How Did This Get Made? - Matinee Monday: Striptease LIVE!

Episode Date: September 2, 2024

Paul, Jason, & June break down 1996's Striptease starring Demi Moore, Burt Reynolds, Ving Rhames, and Robert Patrick. LIVE from Onion Fest in Chicago, they discuss the Vaseline on Burt Reynolds' body,... Ving Rhames' yogurt scheme, the strip club named "The Flesh Farm," and a whole lot more. (Originally Released 07/05/2018) Troll 2 VIRTUAL live show on Sept 6th (pay what you can tickets) + we'll be in NYC on Nov 15th! Go to hdtgm.com for ticket info, merch, and for more on bad movies.Order Paul’s book about his childhood: Joyful Recollections of TraumaFor extra content on Matinee Monday movies, visit Paul's YouTube page: youtube.com/paulscheerTalk bad movies on the HDTGM Discord: discord.gg/hdtgmPaul’s Discord: discord.gg/paulscheerFollow Paul’s movie recs on Letterboxd: letterboxd.com/paulscheer/Check out new HDTGM movie merch over at teepublic.com/stores/hdtgmPaul and Rob Huebel stream live on Twitch every Thursday 8-10pm EST: www.twitch.tv/friendzoneLike good movies too? Subscribe to Unspooled with Paul and Amy Nicholson: listen.earwolf.com/unspooledSubscribe to The Deep Dive with Jessica St. Clair and June Diane Raphael: www.thedeepdiveacademy.com/podcastCheck out The Jane Club over at www.janeclub.comWhere to find Paul, June, & Jason:@PaulScheer on Instagram & Twitter@Junediane on IG and @MsJuneDiane on TwitterJason is not on social mediaGet access to all the podcasts you love, music channels and radio shows with the Sirius XM App! Get 3 months free using the link siriusxm.com/hdtgm and code HDTGM

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Tonight's show is dedicated to the brave men and women who fearlessly applied Vaseline to Burt Reynolds' entire body. You are true heroes, and you will not be forgotten. We saw strip tease, so you know what that means. Screamin' How did Schwarzenegger grow a baby in his belly? Rock a ron stone vest while ripping Justin to Kelly Or maybe see a burlesque show with Nick Crowe And take a boat with Speed 2 hitting cruise control J-Man, Big Paul, and the beautiful June
Starting point is 00:00:35 Gonna take you from the goob all the way to the room Rander games and street fighter help to blow off steam Just a sucker punch the odd life of Timothy Green Shocknado to birdemic, how we stand alive they call it in the badass and he's on the line cranking 88 minutes cause they cool as ice cause a bad jim barney looking kind and nice paul and june getting literal jason is getting laid june is making sure all the monkey shots getting paid they judge a bunch of movies while they making the grade Here's a real question for you, how did this get made? Hello people of Earth!
Starting point is 00:01:08 And hello people of Chicago! We are so excited to be in one of the best cities in the country. An audience that doesn't get tricked by just applause gimmicks, we're to talk about a movie that, wow, a little problematic, remembered it very differently. Um, I apologize to anyone who watched this on an airplane like I did. Or a train. I finished this movie in a gym. Did not, not a cool thing.
Starting point is 00:02:01 A lot of questions by the people in the treadmills next to me. Um, but there is so much to talk about, A lot of questions by the people on the treadmills next to me. But there is so much to talk about, and we're going to talk about it all. And tonight I'll do that with two of my co-hosts, but the first one being Jason Manzoukas! What's up jerks? How we doing Chicago? Holy cow. I'm not going to lie.
Starting point is 00:02:41 I've been in this town 48 hours. I've eaten 48 pounds of meat. They make you eat meat as you get off the plane. I went to Stumptown, I had a meat coffee. This city loves meat. This city, you know what this city hates? Vegetables. Unless they're pickled to go next to your meats,
Starting point is 00:03:03 you fucking monsters. Oh. I don't eat meat, but when I come to Chicago, I become a meat monster. Yes. I've eaten more meat in a year than I've eaten in... I've been in an active meat sweat for, like, I don't know, 30 hours?
Starting point is 00:03:24 This is dangerous. My cholesterol is very high. If we did three nights of shows the two of us would have heart attacks. Yes. I'm not even kidding. This town is for real. Here to talk about the movie is my other co-host. Please welcome June. Hi Paul, how are you? I am great, I'm very excited to talk to you both about this movie, Strip Tease. Lots of stuff to talk about. Oh yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:31 Let's start with the title. Yes. Strip Tease. Yes. So that is different than stripping, because a tease would be almost more of a burlesque. It would be like, we're teasing. I think of Gypsy, yeah, Gypsy Rose Lee, just like a dance.
Starting point is 00:04:54 Gypsy Rose Lee? You think it's like Gypsy Rose Lee? I think of Natalie Wood at the end of Gypsy Rose Lee. That's what I'm thinking of too when I hear strip tees. Does a whole dance and at the end of Gypsy Rosalie. Mm-hmm. That's what I'm thinking of too when I hear striptease. Does a whole dance and at the very end, there's a... A bra strap? Yes, and then curtains. That's not what this was.
Starting point is 00:05:16 No. I will say though... I will say there is a bra strap and there are curtains, but it is a very different movie. Very different movie. I will say we are going to talk a little bit about the dancers in the movie. I was very impressed with the level of commitment to their different characters. There's that one woman who dressed like a cat and did almost a salute to the cat's musical.
Starting point is 00:05:43 She was fully committed to the character of the cat. There was... Yeah. Go ahead. No, I was gonna say, one of the story lines, question mark, in the film, question mark, is that there's another strip club that has more gimmicks. Gotta get a gimmick. Not the Eager Beaver.
Starting point is 00:06:07 Right, not the Eager Beaver. Yes. So, but, it was called Flesh Farm, which is a disgusting name. It is somehow the classier establishment. Disgust, like, it made me go, ooh. It connotes violence and poultry Yeah, and and and somehow a transaction happening like we've we've been growing them
Starting point is 00:06:34 Oh, we're gonna we're gonna sell them now It felt like to me like the killer in silence of the lamb goes to a flesh farm Yes to complete his human flesh suit. Yes. I wouldn't be surprised. The eager beaver, it seems like there's a progression, like the eager beaver, flesh farm, then like the slaughterhouse. Or something like that seems to be where they would be going. But what was interesting is so the flesh farm is doing a lot more gimmicks there.
Starting point is 00:07:02 They have a dancer with a live snake, and she's doing some incredible work with that snake. It was unbelievable to me. I will say this. I don't wanna pull you off your point, I just wanna ask, my impression of the flesh form is that they all danced with an animal of some kind. Oh, I didn't realize that.
Starting point is 00:07:20 I don't know, I'm just saying that that's- Oh, wait, is that the farm? Is that the farm? That's what I thought. Oh! Whoa, wait a minute. So there might be one- Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Hang on Yeah, is it called the flesh farm because there's animals in every act. That's how I interpreted it. Did everybody get that? No, no, I thought there'd be a girl with a chicken You know, like I thought there would be like other animals.
Starting point is 00:07:46 That was my impression. That would, I would go to that strip club. Like at first I was like, oh, I'm a hundred percent an eager beaver guy. No way, flesh farm. But now that that's the reality and I have a very high likelihood of seeing both boobs and someone get mauled by an animal?
Starting point is 00:08:07 That is trying to escape, and I am rooting, by the way, for the animal to escape. I'm rooting for that snake, guys. Monty Python, come on. But yes, I didn't mean to cut you off, June. No, well, back to our dancers at the Eager Beaver. So I did feel a bit resentful that the owner of the Eager Beaver was feeling so threatened by the competition at Flesh Farm
Starting point is 00:08:34 and all their gimmicks and elaborate stunts they do there because I felt the ladies at the Eager Beaver each had distinct characters. Yes. One was a baby. Yes. June, June, I don't want to jump in. I don't want to try and mansplain this for you. But I think technically she's a sexy baby.
Starting point is 00:08:53 She's a sexy baby. I don't think she's a baby as much as she's a sexy baby. Like Goo Goo Gaga, Daddy Changed My Diapy Baby. Yeah. There's a subtle difference. But important to, and then there was of course the cat Look to be mid explosion yes That her she is a actual dancer her name is Pandora Peaks, and she was playing the character Urbana sprawl
Starting point is 00:09:24 Which is a sprawl and she was playing the character Urbana Sprawl, which is odd. Urban Sprawl? Urbana Sprawl. So she's basically somehow a joke about Urban Sprawl? What is that? I get Monty Python being worked in there, but why call her Urbana Sprawl? Oh, this city's getting out of control.
Starting point is 00:09:40 I mean, listen, I believe every woman should be able to do whatever she wants with her body, of course. But when I saw those breast implants, I'm assuming they're not real. No, I will say that she, whoa, oh yes. Paul. No. You know what? Let Paul explain boobs.
Starting point is 00:10:02 We've had this fight a number of times where Paul cannot spot fake breasts. What? Cannot. I would argue it is my greatest skill. And I question it. It's like can't or won't. Why was her god-given name Pandora Peaks if they're not fully real? Wait, are you saying, did you just say Pandora Pizza? Peaks.
Starting point is 00:10:26 Peaks. Pandora Pizza. Okay, I thought you just said Pandora Pizza and I almost lost my mind. If there was a pan star named Pandora Pizza, I would watch that every night. Pandora Pizza is my small little shop I opened in the Avatar world.
Starting point is 00:10:44 We make a quality pizza for humans or Navi. Navi, it's no big deal. We have a Navi menu. We have an Earthling menu. We keep the peace. I have a question about, and I don't know if we're experts, but I will ask this. If you are having a breast implant that big,
Starting point is 00:11:03 are you saying that the implant itself must be beachball-sized? Is that what we're assuming, that there is a beachball-sized thing inside there? Yes, Paul. Yes, Paul. I know it's incredibly hard for you to believe. I think that's exactly what we're saying. That's exactly it. It seems so crazy to me, like that they would even have that option.
Starting point is 00:11:26 Are you just considering this right now? I think that when I would see someone like that, I'm like, oh yeah, they got breast implants. But now think about the reality of it and going like, wow, someone manufactured that. Oh, so you're curious about the manufacturer. You're interested how this works on a manufacturing level? Yeah. Got it, got it. I'm like, are they going, all right, well, we're selling a lot of these,
Starting point is 00:11:57 but is it like in a big and tall man department of the factory? Because it's like, we're not making a lot, but we'll sell like two a year. It's like a car dealership that has like two Mercedes. It's like, we'll make a lot on those, but we're not gonna sell, we'll sell the Toyotas. So you're saying what's on her chest is the two Mercedes? I just think it's a big, it's a, wow. I don't think it's priced by the size.
Starting point is 00:12:20 I don't know, I don't know. Yeah, I agree, I don't think, I actually don't know, but I don't think like the bigger ones are more expensive necessarily. I don't think that's how it's done. How big do you want to go? And keep in mind, the bigger the, the, the, the bigger the bucks. Oh, don't you worry. If you want those big giant jugs, get ready.
Starting point is 00:12:41 It's going to be big dollars. I was going off the, like, the turkey model at the supermarket. Wait. So to you, checking out turkeys at the supermarket is like touching boobs? I just would like to be like to run into you at the market and you're just like, uh...
Starting point is 00:13:02 No, like, you know, it's like if you pick up a bigger thing, it's like if you pick up a bigger thing, it's more expensive. I don't know. Anyway, I just want to let everyone know I run a very reputable plastic surgery practice. And yeah, I may ask questions, but you know what? We do it, and it's on the up and up. It's totally cool.
Starting point is 00:13:25 I agree with you, Paul. When I see a girl with big boobs, my first impression is, how much do those weigh? And what's the price per pound? And can I get a Greek salad with it? And half a pound of prosciutto, please. Ah! Meat!
Starting point is 00:13:48 Those meat jokes are for you, Chicago! But, yes, June, I've derailed your point about Pandora's. No, that was it. It was just that, it was just that, you know, I do think at the Eager Beaver, everybody had a pretty distinct personality, and they should have been a little bit more open-minded your point about Pandora's. No, that was it. It was just that, it was just that, you know, I do think at the Eager Beaver, everybody had a pretty distinct personality
Starting point is 00:14:09 and they should have just trusted that. And they were very, I will say this, what I appreciated about the Eager Beaver was that they were open to different kinds of expression. Every time Demi Moore dances, it's a different act to a different ballad. Well, to a different Annie Lennox song. They're all pretty much only Annie Lennox.
Starting point is 00:14:29 Which by the way, I liked. I liked that the patriotic woman does her thing. Each one was very different, which I was like, oh, oh. And by the way, for those of you who think that you're gonna get us in the Q&A, I know that Penny from Showgirls was also in this movie too. So for those of you who reference that, we don't have to, we get it. I will say too that the Prince song and Sweet Dreams by the Arhythmics,
Starting point is 00:14:58 Annie Lennox, that's also in it. So it's not even just Annie Lennox solo, she's going into other Annie Lennox out in the bout. Which I, and I loved that. I loved that she had her, that she was basically just doing ballads and using it as a method of self-expression that was like sad to basically tell sad stories.
Starting point is 00:15:21 I was like, I love that the eager beaver is allowing this expression and also Cat Lady. Yes. The eager beaver, if nothing else, is a safe creative space. Yes. Like, I feel like... You can fail there. You can be wrong. Yeah. Or the sequel to this movie, I believe, was the Cat Woman's performance goes to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and gets a short order on the BBC. I was genuinely disappointed that we did not get to see the full Catwoman number.
Starting point is 00:15:53 Agree. Because when she came out and got, you know, cat. Yes. Got cat. Got perched. I was really looking forward to that. Agree. And when I, and I was like,, now I've gotten the uncut version, so the extras must be each
Starting point is 00:16:11 person's full dance. Nope. Nope. As a matter of fact, for those of you who watched the director's cut versus the regular cut, I went and did a little compare and contrast online about what was added. And what was taken out for the theatrical cut, but was added in for the director's cut, was just a line, lines that the owner of the strip club
Starting point is 00:16:36 says to Ving Rhames. Like, you're like, oh. That's the exclusive cut, more of that story. So. Oh, uh... The guy that said nothing gets him hard anymore except when he went to SeaWorld? Yes. There's more of that storyline?
Starting point is 00:16:55 Oh, good. That's what I watched? Okay, good. I need to hear more of... And then there's a scene in SeaWorld. And I was like, oh, are we gonna catch a glimpse of this guy, like, straight up jerking off in the background, while Rumor Willis gives a fish a fish? Technically, it was called Splash of the Ocean, a terrible name for a sea place.
Starting point is 00:17:21 But a great name for a porno. Starring, it's the next Oceans movie. We had Oceans 11, now Oceans 8, a splash of the ocean is the next one. It's a full squirting movie. For the lost ocean sibling. Going back to the Eager Beaver Club, I thought the dances were artistic. I thought the DJ was out of place. The DJ felt to me like Sam Levine's character from the Wet Hot American Summer movie. Grown up. Like, I was like, oh, this is where he's elevated to.
Starting point is 00:17:58 He's up there like, hey, everybody, what's up? And he's not even doing it sleazy. Like, he seems psyched. Like, he's like, this is awesome. Check it out. Cats on stage. Like, not over it. Not over it. What's like and he's not even doing it sleazy like he seems psyched like he's like Like not over it not even sleazy just happy to be there. Yeah. Oh No, he he was having a great time I think he was like psyched to be doing the movie as well and that might have informed a little bit of what was going on And that might have informed a little bit of what was going on. I have a lot to talk about.
Starting point is 00:18:27 There was one, from a directing standpoint, there was one thing that I did not like about this movie, was this thing, and I only wrote it down as like, the camera moves so aggressively at people, it's like a close talker, it's like you'll be like, sitting in normal space, like zooming right into a face, like oh. Like and they do that in the opening, they do that a handful of times. You're getting like, it's like the cameraman got out of control, like oh stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, breaking, like getting on the face, like stop on the face.
Starting point is 00:18:58 No one noticed that anyway? I didn't notice that. I didn't notice that. I believe you though. I did notice Demi's ex-husband's sister wearing a... First I thought it was a bulletproof vest. Yeah. By the way, that performance she gave, whoever that sister was.
Starting point is 00:19:16 Who's that actress? Oh, okay, go ahead. Does anybody know? I have her name here. Yes, thank you. She's amazing. Yeah. That was a performance.
Starting point is 00:19:24 I would have watched a movie about her and her security guard husband. I was blown away by that performance. Was it a catcher's vest? Yes. And did we ever learn why? Well, yes, because she's training wolves. Yes.
Starting point is 00:19:39 Oh, I didn't hear that. They do one of those things where they set it up and they pay it off about an hour later, so So every Friday keep it on every Friday Rumor Willis is dropped off at her Yeah, right. That's rumor. Yeah, room. Oh, I thought it was for a minute I was like maybe maybe I've got the wrong one, but it was really it gets dropped off at her aunt's house Where her aunt is actively training wolves?
Starting point is 00:20:06 Which and and Demi Moore cannot get custody. It's wild. The opening scene of this, you are like, in what world would this even be considered? Also, by the way, I'm also perhaps more interested in a Paper Moon style movie with Terminator 2 and Robert Patrick and Rumer Willis going around stealing wheelchairs. That's a Sundance movie if ever I saw one. He can't get it together.
Starting point is 00:20:42 He's using his daughter to steal wheelchairs. They're just, and that's the deal, you know? I would see that movie. What I liked about that character, the husband, was he really played it in the middle of the road. You didn't know if he was a good guy or a bad guy. Always sector questioning. Really, real subtle.
Starting point is 00:20:59 So just so I understand, because they said it a few times, it was unbelievable every single time, though. This judge listened to her testify that her husband was a... An informant. An informant for the FBI. Yes.
Starting point is 00:21:16 And also a criminal. Yes. And she lost custody because... She lost her job working for the FBI. FBI because of him. Because of him, but because she had no job and he was a great football player in high school, the judge gave her one of the harshest sentences of all time. This movie came out in 1996 and he said, you can see her for two hours every two weeks
Starting point is 00:21:44 and on Christmas Eve and then on Easter. Like that was the plan. Very arbitrary. And part of it was because he was an informant for the Vice Squad. I mean, I do have that scene. And that they had pressured the judge I think to Yeah, I mean be lenient on him and punitive towards her I mean if you if you want to just hear him rat it off finger hot oh Finger hot like straight out of the box. I'm like here we go here we go! I never saw him. Of course, he's had his run-ins with the law, but he's made his accommodations with the authorities. Your Honor, being an informer for the Dade County Vice Squad
Starting point is 00:22:50 hardly qualifies him to raise a seven-year-old child. Neither does being a mother without a job. But I lost it because of him. The lady, my decision is final. Boom. That's it! That's the close-up! He just beat in! Just that in!
Starting point is 00:23:07 That was a little bit of that classic, whoo-wee, ramp into the face. And is there no court-appointed lawyer for her? Also, I point out that Robert Patrick is sitting in the spot that the lawyer normally sits in. He's on the outside edge of the table. Which means the lawyer would have to go... Why does she appear to be representing herself? That judge...
Starting point is 00:23:31 Fingerhut? Yeah. I guess my... Joe, I only say that because he's a judge. And we should give him the respect by saying his name. LW... LW... LW Fingerhut. My question is, and I felt this throughout the whole movie, why
Starting point is 00:23:48 would Robert Patrick want the daughter? Like full time? It seems like he's not a guy who really would like responsibilities. I agree. I feel like he would want the opposite. I think he's just doing it as a fuck you to Demi Moore and I bet, I don't know, I bet he gets money as a result of being the full time or something like, I bet there's some, because he's such a sleazebag, I'm sure there's something in it, I don't think he's doing it out of the goodness of his heart.
Starting point is 00:24:13 I mean, what did she see in him? That's what I wrote, I was like, why did she marry this guy? Well this is, by the way, there are a couple things we need to address in terms of the problems with the movie. But. Wait, there's problems in this movie? There's a few things I took issue with.
Starting point is 00:24:30 But at a certain point, what's the actor's name again who plays the. Robert Patrick. No, no, no, no, who plays the FBI agent. Oh, Armando Sante. Armando Sante, of course. Lieutenant Al Garcia. So what I am resisting is the implication that this is all her fault. Because at one point he says to her, she's sort of in shame over her work, which again, we can get into the problems around that,
Starting point is 00:25:00 but she is very embarrassed that her daughter saw her stripping, and he says the only mistake you made is to marry that guy. There is not, single time in this movie is any man implicated for any of their actions. Because it's kind of unbelievable. He doesn't even point the finger at this horrible man who's her ex-husband and the father of her child. The person who did something wrong was her
Starting point is 00:25:30 for marrying him. It's insane. She really fucked up, yeah. She really, she did a terrible job. If she had better taste in men, she'd probably still be at the FBI. It's maddening. Oh my gosh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:49 She really is an island in this movie. She is surrounded by incompetent people, and I'll get into Shad, Ving Rhames' character, who seemingly is never working the bouncer position at this strip club. Never there when you need him. He is backstage reading the Wall Street Journal when a major fight breaks out. He is escorting her to a private boat in the middle of the night,
Starting point is 00:26:15 assumingly, or assume that the eager beaver is open. How does he think that yogurt thing's gonna work? I will say this. The greatest mark against his intelligence is that he thinks that yogurt thing's gonna work. Well, I mean, he's a real, like, he contradicts himself a lot, first of all, he's reading the Wall Street Journal, and then later on in the movie they go,
Starting point is 00:26:43 do you follow politics? He goes, do I look like I follow politics? Well, yeah, you're reading the Wall Street Journal. Like, all right, sure. And then this setup that he has here also seems grossly elaborate just to put a roach in yogurt. You don't need the vice. He has a vice holding a cup of yogurt.
Starting point is 00:27:09 Okay. Just set it down on the table. He has a full table of tools. There's a soldering iron right here. Oh, need it. Just place it. Just put it down. Just to put a roach in yogurt. And his plan, and let's listen to him lay out his plan. So this is the new brainstorm, huh? According to the Wall Street Journal,
Starting point is 00:27:31 we got here the hottest-selling yogurt in the country. I bring this in, say my hair fell out from the shop. Boom. They pay off big time. Lawyer thinks it's a genius idea. Your lawyer has an office over a video store. Call me a dreamer. I don't want to be a bouncer forever. I like that attitude but I'm also like if you know from the Wall Street Journal that's the biggest selling yogurt, invest in that yogurt.
Starting point is 00:28:00 There just seems to be so many problems with the plan. A being if there's any pictures of him any time before this movie, his hair would not be there. Yeah. I feel like in some ways, he's just been trying to figure out an explanation for his hair not being there. Like it's always been a long road back
Starting point is 00:28:21 to that explanation. Speaking of which, you can hear it in the clip, but there's a monkey in this movie. Oh yeah. A monkey that- Oh, so that's right, all the strip clubs have animals. Well, I feel like this monkey was belonging in, similarly to LL Cool J's parrot in Deep Blue Sea,
Starting point is 00:28:39 but at least LL Cool J acknowledges that there's a parrot on his shoulder. Ving Rhames does not acknowledge its monkey. They're in some sort of relationship where the monkey is like, I'm here and he's like, don't see me. I like to think they had a falling out day one. And he was like, fine, if it's going to jump on me, but I'm going to tell you right now, I will not acknowledge its presence.
Starting point is 00:29:02 Something I think did happen because he he's in several other scenes without the monkey. Sure. Which leaves one questioning like where is the monkey? Yeah. Is that monkey okay? Are those are any of those scenes in the extras? Like while they're off at the boat stripping is the monkey off doing something? The monkey falls into that trope of film where the monkey just does reaction shots. Like we don't need, we get it. The monkey is cueing the audience like, whoa, whoa, whoa. I don't-
Starting point is 00:29:35 Now, there is a point in this scene we just saw, Demi Moore tips him or tries to tip him for breaking up- A fight. A fight with a bachelor who looks like he's 55 years old. or tries to tip him for breaking up a fight with a bachelor who looks like he's 55 years old. Well, why, you're saying just because he's older, he shouldn't be getting married? I mean, after 40, like if you're not married,
Starting point is 00:29:54 forget about it. How old? Wait, how old? Forget about it, 40. After 40? If it hasn't happened then, it ain't gonna happen. happened then, it ain't gonna happen. It was just interesting to have a bachelor party roll in.
Starting point is 00:30:16 I get it, it's gross. And to see this groom, question mark. Looks so much older. But by the way. It was hard to suspend my disbelief. I'll say that much. Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm. Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm. You know, I thought maybe it was his second marriage.
Starting point is 00:30:34 Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm. So that's how I was able to continue watching. But I definitely questioned it. Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm. Ugh. I definitely questioned it. I was acting. But Ving Rhames in that scene, when that bachelor gets on stage and assaults, there's no other way to put it, to me more, Ving Rhames is backstage reading the Wall Street Journal. Read about yogurt. Yeah, later on in this scene, and he does eventually, because she's screaming, come out.
Starting point is 00:31:12 Burt Reynolds has already come and plucked the guy. Oh, a lot has happened. It's been photographed, a lot has gone on. She then goes to tip him in this scene. For what? Yeah, he didn't do anything. Nothing. You would be better than Tim Burr Reynolds.
Starting point is 00:31:29 Did she say something? I don't remember. Did she say something? In this scene we just saw, she says, I want to give you something for. Yeah, getting in there. Yeah, getting in there and protecting me? Well, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:31:43 I think the problem I have is that he is treated as though he is a hero in this movie. And he is not. He is not. He does not simply do his job to protect these women. Not at one bit. No. And he also... In this scene, no. But I do think in other scenes he steps up. I disagree. There's a scene... This scene, we cut out before it, but another dancer comes over, and I'm using the language that it seems from the movie they prefer, dancer. He comes, she comes over to try to investigate what's going on with that cockroach, and he hits her.
Starting point is 00:32:20 And says basically, get the fuck out of here. Did we watch the same movie? This is a terrible man and he is only there to protect Aaron. He doesn't give a fuck about the rest of them. Yeah, maybe, I don't know. Yeah. I will tell you this. I said to Choon, I said, oh yeah, Said to June I was like well thing I said like I have a big brain was great She's like no, he's not and then she showed me all the things like oh, yeah, I guess not I don't know why my brain yeah
Starting point is 00:32:53 I am taking those those moments where he says things like don't go there without me or he's looking out after her or he Tracks her down to make sure she's okay to be him in his intentions that he is going to take care of her. Listen, this is gonna open up a can of worms because the only reason that she is considered a stripper who we care about is because she's a mother. The rest of them are, in the world of this movie, dumb and I guess not worthy of his protection. That's troubling to me.
Starting point is 00:33:24 Yeah. He treats the rest of them quite differently. And if you go scene by scene to watch his character, which I did, you'll find that, especially because the movie ends with him really, and all he cares about is protecting her purity as a mother. And I reject that. And by the way, the movie posits a world, I mean, it completely upholds a very disturbing view of women, which is they are either mothers or they're whores. And we're both, you guys.
Starting point is 00:34:03 Duh! That's a new t-shirt! They're... Ha ha ha! Oh. Speaking of someone who's both, Armand Asante. Oh, yeah. No, agree I agree I mean I think
Starting point is 00:34:27 it's a weird movie these are these movies that came out in this time where I think strip tease came out there's a lot of like I think it's like this is strip tease. Oh sorry. Showgirls. I think there was like this fascination of like what can we show and you know it's, you know, but I think the only way you could get into this world is by showing someone that you would, is a mother. She doesn't belong there, and that's why she's a lead character, yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:54 Of course, yeah, and she's entering the world because she has no other choices, which is of course true for many women who do, and not true for all women who are dancers and strippers. And I will say the distinction they force us to make over and over in this movie about strippers, dancers not being sex workers and not having sex with their customers is also troubling because it requires us to shame sex workers and criminalize them, which I don't believe we should be doing and believe in the end of criminalization shame sex workers and criminalize them, which I don't believe we should be doing,
Starting point is 00:35:25 and believe in the end of criminalization of sex workers, but I guess that's another podcast. But by the way, and I understand what we're watching in yada yada, blah blah blah, I know it's a big, stupid movie, but I also think this movie is an incredibly dangerous film. I also think this movie is an incredibly dangerous film. I really do, because it's a very dangerous movie
Starting point is 00:35:55 for everyone to see, because it really is. And that's, I mean, like the treatment of animals, let's just like put over there. From that monkey to that snake to the dolphins at SeaWorld, like they're just like over there for a second. From that monkey to that snake to the dolphins at Sea World. They're just over there for a second. But the shaming of women who are paid to be sexual and to use their sexuality is horrifying to me. The very end of the movie, she has a line where Armand Asante says, are you going to
Starting point is 00:36:24 run for Congress? There's a seat open, and she jokes and says like, oh yeah, I'm gonna do that next. And I wanted to say, yeah, you should. And also, what's so disturbing is you feel at the end of this movie she is launching off to completely reject this past. And the reality of the working conditions
Starting point is 00:36:43 of the stripper she was just with the entire film. There is nothing political about her character. She never cares about the other women who are there and she should because they care about her and take care of her daughter and that's troubling in a world I don't recognize. Sorry guys I'll wrap it up. I mean not anytime soon, but I will wrap it up. But I do believe this movie is incredibly dangerous to watch and to see a woman who, you know, the distinction they're making between stripper and sex worker,
Starting point is 00:37:23 I understand in like our cultural lexicon, but I really think it's upsetting and We should reject it Well said and we should reject it Because sex workers and exotic dancers are some of the most vulnerable women among us. And this movie sort of purports itself to be feminist and it is not in my mind. Because there's no recognition of that. And there's just shame and the assumption
Starting point is 00:38:05 that she should completely forget about her time there and the horrible harassment and degradation she was subject to. And to me, they go to such lengths to make her character sympathize with every man. I mean, she sympathizes with that guy, Jerry, who's a fucking serial killer. And she literally says,
Starting point is 00:38:29 he's harmless. Why would you ever think that? He is not harmless. He's a serial killer. But the lengths they go to make her sympathetic to us because of what she's doing is so... It's just unbelievable. The end.
Starting point is 00:38:53 I would have a lot more to say, but the end. Well I'm glad that you said that. How does this go? Well I'm glad that you said that. I think that that's really, because I think looking at these movies with context is always important. And then it frees us up to also talk about Burt Reynolds and Armand Desante as well. I would love to talk about oiled up Burt Reynolds as dangerous and irresponsible on my eyeballs? I will say that this performance by Burt Reynolds is the closest we'll ever get to seeing a real life personification of the KFC mascot.
Starting point is 00:39:41 Colonel Sanders. This is a little less than the ones that we're seeing in the football commercials. This is just taken down just a notch. I mean, this character is bananas. Oh, yeah. Burt Reynolds fought to be in this movie. He took scale to be in this movie
Starting point is 00:39:58 because he liked this character so much. Oh, I feel like this is why that happened. They gave him the script and he went to the what page am I first on? Six? Okay one two three four five six. My first line is Poon Tang. I'm in. Get me this part. My first line is Poon Tang. Is the character's name Burt Reynolds? It's not? Wow, they got me though, so get me this part. By the way, it's shot in its home state of Florida, so it was an easy drive, too. Here are some actors, and I just, for the sake of,
Starting point is 00:40:35 maybe just go one by one, I'll just tell you, envision the movie with Michael Caine playing this part. That's who they wanted, which is an odd choice, because he is a congressman and I've never seen Michael Caine not have a British accent. Oh yeah. So that's an odd choice. I think people think Michael Caine exists in a world which Americans think they can't hear him have a British accent. The second person that they went to after Michael Caine was Gene Hackman. I'm into that. I
Starting point is 00:41:04 would be into that. I think that that actually works well. And then after Gene Hackman, it was Donald Sutherland. Okay. Which I think is creepier, oddly. I see him in a wig, wearing... Too much President Snow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:19 But then... Yeah, there's malice to that. Burt Reynolds is kind of perfectly like, of course it's Burt Reynolds, play girl Burt Reynolds, we've all seen as Dick Burt Reynolds. I mean, I've never watched a performance and thought like, oh, that's a buffoon. That's true buffoonery.
Starting point is 00:41:39 Yeah. In some ways, I took my hat to it. Burt Reynolds is widely regarded as his generation's most perfect interpreter of Tartuffe. His Ubu Roy was widely perceived to be the greatest of his generation. And by the way, we are saying this is before Burt lost his hair, right? This is his natural hair, right? What now?
Starting point is 00:42:04 Oh. Yeah, this is Burt's hair before he balled. Uh-huh, uh-huh. I know he's balled now, but this is definitely his real hair. Oh, in all the scenes? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Where his hair looked exactly the same scene to scene? I will say this much.
Starting point is 00:42:20 Demi Moore, she was shooting GI Jane and had to come back for reshoots and wore a wig for a considerable chunk of reshoot scenes and her wig looks a zillion times better than what was on his end. His end looked like no one ever did a wig fitting. It was sort of like they tossed it to him like a frisbee and however his head caught it, it was like, and that's how it is for today. He does some work here in this movie, in the scene where he goes to get some money from his, like, a group of older Jewish people, and he's dancing with them. But the thing that was so infuriating there was, Archer, he's doing this and then he goes, Manischewitz, and they all go, yeah!
Starting point is 00:43:10 That's crazy, their reaction is crazy. It would have just been better if he said Manischewitz. And you're telling me he's a congressman for like 20 years in Florida, and Manischewitz is all he's picked up? Like an enormous amount of his constituents must be old Jewish people in Florida. And he's getting by with just doing a hora
Starting point is 00:43:31 and screaming Manashevitz. I don't know. What is his district? I mean, what is the makeup? I would love to know. He's in Dade County, the 34th district. No, that would be amazing if they really drilled into the politics of it.
Starting point is 00:43:46 All right, so look at the congressional map. Now here's the deal. Now there's been some gerrymandering in this area. We're gonna pop this out. That is all in the director's copy. Very detailed, Paul Guilfoyle going into it. He's the king. I would love, again, there are,
Starting point is 00:44:03 I would love to see the striptease universe built out. I,, there are, I would love to see the strip tease universe built out. I would like to see a West Wing style show with his young guy that's with him all the time who's like, what, now I gotta go to a laundromat and steal fucking lint? So you can huff lint from the dryer, You oiled up monster? I will say, I like the portrayal of our politicians. I think it is valid. These are grossoes. Right?
Starting point is 00:44:35 Okay, let me ask. So that was, I did, well, I actually didn't rewatch that part, but I was, I thought about rewinding it. What they took from that dryer, that he went to that was those weren't underwear no it was the lint from the dryer fucking he was like huffing like it was a scene from blue velvet it was insane at that point when that kid saw that he kid saw that, he should have killed him. He should have killed Burt Reynolds and been like, I'm doing this for the greater good. I guess I'm just trying to understand, like...
Starting point is 00:45:15 This is the movie we saw for you, Chicago. You made us do this. I'm just playing slow motion. You don't think we're all going to think about this when we fuck now? This is the world we live in. We live in a post-looped-up Burt Reynolds jack-off fest. You did this to us. This is a fetish now. When you're fucking later, all of you, Chicago,
Starting point is 00:45:47 when you're about to come, please just, when you're coming, say to your partner, B-R-E-N-O-U-L-D-S. Can I... Do it and then tweet about it, you gross monster. Can I just say, I want to get into the lint thing, but I also want to tell you, as we're talking about that scene... Or fuck my lint. As we're watching that scene... I want it to be fuck the lint thing, but I also want to tell you, as we're talking about that scene... Or fuck my lint.
Starting point is 00:46:05 As we're watching that scene... I want it to be fuck my lint. What I like about the scene is that not only is he in a... Like he's in boxer shorts, a leather cowboy vest, a cowboy hat, but he's still wearing his watch. And his wedding ring. And his wedding ring. And by the way, this, just so I'm clear, this is all just for him. Yes!
Starting point is 00:46:27 Yeah, this is just... He's alone. So he got dressed up and he... He's supposed to be downstairs. He's supposed to be at an event. Hold on, hold on. He got in that vest and he oiled himself up just for himself. And by the way, here he is...
Starting point is 00:46:43 Just for himself and the lint can we just say though It's not that he oiled himself up. He put Vaseline like that like I feel like oil can note something a little bit more. Oh, it's so tack. It's so tacky It's gonna kiss everything lean to get that level of, like to get that level of lubrication that he's done with Vaseline, he must really rubbed it in. He is full on greased up. This is, this is nuts.
Starting point is 00:47:15 And by the way, just to put a little bit of a touch on it, they are spying on Erin, that's Demi Moore's character, and he goes, I need you to get me something personal from her, very personal,i Moore's character, and he goes, I need you to get me something personal from her very personal, Southern fraud personal. And so I'm thinking, oh, he'll break into her house and steal her underwear. That's the normal. That's what you're thinking?
Starting point is 00:47:35 Well, I mean. Hey man. Right, I mean. Why don't you let them just do what they're doing? You don't have to like imagine ahead where the grosso's going. So obviously I'm thinking break in, but break into, like, a basement window.
Starting point is 00:47:48 Something that won't be noticed if she returns home. Get in there and look in the hamper, not the drawer, because he's gonna want something used. That's just what I'm thinking. He's got to go there the night before, break the window, but don't do anything. So then she's okay with the broken window
Starting point is 00:48:07 for the night when she's... then the next day. Yeah. But, no, but, I mean, I guess the thought process to me is... Oh, yeah, you know what I'm thinking. I'm thinking, obviously, go to her house, scoop a turd out of her toilet, put it in a brown paper bag...
Starting point is 00:48:23 Or a Ziploc. It's easier to transport. And... I mean, look, the movie is basically... You know what I'm saying. Crawl up on the roof. The movie is basically saying, that's exactly what happened. Get into a crawl space, find her attic, get her old prom dress, put it on. I guess...
Starting point is 00:48:45 Obviously, that's where the movie's going. But I guess what I'm saying is, and yes, have I done a little B&E to steal personal time? Sure. But what I'm saying is, like, it's such a far logic leap to go, okay, he wants something personal, she works at a strip club, she is there, let me get lint, like I don't get where the lint comes in, like I would never go like, oh, lint would do,
Starting point is 00:49:13 lint would be the thing. Like so. I know, it did make me think like, what does that lint smell like? It just, I was just gonna say, it just, if I was wanting something to evoke that person, I would want something that smelled like them, not something that smelled like clean,
Starting point is 00:49:27 like laundry detergent. Yeah. You know? It's, yeah. But maybe that's just what he was after. Yeah. Well, he says he made love to it. So after he's huffing it here,
Starting point is 00:49:38 he must have like fashioned it into some sort of lint pussy. In order to fuck it, right? I mean, that is a lot of lint. Now, if it was me, what I would have done is I would have seen her in the laundromat. And then I would have walked in, but I would have bumped her, but bumped her hard enough that she dropped the laundry basket. Then a bunch of stuff fell on the floor.
Starting point is 00:50:00 Then what I would have done is with one hand, I would be like, this sounds like you've done this. And then I would take and I would do one of these things or I'd take the other one, and I drop it in my, I'd be wearing a larger coat. Didn't you guys? Put it in my pocket. What? Didn't you guys meet at a laundromat?
Starting point is 00:50:15 Oh, but that was different. I had dropped a coin and I had made June go to pick up the coin. And then we fell in love. Okay, okay. The crazy thing about that, Lynn, last thing I had made you go to pick up the coin and then we fell in love. Okay. Okay. The crazy thing about that lint, last thing I want any of us to say about it is it was such a big piece of lint. Yeah. Which is why I genuinely thought it was.
Starting point is 00:50:37 And it was red. I will say that the the place that they go in said jumbo size dryers. It did like that was literally. And I was like oh is that like they're trying to be like. If the lint is red that must mean that all of the contents of the dryer were red fabric and that wasn't the case. I feel like the color of lint is usually gray. Yeah. Yeah why was that lint red? Again. I mean I had several questions of like where did all of our costumes come from. I, I know I do there is an explanation. Oh no dryer was having its period. Oh black it out black it out that's the show
Starting point is 00:51:12 goodbye. Oh can I just talk about I like the ball you went oh no. I was the guy who took the lint. He's calling him Herb, but I didn't know if his name was Herb and that was Southern, or his name was actually Herb, because in subtitles it was Herb. E-R-B. And I kept on looking and I was like, really? Herb. And by the way, there's a couple, I've been now noticing a lot of subtitle things. So in the movie, one of the dancers says,
Starting point is 00:51:51 Bill Bradley's out there, but in the subtitles, it's Michael Jordan. Or it's reversed. Maybe the opposite. In my version, she says Michael Jordan's at table eight. And the place was like empty, and I was like, Michael Jordan's not there. Oh, then it was changed to Bill Bradley, which is even a weirder thing.
Starting point is 00:52:09 Who's Bill Bradley? A former basketball player and then governor of New York, which is an odd choice because it's like, ah, not Michael Jordan, Bill Bradley. Like, weird. Can we just hear Burt Reynolds talk about why he greased himself up? Here you go.
Starting point is 00:52:25 I just can't imagine. This is the essence of that glorious creature. I gotta say, even for you, David, this is off the charts. Why are you all shiny? It's Vaseline. Oh, oh, it's Vaseline. You never covered yourself with Vaseline. No, no, not unless Ieline. You've never covered yourself with Vaseline?
Starting point is 00:52:46 No, no, not unless I have third degree burns, no. You know what you're missing. I've got it all over. It's down in my boots. I can feel it squishing. The squishing sound I didn't like. David, the young Christians are waiting. So, by the way, I've just done you all a service.
Starting point is 00:53:05 I remember the sound of the squishing really grossing me out as if it was like wet mouth sounds. I didn't like it. Oh, so you were cool all the way up until just the squishing. Yeah, yeah, the rest of the scene, I'll be honest, was downright erotic. His boots are gonna be so gross forever. Yeah, you can't wear those again. You can't dry out that.
Starting point is 00:53:25 There is nothing about this that makes any sense unless he's about to be like in a oil wrestling ring or something. This is, even to jerk off using oil, you wouldn't oil your whole body for it. I mean, listen, people are into different things. I don't. True, true. Yeah, that's fine.
Starting point is 00:53:45 You know what? I want to support him. And the privacy of his own home. I would like to say that they told him in the script, like, oh, I oiled myself up, and Bert's like, I'll just say Vaseline, because that's how he understood what oil is. He's like, yeah, Vaseline, you know, when you put it all over your body. I'm into that. That kid, though, who's his assistant, like, he endures...
Starting point is 00:54:07 Herb. Herb? Wow, that's so weird. He endures a lot of straight-up nonsense, including like very obvious corruption. I would say that that scene was disturbing, but... Or just, herbing, nailed it. Guys, no, no, stop, stop. Don't reward wordplay. Come on, what are we doing here?
Starting point is 00:54:37 But it was not as disturbing as what Necessari... What Demi Moore found when she go went to go visit the old house that her husband was living with the kids and she finds the heads ripped off the dolls that she gave her daughter and I'm like who did that the daughter the father and father because she says later on on their two hour play date. I mean, there are moments in this movie that are devastating. I mean, did I cry during the rumor to me scenes?
Starting point is 00:55:12 Of course I did. Many times. Well, because they seemed very much mother and daughter. Obviously. Very much so. And it was devastating. Did it just get brighter? What the fuck is going on?
Starting point is 00:55:23 Am I, am I passing out? Am I okay? You are ascending to heaven after that period joke. Is this a Jacobs ladder for me? That period joke has made you, you're going on. You've done your job. Did I die after the period joke? And this is a Jacobs ladder scenario? You're going up, you're going up.
Starting point is 00:55:40 By the way, worth it. Worth it. You did everything here that you needed to do on this plane. Oh, let me shuffle off this mortal coil. During their beach play date, the daughter... Rumor says that she can't find the dolls... Right. ...that Demi gave her. But they're clearly out in the living room.
Starting point is 00:55:59 But in the old... Yeah, but they're just heads. ...in the house she doesn't live in anymore. Right. Oh. Right? Yes. Yeah, you're right. That's right, right?
Starting point is 00:56:07 But it seemed like it was like he ripped up, did he just rip off the heads of the dolls and throw them in the living room and they were out? The bodies were there too, they were just all separated. Oh, yes. So do you think, I guess the big question is, is that the work of rumor or? Well, here's my thing.
Starting point is 00:56:20 My thing is I think this movie was setting up like an Annabelle type movie scenario where those dolls will chase them all down and kill them all. There was also like a three foot raggedy Ann doll. Didn't like that. That I was very uncomfortable with. I don't like dolls that are bigger than the kids that play with them.
Starting point is 00:56:41 Yeah, agree. I'm gonna say, I'm to go on record with that. Not good, yeah. I don't trust it. But Chucky you're kind of okay with. Chucky is like a bro. I only say this because I'm very friendly with the actor that is Chucky. The doll.
Starting point is 00:57:04 I just remembered something very sad from my childhood. I was an only child and there was the Chucky doll, it's like kind of based on this doll called like my buddy. My buddy, my buddy, my buddy and me, we can climb up a tree. My buddy... And he's like, wherever he goes, he goes. He goes. Yeah. But my mom got that for me, and she said,
Starting point is 00:57:31 because you don't have any brothers or sisters... audience laughs You can have a my buddy. Like, my mom bought that commercial hook line in Zykker, like, oh, this is great for him. He doesn't... He needs him, my buddy. Paul, I'm, like, going to cry right now. That is incredibly sad.
Starting point is 00:57:56 Oh. And I remember being presented to me like, you know, when you're home from school, you guys can have fun. Oh, stop! Stop! When you... Let me ask you a very real question. Did you ever come home from school and your mom had set up my buddy
Starting point is 00:58:15 as if he was waiting for you to do a thing? He's like... She was like, my buddy assembled half a Lego TIE fighter in the other room. He's waiting for you to finish the rest. And my buddy was just there like, she was like, my buddy assembled half a Lego TIE fighter in the other room. He's waiting for you to finish the rest. And my buddy was just there like... with half a Lego TIE fighter assembled. I won't. She did not do that, but I do remember
Starting point is 00:58:37 when I did get a Cabbage Patch Kid, my mom... What? How did my buddy feel about the Cabbage Patch Kid? It predated to my buddy. So the Cabbage Patch Kid? It predated to my buddy. The Cabbage Patch is one of the problems. But my mom read the birth certificate to me and the adoption notice and made it feel really real to me. I had to take care of this thing.
Starting point is 00:58:58 So I felt very pressurized. Like I think I took... Can I ask you a question? I think I took a day I ask you a question? I think I took a day before I signed the adoption certificate. What? What?
Starting point is 00:59:14 Can I ask you a real question? Based on the timeline of this, is there any possibility that you are currently putting a Cabbage Patch Kid through college? Like, hard cut to UMass, and they're like, um, lemon sheer? And it's just cut to a doll. I will say he is on the Dean's List. And doing really, really well.
Starting point is 00:59:43 Oh, boy. That is harrowing. I don't know a lot's come up from this movie. A lot. Speaking of like odd kid behavior, mine, was the other kid, Armando Santé's son, who were introduced to him by him running into the scene and going, Dad, we got a floater. How does he know that? What? He knows police terms? That seems to be something he said before. Yes.
Starting point is 01:00:23 Like, wherever they go, they get floaters. I also, to stick on kid stuff, I want to know. They're playing two different board games in the strip club. Which are both generic board games. Yes, they're both nonsense games. One is just a bunch of boxes with question marks around it, and they're like, one, two, three, four. What strip club has multiple board games?
Starting point is 01:00:48 If they do, a crime is being committed. It's just as much as strip clubs having peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in Blues Brothers 2000. These should be warning signs. Oh, of course your child can come. 2000? These should be warning signs. Ha ha ha. Oh, of course your child can come. We have a bunch of board games.
Starting point is 01:01:11 And a loose monkey and snake. Right before they installed the falafel ring. Oh, right. No, they already did the falafel ring. He wants to do creamed corn this time. Which is gonna curdle. It's disgusting. You know, it's gonna smell. It's gonna really smell.
Starting point is 01:01:33 I don't want that. Oh, no, he's rolling creamed corn at us. No, no. I don't want that. Oh, I wish. And it didn't reach Jason, thank God. Kick it back, kick it back. Am I close? Not further. I guess... But it's coming back Jason, thank God. Kick it back, kick it back. Am I close? Not further.
Starting point is 01:01:47 I guess. But it's coming back. Oh God, I feel unsafe. I feel like it's now only time. He was like, we gotta get in the front row so I can roll this creamed corn on stage. If I can only roll this cream corn on stage, my life will be made.
Starting point is 01:02:08 Um, I think we've come to... the time in the show where we will talk to the audience or... Where we take the cream corn into the audience? They're my buddies. If you have a my buddy, we'll definitely talk to them as well. Ha-ha! Guys, while Paul's going out there, don't you fucking look at us. Don't look at us.
Starting point is 01:02:27 You don't look at us until he comes out there and you look at him. All right, so we're in the audience with a bunch of people who probably have a lot of questions about strip tease, and what we're gonna ask you today is to, oh man, let's come up with a name that you would like to be called if you were a dancer. I'll say dancer using the term and your real name in your question. Alright, you want to go first here? Oh, you have an alternative title? Okay, you can give it to us. You can break the rules. Stand up. Here we go. Okay. Your name? My name's Bets Okay. Your name? My name's Betsy.
Starting point is 01:03:06 Your alternative title? I would go with Eager Beaver. I mean, it's already in there and feels a little obvious. I like it. My question is, what genre do you think this movie would fall into? The trailer seems to suggest it's a comedy, but there's some very dark moments. Demi multiple times tells people that she's worried she's going to be murdered.
Starting point is 01:03:30 And then we have- She does hold a knife to her throat. Yeah, and then we have Burt Reynolds who is covered in Vaseline. So I just was wondering if you could help us kind of parcel this up. I think I can identify the genre pretty succinctly. Florida. I think this is a Florida movie.
Starting point is 01:03:53 Which is gross, sometimes funny, but capable of murder. So, kind of like Monster and Striptease together. Yes! I would believe those existed in the same world. Monster, Striptease, Florida Project, that is a trilogy. Yes. Okay, sir, your name, your dancer name, and your question. I'll hold the mic. Get your hands off that mic. Any loyal listener would- Paul, walk away. Paul, walk away. My name is Scott.
Starting point is 01:04:30 Dancer name would be Fruitcake Love. Okay, great. And my question is, what is with the music in this movie? Like tonally, it's just all over the place. This is a good question because I do agree that this is, you know, Jason and I have mentioned this off stage so you wouldn't hear it, but it's based on our-
Starting point is 01:04:46 Unless you were eavesdropping on us. Were you? And by the way, don't eavesdrop on us. Don't do it. We were, I mean it's based on a Carl Hyason book and he's a very interesting writer, kind of like the, you called it like the- Well he's like a crime writer from Florida. He's like doing, I feel like-
Starting point is 01:05:01 Out of Sight is his- No, no, out of sight is... Elmore Leonard. Elmore Leonard, thank you, thank you. But I feel like he's in that world of kind of guys, right? Yeah. Crime guy, but for Trashy Florida stories. Right.
Starting point is 01:05:14 And his books have... Which should say Florida stories? I'm just taking shots at Florida. But his books have humor and they have thriller aspects in it. And I think that the tone of this movie is so off. Every character is slightly in a different movie. But I would forgive it if it all didn't come together perfectly in the end. I mean, there it was.
Starting point is 01:05:36 It really paid off on every level. Okay, yes. Your name, your dancer name, and your question. My name is Cassie, so it's a pretty lateral move to assy. So I actually have a question about the names in the movie of the dancers. You have Miss Gaza Strip, you have Urbana Sprawl. Demi Moore is a number of times mentioned to be smarter than everybody else. Armando Santé is like, oh my god, do you read mystery novels?
Starting point is 01:06:03 And everyone says how smart she is. Why does she use her fucking real name? Her just, and coming to the stage, Erin Grant. Like, and everyone knows about her question battle. It is so weird, it's dangerous to use her full name. Right. Yeah, that, I noticed that. For the Jerry's of the world.
Starting point is 01:06:21 Well, by the way, they say one thing, Armand Desante goes, he has pictures of you all over his house. How? He was what? He has pictures of you all over his house. Oh, yeah. And it's like, well, how? There's no photography allowed inside.
Starting point is 01:06:36 She's not posing for anything. I bet they're all her getting into her car and out. Yeah. Probably. Scary. Your name, your dancer name, your question. Also, guys, don't eat the mic. You balcony dwellers, I know, you'll go crazy. It is not a brat.
Starting point is 01:06:55 So my name is Steve. Going off of the Chicago theme of meat, my name would be Pork Chop. Nice. Love it. And I want to circle back to the board game because when they do the first shot, it's a generic kind of board game kind of thing.
Starting point is 01:07:10 And then the way they cut back, it's Candy Land. And then the second time, it shoots in ladders. But it's generic in the closeup. The insert is a fake game, but the wide shots are a real game. I agree. Because I'm sure they got Milton Bradley who was like, no. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:26 By the way, good eyes pork chop, good eyes. Okay. All right, ma'am, your name, your dancer name and your question. My real name is Laura. My dancer name would be Jane Fondle. And my question was, why does she call the news crew
Starting point is 01:07:44 to come to the sugar factory? Like, what was her plan? By the way, this is something I really wanted to talk about, the news crew coming because- In the middle of the night? In the middle of the night, but, so the big scene goes down and this newscaster pops out of the truck, runs, and she's like, Senator, you called the news conference?
Starting point is 01:08:05 Like, as if, it's like, no one ever approaches a news conference, like, no one's bounding out of a van, going, where's the news conference? Where is it? Go, go, go! And I was like, she had SWAT precision for her news conference. Also, they've driven the news van
Starting point is 01:08:21 right up to the section of the sugar factory where they happen to have just had this whole kind of scene happen, but it's not where they would normally drive. They would have driven into the parking lot, parked, and been like, okay, where's the news conference? They wouldn't have driven into the factory, into the sugar processing plant, into the work area and been like, we'll just keep driving until we see people? In the middle of the night at the sugar factory
Starting point is 01:08:51 is where the congressmen's having a news conference? Don't you think they would be like, they are, anybody who showed up for that is terrible at their job. Well, the other crazy thing is that sugar happened to fall on those guys. Just happened to. Perfectly. And they couldn't get away. Right up to their neck.
Starting point is 01:09:12 But, June... What? You've got to say, though, it happened so organically. Um, Robert Patrick... Where are you, Paul? Where are you? Where are you? Paul, where are you? I'm one of them. I'm one, Paul? Robert Patrick. Where are you? Paul, where are you? I'm one of them.
Starting point is 01:09:28 I'm one of the balcony people now. Jesus Christ. I didn't recognize you. You've become a balcony person. I am part of the balcony. You've been up there for a while. You should come down soon. No, it's cool up here.
Starting point is 01:09:41 These people are my friends. Paul, that's what they want you to think Paul but they're not your friends they're balcony monsters by the way that's a t-shirt balcony monsters that should be for our live shows but who's gonna buy them you fucks couldn't even get tickets earlier enough to sit down here. You think you're gonna order T-shirts? You idiots, no way. So at the end, for that ending to work,
Starting point is 01:10:14 it's so convoluted. All right, so Robert Patrick is dazed. He's so dazed that he has to be functional enough to understand that he needs a cup of coffee, but then just assume that that is a coffee machine in the middle of a sugar plant and he's gonna get some coffee, but he wants to make sure that he hits the right button that doesn't give him sugar. Like there's so many steps to get that thing at the end and it still all happens there. at the end, and it still all happens. And also, by the way, though, how dare the filmmakers
Starting point is 01:10:46 give that guy the final, like, heroic move of this movie? That's insane. All right, sir, you're... The best is, though, he goes, I said no sugar. He goes, I said no sugar, He goes, I said no sugar. And then Armando Sade is like, I got even a better joke. He goes, oh, you guys got a bad case of dandruff.
Starting point is 01:11:10 Like, all right, everyone, they're just hitting jokes. That's the fun of these movies, jokes and jokes for days. So yeah, I take it back. It's a straight comedy. Sir, your name, your dancer name, your question. So my name is Rory. My dancer name would be Dalton Roadhouse. From Roadhouse.
Starting point is 01:11:30 From Roadhouse. And so my question is, at the end, in the sugar factory where this entire elaborate plan is going on, she's got a tape to tape deck that she records all of this conversation on. The music box? It's called the music box, okay? that she records all of this conversation on. My question is, where is the microphone on the tape deck that is recording this conversation? They do show you the area that is the microphone. The problem is she's actively playing music
Starting point is 01:11:58 out of the boombox, but when they play the tape back that's his confession, there's no music present on the tape. So it recorded him talking, but not the music that was blaring while he was talking. You don't think that music box, as it's referred to... I think it's more of a boom box. I picture a music box like... No, she calls it a music box
Starting point is 01:12:22 when she's trying to take it out of the back of the car. But you don't think it had the capabilities of like editing out vocals and all that stuff? No. I don't think so. I think if it was recording, you couldn't have... I mean, it's just a matter of convenience. I'm certain it recorded the thing, but... Uh...
Starting point is 01:12:39 Uh... Ha ha ha ha. Right? I mean, I'm exhausted with this movie. It is now time for second opinions. And you'll never know the flip side to the consensus that says the film you're watching is pure tripe. You need to scan through all the reviews on Amazon.
Starting point is 01:13:03 You need to search the stars for positivity. You can lode the film, but still, all you'll know is hate until you have read through all the second opinions. Amazing. Thank you. Give it up for John. Thank you, John.
Starting point is 01:13:32 That was great. If you want to hear a few other versions of it, stay tuned after the episode where we replay the ones that we just didn't play, about five more. All right. And I will say, the one Jeff Tweedy did was fantastic. Oh, yeah. It was good. And it was so cool that Taylor Swift came too. Thanks again to JT for coming by.
Starting point is 01:13:48 Um, obviously you can imagine the second opinions from Amazon for this movie are disturbing. Um, as Nick Keiley wrote me, barf, double barf on these reviews. So I've tried to get them a little bit down to size here. This is from John Wise. I have loved this movie since I was four years old. And I would love to marry Demi Moore. Five stars. Four years old.
Starting point is 01:14:22 Now, you Chicagoans have a special relationship with this movie because it was played in one of your public schools in 1997 by a teacher, and the school caught him and was like, what are you doing? And he's like, the kids wanted to see it. Was this in Florida? No, here in Chicago.
Starting point is 01:14:40 Is that why we're doing this movie? Because it's taught in your schools? If so, I'm more on board for Chicago. Um, this is just something that was unintentional in this Amazon review, but funny. Uh, they, it's, uh, by Robert, and it goes, Demi Moore looks good, but Reynolds is hilarious. And I just thought, obviously meant Burt,
Starting point is 01:15:09 but but Reynolds was a happy accident. Five stars. This is a great one here. It just says, someone borrowed my VHS tape, but neglected to return it. I am very happy it is available on DVD, as those require less space when they're stored in between viewings.
Starting point is 01:15:30 Five stars. I would love it if, like, two reviews later, it was like, hey, Randy, I'm so sorry I borrowed your VHS, if there was, like, a fight between two people. This is one movie that, like a lot of the times they try to sum up the plot, and they're very long because they go through, it's almost like an oral history of the film, but Ronnie Clay does it in three lines, and you tell me if you think that Ronnie Clay is right on the money here.
Starting point is 01:16:04 Demi Moore is a stripper who's doing her best to win child custody over her ex-husband. He's wins custody, so she's went to the house and snuck her daughter out of his house. A Congarissa man has the hots for Demi, but she doesn't dig him at all, but he pays her a lot of money to dance for him on his yacht.
Starting point is 01:16:22 Y-O-T. Five stars. ["Five Stars," by The New York Times, plays, audience cheers and applause.] Is that one of the students from the Chicago school that watched this? Because that's what you teach your kids. And I will end on this one. This is a great movie.
Starting point is 01:16:44 I love Sandra Bullock movies. Five stars. Wow, what? Ha ha ha ha. Oh, that's amazing. That's amazing. Because I didn't even realize it was Sandra Bullock. It's that wig, you know, she was shooting J.J.
Starting point is 01:17:04 and then she came back. This movie came out in 1996. The budget, would you like to guess the budget for this movie? Demi Moore was paid at this point the highest amount for an actress I believe at the time was like $12.5 million. What do you think the budget for this movie was? 30. Yeah, 30 seems about right.
Starting point is 01:17:24 50. $50 million. It's all that sugar. And all the animals. But it did worldwide, this movie made $113 million. Oh wow, oh okay. Domestically it only made 30 free. But it was a huge hit overseas. It was like successful.
Starting point is 01:17:41 Overseas, yes, very successful. It came in 47th of all the movies made in 1996. The top three movies in 96 were Independence Day, Twister, Mission Impossible. It was beaten by Jingle All the Way and Dragon Heart, but it beat- It was beaten by those. Yes. And then it, but it beat of the movies that we've done, The Island of Dr. Moreau, Escape from L.A., The Quest, Glimmer Man, Kazam, The Phantom, and Barb Wire.
Starting point is 01:18:08 Wow, what a year for films. This might be the year film died. Um, can I just... Because you're telling me the successful movies were Independence Day and what else? Uh, Twister and Mission Impossible. I mean like this, that is the year, that entire year of film is equivalent to Florida. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:33 I want to read you the taglines for this movie because it's so, they're weird. Oh really? I'm gonna be shocked at that. Um, it's so, they're weird. Oh, really? I'm gonna be shocked at that. One tagline was this. A stripper raises money needed to get back the one thing she can't live without, dot, dot, dot, her daughter.
Starting point is 01:18:59 That's not true. Yeah. That's the tagline? That's the tagline. She's not doing, like, a Kickstarter campaign. Yeah. I don't think there was Kickstarter at the time. That's true.
Starting point is 01:19:09 It was GoFundMe back then. Some people get into trouble no matter what they wear. Excuse me? Then this one, it ain't showgirls. Then again, it ain't Snow White either. Excuse me? And then, and then finally this, a comedy in the last place you'd expect to find one.
Starting point is 01:19:36 Florida. One last zing at Florida. Don't worry, they're not listening. I imagine I know what everyone's gonna say, but do you recommend this movie Jason? No, I don't. It's not even fun enough to be. As June said very eloquently, it is deeply troubling on many levels, and there's nothing about it that is... It's not a successful crime caper. It's like on every level, it is both unsuccessful and not very fun. So while we certainly had plenty of things to talk about, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:20:20 It's not for me like something I would be like, yeah, that's it that like the way that I've enjoyed watching so many trashy movies Yeah, or so many whatever movie terrible or or whatever on this No, this is not for me And June you you do want people to watch this, right? Hey, listen, it reminded me that it's important to destigmatize me that it's important to destigmatize the work of stripping and exotic dancing so that these workers may work because it is work in safe conditions where they feel free to report violence and harassment without retribution. So for that, I guess I was thankful for it. But yeah, I think, you know,
Starting point is 01:21:05 obviously we should just decriminalize sex work. And that's the end of that. I, and I do understand the distinction between, before I get a gazillion tweets about it, I do understand the distinction between sex work and of course stripping and dancing. But again, they're forcing us to draw those comparisons
Starting point is 01:21:24 in this motion picture. Excellent. And I don't have anything to add, necessarily, to either what either of you said, because I agree with both of you. I just want to point out one final thought. Is this a Fred Armisen character? This looks like it could be a Fred Armisen character. Um, I just wanted to bring out one thing that I thought was interesting.
Starting point is 01:21:47 There's a driver in the film that drives Demi to the yacht, Y-O-T, and, um, he's reading an L. Ron Hubbard book in the beginning. Oh, yeah. And, um, but more importantly, Burt Reynolds hits him in the head with a brick, uh, or a rock, and at the end of the movie,
Starting point is 01:22:05 when they're all kind of triumphantly driving away, he's sitting in the front seat with just a bandage around his head, seemingly comatose. And I wondered to myself, why isn't he in an ambulance? And where are they taking him? Because...
Starting point is 01:22:21 He has had a traumatic brain injury. Yes. He needs attention. Yeah. So, if there's any... But that's Burt Reynolds' move, is to hit people in the head with stuff. Because he gives it really good to The Bachelor too with the champagne bottle. Oh yeah, he's good at hitting people in the head. Well that's all we got there. Anybody want to plug anything?
Starting point is 01:22:40 What month do you guess it is? Summer. Summer. You know what, plug for the audience and we'll go back and plug for the at home audience. You know, I got nothing. That's not worry about it. Nothing. Okay. Here's what I want to plug. Paul and I were on another fantastic episode of the Chris Gethard show that is on TruTV. In which Chris Gethard, like a coward, abandons his own show in the opening minutes, leaving Paul and I an hour of live television to host ourselves.
Starting point is 01:23:22 Needless to say, we didn't know it was gonna happen. And needless to say, we didn't know it was going to happen. And needless to say, we fucking crushed it. Now, unfortunately, you can't see it. Unfortunately, it's somehow proprietary to true TVs, whatever. If somebody could figure out a way to put it someplace where people could watch it, boy, would we love it and maybe just send it around and hopefully people will figure out how to watch this episode of TV. Get to it, nerds!
Starting point is 01:23:49 I will say that I have a podcast with Amy Nicholson. It's called Unspooled, which is kind of the reverse of this. Oh, thank you. It's We Watch Good Movies. So it's great. It's a great relief to see something. How nice for you. But... So it's great, it's a great relief to see something. How nice for you. But...
Starting point is 01:24:09 June, are you doing that podcast? No, I have not been asked. I'm not either. I'm somehow, like you, relegated to this nightmare of existence. Yes. We live in this prison. Where we are granted no reprieve with beautiful, lovely movies from the 20th century. I now hate movies. Yes.
Starting point is 01:24:29 I'm beginning to love them again. Anyway, subscribe to Unspooled. I will also say to you guys here in Chicago, this whole week on Adult Swim at 4 a.m., I have written an infomercial called The Message from the Future, which is airing every night this week at 4 a.m. Okay, so that does remind me. At the end of June, I'm not sure when this is coming out, but at the end of June, Adult Swim is airing a special that I did with Brian Husky,
Starting point is 01:24:57 Jesse Falcon, and Rob Cordray called Mr. Neighbor's House 2, and it is like, what if David Lynch made Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood? So, so funny. It's great. It's super fucked up, and there's a bunch of weird puppets, so get involved, people. A big thank you to April Halle who cut all of our amazing clips. To Nate Kyle, who did all of our research.
Starting point is 01:25:17 And to you, our Chicago audience. You guys were fucking fantastic. Thank you, Chicago. Thank you guys were fucking fantastic. Thank you, Chicago, and good night. Wow. And here we go. It is now time for Second Opinions. Everywhere on Amazon
Starting point is 01:25:42 They got second opinions. DVD or VHS, they're gonna say this film's the best. The stars are gonna give them five. It's gonna make them feel alive today. Yes, give it up for Angela who just gave me an amazing this piss is shit mug words spoken by Laurence Olivier in referring to the jazz singer remake with Neil Diamond. Thank you Angela. And now it is time for second opinions. Imagine no bad movies. It's easy if you try.
Starting point is 01:26:28 No room or epidemic. No bobo iony sky. Imagine all the people loving every film. Oh, oh. You may say I'm a moron, but my words are posted on Amazon. And I hope someday you watch this and agree with my second opinion. Amazing. Give it up for Alan.
Starting point is 01:27:00 All right. No touching of Jason. Repeat, no touching of Jason. All right. No touching of Jason. Repeat, no touching of Jason. It is now time for second opinion. It's the best, it's the best, it's better than all the rest. I love the movie strip tease, I've got to get it off my chest. Demi's hot, it's got buns, it's got Burt Reynolds and guns.
Starting point is 01:27:29 There's a monkey and a snake, and there's a floater and a lake. Granger's at table eight, and Robert Padrake is great. A porpoise gave some guy his last hard-on. Come on and give it a break. There's that the boobs are all fake. I'm going to give striptease five stars on Amazon.
Starting point is 01:27:46 Amazing. Give it up for Nick. It is now time for second opinions. Second opinions and Striptease, who am I to disagree I checked Amazon and the seven seas everybody looking for something yes give it up for Jennifer It is now time for Second Opinions. Second Opinions, what can I say? I cannot condone people who think this way. We got Bloodsport and people yell kumatay.
Starting point is 01:28:37 We got Glitter starring Mariah Carey. People seem to really love these movies like Jack Frost sleepwalkers and also goobay second opinions from Amazon if you really like these movies you're a moron give it up for Chris amazing job Chicago brought it 100%

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