Suggestible - Best Suggestibles of 2020 (Part One)
Episode Date: December 31, 2020Suggestible things to watch, read and listen to hosted by James Clement @mrsundaymovies and Claire Tonti @clairetonti.This year’s Suggestibles:The Trial of the Chicago 7The Invisible ManGreenlandPlu...s OneThe RipperExpecting AmyInto the Unknown: Making Frozen 2My Octopus TeacherThe Last DanceThe Speed CubersCheerRonny Chieng: Asian Comedian Destroys America!Ted LassoAunty Donna's Big Ol' House of FunCelia Pacquola: All TalkZoë Coombs Marr: Bossy BottomMichelle Buteau: Welcome to ButeaupiaMarc Maron: End Times FunDieBog BodiesBook Cheat: Withering HeightsUntamed by Glennon DoyleThree Hours by Rosamund LuptonKnow My Name by Chanel MillerEducated by Tara WestoverPrestige by Caravan of GarbageSend 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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This is the intro. This is the pre-intro intro where we're saying,
this is an extra long episode. So we're splitting it into two episodes.
Two episodes.
A one and then a two.
Then a three and then a four.
No, just two.
The second one is going to, I think we did that last year from memory
now that I think about it.
This is this real schmoz.
And then we finish and we realise we should probably do it this way.
We've ended this year on this podcast like the year of 2020 disastrously.
The second one towards the end gets a bit loopy, just so you know.
We get loose.
But anyway, so if this stops abruptly,
it's because there'll be one the following week.
Correct.
All right.
On with the show.
On with the show.
We made it.
It's the end of 2020.
Yeah, but it's like as people who are awful point out, it's just a date.
Like all the things don't stop.
Well, then everything's anything.
Everything is anything.
Everything is just anything and nothing matters.
That's not how it is.
Hello, I'm James and Claire is here also.
And somehow I've made it to this end of the year and I don't know my own name,
but I do know that this show is called The Weekly Planet.
Oh, my goodness.
You've got it all wrong.
No, this is called The Weekly Planet. Oh, my goodness. You've got it all wrong. No, this is Suggestible Podcast.
We recommend you things and this is our inaugural second best of the year.
Wrapping it all up.
Wrapping it all up.
Wrapping it all up.
And just to like give you a little insight into our two personalities,
James has been collating all of his suggestibles all year in one document.
So then he just went through and like highlighted all of his.
I, on the other hand, did not.
I put them in all weird separate documents.
Some were handwritten, some were in my phone,
some were probably, I don't know, used for toilet paper.
Who knows?
And so then I had to go back through all of the episodes
and like look at all the meticulous show notes that Royal Collings
has put together to remind myself what happened in this godforsaken year
because I couldn't remember a thing.
Yeah, well, neither could I.
But I just had them all in the one.
I just opened a Google Doc and I just add them in every time.
And then if I don't get to something, I just move it to the top of my list.
All right.
So I've got like six things that I've got ready to go in the chamber, mate.
Six you don't. All right. I had to make a list and now I've highlighted. six things that I've got ready to go in the bloody, in the chamber, mate. I know. Six-year-old.
Right ahead.
I had to make a list and now I've highlighted.
It's all not, it's not good.
Anyone else out there feel like their systems are not very good?
Not me.
Do you know what it is?
Yeah, tight.
My brain is so large, the systems are so complex.
Then why is your head so small?
Mere mortals wouldn't understand.
You've got like a pinhead.
I don't understand.
Is your brain like pushing up against your skull?
No.
My brain, my head is a regular size.
It's my shoulders, James.
Oh, okay.
I have very broad shoulders for a woman.
The dog's trying to get out, so I'm just going to let the dog out.
This is a schmuzzle.
While I let the dog out, do you want to go through the-
The reasons why broad-shouldered women are the sexiest?
Nobody wants that.
Nobody wants that.
Sexist?
Sexist?
Do you know what?
No, sexiest.
I don't know if they're sexist. Some probably are. Just go through the know what? No, sexiest. I don't know if they're sexist.
Some probably are.
Just go through the subheadings.
We don't know what they're on.
All right.
So we're looking at today, if you're interested,
our favourite films of the year, our favourite documentaries,
our favourite comedy things, our favourite books,
our favourite TV shows, our favourite music,
our favourite podcasts and favourite
things that we made this year and then anything else that we can bloody well chuck in there
too.
So we're going to get started.
Let's do it.
And we're going to start with a film.
I really just did not watch a lot of film, I realised, because I feel like this year
was a real golden age for television.
And a lot of them got pushed back as well.
Correct.
I mean, cinemas were shut, if you're listening to this, in the future.
Cinemas were not even open for most of the year and I think still in a lot of places
in the world they're probably not open or people don't want to go because of the virus
thing.
And there's not really anything out.
Correct.
Well, that's the other part of it.
So, James, start us off.
What was your favourite film of this year?
I've written down three and they're all very different
and I like them for different reasons.
Here he goes.
But I'm not going to go into it because we already did episodes,
so I'm just going to list them and then I'm going to be quiet.
That's so boring.
I don't really like Netflix movies generally.
I think they're fine, but I thought The Trial of the Chicago 7,
the Aaron Sorkin movie, was excellent.
That was very good.
I know it wasn't an entirely accurate depiction of everybody in that movie,
but I thought it was just –
I enjoyed Borat. He was excellent. Yes, I also saw Borat know it wasn't an entirely accurate depiction of everybody in that movie but I thought it was just. I enjoyed Borat.
He was excellent.
Yes, I also saw Borat this year as well.
I think I saw Borat.
No, no, I mean Borat was in that movie.
The character?
No, the actor.
Much trial.
Oh, no.
You can't do that.
You can't say that.
It's very true.
It's film.
It is.
But the guy, Sacha Baron Cohen.
Sacha Baron Cohen, yeah.
And there's a lot of parallels to today and like protest.
Sorry, everybody, our daughter arcs up whenever the podcast starts.
She knows.
It happens literally every week.
She knows.
Also, The Invisible Man I think was my favourite movie I saw at cinemas.
You saw that in a cinema?
I did by Leigh Whannell and I did see it in cinemas
and starring Elizabeth Moss.
Early in the year.
My favourite VOD movie that I watched at home.
What's VOD?
Video On Demand was probably Greenland.
Oh, I really liked that.
And it's not like the best.
With Jared Butler.
Yeah, it's like.
I'm sexy and gruff.
I'm Jared Butler.
It's definitively not like the best movie of the year.
It's probably not even the best streaming, but I just really enjoyed it.
I thought it was great.
See, it's funny that you say Greenland.
A lot of my recommendations or suggestions that were my favourites
weren't necessarily the most accomplished.
They were the ones that I just enjoyed because I felt
like this year was so bleak in so many ways and I just wanted
to watch and consume and read things that I just enjoyed.
Yeah, totally.
All my TV is pretty much that.
Yeah, right?
Rather than necessarily being like there are ones in there
that I think were really important or had really diverse cast
and, you know, I thought were really interesting and great
but my really favourite ones were just the ones where I just got swept up.
Yeah.
You know?
Like before the show you were like, oh, you watched the unbelievable,
the Tony Collette series about the series of assaults.
Oh, which was, you know, excellent.
Yeah.
But I'm just like, it was amazing.
But I'm like, I didn't enjoy it.
I don't want to watch it again.
And I think this year there's just so much less brain space, you know.
Yeah.
The news cycle is so dark or has been so dark and so grim.
So my recommendations are, yeah.
And what are your movie recommendations, if any?
Interesting you say The Invisible Man because I also had The Invisible Man.
Oh, really?
Yeah, and I don't even really like thriller-esque movies,
but I just got so absorbed in this.
And Elizabeth Moss, just her face moves in such great, terrifying ways.
Yeah, it does.
And I just really thought it was a cool concept for a film.
I like the special effects and the way they did that.
Or the lack of.
The lack of.
That's what I mean.
Like I just thought I really enjoyed that as a premise
and I also thought it really explored issues that are in marriages
and all that kind of stuff, relationships and domestic violence.
Spousal abuse.
Yeah, spousal abuse, all of that stuff.
I thought it was really good.
Just quickly, there's a piece of fluff that I've been meaning to get
that's been sitting on the soundproofing phone behind you all year
and I'm like, I'm going to get that.
And then today I'm like, no, just get it.
Because I'm looking at you and I'm looking at that.
I've just been doing that all year.
It's my eyes like darting back and forth.
You didn't tell me that.
I got it.
Oh, wow.
So what I'm going to do, I'm going to put it here on my side
so you have to stare at it.
Oh, no.
Just for the rest of the year next year.
Who knows what the world will be in 2021?
Dear God.
Okay, so The Invisible Man was one.
But if you're looking for something lighthearted,
I really enjoyed all those rom-coms that were coming out on Netflix.
It's a good one.
And my favourite one was actually Plus One with Maya Erskine and Jack Quaid.
Yeah, that one where they just like kind of rollick around going to a whole lot
of different weddings. Yeah, that was good. Yeah, that one where they just like kind of rollick around going to a whole lot of different weddings.
Yeah, that was good.
I liked that one.
Yeah, and it wasn't particularly like unique or anything.
I just really like the sense of humour.
I really like Maya Erskine.
I hadn't seen her in anything before.
I liked her comedy.
I liked her wit.
She's from Pen15, yeah?
Yeah, yeah.
You've got to watch that.
Yeah, and she was great and I thought Jack Waid obviously, you know,
he's got some famous parents there.
He's in the Auntie Donna series.
Yeah, is he?
I should put that on the list because I actually didn't put Auntie Donna on,
but I actually.
Yeah, they're so good.
Because I didn't have it in my list because.
Oh, there you go.
I mean, Parasite came out this year.
Did it?
Yeah, the very beginning of the year.
Oh, Parasite was amazing.
Yeah, it was amazing.
So I had that on my list as well.
Like that was also an amazing film.
But in the end, I'm putting like kind of like popcorn movies.
I've seen Parasite twice.
Yeah, it was amazing.
I remember you called it super early.
I don't think I did.
I think all the awards called it and then I saw it, yeah.
Well, anyway, it was really good.
No, but you saw it early, I reckon.
Did I?
Anywho.
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All right, next up, Adaco Umentarios.
So this is one I just want to mention.
It's not my favorite.
It's just one of those, if it wasn't so, like, serious,
it would be a comedy, like an absolute fucking joke.
It's called The Ripper on Netflix, and it's about a murderer
through the 70s.
He killed, like, 10, maybe 20 women and assaulted like various others
with like hammers to the back of the head for like even longer than that.
Oh, Lord.
And so he was like the new Jack the Ripper and they were like,
how are we going to catch this guy or whatever?
But the reason they caught him by accident at the end,
as they always do with these fucking guys from that era,
and it's just incompetent cops just fucking banging into rakes.
Do you know what I mean?
Just fucking walking around.
Like there's moments where they're like, well,
the guy that we're looking for, he wasn't smiling,
but this man we're interviewing, he's smiling
and he's wearing a different green hat, so this must be a different guy.
Like it's literally like they find a guy who's so close to him
because it is him.
Like they interview him and they're like, no, his accent's different.
It's not him.
Don't bother me with this.
But it's like literally every other piece of evidence lines up, right?
Yeah.
And then in the end they figured out after they accidentally caught him,
by the way, through some good police work to be fair
because there are good cops working on it,
they'd already interviewed him nine times and he'd been spotted
in the local area of these murders 50 times.
Jesus.
50 fucking times.
And they couldn't find him because it's just people being like,
well, we think he's from here and we think he only murders prostitutes,
but he's just murdering, like, anybody.
And they're like, well, this doesn't fit with our narrative,
so this must be a different murder.
Or that woman was murdered, so she must be a prostitute.
And the family's like, yeah, she wasn't a prostitute.
And they're like, we don't care.
She's a prostitute.
I'm watching it and I'm like, are you fucking kidding me?
Wow.
Just the sheer incompetence was staggering.
So it wasn't that he was clever.
No, he was a fucking idiot.
Oh, man, because it's the complete opposite to I'll Be Gone in the Dark,
which is a really excellent documentary, not my favourite,
but the murderer, it's a true story,
but the murderer in that was actually just super clever in lots of ways.
Yeah, totally, and there are people like that do exist.
But, like, if you look at, like, this guy and, like, Ted Bundy,
who escaped out a courtroom window during his trial and then, like,
and broke into a sorority house and did like terrible things.
It's like you don't want to cuff him or like have someone in the room.
Like it's just like what are you guys doing?
And I guess they didn't have DNA either.
Yeah.
So they didn't have like because that's how they caught the killer
in I'll Be Gone in the Dark in the end because they had DNA tracing.
And the crazy thing was also like when they did catch him
and I can't remember his fucking name, whatever,
but they were like, can you believe it?
It's just like he looks like anybody.
He looks like a regular man.
Yeah.
What do you think he's going to look like?
He's got fucking four arms and he's just screaming
and running down the street.
Wearing a T-shirt that says I'm a serial killer.
I think they're like they're looking for Jack the Ripper,
looking for a big top hat and a cape and a knife,
and he's skulking around.
But he was a lorry driver from wherever.
I'm like, yeah, he's a guy.
What did you think?
Spoiler alert, it's usually blokes.
It's always blokes.
Fairly ordinary.
But it was just baffling to me.
I'm like, wow.
It made me mad.
I didn't enjoy it.
And again, there were good people who worked on it, John.
I mean, but they interviewed a lot of the women who were attacked at the time
who survived who were just like, yeah, they didn't believe me.
Like I said that this guy and I drew a picture and it turned out to be the guy
and they were like, nah.
And it was nuts.
It was really frustrating.
Yeah, I bet it was.
I bet it was a little more frustrating for the people involved than frustrating.
Yeah, probably more frustrating than for me, yes.
And I think that actually speaks to a larger issue at the time
where women just weren't believed.
Women who were murdered, sex workers were not treated in the same way.
A hundred percent.
And so dismissed and a murder of someone in the streets like that
was just not seen as important.
Oh, God, it's a huge chasm.
Even just the Teacher's Pet, that podcast,
a woman was murdered by her husband.
It is clearly, it's just so obvious that he did it.
That's great.
But they just never got the guy because people just didn time was in on it. Yeah, people just didn't think it was their business.
And women weren't believed.
Yeah.
And their value wasn't seen and their voices heard in the same way.
Anyway, let's move on.
I just want to quickly say, sorry.
Let's move on.
You've been talking about this forever.
No, no, no, sorry.
It's really depressing.
I want to move on.
You're absolutely right.
I have one more thing to say now.
I can't remember.
But yeah.
He's just ranting.
I'm moving you on.
Move along, sir.
Move along.
Okay, my turn.
Anyway, bad.
Oh, that's right.
Yeah.
All the cops were from like the same area.
It was like the same like they didn't go outside of it.
And the only reason it like it caught on was because the third person
he killed, but probably not, was what they considered like an innocent.
They were like, you've accidentally, and they wrote a letter
and they're like, you accidentally killed a 16-year-old girl,
not a prostitute.
You killed an innocent.
I bet you feel bad now. And he's like, nah, I love murderingyear-old girl, not a prostitute. You killed an innocent. I bet you feel bad now.
And he's like, nah, I love murdering.
I don't care.
It was crazy.
It's crazy.
Don't watch it.
Anyway, go on.
Oh, my God, it's on Netflix.
Yeah.
Don't watch it.
The Ripper.
Good.
Okay, I'm going to move on now to the documentaries that I loved.
Okay, so two that were like my runners-up.
I watched so many good documentaries this year. Expect Amy, the documentary, Amy Schumer's pregnancy.
Oh, my God.
It was just so, it gave me so much insight into the craft that goes
into being a comedian and also the lead up to her stand-up special Growing,
which was really awesome and that came out last year.
But expecting Amy, I loved it for so many reasons.
One, because it gave me such an insight into just how much work goes
into being a stand-up comedian and creating an hour-long amount of material.
I mean, that is like the pinnacle for stand-ups.
And I hadn't realised, it's like the Olympics basically,
to spend a whole hour making an audience laugh is, you know, supremely
difficult.
So much goes into it.
Yeah.
So much goes into it.
And I had no idea.
They just make it look effortless.
So.
Well, the good ones do.
Correct.
Yeah.
So that was one thing.
But the other thing that I thought she explored so honestly and openly was her condition,
hyperemesis gravidarum, which is just insanely terrible morning sickness where you're hospitalized
for like vomiting and it's just awful.
And Kate Middleton had the same thing.
It's not a Harry Potter spell?
Hyperamicus caraballum, whatever.
Everyone wishes it was.
She shone a light on an experience that a lot of women have
and just the difficulties that pregnancy brings.
And it just made my heart sing even though it looked really difficult.
Also because it showed the relationship between her and her husband,
which was really beautiful too.
But I really enjoyed that.
And the other one that was a runner-up was Into the Unknown,
The Making of Frozen 2.
Oh, you loved that.
On Disney+.
I really loved it.
So Ben, who edits for The Caravan of Garbage and other things,
he was turned around on your opinion on Frozen after watching
that documentary because he was like, I didn't like it,
and then watching that and hearing your opinion on it, he flipped on it.
Oh, Ben, I always knew I liked you, mate.
There you go.
He's a good one, that one.
Well, yeah, I reckon it would change your mind too because the depth
of what they go into during that documentary,
I just love understanding how people make things,
just the inspiration that comes from that and people's creative process
is just one of my favourite things
to unpack and talk about and dissect because I have such a hard time with it.
So I just find it so fascinating and just the sheer amount of work
that went into making any animated feature but particularly something
with Disney I think, oh, mind-blowing.
But my favourite documentary of the entire year, drumroll,
was My Octopus Teacher.
Oh, my God.
No surprises there actually.
I've forgotten about that one.
That was absolutely stunning and heartbreaking.
If you haven't watched it, go and watch it immediately.
It probably sounds like a documentary about octopuses
that you would not want to be into but, my goodness,
I think you could watch this with literally anyone
and it would just turn their, melt their heart.
Like it just, it makes you connect with nature in a way
that I hadn't thought about as deeply before.
It makes you understand how precious life on earth is, how complex.
How precious is life on earth?
Pretty precious.
That's what it says at the end.
Anyway, I figured out that the octopus told me that life is pretty precious.
Oh, anyway, it's about a man who goes to
visit an octopus every day for a year. But the incredible kind of intricacy of the octopus as a
creature and how smart they are. They're as smart as kind of cats or dogs. They're very, I had no
idea, like their bodies move in such incredible ways. They regrow their tentacles. They have over
2000 little circles on their tentacles and each
one moves in isolation. And it's just this beautiful story. It makes you kind of laugh
and surprises you and then makes you cry. And I just loved it. And I just think if you watch
nothing else out of this, I reckon watch my octopus teacher, it'll just make your heart sing.
I loved it. Okay. So. I do have some docs just quickly.
Okay.
So The Last Dance, which is a Michael Jordan documentary.
I think it was on HBO, but it was on Netflix here.
Shooting some hoops.
Yeah, and it's basically him going like.
Banging some balls in the holes.
Yeah, he was banging some balls in the holes.
Yes, but he was, because like a lot of people were being like,
and he's the best player in the world and whatever,
and when you cut to him and he's just like, anyway,
I hate this guy and he did me wrong so I ruined him at basketball
and then this guy said this and I ruined, fuck that guy.
So he's just got this real like chip on his shoulder.
It's like, dude, relax.
You are literally the Michael Jordan of basketball.
Like you're the best.
It's his competitive nature though, right?
Yeah, exactly.
That's what goes into it.
My favourite was the Speedcubers, the Rubik's Cube documentary
about the relationship between the different people who do Rubik's Cubes
for world championships or whatever.
It's only short.
It's only like 40 minutes.
It's beautiful.
It's amazing.
It's the same as that kind of octopus thing.
It's like you don't need to know anything about Rubik's Cubes
or anything like that.
It was incredible. I loved it. I loved it. I still haven't watched that. That's something
I'm going to catch up over the summer. I'd love to watch that because it is, it's the
intricacy I think of, um, of watching someone's like passion for a hobby that really gets me,
you know, like the ins and outs of it all that like becomes so incredible to me
and I think is what makes life worth living sometimes.
Sure.
It's all those tiny little things about a passion that you're into.
I don't know what I'm talking about.
I'm raving.
I bet an octopus could do a Rubik's Cube.
You know what?
I bet an octopus could.
I bet you could teach one to do it.
Yeah.
They would totally be into that, I feel.
It's got the right kind of movement for an octopus.
I don't know if they can see colour in that way.
Who knows?
Anyway, oh, there's this bit where the octopus collects shells
and covers itself in the shells.
It's like a protection thing.
Yeah, that was cool.
Oh, so good.
And then there's some drama.
Oh, my God, when the sharks come.
Anyway, heart in my mouth.
I literally, my heart rate was like racing at that part.
Oh, the other good doco is cheer, about cheerleading.
I had no idea it was like so terrifying and death-defying.
My God, that full respect to anyone who does professional cheerleading.
My God, you have to be fearless.
Okay, moving right along.
Comedai, comedy.
Comedy, yeah.
So I've got some comedy specials or one in particular,
but minor comedy shows.
But Ronnie Cheng's stand-up special, which might have been from last year,
Asian-American Destroy...
No, was it Asian-Australian Destroys America?
I can't remember.
Anyway, it's terrific.
He just does like a takedown of like, not really a takedown,
but he just talks a lot about American culture and Australian culture.
And there's this great bit about how he has to...
He's late for his wedding and he has to get a plane to whatever.
It's incredible.
It's really great.
Ted Lasso was probably my favourite comedy of the year on Apple+.
It's about a soccer team.
They poach a college football player to teach soccer,
to coach soccer in the UK even though he doesn't know anything about it.
Farting with your mouth.
That's right.
The Detectorist was excellent as well, which I just finished up,
which I talked about recently.
Moonbase 8, which I also talked about recently, and Aunty Donna.
So those are my favourite.
Aunty Donna I've watched three times.
Not just because I know them.
You loved it.
But that's also amazing.
I do love it.
Yeah, those boys.
Those boys.
They're pretty good.
They're pretty hilarious. All right. Okay, so I don't really watch comedy Yeah, those boys. Those boys. They're pretty good. They're pretty hilarious.
All right.
Okay.
So I don't really watch comedy show, TV shows.
It's just not really my jam.
Fair enough.
I don't know.
I just don't really get into it.
However, I loved the following comedy specials that came out this year.
Celia Piccola, All Talk on Amazon Prime.
Actually, Amazon Prime have a plethora of incredible,
particularly Australian comedian specials.
They've got a Will Anson.
They do.
Really great too.
Excellent.
But Celia Pakola, chef's kiss.
I love that woman.
She's hilarious.
She also has co-written and stars in a TV show called Rosehaven
with Luke McGregor that's really, really good.
I've got to watch that season.
I think the last two, I think I'm two behind.
Yeah, it's really, really good.
Anyway, I just love her.
I saw her live at the Film and Comedy Festival and she's just so great.
Now, new comedian I found this year who I bloody love, Zoe Coombs-Ma.
She did her comedy special called Bossy Bottom and it is just,
it involves tech and like one of those like camera things that flies around.
What are they called?
Drones?
A drone.
It's just like it's bloody great and she's hilarious
and has been around the comedy circus for a very long time.
It's like refreshing and interesting.
Will Anderson actually called it his favourite comedy show he's seen
in like the last ten years.
Whoa, okay.
He said he would have gone to see it twice.
I need to watch this.
Yeah, it's really good.
And then I also really enjoyed Michelle Bateau, Welcome to Batopia.
I really liked her this year.
Bloody love that special.
I have no idea what that is.
Oh, it's so good.
She's got like amazingly big curly hair.
She was in the TV show The First Wives Club.
You'd recognize her if you saw her.
Anyway, loved it.
And my last favorite one was End Times Fun by Marc Maron.
Oh, yeah, that was good.
It was so good and spooky because it came out in March
and it was kind of like foretelling all the things that were going
to happen this year in a weird way because it's all about like basically
the end of the world and how it's like looming.
And he kind of just, he talks out loud all this stuff that ended up kind of,
or at least how we all kind of felt about the year.
So it was really interesting and I just really enjoy it.
I really like him.
I really liked him in Glee, not Glee, the wrestling show.
Oh, Glow.
Yeah, but they cancelled.
They had to cancel it.
I know.
I'm so heartbroken by that.
I loved that show but he was so good in that show as well
and obviously his podcast WTF.
I mean it's classic. So I loved that show, but he was so good in that show as well. And obviously his podcast, WTF. I mean, it's classic.
So I loved him.
Okay, that's all my comedy special.
Excellent.
What else we got?
What's the next topic?
Ooh, so books.
Oh, no.
Books, James.
I'm going to do comedies.
Die, which is about people getting stuck in a Dungeons and Dragons world,
but it's a comic and it's also a nightmare because they're like,
oh, this is bad actually.
And also Bog Bodies, which is by Declan Shavey,
which is about the moors and spooky things and, like,
mobsters and stuff.
It's a graphic novel.
So check that out.
The moors.
The moors.
The moors, like set on the moors in England,
like those big, like, kind of swampy fields.
Yeah, they go there to like dump a body.
So many spooky things happen on the moors.
What about you and books?
Books?
Books.
Wuthering Heights happens on the moors, I think.
I've never read Wuthering Heights.
It's very romantic and dark and mysterious.
They're like, ooh, let's climb into this bog and have a bog swim at night.
No, it's more like a castle in the middle of nowhere.
Oh.
Is that Rocha?
No, what's his name?
I can't remember now.
But it's like a romance with this like spooky guy and his wife
who's like a ghost or haunting the house or something.
I don't know.
Anyway, it's good.
All right, so I've totally botched that.
I'm sure that Dave Warnicke on Book Cheat has actually done a really good job
of describing what happens in Wuthering Heights.
Anyhoo, moving right along.
So my favourite books.
Now, I had a baby this year just in case.
Oh, yeah.
Just to preface this.
So I really didn't do as much reading as I wanted to.
Also, we had a pandemic, you know, just in case anyone wasn't aware.
And so my reading this year has been in like fits and starts.
Yeah.
Where I could sneak it in.
And also my concentration is shot.
I just think that this year has.
That's like lack of sleep and two kids and working from home.
And a pandemic.
And like just like.
And whenever you get a time by yourself, I come in and go, hey.
I'm working on a Fonzie impersonation.
You don't do that. That's what I've been doing all year. I'm working on a Fonzie impersonation. You don't do that.
It's what I've been doing all year.
I'm already yawning, my God.
So that's like.
Hang on.
Hey.
There it is.
All right.
Okay.
Can I keep going?
Yes.
All right.
So I thought I would just talk about books in a few little bits and pieces.
So probably my favorite book of the year was Untamed by Glennon Doyle.
You do love that book, Untamed by Glennon Doyle.
Oh, I love it.
I have it beside my bed and I just open up and read it when I need
to be reminded about boundaries and believing in yourself
and the struggle of womanhood.
When I come in and you're like, now is not the time
for your Arthur Fonzarello impersonation, James.
Correct, exactly.
Oh, look, no, that book is just wonderful and really life-affirming
and has a lot of teachable moments
in it and it will, I think, will change your life and your perspective
on a lot of things.
And it also kind of gives you permission to live the life that you want to
and anyway, it's great and I love it.
And I just also Glennon Doyle just throughout this year in particular,
I've really enjoyed his Instagram.
It's been really awesome.
You have been on there a lot.
I have.
And also Untamed is like a New York Times bestseller
and just smashing it out of the park.
So I'm not the only one that thought it was really good.
Other than that, I really enjoyed Three Hours by Rosamund Lupton
that I only finished recently.
If you want just a page turner, a book that you pick up
and it grips you by the horns and suddenly it's 3 a.m. in the morning and you've just finished it,
that's the one for you.
It's like a page turner.
I don't want that.
If you want something that will make you think and look at things
from a different perspective, Know My Name by Chanel Miller,
I really loved that.
Oh, yeah, you talked about that.
That was really fascinating.
Yeah, and I really loved exploring not only her story about her sexual assault
and what happened to her but what she did with her life after that
and her art and her writing.
I just really enjoyed learning all about her story and her world
and I just think she's a really fascinating, clever, creative person.
Yeah, right.
So I really enjoyed that book too.
Yeah, and Educated by Tara Westover I read really early in the year
and hers is a really interesting story too.
Yeah, right.
So there you go.
They're my books, my top picks.
I've got to read a book.
I've got to read like an actual book.
I read The Prestige for Caravan of Garbage.
That was good, I guess.
But I didn't love it.
I wasn't like, oh, my God.
Do you think your concentration is shot?
No, I think, yeah, maybe.
But like I should just do audiobooks.
I should just do audiobooks.
It's not exactly reading.
But, yeah, you should.
It doesn't matter.
What are you, the book police?
Yeah, I am.
Hello, my name is Captain Book Police.
I'm policing your book reading.
Who are you looking for?
I'm looking for you because you haven't been reading all your books.
Oh, no, I'm the Fonz.
Hey, you're looking for someone else.
Get out of here.
Get out of here.
We might have to split this episode into a two.
No, we do one episode and then we go to bed.
Gee.
Hours apart.
God.
Yeah, God.
All right.
Fine.
Bloody taskmaster over there.
Thank you.
We should get the podcast police onto you.
Hey, I'm the cops.
I am crawling over the line.
I am like rolling over the line from this year. I thought last year I was crawling over the line. I am like rolling over the line from this year.
I thought last year I was crawling.
This year I'm like inchworming over it.
You were crawling because you were pregnant for nine months for 15 months.
Yeah, the end of last year I was like a giant woman.
You were so pregnant for so long.
Oh, mate, I was so pregnant for so long.
And then I remember Christmas feeling like I surely can't get any more pregnant than this.
And then I got way more pregnant.
Yeah.
Oh, mate, it was a lot.
Anyway, she's worth it.
She's a legend.
Anyway, Merry Christmas.
Happy New Year.
Merry Christmas.
Love to you guys.
And we'll see you in the new year, 2021.
Goodbye.
This podcast is part of the Planet Broadcasting Network.
Visit planetbroadcasting.com for more podcasts from our great mates.
I mean, if you want.
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