Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Mm hmm. It was a hello, welcome to war torn Portland.
(00:24):
I know, Oh my gosh, I cannot believe they were
living in this war zone. Yeah yeah, yeah yeah, do
you know what? Yeah, so scary here, it's so scary.
People crocheting around trees, there's people running marathons. There are
people dressing as clowns, which is an everyday basis. Girl.
They are doing an emergency naked bike ride. Yeah, I
(00:44):
mean how how we rallied the troops and we said
we needed planned we're not with weird within the fortnight
and they were like naked ride bikes. Legally we're there, Yeah,
we're so yeah, but welcome back to this episode, another episode.
Speaker 2 (01:05):
Another episode, Welcome to another episode of It would seem
as though this suddenly I'm.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
From another country. I don't know my accent witch country.
Who knows the podcast where we talk about anything everything
ends nothing mostly not.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
I'm ama, And it's a lovely fall day, yes, cool
weather and it's dry today.
Speaker 1 (01:32):
I'm wearing some HALLOWEENO.
Speaker 2 (01:33):
I say, we're all HALLOWEENO. She's wearing a shirt that
says Scream on it.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
It's like from the movie Scream. And then there's a
little little sayings and characters like.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
Okay, so I'm going to tell you I was confused
because this character on this side, just at first glance,
it looked like the bright frank side that's actually the moon.
Speaker 1 (01:53):
But yeah, so I'm not a scary movie watcher anymore.
It used to be.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
I mean, they were never my favorite genre, but I
could watch them. So I saw the first three Scream movies.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
Yeah, but somebody that you say that because you are
the person who's showed me some of the scariest movies
of my life, you know what I mean, Like, I
saw exercis at your house, I saw the others in
your house. I watched a lot of scary movies in
your supervision.
Speaker 2 (02:18):
And it turns out the movies that scare me the
least are the ones that are like what would you
call that, like the words supernatural?
Speaker 1 (02:28):
Supernatural?
Speaker 2 (02:30):
If it's just that can really happen, Like Scream, where
you have teenagers are killing each other because they're idiots,
that's terrifying.
Speaker 1 (02:37):
I agree.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
Where it's like a demon possessing a child, that's just
good times.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Yeah, girls, little I need her personality, bitch, Everyone just
needs a little pozuzo. Life when I was I thinking
about Oh my god, oh my god. Oh no, but
the paranormal activity movies ruined my entire life. Girl. I
(03:06):
but they're scary as fuck. Kevin and I watched all
of them a year ago, and they're also scary. But
I think because it's like found footage. You know, it's
like reading cams or security cams, and it's all very
eerie to me. I'm a real sucker for found footage
or you know, kind of mockumentary kind of stuff. I
(03:26):
love that ship.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
Speaking of mocumentaries, I just saw that Dropped Dead Gorgeous
on one of the streaming Oh my God episodes. You're
gonna have to sit down and watch a little drop
this gorgeous and if you don't know dropped.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
Gorgeous scary, it's hilarious.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
It is a mockumentary about the pageant system. Oh my god,
a teenage pageant where in Wisconsin?
Speaker 1 (03:47):
Yeah, in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Minnesota, And but like everybody's star studied.
And then there's the like Amy Adams, oh my god,
oh my god, I'm so cute, and uh, what is
Alison Janny Kirstend when she is a little girl? Yeah?
(04:10):
O God and Brookshields. What's her name? Who the little girl?
You know? Brookshields was way it was, wasn't you know?
Christy Ally's daughter? I know, isn't her name? You know?
Speaker 2 (04:30):
She was married to Charlie Sheen And but I never
liked her.
Speaker 1 (04:34):
I never liked her anyway. Yeah, but Kirstie Alley, isn't
it she's brilliant.
Speaker 2 (04:40):
Yeah, because it's it's just super good, super funny. It's
super irreverend and it's so fun I'm also.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
Blanking in the name of the actress who plays her mom. Yeah,
I don't know her name. I do know her.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
I've seen her in lots of things whatever, Who cares.
But if you get a chance to watch it, remember
I said it's super irreverent.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (04:59):
It is particular of those comedies where you're like, I
should probably not be laughing at this.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
It's so funny.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
And there are some problematic moments. I will tell you
that because it's how old late nineties. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
so there are some problematic moments. They use the R word,
yeah and there to refer to the especially brother.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
Yeah, one of the guys there. So mm hma with
that in mind, when you said drop that gorgeous might
for some reason, because this is what I just thought
on streaming was death becomes her, and that's why my
brain went. Initially, it's like I don't know, but I
saw I saw that it's streaming on Think on Hulu
and Gavin has never seen it, and I said, well,
(05:41):
we have to watch it. There's so many things. I
feel like maybe he missed because it was his father,
his very Catholic working professor Fuller, and two teenage brothers
and you know, they were all very depressed because their
mom passed. So like, I think they missed out on
some things. Maybe like not a lot, but I'm just saying,
like sometual things that like death becomes her or it
(06:03):
happens like I think I've seen the Rocky Horror Picture
Show and I'm like, what that's like? That was a
stick of my life, you.
Speaker 2 (06:08):
Know, to me, that's not one I think you could
say I think because it's like no other movies.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
Yeah, but when you've been an addict, you know you
remember your yeah about that aspect. But yeah, yeah, so let's.
Speaker 2 (06:22):
Talk about for just a hot second, since it is
you know fall, Yeah, and we were talking scary movies.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
Tell me like five of five scary movies you like
to watch, like more than once. Do you like to
watch this season or yeah, so Scream is one of them.
I loved Scream, Scream the whole franchise or just the
first one. Well, the first one is really my favorite,
of course, that's what I think. But I have no
issue with any of them because it's one of the
(06:51):
things when you have a love for like the characters
and the franchise, Like even if it's can't be cheesy stupid,
it's like I love it, you know, I'll eat it up.
There's some things, especially with the newer ones, I wish
it would have done differently or better, but Scream is
definitely one of them. There's a bunch of little and
the newest ones. Yeah, if you don't know who she is,
(07:13):
watched Wednesday, honestly. But if you don't know who she is,
you've been in a cave or something somewhere and everywhere. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
She's also in a great a twenty fourth film with
Paul Rudd, Caauled Death of a Unicorn, Yeah, which was
really great. Uh, there's a lot of Halloween movies I
like to watch that aren't really aren't scary hocus Pocus,
you know, I love it, but one and two and two.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
If it wasn't hocus Pocus, yeah, would have been fine
because being a sequel to something that is so so culturally.
Speaker 1 (07:44):
Important, Yeah, so iconic. You know absolutely that it was cute. Yeah,
I mean I really enjoyed it. I thought it was
very cute. It was a cuttle, fluff piece of movie,
you know whatever. It's fine. Yeah, but it should not
have been the sequel to the original. No, I agree
with you, absolutely not. I do. Like in this movie,
I think is kind of spooky, kind of scary, and
(08:06):
they don't know if sleepy hollow, you know, I love Yeah,
but what in the normal past of any Timpertant movie
anytime he uses all the same people? Yeah, who plays
the head of sportsman? You know? That whole thing when
I was a kid fucked me up. I thought he
(08:27):
was so terrifying because his teeth were sharp and Christopher.
Speaker 2 (08:31):
Walking on a daily basis is kind of scary. Yeah,
but then you give him sharp teeth and you know whatever.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
Yeah. I also think the Craft, because the Craft isn't
always scary, but there are parts that are fucking scary. Yeah,
like you know when Nancy, who's like the new girl
into the group, has to fight whit Nancy's for the
book whatever, has to like bind for the bulk and
like there's snakes and spiders. House is shuddering and it's
(09:00):
really eerie. I love, love it. But like movies that
are Halloween based feel different to me than they're not
scary movies necessarily, do you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (09:10):
Well, they're so oh I'm sorry, we're still doing you.
But I was going to say the movie Halloween, the
original Halloween, yeah, which is like the first slasher type film,
came out when I was a teenager.
Speaker 1 (09:21):
Yeah, I now watch it now. I've found it much
less terrifying than I found it nineteen seventy seven. Yeah,
but I was.
Speaker 2 (09:27):
Fifteen and it was a new genre of film, and
it also introduced us to now the iconic and legendary
Jamie Currie.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
It was known that like shortly thereafter as a scream queen. Yeah,
because she did so many horror the original Yeah.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
Plus it also really was about her scream. Yeah, she
had this like iconic screen.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
Yeah. Okay, I also loved to watch the show Scream
Queens at Halloween. How you've watched Scream Queens. Yes, I've
watched all of it multiple times because it is so
fucking funny. And Jamie Curtis and NC Nash and Emma Roberts,
Billy Lord, yeah, Ariana Grande like girl, everyone's in it.
(10:11):
It's so fucking good. I just finished Monster the Edgeen Story, okay,
which is eight parts, and it's really good. It's also
I don't think it's star studded, but Laurie Metcalf isn't it?
And you know, I adore Laurie Metcalf. I could watch
her anything, but I really really enjort it. I watched
(10:31):
The Dahmer one. You know, I didn't watch The Menandez
Brothers one because it's a part of this series on Netflix.
The Dumber one was very dark and it felt fucked up,
like they're all fucked up, of course, right, but it
felt like brainwashing. It felt like it was you were
being held in captivity watching this show, right, felt like
it felt really oppressive. It was really dark and dingy.
(10:55):
The ed Gaen one, of course, he you know, it's
the nineteen forties, fifties, and he's he's killed a couple
of people. But like edgen wasn't known as being a murderer.
He was more known as like a brave digger. So
he was digging up fresh corpses, which is like gross
on its own, and what he did to the corpses
as gross. But didn't he kill his brother though, So
(11:15):
there are two confirmed killings that he did, and then
there's nine that he allegedly that they can't prove. They
can't tie him, but they they they suspected that he
did it, and most of them they touched on on
the show. But what I really liked about the show
is that ed Gean was just abused by his mother
because super religious, like don't you touch a woman, don't
(11:38):
you have a child with a woman, women are evil
women or whatever, and yeah, and he had really repressed sexuality,
and he fantasized about this woman named the Bitch of
Bupenold Buchenwald, who was like a naughty scientist bitch in
during World War two, okay, and she was like skinning
(12:00):
people and creating you know, benches, lamps, belts. That's where
he said, yeah, and so it's theorized that he got
that the first time he saw pictures from concentration camps
in world, like during World War two, and seeing like
the bodies or the you know, the horrific conditions or whatever.
(12:21):
That's what may have broke his brain. It was like
it was him. And so he was an adult, you know,
he wasn't like a kid, and like his the oppressive
nature in which he lived with his mother alone, like
kicked his brother out and then he allegedly killed his
brother and kicked the father out. So just her and
ed in this you know, Wisconsin, middle of nowhere, outside
of a town, and she was just you know, commanding,
(12:46):
and you will respect me and you'll never do anything
against it. Back, like there'll be no touching of yourself
in this house. And if I find out, like lots
of humiliation, right, and so with all of that, and
then he saw these images and was like, holy fucking shit.
And then got a comic called I Think the bit.
(13:07):
It's the bit of Bukenald or bald it's a front
or a German word. But in the show, he I
don't want I'm not going to spoil anything, but he
his brain breaks obviously because he doesn't understand. He really
never understood what he did wrong, which is crazy, Okay,
because when he gets stopped and this is recorded and
(13:27):
place file that you know, the cop was being rough
with him because there's dozens of cops in his house
going through it. And he shows up and he's like,
what's going on? They shouldn't be, you know, troops in
and out of the hop like that, and the shriffight
grabs him and Nick slams him his car, like what'd
you do? What'd you do? And he's like, I don't
know what you're talking about, and like, I just make
sure what likes mapple pie like that was his response,
(13:48):
Like he because he was like, I don't get it.
But in part of the show he has he gets
a Steebee radio or whatever it is, a ham radio
and sets it and he sends a couple to Christine
Jorgensten because he had this obsession with gender too. Okay,
so we don't know if Eddin wanted to was like
(14:09):
a transvestite or transsexual or just a man who was
a guynophiliac, which means he's attracted to being a woman. Yeah. Well,
and it's not even being a woman. It's it's like
Buffalo Bill, the Lambs, or you know, any of the
others I can't think. So it's like wearing a woman's
(14:32):
skin is like the deepest form of penetration. It's the
deepest form of you know, a ruination of a woman.
So we don't know, but he was sexually turned on
by it. He used to wear bras and panties whatever.
But he was obsessed with Christine Borkinson because she had
transitioned right, and so he had this whole fantasy that
he had talked to her on a CBE radio and that
he had talked to the evil Nazi scientist when she
(14:53):
was in jail, but he never did. But they go
through all that they play in the show like he did.
And so you see his whiey believes that you know
what I mean, you see how to break your fucking brain,
like you don't understand what you did wrong. You think
you're talking to these two heroes of yours and you're not.
You know, it's really interesting. It was really good, and
(15:14):
I do think that it's not scary. Right, there is
some gore, but I wouldn't if you can handle you know,
what they're claiming to be like a skin suit or
a skin mask, and you know it's not real, and
you'll be fine. But yeah. It also goes into all
the movies that he inspired, from Psycho Dismount of the
Lambs to why is there one that I can't remember?
(15:36):
There's a third one specifically Texas Gents on Massacre obviously,
but yeah, all of them they're directly inspired by Ed
Dean Scary the original. No, I've never seen the original.
Speaker 2 (15:51):
I've seen the one that was in the early two thousands.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
Yeah, and I'm blanking on name very popular girl from there,
Jessica Biale. Not it wasn't. No, Jessica Biel's from a
Flash Dance. Oh no, no, okay, wait, Jennifer Beal, Okay,
maybe I don't know. It doesn't matter. The one who's
(16:18):
married to Justin Timberlay. Yeah, I saw here. I am
ready for a flash Dance. Everyone write that down on
your calendars, right. I saw the movie in theater in
make Minville, Oregon with my sister Ashley and a couple
of friends, and she was supposed to have like a
sleepover with them that night, and I said, no, you
have to sleep with in my room because I can't.
(16:41):
You mean, what do you mean we live in the country.
What do you mean you live in the country where
these kind of folks actually exist. Yes, bitch, and you're
just gonna make okay bye and well no girl, get
your sleeping bag. How about we just have to go
over in my room. We can play with my barbies. Yeah, honestly,
we're all in high school and so this is the
bar this is. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (17:01):
But when we watched the first Paranormal Activity, we it was.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
Late at night and we should watch it's kind of late,
should be really, oh yeah, we should watch it. So
we watched. And this is pre children. I own the children,
and so we watched. It's bedroom was in the basement
and you it's a finished basement. Yeah, it's like there's
another room. No, no, no, anyway, so yeah, she was
(17:31):
just heard some chair.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
But we watched the movie and she's like, I can't
go downstairs now, and so she stayed up and watched
The Golden Girl.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
I left every light in the house. I did, I did,
I left everyone, and then I went, okay, I'm gonna
go state now. Every light had to be on, the
on and the TV had to be on. Think about
your room was upstairs, girl, you can't get any of
that light. But that was all Why would she let
me watch this movie. It's her fault. It's on my
she was a grown ass. No, I'm just one girl,
(18:04):
you know what I mean? I know, but yeah, you
showed me a lot of don't, I mean the expercist.
I think there are parts of it that sucked me up.
When breging, like the first time she's put the initial
possession and she comes on the backwards ruins my life
like that, and hearing something and then turning and seeing
(18:26):
literally bent over back yeah yeah yeah, crawling down this backwards. Yeah,
I hate it. And then she vomits blood our pie,
sup and my girl, And I know this is not
a scary moment.
Speaker 2 (18:38):
One of the moments I found kind of unnerving, yeah,
is when she goes downstairs and like her mom's having
a party, just stands.
Speaker 1 (18:45):
There and just pisses. Yes, it just is. And I
don't know why it was unnerving. Yeah, no, I get it,
but it was like the fact that she's just standing
there looking completely and just peace and they're all playing piano,
singing and like having a all the time. Yeah, it's
fucked up. It isn't nerving because it's breaking like every
social form, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (19:06):
Very right, there's so all of the Exorcist kind of
movies that I've seen. I find them unnerving, find them scary,
but they don't like make me lose sleep totally. So
the Extorcism of Emily Rose is one that I've watched
more than once.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
Enjoy it. It's horrifying. It is horrifying. Yea, absolutely.
Speaker 2 (19:24):
But then there's also that there's a prequel to The
Extorcist starring oh god, I've lost their names scars Guard
the Dad.
Speaker 1 (19:37):
Oh yeah, right, no, who's the hell.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
Stalin stell S scars Guard. Anyway, he is the star
of that movie, and it got horrible.
Speaker 1 (19:49):
Reviews, and I enjoyed it thoroughly. Yeah, I thought it
was really well done.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
It really kind of sets up The Extorcist with a
lot of the Because here's my problem.
Speaker 1 (19:58):
With the movie The Exercist tell me is it starts
out and you're in Egypt. Yeah, you don't know why
you're in Egypt.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
But that piece feels like goes on for a long time.
You're in Egypt, they find some stuff they it's on relics,
and then all of a.
Speaker 1 (20:10):
Sudden you're in New York.
Speaker 2 (20:11):
Yeah, and there doesn't seem to be a good connection together.
It's like the ship that was found here unleashed some demons.
They were brought back with, right, But that's all I guess.
She just I know the way the film was edited,
they left out I feel lots of kind of important
(20:32):
moments because like she also goes from making this happy,
you know, happy go lucky little girl, to the next
minute she's possessed her, like, oh, she's been acting real weirdly.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
It's like, well, we haven't seen any of that. No,
you just literally was she peet on the floor like
she was a bad dog that day. I remember she
said she talked to what was like mister Happier. That's
that's that? Oh god, what was his name? That was
so unsettled that part, unto when she was talking to
her imaginary friend, which I know it's a normal thing
(21:02):
for kids, imaginary friends. I've had one. I get that,
but like, I don't know when you hear them. I'm
just taking out with mister crappy, like you go pray
in the praying pause, the prayer pause, I like, now
carry off, okay, but wait, wait wait the part there's
parts of exerciseet scam me. Then there's parts of my
(21:23):
con when she says your mothers cocks and hell, I
almost pissed my pants. But the parts worth all very
subliminal messaging. When it flashes and there's like a face
in the dark, I want you to know that every
movie after that, anytime there was a dark pause or
a dark corner, I'm like staring at it intently hoping
that there's some flash of something. It was like my
first time ever being introduced to like that kind of
(21:44):
thing that I was so fascinated about it.
Speaker 2 (21:46):
Anyway, Well, and before I move on to yeah, what's
kind of funny to me about when the extras just
came out, So it's funny to me about all that is.
Speaker 1 (21:57):
I mean, I don't think it's a terrifying movie. It
is unnerving. There are some little scary moments and whatever.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
But I saw, like when we watched it on Blu
rayir DTY or whatever, there was a whole little documentary
about it and they're showing people leaving the theater crying
and like freaking out, growing up, and it was like,
calm down.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
People weren't saying girl. And especially if you make a
movie that has like religious iconography, are very heavily being like,
this is a demon and we need God. People are
fucked up by it, and I want to even know.
Those are my favorite type of horror movies. So I
love the divine and the devil element of it. I
love possessions. I love like watch. I know you want
(22:40):
to talk about Carrie, but I watched this horror movie
that's a dead movie called Weapons. Okay. It has heard
of that one, Okay. It has the man who played Thanos,
who is Barbara Stars and step son Josh Okay. So
(23:00):
it has Julia Gardner who played the Silver Surfer in
the New Fantastic Four. She's the main character. It has
Amy Magan in it and she looks unrecognizable by the way.
Josh Brolin, and then a lot of people I don't know,
Justin Lung is in it, and then just a Sarah Paxton. Yeah,
(23:20):
a lot of people. So the overview of the film
is the poor thriller film. It centers around a mysterious
disappearance of nearly all the children of a single clots
room in the same night. It leaves the community in
fearance suspicion, and then they start to blame the teacher.
The teachers, the Jennifer Jennifer Gardner, Julia Gardner. And then
(23:45):
it goes around because it's like what happens subsequent after
these children go missing, and it's not like they were kidnapped.
It's all very like supernatural. But Amy Madigan plays like
a weird She's like an aunt aunt Gladys or whatever.
But she has this really awful like bright red bowl
cut in her lips or painted ride but it bleeds
(24:06):
into the gold. But she's and she's like unsettling, and
it is a really but it's creepy weapons, it's creepy, creepy,
it's really spooky. I wouldn't say that again. It's overwhelmingly horrifying,
but it is. I like them when they make you
think more, you know what I mean. When kidding, but
(24:29):
it was really good and I wasn't, you know, I
was the twists and turns, I didn't see them coming,
so I thought it was really really great. I wasn't
again I'm expecting. I didn't know what to expect from
the previews either. I know, children are go missing and
they all became the teacher and that's kind of all
I got, okay, But then watching the movie, it was
really good. I do think you would enjoy it because
(24:49):
it's all like children getting hurt, you know, children not
are paying torture. But it's really really interesting and it
kind of shows you how town's mom mentality can take
things out of control. Sure, you know, because like they
all think the teacher did it, did what you know
what I mean, like, how would she dispose of however
many students. Yeah, well, and it shows you that these
(25:10):
children running out of their house all at the same
time because everyone has a ring camp and they all
run like their arms behind their back back to Maruto
from an anime. They all run like that, but all
of them just run out of the houses. No one
was there. So it's just it's very very interesting and
I think you would have enjoyed. Yeah. So jumping back
to Carrie. Yes, it's Mary. So Carrie also came out
(25:31):
when it was high school and the movie.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
Yeah, well the book also and I read the book
first Stephen King book I ever read.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
The book is better. Obvious the book is better. The
movie is great. Yeah, the book is better.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
Yeah, and you know, since it is mostly supernatural shit,
but it's also people getting kind of their come.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
Up and ship. The it's like the outcast, the marginalized,
the sad person, the bullet person giving come up. It's
everybody to everybody, including her bully mother. So who doesn't
relate to that, right well, because the thing is her
mom is her biggest bully. Her mom is the one
who sucks her up the most.
Speaker 2 (26:10):
Religion is super super hyper religion, you know where it's like.
Speaker 1 (26:17):
Is a sin, you know?
Speaker 2 (26:19):
And yeah, and she makes her go to a closet
and pray when she does something. She makes her go
to a post closet and pray because she got her period.
Speaker 1 (26:26):
How fucked up? No wonder that girls so fucked up
for real?
Speaker 2 (26:29):
And but here's my funny care So watch Carrie Sissy Space,
the original so good, you know, I understand that the
remains a good yet more.
Speaker 1 (26:39):
And Zoe More. I don't know what her name is,
marect yeah, her, God damn it her. Yeah, but Sissy Spasic,
you can't beats She's no, it's so so good. It's
so so good.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
But here's my funny story about that. And I may
have told it on her, but who cares. One time,
when my nephews and nieces were staying at my apartment,
it was around Hello, they want to watch scary movies
around Halloween time. And we went to the video store
that was and I was like, oh, I didn't want
(27:16):
to run a movie I hadn't seen because I didn't
want him to like, I don't know how scary these
things are.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
I am. And they were pretty young, and so I
was like, well, I've seen Carrie. I completely forgot. The
first five minutes of Carrie is a naked locker room
shower scene where she gets her period, where she gets
her period and everyone throws tampons at her. But it's
like a lot of naked and before it gets to
the blood scene, yeah, it's just these girls walking around naked,
(27:45):
headed for the shower or toweling off after the I
was like, uh oh, oh god, I'm showing this a
teen boys. But at this point it's too weak. Yeah,
I know, there's no point to be stopping now. Yeah,
they've seen girl, the titties and the guba. They all know. Well.
It makes me think of when Grandma I've seen you know,
started watching Rocky Horror when I was five years old,
(28:06):
and I know the hundred times i'd watched it. I'm
probably ten or eleven and the Park comes on, where
Frank Conforter goes and meets Brandon separately, just to do
some Yeah. Grandma stands in front of the TV and
mutes it, and I'm like, you know what's happening. You know,
I've been watching this. I've been staying like it was
so funny. I was like, okay, grandmam, but I.
Speaker 2 (28:27):
Can't wait till we go to the fiftieth annivers Girl,
I know, and you know what I'm excited for.
Speaker 1 (28:32):
And I'm so excited for you too. But I'm excited
that I'm on the balcony. And here's why. Because people
are going to be throwing rice and shooting little sport
guns because they want you to participate in. Oh my gosh,
so you have fun. You better have your parasol, bitch,
you better have your newspaper.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
Okay, I want to share with you a funny Rocky
Horror story.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
So I went to Rocky Horror.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
Many, many, many times as a young young adult, a teenager,
late teenager, young adult. I went many times and participated
and did the things and whatever.
Speaker 1 (29:10):
Then you have to be kind of be my age
to even get this.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
So I one time, though, I'm going to bring in
my little portable cassette player, which by the way, is
like the size of a lunch pail.
Speaker 1 (29:22):
It's not like a little walk I'm gonna makes in
my pocket, right, I'm gonna carry this in my person
and I'll notice. But you know, to like recording stuff.
I don't know what I was doing, so whatever, nobody
bothered me. Did. I love that? Well?
Speaker 2 (29:37):
But then I'm listening to tapes and I'm like, what
is that weird sound? It was like this weird rattley,
like what's wrong with my tape player? And finally I
was like, I'm gonna have to take so I took
a part that just where the speaker was there was
Rice speak.
Speaker 1 (29:55):
How funny. I love that.
Speaker 2 (29:58):
I love it so one of the time, as I
saw it was in McMinnville.
Speaker 1 (30:02):
That is so crazy, which is super crazy.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
And of course none of the mcmvillions knew about the
whole you know, talking to the screen and Rice and
paper newspapers or whatever. But my two friends who are
with me, neither from McMinnville, We're doing like all the
lines and things and the like.
Speaker 1 (30:25):
You what are you talking? It's like this is how
you watched the movie? This is part of the movie
going experience. You're dumb. Yeah, I a rocky horn and
it's one of my favorite movies of all time. So
as we're getting ready to leave, this guy is like
giving a ship, like being all puffed up and threatening
(30:45):
to three women. You're scary. And my friend Cindy, who
just on a normal day look like a viral. Sure,
she was like, what are you gonna do about it?
Speaker 2 (30:56):
You know, and it's like puffs up herself and he's like,
meet me out.
Speaker 1 (31:00):
So it's like, you're still threatening, Uh huh whatever. I
love that.
Speaker 2 (31:05):
So she's like, do you worry about I have a knife.
We get to her fucking car. Do you wonder what
kind of knife she had? What the kind of spread
frosting with? I have a nice spread stuff all over you,
and you're in a regret.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
That is the best. We're gonna die.
Speaker 2 (31:21):
We're gonna die here in MCMD, which has always been
my fear anyway, girls dying out there in the country.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
There are plus many places, and I'm like, fine, I'm here.
I cannot die here. When I worked in Happy Valley
around all those white people during the pandemic, except I
cannot die here. I can back my body to Portland
if I die, dragged me there because I'm not dying.
Hair no, no, no.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
So jumping back to Halloween movies, I grew up the
time of like Hammer films.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
And Hammer was Hammer for those scary they were terrifying.
Speaker 2 (31:55):
No, it was a film company and I believe Hammer
was the director.
Speaker 1 (32:01):
But we were all British horror films.
Speaker 2 (32:03):
So it was like your classics like Dracula and Frankensteine
and the different but then there was a bunch of
other ones.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
Okay they all It was kind.
Speaker 2 (32:14):
Of a Timbert kind of feeling because they had a
lot of shared actors, you know, like Christopher Lee pushing,
and so they were not your typical kind of looking
movie villains. They were more kind of oh, what's the
word I'm looking for.
Speaker 1 (32:31):
They were like, well they're British. Were fine, yeah, But
it was like these movies some of them are super corny. Yeah,
of course, but I was a teenager, so corny really
wasn't a thing problem for me that I know, because
I don't.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
Think I recognized. I mean, I watched the movie Logan's
Run several times. I loved it, and it's a terrible movie. Yeah,
I mean, if you can find this freaking over, if
you can find it somewhere, I highly recommend watching it.
But please go into it knowing that you're going to
have a whole lot of laughs.
Speaker 1 (33:05):
Knowing that it's best just favorite movies. We think it's
things is.
Speaker 2 (33:13):
Such a bulgin Yeah, and I watched it with my
siblings in the theater.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
We all loved it. When it came to TV, we
all watched it crazy exact then you know, there was
no you know, renting movies because DVDs you would have
to run a projector like six wheels of film like
it would if you watched the movie at school. Yeah,
it was on al we had. I mean there were
many films when I was a kid that we still
(33:36):
did that in the country. We had real, real films.
And I was like, it is the nineties, girl, Get
with the wing, Get with the tames also waiting shout out,
shut up. I love classic monster movies. Yeah, I love them.
And my favorite, which feels anesthetical to who I Am,
is Creature from the Black Again. Oh right, it is
(33:59):
the favorite, and I have over here somewhere like the
fiftieth anniversary of it. I do love it so so much,
and I think it was because I saw it from
such a young age with Grandma and it was it
was her favorite. Yeah. But as an adult, I've seen
all of them and I do enjoy them and I
think how great, you know, like, but then I love
(34:19):
the spin offs of them of like the cheesy like
my god, I'm freaking out, uh, the Comedians Meet the Mummy, right, yes, yes, yes,
all of those killed me dead, right. And one more
honorable mention Vincent Price. Any of his films like The
(34:40):
House on Hunted Hill, and like all of them, I
adore him as like a horror actor, right well his
girl yeah. Well.
Speaker 2 (34:49):
Also, one thing I learned just recently about Vincent Prices
he was kind of a horrible human being and then
became educated. Lovel I guess I've been you know, awful,
and he became very like four rights, women's rights and
queer rights and whatever.
Speaker 1 (35:08):
Wow. I love that.
Speaker 2 (35:10):
But initially he was all very racist, very and he
got educated and actually, you know, absorbed education.
Speaker 3 (35:17):
That's because you know, one of the things we talk
about often is how older people must give them a pass,
and it's like, nope, no, no, We've lived through all
of these things and you still don't know.
Speaker 1 (35:29):
Better and you've learned nothing.
Speaker 2 (35:30):
You've learned nothing, So that's on you. Yeah, but he
is in.
Speaker 1 (35:36):
So many movies that I love. He did like several
of the poem. Yeah, so's he's so good. Yeah, and
his voice is just to me. He could read anything
to me. I just because it's all it's very haunting,
very creepy, and I would love his last movie was.
Speaker 2 (35:54):
That he actually died while they were making Edwards, but
he finished his portion, you know, but yeah he did. Yeah,
he was so good.
Speaker 1 (36:05):
And then of course Thriller, right, yeah, I think it's
where a lot of people in my generation and like
Gen X or whatever, learned movie or fell in love
probably yeah, because I would imagine, well, I wasn't watching like,
you know, black and white horror movies when I was,
I was watching Thriller was because on but they were
(36:26):
much less old. I was. A film had just started, right,
film has just been creating, and they just start making talkies.
Speaker 2 (36:37):
I remember as a kid though, watching the original like
Dracula and Frank his Sign and I had to wear
a wolf and all of those things, and just loving
all of them. Yeah, finding them a little creepy. And
then when I was I want to say six, this
show called Dark Shadows, which was a scary soap opera.
Speaker 1 (36:59):
Yeah arted at six, I found it terrifying. Yeah at
one hundred and six, Like I am now, I just
find it a big apologeese. It's also very boring. It
is yeah, intertily. Yes, it's very like I would rather
watch The Monsters or Adams.
Speaker 2 (37:15):
But it also has a moment in it that I
will never forget. I mean, it still lives with me
all these hundreds of years later. And then it was
then recreated a different way in the movie Carrie, which
is where the hand reaches up out of the room
and grabs someone. Because that happened in uh Dark Shadows.
(37:36):
This man dies and fury or whatever, but he's not
really dead. Someone's visiting his grave and his hand reaches out.
My pants seeing sing.
Speaker 1 (37:48):
And Carrie, I was like, holy shit.
Speaker 2 (37:50):
When it happened in Carrie, I screamed, and it's here
the ship with me, And then I had nightmares.
Speaker 1 (37:56):
You know, the rest of the movie, I was all
there was a couple of people.
Speaker 2 (38:01):
I felt bad for the gym teachers. She didn't have
a coming but most of them did, you know. But
it was like that bit at the end where Amy
Irving's hand came about the ground.
Speaker 1 (38:12):
Yeah, I do love in that movie and the original
carry grabbed me. Yeah yeah, sorry, I had him backwards
drinking this morning the first when Carrie kills her mother.
If you haven't seen it, sorry spoilers out forever. When
she kills her mother and she is like pinned the
(38:35):
wall and like the sign of the Cross in her
head bold like Jesus, and her eyes shine like a portrait,
you know, like a traditional Jesus portrait. It is so good.
I do like it all with kitchen knives, right, yeah, yeah,
and I do like the book better. And this is
why I will say, I mean, I love both the
original movie and the Roommate with the book because the
(38:55):
whole town is essentially destroyed and carries Brath she literally
everything up. And in the movie it's more so like
the school and perhouse, you know, but in the in
the book it's literally yeah, it's crazy. Yeah, except for.
Speaker 2 (39:11):
Her neighbor who didn't get to go to prom. That's right, right,
So yeah, left in town.
Speaker 1 (39:19):
I know I was thinking because you were watching, you
were watching, like scarier things when you were little, like
dack Uya and Frankenstin or whatever. I mean same because
I remember with my older brothers and I was like
three watching Nightmare on Elm Street with Freddy Krueger, which
isn't something for a child to be watching. But yeah,
I was kind of entitated with horror as a kid,
(39:41):
and not just because I lived it, but like I
saw the first time I saw the movie, it was
with Grandma and I was nine or ten, you know,
like Puppetmaster, all of this scary because it's to me,
the tradition of like we're having a sleepover, We're gonna
get snacks and eat popcorn, watch scary movies like that
to me as a traditional sleepover. And I know there's
(40:02):
a lot of like painting nails, doing hair during boys
prank calling. Mine was eating food and watching horror movies
and playing games. So I saw a lot of horror movies,
probably way before I should have, because well what supervision.
You know, I do really have an affinity and I've
always have love for horror and villains because I mean
we've talked about this on here before, but like so
(40:24):
many villains are just queer coded you know right now.
Speaker 2 (40:28):
And I watched a whole documentary about that, and it
was super fascinating because I never I don't know that
I would ever really given it any thought. Yeah, but
it's like once once you watch it once you so
you just if you.
Speaker 1 (40:42):
Find a documentary.
Speaker 2 (40:43):
But I don't remember what it was called, but it
is literally about how most monsters in most monsters, yes,
are queer coded. Yeah, then they are the ones who
are actually just queer. Yeah, Like in the movie Rest
to Kill, which was one of the first movie I
remember the queer community getting up in arms about in
(41:03):
protesting because the killer And sorry, I'm going to ruin
your life because if you've never seen this movie.
Speaker 1 (41:09):
It is like fifty years old. The killer is a transvestite.
Oh okay, so the.
Speaker 2 (41:15):
Killer dresses as a woman and then kills other women,
right and so, and it's Michael Caine, who my watch
anything Agree.
Speaker 1 (41:26):
Yeah, but that was the first one I saw where
the killer was, you know, not just queer coded, but
actually queer queer. What was it called Queer for Fear?
It as several part documentary. I don't know what's on
Apple TV plus maybe Queer Villains, Okay.
Speaker 2 (41:46):
But you know, it's it is an interesting thing to
me that when you when they talk about how is
queer coded and everything, it's like.
Speaker 1 (41:55):
Oh yeah, and for those people who don't know queer
me anything coded means like, oh you are. This character
is going to emulate queer behaviors, styles, you know, dress, names,
things that people especially things that like heteronormous society fear,
(42:15):
they're going to put that on. Usually it's queer. Usually
it's an outcasts othered ideology, but they're going to put
that up on you. Like look right now with like
trans people and bad queens and how you know, the
right wing, the evangelicals, the government are saying like, oh
they're groomers or trial ulsters, and none of that's true
(42:37):
when it really turns out to be the evangelicals and
the conservatives and politicians who are the child musters. But
like people become villains because society puts the labels on
them and those labels are associated with queerness, and queerness
is vilified. So that is I think the thing you
(42:58):
were talking about. Was it Queer for Fear The History
of Poor a TV mini series. Yes, yeah, it looks
like the Alaska's thundercuck on I don't know. Yeah, let's
see what it was on. I think this one was
on Apple TV is where it says one of the
second find out. Okay, I watched it somewhere else because
I didn't have Apple TV, but maybe I was one
(43:21):
of the things. I think it's nice to be a queer.
Speaker 2 (43:23):
Pouding is like the even it goes all the way
to like Disney characters. And we've talked about this before,
but like Ursula from Little Mermaid, her whole look.
Speaker 1 (43:33):
Is based on divine legendary drag queens.
Speaker 2 (43:38):
And when that came out, what the person who was
the animator for that actually said, Yes, that's who I
based it on. And if you look at Ursula and
you know who Divine is, it's really easy.
Speaker 1 (43:50):
To go well I did. I do love though that
during the casting of the live action I was discussed,
like it was brought to the attention more so that
a dragon queen, specifically Divine was the infris behind Ursula,
which I think is really fucking cool, and Divine was
like cool I have. When I was a kid, Divine
(44:13):
and RuPaul were my idols. What else did I need?
I mean?
Speaker 2 (44:19):
Yeah, and now of course, rup Paul's a little white lace.
Speaker 1 (44:23):
So you have I have beef. I don't really have
idols anymore. No, I don't either. I just find it
at this point. And this is going to sound I
know we're coming to a closed and because everything, you know, everything,
look at the world at large, the war again, like
(44:44):
America's war against his own people, ship up to the
Middle East. It's just everything that sometimes I'm like, what's
the point of all of this? And not in the
way that I'm like I'm gonna go die or you know,
off myself or whatever, but like, what is the point
of all it? Are any of us having a good time? Right?
You know what I mean? And I mean that's a
solid question, And I mean genuinely, are any of us
(45:06):
having a good time? Because I can tell you I
am comfortable, I am contented, I know, I am loved,
I have degrees whatever of all this stuff. But do
I feel great? No, I don't. I don't feel like.
This sounds very tragic. But again there's no need for
concern when people I don't know, I don't think. I
(45:27):
think the world and life is beautiful. I do. I
think the systems and structures that have been implemented to
subjugate and oppress people, have made life slightly unbearable, and
I don't think it's a good time. I don't think
it's fun. And part of me sometimes I think I
worked so hard in my life and I fought so
hard and I survived so much shit for what you
(45:49):
know what I mean? Sometimes I'm like, what was the
point for people to be made illegal? To be made right?
You know, and it's a sustaining horrible monster. Yeah, did
I fight so hard and burn out my you know,
like my pores levels, so I could what still be miserable? Like,
I don't know it just sometimes I think what is
the what's the catch? Right, Like what is the point?
(46:11):
And that's that's been a lot for me to tackle.
Speaker 2 (46:14):
You know, right, So going off topic, but I want
you to talk about what you were telling me the
other day about gen Z uh gen Z, who was Wait,
they're like fucking should up and then fixing it.
Speaker 1 (46:29):
Oh oh oh oh in Nepal. In Nepal, yea, yeah, yeah,
it's gen Z. So I talked about this before, but
in Nepal, I don't they're capital I don't know names, okay,
but they their government is being very oppressive. And again
I'm not going to give you specifics because that's the
point of this. So and then the government banned all media.
(46:52):
Well the nephologies people said go fuck yourself, I'm not
doing that. And they rioted all of them and they
burned down buildings where okay, all officials, the privates, okay,
Kevin do the officials, the Prime minister, his family, all
of their families had to be like helicopters had to
(47:14):
come get them life supported out right. And all of
these people just torched their house at their mansions. They
torched the prime or their Prime minister building whatever it is,
like their official court building, right, they burned that down,
and they installed a new leader, like a democratic leader
who's a woman, and basically everyone who wrote protested and rioted,
(47:41):
and it was gen z monuals. They went out and
they fixed the streets that they suck up. They swept,
they cleaned up, they repaired shit, they rebuilt things, and
they're still currently doing it and they're fixing their country.
And they just overthrew the fucking politicians because they were
corrupt and not giving people what they need. And of
course all the Western world saw was Oh my god,
(48:03):
they took away social media and these people wn't crazy,
but it was started with something before social media. It's
like when people talk about Palestine and they're like, well,
what about October seventh, bitch just started looking for October seven,
twenty three. Like, it's not the banning of social media
that makes people lose their mind. It's the lack of
freedoms and the taking away of rights that people have
(48:24):
an issue with. And when you cover it up as oh,
we're just getting rid of social media, no, you're getting
rid of opposition. Sounds a lot like Trump, who wants
he's now called for like I don't know, Colorado or
Minnesota's governor and mayor be arrested because they spoke out
against Yeah yeah, yeah yeah. So just a little extra
(48:46):
information here. That was in October twenty five. Nepal is
in a state of political transition following a swift.
Speaker 2 (48:53):
Youth led rebellion in September that led to the collapse
of the government.
Speaker 1 (48:58):
This was distinct from the decades long.
Speaker 2 (49:02):
Mouse insurgent Mouse insurgency that ended in two thousand and six.
Speaker 1 (49:09):
Government corruption.
Speaker 2 (49:10):
Many young Nepologies had grown frustrated with the long term
political instability and corruption of the political country's political elite.
The immediate spark for the uprising was the government's suspension
of twenty six social media platforms. Although the government claimed
the man was due to regulatory non compliance, many saw
it as an attempt to silence dissent. Longstanding economic problems
(49:34):
such as high youth unemployment and heavy reliance on remittances
from abroad, fueled public discontent. The rebellion began with peaceful
protests on September eight and Canandu, organized largely by young,
tech savvy.
Speaker 1 (49:49):
Gen Z activists. The demonstrations quickly turned violent after police
responded to barricade breaches with tear gas, water.
Speaker 2 (49:56):
Canyons, and live ammunition. Over the next few days, just
burned government buildings, including the Parliament and the residences of
the politicians.
Speaker 1 (50:05):
Prime Minister K. P. Sharma resigned September nine.
Speaker 2 (50:11):
The violence resulted in at least eight before deaths and
more than twenty one hundred injuries. So after the so
here's an interim government after it calls consultations between protest
leaders and the Pauli Army. So Sheila khar Key, which
is probably thing wrong. A former Chief Justice known for
her anti corruption stance. Was appointed interim Prime Minister on
(50:33):
September twelfth. She is Neapoli's first female prime ministers and
parliament was dissolved. So the point, I know when you
told me this story, which I love, the point really
being that the youth came in and said enough work
of time and they fucked it up to a point
where they had to fix it. Yeah, it was like
and the government was like, shit, we had out of here.
(50:55):
They're going to kill us, and you know, got rid
of the corruption. Now do I think violence is always
need us to know? Do I think in this case
it absolutely was the answer, yes, because it took something
because this has been going on for a very long time.
And I think that it's going to have to kind
of come to the same thing here because it's getting
(51:17):
so ingrained that this is now just the norm that
we're taking away people's rights, their right to freedom, their
right to freedom of speech, they're right to freedom of thought.
It's like, oh, I'm sorry, you want to speak against
your government, but that's a crime. That's a communist country
kind of behavior.
Speaker 1 (51:35):
Yeah, it's more just like authoritarian and absolutely.
Speaker 2 (51:39):
But it's like the people who they speak against saying like,
you know, we don't we don't want any communists in
our country. We don't want any of this or that.
The other thing, well, that's what you're behaving. You're behaving
like Nazis, you know, with your white supremacy, and you're
controlling of the media and controlling of what people are
(52:00):
allowed to have for you know, the dissemination of information.
It's like, well, we don't want you to have all
the information because then you're gonna know too much. So
we only want you to know what we.
Speaker 1 (52:10):
Want you to know, so you will not rise up
against this nonsense. Yeah, yeah, no, And I agree with
you one hundred percent. And you know I violence is
not the answer. Sure, but the people who don't want
you to use as they answer to the people with
their boot on your neck. So my thing is violent
resistance isn't violence in face of violent oppression. You need
(52:34):
a resistance to be as violent as the passion is coming,
because if not, then that's when they are able to
separate us. That's when they're able to subject us, that's
when they're able to set us off. But I think
Portland and Chicago are really la We're really, really good
examples of like come to our cities and fuck around
and in good news. Though because national guards being sent
(52:57):
here to judges have blocked Donald Trump. On them who
blocked Donald Trump had their house up on fire. But
two judges have blocked Donald Trump from sending troops here.
But then the Texas Governor, Greg Abbott or whatever his
name is, has sending I don't know, a few hundred
troops to Portland. So the Oregon National Guard, I don't
know what it is. Sergeant Leader, Admiral, Captain King Princess,
(53:20):
I don't know what it is. He said, our job
as National Guard is to protect protesters, eat shit federal government.
So he is like, there is I'm not gonna I'm
gonna protect protesters from others coming into my state term them,
which would be other national guards from other states. So
(53:41):
but we're like we and I want to be very
fucking well aware one state sending troops to a red state,
sending troops to a blue state to get them under
control is a catalyst for civil war. It is literal
civil war by the fucking way, like by definition, but
(54:01):
it is, and that it doesn't stop there, and it
won't stop there, So I understand that violence is not
the answer. But you're not going to turn these ICE
agents around. You're not going to turn around Donald Trump
or and hes fucking cronies by pleading to their what
their good side, their humanity. They don't have that shit.
And I'm sorry. We just saw an. I just saw an.
I told you about it. Fifty thousand dollars sign on
bonus to work with Ice. That's insane. Just on just
(54:24):
on LinkedIn normal add do you want to work with ice?
Fifty thousand dollars sign on bonus? Mean the fucking ahead.
I would rather have a You couldn't pay me enough? No,
christ girl, And like I looked. I looked at it
because I want to see how much are you paying them?
What were they making these people qualify? As you know?
I mean it just said to my stomach.
Speaker 2 (54:42):
I know that we recently talked about, or at least
I was talking to you about.
Speaker 1 (54:47):
This comedian who I love it. I think we talked
about her.
Speaker 2 (54:49):
Her name is Caristilla. She in her newest special. She
and her specials filmed in Texas. And she comes down.
Speaker 1 (54:59):
She goes over to the.
Speaker 2 (55:00):
Chair where her glass of water is sitting, and she says,
I just I just got to get.
Speaker 1 (55:06):
Rid of my room temperature water because I fucking hate ice. Yes, yeah,
I cute what she meant.
Speaker 2 (55:16):
Yeah, but what a clever way to say it. Yeah,
you know, I hate their criminel, their moms.
Speaker 1 (55:23):
You like a stopo bitch in the exact same way,
the same playbook. And I'm sorry, quote unquote because I
hate the name of this alligator. Alcatrazed. Twelve hundred people
are missing. I'm sorry, does not sound like a concentration camp.
Speaker 2 (55:39):
Well, and the fact that folks you know, who are
Trump supporters are down there taking pictures with the signs,
you know, down there like yeah, how great is this place?
Speaker 1 (55:49):
And it was like down bitch, so what are you
talking about? Right before? Yeah yeah, and it was like
what is wrong with you?
Speaker 3 (55:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (55:55):
They love human suffering.
Speaker 2 (55:57):
And the fact that they ice rated an entire apartment building,
you know, like pull pulled every single person out of it.
Speaker 1 (56:05):
Well, here's the thing. They're not just going after brown people.
They're going after black and brown people, men, women, children,
They're going after literally anybody they want at this point. Yeah,
they yeah, ripped kits from bed. Most of them didn't
have time to get clothes on.
Speaker 2 (56:19):
Yeah, yeah, disgusting anyway, And I know that was we
started just talking about, you know, the Halloween and scary movies.
But listen, so we're gonna end back on on that note.
I think it was important to talk.
Speaker 1 (56:32):
About this other stuff. Of course it is, you know,
as we like to always do what I would like.
I want other people to tell me what their favorite
scary movies are. Yeah, and I'm gonna tell you so.
Speaker 2 (56:44):
My favorite scary movie probably of all time. The Birds
scares the shit out of me. I'm terrified birds because
of it. But I watched it probably twenty times.
Speaker 1 (56:54):
Yeah, you know, because well it's so effective.
Speaker 2 (56:59):
I know that probably people who would be like, oh,
some of these special effects, some of the special effects
are animated birds. They were animated by Disney animators, but
a lot of them are real birds. That's a I
know that some of those films film scenes.
Speaker 1 (57:18):
Were with real, real live birds. Yeah, I don't know
how they made them frenzy. Well, if you tie a
bird to anything, it's gonna freak the funk out. But anyway, yeah,
tells movie is your favorite and what what's your like
Halloween tradition, that's your favorite.
Speaker 2 (57:38):
I quote scream all of the time to my children
because her liver was found in the mail of liver alone,
you know, justly for no particular reason.
Speaker 1 (57:52):
Yes, all right, we gotta go. We gotta wrap this
shut out. My man's on is my home. He's going
to ruin our whole thing. I know. It sounds like
him just ruining everything. I know.
Speaker 2 (58:01):
All right, Well, so I asked you to your favorite
scary movie. So do that to where it would seem
as though gmail dot com and.
Speaker 1 (58:13):
We'll be back next week.
Speaker 2 (58:14):
We were rapidly approaching our two hundredth episode. Oh no, so,
as I just mentioned, we're rapidly approaching our two hundredth show.
So yeah, we're very excited to be here every week
and to talk to you whoever was listening, and thank
you for listening.
Speaker 1 (58:29):
I know, all right, and so but yeah, we gotta go.
Stop talking. We'll talk to you next week. Bye.