Suggestible - Jenny from the Block
Episode Date: June 30, 2022Suggestible things to watch, read and listen to. Hosted by James Clement @mrsundaymovies and Claire Tonti @clairetonti.This week’s Suggestibles:02:00 Smart Sweets03:03 Jennifer Lopez Halftime20:00 R...yan Gosling as Ken from Barbie21:24 Veep32:46 The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner36:36 Did Obi-Wan Meet Expectations? Kenobi Series Recap VideoSend 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.
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Hi, this is Katnett Unfiltered.
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Bing bong, bing bong, Jenny from the block. Bing a bada bing, bing a bada bing, bong.
Let's get loud. Let's get suggestible. Everybody come and be suggestible.
This is the worst one you've done.
And that is saying something because I never enjoy these.
Oh, look, you see what I've done there.
Listeners will appreciate the connection I'm going to make soon
with the bing bong at the start of the show.
Yes, I'm sure people have not figured out what you're doing already.
There's not a big documentary.
I'm so into it.
Yeah.
What is this show, guys?
Yes, J-Lo, yes.
All right, anyway.
Hello, welcome to Suggestible.
This will all make sense soon.
My name is Claire Donte.
James Clement is here also.
Oh, he's British today.
He's a British boy.
That's right.
We are married.
We recommend you things to watch, read, and listen to,
and occasionally I'll sing at you.
Just if you don't like it, it's probably time to leave now.
It's just picture of a vote.
Too late for James.
That's right.
It's like a window into my life.
You get half an hour of it, I get it on full blast every day.
My singing teacher got the giggles the other day because I was on the stage
practicing my song because I'm doing a song over the weekend.
My goodness.
And I was talking to her about something to do with the kids admin
and then I just sang one note from the song and then just kept talking
like I hadn't done it because we'd been talking about how to hit the note.
She just started giggling and I didn't even notice I'd done it.
I understand why my son and you get really irritated.
Why we don't like you, yeah.
Well, listen, Claire.
Tough.
You stuck with me, boys.
What are you all about this week in terms of suggestibles?
Would you like to kick us off?
I would, but first up, James, I need to ask you something.
Okay.
How are you doing?
I'm fine.
What percentage of fine are you, 10%?
I don't know, man.
Who knows?
I don't think I'm ever going to be better than this, so I don't know.
This is it.
This is it. You got your't know. This is it. This is it.
You got your hair cut.
I like it.
I could probably, like, get some therapy and whatever and rest more
and eat better, but I'm just not going to.
So this is it.
This is it.
You ordered some pretend lollies in the post.
Man, I'm eating so many pretend lollies.
It's crazy.
I just think that you're going to end up with some horrible cancer.
Touch wood.
I don't want to put that in the universe.
But the amount of fake food that you eat.
No, well, actually, they're natural lollies.
This is not an endorsement.
I still don't understand how they are lollies and they taste like lollies
except they're not lollies.
Well, they've got a lot of good energy and fruits and stuff in them.
They're called smart sweets, not an endorsement.
But if you need like a little like sweet kick, you know,
they've got like 90 to 100 calories in each packet.
Just give it a chew, go yum, yum, yum.
Some are better than others.
Some just taste like a rubber band.
But other ones taste quite good.
So this is what I do.
I order a bunch of weird stuff and then I work my way through them
and like it will be ten different flavors of the one thing and then I'm like,
okay, one of these is good.
The rest of them are not.
That's how I live my life.
Cool.
Excellent.
I'm glad.
That's the only joy that I get.
That's the updater from the old Jim Bob's Live over there.
Wow.
You've got a lot going on.
It's true.
What have you got going on though?
What have I got going on?
Oh, I've been watching the Halftime J-Lo documentary,
Can You Tell?
Oh, boy.
I know you.
Oh, boy.
I have watched it twice.
Twice? Yeah, I loved it. I just bloody, boy. I have watched it twice. Twice?
Yeah, I loved it.
I just bloody loved it.
You were up to, Claire.
That woman is in her 50s.
Yeah.
That's insane.
Yeah.
It's insane how talented she is.
It's insane.
I think the reason, though, that she has been so successful is because she's had Ben Affleck
by her side in both the early 2000s, then there was a bit of a break of 20 years and now they're back together.
And I think that's the kind of thing that keeps you going.
You always say behind like a powerful person is their partner doing all the real work.
And in this case, it's Ben Affleck.
Just completely broken Ben Affleck.
He's been in and out of rehab most of the time.
I can imagine Ben Affleck just like watching a stage show just from like,
you know, from just off to the side by the curtain,
just punching a dart, just like.
It is funny you say that because I'm talking about J-Lo's halftime.
It's a documentary about her that's on Netflix at the moment.
But there is a brief snippet of Ben Affleck in it.
Oh, really?
He's in it for like a minute and literally he says something like,
yeah, they're always really underrated, Aaron.
We're really rude to her.
And he doesn't, he looks like he's holding a cigarette.
He's not.
Oh, really? He looks very much like he would be if he was allowed to.
And he just looks, he's so like deadpan, real low key.
And you can tell that like maybe they did like two hours
of interview footage and that is like the best clip they could get.
I would be shocked if they got Ben Affleck for two hours.
I don't think he'd allow it.
Oh, my God.
It was just like he, anyway, it was very Ben Affleck.
Yeah.
Very Ben Affleck.
Anyway, let's not talk about him because I want to talk about her.
And this is the problem with J-Lo, actually, I will say.
No, but I do want to actually.
I didn't mean this to be a tangent.
I know, but this is the thing that happens with J-Lo
and it's happened for her whole career, which they do talk about in the doco too,
that she is so insanely talented and yet somehow most of the press
around her tends to be about her tumultuous kind of love life.
Yeah.
And she's in the tabloids.
Yeah, or her body or her figure, exactly.
And I hadn't realised when they played footage from this back
when she first was kind of breaking into the scene, it's so racist
because she's Latino and it's just blatantly racist
and on like big talk shows and also her curves were a massive thing
because I'd forgotten but at that time the kind
of Gwyneth Paltrow aesthetic, like blonde hair,
incredibly tiny Kate Moss heroine chic vibe was out.
So she was kind of made fun of, talked about,
like objectified everywhere for having curves and having this like,
you know, bum that was like particularly amazing.
But when you look at the footage back, I mean,
she's absolutely gorgeous.
There's no doubt about it.
And she's curvy but she's not like incredibly curvy.
She's just a woman who has a lovely hourglass figure.
And it's just so wild to me that that was the thing everyone talked about.
Was that because at the time, like I remember it being talked about,
but you'd never look at her and go, wow, that's crazy.
What a crazy body to see on a person.
That's what I mean.
She just had a lovely figure.
She's obviously an amazing looking person.
Yeah.
And then when you think now we've got people like Lizzo,
we've got Beyonce, we've got Kim Kardashian,
like it was all before those women.
So it is just so stupid and wild that she was kind of objectified in that way. I mean, she's ostensibly, obviously incredibly talented and beautiful. Beside that though,
she is so hardworking. She's an incredible dancer, which is kind of where she started with her break.
And then she's also this incredible singer and her acting is
excellent so i'm just going to read out some of the amazing milestones from her career
obviously the netflix halftime documentary is really a sort of personal look and it's obviously
very 19 yeah yeah so it's a look at it starts off with her just before she's getting on stage to
play the halftime show at the super bowl, which is obviously a highlight of her career,
while at the same time she's been nominated for Hustlers,
which is just an incredible movie that she produced and stars in.
I can't watch Hustlers.
It's so good and it's directed by women.
It's just amazing.
Let me tell you a little bit about Hustlers.
I'm kind of jumping all over the place because I'm so excited.
But Hustlers is a 2019 crime comedy drama written
and directed by Lorraine Scafaria and it's based
on New York Magazine's 2015 article The Hustlers at Scores
by Jessica Pressler.
So it's an all-female directed written movie produced by J-Lo
and it follows a crew of New York City strippers who begin
to steal money by drugging stock traders and CEOs who visit their club and then running up their credit cards.
So it has a really diverse cast.
It's got Jennifer Lopez, Julia Stiles, Kiki Palmer, Lily Reinhart, Lizzo and Cardi B.
So it's just like, it's such a great movie.
Also, JLo had to learn how to do like pole dancing and the strength that she shows to be able
to do it is just unbelievable. Because I was watching some of it because I often walk in and
out of rooms in the house that we live in together. Correct, you do. We do not have separate houses
unlike Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez presumably. And just seeing her like on the pole and when I
first saw it, I thought like, oh, she must be like standing on something or like she's popped up on something.
Yeah, no.
But she's just like casually just kind of like.
Just like holding herself up.
Crazy.
It's insane.
And so that Hustlers film was so amazing that she was then nominated
for an Academy Award for Supporting Actress,
which is the first time she'd been nominated since her breakout role
in Selena.
When was that?
So let me go through.
Like 1996 or something?
Correct.
Yeah, it was actually Selena was in 1997.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, yeah.
So she won, she earned a Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Actress for Selena.
And then her list of movies, she's been in almost 30 movies and just so incredible.
So from there with her breakout role in Selena,
she then released a debut album called On the 6th in 1999,
which garnered her various awards and nominations.
It's singles Waiting for Tonight, Waiting for Tonight,
and Let's Get Loud.
Both received Grammy Award nominations for Best Dance Recording
and then also won the MTV Video Music Award for Best Dance Video.
2001 she won an MTV Europe Music Award for Best Female
and the following year for the song I'm Real.
And her music is like very pop, right, but it's got different genres
of pop which is really cool.
And I'm Real was her second studio album and then J-Lo in 2001 won the MTV Video Music
Award for Best Hip Hop Video.
So she moves into kind of J-Lo as well, I mean into hip hop as well.
And then J to the Low, the remixes in 2002, was recognised by Guinness World Records as
the first remix album to reach number one on the US Billboard charts.
I know.
2006 she was presented with the Crystal Award for Women in Film
for her strong portrayals of women and charitable work.
And through all of this she's starring in so many films
that we would all recognise.
So it's just it's kind of unbelievable how amazing she is
and how often overlooked she is I I think, or undervalued partly, I think, because of her Latino heritage, but also because she
was kind of made fun of and seen as like a pop star and celebrity in the tabloids rather
than a serious actress, even though every film I've seen her in, she's been brilliant.
Yeah.
And look, like all actors, obviously they're not all terrific.
She was in the movie Anaconda, for example,
which, by the way, is a terrific movie.
I was just kidding.
But, yeah, you're right.
Like you look at, I mean, and also she was in the movie Geely.
You remember that one?
That was in that era of like Jennifer Lopez,
Hayden and all those kinds of things.
But she's been in so many great things.
Like I don't know if you've seen Out of Sight,
which was the movie Steven Soderbergh did before Ocean's Eleven.
She's in some of the Ice Age movies, which is incredible.
The Cell, which is like this psychological thriller.
I don't know if you've ever seen that one from like the year 2000.
Yeah, there's so many good things in there.
Is she also in Jack?
She's in Jack, yeah.
She's great in that.
Is the mother in Jack?
Yeah, I think she's a teacher.
Yeah, she's a teacher.
Yeah, you're right.
And she's also in, there's a couple of rom-coms, like quite a few rom-coms.
Well, she was in that recent one with Owen Wilson,
which is really good.
Which is really, really good.
Yeah.
And there's the one about.
Yeah, The Wedding Planner, which is really good.
And she's very funny too.
Yeah.
She's got really physical comedy as well as literally being
such an incredible performer and dancer.
And you get to see all of that in the Halftime documentary.
You get reminded of all the versions of her but also just the hard work.
Like you cannot deny that she is, I would say,
one of the hardest workers in the business.
And then what kind of unfolds in the documentary is all of the buzz
around the Golden Globes and then the Oscars.
Right.
And you kind of see her fighting at that time because it was also
Trump's America at that time, right, at the height of it.
Still kind of is, but yeah.
Yeah, but you know what I mean?
Like at the height of the children in cages problems at the border.
And so she does this halftime show that includes kind of like lights,
light installations that look like cages with children inside them.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
I don't think I've actually seen it.
It was an incredible performance and she had to share it with Shakira
who is also amazing but you can see she was so annoyed about that
and I agree with her.
You only get 14 minutes to do a halftime show and it has to be, you know,
really down to the wire with that time limit because of the game.
You can't be like, what's next?
No.
And she has this incredibly long career.
You know, she's in her 50s now.
She's still making movies and really relevant music and movies and everything.
And they make her share it with Shakira so they each only have seven minutes.
Right, okay.
Which is so ridiculous.
Like they just should have given her the whole show to do.
And Shakira was amazing.
And then to watch her do that but also to see what she managed
to make happen with her and Shakira working together.
And you could see two divas.
It could have really clashed.
Sure, yeah.
But you would have had to integrate those two teams
and those two worlds.
And in the end it was a triumph.
Like it was just reverberated around the world.
People just loved it and just were mesmerised by what she did.
I mean, she incorporated the pole dancing from Hustlers in it.
The soundtrack alone, the way they like sort of cut,
with only seven minutes to do it, cut in all of her hits somehow.
And that's a lot.
Yeah.
And then it finished with Let's Get Loud with her daughter singing
on stage with all of these young girls who were also Latino singing about Let's Get Loud and Raise Our Voices
and then she had kind of the representation of the children in cages
and it was this real celebration of her Puerto Rican culture.
And I just think it was, and I'd be so interested to know anyone
who is Puerto Rican and how they felt about watching it because to me I thought,
wow, A, what a kick-ass woman who just smashed it.
B, you can see that and it reminds me so much actually
and I'm just rambling now, I know, but it reminds me so much
of why people are who they are and as successful as they are.
Most of the time, yes, they have people and machines around them,
but generally it's because they are the hardest working person in the room.
Oh, yeah, you can't just be propelled by all the people around you.
No, you're the detail and not to have a career like that
and to be a Latino woman and have a career like that
through all of that bullshit she had to deal with, just so inspiring.
And to hear her talking to like the heads of, you know,
the Super Bowl and demanding time and saying,
no, we need this. And I need a vision. I've got a vision and this is what I want it to be. And I,
and I'm representing my community here and I want to lift everyone up and we need to do this at
that particular political moment when there was real pushback. It was anyway, I just totally
recommend it. What's it on? It's on Netflix. It, it's on Netflix. Yeah, it's called Halftime.
It was released on the 8th of June and it's directed by Amanda Michelli.
So I just think so often with people like, you know,
Jennifer Lopez who you have all these connotations of from sort
of pop music and you underrate them.
When you look back, even Nicole Kidman I feel like this happened to,
the media kind of painted her as a particular type of actor.
Yeah.
When actually she has done some of the most diverse roles ever and chooses really interesting
parts and works incredibly hard and does physical comedy too.
And I just.
I think when she put on that fake nose, people went, this is serious stuff.
I know.
I know.
I'm just raving.
But I just, I think so often women, as I've grown up,
like with celebrities, some of them have been really undermined.
Yeah.
You know, and just she has to work a thousand times harder
than Ben Affleck, you know?
Hey, Ben Affleck was Batman and actually he's.
I know, but not many other artists in the globe can do everything she can do.
And to be given half of a half a bowl show, Super Bowl show.
Yeah.
Half of a Super Bowl show.
You know, just tiny, frustrating.
Oh, man, I don't know how I'd feel half of a Super Bowl show.
Oh, mate, I don't believe you could do it for a second.
I mean, I could probably do a podcast.
For 14 minutes.
I'll talk about that.
You and Mayso could get up on the halftime show.
That would be fun.
Oh, my God.
This is my vision.
I loved it.
I'm representing my community.
Anyway, just go watch it.
I loved it so much.
It was really inspiring and awesome to see,
and I just think she's cool.
Yeah?
Yeah.
I agree.
Yeah.
She's also been honored by organizations such as Amnesty International and the Human Rights Campaign for Humanitarian Activities. Oh, cool. Yeah, I agree. She's also been honoured by organisations such as Amnesty International and the Human
Rights Campaign for Humanitarian
Activities, which is really cool too.
Done a lot of work in lifting other women
up and people from her community up.
Probably literally, because she's so strong.
She is so strong. You see this woman,
oh my god. I know, she
goes, I think it's Gucci or
Versace, one of the big fashion houses,
and the head of the fashion house is just like, darling,
your body is better now than before.
And it's so true.
It's just insane.
I have no idea what kind of work she's had done.
Also, it looks great.
Yeah.
Which is rare and really hard to do.
And you see her without makeup again because I'm in and out of the room
because we live in the same house.
And, yeah, she looks, when she's not wearing makeup,
she doesn't look like a lizard, you know.
No, and I like this too and I know I am aware that all
of these things are, you know, made and contrived and all of these.
Of course.
But you see her, you see the sweat and just the intensity of her
and the way she's just like working like a Trojan and part
of it you understand is from her background.
She came from nothing and her mum, I think, was quite abusive.
Oh, right, yeah.
And you sort of see that storyline play out to you,
kind of understand why she is the way she is.
And look, of course it's like a bunch of it would have been contrived
and all of that.
But, you know, even if that was 100% true,
like she's still done amazing things.
I know.
And you can still be inspired by something.
And you also can't, I think there's a certain part that you just can't make up.
No, absolutely not.
Yeah.
You know, because the work ethic shows for itself.
Eventually you get done.
I think something eventually like.
You see the work that goes into the dancing.
You get Alan'd or whatever happened to Alan.
Yeah, totally.
And her team has been with her for like 20 years or whatever since Selena,
which also I think speaks a lot about loyalty.
Oh, definitely.
Yeah.
And also paying people well.
Yeah.
I'm serious.
Yeah.
I agree.
People don't stick around.
Yeah, and valuing them.
Yeah, people don't stick around for like good vibes.
Yeah.
They shouldn't at least.
Totally.
So anyway, so cool.
I've rabbited on for 20 minutes about it. But she is deserved because she's bloody awesome.
And I feel like this is happening a lot recently where people are looking
back at the lens of how women were treated and going, oh, yeah,
remember that woman that we totally thought was all right or average
or made fun of?
Remember how actually incredible she is as an artist?
I think it happens every now and then.
Like it happened with Keanu Reeves like a few years back.
It's not the same kind of situation.
I know Claire, but he was a joke for like a long time.
Weird Al Yankovic, same thing, you know, Barbara Streisand.
I would say Dolly Parton.
Dolly Parton, exactly.
Correct.
So these people, you know.
Yeah, but more happens to women.
You can't put like Keanu Reeves and Dolly Parton in the same basket.
Keanu Reeves is very nice and he works with a lot of different directors
and things.
Yes, I know he's wonderful.
I know you love Keanu Reeves.
And he's one of the few action stars that has worked with a lot
of women directors as well, which is very uncommon.
Cool.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, I do.
I know.
But I still don't think he would have had the same battles as Dolly Parton
or other recording artists.
Sure.
Completely. He had a band called Dog Star or other recording artists. Sure. Completely.
He had a band called Dogstar or something in the 90s.
You don't know Dogstar?
Yeah, he didn't get objectified in the same way.
No, that is certainly true.
And he didn't get spoken down to.
Anyways, we're not here for you to make fun of Keanu Reeves, Claire,
wonderful man and actor.
What do you think of this?
Ken!
You've seen this, have you?
Yes, I have.
Of course I have.
Yeah, so I'm showing Claire.
Oh, we're talking about the new Barbie film that's coming out.
That's right.
And I've got a picture of Ryan Gosling in a little cowboy outfit
because he's, of course, Margot Robbie is playing Barbie.
So into it.
You know, the director of this is the Little Women director.
I know.
Are you excited?
Yes, I am so excited.
You didn't show me the really good one of, is it Ryan Reynolds?
I don't know.
What's his name again?
I've forgotten. Ryan Gosling? Rison Gosling. I always get that. That's a really good one. Oh, the shirt, Ryan Randall? No, what's his name again? I've forgotten.
Ryan Gosling.
Rison Gosling.
I always get that.
That's a really good one.
Oh, the shirtless one.
The shirtless one.
Oh, like the cowboy one.
Oh, of course, yeah.
You like the cowboy one.
I'm going for the shirtless one.
God damn.
Do you know how many women lost their minds on the internet
when that shirtless Ken image came out?
Oh, I'm well aware.
The only reason, though, I didn't bring that up because it just popped
up in my Twitter feed as like this is the Bobcatter biopic. Oh, I'm really aware. The only reason though, I didn't bring that up because it just popped up in my Twitter feed as like this is the Bobcatterbine.
Oh, I'm really looking forward to that.
And also because Margot Robbie, excellent choice.
I agree.
She's great because she can play that kind of ditzy blonde with
but also always has a really interesting kind
of dark side to her character.
So she's really complex as an actor, I think,
which is really interesting.
Yeah.
While looking like a blonde bombshell kind of Barbie person.
It's really interesting.
Yeah, she's great in The Wolf of Wall Street too.
And in everything.
And in the ice skating movie.
Yeah, she's in that ice skating movie.
Anyways, speaking of women, powerful women, Claire.
You know what I've been watching, which I've been thoroughly enjoying.
Here he goes, yes.
It's an older show.
It started in, I want to say, 2012, 2013 and went to 2017.
It was somewhere in that era.
Veep.
Yes.
This was created by Armando Iancini.
I've definitely said that wrong.
I apologise.
Iancini?
I'm not sure.
I did look it up and I butchered it.
And it's actually an adaptation of the British sitcom The Thick of It.
I don't know if you've ever seen that.
Yes.
It's just like it's Peter Capaldi just swearing at people.
It was also a movie with James Gandolfini.
It's about politics.
I actually need to watch that as well.
But I actually didn't know that these were connected at all
and obviously they would be because they're quite similar.
Anyways, it stars Julie Louise Dreyfuss.
The legend herself.
That's right, who's amazing.
And I think the only person from Seinfeld who actually got a successful show
post-Seinfeld.
Correct.
They've all tried out various things.
And obviously Jerry Seinfeld is, you know, he's doing his stand-up
and he's doing his comedian's complaint about getting coffee and whatever
and all of those things.
I guess Larry David as well who created Se Seinfeld, is still doing stuff.
Anna Cholumsky is also in it.
Reed Scott, Tony Hale, who people might also know
from Arrested Development.
So here's the premise for people who don't know
about this very famous show.
Former Senator Selina Meyer gets the opportunity
to serve as the Vice President of the United States.
She tries to prevent various political uproars
while juggling her public as well as private life.
So I don't know if you've ever seen the show Yes Minister,
the old British sitcom.
Certainly did love that.
Which is about, it's a similar premise in terms of like it's centred
around initially at least the most powerful figure in the country
and you're kind of like a minor player in that and trying to, you know,
just fighting for scraps essentially.
Yes Minister is amazing, by the way, if you haven't seen it.
It's very funny.
I love it.
I used to watch that with my dad.
Yeah, such a good show.
And so in this situation, so it's about her and her team
and like how everybody's petty and the infighting and trying
to climb over each other for, you know, for different opportunities
like even within, you know, within her group. And also she's trying to do the similar thing to,
you know, to rise above, you know, being a mostly ineffectual vice president. And it's just
awful people, you know, really believing in nothing and with no actual power, it seems,
you know, beyond, you know, their political backers and corporations and brokering deals
and all of these kinds of things. But, you know, it was a lot of the times in our capitalist systems, and I hate to get on this,
Claire, like anybody who's in power is really there to keep the status quo. Like there's varying
degrees of what that can look like. But really, it's, you know, it's there are certain rules that
you cannot kind of step outside. So it works like within that framework. And I guess the other thing
is, it's incredibly funny and awkward. And you rooting for all of these people, even though they're all terrible in, in, in
different ways. And it's, I can't believe it took me this long to get to it. Cause it's, it's,
it's so funny and it's so well-written and the, and the joke to like minutes ratio is crazy.
Like it goes by so quick and every line is just incredibly cutting. And obviously it's,
you know, it's a reflection of, you know,
how politics, you know, runs in the real world,
but it runs at like a mile a minute.
You know, not everyone's always got the best witty thing to say in real life,
but it feels very real and the situations feel real,
like the authenticity of it behind the scenes,
parallel with what you see in the public eye,
which is mostly just, you know, very well crafted
and it's all down to haircuts and clothes
and how tall somebody is and who you're seen with
and all of these other kinds of things.
It's just, it's really, really great.
And again, Julie Louise Dreyfus is amazing.
She's so funny.
Her physical comedy, honestly.
Her face.
Like the way, she's just incredible.
She's one of the great comedic actors clearly of all time.
Oh, I would 100 million percent agree with that.
She's brilliant.
Yeah.
I'm a day person.
There's just so many like amazing lines from Seinfeld.
And it's not just like if you're a Seinfeld fan and haven't seen this,
which is probably not the case, you probably have seen it,
but she's not just doing like a lane 2.0.
You know, I know, what's his name?
George Costanza, whatever his name is in real life.
Jason Alexander, he did a show called The Bob Patterson Show,
which was basically like the George Costanza show.
Michael Richards did a similar thing.
You know, he did, you know, they kind of.
Tried.
Kind of tried.
But also I think the difference with her is she waited like quite a while.
She did work but she kind of didn't like jump into another sitcom straight away
and I think that's really kind of benefited her career.
And clever, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, completely.
But I also just think that she is incredibly smart.
Yeah, definitely.
And to be able to do what she does and have such a long career
and I just think there's something about her that's just so funny and great.
And I will say as well that it's that whole thing
because she's also the most attractive person on that show by a mile,
not Veep Seinfeld is what I'm talking about, right?
Probably Veep as well.
Yeah.
And it is kind of an example of when you're a woman in that industry
and it's changing a little, you kind of have to be everything.
You have to be a J-Lo.
You can't just be funny.
You have to also be hot.
You have to also be smart.
You have to do the physical comedy but you also have to do, you know,
write your jokes that are really great as well and you have to have
just all of it and that's what she is to that show, you know, write your jokes that are really great as well and you have to have just all of it.
And that's what she is to that show, you know, which I think, yeah,
she's just so talented.
I would go as far to say I think she's the most talented wine on Seinfeld.
Well, maybe.
I mean, she's, I mean, also Larry David,
even though he's not in that show very much.
Oh, but he's the brains of that show.
Yeah, he's the brains of it.
And not to sell short the other people that are in it.
No, they're brilliant.
They're all brilliant.
That show all works because everybody is at their best they've ever been.
Well, you know, again, some people have gone into other things.
We're living in a society.
Yeah.
Oh, my gosh.
But I think so much of Seinfeld is Larry David as well.
I think, I mean, maybe now, but, like,
he should get more credit for creating that show than Jerry Seinfeld
because Jerry Seinfeld, and this is also kind of, you know, the point of that show is he's like the least interesting, least funny aspect of that show.
Like he's really, even though he does silly things, he's kind of like the straight man who does the what's the deal with whatever kind of comedy.
Yeah.
While everybody else around him is.
I mean, I still think he's incredibly funny.
Yeah, I agree.
He's funny.
And look, he did date a high schooler when he was 38 years old.
Nobody's doubting that.
But the most important thing to remember is that you should watch Veep.
Veep.
I know.
My God.
It's so good.
I've only watched the first couple of seasons.
Yeah.
So I really need to get back into it.
I think we had a baby at a certain point around there.
At a certain point, we did have a baby.
We did.
And then I just couldn't switch on to it.
I did start it like five, six years ago and I, yeah.
Yeah, I think that's what happened.
I think five, six years we started and loved it and then the world sort
of got very small and we just dropped it.
And sometimes when you do that with a show, you lose the thread of it
and then you always have to go back to the beginning.
Yeah, so that's what I did.
Yeah, I'm going to do that too.
But it picks up pretty quick.
Like you're not going to.
Because I couldn't remember where I lost the thread of it.
You're not going to need, what was I going to say?
It's fine.
You can start from the start.
You're not going to be like, oh, this sucks because it doesn't.
It's really good.
All right.
Anyway, it's also kind of a shame that Jerry Seinfeld's like,
you can't say anything.
You can cancel culture and all these kinds of things.
And it's like, dude, none of your comedy is like cancel culture shit.
It's all like my pants are too tight or whatever.
And I love that.
Yeah, I know. And that's all fine, but it's weird to be like,
no, I can't joke anymore.
But it's like you've never did anything that was like, I mean,
except for dating the teenager, but your comedy isn't,
like it's not cancelable stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
If that, anyway, whatever.
I think he's saying that to be part of the cool game.
I think it's just something that you're out of,
they all fall into at a certain point. And I think it's also a part of the cool game. I think it's just something that you're out of, you just, they all fall into it at a certain
point.
And I think it's also a part of like, hey, maybe that stuff that would consider, which
is considered like counselable now, which I don't even really think is a proper thing.
You know what I mean?
I don't, I don't, I think there's very few people that have been like properly cancelled
like in the returns.
Well, women have.
Yeah, absolutely.
Ricky Gervais has just seen, and no, what's his face?
Louis CK just seemed to like go away for a little while has just seen. And no, what's his face? Louis C.K.
Yeah, he's still doing stuff.
Just seemed to like go away for a little while and come back.
I mean, it ruins women's careers.
Yeah, definitely.
And it also, people who do that, it ruins people's career around them.
People of colour as well.
Exactly.
But if you're a white dude, it seems you can just go on a little tiny mini break.
Yeah, you build out.
Like in our country, then just become Deputy Prime Minister.
Who's Deputy Prime Minister?
Like Barnaby Joyce after a massive scandal.
And then get, I mean, he's still in politics, but, you know,
he's no longer, his party's no longer in charge.
That's cool.
I think it's also like a lot of the times when they're like,
oh, you can't say this anymore and whatever,
but it's also like this is boring and uninteresting.
And hurtful.
Yeah, but I agreed, but a lot of that stuff is like, you can do jokes about trans
people. You can do jokes about literally anything. But a lot of it's like, well, I could identify as
an attack helicopter, you know, that joke that people do. And it's just that like a thousand
times. It's like, that's, that's not a joke. It's like, it's not, that's not funny.
And I also do think that when we're talking about people in minorities who have had historically incredibly difficult times,
I just think do we need to make jokes about trans people?
No, what I'm saying is you can make jokes about it and people
and there are comedians who can do it very well and who are like allies
of the community or trans themselves is what I'm saying.
But there's so many people that are just so many like old comedians,
like Ricky Gervais did a bit where he's like, look,
I'm like transitioning into a chimpanzee or whatever because it's like,
yeah, great.
And he's like, what, is it too much for you?
And it's like, no, it's just not anything.
It's not interesting or funny.
And also it's really hurtful.
Exactly.
And damaging to an already very vulnerable community who need
to be lifted up at a time when there is politics happening
that's very challenging and difficult.
And just being like trans people are weird.
It's like what's the joke?
You know, you're basically just punching a group just being like
that's strange, isn't it?
And it's punching down to you, which is the other part of it as well.
And for the record, we love trans people on this show, as we do everyone.
We just want to make that official in case that was not clear.
No, exactly.
We talked about it before the show and we said we were going to go on a tangent
for 10 to 15 minutes.
And we have.
We've gone on a tangent.
So I'll save my next recommendation for next time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I do 100% agree.
I don't know how we got there.
Go and watch Veep.
So good.
Yeah, watch Veep, man.
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Anyways, have you got anything else or should we give it a bloody?
I think we should just start.
Like, let's do our little review thing.
Oh, my God, Claire.
It's funny you should say that because I have a review right here.
And it's from Jerry Seinfeld.
It says, one star, you can't say anything anymore.
It's crazy.
I mean, I'm glad he listens.
But, no, this is from DeBell520 who says,
chaos.
You can just do this in app, by the way.
You open your phone and you go click, click, click, clock, click, clock.
Click, click, clock, clock.
Says, my girlfriend and I have been listening since the beginning of April.
Hey.
The energy has become more chaotic with every episode
and we are absolutely here for it.
Like a little man who has found some butter and pancakes.
So there you go.
I love that.
I love butter and pancakes.
Me too.
Was that a thing that we said on the show?
I don't know.
I can't remember.
I feel like this review is from a few months ago but, yeah.
Yes, I love it.
I love it.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much.
Cool.
And you can also email the show at suggestforpod.gmail.com
with your recommendations or just general comments about everything.
This one is from Alex.
Good bones, old boots.
Already love it, mate.
I love it.
Are you going to do more sperm facts this week?
No more sperm facts.
I know we're moving right along.
This is a poetry fact instead.
Oh, I love that.
Hello, Claire and Mr. Old Boot Movies.
Oh, you old boot.
Love that phrase.
I just wanted to reach out and share how much I enjoy your recent episode
where James shared the poem Good Bones, Proud As Could Be,
and the hilarious narrative that followed where you revealed you had read
the same poem on the pod years ago.
I remembered your initial reading, but much like James,
it was the second exposure to this poem that really hit me hard.
Bam.
Maybe it's because my wife and I are trying for a child
and I've been thinking about all the things parenting will hold.
One of the things I think about most is as a parent,
you have the unique opportunity of getting to introduce life
and all its wonders to another human.
I can share every favorite book and film as they grow into them,
share the things that bring me joy and delight in learning what they love.
It's bloody beautiful.
It is, mate.
It is.
And then they'll throw it all away.
They'll say, we don't care.
Anyway.
Oh, sorry.
Just to clarify, that is not my phone going off during this email.
I'm so sorry.
I would never.
Let me keep going.
Anyways, James suggested we share a short depressing poem.
Oh, my God.
This is my favorite.
So here's one I remember from some English class in college.
Let's do it.
All right.
It's called The Death of the Ball, Turret Gunner by Randall Jarrell.
Jarrell?
Strap in, mate.
Son of Jarrell.
Here we go.
This one is a doozy.
From my mother's sleep I fell into the state,
and I hunched in its belly till my wet fur froze.
Six miles from earth, loosed from its dream of life.
I woke to black flack and the nightmare fighters.
When I died, they washed me out of the turret with a hose.
That is so grim.
Wait, what is that?
Poem. No, explain it to me. Here he What is that? Poem.
No, explain it to me.
Here he goes.
Yeah, go again.
It always stuck with me because it was so abrupt.
I even remember the poem was on the bottom half of the page of the book it was in
and I remember turning it back and forth looking for more poem.
But that was it.
That's what you want.
You want them to leave.
You want more.
Leave them wanting more, you know.
Life is short. Don't get hosed before your time. Gotcha. That's true. want. You want them to leave. You want more. Leave them wanting more, you know. Life is short.
Don't get hosed before your time.
Gotcha.
That's true.
Love the pod.
Love y'all.
Alex from Austin.
Thank you so much, Alex.
And we won't get hosed, I hope.
No, exactly.
When I died, they washed me out of the turret with a hose.
Mate, this is brutal.
It's true.
People are just like, see you later, bitch.
Yeah.
I think it's talking, obviously, about the state with a capital S.
So it's like I fell into the state.
So I fell into the military.
Right, yeah, yeah.
And I hunched in its belly till my wet fur froze,
six miles from earth, loosed from its dream of life.
Is it about a dog in the military?
I think it might be about fighting in the war, right?
And then dying.
Yeah, and then being like next, next person.
Yeah, being flushed out.
Yeah.
I know, grim, mate.
But also poetry.
There's something for everyone.
We love poetry.
On this show we've always been pro-poetry, pro-etry, if you will.
I feel like we're slowly, you know what, Alex, between you and me
we're turning this old boot over here towards the light that is poetry.
You know what?
I've never thought anything about poetry until Alex's latest email.
Every other attempt that somebody has had has fallen short
and yet Alex has somehow reached within my soul and bought something
that I think we can all enjoy and appreciate for once.
Cool.
Claire, it's the end of the show.
Oh, mate.
Yeah, thank the Lord. Yeah. I'm going to it's the end of the show. Oh, mate. Yeah, thank the Lord.
Yeah.
I'm going to go flush myself out of this hose.
Flush myself out of this turret with a hose.
What did you think about the end of Obi-Wan?
You finally finished that show.
I didn't.
I gave up halfway through.
You forgot this?
You didn't see this bit.
Oh, jeez.
That's right.
What is that?
Obi-Wan Kenobi cut off his mask and he was like, boo.
Man, I don't like that.
I'm awful in here.
Oh, that's awful.
I'm more like I look like I've been in the bath too long.
I'm more wrinkled than burnt.
Yeah.
Oh, it looks like the inside of a rotten egg.
Yes.
Look, it wasn't like I think the show was okay,
but the moment with the final confrontation with Obi-Wan
and Darth Vader, terrific stuff there.
Oh, I missed that with you.
I would want to watch that with you.
I just couldn't handle watching more violent stuff.
Solid.
And his voice was like fluctuating between like the James Earl Jones voice
and his regular voice because he'd been.
Cut in half.
That was cool.
Yeah, it was all good stuff, man.
You should at least watch that scene.
I should watch it.
No, I do want to keep watching it.
I think I just can't watch it at night time.
Yeah.
I need to watch it during the day.
It was just a bit intense.
He had all the lights off.
It was a lot.
And there's a bit where Luke's aunt and uncle just go fucking full on like karate
and all these kinds of things on the Inquisitor.
She comes to visit the farm and they like shoot her and beat her up for a bit.
Oh, why didn't they do that to the stormtroopers?
That's a great question.
I had a similar question.
I have another question.
Why is it in the flashback where Obi-Wan is sparring with Anakin Skywalker,
this is set before Attack of the Clones, before he's missing his arm, and yet his lightsaber
is the traditional Skywalker lightsaber and not the lightsaber he actually had in Attack
of the Clones.
Because the lightsaber that he's a traditional lightsaber that he has that then carries on
throughout the films, which becomes Luke's then Rey's lightsaber, that didn't make an
appearance until the Clone Wars.
So canonically, you're right.
It doesn't make any sense.
It's interesting that you brought that up.
I'm glad you noticed.
Let's move on.
Goodbye, everybody.
I just want to say that if anyone else is married to a big old nerd, I feel you, mate.
There's a very good chance that if you're sitting in the car with your partner and your
partner listens to my other podcasts, your partner is nodding along and you're just like,
what the fuck's happening?
I don't actually know what just happened.
Yeah.
But this is the kind of shit that I hear about all the time.
That's right.
And all I want to say is solidarity to you, whoever you are.
Exactly.
We're all in it together.
That's right.
Because we're all in it.
All right.
We're going.
Thanks, Collins.
Let's get loud.
Let's get loud.
This isn't fun.
The music gotta tell you what you gotta do.
It's more fun when I'm annoying you with my thing.
All right.
Thanks, colleagues.
Bye.
I'm still Claire from the block.
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