formula, I feel like the only
other movie that made me havethat much fun.
It took up the, it took up thestoner aspect, but it did have,
like, the drug aspect of whatthe comedy was 21 Jump Street,
oh that was a fun movie that wasa fun movie and to me that was
like the kind of closest thingthat action comedy over time

(26:42):
Right.

Speaker 2 (26:42):
It had kind of like a mix of both and the action
looked like some real action,yeah, and it had ice to it, yeah
.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
So it's one of those movies where, you know, I really
thoroughly enjoy pineappleexpressed for the Blinks out
there.
If you guys haven't seen it,man, y'all gotta, y'all gotta do
it.
And if you, you know, if yougot some pineapple express with
you, the movie is gonna be a lotmore enjoyable and I feel like
you guys are gonna really enjoyit.
But until next time, be safe.

(27:10):
Ulter Blikers.
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