Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 116: Our Scariest Horror Movie Experiences | Ear Biscuits Ep. 116
Episode Date: October 16, 2017Rhett & Link sit down to discuss all things horror movies -- from Rhett's annual horror movie birthday tradition to Link's recollections about the first time he saw The Texas Chainsaw Massacre on this... week's Ear Biscuits. Follow This Is Mythical: Facebook:Â http://facebook.com/ThisIsMythical Instagram:Â http://instagram.com/ThisIsMythical Twitter:Â http://twitter.com/ThisIsMythical Other Mythical Channels: Good Mythical Morning:Â https://www.youtube.com/user/rhettandlink2 Good Mythical MORE:Â https://youtube.com/user/rhettandlink3 Rhett & Link:Â https://youtube.com/rhettandlink Hosted By: Rhett & Link Executive Producer: Stevie Wynne Levine Managing Producer: Cody D'Ambrosio Production Manager: Jacob Moncrief Technical Director: Meggie Malloy Editor: Meggie Malloy & Ty Schmieder Graphics: Matthew Dwyer Set Design/Construction: Cassie Cobb Content Manager: Becca Canote Logo Design: Carra Sykes To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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This, this, this, this is Mythical.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits.
Got a little leak.
You didn't like that.
No, you usually say, I'm Link.
Oh.
It's funny how-
I'm not a creature of habit.
It's funny how many times,
I mean, it's a pretty simple thing.
Just go with it.
The guy who starts just says,
welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm whatever my name is.
I'm not a creature of habit.
I don't like to do.
It's really unusual that you're the one
that this is happening to.
Yeah.
You're Link, which you ended up saying Leek,
which a lot of people think your name is Leek.
You said sprung a little Leek or whatever you said.
A lot of people think your name is Leek.
No, I said sprung a little Leek. Oh, said. A lot of people think your name is Leek. No, I said sprung a little leek.
Oh, you did?
No.
Because when you go to Starbucks,
don't a lot of times they think it's Leek?
Yes, Rhett, this is a sore subject.
No.
Well, just the other day. I guess so, yeah.
Leek.
When we went to Starbucks with our wives, remember this?
Oh yeah.
And my wife, whose name is Jessie, said,
she's like, what's your name?
And she said, Jessie.
And she was like, that's a cute name.
And I was like, hold on, what?
Hold on, she said Jessie.
No, you didn't say it to the barista.
You turned around and you said it to me and Christy.
You were like.
I was like, this girl thinks Jessie's a cute name.
She must not be from America.
And then we got the cup and it was,
what had she written?
She had written like.
I was trying to go in the bathroom.
It was like.
Which doesn't happen on Hollywood Boulevard, so.
I just waited outside of the bathroom
for a long time and then came back.
Yes-y or Jack-sy or something like that.
It was Jack-sy.
Jack-sy?
Jack-sy.
She thought she said Jack-sy, which would be a cute name.
Anyway, my name is Rhett.
But Jesse is not.
This week at the round table of down...
Down pillows.
Man, we are really hurting tonight, y'all.
This week at the round table of dim lighting is your boys.
Your boys are gonna talk to each other about horror movies.
We feel a little bit differently about them. your boys. Your boys are gonna talk to each other about horror movies.
We feel a little bit differently about them. We have some different experiences and interestingly,
one of our first ever horror movie experiences was together.
It's actually not very interesting.
I think they would expect that.
But I think our perspective on it,
I don't know your perspective,
so I'm interested to hear that.
You don't know my perspective?
On that specifically.
Oh, on the past?
Yeah, on many other things,
you've regaled me with your perspective to no end.
Okay, yeah.
But on that first night of horror-ness,
I've avoided ever talking about it again.
Well, we're gonna talk about it tonight.
I'm gonna open up some wounds.
Oh, yeah.
And, yeah, so. Some chains some wounds. Oh yeah. And um.
Some chainsaw wounds.
Yeah so we go deep.
This is gonna become a psychological thriller podcast.
We're gonna talk about that.
We're gonna bare our souls.
I had a bad dream last night.
I never have these type of dreams.
Snake. You never had bad dreams?
Snake dreams.
Oh, I have a recurring snake dream.
And I don't have one.
And your wife does as well.
She does, yeah.
And you got it, you caught it, it is like a virus.
I'm so afraid of snakes in real life
that they need not make their way into my dreams.
Right.
And you know, on GMM, I conquered my fear by self-talking,
which I did not access that ability in the dream
when I was swimming in a tributary to like the Amazon River
in nothing but like trunks.
Yeah, swimming in tributaries is a thing
that happens in dreams.
And I was swimming in it and there was like a jungle
around me and then I saw this snake swimming right towards me.
Is it a sea snake?
It was like an anaconda, dude.
It was huge.
It was like a 20 foot snake with the head,
the size of a basketball.
And it swam up to me,
swam kind of around me and I didn didn't panic, and I kept swimming.
And it was swimming around me,
and then I finally got to like this overlook,
even though I was still swimming,
but I wasn't about to go off a waterfall,
and I saw you down there getting in a little kiddie boat.
Yeah, I was in the sea canyon.
It was like a kiddie ride with Locke and Lincoln.
You were like, get,
ushering them onto a kiddie boat ride.
And the three of you were getting it.
An undersea kiddie boat ride?
No, it was just down over a cliff.
And you were down there and I had-
The laws of physics have been suspended in your dream.
They were never there.
Okay. To be suspended.
Right.
So I'm already tapping into a few fears.
I might as well go all the way.
What are you about to talk about?
Just lay bare my soul,
or at least my, you know,
talk about the big decision I've made.
I'm second guessing it.
Second guessing the decision
or second guessing talking about it?
Talking about it.
Well, you have to talk about it.
I know now that I've said I'm gonna talk about it
because I know we talked about me talking about it. Well, you have to talk about it. I know now that I've said I'm gonna talk about it because I know we talked about me talking about it.
But everyone's going to talk about it.
You don't have a choice.
And because everybody, you know,
whenever you change something about your appearance
and you're me or you,
you know everybody's gonna talk about it
so you're gonna, you just need to go ahead
and get ahead of it.
Get ahead of it. And it may be too late.
It's a little too late to be ahead of it
but you're kind of just getting in sync with it.
I've got a few gray hairs.
And by a few, I mean a lot.
I feel like I need to confess
that I've been hiding my gray hairs.
How you been hiding them?
I've been coloring the gray hairs.
What color?
They were gray. What color? They were gray.
What color you been color?
Purple, you haven't noticed?
The color of the rest of my hair.
Oh yeah, that makes sense.
Or at least trying to approximate it.
I didn't notice, so I think you did a great job.
I don't know what, when I made the decision,
I think it was when we were wrapping Buddy System,
I think I've mentioned on a podcast
that the people that you get closest to
are the makeup people and the hair people
because you see them at the beginning of every day
and the end of every day and you have conversations with them
and they know your deepest fears of forgetting lines
because you're cramming to study those.
Right.
And you're in a vulnerable position.
But, you know, so they're like, you know,
you gotta do a better job coloring your hair.
Like, you know, you just have conversations about this.
I'm like, yeah.
Because you've been doing it personally.
I do it personally.
Like you take out like a brush, what is it, shoe polish?
How does it work?
I've been using Just For Men.
Oh well, that's, you are a man.
Because as you know, I am just a man.
Nothing more.
And wait, because you don't wanna go down the aisle
with all the women hair dye,
you wanna go on the man aisle with the razors.
Hold on, is this Just For Men?
I wanna make sure this is Just For Men.
Of course not, it's so stupid, it's marketing.
Hold on, this would not work on a female's hair, right?
It's just for men, just making sure.
I guarantee you the stuff on the woman hair color aisle,
which by the way, instead of just having
like a little swath of hair color,
has an entire aisle of the stuff,
is the same exact stuff and probably cheaper and more expensive, all types.
Because nobody can compete with Just For Men.
When Just For Men came up with that,
they got the corner on the man market.
Right.
Because you can't have like for everyone.
Just For Men won.
And so that's where I went because men aren't comfortable
going down the women color aisle.
Right.
They want to go down the razor aisle
and just pick it up when nobody's looking.
Yeah, that's just for me.
I'll take it home.
And I would, well, I mean,
it's probably going back five years, maybe more than that.
I remember, I mean, it has to have been more than that,
when I first started seeing some gray hairs.
It's not because I'm old,
even though I do blame it on my kids all the time
whenever they're like,
Dad, I see your gray hair.
And they're like, well it's your fault.
It's hereditary, man.
It's not because I'm getting old.
It's because genes.
My mom went gray early.
I'm hedging.
But let me just say though,
so you're not, I mean, you're not really going gray early.
I mean, you're 39 years old.
I mean.
I'm a young guy.
Yeah, I know, but lots of people are in their late 30s
having gray hair.
If you're gonna go gray, this is when it happens.
I've got some spring starting too,
it just doesn't show up as much
because my hair is not as dark.
So what I would do was, at first I would just,
I had some like in my part and I would just pluck them out
because they would be wiry.
Yep, they come in a different consistency.
And then, because like right where your hair would part,
like all the way back here I would notice
some sprigs would be coming up.
They're a little pubish.
Pubish, but totally white.
Yeah.
Like if your pubic region got struck by lightning.
That's what it looked like on top of my head
in certain places. But there are benefits
to when that happens.
My Uncle Roy got struck for lightning on his lightning rod.
Got struck for lightning on his lightning rod.
And then at a certain point, I'm like, whoa,
right here where you would like hit a soccer ball,
not the total front, but just behind that,
I saw a patch like over like my right frontal lobe,
like a little white patch.
And I was like, you know what?
I'll just get a little bit of that beard and mustache color
because you just brush that on. Yeah. I just get a little bit of that beard and mustache color
because you just brush that on.
Yeah.
And then I would like brush a little bit up there
and a little bit back here so I don't have to pluck that
on the crown of my head.
And then of course, that patch gets bigger.
And grows, it spreads like a virus.
I remember one time I tried, I was like, screw this.
I'm just gonna shampoo my whole head with the hair dye.
And it was when I went home for Christmas one time.
Oh, I remember that.
And I was out grilling,
because it says it only sticks to the white hairs.
It didn't, you looked like the dad from Adam's Family.
Yeah.
That Christmas.
And I remember I was grilling with my dad,
who, I was living out here so I don't see him as often
and I remember when I was grilling,
all of a sudden I noticed he was looking at me
instead of the grill and he was like,
you dye your hair?
He said that to me and I was like, yeah, I tried.
Well, it's just a spot here and there
but I tried the whole thing and it didn't.
It went black basically.
I was like, I am not gonna do that again.
So then over time, over years, I would just,
you know, like just, I noticed I was using
more and more of the Just For Men.
But can I?
Out of the tube.
Let me interject because I-
And you start to, go ahead.
I think that, not to speak for you,
but to speak for you,
because I'm also speaking for myself.
Yeah.
I think that the tendency to dye the hair,
I think was rooted in we've always had this feeling
that people perceived us to be younger than we actually are
because most people do.
If you just stumble on one of our videos,
you don't think, well, I don't know,
I'm starting to look older faster,
I think we're working too hard,
but rewind just a couple years,
you wouldn't think that guy's about to turn 40,
I don't think.
Right.
And so.
And we felt like in order to succeed on YouTube,
we couldn't be seen as like old guys.
And so it was just like, everybody does it,
people dye their hair.
Sure.
So it's like, yeah, I don't want them to think I'm old,
I don't wanna become irrelevant. I literally old. I don't want to become irrelevant.
I literally thought out loud.
You thought out loud?
To myself, George Clooney did it.
George Clooney did what?
Dyed his hair.
Like that was a rationale for me to feel more comfortable.
How long did he do it?
He does it on and off, you know?
I mean, for years before that movie in Hawaii,
he would do it all the time.
He would, he was gray on ER, dude.
He was salt and pepper on ER.
Right, but he wasn't doing it to hide it.
He was doing it for parts.
He was doing it, well, no, he would do it in real life
as like, this is who, this is my normal look.
But he wasn't trying to not let anyone know
that he had never tried to grade.
No, because he was on ER as a,
I don't even know if I'm right,
but I use it as a rationalization.
I don't think it's true,
but I don't think he ever died his hair.
Because the flip side of being on YouTube
is that there's a level of expected authenticity
that you don't,
that's not required of just an actor.
So I always felt a little bad about it.
Or I mean self-conscious about it at least.
And I think you also look forward to the day when-
It's not like we didn't talk about it by the way.
It's not like I was keeping it from you or anything.
You didn't think, you dreaded the day
that you'd have to let it go and make the switch, right?
And if you're like, I'm still in the public eye
and all of a sudden I become Anderson Cooper,
I got some explaining to do, right?
My uncle Dan had a big red beard and reddish hair
and he was a school principal for years.
And then one day he comes over to Nana and Papa's house,
his in-laws to eat dinner like we did every month.
And he had gotten a promotion to be like the superintendent
of the public schools in the county.
Of Harnett.
And all of a sudden he was full gray.
It was like a different man was eating dinner with us.
And I was like, that's shocking.
I wouldn't wanna do that to anybody.
Yeah, well you've avoided that.
You've avoided that.
Right, so I think that's what went into
making the decision now was, you know what?
I think I just gotta, I don't,
I feel like I'm covering something up emotionally
or in some way besides obviously physically.
And it didn't make me feel comfortable.
And I was like, it's ridiculous.
But didn't you also feel free to just, to just?
I felt safe enough with like the mythical beast
to be gray if I have gray hairs.
Yes, but in my own brain, I had to let,
I had to give myself permission.
Because we were also sensitive about,
we would also avoid talking about how old we were,
Right.
You know, up to probably like five years ago.
Right. And now it's just,
you know, when this podcast comes out,
I will be 40 years old.
That's right.
And everyone knows that now.
And I'm not worried about it.
And there is something freeing about that.
And I decided when the makeup people with Buddy System
would like brush the white hairs that I didn't dye
with like something in between takes to like cover it up,
I was like, enough of this, this is for the birds.
And like trying to color my own hair over the weekend
or you don't know how many fights me and Christy got in
with her trying to color this part in the back.
She wouldn't do it right?
Yeah, in my opinion, she wasn't doing it right.
But in her opinion, she didn't have to do it at all.
Poor woman.
So. I do not envy that position, coloring Link's hair.
Oh gosh.
So there were so many factors
that just pushed me over the edge.
But the main one is just to be me.
You know what, if I wanna tell people to be themselves
and to be confident in who they are,
why I need to do that, you know?
Yeah, but I actually think that there's,
I think that ultimately you will only experience
a positive benefit that's redundant.
You will only experience benefit from this.
I honestly don't think there's any negative
that can come from this. I think if't think there's any negative that can come from this.
I think if anything, there'll be some parent
who's watching Good Mythical Morning
over their child's head, shoulder,
and they'll see you and be like,
hmm, he's got gray hair.
He's old, he must be about my age.
Maybe I'll start watching.
Maybe this is for me, or they'll look over their kid's
shoulder and be like, why are you watching that old man?
This is creepy.
This is creepy for everybody.
I think that I might lose some fans
who psychologically think it's creepy to watch an old guy.
But you'll gain some.
For every one you lose, you'll gain two.
I hope to gain so many more who are fan
of salt and pepper hair and I don't know.
It's just in here, it's not everywhere.
Well, it's kind of all on the sides.
I mean, it will be.
And it eventually will be everywhere.
Yeah. I guess I feel better.
Yeah, you should.
No, I feel fine.
I feel good about the decision.
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Now back to the biscuit.
We're gonna talk about our experience with horror movies.
And I do believe that,
I mean, I think I saw horror movies before
the one that we're gonna talk about first.
But we can just start with our common experience.
Because I believe that was definitely
your first horror movie.
And it was a big one to start with.
Oh my goodness.
Well, this is what I remember.
Do you know what grade it was?
Fourth grade?
Third grade.
It was sixth grade.
Sixth grade?
Because I remember another monumental event
that happened that night that we'll talk about
in another podcast.
So sixth grade.
And that's how I mark that year.
Sixth grade.
We had a group sleepover at Adam Nicholson's house.
Yep.
I never had a sleepover at Adam Nicholson's house.
And so I guess it was his birthday.
It was like, this is going all night, man.
I don't know whose idea it was
to put on the Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
All I remember is he was talking about it
and I was just so excited to watch it.
Because did he go to like Coates Party Beverage
and like tanning salon and rent the VHS?
He must have.
I mean, his older brother who worked at Hooters
probably did.
Larry.
Larry.
That Hooter frying.
He probably also.
Well you didn't fry the Hooters, you fried the wings.
He also probably owned it.
Larry's the kind of guy that would've owned
Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
Larry was cool.
But the parents knew that we,
it was not a, we weren't sneaking around.
The parents knew that we were watching it.
And I was super excited because I'd already
kind of been enjoying horror movies
and the idea of enjoying a horror movie
in a group of my friends was especially exciting to me.
I think that horror movies,
even though they're like rated R,
are designed for sixth graders to watch
because it can just scare the living crap out of you
and change your entire life.
Like I said, I was just, I didn't,
I'd never heard of it before.
I never watched a horror movie before.
And the moment he said we were gonna watch it,
I was like freaking out in my brain,
but I wasn't gonna tell anybody because that wasn't cool.
I mean, I definitely thought about bailing
on the whole sleepover entirely.
I'm sure of it.
Well, but I didn't do it.
You were already anxious just about being at a sleepover.
Yeah, yeah.
For reasons I didn't do it. You were already anxious just about being at a sleepover. Yeah, yeah. For reasons I didn't know at the time.
I did not know that you were so anxious about it.
I was like, surely Link is having just as good of a time
as I am at this stranger's house,
not the stranger's house, but at this friend
that we don't know that well's house.
I never spent the night over there,
but I felt comfortable doing it in a group.
So he brought out Chainsaw Massacre.
Also that night, we stuck somebody's hand in warm water
and tried to get them to pee themselves.
After we went to sleep.
Who was that?
Who would that have been?
I don't know.
It didn't work.
I do remember trying it, but since it didn't work,
I don't remember it.
For those of you who don't know,
I'm gonna read the synopsis of Texas Chainsaw Massacre
made in 1974, released in 1974 actually,
shot in 73 outside of Austin, Texas.
When Sally hears that her grandfather's grave
may have been vandalized,
she and her paraplegic brother Franklin
set out with their friends to investigate.
After a detour to their family's old farmhouse, uh oh,
they discover a group of crazed, murderous outcasts
living next door.
I believe it was an incestuous family of freaks,
the way I would put it.
As the group is attacked one by one
by the chainsaw-wielding Leatherface,
who wears a mask of human skin,
the survivors must do everything they can to escape.
Now this thing was made for $140,000.
I mean, you can kinda tell when you watch it.
It's pretty clear that it was a low budget film.
Yeah.
Made over 30 million in the box office.
Good gracious.
That's a great return on your investment.
But I just remember watching it that night and then.
What do you remember about the movie?
Like does anything specifically stand out
because there's one scene that really stands out for me.
With the meat hook.
No, I just kind of have a vague memory
of Leatherface and the chainsaw.
I distinctly remember, I mean to me it was like,
yeah it was like a refrigerated butcher room
but he takes this girl and then there's like a meat hook
and he hangs her on the meat hook, like,
through her back.
She's hanging there, man.
It was so grotesque and that family acted so weird.
And the fact that it was shot in 1974,
it just looked so disturbing and it was so hackishly done.
Like it all played into like being horrifying.
I mean, there was a guy who played the granddad
and he had like this, I watched this clip
so I only remember this part from rewatching it
a second ago.
Because I wanted to verify the meat hook, which I did, and I shouldn't have.
Verify the meat hook.
But do you remember there was like a granddad
at a dinner table?
I remember an old, old man.
And he had like really old man makeup
and like a latex skin on, and then they took the girl,
and they cut her finger, and then they took the girl and they cut her finger and then the granddad
was sucking on her finger.
It's just demented stuff, man.
That's great cinema.
Now see, you're saying this demented and horrifying
as if this is a-
I didn't even mention the guy
with the human skin mask on the chainsaw.
Well you did in the synopsis.
You're saying all this as this is,
as it's, I cannot speak, I've been talking too much today.
It doesn't matter.
As if it's a bad thing.
You say, oh it's so horrifying.
That's what makes it such a great thing.
Is there really nothing at all about the experience
of just being just totally scared to your core,
but knowing that you're not really in any danger.
Is there not anything exhilarating about that?
I didn't know that I wasn't in danger.
It's like something, there was no logic component to this.
I mean, it was like in the dream
when the snake swam up to me in the tributary,
that was a snake and I was swimming.
I mean I experienced that as a sixth grader
in a similar way.
Because you remember what happened afterward.
We went outside.
Yeah when the movie's over,
then someone had the bright idea to be like,
let's go outside and his backyard backed up to a huge field and then we, everyone just started walking
into the field in the pitch black at night
and it was like a cornfield or like,
and we're walking into it and then all of a sudden,
once you walk into the field,
you can't see your friends anymore.
Yeah.
So I'm alone in a field, in a place I've never been,
and I can hear rustling, presumably of you people,
former friends of mine walking in there.
And it was the most terrifying thing.
I mean, I was waiting for Leatherface
to jump out at any moment, dude.
See, this is, you know.
It was torture.
This is interesting because sometimes
there are these life events that really highlight
very stark differences.
We're very similar in a lot of ways,
very different in a lot of ways.
So when a group of kids.
It was probably your idea.
When a group of kids goes into a dark cornfield,
the only thing I'm thinking is,
how do I scare someone? And you're thinking. I'm thinking is, how do I scare someone?
And you're thinking, I'm so scared.
I'm thinking, am I gonna die?
Right, and I'm like, you become the victim
and I become Leatherface.
Yeah.
You become the girl on the meat hook
and I become Leatherface.
Sixth grade Leatherface.
I mean, I love scaring people.
You're like, dang it, I should've brought my chainsaw.
You remember, we would go camping.
Yes.
Across the river. Cape Fear River, yeah.
And we would all be walking,
and then sometimes we would be walking through the woods.
All of a sudden I'd turn around.
And I'd be gone. But where's Rhett?
And I would literally devote like an hour of my time.
I would let you guys get completely ahead of me,
and then I would walk through the woods,
and I would get like 100 yards from the campsite,
it's totally dark, and I would very, very slowly,
and I would get up next to the campsite
and I could hear you guys and you would all be like,
he's gonna come scare us, he's gonna scare us at any moment
but I would wait.
He'd wait way past that moment.
I would get really, really close
and I would wait for you to get right to that moment
where you would let your guard down
and I would just come out there and scream.
Well the camp, I remember this one time
because the campsite was on the other side of the river
and then again another tributary came off of the river
and formed our campsite on an island.
Yeah.
And I remember we set up camp
and then you went to take a leak and never came back.
Didn't come back.
It was pitch dark outside of the campfire zone.
And then after a while, I go to take a leak
and I go next to the tributary
and I swear for the past 30 minutes,
you had been submerged in the water.
I was in the river. You were in the river.
I got in the river and just kept my eyes above the water
and waited for somebody to come take a leak.
Like Predator, right?
Like Arnold Schwarzenegger in Predator.
I live for that kind of thing.
I do it to my kids, too.
But you know what?
I did pee on you.
My dad did it to me.
I remember really vividly coming back over,
walking back home from Ben Greenwood's house, and my really vividly coming back over, walking back home
from Ben Greenwood's house, and my mom had called me
and said, you need to come home.
Uh-huh.
It was late or whatever.
And so my dad knew that I was walking
from Keith Hills back to our house.
It's like a mile walk across a couple of cornfields.
The same cornfield.
Yeah, same cornfields.
But yeah, Adam's house back there.
I'm walking and I come out of the cornfield
and then I'm walking on the grass field
in front of my house and I get right up to the road
and all of a sudden the bush starts shaking
and then all of a sudden there's a dog going
and then I realize it's my dad
and I'm like, I'm on the ground.
You're laid on the ground?
I was so scared.
And then he just laughed at me.
And you got a thrill out of that?
Or you wanted to be your dad,
you're like, one day I'm gonna be the scary
and I'm gonna have the power.
I have a very similar personality makeup.
It's like, I wasn't scarred by it,
it was just like, when we went inside,
I was like, man, you got me.
And then I just, you know,
I carried on the cycle.
But it's not that you experienced joy in being scared.
It's that you- No, but I do, I do.
I do, so that's where I wanna go with this
because you like riding a roller coaster, right?
Yeah.
And to me, the joy of riding a roller coaster,
as long as I'm not getting sick,
is the feeling of being in danger coaster as long as I'm not getting sick is the feeling
of being in danger with not really being in danger.
Now of course.
That's not the part I like about it.
Now of course, there is.
I like the fun part.
Yeah but what makes it fun?
It's the thrill and what makes it a thrill?
The physical sensation of, I mean.
I could just pick you up and throw you around
and that wouldn't be fun.
Well it might be.
I don't think it would be the same thing.
To me.
So you're saying it's the adrenaline associated
with a simulated near-death experience on a roller coaster
where I can suspend my fear of actual death and I can't.
And the scarier it is,
the more the sensation, right?
So okay, so when we went to Six Flags with the team
and we got on that, what was the one where you were flying?
What was that called?
What was that thing called?
The one at Six Flags that's like-
I couldn't say it right.'s like sponsored by the chips.
I don't know what it's called.
But anyway, there's one where you basically are strapped in
and you're flying and the whole time I was strapped in,
I was thinking, if this thing breaks.
We talked about this.
Right, but that's what made it great
is that I actually thought, man, I am,
I could actually be in danger,
but then when you get through it and you're done,
you're like, that was the best one,
that's the one I'll remember,
that was the best experience I had at Six Flags
was the time I thought I was gonna die and then I didn't.
So a horror movie is tapping into the same thing.
Your mom also trained you to like that experience
in the form of horror movies too
because she would force feed you horror movies as a baby.
I don't think that my mom really understood.
Like my mom thought that her presence with you
made whatever you were watching okay.
It was like parental guidance.
As long as I guide him through this, it'll be okay.
Well, R stands for restrict.
Now, but she has denied this too.
Restricted without mom being there.
Because I've talked about how,
either on the podcast or Good Mythical Morning,
I don't know. Watching Hellraiser.
Hellraiser, how she got me to watch Hellraiser,
or she let me watch Hellraiser with her
and when I was very young.
And she's denied this and she says,
I wouldn't have done that.
And I was like, well, how do I was like, well how do I remember it?
And how do I remember sitting there next to you watching it?
So, but she loves horror movies.
My mom will go see horror movies by herself.
Like she called me last year and she was like,
I just went to see Insidious Four
or whatever what you want it was by myself.
And I was the only one in the theater.
What?
And she loved it.
She loves every minute of it.
So there's something in our blood
that makes us want to experience these things.
But, and I've made kind of a,
It feels wrong to me.
The funny thing is is I don't have a lot of people
in my life to enjoy horror movies with.
Jessie doesn't like to watch them.
You don't really like to watch them.
We will talk in a second about some of the ones
that we have enjoyed together
or we both have enjoyed recently.
But one of my favorite horror movie stories
is I learned that my father-in-law.
Oh, well, this movie, you made me watch it with you
in the theater and then you watched it again with him.
Oh, the ring?
Yes.
I saw the ring in the theater in Greensboro.
In Greensboro?
Yeah.
Okay.
After Christmas because you were like,
man, we got some time, we're on the road,
let's stop at a theater and watch the ring.
And I'm like, no, we'll watch something else.
And we get there and there's nothing else
within an hour and a half timeframe.
So then you forced me to watch The Ring.
And how do you remember that?
Don't pull your mom on me.
I remember it because it scared the daylights out of me.
How do you remember that?
Not how do you remember that?
With my brain, I don't understand it.
Tell me about your experience. How do you recall that? What how do you remember that? With my brain, I don't understand. Tell me about your experience.
How do you recall that?
What was it like to watch the movie?
That's what I'm asking.
Wow.
Not how do you go about remembering that,
but tell me about the experience.
Oh.
What do you mean, man?
No, I was just making the- With my brain.
It scared me, it was very scary.
You didn't enjoy any of it.
It was all bad.
I can read the synopsis
and then I'll let you tell the story about-
I think most people know the synopsis to The Ring,
but feel free to read it.
It sounds like just another urban legend.
A videotape filled with nightmarish images
leads to a phone call for telling the viewer's death
in exactly seven days.
Why couldn't it be in the video?
Why you gotta get a phone call?
Anyways, newspaper reporter Rachel Keller,
played by Naomi Watts, is skeptical of the story
until four teenagers all die mysteriously
exactly one week after watching just such a tape,
allowing her investigative curiosity
to get the better of her,
Rachel tracks down the video and watches it.
Now she has just seven days to unravel the mystery.
Even reading that scared me.
So we watched it together.
I really enjoyed it.
I like watch, I do not watch horror movies by myself.
I've almost done it a couple of times,
but I'm not like my mom.
I don't wanna do that because the thing I enjoy
is being with someone who's also getting scared.
That's why my birthday parties usually consist of
watching a horror movie together with a bunch of adults.
Because I like to see, especially people
who don't like to watch horror movies get scared.
But I found that my father-in-law also liked
to watch horror movies and so,
this is years ago, I'd just gotten married to Jessie
so this is like.
It came out in 2002 so it's probably 2003.
Yeah, and so it was like right when it came out on video.
And so she's like, he's like,
let's watch a horror movie together.
I'm gonna go get the ring, I'm gonna go,
yeah, it was when you went to rent movies.
And he comes back with it and like,
okay, we're gonna watch this thing together
and we're in the living room together
and then Jessie and her mom are on the other side
of the house, like on the sun porch, they called it.
So like basically outside of the house.
And you should explain what happens in the movie.
Yeah, so well, of course, in the movie,
well, yeah, the way that she kills you is she comes,
you're watching the tape, and then she comes out
of the television and kills you.
She's very pale.
Yeah, and so, and the first scene is probably
the scariest one, the first murder in the movie,
in the original Ring, is incredibly scary.
So, sitting there watching it, we got all the lights off,
and got the volume cranked up real high.
And there's this moment when it's zooming in
on the television, and I know what's about to happen
because I've seen the movie, I know that she's about to happen because I've seen the movie.
I know that she's about to come out of there.
And as soon as that black hair,
that greasy black hair is right there at the screen,
at the peak of the music and the buildup and everything,
all of a sudden, the TV, the speaker, everything,
the whole entertainment center just goes,
and just cuts off.
Oh no.
And then we both ran.
Ran.
We both.
Where do you run?
We ran to the sun porch.
You ran to your mama.
We ran to our ladies.
We just ran in there.
It was like, we had like run all the way across the house
and then we ran in there and they're like,
what in the world?
With your father-in-law.
Why are you guys running in here?
And we're like,
the horror movie just did something in real life.
Oh my goodness, but then you looked over
and your dad was holding the plug.
No, laughing.
Laughing, my father.
Barking like a dog.
We never, I think.
That's crazy.
I think actually what happened.
The timing of it is crazy.
My scientific, my completely rational explanation of this
is that we had it turned up so loud
and the bass was so, the was, the music was peaking
at that point that something happened
that it overpowered the system and then it went out.
Or maybe the ring is real and if we hadn't ran out
of the room to the sun porch, we would be dead.
Wasn't there a viral video of people,
there was like a bunch of televisions
and like a Best Buy or something
and then a ring girl crawls out of a television.
Yeah, that was for like the most recent ring campaign.
If you've got a horror movie these days,
you gotta have some viral campaign like that
where somebody gets thrown up against the wall
by some witch in a coffee shop,
that kind of thing, you gotta have that
if you want anybody to watch your movie.
It's a remake of a Japanese horror classic.
But so what I have done for a number of my birthdays
is I've invited, especially since we moved out here,
I've invited a lot of people over
to watch a horror movie with me.
And just to bring you up to speed
on my horror movie watching life,
you took me to see The Ring.
Well, after the Texas Chainsaw Massacre,
I did not watch another horror movie.
I didn't even watch Gremlins.
I don't believe that's technically a horror movie, but.
I wouldn't believe that's technically a horror movie, but. I wouldn't watch it.
I would not watch anything that could remotely be scary
after that movie, probably until you took me to see
The Ring as a married adult man with a few gray hairs.
Just a few.
But then, so this is probably three years ago,
maybe four years ago,
because we were definitely in the previous studio.
Mm-hmm.
And I was like-
The downstairs did not have any windows.
I'm gonna have a birthday party,
I'm gonna invite all my friends over,
and we're gonna watch The Conjuring together.
And it's great because your birthday is in October,
so it's like everybody's in the Halloween mood festivities.
Right.
And nobody- The Conjuring.
Everybody was kind of in the same place.
They were like not really fans of horror movies,
but one person in particular hated horror movies, but one person in particular
hated horror movies more than you.
Yeah. And that was Tony.
Yeah.
And he said, I don't want to be here,
but I know this is your, you know,
we're friends, it's your birthday.
Not to name drop, but for context,
we're talking about Tony Hale.
Yeah, so now it's funnier because you can-
You can imagine what it's like
to watch him watch a horror movie.
Buster from Arrested Development,
or I mean, even more famously now,
whatever he is on Veep, I can't remember his name right now.
Gary. Gary.
But yeah, just imagine him.
I mean, he was like, I'm only here because we're friends
and I wanna support you as a friend.
But- And then he proceeded
to put on headphones while we watched the movie.
He put in earbuds and listened to music
while we watched the movie.
Like, I think the way he put it was like,
really nice music.
Yeah. Like friendly music.
And he also left a couple of times.
Yeah.
So he wouldn't watch the movie,
but he wanted to be supportive.
So he listened to nice music and he looked at us.
And I gotta say that-
Was very kind of him.
I really appreciate the support,
but I would have enjoyed it more
if he had just committed fully to the experience.
Because that's the thing that's so exhilarating to me.
For you to be entertained at his expense.
Well I like everybody to be in this,
I love to watch it in a group
because everybody's grabbing onto each other
and it's just like, you're just experiencing this as a team.
It's like, you're like, it's as close as you can get
to being like one of those pods that's gonna roam around
during the apocalypse, you know what I'm saying?
Like just a, like the-
If we can get through this together,
Right.
we can, we'll be safe.
Safety in numbers. We can do anything.
We can do anything.
If we can get through this movie.
And The Conjuring was especially scary.
Shall I read the synopsis?
Read the synopsis, Link.
In 1970, paranormal investigators and demonologist
Lorraine and Ed Warren are summoned to the home
of Carolyn and Roger Perrin.
The Perrins and their five daughters
have recently moved into a secluded farmhouse,
there's that farmhouse again,
where a supernatural presence has made itself known.
Though the manifestations are relatively benign at first,
events soon escalate in horrifying fashion,
especially after the Warrens discover
the house's macabre history.
And now these-
Synopsis are not very great for horror movies
because they can't give anything away.
Right, yeah, but you can keep reading them.
The thing about any sort of demon-related horror movie
is there's always been this thing in the back of my mind
that I'm like, it's different than just a very
crazy dude with a skin mask.
Grotesque monster that feels like very removed
from the human experience.
But then when all of a sudden there's like a demon
in the house, you're like.
He could be in your house right now.
I don't know what I actually think about this. I don't know if I believe in this or not, but it could be now. I don't know what I actually think about this.
I don't know if I believe in this or not,
but it could be true, I don't know.
And then you really start getting scared.
And if it is true and you don't believe in it,
you not believing in it doesn't matter.
Yeah, right.
He can be there at any moment.
And then when you get home.
He can be there too.
You're thinking, oh man.
Because you know that the swamp thing,
swamp thing's not gonna be in your house.
Yeah, because your house is not in a swamp.
But maybe your house is haunted,
maybe there's a demon under the bed.
Right. Or in your dog
or something like that.
Well, I prefer to think that he's hiding
behind the trash cans, which is why I always run back
in the house after throwing the trash away.
And then the following year,
I got everyone to watch the Babadook.
I'm giving up on the synopsis.
Yeah, that one was.
No, this is the one where the kid.
The basement.
The kid was spooked out about this Babadook haunting him
and the mom starts talking to it.
Oh gosh.
Oh my goodness.
You want me to read the synopsis?
Read the synopsis, dude.
Amelia, who lost her husband in a car crash
on the way to give birth to Samuel.
Ooh, only, first of all, their only child.
You like come from a horror movie situation
as an only child.
Yeah.
You know, like you could have been like the little boy
in a horror movie, that's the thing, maybe you are.
Struggles to cope with her fate as a single mom.
This is like Sue.
Yeah.
Link's constant fear of monsters and violent reaction
to overcome the fear doesn't help Sue's calls either,
which makes her friends become distant.
When things cannot get any worse,
they read a strange book in their house
about the Babadook monster that hides
in the dark areas of their house.
Hey honey, you're troubled?
I've got an idea, let me read you a story
about the Babadook.
What kind of mom?
Even Sue seems to feel the effect of Babadook
and desperately tries in vain to destroy the book.
The nightmarish experiences the two encounter
form the rest of the story.
But she would talk to it in order to try
to get it to go away, right?
And I think at first she was doing that to calm the kid
but then it was actually there.
But that's another great device
in a horror movie is a child.
Yeah, children.
Now first of all, the scariest,
I think I've said this before,
but the scariest possible thing in a horror movie
is like a little girl
that has somehow been corrupted by evil.
Because you've got the most innocent thing
you can possibly think of that, and the irony of,
so like Poltergeist or whatever, those movies are,
or even like The Exorcist where you've got like
a young girl getting possessed by a demon like that,
the juxtaposition there is just so strong.
And, the Babadook was really scary,
but it didn't get me as much as The Conjuring.
It wasn't as pure of an experience.
Tony didn't come to that part.
No, he didn't.
He's too scared.
He ran out of nice music.
So, but it's interesting because this whole-
That was at your house and there were windows too.
That's true.
This whole concept-
And some people were in the other room,
like they were talking a little bit.
It's hard to be isolated in my house.
Yeah.
Yeah, because it's too open.
But this concept of watching horror movies
for entertainment, like in a group,
has passed on to our kids.
Yes.
Interestingly, so my son gets it directly from me. I bet Locke did it to my kids. Yes. Interestingly so, my son gets it directly from me.
I bet Locke did it, but to my family.
But Lincoln is now in on it and he's not like,
I remember Lincoln would watch like,
think of something that's not actually scary that,
like Gremlins, but not even Gremlins.
He would like watch like-
Land Before Time, Odin dinosaurs can step on you.
Exactly and then he would like have to come upstairs
and sleep with you guys.
But now Locke's got him watching,
they watch frickin' Annabelle together.
Yeah it's like a status symbol to be able to brag
to your friends that like I watched,
that's the baby doll one.
I think you're seeing it wrong though.
You think that.
I think Lincoln did it because he thought it was cool.
You think kids are watching it
because they're trying to prove something?
You don't think that the idea of just,
I think Locke watches it for the same reason that I do,
to get really, really scared.
We went to see It together.
I think Lincoln watched it because Locke was into it.
Well before I tell the It story,
because I wanna talk about the two horror movies of 2017
that I think are just,
like probably my two favorite movies of 2017 that I think are just, like probably my two favorite movies
of 2017 are both horror movies.
But the other night, well this has been a few weeks,
we were at your house and Locke was like,
Dad, Lincoln and I are gonna watch Annabelle.
And so they go back to Lincoln's room,
they put the movie on and then Lily,
while they're watching the movie,
she goes and gets a bunch of her dolls
that she used to play with and she sits them in the hallway.
Yeah.
So the first thing they're gonna see
when they come out after the movie
is a bunch of dolls staring at them in the hallway.
Staring right up at them.
Like American Girl dolls, like those that are like.
Like the big ones with the big open eyes.
Yeah. American Girl dolls, yeah. So and like. Like the big ones with the big open eyes.
American Girl dolls, yeah.
So and they.
She got them out of the garage.
I'm like why are we keeping these?
Oh for occasions like this.
So what they did, they opened the door
and they both kicked the dolls.
They like.
Yeah it was like convulsive reaction.
They freaked out and attacked the dolls.
Yeah and.
Which I love that, that's what I live for, stuff like that.
Yeah Lily, it's like you hiding in the river water,
up to your eyes like an alligator.
That's what she was doing.
I think part of it has to do with the fact
that we just don't, I think humans are,
you know, we're basically, it's in our DNA
to be scared
and to escape, to escape things.
It's a safety mechanism.
When in doubt, be afraid of it.
Over and over again.
Instinctively.
We've still got this stone age hardware, right?
And we've got the modern day software,
but our hardware, our DNA is basically designed
so that we will experience this incredible stress
and then we will move away from it
and there'll be this feeling of euphoria
when we get away from that thing, right?
It's that was reinforced over millions of years.
But we don't live, and it's one of the reasons
we have all these health problems is because we live,
we have this very constant low-grade stress
that causes a cortisol release,
which is very unhealthy to have this constant release,
as opposed to a big flush of it and then it's over.
So you think that your mom taught you from an early age
to flush the system?
I don't know if it's,
because I'm already, I'm also living in the stressed out
modern day world with this unhealthy level of low-grade stress. I'm just saying that'm also living in the stressed out modern day world with this unhealthy level
of like low grade stress.
I'm just saying that I think one of the reasons
that you feel good after you watch something
that's really scary and then it's over is like,
for me it is that flush but there is also the bonding.
That's why I like to watch it with somebody.
So like if I run from a bear and get away from a bear,
it's pretty exhilarating but if we run from a bear and both get from a bear, it's pretty exhilarating, but if we run from a bear
and both get away, we're like, you know,
we'd reinforce something between the two of us.
Or if we run from a bear but I run faster from the bear,
then the bear gets you and I get away, so.
That's even better. Even better.
But that's what makes horror movies so amazing
because nobody actually is killed by the movie, right?
You get out. And so right? You get out.
And so. Oh, get out.
Let's talk about get out.
My favorite movie of the year.
Yep, and I just wanna give a shout out
to Cabin in the Woods,
but we're not gonna talk about that one.
Okay, because that was another horror movie
that you loved because it wasn't, it was,
you don't wanna do any spoilers.
You've seen it, all right.
You should see it. If you're gonna see it, you've already seen it.
If you love horror movies, you should see it.
And if you don't love horror movies like me,
you should see it.
Right, it's a perfect horror movie
for people who don't love horror movies.
But Get Out, which we did not see together.
We saw separately, right?
Because I saw it, yeah.
But we saw it like the same weekend.
And it's just like a perfect movie, man.
Well, it's so rare that people rave and rave about a movie
and then you haven't watched it yet and you're like, man.
It's too built up.
There's no way.
Yeah, can't live up to the hype.
And then it does.
I didn't know any of the details and if you don't,
I don't think I wanna tell you.
But I encourage you.
So you should see it.
If you've avoided horror movies,
definitely Cabin in the Woods.
Definitely, probably Get Out before Cabin in the Woods.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because Get Out is actually not as,
I don't think it's as scary as Cabin in the Woods.
And also Cabin in the Woods is like a tropey movie
that's like making fun, it's a parody of horror movies
with a twist.
This is more of a thriller.
I mean, I didn't watch those either,
like Hand That Rocks the Cradle, any of that stuff,
but it's a little different than a horror movie,
like a psychological thriller.
Yeah.
And that's what Get Out is.
And it also has this incredible social message,
which is like, you know,
and the thing that is so amazing about it
is you got a guy, Jordan Peele,
who is one half of a comedy duo, we can relate to that,
who all of a sudden just busts out this perfect movie
that makes over $100 million.
That's crazy.
That's a feat in and of itself.
And he also has said that he's got like a handful more
of these type of movies.
I love that he did that.
That address something important in a really creative way.
Yeah, I would say he is a creative hero of mine.
Oh, definitely.
Along with Beck.
Beck?
Beck is a musical creative hero of mine.
The way he can shape shift and I just,
I really have this on my creative heart and I wanna do it.
Hmm.
Beck, huh?
Yeah.
I'm a fan.
I have one more, but I can't remember right now who it is.
Keeping a running list of-
Moby?
No.
Creative heroes of mine, but.
I saw Moby in a, I saw Moby at Kitchen Mouse.
Saw the back of Moby's head.
You could switch any of those three words around
and I'd still believe it.
I saw mouse at the Kitchen Moby.
I don't know what you're talking about.
So, but then I presume that you're moving on to It.
Oh gosh, yes.
Because what you were talking about with the kids was
they've been badgering us to see It.
And I'm like, now I remember when I was 10 years old
and It came out on television as a mini series.
As a network television thing.
Yeah and.
They couldn't do anything
because they were restricted by network television.
Everybody at school was talking about it,
so I did watch a lot of that,
but it had that creepy clown
and it scared the crap out of me.
And I don't recall watching all of it,
but I watched portions of it just to be in the know.
I watched that with my brother.
I remember watching that mini series, but this It,
first of all, guys, come on, let's be real.
This, the it from this year is so much better
than the original.
Let's just be honest.
Is that a question?
Yeah, no, people, there are people who no matter
how things are done, they always say,
it's not as good as the original,
he's not as good of a clown as the first guy,
not as scary, it's not as creepy, this, you're wrong, okay?
I know that this seems like a subjective thing,
but you are objectively wrong if you think
the original It is better than the current It.
On every level, you are wrong.
You have an incorrect perception of the world
and those two movies, okay?
So now that that's out of the way, this It.
And now they're like, I'm glad you pointed that out.
I am totally swayed by your cogent argument.
It was very gracious too.
It's so.
You've won the hearts and minds of every.
Hey, I'm not about winning hearts and minds.
I'm just about stating facts.
Now that I've settled it, which is okay.
So, it is so good.
Now there's a lot of people and I.
Well, let me say it is so good. I saw it. You of people and I- Well let me say, it is so good.
I saw it. You loved it too.
Except for that clown part.
You know?
You loved every minute of it though, man.
Man.
I'm not proud of the fact that I took my kids to see it.
Not Lando, of course, but I mean,
Lincoln, once you see all the other ones,
like Lincoln has and he's not coming up to my bedroom
at night scared, then I'm like, all right, fine,
we'll go see it.
If I get some cool points out of it, I'm kinda curious.
So yeah, I'm not proud nor not proud
that I took them to see it.
Yeah.
And you and Locke went to see it.
Well, so Locke was playing basketball at the Y
and then I picked him up and I didn't tell him.
I picked him up and I was like,
we gotta go home and get ready
because in one hour we're gonna be watching it
and his face just lit up.
Which is, as a dad, I just love being able
to do something like that with him.
And then during the movie, we were grabbing each other
and screaming the entire, we were running from the bear
and repeatedly getting away together.
And we bonded because of that.
We absolutely loved, and he's gone back to see it again.
That's interesting because I reserved seats
for me, Lily, and Lincoln, and then a friend of theirs
and their friend's mom.
But the seats couldn't all be together,
so me and the friend's mom sat together.
Had a little date, huh?
Yeah.
Yeah, I did.
So yeah, there wasn't as much grabbing each other
and camaraderie with my kid's friend's mom
that I kinda know.
Right, well I was also,
I was actually kinda disappointed,
because not in the movie, but in the people watching the movie, because the movie I was also, I was actually kinda disappointed, because, not in the movie,
but in the people watching the movie.
Because the movie was so good, it was scary.
Now first of all, there are people
who don't think the clown is scary,
and I think that that's fine.
If you're not scared of something, you can't help it.
People just think it was too, it was like,
Cartoony or something?
I don't know, if you don't find the clown scary,
then the whole thing is ruined for you.
And I know there's some people at the office who didn't find him scary. So you can't find the clown scary, then the whole thing is ruined for you. And I know there's some people at the office
who didn't find him scary.
So you can't argue with that.
I found it incredibly scary.
I kind of give myself over to movies when I watch them.
But also- Well, after the first scene,
I think they did a bang up job of establishing
how afraid you should be of this clown.
Yes, it was a great first scene.
Right off the bat.
And also it was- Like surprising.
I was like whoa.
Incredibly funny.
Those kids, first of all those kids are incredible actors.
And what are the-
It was just crafted, so I mean like cinematically,
like even in that shot, like there's that overhead shot
where it's raining in the aftermath of what happened
and there's, you know, it's like the water's draining away.
All the visual choices, but the kids are so talented.
I've never seen a movie.
What's the kid's name from Stranger Things,
the main dude from It and Stranger Things?
Kid from Stranger Things I think
is what he's properly called.
Finn Wolfhard?
Yeah, Finn, okay, so.
He was great, he's funny.
One of the things about that kid is that
in a way that hasn't, it hasn't happened since the 80s
that you kinda saw kids kinda grow up
and star in movies that adults liked.
Yeah, very nostalgic feeling.
The 90s kinda ushered in this time
and definitely most of the 2000s have been
where kids are in movies that are mostly for kids
and then occasionally people, you know, stars, star kids,
adults will tolerate the movies.
But back in the 80s you had like kids
that were in family movies that became stars
and they kind of grew up and they were good actors
and they were respected.
Like I can totally see that kid becoming,
being somebody that we know for our entire lives
as an actor, you know, that just doesn't happen a lot,
but he's incredible.
He's incredible in Stranger Things.
He's incredible in It.
Yeah, and that's- But all the kids are.
That's the cool thing is that it's a book from the 80s.
Set, it was written then, right?
I mean, it certainly came out as a miniseries in the 80s.
But then- I think he wrote it
in the mid- 80s, yeah.
And obviously, this is the Stranger Things phenomenon
that's happening.
I'm not saying anything you haven't heard here.
But obviously, Stranger Things was inspired by it,
which gave it permission to then be re-inspired
by Stranger Things.
But they didn't have to make the choice
to set it back in the 80s necessarily.
I guess that was a story.
So they kinda had to do that back in the 80s necessarily. I guess that was a story. So they kind of had to do that.
But the style of it, but then adding on top of it,
the nostalgia factor that you're talking about
of kids stars in movies for adults and kids
was like that last piece that brought it all together.
It was like, it's in the 80s,
was like that last piece that brought it all together. It's in the 80s and it's shot like that,
like a movie from the 80s,
but done in the highest production value of now,
but also that whole phenomenon is very nostalgic.
Yeah.
And then just visually,
there's so many memorable and horrifying scenes.
And it keeps coming at you.
It's like, it's unrelenting.
And how many times it just keeps coming back.
I'm tempted to say that I like horror movies.
I mean, I'm gushing about this movie.
Maybe I finally switched over.
You like good horror movies,
which I agree, there's not a lot of them.
You know, most horror movies are bad.
But this year has been good.
But it had other things, it had humor, it had.
Well, a lot of horror, the best horror movies
are funny as well.
I mean, Get Out was hilarious.
Yeah, yeah.
And even some of the best ones from back in the day,
like Nightmare on Elm Street or Friday the 13th.
They were funny?
Of course I never saw those.
Freddy Krueger was funny.
He was legit funny.
Like he had like one liners or something?
He had one liners, yeah.
Oh really?
Yeah he was funny.
You can watch those now and you really won't be scared.
But talking about, okay.
But I'll laugh?
The remake, I have another point to make.
It then versus it now.
It's the same people make the argument that, you know,
if the NBA players from the 80s
played the NBA players from today,
they would totally beat the NBA players for today.
They were just, it was so much more of a pure game
and they were tougher physically.
You are also wrong.
You are objectively wrong.
If the NBA championship team,
if the Golden State Warriors were to play the 1993
or 95 Chicago Bulls, they would decimate them.
Ho, ho, ho.
Horace Grant.
You gotta understand how much the game has changed
in 20, 30 years.
It's changed so much.
Like they move faster.
You can definitively prove this.
Somebody needs to just scientifically break it down
so their argument would just be over forever.
I'm just telling you, I know that they were great.
They prove it in the Olympics every year,
every four years.
Exactly, exactly.
So there's a definitive measure of athleticism
and what happens with world records, they get broken.
Every year at the Olympics for these definitive things
like sprinting and jumping and weightlifting,
typically there are records that are set.
Why is basketball any different?
The game is evolving.
My kid is playing basketball right now and they are so-
He's better than Jordan.
They are so much better than I was at that age.
And I realize we're in Southern California,
but North Carolina is a pretty good basketball state,
but the skill level of all these kids,
like the mean skill level,
is so much higher than what we had.
There's just no contest.
And the filmmaking, to take it back to filmmaking,
we've gotten so much better,
the technology has gotten so much better,
and the sound and all these things
have gotten so much better.
And not to mention, the It would not even be,
is not an argument because the original It
was a network television mini series
that had so many lines that they couldn't cross,
so many things that they couldn't show and couldn't say,
and you don't have those restrictions
with the modern day version, there's no contest.
Why are we even talking about this?
I think the exception is there will never be
another Texas Chainsaw Massacre,
except for the fact that they've made countless sequels.
Am I wrong in thinking that Matthew McConaughey
was in a Texas Chainsaw Massacre sequel?
I bet you.
I think you're wrong about George Clooney
dying his hair ever, and I think you're wrong about that.
George Clooney.
Dude, George Clooney dyes his hair.
For roles, yeah, but then he-
For roles only.
But like on the front of a magazine.
No, no, no.
He was in Texas Chainsaw Massacre,
The Next Generation in 94.
Okay, I want you to say that on mic, Rhett.
Matthew McConaughey was in Texas Chainsaw Massacre,
The Next what?
Generation.
No, that was Star Trek, man.
The Next Generation. He was on Star Trek.
1994.
1994.
Matthew McConaughey.
You are wrong about George Clooney though.
Somebody look that up.
George Clooney dyed his hair for Hail Caesar,
but other than that does not dye his hair.
Okay.
Yes he did.
No man.
Just in normal life.
Just like Anderson Cooper doesn't dye his hair either.
George Clooney reveals why he will never dye his hair.
Okay see.
George Clooney reveals why he will never dye his hair.
Yeah again. I'll here. Okay, see. George Clooney reveals why he never dies here. Yeah, again.
I'll call George myself, fine.
Okay, you're one for two, man.
Hey, but listen, I'm telling you that
the Gold State Warriors would definitely be the Bulls.
Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Why are you talking about it?
Texas Chainsaw Massacre could not be redone scarier
than the 1974 version because it was the low budget,
like horrible acting, like.
You're right, I completely agree with that.
It was like a Blair Witch experience,
but it was real.
Now, you know what I'm saying?
I know that is not clear but.
I also watched the Blair Witch.
I have not seen the Blair Witch project.
Locke is on this horror movie binge, right?
And so we watched Blair Witch together and I actually.
The sentiment is that it was all shot on home video.
Well, yeah, it's actually a recording of real events.
Oh, I'm not saying that Texas Chainsaw Massacre
was that by any means, but I'm saying that it has that feel
because it was done by like,
like borderline amateur filmmakers,
like just trying to make it happen with no money
and outside of Texas and nearly killing each other
trying to make this thing.
And I think it translates into the way
that this demented family, the actors chose to act.
And like, I watched the closing scene
right before we came in here and it just gave me chills
because just the production of it.
Now-
It's probably a scary film set to be on.
Yeah.
You know, cause it was so, they had to get so raw
and the lines between reality and the fiction
were probably pretty blurry.
At the very end, this like big rig drives up.
Oh, the big rig.
Cause the bloody girl has made it to the highway
and she's being chased by Leatherface and his brother.
And then the rig hits his brother, runs over him.
And then the rig pulls over and the guy gets out.
And then like, it's just, it's a rig
that's full of chickens.
Oh, a chicken rig.
And you know that that was not a production choice.
It was like, you know, what's the scariest rig we can get?
The correct answer is a chicken rig.
But they didn't do that.
What's the only rig we have access to?
They probably flagged down the first rig
that came down the road once they set up the shot,
and it was that dude in a chicken rig,
and they talked him into being in the movie.
I don't know the story, but that's what,
you could just taste it.
You could taste the chicken. You could taste the chicken.
You could taste that chicken.
Speaking of rigs, have you seen that movie
where the guy is being chased by the rig?
That's a horror movie.
He's being chased by the rig the entire time.
It's the guy that's-
Just take an exit, dude.
Sometimes you'll see that movie as a TV movie on.
And it's, what is the guy's name, Dennis something.
Matthew McConaughey.
Dennis.
Dennis the Big Rig.
He is being chased by a rig.
Is it like Thomas the Train?
And there's also a horror movie
about a baboon called Baboon.
You heard about this one?
I just, I love, we gotta make a horror movie, man.
We gotta do it.
I think that that is the conclusion.
You know, just because Jordan Peele
made a blockbuster horror movie,
I feel like now I can't even entertain the possibility.
But I think the two of us working together,
you've got the guy who loves to scare people
and the guy who loves to be scared.
Oh. So we work in tandem
to dial it in perfectly.
And we make sure it's got all the elements
that a great horror movie should have,
but it's super funny, it's also a musical,
because that hasn't happened in a while, right?
No.
Come on, let's do this.
Okay.
Let's make a horror movie, a horror musical,
before we die.
A horror music-a-ma-na-na-na-na.
You wanna shake on it?
Macomedy, macabony. You wanna shake on it? Macomedy, macabony.
You wanna shake on it?
Macab, what about that?
Macabony, macabon, macomedy, macomedy.
Macabody.
Macomedy.
Macomedy.
And Matthew McConaughey stars in it.
Oh crap, we're gonna do everything we can
to get Matthew McConaughey in this thing.
All right guys, I bet you we could get John Mayer in it.
He was in a Zombiever.
Yeah, he was, wasn't he?
Yeah.
Not one I necessarily recommend.
All right guys, thank you for hanging with us.
I hope you weren't too afraid.
If you were listening to this whole thing
in like a dark and windowless room
with a purring chainsaw or a meat hook dangling nearby,
then good for you for hanging in there to the end.
But just think about the fact that anything is possible.
Someone could have snuck into your house
while you were listening to this
and that little creak that you heard downstairs,
that could be a person
or it could be some sort of supernatural being
that is ready to infest your soul.
You're a jerk, man.
Now try to go back to sleep.
They weren't trying to go to sleep.
Some of them were.
Some of them were. Thank you.