My Brother, My Brother And Me - MaxFun Block Party: Movie Advice with Maximum Film
Episode Date: October 19, 2021As part of the celebration of the MaxFun Block Party, we've got a special crossover episode with the folks from Maximum Film discussing the good and EXTREMELY BAD advice from our favorite films.Check ...out Ify Nwadiwe, Drea Clark, and Alonso Duralde on Maximum Film! https://maximumfun.org/podcasts/maximum-film
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One, two, three, four!
It's the start of something beautiful
A small acquaintance has blossomed
It's rapid into a precious friendship
I could have never seen what was coming for me
Hangs at the skate park, hangs by the beach
My life, it feels like
My life, ah itÃs better, itÃs better with you
My life, ah itÃs better, itÃs better with you
But this is true, ah itÃs better, itÃs better with you
My life, ah itÃs better with you
So weird, they said they would be here right at this time.
They said, it's 4.09 sharp, meet us.
It was oddly specific.
Yeah, at the parking lot of where
the Kroger that used to be a big bear,
you need to set 4.09 PM East Coast time.
Travis McRoy co-hosted my brother, my brother and me.
Where do you think they could be?
I don't know, Justin McRoy co-hosted my brother,
my brother and me.
Griffin McRoy co-hosted my brother, my brother and me.
Do you see them anywhere?
Oh yeah, there they are.
Oh no, wait, that's a fire truck.
No, wait, they're stepping out of the fire truck?
Where did they get a fire truck?
Hey guys, what's going on?
Oh hey, we've been looking for a big bear sign.
Oh, it used to be a big bear.
It used to be a big bear.
Oh, OK.
See, I thought it was a Kroger and then they said no.
Oh, no, no, no.
It used to be a brick factory and then became a big bear.
It was a big bear, then a Kroger,
now it's a COVID-19 vaccine injection site.
Oh, sure.
So you've got to get, yeah, it's kind of a one-stop shop.
But it is also still a Kroger, which is nice.
It is nice.
So when they say injection site irritations,
do they mean here?
Right, yeah, exactly.
Because the guy who gives them does a lot of like puns,
and that's not my exact kind of thing,
so it is kind of irritating to hold.
Well, it's in my contract that if there's
going to be big game involved, I only arrive in a fire truck.
Thus, our transportation makes sense today.
But that's on me, you guys.
We didn't need to rent this thing.
Well said, Dre Clark, co-host of the Maxwell podcast.
Thanks a lot to Derralde Co-host of Maximum Film.
Hey, who's this other guy in our fire truck?
Oh, and you know, I was just back here taking selfies,
really trying to do a selfie calendar.
You know, one thing, which is being a firefighter,
you know, I want to shout them out.
I was wondering what you were doing with that hose,
if he walked away, other co-host of Maximum Film.
Oh, yeah, yeah, no.
I was definitely being suggestive with it,
but not in a non-classy way.
No, yeah, it was very tasteful.
I was going to say, very tasteful.
Well, I guess now it's time for us to knife fight
like we agreed on you.
Let's rumble.
Why did Jesse Thorne make us knife fight each other?
He said for his love, which was weird.
Really weird.
So we have two different podcasts.
One, our podcast, us brothers do one.
It's a brother advice show called My Brother, My Brother,
and Me, and Maximum Film, you'll never guess.
It's film, and it's all maximal fun.
Yeah, it's a review show that isn't just
a bunch of straight white guys.
No offense to you straight white guys.
No, it's fine.
We're a big fan of them in general.
Just none of us are one.
Why?
Yes, it's a lot of people.
Someone's got to be.
Yeah, finally, someone's supporting the straight white
guys thing.
Nice to finally have some support.
It's been too long.
So this is what we talked about for a merging of our two themes
into one advice that we got from movies, both good and bad.
And I would love to hear good advice
that you all got from movies.
Griffin's adjusting his blinds, so he's not going to start.
Left his headphones on, though, which I appreciate.
That's a pro.
That's a G move.
Yeah, he's just like, I'm going to stay in the know.
I'm not going to take the cans off.
That's industry term for headphones for any of us.
That's what that means.
I've been wondering, because you will say it.
And I'm like, oh, yeah, OK.
If I remove myself from the sauce,
it's so hard to get back in.
You know what?
I tell you what, it's not fair for me to introduce a concept
and then not get the ideological ball rolling.
So let me pull mine.
Wayne's World, for a long time, has been my favorite movie ever.
It may have been supplanted by Holy Motors at this point.
I'm not sure.
But it's up there.
It's top one or two, right?
What is the movie?
Holy Motors is up there.
It's one of your maybe your favorite movie.
OK.
Like, it's up there, man.
It's like really good.
You should see it.
No, I can't see it.
It's just a wild pick.
Which is fine.
That's movies for you, I guess.
You think about Wayne's World.
You think about Holy Motors and vice versa.
Everybody's always here.
It's the same, basically.
Right.
So I watched Wayne's World like 50 times growing up,
could quit the whole thing for Mary, pretty much.
And the number one lesson that I take away from it
is hilarious that we are here talking about that on maximum
fun because I learned a real distrust for corporate ownership
of your individually owned IP.
So if you remember, the premise of Wayne's World
is that Benjamin, who's a network executive,
buys the rights to Wayne's World so he
can sell it to Noah's Arcade as a sponsorship opportunity.
And he basically buys the show for $5,000 each.
And then, because he's a corrupt.
$5,000.
We got $5,000.
But it ruined it.
It almost tears them apart their relationship.
Was that supposed to be a lot of money to them?
It was.
It was massive to those guys.
And then the lesson they learned,
Benjamin turns out to be a bad guy.
And Wayne says to Benjamin's henchmen,
Benjamin is no one's friend.
If he were an ice cream flavor, he'd be Pralines and Dick.
Benjamin were an ice cream flavor.
He'd be Pralines and Dick.
And I remember that.
I took that, like, if I get something that's good
and people like it, I'm not going to sell out
to the corporate bigwigs.
That was a very big theme at that point,
thanks to things like reality bites or what have you.
But that is the lesson that I took from Wayne's World.
And it has served me well at an artist-owned audience
supported network right next one.
Wayne's World, the division of NBC Universal.
Yeah.
My lesson from Wayne's World was don't trust men
that look like Rob Lowe.
Yeah, it's a good one.
We kind of had similar lessons.
So, Dre, does that make it hard for you to trust me?
Yeah, sorry.
I apologize for the cackle I just did in it.
No, it was just, it was too real.
Because of your strong resemblance to Rob Lowe.
One of the biggest lessons I took away
is my favorite movie is Blazing Saddles
and the scene where Gene Wilder is talking
to Cleavon Little and he's saying,
like, you know, these are salt of the earth folks.
These are, you know, the solid foot.
And then he ends it with, you know, morons.
You've got to remember that these are just simple farmers.
These are people of the land,
the common clay of the new west.
You know.
What is this idea of, like, hey, man,
don't let them get you down.
Don't let the stupid folks get you down.
Not really.
That meant a lot to me and also the other lesson,
if you can become friends with Gene Wilder,
you really should.
You should really become friends with Gene Wilder.
To the point where I got the line,
you know morons tattooed onto my skin.
Amazing.
Yes.
That's a good one.
Can I just, as somebody who faked sick a lot,
I think just all of Ferris Bueller's day off,
basically, from start to finish,
there's probably a lot of takeaways from that film
that are maybe not the best thing to let get ingrained
in your sort of high school psyche.
If you want to have, like, a good educational career.
But if you want to, you know, not go to school
and instead eat a bunch of hot dogs, that's a...
Is that what you did?
Yeah, I just non-stop, just, yeah, just with pound hot dogs.
Makes sense.
I wonder what happened to all the hot dogs.
So that's what I'm trying to say.
Griffin, did you ever lick your palms to make them clammy?
No, my parents never really, I was the youngest,
so I really never faced that much scrutiny.
So I, yeah, I wouldn't require that much.
As a fellow youngest, yes, at Testify, amen, for sure.
Just one of my little cute baby coughs.
And I was, I was made in the shade.
I have seen Ferris Bielersday off so many times,
more times than I could possibly count.
And this is the first time, like, as an adult,
that I've thought about, like,
I don't care what Cameron's relationship is to his dad
or what kind of person his dad is like,
I just want to see the scene where dad comes home
and the car's on the, and he's like,
listen, yes, of course I'm upset.
That doesn't make me a bad guy.
You smashed my car out there, you stole my car,
drove it all over the place,
and then crashed it into a fat-over house.
Yeah, our dad is famously very kind, a very sweet man,
and if we destroyed his automobile.
And house.
And house.
And a good chunk of his house.
That garage is going to need remodeling,
and that was a nice garage.
It's probably more of a carport.
Was it more of a carport?
Anyway.
It's like a showroom.
I think it was a showroom, it's what I would go with, but.
Maximum film folks, any advice that's stuck with you?
I mean, in the abstract,
like I pick up on a lot of like old cocktails and desserts
from old movies that I want to try.
Like I had Floating Island at an LA restaurant
that's been around for decades
just because they eat it in Desk Set.
But in a more concrete way,
the movie Defending Your Life,
because I'm an atheist and don't live
by any other sort of codes,
at least instilled in me the idea that like,
if we're judged for anything in our lives,
it's whether or not we were afraid of stuff.
And not that fear in general is always a bad thing.
Damn it.
But it's a good idea.
I'm so screwed.
Yes, diving right into the piranha infested waters
because fuck it.
No, but I like that as a sort of philosophy of like,
that it's not about that if you weren't afraid of stuff,
then you are more likely to be better to other people
and to treat yourself better.
And so I don't know, that's the thing I took away from.
That's a really positive one,
like a philosophical heartfelt.
And now let's go to Iffy.
Yeah, mine is just straight up.
When I was in kindergarten,
I stuck a bobby pin in an electrical socket
because if you know me, of course.
And you know, I've recently seen movies like Home Alone
where if he's ex, when he was electrocuted
and he turns into bones and then he caught on fire
and we just learned stop, drop and roll.
So after getting electrocuted,
I stopped, dropped, rolled, threw off my,
I was so sure I was on fire.
And then I turned to my friend and I goes,
did you see my bones?
Because I was so sure that I was gonna get electrocuted
and my bones, you would see my bones and...
Not disappointing that that doesn't happen.
Yeah, but you did experience this comfort though, right?
Like you did get the shock though.
Yeah, I definitely was shocked.
It was like Duck Bill was on the back of your head.
Yeah, I was so convinced that we lived on Looney Tunes physics
and I was like, yeah, you saw my bones,
I was on fire, none of that happened.
Like, and to you also, you are not seeing this
as a lesson I learned to not continue.
You are proud of this moment in your history.
Like, I feel any movie that has any lessons built in
about dumb stuff kids do, if he's still on his bucket list.
Like, you can't wait to be in the cold
so you can lick a pole like this.
A warning, I see a challenge.
That's why I got that black challenger.
You want to do that girl that turns you into a blue bear.
You know, yeah, I got the black challenger in the garage.
It scares me, you know, it scares me, but I'm gonna ride it
and I'm gonna race against my fugitive friend
against a train coming.
And that's how you build a family.
And that's the dream.
That's the dream, yeah, yeah.
I think on a related note though,
how many lives has Home Alone saved
just by keeping all of our heads on a swivel
for household accidents?
Just like a plane.
And teaching us to really trust
that creepy person who lives next door.
Because listen, they seem creepy, but they're harmless.
Definitely go in their house.
Say what you all about Home Alone,
teaches you to respect your crazy,
weird old next door neighbor and not trust the cop
that came to your house.
Not trust the cop anymore, okay?
Any cop?
Home Alone's ahead of the game.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Home Alone was saying,
hey, cab, way before you went on top of it.
Hey, Kajap, all cops are Joe Pesci's.
Joe Pesci.
Joe Pesci.
Joe Pesci.
Listen, we've had a lot of fun here today
and that may not be true,
but one out of every three cops is Joe Pesci.
He's Joe Pesci, so.
Well, interesting, like this is less of a lesson
that I can take with me in more of a reality
that movies universally told me
that the most interesting groups are comprised
of a strange array of eccentric men
with varying degrees of handsomeness and age
and one woman.
And I look at us today and it's really,
it's really a lesson that's proven itself time and time again.
Look at us now.
It's your own Mamma Mia.
There are five potential followers on the island.
Any one of them.
Good desire to manage them.
You know, when you phrase it like that,
that sounds like the setup for a horror movie though.
Like you're on an island,
that's fine, but that's your father.
Yeah.
I was thinking more heist.
My five dads.
Where is that Mamma Mia heist picture
that we've all been waiting for?
Would watch.
We've got to steal the Abaholograms.
Oh, I got a lot of bad advice too.
I think that my generation probably grew up
with some of the worst relationship advice,
especially for dudes like on the planet.
Like I wanted to talk about bad advice
just because of like high fidelity
to junk use act, not content to ruin a generation
on proper dating by like stalking a woman
with a boombox above his head.
Then goes on to 10 years later,
ruin a whole new crop with high fidelity.
You once again, giving you great lessons
like if you have a relationship that ends
in a way that's dissatisfactory,
you should track down the person
and harangue them until they'll discuss with you.
But the-
Because your closure is what matters.
Your closure is what matters.
Your emotional experience is more important.
But the worst-
Their new life.
The worst though was,
I was at the exact Rory Age for Fight Club,
which came out in the year I started college.
So me and my dirtbag friends bought a like bootleg VHS
of it when we were in New York
and played it basically on a loop.
Specifically the section about how self-improvement
is masturbation but self-destruction
and he doesn't finish the line, but you get the idea.
We took the real wrong lesson from that.
And like just the bigger dirtbags we could be,
like the more 89 cent pizzas we could eat from the store
and the more trash we could fill our cars with,
those like, this is exactly what Tyler Durr envisioned for us.
I'm gonna say one word here, swingers.
Yeah, all of swingers start to finish.
Just like, okay, not even just the relationship stuff,
but just like wallet chains.
It was just like this idea,
just like, this is who you wanna be.
Hey, swing dancing is cool.
Fuck!
Squirrel nut zippers, y'all.
Yeah, they're back.
Squirrel nut zippers might be the worst blight
that that film, the cracking of that Pandora's Box
lose to the world.
And the end result being that if you play your cards right
like this guy, then Heather Graham will be attracted to you.
The movie is just like, oh, it's all bad.
It's all bad.
What if one of the squirrel nut zippers
has already reached over and turned them all down?
Nevermind, I don't like these podcasts.
I don't think I'm gonna listen to podcasts anymore.
I was kinda zoned out that they mentioned my band.
Oh.
Rewind it.
I want the kids to hear.
I don't, Roger Dodger is another one that I feel like.
Oh man, I was gonna bring it up.
I didn't think enough people had seen it, but God, that is.
Yeah, it might be a little too.
That was Jesse Eisenberg's first major feature film
with Memory Serves with, oh God, who is the guy
who actually plays Roger Dodger?
It was Campbell Scott.
Campbell Scott, yeah.
It could be Berkeley's in there somewhere.
Of Christmas Carol, Broadway Christmas Carol fame.
Backing on the early aughts, I feel like this was a,
this was a pretty raucous period.
Swingers was mid 90s, right?
And then this, I feel like mid 90s to early aughts,
it was like, we're gonna make these cool dude movies
about these cool dudes.
And sure, they're pretty misogynistic,
but that's like part of it.
And they go on a journey,
and by the end you're rooting for them.
And it's like, I'm pretty sure in Roger Dodger,
he encourages Jesse Eisenberg to feel up a sleeping person,
which is bad, Roger.
There's no like, the whole movie is bad.
The arc of Roger Dodger is him learning,
and so that at the end, instead of trying to seduce
and be misogynistic to women out in society,
he's teaching a new younger generation
how to do it in a high school.
This grown man's just sitting at a high school lunch table
telling boys how to manipulate women.
And they said, cut, print, send it to the theaters.
He should be wearing like a wild fascinator hat
and just be mystery, just be the pickup artist.
And that film would literally not change even a little bit.
I will see you, Roger Dodger, and raise you 16 candles.
Oh yeah, Jesus Christ.
My high school period started with porkies
and ended with John Hughes.
Taking off the table the fact that pretty much all movies
that I ever saw in that period were about heterosexuality
and thus completely sending me down the wrong path.
Yeah, the idea of like how courtship and romance works
was pretty horrifying, even like a movie
that I loved like Risky Business kind of boiled down to like,
well, if you'll luck out, you'll find the right sex worker
and have them fall in love with you,
but only after her pimp steals everything in your house
you have to buy a bag.
Yeah, basic, that's a basic life story right there.
The porkies generation, I was the American pie generation.
That's the whole reason I lost my virginity
before I graduated, because I was like, there's no way,
I can't graduate a virgin, I got to.
So, you know, we had a pact
and that's how I lost my virginity
by having a consensual pact.
So I didn't really pay attention to the movie that much
because I was really focusing on boundaries and consent.
I thought you said you'd lost your virginity to a pastry.
Oh, I wish, you wish?
You know, I was like, man,
my mom would beat my ass if I ruined a whole pie.
Like that was the thing stopping me,
not the actual activity, it was like.
Well, like one pro-federal, sure, but.
Yeah, yeah, I could do a slice and go to town on that
and it's all fair game, but, but if the whole pie,
no, mom's beating my ass for that.
They don't discuss the tremendous cost of his sex act to that pie.
He did it right in the middle of the pie.
So you can't even eat it.
You can't get a slice out of that pie anymore.
Yeah, yeah, it has been defiled geometrically.
Also, from you, is that you would if he had taken a sideways entry
because he had made more sense.
He cut half the pie away to hump half the pie.
Yeah.
And left the other half for you to Gene Levy to enjoy.
I think everybody would have been satisfied with that.
Oh, yeah, yeah, well, you have to go in sideways.
Like now thinking about it as an adult, like going from the top,
you don't.
But then how do you spin the pie around?
They don't tell you.
Jason Bates has a tuna can.
And that makes it actually.
Jesus.
It's like dimensionally.
Oh, no.
Jason Bates has turned off the podcast.
No, we're not precise.
You were right.
Scroll, not Zipper's lead singer.
This podcast is no good.
I'm sorry, I told you we should keep listening.
Now back to our chess game.
I feel very like take, you know, my my lesson learned is one
that is in this very in beauty in the beast,
but is a lesson that's picked up on many of the films that you said,
which is the the absolute damaging concept of he's not bad.
He's just misunderstood and the amount of children who find that
movie so wonderful and engaging.
It's a beloved film is horrifying to me because the beast is this
abusive character and it is like just washed away in the Lloyd
Dobbler and all what's what's his name in high fidelity?
Rob, Rob in high fidelity.
Yeah, it's the same vein of like, oh, no, let him just be petulant
and call all the shots and do anything.
And your job is to wear a young dress.
He's he's not bad.
Like he's not that angry and violent.
That's all right.
The beast's arc, if I remember correctly, it's been a while,
is sure he has kidnapped this woman and her dad for a minute,
but mostly this young woman and is very abusive.
But fuck, he's got so many books.
Could he be that bad?
Look at all his books.
Yes, it's entirely on her shoulders to find the empathy for him and zero
work for him to do in the same situation.
I'm really glad you brought this up because I was thinking about this
this film recently because my kids watch these constantly.
So I'm visiting a lot.
So like the beast, what we know of the beast is that he's this conceded prince
and an old woman shows up his door and she's like, please help me.
And he's like, get lost.
Like you're you stink.
And she's like, fuck you.
I'm going to turn you into a beast.
OK, flash for the next thing that happens to this dude.
The next thing that happens to him 20 years later, he's locked in this hell.
An old person comes to his home and is like, please help me.
And this motherfucker is like, each shit, no way.
He has not grown.
He sucks.
Then he sucks now.
Then Belle's like, I see something in this guy.
I think, yeah, no, he's incapable of change.
Nothing got through to this guy.
The thing that pisses me off about Beauty and the Beast is this dude says,
get out of here, old lady, you stink like butts.
And he sends her away and she's like, I'm actually a fairy princess or whatever
in your curse.
And at no point is like the guy who's his butler or his cook who gets turned into
an inanimate object like, hey, wait, hold on.
This fucking sucks.
Yeah.
I suck shit.
She's not.
Yeah.
She's also not great.
Well, you know what?
OK.
She's not where we're at.
Belle's lady.
Oh, you're the asshole staff.
You're going down, too.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
What?
The spoons and the forks and shit move.
Are those people that they're eating with when Belle uses the spoon?
And is she putting someone's face in her mouth?
Don't go down that.
Because they sing and dance.
She's screaming play a guy with fork woman.
It's all that.
If you go too far down that road, you start worrying about what happens
when Chip comes back to life as a human boy with a massive head trauma.
It sucks.
All right.
Or you think.
I'll do that.
You think about the song and dance in the dining room, but there are other rooms in
that house like bathroom that you don't want every object in there to be.
I'm Mrs. Chamber Pulse.
Yeah.
The day becomes the Nestor Williams movie.
It's only fine.
I'm nasty.
Monsieur Twilight.
I like it then and I like it now.
That is the shot you needed when they all became human again for like,
once you're a chamber pot to come up and be like, well, I'm stuffed.
If you could change me back, I sure would appreciate it.
Oh, the sweet release of death is mine at last.
Chamber pot is the one watching the rose petals fall like, oh, fuck, please.
No, Bill, I wouldn't.
I wouldn't say if I were you, Bill, I'd go.
Yeah, he's a real piece of shit.
And I know, you know, spin kick that rose into the fireplace to be so good.
Right.
Hey, if somebody wanted to listen to maximum film, where would be a good place for them to start?
We recently recorded an episode of the motion picture Coda,
which is currently available on streaming with our friend Moshe Casher, who's an incredible
comedian.
And Coda, if you're not familiar with it, is a lovely story of it stands for a child of deaf adults,
and it is a teenage girl sort of coming of age.
And she has two deaf parents and a deaf brother.
And Moshe, in addition to being hysterical, is also the child of deaf adults.
So had some really cool insights.
And we like a film with unique perspectives.
That's also well made.
Don't call us the shitty films and unique perspectives.
We really like a nice intro section.
That was one time.
Do you all just usually pick one one film each episode?
And is that how it's structured if people haven't listened before?
Is that what they can anticipate there?
Yeah, generally speaking, we will we review mostly new releases, but every so often we'll
do like an anniversary or something that ties into something else that's about to come out or
whatever.
But then also in every episode at the end, we include our staff picks where we'll each pick a
movie that could be out in theaters or might be streaming or new on video or just one that we,
you know, randomly plucked out of the ether.
So but yeah, for the most part, we do focus on a single release and very often with,
like in the case of Kota, a qualified guest to to sort of throw around ideas with us.
Oh, and folks should definitely tune in in October.
We're doing kind of a theme month every week.
We're going to talk about classic queer horror movies just in time for Halloween.
Excellent.
Yes.
And we'll cover some film news.
We like to make KC our producer.
Make us quizzes because we all like to win those quizzes.
Well, yeah.
Although there can only be one.
Yeah, we answer listener questions.
Yes.
Fair quizzes that are built well and their questions make sense.
And everyone gets it, you know.
And if he never complains about the quizzes for sure.
Yeah.
So it sounds like everyone loves the quizzes.
Those of us who are good at them, adore them.
So it seems pointless to ask, but what just happens over there on my brother, my brother?
Yeah, we get bad advice to people.
You can listen to any episode.
They are interchangeable, both to you, the listening audience, and to us, the creators
at this point.
We've made five hundred and eighty of them and it just keeps getting better,
but it also keeps getting less distinguishable from pre.
We spent half of this today's episode talking about, have we discussed this before?
It feels like we've talked about like not general stuff like dogs,
but specific stuff like an anti-stink that can erase a bad stink to replace it with a good news
stink.
Like it gets, so it's a good show and it's, we usually comes out every Monday
and you could just hop on anywhere.
We try not, we don't do a lot of like running jokes or anything like that.
Sometimes we'll do news from the world of fast food that's called Munch Squad.
Sometimes we have a haunted doll watch where we'll get in and check out haunted dolls.
We occasionally, Travis has some called work of fart where he replaces the names of,
he makes scatological puns out of great works of art.
It's not always scatological.
Hey, sometimes it's just like,
different human fluids.
Yeah, like a streetcar named Dee's Nuts.
That was not necessarily scatological.
That's true, that's a good point.
And those amazing mad libs, let's not bury the leader.
Oh yeah.
Thank you for reminding Travis about that bit that it exists.
Sad libs is like mad libs except I just choose the words and where they go and then I write
around the word.
So it's not like mad libs at all.
It's like bad writing.
It's just word garbage that Travis just word garbage exposes us to.
What days do you guys release?
I meant to ask.
We come out on Fridays.
We come out on Fridays.
Well, that's a good, you got a good gap there.
There's plenty of time to listen about it.
We're going to bookend your weeks.
Well, thank you all for meeting us in the parking lot.
Can you give us a ride because we are taking a walk.
Yeah, you can climb up this truck.
You can come with us wherever you want to go.
I've always wanted to ride on the ladder while it is up in the sky at the top height.
And just don't look directly at the Dalmatian because it gets real nervous.
Yeah.
Okay.
I wouldn't do that anyway.
Here, before we wrap, let's look at the selfie together.
Everybody say discount mattresses.
All right, hold in the hose.
Hold in the hose.
We don't have a signature out there for this podcast.
Keep holding the hose, everyone.
Everyone, keep holding the hose.
Until next year.
Keep on holding that hose, please.
Please, we're begging you.
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