Suggestible - Baby, It's Cold Outside
Episode Date: December 2, 2021Suggestible things to watch, read and listen to. Hosted by James Clement @mrsundaymovies and Claire Tonti @clairetonti.Please vote for Suggestible in The Listener’s Choice award australianpodcastawa...rds.com/voteThis week’s Suggestibles:EncantoOur ZooDexter: New BloodFirst, We Make the Beast Beautiful by Sarah WilsonThe One Wild and Precious Life by Sarah WilsonWild PodcastClaire’s Christmas Gift IdeasSend 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)
Hey folks, it's Mark Maron from WTF. I travel all over North America doing stand-up and it's always
good to know Airbnb is an option when I'm away from home. But if you're away from home, why not
take your own place and Airbnb it? Airbnb your whole home to make some extra cash. Or if you
have a spare room that's not in use, just Airbnb that. Whether you could use extra money to cover
some bills or for something a little more fun, your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at airbnb.ca slash host.
Bing bong, bing bong, bing bong, bing bong.
Oh, my goodness.
Is it that time already?
It is.
It's the National Podcast, the podcast where we recommend you things to watch, read, and listen to.
That's right.
My name is Claire.
James is here also.
We are married.
I don't like how this— And it's the start of the story.
What?
What?
What?
What?
Did you change the microphone?
You took the other microphone away.
Oh, yeah.
And this one is slightly different.
Like, do not like it.
Oh, I was just using it for my other job where I interview people.
Oh, very good.
And I'm creating the new season.
Yeah, you've got some exciting interviews lined up it seems.
I know.
One of which I'm going to talk a little bit about today. Oh, because, yeah, you've got the book. Yeah, you've got some exciting interviews lined up at Sings. I know. One of which I'm going to talk a little bit about today.
Oh, because, yeah, you've got the book.
Yeah, and it's really exciting and I'm so nervous about it.
I'm, like, nervous now.
I've got adrenaline, like, racing through.
I'm all shaky.
Does that ever happen to you?
You get, like, super nervous?
No, I've never been nervous about anything.
Oh, yeah.
This cord is too short.
It shows.
Just a complete.
Okay.
Just like an absolutely unearned confidence
in everything that I do.
Correct, exactly.
This is so annoying.
Sorry, I keep adjusting the microphone because the cord's so short.
Oh, okay.
Are you okay?
Now it's better.
He's fine.
Nothing but professionalism here.
So, James.
Yeah.
Did you know that this week is the beginning of December,
which introduces the most wonderful time of the year?
Have you written out a song lyrics?
What is this?
Yeah, so this is an ambush.
Are you really going to sing a song?
No, I'm going to make you do it.
I am absolutely not doing this.
Yeah, baby, it's called Outside.
It's really fun.
We're going to load it up.
We're going to get everyone in the mood.
Everyone needs a bit of a buck up.
This is the PC version by John Legend, by the way.
The PC version.
It's PC gone, man.
I've highlighted, I've started highlighting it, your lyrics in yellow,
and then I stopped.
But you get the idea.
It's just the bit in the brackets.
This is for you.
This is an awful thing to do to another person.
Yeah, I know.
I love it.
All right, let's get started.
My confidence is shaken.
Oh, you have to listen.
You have to put your headphones on.
Why?
So that you can hear the backing track.
You sure I can't put earplugs in?
The enlisters will want to wish they could put earplugs in.
I don't actually know if I can hear this.
Let me see.
Let me play it and see if you can hear it.
Can you hear it?
What do you mean?
I cannot hear it.
You're lying.
I can't hear it.
I don't know what to tell you.
Well, you should be able to hear it.
It's the same as when we listen to people's voice memos.
Try it now.
I can't hear it. You're lying. I'm not lying. Why don't you listen to it? You have to be's voice memos. Try it now. I can't hear it.
You're lying.
I'm not lying.
Why don't you listen to it?
Well, you have to be able to.
Okay, what?
Hang on, let me try this.
What?
I set it all up.
There we go.
Try it now.
Okay.
Yeah, I can hear it.
Ha-ha.
Excellent.
Are we ready?
Bring some Christmas joy, James.
Absolutely will not.
Let's do it.
Oh, my God, I love this so much.
I'm going to stuff up the start.
I don't even know when to come in.
But that's alright.
Yeah, big bad feels
of Christmas time.
I really can't stay.
You've got to do your line.
Oh baby. I've got to go away.
I'm going to get a gun.
This evening has
been. I wish somebody
threw me down a well. So very nice.
Time set with you is paradise.
Oh, paradise.
My mother will start to worry.
I'll call the car, tell him to hurry.
My daddy will be facing the floor.
Where's he going to wait for me?
So really I'd better scurry.
Your driver, his name is Murray.
But maybe just to have a drink.
Oh, we're both adults, so he's keeping score. What do you mean driver? His name is Murray. But maybe just to have a drink. Oh, we're both adults
so he's keeping score. What do my friends think?
I think they should rejoice.
If I have one more drink.
It's your body and your choice.
Oh, you really know
how to
cast a spell.
One look at you and then
I fail. What's your line? I ought to
say no, no, sir. I don't know where I went. At least I'm going to and then I fell. What's your line? I ought to say no, no, sir.
I don't know where I'm at.
At least I'm going to say that I tried.
You're going to talk about Murray again.
I really can't stay.
I've lost where I'm at today.
Baby, it's cold outside.
Okay, are you ready?
I'm not.
I'm not ready for this.
This is like when you haven't studied for a test in a dream.
And then you wake, and then you're in a class and you're naked.
Simply should go.
And they're like, it's algebra.
Text me when you get home.
Text me when...
I'm supposed to say no.
There's a line in the test.
That's respectable.
Gosh, your lips look delicious.
This welcome has been so bad and warm.
You're really screwing this up.
How am I?
My sister will be suspicious.
What?
My brother will be there at the door.
What is this about?
My gossipy neighbour's vicious.
But maybe just a cigarette more.
You know, I've got to get home.
I need a bite of cigarette.
I'll put it out of my eye.
Say, lend me your coat.
Come on.
I'm not doing this.
You've really been grand.
Oh, don't you see?
How long is this song?
It's almost done.
Is it?
Ready?
Because it feels like it's been going my whole life.
Talk tomorrow.
At least there will be plenty of flight.
Mam, I really can't stay.
Baby, it's cold.
Baby, it's cold outside.
Well, you thoroughly stuffed that up and nobody's in the Christmas mood now.
Well, I hope so. Should I have done the regular version? Would that have helped? Oh, you thoroughly stuffed that up and nobody's in the Christmas mood now. Well, I hope so.
Should I have done the regular version?
Would that have helped?
Oh, you know what you could have done?
Yes.
You could have thrown me down a well, like I suggested.
That was awful.
I hated that so much.
Well, it was so awful because you didn't say anything.
You just kept panicking.
Do you think by me attempting to sing this,
it would have made it better for me?
Yes, I'm going to listen to this.
It would have been a Christmas gift, a Christmas miracle.
You know how you hate Halloween and watching Spooks?
This is my version of that.
I know, but I thought you would get into the spirit.
Nobody listening to this, except for people I guess who are similar to you,
would enjoy being handed lyrics to a song they don't like or know
and then being expected to sing it off the top,
especially when they cannot sing and do not want to sing.
Well, actually, someone in the Great Mates group said
that you had a beautiful singing voice.
Disagree.
This is like they used to do this thing at the primary schools.
They always think teachers want to get involved in things.
They're like, oh, look, it's on stage.
Bring the teacher on.
And I remember once they were like, we're doing a,
I can't remember what it was, it was some kind of,
it was a song or something.
They're like, come on, you've got to come up.
I'm like, yep, and I literally just walked out the door
and I stood outside for 20 minutes.
I thought you might even at least come up with some, like,
witty things to say in between.
Between what?
Between lyrics like, I ought to say no, no, no, sir.
And then you say, you really ought to go, go, go,
because you're being PC, mate.
None of this like usual one where it's like, come in, it's nice and warm,
have another drink, all the things.
My sister will be suspicious.
My brother will be there at the door.
Whose siblings are like, I'm watching who you're dating.
Get fucked.
It's none of your business.
Well, anyway.
This is a weird song and I don't like it.
I was really hoping that you would say your line,
my sister will be suspicious and then you will say, well, gosh,
your lips look delicious.
I did say that during.
I was like, what a weird lyric.
Oh, well, maybe it doesn't work.
And Colleen, you can take it out and I can just keep it for posterity.
Anyway, I hope that puts everyone in the Christmassy mood. So listen, if
everybody's around that, you know,
you want to put on some Christmas cheer
with your family or work,
holiday, party, Christmas, just throw this
on. Just put this on and people will be like, what is
this? What, our version with
you just like groaning through most of it
and panicking. I hated that. Oh my god,
I love that so much. Alright,
listeners, I hope you know that I did that mainly just for me.
Oh, really?
No, they don't know that at all.
Oh, man.
That is an absolute nightmare scenario.
Let's get on with this actual show that we're doing.
That is the worst thing that's ever happened to me.
Are you okay?
I'm not okay.
Oh, no.
What are we talking about?
I'm so sorry.
What are we talking about this week?
Just say funny things
you gotta just laugh you to just laugh. You've got to just laugh.
It's all the things that you hate.
It's everything that I hate.
I don't know how you managed to do it.
All right, come on, get on with it.
Stop chili-tallying.
Baby, it's cold.
It's actually really hot outside today.
I saw the movie Encanto at a preview screening with our son.
It's a Disney animated movie, not Pixar, just Disney,
directed by Byron Howard and Jared Bush.
It was helped also developed a little bit in story by Lin-Manuel Miranda
who does the music.
Ooh, I see.
So it's about the Madrigals and their extraordinary family
who live in the hidden mountains of Columbia in a charmed place
called Encanto.
So basically the grandma, she was running from there was something
happening in a village,
so she escaped. But when she escaped, like the magic presented itself and a magic house sprouted
up and the house protects the family, right? And everybody in the family who gets born into it
on their eighth or 10th birthday, I don't know, there's a little ceremony where they go through
a magic door in the house, which is made just for them, and then they get a gift. But the lead person in
this, Mirabelle, she doesn't have a gift. So she's the only one in the house who doesn't have an
ability. Some can talk to animals. Some can predict the future. Some can control plants and
shit, whatever, stuff like that. She doesn't have any of that. Anyway, the magic is dying,
and she has to kind of figure it out. I think the music's quite good, because know, stuff like that. She doesn't have any of that. Anyway, the magic is dying and she has to kind of figure it out.
I think of the, like the music's quite good,
like because Miranda obviously he did Hamilton,
but this year he also did Vivo, Tick, Tick, Boom,
which he directed, which just came out on Netflix,
which is the story of Rent.
The guy who made, it's got Andrew Garfield,
which is apparently incredible.
He did the music of Moana.
I don't think it's as good as Raya the Last Dragon,
which came out this year.
I think it's interesting and it's, like, fun and our son, like,
really enjoyed it.
But I think it's kind of it's good but it's not, like, great.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, but, like, it's got some, like, really colourful characters
and it's got a great voice cast.
And I think it also captures, like, the feeling of, like,
community and, like, a home and all those kinds of things really well
and like a family dynamic.
But I don't know, it was just not quite like, like, you know,
like I really like, for example, yeah, Raya and the Last Dragon,
I really liked at the start of the year.
I loved that.
Yeah.
The art style is amazing.
But I do think that this is kind of more up your alley because you like music
and Raya doesn't have any songs.
It's not a musical.
No, I mean the score, like the soundtrack is beautiful but it doesn't have.
I think you'd love this though.
I think you'd really enjoy it.
It's got all the elements of things that I love.
That's right.
I was so jealous when you guys got to go and then our son was so sweet
and he was like, I thought that you could go too, Mummy,
but then you can't because it's early screening. You won't be able to see it. And he's like, I thought that you could go too, Mummy, but then you can't because it's early screening.
You won't be able to see it.
And he's like, I thought you'd see it on Disney+, but no, you can't.
I was like, oh, mate.
It sounds like he's just ribbing you, mate.
He is a little.
He's just bloody ribbing you.
Nah, he's a good one.
So, yeah, I think all in all pretty good, to be honest.
Best movie ever?
Yeah, no, definitely.
But I just like the other animated movies I've seen this year,
including like Mitchell's versus the Machines, which I really love,
which again, though, that's like right on my alley.
Yeah, see, I hate it.
I didn't really enjoy that.
I felt it was too manic for me and too digitally
and I just didn't enjoy it as much.
So, yeah, I feel like this is, I love a magic.
I think you would.
And I'm prime Christmas magic time at the moment.
It's interesting because it's all set like within this house
and community, like it doesn't go like Frozen where you go out into the world and explore.
It's all like internal, which I think is a really interesting concept,
but also maybe makes it feel a little kind of smaller scaled.
Yeah, a little bit, yeah.
But it's, as I said, it is really good.
And like if you've got young kids, they'll probably enjoy it.
It's not too scary or anything.
It's pretty funny in moments.
Gosh, you know what I'm really interested in?
I just love looking at how they come up with these concepts
and then the sheer amount of hours that go into creating an animation
like this and just the feat of it, you know, like the legs and feet,
but like, you know, the amazing artwork that it is
and then the skill level
that they've got to with Disney, it's just spectacular.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, yeah, I think also it's good that other studios can match now Disney.
Like Bevo's not Disney.
Like the amazing, that Spider-Verse movie's not Disney.
Mitchell's vs. the Machine isn't Disney.
I like that other companies are also doing it.
Yeah, I do too.
I mean, that Frozen documentary I talked about ages ago on Disney+,
I think does a really great job of bringing to life the journey
of something like this and how it comes to fruition,
which I think is like super interesting.
Because that gave you a new appreciation for the movie Frozen too,
didn't you?
Did you not like – I didn't really like Frozen 2.
No, I loved it.
Remember I loved it?
I always loved it, but I loved it even more.
And you're going to need those headphones, mate.
Oh, why?
Have we got another song?
Yeah, no.
No, we've got a listener voice memo.
Well, I feel like I might be being ambushed.
No, no more ambushing.
I'm sorry.
I feel bad now.
I feel like I ambushed you and you really didn't rise to the challenge.
You feel like you ambushed me. Is that. I feel like I ambushed you and you really didn't rise to the challenge. You feel like you ambushed me.
Is that what you feel like?
Hey, folks.
It's Mark Maron from WTF.
I travel all over North America doing stand-up, and it's always good to know Airbnb is an
option when I'm away from home.
But if you're away from home, why not take your own place and Airbnb it?
Airbnb your whole home to make some extra cash.
Or if you have a spare room that's not in use, just Airbnb that. Whether you could use extra
money to cover some bills or for something a little more fun, your home might be worth more
than you think. Find out how much at Airbnb.ca slash host. What's your suggestion?
This is lovely. I talked about this with you the other day.
So it's called Our Zoo and it's a British drama television series
from the BBC.
Ah, yes.
It was first broadcast in September 2014.
So it's actually old but it's come out now on Australia
on ABC Eye View recently.
So it's six parts written by Matt Charman,
directed by Andy DeEmmony, and it's about a real-life guy
called George Modestead
who had a dream of creating a cage-free zoo with his family.
That sounds dangerous.
Right, exactly.
It's set in 1930 in post-war Britain and it's about the real-life Chester Zoo.
So the Chester Zoo is one of the most beloved zoos in Britain, I would say.
Well, as it's said on Google, so I don't live in Britain,
but if that's the case, there you go. And it's still alive today. That was 80 set, you know, this is set 80 years ago. Okay. Well, as it said on Google. So I don't live in Britain but if that's the case, there you go.
And it's still alive today.
That was 80 set, you know, this is set 80 years ago.
Yeah.
But the actual show is beautiful.
So Lee Ingleby plays George Modishead and Liz White plays his wife
and then Anne Reid, who I always love, she plays his mother-in-law
and Peter White plays his father-in-law.
The premise is really that this man, George, is suffering from PTSD from the war.
Right.
And at that time, obviously, there weren't words around for anything like that.
You got shell-shocked.
Yeah, exactly.
So he's had to move in with his parents-in-law because he's obviously suffering from PTSD
and he has a little daughter as well who's just played so beautifully in this.
It's about the relationship with him and his wife and he's struggling
to kind of find his feet in the world and cope with all
of this post-traumatic stress and the kind of visions he gets from the war.
Yeah.
So he goes down to the wharf one day because he's working
for his father-in-law and sees a little monkey that's come off the docks
and is about to be put down by the
people who own the docks because they can't obviously keep a monkey.
Chloroform.
Nice.
Really, it's intense.
Anyway, and he sees this monkey and just like falls in love with this monkey and this parrot
and decides to just bring them home.
He's got this real-
A whirlwind romance.
Correct.
He's got this real love of animals.
And I think that's, there's a lot of sort of research into animal therapy really, right, and helping people
with mental health and mental disorders and things.
I mean horse therapy is a real thing.
Anyway, so that is sort of stuff.
I mean they've got a bloody couch big enough for a horse.
Am I right, everyone?
Anyway, it starts there and he brings this monkey and this parrot
home to this tiny house, this suburban house in Britain
and there's like no room for the family in the first place
and then he's got this parrot and this monkey.
Yeah.
And then he said he's going to get rid of them and instead
he comes home with a sad camel from the circus.
So he's going to sell the monkey to the circus and instead
comes home with a camel and this camel is like in his backyard
and his mother-in-law is just this really stoic, sensible person
and they've been
like the linchpin of their community for like 40 years. They run a local store and she just
can't believe that this has happened. And he just thinks, actually, it's not his mother-in-law,
sorry, it's his mother. But their relationship is quite strained because his brother died in the
war. And you sort of get the feeling like his brother was the apple of his mother's eye.
And he's, she's really disappointed in him and doesn't understand this whole ptsd thing and
thinks he just needs to pull himself up by his bootstraps that kind of vibes anyway so he's got
this camel everyone's like what the hell are we gonna do with this bloody camel and then he finds
this incredible house in a little village called of upton and it's sort of this big rambling mansion that's up for sale
and he kind of gets inspired to dream to purchase it and goes to the bank for a loan and somehow
manages to pull it off. And so the whole family and his father kind of sees something in this
dream of his and decides to sell the family store and the family house and help him buy this mansion, much to his mother's chagrin.
Chagrin.
So that's kind of the tension in the story initially is
that his mother's so angry about this decision.
His wife is kind of bamboozled but also really wants
to support him and the family suddenly get kind of excited about this.
He also has a 16-year-old daughter who is sort of boy mad in a way
and really wanting to get out of suburban life.
Probably on a bloody phone too much.
Am I right, everyone?
In 1930 possibly.
Anyway.
Rotary phone.
So it's kind of about the journey to creating this zoo
and how it heals him and his family, but also the villagers themselves
of Upton hate the idea.
And there is a point where he decides to bring two Himalayan black bears in
and there's no cages or anything.
He's got no actual kind of legal safety requirements
or even proper understanding of animals other than his own gut feeling
about things.
And so you can see why these like sort of quiet village of Upton
would be completely, you know, in arms about the fact
that he's developing this suit.
Yeah.
Anyway, it's a beautiful story.
It's only rated PG so it would be a perfect thing
to watch with kids as well.
It's also only six episodes and it didn't get renewed
despite it being very well liked.
But I wonder if that's just because the story arc was finished.
Oh, did you watch the whole thing?
Yeah.
Oh, and it kind of wraps up.
Yeah.
So I wonder if that's possibly why.
Anyway, it's beautiful and it took me down a rabbit hole about Chester Zoo
and just the gift of what animals can do for people.
I think that idea of like a cage-free zoo is like it's,
I think it's something they try to do more now as well where they're
like living environments.
They're not just like in a cage.
Yeah, exactly.
And back then you think about the cages were tiny.
There was no, like, you know, our Melbourne Zoo now has these beautiful
big enclosures that are basically forests with animals inside them as opposed to these like tiny cages in 1930.
His whole premise was the cruelty that human beings enact
on animals is just atrocious and he's kind of fighting
against that as well.
Absolutely.
And he wants to dream big and inspire people
and I think that's what's also kind of beautiful
and what we're kind of searching for as human beings even now,
connection back to the wonder of nature.
Absolutely.
Which I think is super healing because really we're beings of nature and that disconnection, and this sort of comes
into the second thing I'll recommend, but that disconnection
from nature is really a disconnection from ourselves.
And as I say, sometimes what we do to ourselves,
we do to the planet and we do to animals.
And so there's this beautiful theme and, you know,
he was ahead of his time I think in a lot of ways.
So, yeah, it's great.
Do we have time to do more things?
Yes, we certainly do.
Okay, let's continue on.
Okay.
When I talk about, if we're talking about nature and healing
and people throughout history are absolute heroes, I've been watching Dexter New Blood,
the new series starring Michael C. Hall with returning showrunner
Clyde Phillips.
So I even went with Dexter as a TV series.
Certainly am.
And there's a sexy orange where he slices it open at the start.
It's like a blood orange and it's like blood.
He's a serial killer, right?
Yes.
But a sexy one.
He's pretty sexy. Like blood. He's like a, he's a serial killer, right? Yes. But a sexy one. He's pretty sexy.
So Dexter was a series that ran from like the late 2000s to like,
when it ran, 2006 to 2013.
Was it back in that time where like vampires were sexy as well?
Yeah.
Is it kind of coinciding with that?
It's an interesting concept which I think fell apart pretty quickly,
but there's some solid seasons in there and episodes.
But it's basically about a guy who has, since he was young,
had serial killer tendencies and his father was a police officer.
So basically taught him this code which means that he only kills
other serial killers or murderers or people that deserve it.
So he needs to kill people but he only targets bad people even though he
himself is a bad guy.
And it's about him like trying to get away with it and whatever.
And I think it does totally go off the rails towards the end and has a very
unsatisfying conclusion.
But this new series brings it back and brings back a bunch of returning
cast, mostly in like people he's imagining because he killed a lot of the
people that he knew.
But so this time he's in a remote fictional town of Iron Lake, which is like this snowed
in like wilderness setting, which is very different because he was in Miami.
So he was a blood splatter analysis guy for the police.
So he was like, because that was his area, you know, he could figure out crime scenes.
But now he's like he sells huntingles in this remote town under a different name because
he had to flee at the end of the last season so it's nearly 10 years on he hasn't been serial
killing he's just been lying low he's got a new name as mentioned new job and but then like a
certain you know he gets kind of gets in a scenario where he's killed where he kills again
and then and i guess that one thing is very consistent with the character
of Dexter Morgan.
He's like his impulses and his decision-making,
even though he's intelligent, like it gets him in trouble
because he's constantly like having to mop up the terrible things
that he's done while people are trying to find out what's happened.
Also his son, who was a child when you last saw him,
turns up and maybe he's the same as Dexter and whatever.
It's only like four or five episodes in as of so far.
And, look, I like Dexter.
As I said, it's pretty inconsistent, but it's a solid concept
and I'm enjoying this little revival that they're doing.
It's pretty fun.
And Michael C. Hall has always been excellent, like, in the role.
Yeah, definitely.
I watched the first season and enjoyed it,
even though it's a bit slashery
for me because of him.
Yeah.
He was great.
Season one is good.
Season two is okay.
I know season three with John Lithgow is really good as well,
the Trinity killer.
And there are good episodes like sprinkled within it.
It's not without its merit.
Like it was, again, disappointing ending.
But, yeah, it's just a nice kind of thing to have back. You know what I mean? Yeah, to revisit. So, no, this is fun. That's cool. I really like that. I like disappointing ending to it. Yeah. It's just a nice kind of thing to have back.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, to revisit.
That's cool.
I really like that.
I like they used the cast.
Yeah, some of them.
Well, some of them.
So it feels consistent.
Yeah.
That's cool.
All right.
What else have you got?
Okay, so as I said before, this week I'm interviewing someone really cool
who I've admired for a really long time.
Oh, Claire, come on.
You already interviewed me.
Yeah, I was really scraping the bottom of the barrel there, mate.
Oh, come on, mate.
Come on, mate.
No, it's all right.
I love you.
Okay, anyway, but Sarah Wilson is a climate activist, a writer,
a podcaster.
People might recognise her from the I Quit Sugar movement.
She wrote books and things around that.
So that was kind of where she leaped into fame.
But she was also editor of Cosmopolitan magazine
and a lot of different things.
She's had a huge life.
Now I'm particularly interviewing her and recommending today two books.
The interview with her is not coming out for a little while.
That's for later for the second season.
But in researching the interview for her, I've read two of her books.
First, We Make the Beast Beautiful, which is her journey around anxiety.
It's kind of reframing anxiety.
So if you're someone who suffers from clinical anxiety and even someone who just has this feeling of
anxiety, I think that is more prevalent now. This book is really interesting and engaging
and it's really valuable, I think, particularly not just for people with anxiety, but with all kinds of different mental health issues. And she really encourages people to expand their thoughts around this area of
neurodiversity. There's lots of practical advice and practical strategies to help. She interviews
experts from all over the place, from, you know, sort of spiritual gurus and meditation experts to doctors and
clinicians and psychologists. And it's also her life story too. And I loved it. So I guess the
basic premise is her idea that anxiety is a feeling of disconnection when we're not living
in alignment with the planet and with our values. And that's quite an interesting way of reframing this idea of anxiety
and it's controversial and I think it's really worth reading the book
to kind of explore what she means by that.
All right, and her other book, Wild, this one, Wild and Precious Life,
looks particularly at the climate emergency and she wrote it
just as the pandemic kind of hit.
She finished writing it, submitted it, and then had to take it back
from her publishers to add in the pandemic.
So she published it last year and it's excellent.
It also comes hand-in-hand with a podcast called Wild,
which is available on Apple Podcasts.
And that's like a series of interviews where she deep dives
into particular kind of thoughts, I guess, or people who have
really interesting and complex ideas about the way we're living now and our culture now. So
anyway, she's a really interesting person. She lives with a lot of conditions, including bipolar
and an autoimmune disease as well. So yeah, really interesting and thought provoking person.
So I would highly recommend going to check her work out.
How are you feeling about this interview that you're on?
Terrified.
Just terrified.
Anyway, it's fine.
I'm just keeping on researching and hoping it'll be okay.
It will be fine.
You're a great interviewer.
Thank you.
Are you doing it over Zoom?
Yeah.
Wow, that's even worse.
Oh, stop.
I know.
It actually is because in some ways it's not because at least
I don't have the anxiety of going to the place and all the lead up
and all the things.
It's just like on the computer it goes, except the downside
of the online stuff is our internet is so patchy,
so sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't.
Anyhoo.
Can I recommend something if it's going poorly?
All you need to do is hand her this sheet, these song lyrics,
and then see if you can get a duet going.
All right, excellent.
That sounds really good.
All right, I'm so sorry about that, Jase.
I feel bad.
I feel like I ambushed you.
No, Claire, people are going to love it.
They're either going to revel in my misery or they'll love your cheerfulness
or they're going to hate it.
Hopefully they're going to hate it.
I don't even remember.
Did you even say anything?
I feel like most of it was you groaning.
But, like, if you think I'm going to, like, do a singing voice on this,
I know ironically I only do things ironically so I can say it was a joke,
it was a parody.
I can't do anything earnestly.
I know.
My whole brand is cynicism, Claire.
I was hoping you'd just jump on board and put aside your usual, you know,
cynicism for the Christmas joy. Is there any part of you that thought that I would jump on board and put aside your usual, you know, cynicism for the Christmas joy.
Is there any part of you that thought that I would jump on board for that?
Do you think if I did it earnestly with you,
do you think you would have enjoyed it?
I thought that maybe you would at least read more of it.
You just basically groaned.
I lost track of where it was at.
I don't know.
I was kind of reading.
I was getting lost in some of the lyrics like what the fuck is this?
Yeah, maybe I overshot the mic.
I overestimated your abilities.
No, I think it was a valiant effort to make me more miserable.
Anyways, if you want to make me less miserable,
you can actually review the show.
Do you know people can do that?
No, get out of town here.
All they need to do is open up whatever app they're in,
just like AEN 2012 who, you won't regret listening. It's been baby bears porridge in
between chill and energetic. It's between serious and fun. The couple is in between sweet and sassy.
Definition of pleasant. Oh, mate, that is one of the best reviews I've ever heard.
Loving that. Loving that. I love that. Sweet and sassy. That's me to a T.
Sweet and sassy. Correct. Exactly. Two or two. Sweet and sassy. Correct. Exactly.
All right. So I have a voice memo today. Thank you so much, guys. We've got a couple in,
which is so exciting because we hadn't had many for a long time. This one is from Captain
Fantastic. Oh my God. And let me tell you, he's fantastic. You can email your voice memos
or just an email if you prefer the old-fashioned word typing
to suggestablepod at gmail.com.
Hells yes.
And this one, here we go.
This is a voice memo.
I'm going to put my headphone in.
Hang on.
Let me put my headphone in.
Put your headphone in.
Put it in.
Put it in.
Get it in there.
Get it in.
Yeah, this is from Captain Fantastic.
Let's go.
Let's go.
Let's go.
Hi, James and Claire. I really am excited to be
writing in to
my favorite podcast,
Suggestible. I do
also enjoy James' other
more successful podcast,
but this one is my favorite.
I have a Suggestible for you guys
and it is Frederick Bachman,
the author. He wrote A Man Called
Uva, he wrote Anxious People,
he wrote Beartown, all of which are very good books. His typical style, the reason that I like
him so much, is he's kind of quirky, like goofy, but it'll make you laugh and then it'll make you
cry in the same page. He does such a good job of mixing emotions in that way, kind of like Taika
Waititi with his movies, where you'll be like chuckling about something, and you'll just have
a gut punch, and you're like, wow, like, it feels good to feel things. I love these books so much.
You've got A Man Called Uva, which is about an elderly man dealing with the
loss of his wife. And he, it does so, you know, he's grumbling the whole way through, but it's
got so much heart. And Anxious People, which is his most recent book about a bank robbery that
goes wrong, but not in the way you've expected. And then he also wrote Beartown, which is a book,
also wrote Beartown, which is a book kind of like what you talked about last week about how sporting communities protect their players. And it's a very interesting read. It's a very
different novel for him, but it's really important. And if you don't want to read, there is a show on,
I think it's on Amazon Prime, but that's my suggestible for you guys. Thank you
so much for doing what you do. And you're just light and joy in my life. And I know so many
others. So just keep up the good work. Thank you very much. I was, sorry, I was struggling to hear
because Claire could hear it very loudly and I could hear it very softly. So I was like trying
to concentrate and listen. So I wasn't interjecting much. That sounds very interesting.
Yeah, I know.
I've been meaning to read his book so I'm really excited.
Thank you so much.
Oh, you're welcome.
No, you.
Oh.
Noah.
Thank you so much, Noah.
Oh, you're welcome.
All right.
And that's it.
That's the show for this week.
We've been to just a little podcast.
Are you going to spring anything else on me?
Yeah, let's go.
Another rendition of Baby It's Cold Outside,
but this time the Dean Martin version.
I really can't stay.
It's cold outside.
Maybe I should have just done both lyrics and then it would all be fine.
You can't these days.
I mean, it's too bloody.
All right, happy Christmas season.
Oh, yeah, we're going to do a Christmas episode coming up.
We are, I know.
I'm so excited.
I'm getting all revved up for that.
And also I made a little Christmas gift list.
I saw that, yeah.
Just a few little recommendations and a funny photo of James
wearing a Christmas card crown.
And so if you want to find that, it's just in the link in my Instagram bio,
at Claire Tonti.
And, yeah, it's just there.
You just click on it.
It's also probably emailed to you if you subscribe to my newsletter,
which will be coming back with a vengeance in 2022,
but I did email that out.
So there's just a few little gift suggestions on there,
nothing too shabby, and I hope you have a merry old time.
Fantastic.
Captain Fantastic.
Captain Fantastic.
Until next time. Bye. Thanks, Fantastic. Till next time.
Bye.
Thanks, everyone.
Bye.
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Or we can engineer access to clean water.
We can acknowledge indigenous cultures.
Or we can learn from indigenous voices.
We can demand more from the earth.
Or we can demand more from ourselves.
At York University, we work together to create positive change for a better tomorrow.
Join us at yorku.ca slash write the future.