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May 19, 2025 • 67 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
excuse me, is anybody sitting here?

Speaker 2 (00:07):
sorry this is taken, sorry.
What do you think separates afranchise like final destination
and fast and furious?

Speaker 1 (00:19):
I think, I think that horror fans and the genre fans
are the things that, like set itapart.
I mean, action movies are a lotmore dime a dozen.
I think action movies don'tnecessarily have as much of a
draw to them in terms of, likelead actors and things like that

(00:41):
.
Because if you look at theFinal Destination films, granted
, his part is very smallthroughout them, but they got
Tony Todd in the original movieand Tony Todd Candyman, that's a
horror movie icon and the fansshow up for stuff like that.

Speaker 2 (00:59):
Isn't he?

Speaker 1 (00:59):
in all of them.
He's in most of them, I'mreasonably sure.
I think the ones that were alittle bit shitty towards the
end I don't think he was part ofbut this one that was made.

Speaker 2 (01:09):
It's been 14 years since the last final destination
.
It's insane, um, but I kind ofdisagree with you.
Like you said, dime a dozen, uh, horror movies are harder to
make, I feel like, just because,like you're constantly trying
to figure out new ways to scarepeople.
Yeah, there is an algorithmlike you can easily do jump
scares and stuff like that, but,um, this one I wouldn't even

(01:30):
say it's scary.
All right, this, no, I mean like, not like this one's a
full-blown comedy, almost atthat point, almost because like
I mean, if anything, I wastwisting in my seat like how
disgusting it was, but like Iwasn't afraid.
Yeah, what I liked about itdidn't have a lot of jump scares
.
If like one or two I couldthink of, maybe, but I liked it.
But Fast and Furious I meanlike that's just getting too

(01:50):
outrageous where the FinalDestination franchise like you
know what you're getting whenyou walk in there, yeah, yeah,
like you show up for like thesegrand weird death traps that
happen and you know, know youwould never in these movies will
see like a resolution, likesomeone gets away with it, like
it continues on.
Oh yeah, kind of like the smilefranchise too.

Speaker 1 (02:09):
Yeah, yeah, I like that idea yeah, I think that the
I don't I mean with fast andthe furious too, like I mean
final destination 2 started outvery serious, like totally the
original movies.
The first two, I would say, aremuch more more serious and
genuinely kind of frighteningtoo, as opposed to these which
are intense and tense.

(02:30):
But also there are parts whereI was like I saw it in a crowded
theater and I was probably oneof the three or four people that
was laughing their ass off atsome scenes At the Final
Destination, at the bloodlines,yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:44):
I mean, I was laughing.
There is a lot of like stuffthat's meant to be funny and,
knowing you, with this humor,like something probably got
killed and you probably laughedat that.

Speaker 1 (02:51):
There's a a couple of them like are we, are we
talking about the movie?
Are we diving in yet or not?
Just quite yet?

Speaker 2 (02:57):
but, yeah, we'll get into the theater experience
because I have an interestingone too.
Um, but welcome back to this.
He's taken.
I'm your host, rob miranda.
Greg rosinski is back on thepodcast.
Hello, greg, it's been a minutesince you've been on.
Um, I've been talking about itlike, yeah, I'm expecting this
is going to be a better year formovies than last year and we're
just getting into that seasonnow.
Like we had a couple good,great movies.

(03:17):
Have you seen sinners yet?
No, I've not.
Oh, I've seen it three times intheaters.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
Oh, it's fantastic the last two movies I saw in
theaters were this and minecraft.
Oh my god minecraft.

Speaker 2 (03:28):
I've seen that because my girl wanted to go see
it that movie sucked.

Speaker 1 (03:31):
The movie was stupid, but I think they did the best
they could you know, putyourself like an eight year
old's foot yeah, I'm sure, likefor the target audience, it was
like great.
But also I would think thetarget audience is also people
around our age too, becauseMinecraft is a bit older.
Yeah, we grew up with that.
I spent many, many months justhigh off my ass building shit in

(03:55):
Minecraft.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
On top of that they get Jack Black and Jason Momoa,
which they both well.
Jack Black was pretty decent,but Jason sucked.
I hated the kids in that movie.
Yeah, the useless yeah but, um,I've been going to movies a lot
lately and slowly I'm startingto see a lot more people coming
to theaters.
Like I think the summer isgoing to be a great summer for
movies like jurassic world,superman, fantastic four.

(04:16):
Um, leo and stitch and missionimpossible is coming out next
week.
Yeah, there's a lot of goodblockbusters coming out this
year.
I'm excited to get into it.
Actually, lilo and Stitch I'mdefinitely seeing that Lilo and
Stitch and Mission Impossiblecome out the same day.
Fewer to go.
Which one are you going to gosee?
Oh, lilo and Stitch, really, oh, yeah.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
That kind of surprised me.
Yeah, I'm not a MissionImpossible guy.
I really am not last one, tomcruise, is good after.
But I like tom cruise back inlike the jerry mcguire days or
like those kind of riskybusiness days.
Yeah him now it's hard for meto separate him from the whole
scientology aspect of it andlike the fact that he's probably

(04:56):
crazy I said the same thing,but then I watched top con
maverick and the last Impossible.

Speaker 2 (05:03):
I felt like I was able to separate them.
Yeah, he was pretty good.

Speaker 1 (05:06):
He's a good actor he really is, but like he peaked in
Jerry Maguire Jerry Maguire isone of my favorite rom-coms.

Speaker 2 (05:12):
Wasn't like in the 90s, yeah.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
Yeah, for real though , like back in the day when Tom
Cruise somewhere probably I meanyou know that fact like uh uh,
christian bale, he modeledpatrick bateman off of tom

(05:37):
cruise no, oh yeah.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
Yeah, I think I did read a fact about that.
They were gonna make thatakethat with Austin Butler.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
No, they can't remake that.

Speaker 2 (05:45):
I think they just cancelled it recently.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
That's a very specific 80s kind of style.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
And I don't like it.
How are you going to remake it?
Is it going to be the sameexact movie?
Are you going to change somethings?
Because?

Speaker 1 (05:56):
you lose If you update it and modernize it,
maybe, but it loses a lot of thewhole satire of the culture of
the 80s where it's just allexcess, excess and them doing
coke and talking about gettingreservations at Dorsea.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
Thinking about when's the last newer movie that
you've seen that they did drugs,like that coke and stuff.
It's been a minute, I feel like.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
Yeah, I haven't seen that stuff in film in a minute,
yeah.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
Some random like.
I had a whole list of Hollywoodupdates.
I wanted to go over these but Iforgot it.
But one of the ones I rememberis King of the Hills coming back
.
Did you see that In Hulu, witha lot of the same creators
coming back too.
I like how they do this becauseyou never see this in cartoons.
It's going to be set yearslater where Bobby's an adult now
I think he's going to be a chefor something like that.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
Were you a big fan of King of the Hill.
I fucking loved King of theHill.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
I loved King of the Hill.
Are you excited about this?

Speaker 1 (06:48):
I am excited I will give it a good shot.
I think that Hank Hill is oneof those that if you bring him
to the modern age, you could geta lot of good stories and a lot
of good.
He's a timeless kind ofcharacter and I think putting
him in today's political climateand like, yeah, putting dale in

(07:09):
today's political climate, Imean.
The sad thing is, though, withdale, you know, johnny hardwick,
the guy that voiced him, diedwhile he was recording it right
yeah I think.
I don't know if they got.
I'm almost positive they didnot get a replacement.
I think they are going to dealwith it in the show.
I'm not sure.
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
Do you think the sister would probably be live in
today's world, like, oh, shehas an OnlyFans or something
like?

Speaker 1 (07:34):
that, oh, luann, yeah , yeah, probably I could see the
sister doing something likethat, yeah.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
Yeah, other big news superman obviously we got a new
trailer.
I don't know if you saw it lastweek.
I'm, I'm down for the tone,like I'm.
I like the james gunn kind oflike jokiness of it.
You know, like the first threetrailers came out it was cool.
All it was was showing likeaction sequences.
But like this last trailer wegot like an actual some look
into the storyline a little bitand the trailer got me hyped.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Yeah, I'm stoked for it I have a good idea of like I
think it's going to be basedaround almost like the all-star
superman storylines um, theyhave set out which storylines is
it looks it looks fun, like II'm.
Yeah, I get hesitant when I seelike the world building parts
of like adding the greenlanterns and hawk girl and uh,

(08:21):
mr, terrific yeah, they're justfilming supergirl, which is not
supposed to even come out forover a year from now.
Yeah, I'm I'm hesitant when Isee that stuff get like thrown
in because I think you couldtell good superman stories
without it.
I think superman's one of thevery underrated characters of dc
.
I think that he is the storiesthat you could tell, especially
like if you want to modernize itin today's world like he is a

(08:44):
immigrant, you know, like he isliterally an illegal alien yeah,
and the trailer shows him likefighting a war and outside our
country, something like thatyeah, like you could tell good
political stories with himwithout the weight of the entire
dc universe yeah, yeah and like, as much as I love the idea of
like nathan fillion, like, doyou, do you know Guy Gardner at

(09:05):
the Green Lantern?
Yeah, he's supposed to be brashand cocky and kind of like yeah,
common ass.

Speaker 2 (09:09):
Yeah, do you think he could?

Speaker 1 (09:10):
do that though Nathan Fillion.
Is that just great casting?
I think that's amazing castingand they're nailing the comic.
Look of it.

Speaker 2 (09:20):
I wish they would've, maybe if Nathan was a little
bit younger no, no, it works, itworks with that bowl, haircut
and everything.

Speaker 1 (09:27):
I'm on board for it.
You know, I like.
I like Nicholas Holt as LexLuthor a lot dude, he's such a
great actor.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
I just saw the.
The juror number three yeah, ohmy god, he's phenomenal.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
Nicholas Holt is gorgeous.
I would watch him read a phonebook.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
Yeah, he's one of my top ten actors right now.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
Fantastic Four is right around the corner.
Are you excited for that?

Speaker 1 (09:52):
Yes and no.
I didn't go see Thunderbolts,thunderbolts.
I'm kind of curious aboutThunderbolts is pretty good.
I've given my take on Marvel inthis before, but I'm kind of
over it.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
Thunderbolts might get me back into theaters, or at
least on disney plus, uh, but Ithink the new captain america
is supposed to come on disneyplus like next month yeah, the
big wet fart yeah yeah, so Imean thunderbolts, the past
eight or seven or eight movies.
We got nothing but questionslike how it's leading all
together.
Like this one, it does answer alot of those questions, so I

(10:26):
think it did give me a littlebit more hype for Fantastic Four
and the new Avengers moviecoming out soon.
Um, and it's.
It's a great movie about mentalhealth too.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
So that's, what um that's what.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
That's why I think it did a little bit better.

Speaker 1 (10:38):
Um, for I'm always like cautiously optimistic on
that because I love thefantastic forest characters.

Speaker 2 (10:48):
I think that in the power hierarchy of these
characters, I think they're someof the strongest that there are
in the marvel universe yeah, ontop of that, like there's very
few characters in the mcu thatactually have superpowers, you
know, so I'm excited for thatreason alone.

Speaker 1 (11:03):
Yeah yeah, you know, and the the.
I'm curious too because I knowthat franklin richards will be
in this and which is thatactually have superpowers.
So I'm excited for that reasonalone.
Yeah, yeah, I'm curious toobecause I know that Franklin
Richards will be in this, whichis Reed and Sue's son, first son
, yeah, and I think he isconsidered I'm almost positive
he's considered a textbookmutant.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
Yeah, yeah, he's an Omega mutant.
He's one of the strongest inthe whole universe.

Speaker 1 (11:24):
So, like I hope that it isn't a Fantastic Four movie
co-starring the X-Men, you know,I hope it is.
Oh, I didn't think about that.

Speaker 2 (11:33):
I think you're definitely going to see them
interacting in that new Avengersmovie.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (11:39):
Like people are theorizing, it's going to be the
Avengers versus X-Men.

Speaker 1 (11:42):
I've heard that too.

Speaker 2 (11:44):
Yeah, but I would like to see.
I wish Iron man and CaptainAmerica were here, for that
though.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
Exactly, I'm a cheap one.
You give me the nostalgiafactor and you give me James
Marston and Halle Berry a stormagain.

Speaker 2 (11:59):
That whole lineup for the chairs James Marston was
probably the most excited for.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
I'm a sucker for that .
They'll get my money.
I'm annoyed by it.
I'm annoyed by it, but they'llget my money for it.

Speaker 2 (12:13):
Yeah, I'm excited they're filming right now.
I mean, I've seen set leakslike costume leaks of like
Doctor Doom specifically, butI've only seen one post of it,
or one or two posts.
I don't really buy it, because Ifeel like that would be bigger
news.
We're talking about horrormovies, though.
Today we're going to be doingthe new Final Destination
Bloodlines.
It just came out this past weekand for a throwback you picked

(12:35):
a movie that I think it came outlast year, right, yeah, 2024,
the Monkey, stephen King.
I've never seen it.
I've never seen it.
I remember when it came out intheaters I was kind of skeptical
on seeing it.
I just didn't at the time, andI'm glad I watched it.
It is scary in some ways, butnot as scary as you might think,
no, it's just like this.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
One More of a dark comedy.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
Final Destination is, like you fighting Not fighting,
but trying to escape death.
But death isn't a physicalbeing or anything like that.
The monkey is the same thing.
But you have something intrying to escape death.
But that isn't a physical beingor anything like that, but it's
.
It's, the monkey is the samething, but, like you, have
something in your hands yeah,like it's a little bit more of a
tangible object.
Yeah, yeah so that's why I thinkyou picked a perfect movie to
go along with this, uh, finaldestination.
I did the first movie on thispodcast.

(13:17):
It's a great franchise yeahit's like it is very gruesome.
It's not for everybody, um,because there are definitely
times where I'm twisting in myseats and each time a movie
comes out like they just outdoit Because these are all freak
accidents.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (13:30):
And they do get freakier as they go along.
I think the most memorable onewas a Finalization IV with the
log truck.
No, that was II, ii.

Speaker 1 (13:41):
Yeah, ii opens with the accident on the highway.
Iii is the roller coaster.
Four, I want to say, is theaccident at the speedway.
Five is a bridge collapse.
I might be getting that wrong,but I think those how many are
there?
Total is this six.
I think this is six.

Speaker 2 (14:02):
They don't list it here or the state on that.
It's kind of weird too that theyneed to find a destination
bloodlines I mean, it's a familything yeah, yeah, yeah, it's
definitely unique, take on it,and I think this is a perfect
way to reintroduce this kind offranchise.
Um, because, yeah, let's justget into it, let's just get well
, you know, before that let'sget to talk about theater
experience.
I went to go see this onopening night on Thursday night.

(14:22):
I originally was going to do itat five o'clock, cause, like
cool, it's two hours to get upby seven o'clock at my night.
But traffic was so bad I waslike I'm just going to go later,
but it's been so hot lately Ifwe didn't turn on our AC yet, I
was like fuck this I'm.

(14:46):
And, um, it was kind of packed.
I went to the one in hobarthere who that usually is never
packed, and there was a goodamount of people too, like of
all legions, to the point whereI was like like I think you
might get scared of this, but Ithink I was probably more scared
than they were no, wow, mytheater was pretty packed too.
I was really, what did you go on?

Speaker 1 (14:57):
I went saturday or saturday or 50 and it was busy
in there, yeah really, yeahright, I'm excited to hear that.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
I hope it does well.
I was surprised this movie gotreleased on IMAX too.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
Yeah, it's going to do well.
I know it's going to do well.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
Yeah, I was very surprised it was released on
IMAX with Sinners still making aroutine and also Thunderballs
is still going pretty strong.
What are you looking?
Oh, there's a light there.
Never mind, I'm like, what thehell is that?
Um, yeah, it was a greatexperience, this one.

(15:29):
I don't know if they had apopcorn bucket specifically for
this one, I wouldn't want afinal destination popcorn bucket
, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (15:35):
I feel like you would reach in it would.
It should just be likesomebody's busted skull open or
something I've seen weirder.

Speaker 2 (15:44):
So I mean, uh, because the the new mission
impossible pop, missionimpossible popcorn bucket got
released, yeah, and that lookspretty sick.
It's just like a bomb thingwhere you push it down or
something like that.
Also, lilo and stitch has apretty good popcorn buckets
going on right now.
Um, let's get into it.
This movie movie, finalDestination, bloodlines, played

(16:05):
by a recurring violent nightmare.
A college student returns hometo find the one person who can
break the cycle and save herfamily from the horrific fate
and inevitably, Inevitably Thankyou.
It awaits them.
I mean, I'm not going to spendtoo much time explaining the
plot of Final Destination,because this is like the sixth
one.
We all know how it goes like.
Someone sees like a group ofpeople dying, she realizes, just

(16:29):
like her, glimpsing of thefuture.
She comes back, she warnseverybody, she saves them, but
then death still finds them all.
Yeah, before it's just been agroup of people like friends or
even strangers before, who theyhad to save.
But this one is a little bitdifferent.
That's actually a lot different.
A woman in the 50s same thing.
She witnesses death, but shewas able to save everybody and

(16:50):
she survived and she grew up,she had a family, she had
grandkids, uh, and death waslike you guys weren't supposed
to be born, exist ever.
So he's killing the wholebloodline, which is insane.

Speaker 1 (17:02):
Well, yeah, well, everybody that she saved it went
on to have families, and thosefamilies weren't supposed to
exist yeah, we'll get into that,but it that concept alone I was
very excited for and it's justdeath.
Being a petty motherfucker andjust being like, yeah, you think
you're gonna get away, nah, Imean there is a funny scene

(17:23):
where, like the woman who's seen, with everything um stephanie
no, not stephanie thegrandmother iris iris almost has
like a funny like roommate kindof like back and forth with
death.
Like I see you fuck face yeah, Ican't like it's funny because,
yeah, like she, stephanie, hasvisions of her grandmother in

(17:45):
the accident that happened.
We'll talk about that.
Yeah, and she goes to visit thegrandmother and the
grandmother's in a fuckingbunker.
And she's off her fuckingrocker.

Speaker 2 (17:54):
That bunker was pretty insane.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
It was pretty cool, I'm not going to lie, but she's
fully crazy and she's justeyeballing all the different
possible ways.

Speaker 2 (18:04):
Right.

Speaker 1 (18:04):
Do you ever just look around in your room and like
dude after watching these movies?

Speaker 2 (18:08):
definitely you walk out the theater, like noticing
every little like shift of windor something.
Yeah, so I don't know.
Let's just talk about thebeginning, because like it sets
up in the 50s, like I said, andit's interesting, I don't think
we've seen that before, likeit's always been in real time.

Speaker 1 (18:22):
Yeah, so the different structure of it kind
of threw me off, because I wasexpecting it to be like hey,
accident, she saves them, wefollow, we see that sequentially
.
But we just see the accidentand it cuts to it being a dream,
it's present day.

Speaker 2 (18:40):
Yeah, that was pretty insane because obviously from
the trailers we know she goesback and saves everybody.
Yeah, yeah, that was prettyinsane because obviously from
the trailers we know she goesback and saves everybody.
But like the format, like that,I thought for sure this movie
was going to open up with thatbarbecue scene in the trailers,
yeah, and then go back.
I thought it meant like adifferent family that had
nothing to do with it.
But no, but it.
It's pretty traditional how itstarts off, like this family,
this couple, go on this date tothis new skyscraper.

Speaker 1 (19:02):
It's kind of like it reminds me of the needle in
seattle restaurant and then, uh,opening night apparently got
finished five months ahead onhis date to this new skyscraper.
It's kind of like it reminds meof the Needle in Seattle yeah,
the Sky Needle restaurant.
And then opening nightApparently got finished five
months ahead of time.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
Right, that elevator guy was.
His voice kind of annoyed me.
Well, and she's like.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
Is that a good thing that it was finished five months
ahead of time?

Speaker 2 (19:17):
Right and it's a clear elevator, the floor going
up on the elevator, glasselevator, like yeah, yeah, that
would scare the shit out of me.

Speaker 1 (19:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:24):
And the dance floor up there.
It was glass.

Speaker 1 (19:27):
You know they didn't give a shit about that shit back
in the day.
No, people were dancing.

Speaker 2 (19:31):
I thought about this too, Like, dude, we don't have
any more clubs that you godancing anymore.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
It's kind of sad.
Yeah, yeah, because you're sucha.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
But it's fun Like they closed Shades of Time
recently and that was a place alot of people wanted to go dance
, but anyways, they go to thisnew restaurant in the sky.
This is where she has a vision.
There's a lot of people notablein this movie, like the singers
and the little fuck-facedlittle boy.

Speaker 1 (19:58):
That's one of I don't want to like For people.
Are we assuming people watchedthis already?

Speaker 2 (20:05):
You know, if you were gonna see it, I feel like you
would've seen it by now.

Speaker 1 (20:08):
That is one of the most satisfying things I died.
I busted out laughing when ithappened.

Speaker 2 (20:14):
He was a little shit in this movie, just being a
little rascal and stuff likethat.
He was the one who set off thewhole occurrence of events.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
One of my favorite fucking scenes, I think, in any
of these movies, because he isone of the last ones to die.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
I think like the third of the last to die.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
Yeah, in the initial accident, and he's one of the
few that manages to make it.
I think he might be the onlyone to make it to the ground,
right?
Yeah, he makes this littlepiece of shit.
Kid, who's like picking onpeople and just being a dick
yeah you know, he manages tomake it to the ground and you
see him just fucking strut andlike, you see him happy and

(20:55):
smiling and then a fucking pianojust crushes him.
Dude, that's one of my favoritethings about this it's one of
my, it's like a fucking looneytunes yeah, yeah, definitely,
definitely, uh.

Speaker 2 (21:07):
It's one of my favorite scenes too, but like
you, don't see that characterever again, I thought, because
he was like I thought we he wasbefore the iris wasn't he?

Speaker 1 (21:16):
I mean, I don't think so.
I think he died after okay,well, that's the case.

Speaker 2 (21:20):
He died before he died.
Okay, that's right rightbecause her iris and um jb I
thought he was after and that'swhy at the end, I thought I was
going to be like I'm crashingwith him or something like that
no, no, no, it's a piece of shit.
I think it was funny, though Iwish they would have shown how
he died, though that would havebeen pretty cool, or at least
show his obituary or somethinglike that yeah, yeah, yeah, that
would have been cool like alittle nod he still died on a

(21:41):
piano, or he died like on askyscraper or something like
that so, like the people thatshe saved.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
Though it's, it stands to reason that, like the
other movies, were based on thattoo dude, I thought that too.

Speaker 2 (21:53):
I thought that was a theory.
I thought one of the you knowthe other grandkids or something
like that, would have been likesomeone from the first movie or
something like that you know.
That would have been insane,that like connection.
There it is believed, and it'spretty obvious, that this is the
same universe as the front ofthe destination, but there's
nothing really directly tyingthem to each other, uh, other
than the fact that what's hisname, um?

Speaker 1 (22:15):
no, no.
There is stuff like because inthe grandma's death book like
she's got a mcguffin, that's aoh really, yeah, a death book
where she's got all of her notesthat she's trying to give to
stephanie, to you could stopdeath with this.
And she's flipping through itand you see things like oh, log
truck.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
You see things like I did see that, but like they
also talk a lot, there was a logtruck reference, a couple of
them in this movie I look likethat.

Speaker 1 (22:38):
That was pretty funny that last bit.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
You know where that comes yeah, yeah, it's great um
and there's like other smallinstances that like show, it's
the same universe.
For instance, I read that thatbeer that they were drinking at
that barbecue scene it's a fakebeer company.
But it was also established inthe second fast and furious.
I'm not fast and furious uh,foundation, yeah that's pretty
cool, like little details yeahum, that's creepy right now, I'm

(23:04):
sorry, yeah anyways, he goes,so let's go back up.
She saves a lot of people.
There's like maybe 30 or 40people that she saves and it
makes sense that, like deathtook this long to come to them
because he had a lot of work todo.
Yeah, um, I feel like you saveda lot of time in this movie

(23:24):
from them trying to figure outwhat's going on, because Iris
already knows what's going on,so you kind of get that stuff
all together, which is prettysmart, but now it's like a
Stephanie trying to convince herother family too, I guess it
sets it up pretty well and likeshe goes to visit Iris, the
grandma, who's like the familydynamics and who's related to
who kind of confused me a littlebit, it was a little bit hard
to keep track of.

Speaker 1 (23:43):
But she goes to visit the grandma who saved everybody
and got like essentiallydisowned from the family to be
like, hey, grandma, why am Ihaving these nightmares?
Yeah and uh, the grandma's likegrandma kind of lays down what
happened and tells her whathappened, and stephanie's like
you bitch, you're fucking crazy,I'm leaving.
And the grandma is like no, no,no, you need to take this book,

(24:05):
you need to take this book yeahand she established.
The grandma has not left theplace in like how long, like
years, decades I think, so she'sbeen essentially who's helping
her?

Speaker 2 (24:16):
who's getting her groceries?
I was wondering.

Speaker 1 (24:17):
She has medication and she's got diagnosed with
cancer, so you're leaving thehouse, yeah, um, she said, yeah,
don't poke too hard, but um,she like, and she goes she
stands at the threshold of herhouse to follow her
granddaughter out and she stopsand it's one of the best, one of
my favorite moments, becauseyou see her and you hear the

(24:38):
wind kick up like death has beenout there this entire time just
waiting and it's a close-upshot.
It's not my chance yeah, well,yeah, because it's like a
close-up shot on her eyes andyou see her look at every single
thing, and then you would seeit in the book too, which I love
.
That, yeah, yeah.
So she's and she takes thechance and she's like you just
need to see it.
You need to see it.
Take this book and you know,seeing is believing.

(25:00):
And then, in a matter ofseconds, a freak, freak accident
.

Speaker 2 (25:05):
Yeah, wouldn't you think that Death would try to
hurry up and get it before shegives her the book?

Speaker 1 (25:09):
I think Death has a sense of humor.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
Oh you think so, because I feel like it would
have been a lot easier to killthem too, if they didn't know it
was coming.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
Well, Tony Todd establishes that when you fuck
with Death, things get messy.
So I think Death, at least thispersonification of it, is a
fucking bastard.
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
He's gotta be, it's gotta be.
So, after she finally believeshim, she wants a family, because
their mom was estranged too.
The mom was trying to protecthim from all this stuff too, but
I feel like you should be withthem more than anything right
now.
I mean, you heard what likeit's inevitable, inevitable, so
you might as well enjoy the timeyou have left, well iris's

(25:50):
granddaughter, iris's daughter,stephanie.

Speaker 1 (25:52):
Yeah, like I mean she , she couldn't have a life with
her kids because, like of theway her mom was, the mom, like
it's.
It's a thing that gets passeddown, just a jet, like you say,
it's bloodlines, like this is aessentially a generational
trauma that keeps getting passeddown yeah, I was wondering,
like if you were that worriedabout it, why do you have a
second kid too?

Speaker 2 (26:11):
you know, but like she probably didn't realize at
that point, yeah, most peopledon't plan that she's pregnant
like at that at that the thingthat, yeah, so yeah, she
probably didn't realize at thetime.
Um so anyway, she was once afamily.
There's all that barbecue scenetoo, and this movie fucks with
you a lot as a bartender.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
I was going to bring that up for you too.
It fucking stressed me outseeing it.

Speaker 2 (26:32):
I thought of you immediately, because there's a
scene where their broken glassgets into ice and it's teased
throughout the whole scene Likeoh, is someone going to drink it
?
Is someone going to step?

Speaker 1 (26:40):
on it.
It's a fun scene.
I love that scene isn't likethe rake under the trampoline,
like it opens, like it cuts tothem, doing it like a family
barbecue yeah, and it's.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
It just sounds like.
It makes you think like, oh,this can happen just any time of
the day.
Well, yeah, there's that andlike you see every single
character and they're all doingthings that could easily go
wrong, which is stuff we do allthe time, yeah, like starting
the grill or or like, like, uh,jambalaya, not seeing something
underneath your foot like plainjunk jenga yeah, yeah, it's

(27:12):
hilarious.
It's just like these people arejust standing around all these
death traps and there's thefirst victim is like the uncle,
who I didn't like his characterat all, that's gonna be.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
No, yeah, he needs to go, yeah, um but the way okay.

Speaker 2 (27:25):
So I don't want to get too much in every single
detail of the whole movie, butlike what was your favorite
death scene in this movie?

Speaker 1 (27:32):
my favorite had to have been there's okay, the the
they rush to the guy in thetattoo shop they think that he
died overnight that first.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
That was a hilarious scene too.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
Yeah, he goes missing and they they think, oh, he's
overnight.
That was a hilarious scene too.
Yeah, he goes missing.
And they think, oh, he's notanswering.
They think he's dead.
This is also my.
I'm glad you said it.
This is also my favorite.
One of the funniest fuckingthings I've seen in a long time.

Speaker 2 (27:56):
Stephanie calls it out how it's going to play out
too In the most ridiculous way,and there's no way it's going to
happen.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
Well, they rush to, they find him and they're like
you're alive, you survived, howdid you survive?
And he's like well, I'm justwalking down the street and
nothing's gonna get me.
And you see, stephanie, lookaround.
She points to what like a treetrimmer and a leaf blower and
kids playing soccer.
And she's like when she says itit sounds like the voice of a

(28:23):
paranoid, schizophrenic.
Yes, because she's like well,the tree trimmer could fall,
it's probably how hergrandmother sounded yeah, yeah,
exactly like it goes back to thegenerational thing, like the
trauma thing.
But she's like well, the tree,the, the buzzsaw could fall and
it could startle the guy withthe leaf blower and it could
blow dust in the kids eyes.
They're playing soccer and thesoccer ball could come and hit
you in the face and then the,the guy's like that's fucking

(28:47):
crazy, you're nuts, leave mealone.

Speaker 2 (28:50):
And then you see, I think what was teased earlier
than that, like in the book yousaw like an image of a truck,
uh-huh, so you knew a truck wasgonna come to play.
I think they'd show in thetrailer.
He even hit by the truck in thetrailer yeah but like when it
didn't, you immediately saw thegarbage truck in the back.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
I knew something's gonna happen with that, yeah,
yeah, and you think that like,yeah, this guy, like he may have
survived one night, but youthink it's coming for him again.
Yeah, but they run into anothercousin who's like a little bit
of a bitch and kind of estrangedfrom the family still, I think,
and they exchange words in theparking lot or like in the
driveway and it's a great, it'sa fucking great shot.

(29:25):
It's one of my favorite shotsin the entire movie, but it's.
You still are focused on theargument between the main
character, her little brotherand the guy who survived the
night prior you see the otherrelative in the background right
go jogging down street and thenyou see the exact chain of

(29:47):
events happen where the guy getsstartled with the leaf blower.
He blows the dirt into thekid's eyes, they kick a soccer
ball directly into her head andshe falls into a garbage can.
That gets grabbed, dumps herinto the back of a truck One of
the funniest things I've seen.

Speaker 2 (30:06):
It sounds so ridiculous, just saying it, it
was pretty cool.
I was shot too.
It was yeah, it's is.
And to see her like you crushbecause, like the garbage man
doesn't know she's in there ohyeah, and they crush, oh god.

Speaker 1 (30:17):
And the thing that makes it seem much funnier,
listening to you, listening tostronger by britney spears yeah,
the garbage man.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
Well, I'll swipe it through tinder, I think.
Yeah, so then, um, but that wasalso confusing scene too,
because like okay, did it justskip somebody because, like the
older brother was supposed todie and like you know, part of
the final destination is likethey figure out the way you die
is in the order you died andthat's the memories yeah,

(30:44):
whatever with the vision butthis one, like you, die on your
date of birth yeah like you, youdie from the father, then the
first born, and the daughter,the youngest yeah, like a little
timeline kind of thing.
So when it skipped the oldestgrandkid.
Everyone was kind of confusedbecause uh turns out.

Speaker 1 (31:01):
He's not a member of the.
No.

Speaker 2 (31:02):
No, you find out his mom had an affair and he's not
his real dad After getting atattoo for dad and everything
Yep.
Oh my God.
And then he's like Jerry Fingalis my dad or something.
Is that why you wanted to playcatch?

Speaker 1 (31:15):
all the time.
Like I said, this movie was wayfunnier.

Speaker 2 (31:17):
This movie has a good sense of humor and I think it's
probably the funniest of themuh, the kid who plays bobby, the
second oldest or the youngest,owen patrick, owen patrick
joiner, dude, it reminded me somuch of a young freddie, prince
jr.
Yeah, yeah, so much.
I was like he was.
He was okay in this movie.
I think he would have been mostlikely me scared of shit, like

(31:38):
kind of accepting it.
Okay, what can we do to do?
And he became paranoid himself.
He knew he was next in line oh,yeah, yeah you.
Yeah, you know, there's a funnypeanut allergy joke reoccurring.
There's another funny scenewhere someone dies through an
MRI machine.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
That's a wild one.

Speaker 2 (31:53):
After getting all his piercings ripped out, even his
cochlear.

Speaker 1 (31:57):
See, and that's why I'm saying, like, death has a
sense of humor.

Speaker 2 (32:01):
Yeah, I think we also skipped over, or I skipped over
humor.
Yeah, I think we also skipped,or I skipped over.

Speaker 1 (32:08):
um, this is a graduate meeting with tony uh,
tony todd who, unfortunately,since we're making this movie,
he has passed away since yeah,we can't like not talk about
tony todd for a second because,like I was genuinely startled by
his appearance in this moviewhen he turned around, because
like I remember tony todd asthis big, hulking, kind of like
intimidating figure, and likeyou could tell that that was

(32:29):
filmed within the last couple ofmonths.

Speaker 2 (32:31):
Oh yeah, I read that they knew filming this here who
was sick?

Speaker 1 (32:36):
Which is why they did that.
This would probably be his lastmovie.
They let him choose how hischaracter interacted with him,
or like how what he said really,and in like, there were moments
where he's talking about, like,life being precious and
everything, and it is kind ofmoving because, like it is,
you're looking at a man who isdying, yeah, and he's talking to
horror movie fans he's likeiconic.

(32:57):
Oh yeah, yeah, he's amazing likehe's a great actor, the
original candy man's fuckingterrifying, you know, like he is
an intimidating, scary presenceand it is.
It's sad to have lost him yeah,yeah, but I was able.
I was extremely happy with thiscameo oh, yeah, yeah,
especially his ending line too.

Speaker 2 (33:13):
Like I'm gonna enjoy the rest of my time as long as I
have it him accepting his fate,which you know is probably him
talking in real life too.

Speaker 1 (33:19):
Yeah, yeah, it was pretty sad, but it was very
moving and it's it's an oddlymoving kind of like thing to see
in a final destination it wouldhave been nice too.
There's like an uncreditedscene and he just dies
peacefully though that wouldhave been nice, you know yeah, I
think that would have been alittle bit too morbid, though,
given like a little bit true,true, like I thought it's like I

(33:46):
thought there would have beenany end credits scene, but there
wasn't yeah, I didn't say I hadto go.

Speaker 2 (33:51):
I went to the restroom and I thought I heard
music, like there was playing orsomething like that.
But no, I looked it up, therewasn't?
It was kind of sad.
Um, stephanie, let's talk aboutthe main actor, stephanie.
Um, stephanie Reyes, she's good, I like her.

Speaker 1 (34:07):
Her fucking big ass eyes, like her reaction shots
some of the times cracked me up.
Yeah, like I don't know if shewas doing it intentionally, but
there was like a lot of timeswhere you, she was just
wide-eyed and just fucking youknow.
Yeah, not necessarily thebiggest fan of her, but oh, I
really I liked her lot.

Speaker 2 (34:25):
Let me see what she's been in.

Speaker 1 (34:29):
I think the little brother is in the Monkey right,
or am I crazy?

Speaker 2 (34:34):
The little brother is in the Monkey, as who?

Speaker 1 (34:39):
I thought he might have been one of the kids in the
Monkey.
I don't think so.
Maybe I'm getting him confusedwith Chucky, because I know the
actor that played Charlie, thelittle brother, was on chucky
for a while that actress?

Speaker 2 (34:53):
she was on the flask.
Was she iris in there too?
I don't think that was her.

Speaker 1 (34:57):
I don't think that was her um, but the uh it ties
up.

Speaker 2 (35:02):
That little kid wasn't chucky, but he's on the
monkey oh, the way they tiethings up is pretty satisfying.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
I feel like you know, yeah, the deaths are very, very
gory.

Speaker 2 (35:13):
I didn't talk about.
They go to Tony Todd and seehow they can fix it.
Wasn't I was thinking aboutthis in the movie?
Wasn't one of the ways you canskip?
It is like going out of order.

Speaker 1 (35:30):
I like they say, say like killing somebody is one of
them like I I haven't re.

Speaker 2 (35:32):
I re-watched up to three recently so I don't know
all the rules.
Yeah, that about the same, likeyeah, if you kill somebody you
get the remaining years, andthere's a scene with the babies
and stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
They talk they think about it would be killed and
they, they cut to like the uhice, or what was it?
The maternity ward?
Yeah and they're standing right, right out in front of the
maternity ward.
Dude, what are?

Speaker 2 (35:48):
the things I thought about.
There's no way the autopsy roomand that big place would be on
the same floor.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (35:53):
Yeah, I hadn't thought about that.

Speaker 2 (35:55):
And on top, of that an MRI machine too.

Speaker 1 (35:57):
Yeah, you want to poke holes.
You can't poke too many holesbecause it falls apart.

Speaker 2 (36:07):
But that MRI machine falls apart.
But that mri machine, the bitwas was pretty fun, I'm not
gonna lie.
Yeah, I mean, and also one ofthe ways you can try to skip it
is you flatline, you die yeahyou come back to some.
Someone has been brought backto life and that breaks the line
um, which they have to do.
Has the guy eats peanuts andstuff like that and he was very
specific what kind of peanut hewanted to eat because he was
like fuck it, and he almost diesfrom this allergic reaction.

Speaker 1 (36:24):
But he gives himself an epipen and he gets like a
spring in the head you know it'ssome ridiculous, freak, freak
accident yeah, like it's from avending machine, spring too, and
like it goes straight into hishead and then it starts to twist
like it does in a vendingmachine.
Yeah dude.

Speaker 2 (36:41):
The third act was great with the cabin oh, yeah,
yeah and um, it definitely ledme somewhere like think, where I
was going to predict the endingwhen I seen that lake drive by.
It's like someone's going todrown and they're going to bring
her back to life, and sureenough, that's how they play it
out.
But then at the end you findout yeah, that's not how that
works.

Speaker 1 (37:00):
Yeah, no, no, no, that's not.
She didn't technically die.
Yeah, this is fun.

Speaker 2 (37:04):
and then there's like a last, very, very last minute,
like the last 0.2 seconds ofthe movie, is the final death.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I guess that's how mostof them are yeah, it's, it's.

Speaker 1 (37:14):
You know there's a bit of thematic kind of tying in
because at the end of the dayit is a penny that you know the
same penny.
Yeah, it's a penny that startsall of this like back in the
fucking 50s you know what's likecrazy?

Speaker 2 (37:27):
I was like that ends it too my.
My final thought was like ifthat penny was from the 50s, the
same penny that's probablyworth some money by.

Speaker 1 (37:34):
That was my final thought I loved.
Like you know, like they, theydrop a penny, like maybe about
20 minutes before act threestarts and a woman picks it up
and like yeah and you know thatpenny's coming back at some
point.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
Well, another plot hole is like the ending the
penny rolls onto a train trackand it shows like how it gets
caught in the tracks, I mean,but then it zooms out was like
how the fuck did that penny getthere?

Speaker 1 (37:58):
well, to a point like I thought it was hilarious
because the way that penny wasbouncing it almost looked like
it was like happily being likekind of like, because exactly
like she, the old woman, drops apenny and it bounces down a
series of stairs perfectly, andthe way it bounces looks like it
is happy.
It's like boop, ba-doop,ba-doop.

Speaker 2 (38:19):
Yeah, he's like finally, he's probably happy
because, like, it's been decadesyeah like this is my last thing
I gotta do.
Yeah, so then, um, but I mean,I think train derailment I like
tyler, picked a penny too,because pennies are often seen
as lucky.
You know, that was a prettyinteresting.

Speaker 1 (38:34):
Take on it too.
But like at the end of it atrain derailment and those, that
fucking log truck comes backyeah, I mean that was probably
one of the most expensive shotsin the whole movie I don't think
, because the train comingthrough houses and stuff like
that and then it just cuts toblack.

Speaker 2 (38:49):
I mean you're stuck like oh man, no one survived.
But also that's how in theirreality, that's how it would
keep going.
The cycle will continue.
There's no ending to it.
Same thing with Smile.

Speaker 1 (39:09):
I like how they never look too much in the deep, like
how to solve it or who toconfront or something like that,
and then get a satisfyingending like no like, are they
doing?
This is real.
Three I want to because becauseif they like what they set up
at the end of the second, smile,right, yeah, then that means
like everybody in that audience.

Speaker 2 (39:17):
Yeah, I predicted or I suggested I wish I don't know
if I talked to you about orsomebody else like it would be
interesting to see, like yeah,it was a pop star this time,
maybe someone like a presidentor our senator or something like
that.

Speaker 1 (39:28):
You know who gets it?

Speaker 2 (39:29):
that would be interesting yeah, yeah, so or
maybe we can see like adifferent country, like how
we've seen like um, I think whatalso I confirmed was a quiet
place.

Speaker 1 (39:37):
Three yeah, different country yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (39:40):
I don't know quite.
Place three is a differentcountry.
I think it's the same familystill.
But yeah, interesting we have.
We saw a different perspectivein New York.

Speaker 1 (39:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (39:48):
But how do they react in Tokyo, you know?

Speaker 1 (39:50):
Yeah, tokyo is loud.
Yeah, A lot more electronicsand stuff like that.

Speaker 2 (39:54):
Yeah yeah, final Destination was a good watch.
What did you see?
I actually have to go watchthis again tomorrow night with a
friend who wants to go see it.
But I would say it's probablylike second only to the original
in the franchise.

Speaker 1 (40:10):
Oh, let's do that.
Let's do what's your favoritefan?
Uh, I would think it's probablyone.

Speaker 2 (40:11):
This one on one this one well the roller coaster,
that I think the number three,two and then like the last two
are kind of interchangeable forme so also in the first one I
remember after we were watchingthere was a scene where someone
slipped on slippery water Likeit's in the bathroom, but then

(40:33):
at the end you see that waterretracting.
I was like, okay, so death cando shit like that yeah like make
it look like an accident.

Speaker 1 (40:42):
Yeah, that is weird, because they don't really do
that stuff.
They let shit unfold a littlebit more like an accident.

Speaker 2 (40:45):
Yeah, that is weird that because they don't really
do that stuff like right, theylet it, they let shit unfold,
right more right they make itmore like natural, and these as
opposed to it being likesupernatural yeah, and I like
how they never give like death,like a form either, unlike the
monkey, what you're going to see.
But because he's everywhere, hesees everything, you know, just
like you know the other side ofit too, god and all that and

(41:07):
it's, it's insanely so themother chose to freak out and,
like, dedicate her life tofiguring this out.
Yeah, I can see some peoplealso dedicating their life to
god too, you know, trying tosave, save themselves through
that way.

Speaker 1 (41:18):
Yeah, I'm surprised they haven't touched on that too
much here, I mean there's a lotof shit that could kill you in
a church too, man.

Speaker 2 (41:25):
Yeah, which is why it's saying to me how that kid
went to the hospital Like dude,you know you're next in line and
you're going to go to ahospital.

Speaker 1 (41:32):
I think there's more ways that, oh, they say that
they're like, yeah, they're likefull on saying like, oh, there
are so many ways to die in ahospital.

Speaker 2 (41:40):
So, as I mentioned, like walking out the theater,
you're obviously like more notes, oh, the popcorn machine's
popping a little too loud or thewind is starting outside.
I walked out of the movietheater and this is when we had
that bad storm and almost all ofMarable is completely black and
I drove home through that.
That was very terrifying.
After seeing this movie, I bet.
And then, like also before that, there was the conjuring

(42:01):
trailer.
Yeah conjuring trailer.
Yeah, that looks terrifying.

Speaker 1 (42:04):
That fucked me up more than this movie I'm
lukewarm on that, like the theone before this kind of soured
me on the franchise, becauseyeah, yeah, I didn't like that,
I didn't see.
I've seen like the first, firstone, definitely the first one's
great, the second one's reallygood I've seen the nun ones
awful.
I think I heard that too yeah,um I I don't deal with a lot of
the um other frant like spspinoffs of it.

Speaker 2 (42:25):
Like the nun and Annabelle.

Speaker 1 (42:28):
There's one.
What is it?
Annabelle Comes Home, orsomething.

Speaker 2 (42:32):
I think so.

Speaker 1 (42:33):
But like it deals with her, annabelle getting
unlocked in that room full ofhaunted shit.

Speaker 2 (42:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (42:40):
So, like all this different haunted shit,
apparently comes out Likethere's a wolf man in it,
there's like a crooked man in it.

Speaker 2 (42:46):
I gotta look into you , but there is a podcast that
goes over all our cases.
Yeah, I gotta find that for you.

Speaker 1 (42:52):
They're con artists, I think at the end of the day,
you think so?
I'm almost positive BecauseI've listened to podcasts on
them.

Speaker 2 (43:06):
I think that the Warrens, at the end of the day,
were a little bit moremanipulative, oh man, but I like
how they're not doing that inthe movies.
Yeah, yeah they, because, likethe movie, I'm not a horror fan
or like I don't like them, butlike the movies are so
interesting storylines yes yeah,yeah, I'll give you that you're
a big horror guy too, um, butlet's switch over to stephen
king's categories now.

Speaker 1 (43:21):
The monkey is based off his, I think that it's a
little short story that it wasin I don't know.
I want to say one of therichard bachman books.
I'm not sure in bachman was thefake name that he used to ride
under during the time.
Yeah, richard bachman I thinkit was like it's called like
outlanders or the last of us, Ican't remember uh, but it's a

(43:42):
little short story about amonkey toy that curses and kills
anybody that really comes intocontact with it.

Speaker 2 (43:47):
Now, and I'm assuming in the book it's the monkey
with the symbols.

Speaker 1 (43:50):
Yes, yeah, but they can't do that for licensing
Copyrights.
Yeah, yeah, because Disney hasit.

Speaker 2 (43:55):
I think so yeah, because it was just a toy story
I read too, but they switched itto a drum.

Speaker 1 (44:03):
It's the same exact effect, though versus the pain,
I think you're able to buildmore tension with the drum,
because the toy, the whole gistof it, is.
This family starts with AdamScott, first of all.

Speaker 2 (44:17):
That was pretty cool to see him.

Speaker 1 (44:18):
Yeah, so this guy.
It's a toy monkey thatapparently got passed down by
the family and kind of hiddenaway in a box that curses people
around it once the monkey getswound up.
And you have to wind it upright.
It doesn't just kill on its own.
You have to be the one to windit.

Speaker 2 (44:37):
It kind of reminds me of that one movie Was it a Brad
Pitt movie where you push thebutton and someone dies.

Speaker 1 (44:42):
It's the Box with Cameron Diaz and Marshall.

Speaker 2 (44:46):
It's the same thing someone dies.

Speaker 1 (44:48):
you twist them like thing yeah um, but you get money
for that that's true, I wasgonna say, um this, you just
twist it and he kills somebody,but it gets passed down family
through family and these twokids find it one day and they
twist it for the first time andthey like all this fucking death
starts to happen.

Speaker 2 (45:07):
The thing starts with a babysitter, who the
babysitter was named as a kathybates character.
And um misery, misery, it's thesame name, interesting yeah, um
yeah.

Speaker 1 (45:16):
It starts with the babysitter, moves on to the
mother.
You know like one of the boysis bullied heavily in school.
So, like he kind of.
There's an element of themonkey drawing people to turn it
, I think.

Speaker 2 (45:31):
I think there's like I was going to bring that up too
.
So, like the dad originally hadit.
And then he tried first of allpawning it.
I was like, if you can'tdestroy this, there's no way
that's going to work.
So, anyways, and this oh, Imeant to tell you like this
movie starts off immediate likewith someone getting killed in a
very freak way.
So anyways, um, the dad musthave died and the kids go

(45:54):
through his closet and find themonkey there.
Do you think that monkey wasalways there, or because you
know it can teleport?
Or I think it was teleported atthe right time, right?

Speaker 1 (46:02):
at the right time.

Speaker 2 (46:03):
I think there's an element like it wasn't there,
like last year.
Yeah, I think there's anelement where, once it knows
when it could be found and itknows, like when to be found,
yeah, yeah, so okay, I'm gladI'm not crazy in that theory, no
, um, so, like you said, theystart doing it and it's creepy
as fuck.
First of all, the monkey isterrifying.

Speaker 1 (46:22):
Yeah, it's a scary looking monkey.

Speaker 2 (46:23):
it's a good design of the toy and the camera work is
so great because it makes itlook like it's looking at you,
like you, the audience member,through the theater.
It's terrifying, yeah, it'sintense.
Like I had to break eye contactwith the thing.
It was terrifying and like,well, his open mouth concept is
pretty scary.
I think that was a popcornbucket, like the drum was a
popcorn bucket the drum was apopcorn bucket part.

Speaker 1 (46:47):
But the wind-up, the actual act of winding it up, is
a great way to build tension.
It gets wound up and it holdsone of the drumsticks in its paw
and it has a little mechanismin the paw where it spins the
drumstick before it goes down.

Speaker 2 (47:01):
Almost like it's randomly picking people.
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (47:04):
It's a great way of like.
I like the idea of that stylebetter than a um like symbol
monkey yeah, yeah, I can seethat too, because how's it gonna
like do that?
Yeah, it's not as like tensionbuilding.
I don't think.
Yeah, um, this movie's got adark sense of humor too, a real

(47:26):
dark sense of humor.

Speaker 2 (47:27):
Yeah, like the mom being like shit mom.

Speaker 1 (47:29):
Oh, I was just going to say like the mom in
particular, because who's the?
The babysitter dies right andthey end up going like the
mother.
The dad's not really in thepicture because he died or is
like out, like I think he saidout for cigarettes.
Out for cigarettes and forcigarettes, yeah, which I read
that steven steven king.

Speaker 2 (47:47):
That happened to him in real life.
His dad went out for cigarettes, never came home, which is why
he throws it in here.

Speaker 1 (47:51):
But uh, you know, they go to the funeral of the
babysitter and the kids areupset and the man is just
fucking dark and then she's like, yeah, you're gonna die one day
, it's gonna happen.
No, like telling these poorfucking children it the actress
that plays her She-Hulk.

Speaker 2 (48:10):
Oh, really, that's her.

Speaker 1 (48:11):
That's Tatiana.

Speaker 2 (48:12):
Masley yeah, oh, I love her.

Speaker 1 (48:13):
Yeah, she was.
I like She-Hulk.
I'm one of the only two peoplein the world.

Speaker 2 (48:16):
I love She-Hulk.

Speaker 1 (48:17):
She-Hulk was fun.

Speaker 2 (48:18):
She-Hulk.
She was also in Parks and Recas Aziz's girlfriend towards the
later seasons.

Speaker 1 (48:23):
You're right.
You're right.
That's funny.
The mom's got a real dark senseof humor.
The movie is about death andwhat it does to people at the
end of the day, but she is justaggressively morbid about it in
front of her two children thatjust watch somebody die in front
of them.

Speaker 2 (48:41):
Right, because she's going through a mental shit too.
This movie kind of reminds meof the anime Death note yeah,
yeah, I get that except like youknow, it's random here versus
you could pick what you wantedto, and so the kids freak out
like they realize, like thisthing is killing people.

Speaker 1 (48:55):
I think they do try destroying it, but doesn't they
find it, they dump it in a wellor something.

Speaker 2 (48:59):
They end up dumping it in the wells like okay, if we
can't destroy it, we gotta atleast hide it.
But they don't realize at thetime that it teleports, yeah.
So the kids grew up like Iforgot.
It's like 25, 30 years later.

Speaker 1 (49:09):
I mean there's an element of it teleporting but
too.

Speaker 2 (49:11):
But yeah, the kids grow up um we follow geez,
what's his name in the movie,how we follow how's character.
First of all, like he had aglow up too.

Speaker 1 (49:21):
He looked like a handsome guy in this movie.

Speaker 2 (49:24):
Was he one of the manana's brothers in the show?

Speaker 1 (49:26):
I don't think so, oh, um, but no, like it follows him
and he's, like he's getting thewhole movie's narrated by him
too, which I like.
That because, like one of thekids, like the, the dynamic
between the two brothers is onewas kind of the much cooler one
and the other was like they wereyoung yeah, yeah, much quieter
and a lot less like aggressive,but the other one was a bully
and kind of a shithead.

Speaker 2 (49:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (49:47):
So we follow the one that was not as cool or as
popular and he's trying toreconnect with a son that he
kind of ran away from because ofthe trauma and stuff like that,
yeah, which is wild to me, youdon't even have a kid.

Speaker 2 (50:00):
If you're that worried like that At one point,
do you think you would be?

Speaker 1 (50:03):
But point people have kids, yeah you could straight
couples walk out the door andtrip and they fucking fall.
And but I mean like I'm okay.

Speaker 2 (50:11):
So the reason he was with that girl.
So at one point in his life youthink he was happy I don't
think so.

Speaker 1 (50:16):
I think he was probably trying to just distract
himself.

Speaker 2 (50:19):
So maybe the trauma like caught him up later in life
, because some people happen.
But yeah, maybe.
I mean I like how the fact thathe was traumatized and he was
that scared of it even as anadult, which I feel like it
would be a very realisticreaction it would be.

Speaker 1 (50:32):
It would be, 100 would be yeah, same thing.

Speaker 2 (50:35):
I'm surprised he would return to the life of god
assuming, because I just keepsaying that's probably what I
would do yeah, yeah, trying tosave yourself, dude.

Speaker 1 (50:42):
Sit there and talk to the priest about the demon
monkey that's trying to killyour family I don't know.

Speaker 2 (50:47):
You know what a movie favorite horror movie of mine
is is the pope's exorcist.
I think you did that.
Yeah, because that story was sointeresting.
Yeah, I mean, it was veryterrifying, but I was more loved
it because the story is sointeresting um, yeah, that that
movie was ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (51:01):
Russell crowe and his fucking motorcycle pope.
I would watch that movieMotorcycle Pope with Russell
Crowe.

Speaker 2 (51:09):
I'd love to see Adam Scott in here, but I also saw
Elijah.

Speaker 1 (51:11):
Wood was in here too.
Oh yeah, yeah.
Like there's a lot of like.
Elijah Wood is a big indiehorror movie guy Like they cast.
He plays in a lot of smallerbudget movies because he loves
that kind of shit.

Speaker 2 (51:25):
Oh man, he had a show on FX and Wilford I respect and
I always love these actors thatcan like.

Speaker 1 (51:33):
There are genre actors that have made their
millions in livelihood off ofthat.
They don't look down at horror.
They treat it with respect.
I was going to bring her up.
She, very famously, has doneaward speeches where she's like
they don't look down at horror.

Speaker 2 (51:45):
They treat it with respect.
Like Jamie Lee Curtis, I wasgoing to bring her up.

Speaker 1 (51:47):
She very famously, has done award speeches where
she's like thank you to myHalloween fans.

Speaker 2 (51:52):
She loves the horror genre.
But I like how she also can besuccessful doing other stuff.
Yeah exactly, she's a veryfunny person too in real life.

Speaker 1 (52:00):
But she's not like Jennifer Aniston who wouldn't
even fucking mention the wordleprechaun yeah, she was low
budget in that, yeah, but atleast Elijah Wood said this?

Speaker 2 (52:11):
Do you think anyone interviewing her brings it up
and she's like nah, fuck that.
I would wonder.
I would wonder I guess she'dcome on the podcast.
I would definitely ask herabout it.

Speaker 1 (52:18):
Yeah, tell me about your time on Leprechaun.
Yeah, see how fast she gets upand leaves.
That'd be funny.
That'd be funny, but no, likethe, the dad does reconnect with
the son that he has, but hestarts to have these dreams of
you know like shit going downyeah, yeah they, they say that

(52:39):
their other, like the monkey, isback.
He's having like heavy dreamswhere, like there are like,
because it's the first like time.

Speaker 2 (52:46):
I love that too, like the dream single which was like
well, he's a giant monkey andhe's killing you himself.

Speaker 1 (52:50):
Yeah, exactly like there's dreams of that and he
starts to freak out and he triesexcuse me, he tries to reach
out to the brother, right Idon't know if he tries reaching
out, the brother reaches out tohim oh, because the aunt dies
and he's telling like, hey, ouraunt died like, and the cops use
the word freak accident so theyautomatically think it's the
monkey.
Yeah, he's a go check on it,yeah and then you know, and it

(53:11):
ends up being like a little bitof a road trip kind of thing,
where the brother doesn't reallywant to go do this, but he's
getting the impression that,like the monkey is back, so they
need to find it and dosomething with it, and part part
of that means going back to hishometown to reconnect with the
brother.

Speaker 2 (53:27):
Would you go back?

Speaker 1 (53:27):
or would you go the opposite direction?
Okay, so like when the brother,when the what was his name?
His name's Hal, because they'retwin brothers.
Yeah, so like the meeker onewith the son that he's trying to
reconnect with Bill, that hekind of Bill, okay, the meeker
one with the son that he'strying to reconnect with he ends
up taking him to his hometownto try and find his brother.

(53:51):
So like the son's kind of justdragged along on this.

Speaker 2 (53:54):
Sorry, this is going off topic real quick.
Do you know the actor whoplayed the young?
It's the same, it's one kid.
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (54:00):
The same guy.
I didn't know that.
Yeah, there's, I thought it wasreal twins.

Speaker 2 (54:03):
Yeah, he's doing dual roles I thought it was real
twins.

Speaker 1 (54:05):
No, but the son gets kind of dragged along in this.
But you ask if I would go backIf I was having a conversation
with my brother about a demonmonkey that was trying to kill
my family again.
And while I'm having theconversation, a woman explodes
behind me.
I would hightail it back home,back home, yeah, yeah.

(54:29):
Because what?
Because he wasn't even nearhome when that happened yeah and
this, what this?
I love this bit because that'sthe first real bit where I'm
like I, this is my kind of moviewhere she just somehow the pool
, that hotel pool that he'sstaying at, gets electrified.
A woman tries to jump into it,she and just fucking the second

(54:52):
she touches it.
She didn't get it in the water,oh, no, just explodes.
It's hilarious.
He's covered in blood, yeah,and he's like uh dude.

Speaker 2 (55:02):
there's a point in this movie where I felt like
this guy's so numb to death,Like he has no emotion.

Speaker 1 (55:06):
Oh, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (55:07):
Because, like Final Destination and like this movie,
they make it seem like life isa game.
You know, and people are justgetting tired of the game.

Speaker 1 (55:15):
You know, like him, yeah, he's just.

Speaker 2 (55:19):
I mean, he's on his path to find it and kind of try
and put an end to it yeah, andthen, like you know, this is a
spoiler alert for people whowant to see the monkey, give me
two seconds.
But this is like I didn't likethe ending.
I didn't like the brother'sstory arc.
Yeah, I liked how it was himwho was actually doing all this
shit, um, and I liked it was himwho went back and he looked for

(55:42):
it and he's been waiting for it.
He's been hunting it.
I did not like the way it ended.
It kind of like ends like withthe power of our brotherhood you
know, yeah, I mean it's not ahappy ending, though no it's not
, but like, I feel like healmost like changes character
immediately when he falls downand he's trying to help his
brother, trying to help him up.
He's like psych, psych, youknow it, psych, you know.

(56:02):
It's almost like a differentcharacter at this point he
resorts back to his 10 year oldself.

Speaker 1 (56:04):
He's fucking crazy, though, too, after all of that,
because you saw how he but hewas like you guys are going on a
road trip.

Speaker 2 (56:10):
Can I come?
I was like you just triedmurdering me for decades and you
killed millions in the innocent.

Speaker 1 (56:14):
You know yeah, yeah, and like the idea of go him
going back to his hometown toreconnect with the brother and
try and figure out what's goingon, and then he gets there right
, and the he's.
It's an open house for the auntthat died and the aunt dies in
a pretty fucking hilarious wayright, she's like fish hooks in
the face.

Speaker 2 (56:33):
Then she caught on fire and then she got her.
She ran to a for sale sign likethe wood one straight to her
head.

Speaker 1 (56:39):
It's funny.
This movie is hilarious.

Speaker 2 (56:47):
But it's funny, this movie's hilarious.
But you texted me like I'dnever seen it and he's like it's
hilarious, like oh, it's acomedy.
No, I just have a fucked uphumor.

Speaker 1 (56:51):
But like the guy goes to an open house and everything
and like the the retail agentsbe like yeah, everybody in
town's been dying in crazy ways.

Speaker 2 (56:58):
Tra la la, here's this house you do see a montage
of people dying throughout theneighborhood oh yeah, it's great
, like one's, like lawnmower,just like Final Destination.
Yeah, yeah, it's crazy.
Great sense of humor in thismovie.
I like how the sun came up likean important role in the third
act too, yeah.
You know, I was like oh man, Ithought the sun was going to die

(57:18):
.

Speaker 1 (57:19):
Yeah, I guess it makes you think that that way.
But what would you give this?
We didn't even do finaldestination first, let's do this
.
So the final destination I'mgonna say is probably an eight
out of ten for me.
I really enjoyed it.

Speaker 2 (57:32):
I felt it was the probably best one in the series,
but it's not for everybody Imentioned, I want to go see it
again tomorrow, but would you gosee it again in?

Speaker 1 (57:37):
theaters, not in theaters, I would probably go
see something else would you?

Speaker 2 (57:41):
would you buy physical media, like like a DVD,
for this?
Probably?

Speaker 1 (57:45):
probably Interesting Because it's not for everyone.
Yeah, I think it's made forpeople that have a little bit
more of a darker sense of humor,like people that are more of a
fan of the way it got, becausethe franchise got more and more
jokey and a little bit moretongue-in-cheek as it went on.
But I think if you got a senseof humor and you like the dark

(58:06):
comedy aspects, you wouldfucking love it I'm gonna give
it a seven out of ten.

Speaker 2 (58:11):
Um, I had a great time watching it the first time.
It was humorous, it did allthat stuff and it was pretty
gruesome.
It wasn't that scary it's.

Speaker 1 (58:19):
It's a good theater experience, like in a crowded
theater where people are likesquirming and laughing and
everything like.
It's a good one yeah, exactly.

Speaker 2 (58:26):
But going back to re-watch this again tomorrow, I
mean it's not gonna seem, infact, like I already know what's
coming.
And yeah, it's not one of thosemovies where the more you watch
it, the more detail you canfind in something too, you know.
So I mean it was it was goodfun first watch, so I'll give it
a 7 out of 10 uh, the monkey isdefinitely like nine out of ten

(58:46):
for me I would give it an eightout of ten.

Speaker 1 (58:49):
So we're right there, I mean because, like, we didn't
talk about all the great deathsthough okay, what was your
favorite one in this one,besides the pool one?

Speaker 2 (58:57):
the bees probably one of the stupidest things I've
seen in a long time, but I lovedit I mean the way it was shot
too, like it was a close up of abee and then like all of them
come out.
But then you see it coming outof his pores and everything.

Speaker 1 (59:10):
Yeah, they just go straight into this guy's mouth
right, like a million of them,yeah, and just crawl, like it's
a terrifying thing to thinkabout.
Yeah, because, like, it justmakes me want to squirm.
But I love this sense of humor,this dark, almost mean-spirited
sense of humor that the secondmovie has, because it is kind of
crazy, you know, yeah, in likethe climax of it, you know, the

(59:34):
brothers are reunited and theone brother you know the details
are laid out where, like, yeah,he went to go find the monkey
and the entire time he's beenwinding it up, hoping that it
kills his brother.
It's pretty dark, yeah, becausehe blames his brother and, like
, within the first 20 minutes ofthe movie, the brother is the
first one to actually wind upthe monkey because he thinks

(59:56):
that, yeah, can we just talkabout too the bullying that this
poor kid went through in thebeginning of the movie.

Speaker 2 (01:00:03):
Yeah, like a group of girls by a group of girls by a
group of girls.

Speaker 1 (01:00:08):
This is how they set up our main character.
He's like this meek littlenebbish kid and he's getting
ruthlessly picked on by a bunchof girls and they're throwing
bananas at him right and hecomes home just covered in
banana mess and he snaps and hewants to like.

Speaker 2 (01:00:24):
I think he puts all his blame, his hate, on his
brother too yeah, yeah and thenso he winds the monkey trying to
kill his brother.
Yeah, he's killing his mom,yeah and in the brother.

Speaker 1 (01:00:33):
The older brother blames him for that for the rest
of his life and the entire time.
He's back there in a solemntown just winding up the monkey,
hoping that somebody like itfinally goes toward the brother
yeah but there's that, though,where, at the end of it I don't
know if it's like I'm trying toremember is he winding the
monkey up multiple times, or isit just like?

Speaker 2 (01:00:53):
the monkey getting yeah, or does it click after one
wind-up, or something Well.

Speaker 1 (01:00:55):
The monkey either winds up multiple times or it
gets stuck.

Speaker 2 (01:00:59):
Or gets pissed off.

Speaker 1 (01:01:00):
I thought, yeah, that too, because then it just
starts like pounding, pounding,pounding, pounding, multiple
times in a row to the pointwhere, like, a plane crashes
nearby.

Speaker 2 (01:01:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:01:10):
And like a bus crashes, bus cheerleaders yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
That was insane.
I also like the babysitter'sdeath too, like the way it was
shot and like the lighting.
It was perfect and the headfalls off.
I thought they were going toshow like a grilled face or
something.
Yeah, it's like the movie'sfunny, I mean like they express
like how they hate going tofunerals and now that's all
they're going to and then so themom's funeral was pretty bad
because like he got the olderbrothers like mom, get up, you

(01:01:34):
know that was pretty sad, but Ialso didn't like the ending,
like how he gave himself like asuper villain costume with his
funeral and his regular shirt Alittle bit yeah, a little too
like comic book-y towards theend.

Speaker 1 (01:01:48):
Plus, he gets to a point where, like I don't know
if the world just changes at theend of it but you start seeing
ghosts, like it gets a littleoff the rails at the end.
That was kind of very confusing.

Speaker 2 (01:01:59):
I thought it would at least be his dad, or something.

Speaker 1 (01:02:00):
Yeah, but I don't know if it's just like the
monkey broke the fabric ofreality with the last bit or
what, but still, overall,extremely good movie yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:02:12):
I loved Adam Scott in this movie.
He was only in it for literallyfive minutes.
You don't even see pictures ofhim or anything like that in the
movie, but I mean I like him asan actor a lot.
I've been watching.
I finished watching Severance.
Have you seen that?
No, I want to.
I like him as an actor a lot.
I've been watching Severance.
I finished watching Severance.

Speaker 1 (01:02:25):
Have you seen that?
No, I want to, you need to, Ineed to get an Apple.

Speaker 2 (01:02:27):
So then I like so, knowing he wanted to do this, he
probably got a lot of money,but he probably just did it
because he loves horror moviestoo.
Yeah, you know, I love thatabout actors.

Speaker 1 (01:02:37):
Did you get that little bit of trivia that where
the they go to once the mom diesis the actual director?
No, I thought that was actuallythe guy who plays saber tooth,
and though no no, it's theactual um director of the movie
and he's good and he's the guythat ends up getting trampled to
death in a cow accident.

Speaker 2 (01:02:54):
A hunting accident, yeah, but hunting accident, but
he doesn't get trampled.

Speaker 1 (01:02:57):
I think it by cows, yeah I fucking see shit like
this makes me laugh.
Like you give me a horror moviethat's essentially a
live-action cartoon, I'm onboard yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:03:09):
Greg, I don't want to take any more time because you
got a hard out today.
What movies are you lookingforward to coming out?

Speaker 1 (01:03:15):
God, you know I still want to go see the Thunderbolts
.
I'll see it on Disney when itcomes out, because I do.

Speaker 2 (01:03:23):
Like probably 85% of the population.

Speaker 1 (01:03:24):
I'm intrigued on it.
You know like I'll watch it andlike it's gonna come out it
will grab me back into marvel?

Speaker 2 (01:03:31):
I don't know.
You definitely should watch itbefore.

Speaker 1 (01:03:33):
Fantastic four, definitely weapons I want to see
weapons so bad you know whatelse I want to see?

Speaker 2 (01:03:39):
what the walk?
Do you see that?
Oh, yeah, yeah, the long walkwith the long walks mark hamill
and it, and it's another StephenKing story.

Speaker 1 (01:03:47):
Dude, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:03:49):
The concept seems so fucking boring, but it looks
incredible.
Yeah, it looks pretty good.

Speaker 1 (01:03:55):
Simplicity at its best, I would say I'm going to
go out on a limb and think thatWeapons will probably be the
horror movie of the year.
Really Not the Conj theaterreally not the conjuring no, not
the conjuring I think it'sgoing to be weapons, because
weapons looks crazy.
I don't know what it is yeah,it's one of the best it's like
one of the best horror movietrailers I've seen in a very
long time.

Speaker 2 (01:04:14):
Yeah out of all the reactions like even though we're
like the fantastic four trailerreactions videos I've seen I
think weapons have the most outof like people who want to react
to.

Speaker 1 (01:04:24):
Yeah, I don't know what the hell's going on, but I
am on board.

Speaker 2 (01:04:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:04:29):
Plus, it's from the director of Barbarian.
Did you ever do Barbarian onhere?
Yes, yes, barbarian is fun.

Speaker 2 (01:04:35):
Barbarian fucks with me like for a year and a half.

Speaker 1 (01:04:37):
Really.

Speaker 2 (01:04:38):
Yes.

Speaker 1 (01:04:38):
Yeah, because, like you know, your foot stops
running fast as you can andyou're gonna go to a different
air or airbnb ever again.
No dude, no fuck.
That barbarian was fun for mebecause it was one of those,
like I knew it was a horrormovie, but I don't think it was
really heavily marketedbarbarian.
Uh, I agree with that.
The only reason I saw thetrailers because I went to
movies and I think that if itwas marketed, it focused

(01:05:01):
primarily on like the first 20minutes where it's like setting
up, like, oh, and you'd thinkAlex, Alex Karsgaard was the
villain.

Speaker 2 (01:05:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:05:08):
It's setting up and playing with the idea of the
tension of like oh, this guy'sbooked my Airbnb too.

Speaker 2 (01:05:13):
And it's like in reality it was like three movies
in the one Cause you see JustinLong's movie and then like it's
great though.
It was had because I went inblind.
Yeah, and like the sense ofhumor that that was great
marketing man.

Speaker 1 (01:05:28):
Great good movie, solid.
Yeah, so with weapons beingdirected by the same guy, I'm on
board um, what's that?

Speaker 2 (01:05:33):
talk to me directors.
They come out with a new movietoo.

Speaker 1 (01:05:36):
Yeah, the bring her back.
Yeah, that looks prettyinteresting.
I've read a review and I heardit's super fucking depressing,
oh man yeah, like I heard, it'slike the feel bad movie of the
year, oh man, but it's superfucking depressing, oh man.
Yeah, like I heard, it's likethe feel-bad movie of the year,
oh man, but it's like good, butalso you know, like heavy,
absolutely.

Speaker 2 (01:05:53):
I've seen like obviously the big movies, but
there's so many movies out therelike the smaller movies I don't
see anymore.
I just need to get back intothat.
Thank you so much, greg, forcoming back on yeah, my pleasure
uh, I have a big announcementcoming up soon, but you will be
back at some point yes, I wouldlike to try to at least um I
don't know.
Definitely recommend watchingseverance over the weekend yes,
I'm also watching the studio onapple tv with seth rogan

(01:06:15):
phenomenal.
Um, I know I'm a little bit late, but I want to start getting to
the the last of us let me getyour apple tv password.

Speaker 1 (01:06:22):
Just put it I use somebody else password.
I think you're using my Macstill right now.
So everybody is that you'reusing my Mac.
No, I'm using my.

Speaker 2 (01:06:30):
It must be my friends .
Yeah, because someone's beenwatching South Park and I was
like I thought it was you.
Stop me.

Speaker 1 (01:06:37):
I don't know how I would all right.

Speaker 2 (01:06:42):
Well, thank you for listening.
Subscribe to the instagram, thetiktok too, and stay tuned.
Next week I'll be saving you.
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