Suggestible - A Life On Our Planet
Episode Date: October 8, 2020Suggestible things to watch, read and listen to. Hosted by James Clement @mrsundaymovies and Claire Tonti @clairetonti.This week’s Suggestibles:Des Mini-SeriesThe Survivors by Jane HarperPuzzle City... MateThe Quick and the DeadDavid Attenborough: A Life On Our Planet2040 Documentary FilmGlennon Doyle InstagramOther links to helpful things: wwf.org.uk/how-to-help-nature and whatsyour2040.com.Send your recommendations to suggestiblepod@gmail.com, we’d love to hear them.You can also follow the show on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook @suggestiblepod and join our ‘Planet Broadcasting Great Mates OFFICIAL’ Facebook Group. So many things. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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Bing bong bing, bing bong bing bong bing. Bing bong, yep.
Welcome to Suggestible Pod.
He's just choked on his kombucha.
He's made the funniest face.
It's in my lungs.
You have like your body did a whole spasm then.
You just spasmed.
Well, while he's recovering.
I've got kombucha lung.
He's drinking so much kombucha, guys.
It's a worry.
But your gut bacteria has never been more diverse. It's healthy as a fox. He's drinking so much kombucha, guys. It's a worry. But your
gut bacteria has never been more diverse. It's healthy as a fox. Anyway, welcome to
Suggestible Pod. I'm Claire. James is over there. He's slowly drowning in kombucha and I am freezing.
We are podcasting from Melbourne, still in lockdown. Still in lockdown. Day 1047. No,
I think we're in the 2000s now. It's like 2035. Great, awesome. And it has now decided to be winter again.
We got lovely sunny days and now it's freezing and I'm cold.
I was missing winter.
We had those two really nice days and I'm like,
I wish it was really cold again every day.
Luckily it is.
That happened to me.
I was like reminiscing, which always happens to me when the seasons change.
But turns out, no, I really do prefer the warm weather.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yep, and I was wearing comfortable socks.
And does anyone else have this problem?
I was wearing comfortable socks inside.
I had to go outside to our studio and I didn't want to do –
Yeah, does anyone else have that problem?
When they have to go to their home studio, right in.
No, I just mean like maybe they have to empty the bins or something.
Okay.
They've got cosy socks on.
You're trying to think about what's a common person thing.
Empty the bin.
Pour their sewage from a bucket into the drain on the street.
Anyway, all I'm saying is I had to do,
you don't want to put your shoes with laces on because that's annoying
because you're tired.
Who wants to do shoelaces on for like a two-minute thing?
But you don't really want to wear, I don't have slippers
because I don't like them.
My feet feel sweaty plus I have skinny feet and they just slide everywhere.
That's why you wear socks with slippers.
You don't wear slippers barefoot.
That's what a serial killer does.
No one in my house ever wore slippers so I never really got it.
I've never been able to wear slippers ever.
You know this about me.
I've known you for like a million years.
I'm Slippers McGay, mate. Yeah, that's all you wear. You barely ever wear regular shoes.
You only ever wear slippers because you barely ever leave the house. Anyway, maybe I
should get some slippers. However, that was not my problem. I don't have any. So I instead
wore thongs, but I was wearing cozy socks and
so I couldn't get the right thing, the little toe bit.
Sandals for anyone overseas, not sexy thongs on my bot bot,
but like on my feet.
Bot bot is so sexy.
I didn't put on some sexy thongs to podcast.
It's not a visual medium.
Anyway, this is a boring story.
It's so boring.
I had to shuffle my way out here in socks and thongs and it was the time.
But I made it and we're here.
Wait, that's it?
That's your story?
That was my story.
You don't want to be – didn't they get wet?
Wasn't that the end of your story?
Yeah, but no, it was more just the annoyance
and I wonder if other people also have that annoyance.
Yeah.
Right in with that really specific and boring story.
If you've experienced something so dull that you want to inflict on others.
No, it's a regular thing that annoys me a lot because I have to leave the house
but I'm always wearing socks.
You've got to read the environment, Claire.
If you look out and the ground is wet, you've got to match your environment to that.
Yeah, I know, but I don't always want to have to put full-on shoes on.
Well, take the socks off and just wear the thongs.
And then when you come down, you put the socks back on.
I'm saying.
I'm not even doing this.
Just what's your thing?
I normally do that, but it's cold.
What's your thing?
All right.
No, you go first.
Jenny goes first.
Okay, so I've already watched all of this, but you started to watch this.
It's called Des.
Oh, gosh.
It's a three-part miniseries written by Luke Neill and Kelly Jones,
but it's all directed by Lewis Arnold.
It stars David Tennant as Dennis Miller, serial killer, from the late 70s, early 80s.
Here's a quick question.
David Tennant, lovely Scottish man.
Yes.
Seems kind and great.
Yes.
Is it hard watching him play someone so terrible, like as a human being?
No.
I can tell he's a good enough actor where I can detach that.
He is brilliant, actually, because he played that criminal
on that show Criminal UK where he was interviewed for an episode.
I swear I talked about this.
Have I talked about this on this show?
Yes, I'm sure you have.
I went through the notes.
Yes, I have talked about it.
Oh, okay.
But I haven't talked about it.
I recommended it.
No.
Oh, Dez.
Dez, yeah.
No, we talked about Criminal UK where David Tennant is a criminal on that.
We have not talked about Dez.
Okay. Because if I watch something, I have to talk about it. That's Tanner is a criminal on that. We have not talked about Deads. Okay.
Because if I watch something, I have to talk about it.
That's like the basis of my life now.
All right.
But anyway, and also says Daniel Mays who's the cop who catches him
and he catches him in like the loosest of terms because he seems
to go out of his way to get caught intentionally.
He's got all these human remains in his apartment and backyard
and some get into the drain so he complains to the landlord
about it.
The landlord finds the human remains and calls the cops
and that's how he gets sprung.
So it seems like he did this on purpose to get some recognition
for the things, for his crimes.
And the number of people that he did murder is in dispute still
to this day.
He's dead, thank fuck, by this guy.
He died a couple of years ago.
Not David Tennant.
Don't panic.
No, no.
I'm talking about this guy, Dennis.
What's his name?
Dennis Nils.
Here's the thing about these guys, they're serial killers.
It's funny how they always seem like they're very important
and they want to get their name out there.
But these guys, they're fucking dime a dozen.
They've all got a show.
They're all like, do you know what I mean?
They're all like the same kind of guy, like looking for attention and, you know, they love manipulating all like, do you know what I mean? They're all like the same kind of guy, like looking for attention
and, you know, they love manipulating the media and you know what I mean?
I'm not sure how much I'm loving the idea that serial killers
are a dime a dozen.
Yeah, they're a dime a dozen, mate.
I'm just saying where's the creativity?
You know what I mean?
Where's the serial killers who kill people and just shut their mouths?
Well, I guess you don't know, do you?
Because they're so good at it.
So what you're saying is if you're a serial killer out there,
get more creative, get more interesting, get a better haircut.
Stay away from me, Obby.
It's always with the bad haircuts as well.
Always with the bad haircuts.
I did listen to a podcast recently.
Annabelle Crabb was talking about it on my other favourite podcast,
Chat 10 Look 3, and she was saying that actually serial killers are on the decline
because of technology.
Yeah.
Because everybody is tracked all of the time.
That's right, and DNA evidence.
Yeah, it's so skilful now.
Because in like the 70s or the 80s where this was, you'd find like,
and this was more the start of like more forensic investigation
that's kind of kicked in.
I don't think they talk about DNA in this yet.
I think it's before that.
I'm pretty sure it is.
Yeah, but, yeah, you're right.
And they've kind of – there's also been the theory that serial killers
have become mass shooters because that's the way that you get attention.
You try and kill as many people as you can.
This is a cheerful subject.
That's a theory.
I don't know whether that's true.
I don't even know who said that.
Maybe it was Nick Mason.
But that's – yeah, that's something that I heard.
I hope that you have tuned in to our program for some lovely people.
Don't worry, Claire's got even grimmer things to talk about.
Don't even worry about that.
But what really kind of annoys me about this guy, and I'm glad he's dead,
is like the mock outrage that he has over the scenarios because what he did,
he'd lure men to his house, often gay but not always,
and then he'd murder them, right?
That was kind of his thing. And then he'd kind of pretend or it seemed like he pretends to like
not know who's who or how many there is or what their names are specific circumstances so he
he dragged this out and there'd be this like mock outrage of like you know he wants to find out who
they are just as much as anybody and look i feel bad but you know the media is really blowing this
out of proportion and all this kind of shit and it's really infuriating that this guy is, you know what I mean,
he's acting so like indignant about this horrible thing that he did.
You know what I mean?
He's almost like offended when people ask him like specific questions
about his crimes.
Anyway, like I said, he's dead and good.
So, yeah, he died in 2018.
Oh, good.
All right.
And so this show, particular show, Des, is on Netflix?
Stan.
On Stan, yeah.
On Stan.
And the good thing is as well, like, it's only three episodes.
So a lot of these things are like, you know,
there'll be like ten or a couple of seasons or whatever,
but this is like three and it's done.
David Tennant, you can't go wrong with him.
Yeah, he's pretty bloody awesome.
I like him.
I liked his Doctor Who, if anybody remembers.
That was my favourite Doctor Who.
For five years and then a revival thing.
And some audio dramas, probably some video games.
He's been around the bush, man.
I'm loving his podcast.
David Tennant does a podcast with.
He actually does a podcast with Elizabeth Moss this week.
Oh, okay.
I haven't listened to it yet.
I'm looking forward to that.
Scientologist for some reason.
I know.
Interesting human being.
Disappointing.
I know, but then also.
I should listen to that to be like, what's up with you and that?
But also kind of fascinating because she was a child actor as well, wasn't she?
What was she in?
I don't know.
Like as a child.
I know she was Mad Men.
Yeah, Mad Men was sort of her breakout role.
Was she in Sopranos or something like that?
I can't remember.
I've never seen Sopranos.
I'm not sure either.
Did you like Invisible Man?
I did actually.
Yeah.
I did enjoy that and I don't like horror.
No, but I thought you might like that one.
Yeah, because it wasn't too graphic.
I can't really handle like gore and graphic details like that.
But I quite like a psychological thriller if I'm in the mood.
Oh, my God.
She's in Suburban Commando, the Hulk Hogan action movie from 1991
that I saw in the cinemas.
So you did see Elizabeth Moss in that.
Well, there you go.
Well, she talks to David Tennant on a podcast this week.
Yeah.
And I'm looking forward to it.
But David Tennant is just great in lots of things.
He's a chameleon.
He's really great in Broadchurch as a detective.
Mason was recently talking about that.
He's in both series.
He's in the US series as well.
He is, yeah.
Did you see the US season?
Because we were talking about it.
No, I haven't seen that.
My most successful podcast of the week.
Oh, here he goes.
No, I haven't watched that yet.
He watched both for some reason. Sorry. He watched both for some reason.
Sorry?
He watched both for some reason.
Yeah, I know that The Office did it really well.
Oh, my God.
Elizabeth Moss is in Animaniacs.
All right.
We've fallen down Elizabeth Moss.
Oh, The West Wing.
She was in The West Wing.
That's where I remember her from.
Correct.
Yeah, which The West Wing, loved The West Wing, tried to rewatch it.
The first season is very problematic.
Bit Bravo, mate.
It's just the women in it treat us so appallingly.
And CJ.
Maybe it's just reflecting real life, Claire.
Maybe it's an accurate representation.
All the women, they're there to kind of facilitate the men
to explain everything to them.
The character of Donna literally just always goes,
excuse me, can you explain to me this really complex thing about policy?
And then the male. Even though I'm somehow in this high-flying political position.
Correct, in the White House.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, there are still lots of great things about the West Wing, don't get me wrong.
I love it.
Also, it's very optimistic for the kind of presidency that the US could be having.
Anyway, however, and CJ, who I thought was a kick-ass character, and you know, her character
arc, it is cool.
However, she's basically sexually harassed for the first season
and kind of unsure of herself even though, you know,
she's in a very important position.
Anyway, that's a West Wing rant for you.
Great stuff.
My turn?
Yeah.
Okay, cool.
Yeah, right.
I've been so excited to read this book.
I had it pre-ordered on my Kindle already to go because I can't get to a bookshop. It's called The Survivors by Jane Harper. If you have not read
The Dry, which is her first crime novel. You've talked about The Dry. I've talked about these a
thousand times. And it's one of the books that people often talk to me about that I recommended
and say, thank you for recommending that because it is just- Thank you, Clay. You've changed my
life. The New York Times bestseller, all the things. It's a ripping great yarn.
But she's done three books since, all of which I've enjoyed.
The Dry, I think, was the best.
And her new book is The Survivors.
What I love about Jane Harper is that the setting and the scenery
in her novels almost are a character into their own self,
if that makes sense.
In their own.
In their own right.
Is that what I'm trying to say?
Yeah. So their own. In their own right. Is that what I'm trying to say? Yeah.
So she really.
It's almost like the setting of the book is an expansion.
Oh, God.
It's like in some movies it's like the world itself plays a part.
It's like people say that about New York City.
Yeah, I hear what you're saying.
In Sex and the City.
You've got a show with like Sex and the City or like a movie like
I Love New York.
The City is a character.
The City is a character.
You might say like cast in order of appearance up top should be NYC.
Yeah, okay.
I know what I said was pretty naff.
NYC in a big heart.
I know it was naff.
Shut up.
I'm right in this instance though.
But the way she writes about landscape is really incredible.
So she's like the hills.
They looked fucking great.
There's some good hills, man.
The grass was long but not too long.
It's clear that James hasn't read a novel since 2002.
I've read a novel.
Really?
Yeah.
When was the last time you read a novel?
I don't know, summer maybe?
Maybe.
You usually read one novel each summer possibly,
usually Ian McEwan because he's your favourite author.
I'm an Ian McEwan.
And then when you're reading it, you're like,
I should read a novel more often.
I should read more books.
Or The Boys Soul is Universe by Trent Dalton.
Oh, no.
I read The Prestige.
When?
Like about a month ago for Cabin and Garbage.
Yeah, exactly.
For work based on the movie.
Let's not pretend that you're not reading books to impress people on this podcast, Claire.
No, I've always been reading books, my friend.
Always been reading books.
Anyway, I love it.
So The Survivors by Jane Harper.
This time, this novel is set in a Tasmanian beachside town.
Tassie is just a beautiful place to visit in Australia.
It's a state that's off the mainland, its own island.
It's pretty chilly but it's just like the scenery there is incredible.
So the story goes like this.
Kieran Elliott's life changed forever on the day a reckless mistake
led to devastating consequences when his brother was killed
trying to save his life as he was hiding out in a cave.
Oh, no.
You find that out quite quickly.
Why was he hiding in a cave?
Well, he was making out with a girl in a cave and then the storm hit.
And his brother was like, you stay in here and make out with the girl.
I'll hold the storm off.
Anyway, the guilt that still haunts him and he leaves the town
and then it resurfaces during a visit with his young family
to the community he once called home.
Kieran's parents are struggling in a town where fortunes are forged by the sea
and between them all is his absent brother, Finn.
So Finn is the guy who died.
I see.
When her body's discovered on the beach, long-held secrets threaten to emerge.
Like what?
A sunken wreck, a missing girl and questions that have never been washed away.
Oh, my goodness.
I know.
It's actually, just like all her novels, deliciously unputdownable.
Things just kind of start to, there's more and more secrets and layers.
It's like a lasagna, this book.
Is it like a lasagna?
And that's kind of like each of her novels.
Like a proper lasagna?
They start off with, you know, usually it's someone with a terrible past
or something has happened and they're returning to their hometown.
That was kind of a similar premise to The Dry.
And then it starts with one crime but then it's quite clear
that in a small town like this there are other crimes that start
to resurface and people tend to have quite a few secrets
that you wouldn't want to know about.
And people are like, actually, there's more than one crime.
Correct.
And you never quite know who's done it.
Her thing is connected to a bigger thing and she's like,
I wasn't even solely responsible.
Well, we'll just wait and see.
Anyway, I would highly recommend it.
I've really enjoyed it.
I've got to read some of her books because you've done,
you've said nothing but glowing reviews.
They're just really great, well-written crime novels
and I love a crime novel, so there you go.
All right, your turn.
Cool, man.
This is an old movie.
It's from 1995.
It's called.
From the olden times.
Oh, Twillidy.
Oh, look at me on my penny farthing on the way to the shoe shine store.
Look at me smoking a pipe while sitting on a veranda,
rocking on a rocking chair while knitting a sock because there are no shops.
Oh my God.
It's pretty much 2020.
You've described 2020.
Except I'm not knitting.
I'm making a puzzle.
Okay.
One quick side note. I have, I. I'm making a puzzle. Okay, one quick side note.
I've got into puzzles.
Yeah.
Okay.
If people have been following your Instagram, it's Puzzle City, mate.
It's Puzzle City.
I didn't think I'd like them.
I mocked everyone who got into puzzles, my mum included.
Poor my mum.
She was really obsessed.
I thought, how couldn't be that great?
I loved it.
The only thing was I finished this bloody 1,000-piece puzzle,
very satisfying, looks great, suddenly realise what the hell do you do
with it at the end?
Put it back in the box.
Just put it back in the box.
It's like those people, you know, like the monks or whatever
and they make like those beautiful like coloured sand like patterns
but then like it's temporary and they put a rake through it.
People are like, what a waste of – all right.
You want to take a picture?
No, but James, it's time.
Everything is temporary.
Anyway, yeah, so I realised that unlike knitting and other things
and cooking where you can't get something at the end of it,
you just put the puzzle back in the box.
Well, like food is temporary.
You know, you eat it, it's gone.
So I guess there's that similarity.
Put a big rake through your food.
That's what I do.
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So this is a movie from 1995.
It's called The Quick and the Dead.
It's a Western.
Are you familiar with this movie?
The Quick and the Dead?
Yeah.
It just came to Netflix.
Mason and I come and make a joke.
You better be quick or you'll be dead.
Very good.
Great stuff.
So I can see your eyes like spinning wildly as you thought of like a joke.
So anyway, it's directed by Sam Raimi who made the Evil Dead movies
and also the Spider-Man movies, the Tobey Maguire ones, right?
So it's about this gunslinger who comes into town for this competition, right?
You win $100,000 or $200,000 in the year old and day,
so it's like worth millions of dollars now, right?
While everyone's knitting socks and riding pretty far.
No, Claire.
So it's this small town and it's run by this dude,
run by Gene Hackman, who's like he controls everything.
But this gunslinger who comes back into town for revenge.
Excuse me, what is a gunslinger?
Someone who's just slinging guns, mate.
They're shooting guns.
I thought like on a slingshot.
No, Claire.
Like getting a gun, putting it in a slingshot.
No.
And like slinging it at people.
Claire.
Sling.
It's not like that at all.
Like that?
No.
Anyway, but the lead gunslinger who would normally be like, you know,
you're Clint Eastwoods or someone like, you know,
Chris Pratt more recently in The Magnificent Seven, the new one, right?
What are you doing?
I'm looking up what the name for the sandpan thing
that you were talking about was.
Who gives a shit?
Mandela.
That's what it is.
Great.
I love those.
I got really obsessed with them.
I don't know if you've noticed this, but we have one above our bed.
Made of sand?
They symbolise the universe.
No, it's a print of one.
Terrific.
Fantastic.
And it was really irritating me because I love reading about them
and I love watching them being made and I couldn't remember
what they were called.
It's called a Mandela.
Great.
Terrific.
Can I continue talking about this much more interesting thing?
So anyway, but the gunslinger in this, again,
normally it's like your Clint Eastwood types or somebody like that.
The lead in this is Sharon Stone.
I love Sharon Stone.
Also, if you follow her on Instagram, she's bloody badass and political.
Cool, awesome.
I love it.
I'm really here for it.
You're there for it.
So like, you know, in the 90s she was doing like Basic Instinct
and things like that, you know what I mean?
She was, you know, this is the height of her power.
So she's playing this, you know, this female gunslinger,
which was unusual for, like, movies but it was also unusual,
obviously, for the time.
But the cast in this is also insane.
Russell Crowe.
What?
Leonardo DiCaprio.
What?
Lance Hendrickson.
Ooh.
David.
I don't know who that is.
Keith David.
Like, it's insane. Like, it's Gary Sinise. Okay. I don't know who that is. Keith David. Like, it's insane.
Like, it's on Gary Sinise.
Okay.
You keep yelling them.
I don't know who they are.
He's Lieutenant Dan from Forrest Gump, Claire.
Oh, yeah.
I know.
And it's just this, like, it's literally like a film about 20 gunfights,
like, in a row.
But it's amazing.
Like, it's really good, and it got kind of middling reviews at the time, and people don't really
talk about it, but it's like an unusual Western.
It's shot in a really dynamic way, because Sam Raimi has very particular style and camera
moves and zooms and things like that.
And young Russell Crowe, I'm here for it, mate.
He's looking great.
He's looking great.
And the gunfighting in this as well is terrific.
They're all different.
They're all done in different ways.
And if you want to see like 20-year-old Leonardo DiCaprio
like in a cowboy hat shooting people with guns,
you're going to bloody love it, mate.
Oh, mate, I was peek into Leo.
This is your era of Leonardo DiCaprio, trust me.
Let me put him on a cracker and eat him for breakfast.
Delicious.
Even now?
No, not now.
When I look back.
You're too old.
You're so young.
All his girlfriends are 22 or whatever.
Oh, man, that's why.
If I was young, I would have been in there.
And better looking, obviously.
Yeah, no, but also what's really interesting is I don't find him
that attractive when I look back at him in those films.
No, because he's a child.
Yeah, but there is a phenomenon, right, which I only heard about recently,
that often teenage girls will go for quite boyish looking boys
because they're not intimidating.
They're like safe and.
Yeah, they're safe and wholesome.
Safe and soft.
Yeah, exactly.
And they look, yeah, just not intimidating because men can be a little scary.
Yeah, and you look at like the people who are popular on TikTok or whatever,
like the e-boys they call them.
They're all that kind of look.
But it's like that parted hair and like a white thin.
Yeah, like a little effeminate.
Yeah.
Because I was really into Hanson for a while as well.
Hanson are cool, man.
Straight up.
And I must say, obviously, I'm talking about teenage girls
who are cis and into, you know.
Of course, obviously.
Boys, it's a heteronormative.
This is quite a heteronormative discussion.
But then again, it's a spectrum, you know what I mean?
And anyone expecting me might be like, young Leonardo DiCaprio, hello.
I know.
You know what I mean?
Correct, exactly.
Anyway, I did see some bits of this and it does look bloody cool.
You should watch Quick and the Dead, man.
I think you'd be into it.
All right.
For reals.
I'm not that into Westerns, though.
You love Westerns.
No.
You tried to get me to watch The Sunshine Boys, I'm a Cowboy.
No, no.
No, no. Yeah yeah and i just wasn't
into it i love that movie but you i think you will like this especially if you like sharon stone
she's like 37 you know what i mean she's just bloody she's bloody crushing it mate she's really
good in it all right i do love i do love a sharon stone cool you got another recommendation first i
just wanted to tell you more about the mandela's give Don't give a shit. Put it on don'tgiveashit.com.
Well, in Sanskrit, it literally means circle.
It's a geometric configuration of symbols.
In various spiritual traditions, Mandela's may be employed for focusing attention
and predictions and adepts as a spiritual guidance tool for establishing a sacred space
and as an aid to meditation and trance induction.
In the Eastern religions of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Shintoism,
it is used as a map representing deities, especially in the case of Shintoism,
paradises, kami or actual shintoism.
So accurate.
I agree.
And it sort of represents the cosmos metaphysically and symbolically.
Yeah, I know.
It's meant to represent wholeness.
Oh, is it?
Anyway, I find them really calming.
Yeah, me too. I really like them. Anyway, so. Oh, is it? Anyway, I find them really calming. Yeah, me too.
I really like them.
Anyway, so I have one in our bedroom and I think it gives a nice image
I had no idea and I'll tell you this much.
of us being connected to everything.
I'm going to smash that.
All right, anyway, can I go?
You said you're going to smash it.
No, I said I'm going to buy a dream catcher because I'm into this shit.
I love it.
No, Mandela isn't a dream catcher.
Would you like me to go with a dream catcher?
I want a different thing.
The movie Dream Catcher. This is why you're so stressed. I think you need to look more at Mandela.'t a dream catcher. Would you like me to go with dream catcher? I want a different thing. The movie Dream Catcher.
This is why you're so stressed.
I think you need to look more at Mandela.
I'm so stressed.
You come on here all like, oh, calm and zen,
but in the house you run around like a mad woman, mate.
If one of us is stressed, it's you.
No, I was just whipping up pasta tonight in a fury.
All right, I've got my next recommendation.
Go, what have you got?
This is why I was in a bit of a furious mood today.
It was probably not a good idea.
I had a lot of existential dread watching this thing.
Did you watch Fast and Furious, Claire?
No, I'm PMSing plus I also watched this documentary at the same time.
Come on, children listen to this show.
Go on, sorry.
No, it was a bad combination.
Or was it?
Anyway.
So I've watched David Attenborough's new documentary,
A Life on Our Planet.
Full disclaimer, if you're finding climate change and life really hard at the moment,
this may not be the segment for you to listen to.
Feel free to skip over.
Or listen to it.
Correct.
Okay.
Oh boy.
So it is such a brilliant documentary for a lot of reasons.
I think it really shakes you up out of the fog, out of the idea that climate change,
somewhere in our subconscious, we've been planted the idea
that possibly climate change, oh, I don't know, maybe and maybe
it's not so bad, maybe it's okay, la, la, la.
And I think that that murkiness is what is causing so many problems
and it's deliberately put there for a reason.
A lot of the counter-science or really people funding who did these things,
Stargoth was like, it's not true.
And now it's like, well, actually, it's good or not as bad as you think.
Yeah, exactly.
All of that stuff.
And it's to murky the waters to keep us distracted.
Anyway, David Attenborough has had the most incredible life.
This documentary spans his lifetime, really.
His 60-year career as a naturalist and begins when he's a boy in Britain.
And there's sort of, you know, black and white footage of him
or, you know, a boy playing him in shorts.
He's so young.
It begins in Chernobyl, which is really interesting too,
which I'd recommend going to watch that TV show actually in Chernobyl
about the nuclear disaster and it begins there.
So at the time when the nuclear explosion happened in Chernobyl,
everyone was evacuated and that was 30 years ago.
And so now the buildings are just completely empty.
Everything was kind of just abandoned because no one could live there
because of the nuclear fallout or whatever.
So he goes back in there.
You've seen the show, I assume.
It's really excellent.
But it's kind of quite haunting to begin it there.
The basic premise, I guess, is that life has taken over there completely.
So it's been rewilded, which is a term he uses throughout the film,
meaning that the forest has taken over.
And so he talks about how if we don't do something about climate change,
that's the future for us, really.
He looks at the loss of biodiversity across his career and he's calling it his witness
statement. He's 94 now. There's footage, archive footage of him from, you know, the 1960s and 70s
when he first goes out to start looking at the planet. And what hits home very swiftly is just
how recent all of this is. So, you know, before then, so he went from no one in, say,
a town like we're living in ever seeing anything to do with wilderness
because no one could travel there.
He experienced the first kind of adventure into plane flight.
Right.
So, you know, in his lifetime he's also seen, you know, the first mission into space
so that he was there watching when the first images of earth that anyone had ever seen from
space were kind of piped in. And when you think about it from that perspective, you can see just
how recent all of this is. And he talks about how old the Earth is and how every, you know, I'm going to
get these facts wrong, but every sort of, you know, like 50 million years or whatever, there'll be a
mass extinction. So there's been five mass extinctions that's on record spanning the Earth's
lifetime. And so I found that fact really interesting in the first place. And the most recent one was the dinosaurs,
which they think happened because a meteor landed on earth
and changed the climate so dramatically.
And what he said from that is, and you can track it in the rock
and in the fossils, which is where he first discovered his love
of looking at wildlife.
Look at this rock.
Yeah.
Anyway, it's so fascinating, Dave Banana Bro,
because when you're watching him as a
person, you realise just how special his ability is to really bring us so into focus with the
natural world.
Anyway, what I found really interesting was looking at each of these mass extinctions
and I hadn't really thought about it before, but basically life had spent millennia developing
and developing and developing and evolving and evolving and evolving and evolving
and evolving into this incredible biodiversity
and then a mass extinction happens and boom, it's all gone.
Yeah.
And the earth then has to rebuild itself again, which it does.
And so since the dinosaurs became extinct,
the earth has been rebuilding and rebuilding
and flourishing and flourishing.
And we've experienced over the last 10 million years this kind of,
he called it the Garden of Eden or this almost like Goldilocks time
in the earth's weather patterns and stability.
So humans have been able to flourish in this time in the earth
where the temperatures, the seasons, the weather,
the climate itself has been really stable and so we've been able
to track the seasons really carefully and clearly.
They've been really predictable so they've allowed us to flourish
and then enabled us.
You can expand obviously when you can predict.
Yeah, exactly, and also allowed this incredible amount
of biodiversity to grow.
And so when you see the footage in the film, it just blows you away
and reminds you yet again of just how incredible our planet is
and then how unique it is and how vulnerable we are
as this blue orb kind of floating in space.
And then kind of heartbreakingly what he looks at are the numbers
and the decrease in the amount of wild wilderness,
basically, globally since he started looking at it in 1960-ish.
Does he revisit some places that he's been to before?
It's not really that.
Yeah, he does look at archive footage and then goes back.
He does talk about how he will have gone back to a place
that he visited in the 1970s and it no longer looks the same,
that there's just
incredible loss of animal life. And these numbers kind of keep flicking up. So he breaks it down
into the year that he was obviously looking, this particular, at the planet and then the population.
So when he started, the population of the world of human beings was like 2.3 million,
the population of the world of human beings was like 2.3 million,
or 2.3 billion, sorry.
Yeah, and now it's 7. And 66% of the world's wilderness remained when he started.
That was in 1937 when he was 11 years old.
That's crazy.
He's so old.
Yeah, I know.
Today, however, the world's population has more than tripled.
So what are we, 7 billion people now?
Yeah, about that.
The wilderness has shrunk to 35%, dropped more than half.
Yeah.
And carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has shot through the roof.
Yeah, of course.
And you can see that over time.
And as through his career, he kind of says he was out there,
he thought, discovering all these unknown places that
no one had ever seen before and no one had ever certainly seen in the way that he was
able to film and he was kind of discovering wilderness.
And what he's now reflecting on is that as it was there, it wasn't untouched.
Creatures were already being lost.
Species were already being lost as he was watching.
And he's watched in real time as the places that he has loved and has seen just incredible
creatures and had experiences with orangutans and, you know,
all these different types of even the ice sheets and, you know,
the Arctic and the Antarctica and he has these terrifying kind
of images of just how much ice has been lost in those places.
He also said something which I hadn't realised before,
that the ocean had been absorbing the heat.
So for a while everything seemed like it was fine even though we'd been,
you know, polluting the air with fossil fuels and increased carbon dioxide
because the ocean was just absorbing all that excess heat.
Doesn't that affect the ocean adversely?
Yeah, but now the ocean is rising, seas are rising,
the temperature is rising.
And so for a while it appeared that it was fine,
but now obviously the oceans are rising to a point
and the ice has started to melt, which in turn has kind
of created this heating effect anyway that we're seeing.
Here's a question for you. I mean, you want to steal more things? has kind of created this heating effect anyway that we're seeing.
Here's a question for you.
I mean, you want to steal more things?
There's one more thing.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That kind of blew me away.
Did you know that humans and our domesticated cows, chickens and other animals that we eat account for 96% of the Earth's mammals
by weight now?
Yeah, okay, yeah.
I didn't know that but.
That's insane.
So what he said is we've moved from a planet of wilderness
to a planet run entirely by humans for human need.
What we've failed to recognise is that we actually completely
and utterly reliant on this planet to thrive and survive.
The planet will be fine if there's a mass extinction.
It'll just shed us.
It will, like it has every time over millennia.
And eventually, just like in Chernobyl, it will rewild.
But he really does look angry at some points in this
and really devastated
and it is devastating to watch.
But he does end with some really positive notes which I thought was.
I was going to say, what can we do?
Yeah, exactly.
What are we doing?
Exactly.
Because what's the point of just watching something, feeling depressed
and then being like, oh, I can't do anything about it.
Can someone go get me a Kit Kat from the servo?
Oh, my God, I'd love a Kit Kat.
Or something, you know.
And so he does end the last half an hour of the film
with really practical strategies, which I'm sure have been said before,
but the way he says things just has so much weight.
So his proposal is that we need to rewild the earth
and that initially sounds like quite a dramatic thing to do,
but he said the first step is to rewild the oceans.
Okay.
Because the oceans are places where we've massively overfished
and by overfishing particularly large fish,
we then are destroying ecosystems.
Because for a long time he said in the 1970s and beyond,
it seemed insane that human beings could change the natural world at all.
Like it was so vast and complex.
How could we possibly have any effect on it?
People are still saying that now.
They're like it's pretty arrogant to think that we could destroy.
Yeah, whereas he said it's absolutely possible and if not, you know,
it happened already.
It has happened already.
He said even large complex ecosystems like the entire world's ocean we've
managed to, you know, basically destroy.
Gosh, yeah.
I just got to put a dummy in.
I can see it's out.
So what did you ask me?
What can we do?
Yeah, what are we doing?
All right.
So he said a couple of things.
The first thing that I thought was really important that I remembered from when we looked
at all of this too, educating girls.
Educating?
Agitating.
Educating girls.
Agitating.
Yeah, and by that, educating girls actually stabilises the population growth of human beings across the world
and raises everyone's living conditions.
So that's one of the first things that he said we can do
is to slow our population growth because every other creature
on earth has a finite kind of ceiling for their population
from conditions and resources.
We talked about that when we did that charity campaign
where it brings up communities and obviously you've got a more autonomy if you're more educated and yeah it's
kinds of things yeah exactly so that's the first step the second one is to rewild the oceans which
i thought was so interesting sounds really hard he said actually not as hard as you think it's about
sectioning off portions of the ocean a third of the world's ocean, that has no fishing zones.
And they've done this in small scales around different islands
and in different areas.
Basically you just create an area that's a no-fish zone.
Yeah, like a sanctuary.
Yeah, a sanctuary, exactly.
And so you create massive swathes of national parks within the ocean.
How does that affect, like, business?
I'd imagine there'd be people lobbying against that. Yeah, So what he said was, and what they found on a small scale, is that over time,
once the fish populations are allowed to regenerate, you actually have more than enough
fish overall across the ocean to make fishing sustainable. At the moment, we're fishing to
the point where there are less and less fish. Yeah, absolutely. So over time it actually improves outlook for business
and for us as well as a food source.
He said divest from fossil fuels, which is obviously such a huge one,
and convert our energy sources to renewables.
He said completely, 100%, no burning of fossil fuels.
And fossil fuels are literally just fossilised animals,
plants that have stayed in the ground for millennia and we're just burning through them
in order to create electricity.
When you think about it, it's kind of dumb.
It is kind of dumb because it's a totally finite resource,
whereas you said, you know, the natural world for millennia
has been powered completely by the sun.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Anyway, and there's lots of examples of that.
Is there somewhere you can like donate and things like that?
Hasn't started that yet.
Okay.
So the first thing was the film.
He said go vegetarian is another thing because obviously cattle,
chickens, all that stuff have a huge impact.
I know people are like but sometimes vegans and vegetarians
actually waste whatever.
That's apparently like I'm sure there's different schools of thought.
That's not true.
And your cousin talked about this.
The amount of water that you save by going vegan or vegetarian
is like astronomical.
I can't remember what he said, the number.
It might have been 80,000 litres a year.
That sounds too much.
I don't know.
I often think about it like not necessarily going completely vegetarian
but reducing the amount of meat.
Totally, doing like a couple of, you know, half your day's meat free
or whatever in a week.
Yeah.
I saw a thing that was, I think it might have been like a Joe Rogan clip
where he's like, what's the point?
You know, it doesn't make that much difference.
But to me that's like, well, just fucking litter.
If it's one piece of litter, just throw it on the ground.
See that guy, just push him over because who cares?
It's like one guy.
He gives a shit, right?
But these little things, they add up.
It's like voting like we were talking about last week.
All these little things make a difference.
These changes need to happen on a bigger scale with corporations
and things like that but there are things that people can do.
Also just yell at corporations about all the shit that they're doing.
Yeah.
No, that's seriously and I often think that like the little guy just us
composting our veggie scraps and stuff isn't going to change anything
and in a way, that's right.
But what really does change things is protesting, is lobbying
and changing our spending habits and particularly, you know,
our eating habits.
Absolutely.
Is making a difference.
You can see plant-based foods in our supermarkets have started
to grow more and more.
Yeah, there are.
You've seen them, yeah.
And there's some good ones too.
Like it's not all.
Yeah.
And corporations will listen to us if we're not spending with them.
And the other one is to change how we grow our food.
At the moment, big ag is just destroying the soil and so we need
to look at the way we change to grow our food.
And there's a lot of countries, and they look at this in the documentary,
who are growing food in completely different ways, even indoors,
in cities, and just we need to stop.
And they're looking at like genetically grown meat and stuff like that.
Yeah.
I don't know like the sustainability behind that.
No, but this is they're just growing fruit and vegetables.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But in kind of greenhouses.
Yeah.
And in stackable sort of shelving.
I know we've talked about also like a lot of farming is now,
what's that, it's not called permaculture.
Regenerative.
Regenerative farming.
Regenerative farming, yeah. Regenerative farming, yeah.
Where basically you grow something else in the off season
and that kind of re-fertilises the soil.
And people also now are using that to grow like a separate,
like a different crop.
So they'll sell corn and, I don't know, hemp.
I don't fucking know.
I don't know anything about farming.
But like, and, you know, that's been working for people.
Yeah, and I think regenerative farming is also about then potentially
if you're having cattle, say, growing cattle feed and grasses
and things alongside the vegetables that you would then be growing
or whatever else and regenerating the soil that way.
And so that's a whole movement too.
The film 2040 we talked about ages ago we did with our charity campaign
talks about a lot of these different avenues and they also have a lot of initiatives that you can actually go
and support at 2040.
Yeah.
Maybe that's a thing we can link below.
Yeah, exactly.
So I think that's something else we can look at.
Anyway, I think it starts with us watching this film though
and waking up.
I know it's hard.
I know there's so much going on in the world at the moment.
It sucks.
I saw you watching it and I'm like, this sucks.
It's terrifying because he then projects if we don't do something
what the world will look like.
And it is terrifying.
So that's why I gave a little warning about this.
We do.
Yeah, correct.
All right.
Anyway, so stop by watching that and then do something nice for yourself.
Take some deep breaths.
It's going to be all right.
Take some deep breaths, mate.
It's going to be all right.
Oh, look, if you want to watch the show, you can, obviously.
But before we get to that, we've got to do reviews
because reviews, they really help the show, don't they, Claire, in a big way.
You can do it in your app of choice.
You just go in, punch in five stars if you want to really appreciate it.
It helps us get us up the charts or something.
I don't know.
I've never literally looked at them,
but I know it does help push it out there a bit more.
This is from Trulon Rock.
It says, let me tell you about these Aussies, Claire and James.
I'm married and they tell you what to re-watch and listen to.
It's amazing, simple, charming and funny.
These two have an incredible dynamic with genuine
and fun conversations happening every week.
Do yourself a favour and subscribe, mate, with an eight.
You won't regret it.
Oh, so nice.
Thanks, Chul and Rock.
If anything, you rock.
No, he's nervous.
Never mind.
What are you going to say?
What are you saying?
All right, I have an email.
You can email the show with your suggestible.
We always love to get them at suggestiblepod.gmail.com
This is an email
from Nicholas Tracy. Thank you so
much. I love the tagline of this.
I like chocolate chip ice cream. Excuse
me. Oh my goodness. In reference to the
fact that I called you chocolate chip ice cream last week because
I don't think anyone likes it. Anyway,
hey Greg and the old boot.
What up?
Just felt the need to write and say that I like chocolate chip ice cream,
but not store-bought so much as homemade-ish.
Adding semi-sweet chocolate chips to a quality store-bought vanilla ice cream
gives it some crunch.
The chips freeze after a bit and the little bits melt in your mouth over time.
I also like to melt peanut butter and then drizzle that on top for the same reason.
However, if we're talking chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream,
that's next level and anyone who doesn't think that tastes good
is an insane person.
It's also my wife's favourite so I'm legally obliged to defend it.
Also, I'm really enjoying Super Mario 3D All-Stars even though controls
on 64 and Sunshine are an absolute nightmare.
Dog shit.
Compared to more modern entries such as Galaxy.
I've been playing like a level a day with our son. Like he's been like, and he collects the little gems
because you can swipe.
Is that what you guys have been scrolling away doing up there?
And lastly, the debate also made me sad.
Our president is a terrible person who needs to get out of office ASAP.
Goodness, especially.
A lot of things happening since we talked about that last week.
Yeah, there has been so much.
And please vote.
Please vote.
Good Lord.
And don't vote for Trump.
Vote for Biden.
Get that man out of office.
Look, none of us like Joe Biden.
We all agree.
Well, I like Joe Biden.
I'm talking comparatively.
Just vote.
So just like Nicholas Tracy has, I've already done my part to make that happen by voting
for Joe in person.
Vote in person and vote early if you can.
If you can't vote in person, vote early via mail-in ballot.
I know they're trying to change some rules and things like that
about how you need to have maybe a witness signature if you're voting.
I know there's some other things.
So look into it before you do it.
Correct, exactly, yeah.
There is, if you need some support in how to vote, I'm sure you don't,
but if you do, then there's also some really great resources
over at Glennon Doyle's page who I follow.
She's just doing every day a post about how to vote, where to vote,
where to sign in.
Collings will link some things below.
Correct, exactly.
And one interesting thing as well, millennials and young people
are going to be some of the biggest deciders in this election.
Good.
I know, I heard it's like 30% of people or something like that.
Yeah, young people and first-time voters.
But again, it's like polls say a certain thing,
but as you know from the last election, polls mean jack shit
unless people actually go out there.
You can't get complacent.
You can't.
And young people, I think that's so exciting because sometimes,
like with climate change, we can feel like we are powerless.
We have to live in this shit.
Hopefully we still have to be here.
And I was just looking at my baby girl today and I was thinking,
I want a world for you that is not doom and gloom.
Exactly.
And we can create that but we all have to do it together.
And now we sound like some kind of terrible political ad.
I don't give a shit, Claire.
I don't want to die.
I don't want this planet to die.
I don't want this, like, human race to be wiped off the earth.
On the whole, there are some exceptions obviously.
I thought you were.
If I can't be specific, I'll just say let's just keep us all alive.
You want to be allowed to podcast in your house
if you slip us on for eternity.
Goddamn right I do, Claire.
Anyway, vote.
Get out there and vote.
The most disappointing thing would be if Trump got re-elected
not because people really wanted him in office
but because people didn't show up to vote.
Yes, I agree.
Good Lord.
We should go.
Thank you for that email.
I agree with that chocolate ice cream thing because if I do a choc chip,
yeah, you're breaking them up in there yourself.
I'm with you on that.
I feel like that, however, is not exactly the choc chip I was talking about.
That doesn't matter.
This guy's got the right idea.
He knows what he's talking about.
No, but you don't store-bought chocolate ice cream.
He's a free thinker.
Nobody wants it, Claire.
No, buying vanilla ice cream and putting chocolate in it,
that's a whole new board game and I am on for that.
Mate, I'll get a vanilla ice cream, I'll break up a violet crumble
or a crunchy and I'll go for it, mate.
But I'm not doing that at the moment.
I'm not doing that at the moment.
I've got an exercise bike.
I'm doing an extra 30 minutes of cardio a day just to keep myself
and just every year you just add a different thing you've got to do
to keep yourself alive.
It's great.
It used to be when I could grow up and drink like a bottle of Jim Beam
and that would just be what I would do.
And that was my exercise for the day.
When were you waking up drinking a bottle of Jim Beam?
University class.
That's what I'd be doing.
And now if I drank like any of that, I'd die immediately.
My heart would explode.
Anyway, we should get out of here.
We should.
We've been to Desperate Pod.
Talk to you on the flip side.
Jim Beam is a terrible drink as well.
We might have been drinking Jim Beam.
Who knows what the hell's going to be happening next week.
I get like a six-pack of Jim Beam and cola.
Remember those?
I used to drink a Jim Beam.
I remember.
I remember.
Cost you like $20 for a six-pack.
Yeah.
And I could smash that easily and then be like, that's pre-drinks.
Then you go out and you drink more.
But six of that now.
Holy shit.
You would die.
I would die.
Okay.
Just one thing.
I'll be blessed.
I know we have to go.
Did you see the video of Trump getting out of a helicopter
and then taking off his mask and saluting like some weird
propaganda video?
Yes, and then he walked up the stairs and took his mask off
and he's like wheezing.
And look, it'll get better because of the treatment
because he's got extra special treatment because he's the fucking president,
obviously.
And money and resources.
And that, I think, is the key thing here.
He will get better, but that is because he is wealthy
and has the best doctors in the world.
And he's the president.
I want him to get better to get beaten, and I hope it goes in that order.
I don't want him to die.
Genuinely, I don't want him to die.
I want him to lose fairly.
That's what I want.
I do too because just the sheer hypocrisy of saying don't worry,
don't be scared of COVID.
Yeah, don't be scared of it.
And, yeah, you probably won't be as scared of COVID
if you have access to the best medical health care for free.
Or you don't care about anybody you know will come across.
Yeah, exactly because that's the thing with this illness.
It can be completely mild in some people and then devastating in others. And it disproportionately is affecting people without
healthcare and people who are low socioeconomic and then people who are elderly.
The rate of survival depending on your conditions is, it's staggering. There's a huge difference.
It is staggering.
Yeah, so just because he might recover and seemingly be out there saying that everything is fine, he's absolutely not
and it is terribly dangerous to say that.
I mean we've been in lockdown here for months and months
for a very good reason.
Because we love it.
Well, your life is just a series of unfortunate.
Batman got pushed back. Shazam.
Dune.
Or is it Dune?
That got pushed to next year.
That's a joke from my other podcast.
Anyway, we really got to go.
All right, we got to go.
Thanks for editing, Collins.
Stay safe out there.
Love to you guys.
Good bloody love to you all.
See you.
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