Suggestible - Just having a good time off air
Episode Date: August 15, 2019Suggestible things to watch, read and listen to hosted by James Clement @mrsundaymovies and Claire Tonti @clairetonti.This week's Suggestibles:Happy Death DayGlowEuphoriaWhy are Fangirls scary? Yve Bl...ake's Ted TalkYou Will (Probably) Survive by Lauren DuboisBack To LifeHow Comics Work by Dave GibbonsPlanet Broadcasting's 2019 Fundraiser with Bonus Rewards - chuck in a buck?Follow the show on Instagram and Twitter @suggestiblepod or visit www.planetbroadcasting.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome back, everybody.
We were just having a hilarious off-air discussion,
and we're now going to bring this hilarity to this new episode of Suggestible.
We were not.
We were staring off into the distance.
You and Mason are the same.
I'm trying to bring some life into the show.
I'm trying to pretend like we don't just stare deadly at each other,
dead-eyed at each other for four minutes.
We also just made our way through a block of chocolate.
Well, I bought a block of chocolate for me,
and you're like, I don't want any chocolate.
All right, stop banging on my face.
And then you're coming in at my chocolate.
Get on with the show.
Okay, it's called Suggestible.
We suggest things that we've been watching or reading or doing or whatever
to people who listen, and people also write in with. We suggest things that we've been watching or reading or doing or whatever to people who listen.
And people also write in with some suggestible things of their own, presumably.
That is correct.
I am Claire.
You are James.
We are married.
That's right.
We are married.
And as always on this podcast, last week I threw the format.
But this week, it's Gentleman's Verse.
I can't wait.
So it's your turn, mate.
What is the first thing you're suggesting these fine people look at?
I've got a couple of things today, obviously,
because that is the format of the show generally to fill out this half an hour.
Oh, dear Lord.
Listeners.
Oh, and he's burping as well.
No, I'm coughing.
Oh, God.
Okay.
I was just thinking about before the show that great joke,
the conversation that we had, just having a good time off air and on air, you know?
Okay, so are you familiar with the Blumhouse horror kind of movie production?
I'm sorry, what was that?
I was staring off into a void.
Blumhouse, Claire.
It's sad as a death.
Basically, the Blumhouse model for horror movies.
The sale looks very great today.
Thank you.
Wait.
The Blumhouse model is that they make horror movies on the cheap for like under $10 million.
Tom House's model is that they make horror movies on the cheap for like under $10 million.
They market them reasonably well.
And then they go on to make like anywhere between $20 and $150 million.
It's like a good business model. It's a great model because they keep the costs low.
A lot of movies make the mistake of they go in at $150 million.
Holy moly.
Because I was thinking $10 million seemed like a lot for a film.
No, it's not really.
It's quite.
They might put in one big name actor or reasonably big,
and then they'll keep costs down on everything else.
So how much do they spend on an Avengers movie?
That movie was maybe $250 million, the last one.
I think it might have been $500 million in total.
I don't have it in front of me, but that's not uncommon.
Star Wars would probably be about that.
If it's a big movie they really push, you double that in marketing.
Holy moly. Yeah, so that's probably $500 million in total for a movie like that.
Just a cool...
I mean, it made $3 billion or whatever, nearly $3 billion, so it doesn't...
Whoa.
But then you get movies like The Dark Tower.
Do you know what that is?
Yes.
Do you really?
Of course I don't.
Why would I know that?
Well, I'm just saying, it's a movie from last year.
It's a Stephen King adaptation.
Okay.
This is unrelated.
I guess we're on this tangent though, aren't we?
We've fallen down the rabbit hole.
I should never have asked this question, guys.
Dark Tale's not even from last year.
It's from the year before.
But they spent $113 million on that.
Nobody saw it.
It made $66 million.
So it's very much in the red.
Right.
So then you get examples like that.
Basically, the Hollywood model is it's either big or small.
Do you know what I mean?
There's nothing in between.
But Blumhouse kind of, they lean on the smaller side, but they're relatively big releases.
Anyway, they've got this franchise called Happy Death Day, right?
Oh, God.
It's kind of-
You are nothing but consistent.
No, no.
You will like this one, I think.
It's kind of horror movie light.
It's like diet horror movie, right?
All right.
And so there's not a lot of blood and there's not a lot of gore.
It's kind of more in the model of maybe scream but a bit tamer.
And it's basically this girl.
She goes to college.
She's a college student.
She's a bit of a bloody layabout.
People don't like her because she's kind of mean.
But maybe she's got some personal problems that unfold.
Anyway, she wakes up in the morning.
She goes through her day. She's miserable and she's angry at everybody. that unfold. Anyway, she wakes up in the morning. She goes through her day.
She's miserable and she's angry at everybody.
And then at the end of the day, she gets murdered.
She wakes up again.
Start of the same day again.
It happens again.
So it keeps happening again and again.
It's the same.
It's like it's Groundhog Day, but she's being murdered.
It sounds like that Netflix show Russian Doll.
Yeah.
It's a bit like that.
Yeah.
Same thing.
I mean, yeah, but not as good.
But yes.
But at the same time, it knows a bit like that. Yeah. Same thing. I mean, yeah, but not as good. But yes. But at the same time, it knows exactly what it is.
And it's, you know, it's quite, it's like schlocky and it's kind of funny in parts.
And the lead, whose name is, what's her name?
Jessica Roth or Roth.
It's got an E on the end.
She's really good at playing this particular character who goes from like really like bitchy
and mean to kind of learning a lesson.
And then also like getting really fed up and exasperated because every day she's getting stabbed or thrown off a building
and she's like god damn it i hate this and uh and so yeah and so she has to and every time she kind
of dies she learns something about the killer like where they might where they might be who it isn't
you know what i mean and it kind of unfolds as it as it goes so she's it's kind of this whodunit
with the added element of it's this time loop
that she's stuck in which she tries to break.
Anyway, there's a sequel that came out two days, two years later,
called Happy Death Day 2U.
That's a two and a U, like the number two and then the letter U.
Oh, I get it.
Yes.
I get it.
It's also her birthday.
Two, like T-O-U.
No, that's not what I said, Claire.
Happy death day to you, old Jim Bob.
Yes, thank you.
The gray hair is so great.
I wish it was my death day, I'll tell you that much,
and then I don't wake up again.
I have a raspberry seed stuck in one of my teeth.
That's good.
That's from stealing chocolate.
That's what you get.
Anyway, sorry, I'm nearly done.
So it's basically the same format except the twist on it is it turns out that what's been happening
is there's been alternate dimensions being created every time she's murdered so she's
kind of slips into a parallel dimension which is a lot like the first day she got murdered
but things are slightly different like her boyfriend's dating somebody else like one of
her nemesis or whatever the killer's different the person who killed her last time is now like a good person in this
because it's a slightly different dimension.
So it deals – it's kind of like Back to the Future 2.
I don't know if you've ever seen that, which I think you have.
I certainly have.
Where it deals with the same time period except there's a twist on it.
So I don't think the second one is as good as the first one,
but it's just – look, if you want like an easy kind of fun,
schlocky horror movie that if you're not really into horror,
if you're more kind of into rom-coms and like a mean girls kind of thing yeah it's kind of that and i think you
might actually like it that actually sounds like something i would like when you said happy death
day i was thinking it was going to be your usual recommendation which was like last time yeah it's
terrible there's a there's like a move like there's a lot of movies like this sort of like
there's like lindsey lohan's got one called like, I Know Who Killed Me or something like that.
But this one is, it knows exactly what it is
and it's kind of fun and breezy and it's like,
and the first one made like, they spent $5 million on it
and it made $120 million.
So it's like, that's the kind of movie.
That's fun.
That's the kind of money that this Blumhouse model,
I think is just, is fascinating anyway.
And really smart as well.
Cool.
So where can you find that?
The first one's on Netflix.
Second one I rented off iTunes or Google Play.
All right.
Excellent.
I actually am going to watch that.
Yeah.
I'm on a plane tomorrow.
Maybe I'll watch it on the plane.
Yeah, with our son sitting next to you.
Oh, yeah.
No, maybe not.
We'll get back.
You're a worse parent than me, and I'm a terrible parent, all right?
What's your recommendation?
What's your suggestible?
All right.
That sounds like a legit good suggestible thanks james my suggestible is glow oh yeah glow's great
i love it so much it was actually recommended to me by maizey x on twitter thank you so much
maizey and you know how many people recommend you things you initially kind of go i don't want to
watch it every goddamn day for some weird reason i always think oh no i of go, I don't want to watch it. Every goddamn day.
Yeah, for some weird reason, I always think, oh, no, I don't know.
I don't know.
And you always suggest things to me.
I'm always like, well.
And then as soon as I watch it, I love it.
And this is what happened with Glow.
I've almost finished the first season because I just binge watched it until like 1am last night.
Third season has just got released.
Correct.
It's on Netflix at the moment.
It is a show about gorgeous ladies of wrestling.
That's what GLOW stands for.
It stars Alison Bray, who was in Aubrey.
Sorry, Like the Cheese.
Like the Cheese, yeah.
There you go, B-R-I-E, who was originally in Mad Men.
And Community.
I'm sorry, I'm going to stop interrupting.
Because you've seen this as well.
Stop interrupting.
Let me talk.
Jeez.
And it also has the wonderful comedian Mark Maron from the podcast WTF. Yes. You've got to stop interrupting. You are, because you've seen this as well. Stop interrupting. Let me talk. Jeez, Lil.
And it also has the wonderful comedian Mark Maron from the podcast WTF.
Yes.
And he is his signature hilarious self in this.
Yes. I really am enjoying it.
It's set in LA in the 80s.
Alison Brie's character, Ruth, is basically an actor who can't get any work.
There's no good female roles as well.
Yeah, there isn't.
Thanks for interrupting again.
I'm just trying to, I'm fleshing out.
Podcasts are back and forth, Claire.
It's not a one-sided conversation unless you're listening to the show.
He's awake, guys.
Last week you were about to have a nap, but this is your time to shine.
I'm ready.
Okay, so there are no great female roles.
Alison Brie keeps getting knocked back.
Ruth, her character,, keeps getting knocked back from
everything. And so
then she kind of stumbles into this audition
of misfits, of women
who were misfits in Hollywood. And
it's for a female wrestling show. Mike Maron's
character, Mike Maron's character,
is the director. And it kind
of just goes on from there. It's so
surprising how touching it
is, as well as hilarious. It's so surprising how touching it is as well as hilarious.
It's very funny.
The pacing is brilliant.
What I really loved about it, though, is it's created by Carly Minsk,
I'm going to say these names wrong, and Liz Flauheim,
and those two are the showrunners.
And I heard an interview with a couple of the actors,
one in particular, Gilpin,
who plays the gorgeous blonde character, Debbie,
who's kind of like the hero to Alison Brie's characters,
like Russian, terrible, what is it,
Zoya the Destroyer wrestling character.
Because when you, like, you loved the show,
but then when they're actually doing the wrestling,
you're like, why do people like this?
Yeah, why is wrestling a thing? I've never really understood it before. And then it kind're actually doing the wrestling, you're like, why do people like this? Yeah, why is wrestling a thing?
I've never really understood it before.
And then it kind of explores in the show how actually it's just a soap opera.
It's exactly what it is.
Yeah, and you blew my mind with that.
It's like a soap opera.
It's like an ongoing series.
It's like anything.
It's like the Marvel Universe.
It's like Anne of Green Gables or whatever.
It's an ongoing narrative.
It's like Little Women, which had a new trailer this week.
And let me tell you, they should call it Regular Size Women.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, it does look – actually, that trailer for Little Women
does look really awesome.
It does, yeah.
I'm really excited about it.
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
And so I suddenly am starting to learn about why people are so into wrestling.
I didn't realize it was all for show.
People don't actually get hurt in it.
It's not boxing.
People do get hurt.
Oh, they do?
Occasionally, yeah.
Sometimes they die.
Oh, God. Really? There was a yeah. Sometimes they die. Oh, God.
Really? There was a guy a few years back,
I can't remember which, one of the Hart brothers, I can't remember which one,
he was getting lowered into the ring and he fell and he hit his head on the turnbuckle and died.
And the whole crowd is like, boo, get up!
Because you don't know what's real. And an ambulance
rolls in and people think it's all part of whatever.
Because that kind of stuff happens all the time, you know.
Yeah, yeah, it's all staged.
But it's a lot of like, you know, like heart surgeries because they've,
you know, a lot of them from the 80s in particular had a lot of steroid abuse
and things like that to get that big and just bad knees.
There's a movie called The Wrestler with Mickey Rourke,
which covers a lot.
Anyway, sorry, go on.
Okay.
I didn't realize that.
Oh, my God.
It's like a competitive sport in like injury-wise, that is.
Okay.
But it's not like you're not punching them.
No, but it's more kind of staged, right?
But it's very physical.
It's very taxing.
Yeah, and you see that in this.
The women are really trained hard to become quite muscular
and kick-ass, which I really, really love.
Most of the bosses and the producers on this are women,
so it's created a completely different environment.
Yeah.
And Gilpin was talking about how as an actor she's had to re-examine the way that she acts in front of male directors and men in general and how often it stifles creativity.
And I found that completely for me when I'm often sitting on a panel and it's me, I'm the only girl, I immediately feel unease and I feel kind of restricted.
And I'm not saying that I'm the same as like those actors in a big Hollywood TV show,
but it does stifle your creativity in a way.
And she said that because it's such a female-dominated set,
you immediately relax and it's a different environment,
which means that you are no longer
feeling like the male gaze on your body in the way that you move your body, in the way
that you say things, in the way you can ad-lib.
Yeah, right.
It's just this like freedom that the women kind of experience.
And you can see that in the TV show because of the way that they interact with each other,
the way that they, like Alison Brie doesn't have to be sexy in this at all.
In fact, she's quite unlikable.
There's even a line where he's like,
are you good looking or not?
I can't tell.
Yeah, exactly.
And she's quite a sexless character.
Like, she has an affair in the very first opening kind of scenes
which shapes the rest of the series.
But other than that, she's really quite a sexless character.
And that kind of freedom just creates this sort of warm welcoming vibe
or not even i don't even know if it's welcoming it's kind of it's safe you know what's really
absolutely and you know what's really good about her in particular like she has been kind of framed
that way before and she's really good like she's been good in a bunch of stuff including like
community and and mad men as you mentioned but she's really good at acting like a bad actor. And then that layer always impresses me when, you know,
she'll do like a monologue and then she'll kind of have an actual real,
like genuine moment within the show, like directly after.
And it's really impressive the way that she can kind of switch.
Isn't it?
Because bad acting, I'd imagine, I don't know anything about it,
it must be such a fine line to kind of tip over into kind of ludicrous,
you know what I mean?
Yeah, exactly.
And then on a hairpin, she can go from being terrible as an actor
to being, yeah, brilliant, and brilliant as a bad actor
becoming a good actor as well.
Yes, yeah.
Because she then kind of owns her character
and finds this kind of wrestling, what is it, Zoya the Destroyer?
Persona, yeah.
Yeah, persona.
And that's great to see on screen.
The persona thing is interesting as well because a lot of the most famous
wrestlers, they go through a few personas.
Like Dwayne The Rock Johnson, he was The Rock,
but before that he was something else.
I can't remember what it was.
And they kind of find their way.
And once you pick, once you land on a character that kind of resonates
with audiences,
it really kind of takes off.
You like develop this.
Narrative for the audience and this whole backstory.
Yeah,
absolutely.
Yeah.
That's what really fascinated me about it.
Yeah.
Anyway,
I highly recommend checking out Glow.
It's really,
really awesome.
I've only seen the first season.
So when you get up to two,
we should watch it together.
Yeah.
We never watch anything together.
We never do anymore.
And I've stopped watching the Handmaid's Tale as well. We never watch it together. Yeah, yeah. Because we never watch anything together anymore. We never do anymore. And I stopped watching The Handmaid's Tale as well.
We never watched it together.
It was too intense for me.
One other thing I will say about Glow is it made me cry.
It did that thing where it makes me laugh so much and the pace of it and the timing
and editing is just great.
Yeah.
Like there was a shot in the last episode I watched where Mike Maron kind of at the
very end of the scene kicks over a coffee cup.
The coffee kind of rolls onto the ground and he goes, ah, fuck.
And then he stubs out his cigarette into the spilt coffee and just walks off.
And it doesn't need to be there.
There's nothing he said about it.
It just moves on to the next scene.
But it is just such a great way of showing his, like,
general mental state and not give a fuckness.
He's great.
We saw him when he was in Melbourne once.
Do you remember?
We saw his comedy show.
Yeah, I do.
He was in Tim Tams on stage or whatever.
Yeah, yeah.
He's awesome and his podcast was one of the originals.
Yeah, it was, yeah.
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My next one, I was going to talk about this last week,
but I just finished it and I kind of wanted to sit on it a bit
to kind of think on it.
It's called Euphoria.
It's a show, I believe it's HBO, but it might not be.
I should have looked into that.
Anyway, it stars Zendaya, who you might know as the new Mary Jane from the Spider-Man movies yeah she's great she's really
well I really like her in that movie and also in this movie but less so they're not the same
character but she's really she's really funny and kind of and like mean and sharp which I really
really enjoy also it's interesting this is unrelated but in Spider-Man it's she's quite
tall and she's
clearly taller than peter parker but they don't put him in lifts like they do for like robert
danny jr and gwyneth paltrow who like they make him the same height anyway that's a funny little
movies yeah it's ridiculous often she'll be barefoot and he'll be in like iron man boots or
whatever but uh jacob elordi who plays like a bully in it uh maude apatow who's you know uh
leslie man and judd one of Judd Apatow's girls.
She's like 21 now.
But anyway, if you've ever seen Skins,
it's like, which is a British show,
which is focused on teen drama and things like that.
But not just like, not teen drama in the sense of like,
I don't know, like the OC, I guess.
It's more kind, it's very-
It's not gritty, right?
It's very gritty.
It's like, so Zendaya's character,
she's a drug addict and she grew up and she was diagnosed with like OCD and a bunch of other things
and she lost her father when she was a teenager.
So this leads her into like substance abuse where she's just taking
any and all pills or whatever.
So it's her and her mum and her younger sister.
And so it deals with things like that.
There's a couple of transgender actors in it as well which kind of weaves
into the story but not in like a,
not an obvious and kind of, I guess, kind of cliche way, I guess.
Do you know what I mean?
Where everyone seems to be aware that this person is transgender,
but it's not really, it's not a big, it's not the main focus.
It's more like this character is kind of beyond that,
which is really interesting.
Yeah, well, that's like in Booksmart.
Yeah. Like the girl, I can't remember her name now, who is really interesting. Yeah, well, that's like in Booksmart. Yeah.
Like the girl, I can't remember her name now,
who is one of the lead characters is gay,
but it's not the main plot line.
It's just like a side note.
It just is.
Yeah.
And there's like people struggling with their sexuality.
The bully in particular who's in this is just this terrible
like jock character who just seemingly,
he's really cunning and ruthless and just kind of gets away with stuff.
And there's kind of this,
this hint towards,
is he gay or is he bisexual?
Does it like,
and,
and that kind of feeds into the anger and the things that he does,
you kind of get,
you get the sense of why he's doing it,
even though he's terrible.
And it deals with like pornography and how that plays a role in teenagers
lives.
And when you grow up with it,
how does that affect relationships?
You know,
because if you watch, if teenagers watch a lot of pornography as you. And when you grow up with it, how does that affect relationships? You know, because if teenagers watch a lot of pornography,
you know, when they're little, it kind of can bleed over
into what they think is normal into real life, you know what I mean?
Yeah, absolutely.
Which is a problem in schools, which we've experienced in schools.
It's a huge thing.
And I actually said to a friend the other day that I want to talk
to my son about porn and she looked at me and was like,
he's three and also dad's disturbing.
And I was like, no, no, I know that sounds weird,
but it's because boys especially often their first, and girls too,
but particularly young men, their first idea of what sex is is porn.
And that is nowhere near what actually makes for a healthy sex life
and nowhere near what women like.
And certainly not the first thing you want to be doing with somebody.
No, exactly.
And it gives these unreal expectations for women of what they should look like and how
they should act.
And also, guys want women to enjoy it.
And instead, they're watching this stuff and none of those moves are actually enjoyable
for women.
It's positioned for the camera and whatever and what looks best.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
But it's also people sending nude selfies to each other and how that effect and it's becomes like almost like a currency in this show
which which it is and that's something we taught primary school but you see you hear you know we
hear a lot of it in from people who who either go on into high school or you know we've got friends
who work in high schools and it is a problem you know what i mean what i always i used to do this
lesson with my kids was i showed i showed a picture Perry with no makeup on, but it was Russell Brand when they used to date or when they were married,
posted online and was online for like 30 seconds, but it's online forever.
And they're like, oh, that's funny or whatever.
But it's like if anything you put on your phone or anything ever digital, you may as
well just assume that everybody's going to say this.
That's how you should approach everything you put online, you know?
Yeah.
well just assume that everybody's going to see this.
That's how you should approach everything you put online, you know?
Yeah.
And there's kind of, there's shaming and people being stuck in their roles and their jobs and just being a teenager and it sucks and people getting
away with things that shouldn't be getting away with things.
But aside from all that, aside from all that,
it's just a really beautifully made show and in terms of how it's structured
and the storyline and the characters and
the relationships between each other,
but also some of the shots are just spectacular.
I showed you one in particular where Zendaya takes a drug and then walks down
a hallway and the hallway spins and she kind of climbs the ceiling.
And as it rotates around,
but all the people in the room don't move.
And I'm looking at this shot and I couldn't work out how they did it.
And it turns out that they kind of tied everybody down
and spun the whole room.
That is insane.
And so they look like they're not moving while she's kind of doing
a loop of the room.
And it's just incredible.
It's eight episodes.
It's going to get a second season.
But it's just spectacular television.
That being said, it's really grim and you'd probably hate it.
I might be able to handle it. But it's really excellent.
It's probably one of the best shows I've seen this year. Oh wow, that's a big call.
And Leonardo DiCaprio likes it. He said so in an interview recently. Oh, there you go.
I wonder if he'll review the Weekly Planet soon like Macaulay Culkin did.
Maybe they will. Maybe he will. Maybe they both will.
Maybe they won't. Maybe they won't. Who
knows? Oh, well, there you go. Okay.
And that's on Netflix as well? No, that's on
Hulu, HBO. I think it's on Fox out
here, but it's on HBO
overseas, yeah. I definitely acquired
it illegally, in answer to your question.
Oh, God, no, don't say that. No, legally
I said. Oh, legally.
Alright, legally
from Google Play or iTunes or one of those many spots.
Yes.
All right.
Well, that actually ties really well into my next recommendation.
My suggestible is a TED Talk by, yeah.
They still do those?
They do.
They still do them.
I actually, a couple of months ago, was very lucky enough to go to the Sydney TED Talk Expo thing,
which was incredible.
And I watched all these amazing speakers and it reminded me again how to the Sydney TED Talks Expo thing, which was incredible. And I watched all these amazing speakers,
and it reminded me again how much I love TED Talks.
Occasionally when I'm feeling kind of down and out,
I just like to go in and Google, like, I don't know, depression,
and then see what comes up.
Or just have such fascinating people talk on TED Talks.
They do.
Anyway, this one is by a girl called Eve Blake, and that's YVE.
I just want to point out, I didn't steal it.
It's like you can stream it
after the season was finished.
It's not the Hino there.
Just in case people
like I'll definitely steal a thing
but this thing I did not steal.
It's a bad
you can get it.
I just don't like Foxtel.
Nothing dodgy.
Nothing nice is happening here.
It's all good.
Sorry, I'll be stealing stuff.
I'm sorry.
I just wanted to point that out
in case, you know.
Oh, good lord.
You just interrupted me.
I apologize.
Keep going, please.
I apologize.
Are you sure?
Are you done?
And another thing.
And another thing.
No, go on.
All right.
Eve Lake does a TED Talk called Fangirls, which on the outset you think, why do I care
about this?
You should.
It's awesome.
She deep dives into the phenomenon of fangirls and those, you know, those kind of amazingly obsessive girls who follow like the Beatles, say,
and that kind of screaming fan of, I don't know, One Direction
or the Spice Girls and how they kind of fall head over heels
and they would just do anything for those kind of guys.
Yeah.
In bands like that.
And how she kind of realised that over time women are perceived,
particularly young women are perceived if they're obsessed in that way as crazy.
But then when you think about young men that go to the football and they scream
and cry and yell over their favorite soccer hero, it is exactly the same thing.
Everyone's a nerd about something.
Exactly.
But women, particularly young girls, are often seen as hysterical
rather than kind of like boisterous or, you know, just a fan.
So she deep dives into that and it's really, really interesting.
It's also very funny.
She interviews a lot of different fangirls.
She talks to young girls who are obsessed with like Harry Styles
and the phenomenon of how like he vomited on the side of a freeway
when in 15 minutes there was a shrine.
Did you hear he turned down the role of Prince Eric in The New Little Mermaid?
I did hear that because I've got my ear to the grindstone.
How do you feel about that?
I don't know.
What's your ear to the grindstone?
I don't know.
I always make more metaphors.
I'm very tired.
I don't cope late at night.
We should find an optimum point for this.
We should.
I don't know when it is because we both peak at different points during the day.
Who knows?
Oh, God.
Anyway, I've always been listening for Disney news and I did know that one.
Yeah, so it's really great.
It's a TED Talk.
She has also created a musical, which is incredible.
She's a singer as well as a musician.
And I interviewed her for Just Make the Thing, my podcast.
And that will be coming out soon this week as well.
Is that out this week?
Yes.
Oh, excellent.
Yeah, the musical that she's written and stars in, oh, my God,
she's so clever.
It's out in Brisbane and Sydney in September and October,
so you can get tickets for that if you're lucky enough to be in those cities.
And I just so reckon you should jump on board.
Tim Minchin, that Australian guy who created Matilda,
is one of her mentors and saw her performing something and just
like fell over heels and said she was brilliant.
The great thing about Eve Blake is that she's all self-taught.
So she's an actor, but she's a great singer, but she never mastered music and never learned
how to kind of read musical playing instrument exactly.
So she's created this musical with really complex, like incredibly amazing scores all through using a computer program.
Right, okay, yeah.
So she's clearly just got an ear for it.
Yeah, she's got an ear for it and painstakingly put this together
and layered it and it's just funky and hilarious and loud and raucous
and joyful and covered in sequins and glitter.
Would you say give the TED Talk a listen, sure,
and the musical if it's in your area,
but maybe check out the podcast episode where you talk to her
about creativity and such?
Yeah, but I think you should listen to the TED Talk first.
Yes, yes, yes.
I'm also saying that, Claire.
It's only like a 10-minute TED Talk.
Oh, thank God.
She came out in a full sequin bodysuit and it was just like the best thing ever.
There is definitely that episode.
And there's also people who are like, there are,
because there are like manic crazy fanboys as well.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, she talks to them as well.
She kind of looks at why people become obsessed with like a celebrity.
But it is a thing of like, it's hysterical often when it's associated
with women, like talking like Beatlemania.
It's like, look at all those screaming women or whatever.
Yeah, aren't they ridiculous?
Yeah, but men screaming at football is fine.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly, and going above and beyond and, like,
punching each other over, like, you know,
what colour their teammates wear or whatever.
Exactly.
And also, like I said before, maybe I said this today,
did I say this?
Everyone's a nerd about something.
You already said that.
You said that a lot.
Did I say it this particular episode, though?
Yes, you did.
Oh, good.
I know, just repeating yourself in your old age.
Oh, well, so that's who I would recommend.
We're nearly coming to the end of the show.
Thank God.
I have one more cheeky recommendation.
Can I sneak it in?
Claire, what's the time?
Look at the machine.
27 minutes to go.
You're lucky.
You are a lucky duck.
I'm sneaking it in.
Okay, so this is a book that I'm reading at the moment.
It's called You Will Probably Survive by the Lawrence of La.
I mean, not in the long term.
No, no.
It's actually a parenting book, which I know kind of sounds boring,
but it's hilarious.
I've tried parenting books.
Yeah, I know.
Me too.
But it's not that kind of parenting book.
It doesn't give you any advice on how to do anything.
It's just funny.
It just goes through all the ridiculous things that people tell you
about parenthood and then just debunks all of the myths about sleep and all the bs goes through being pregnant
and your expectations to like having a baby and then having a toddler and she basically just talks
about how freaking hard it all is and can you give me an example of like a thing that she debunks
yeah sure absolutely so i will say she talks a lot about how people are always going on about
sleep routines and like before you have the baby how you get given books like this stupid book
called save your sleep where you're supposed to like get up at 6 45 exactly and feed your baby
i mean and that works for some people obviously well it does and that's exactly what she says
like it works for some not for others yeah we kind of started with things like that and then
we're just like you know what fuck it let's just do what we yeah and that's kind of what she says like it works for some not for others yeah we kind of started with things like that and then we're just like you know what fuck it let's just do what we yeah and that's kind of
what she says um so that's kind of her shtick really and just like the whole idea that you
have this idea of what you'll be like as a parent and then the reality of it is your child pooping
on your dog or something and you're running around just like just in a total flap and panic and not
being able to just clarify our child has never pooped on our dog no he really never has but i
just thought it'd be funny analogy but like it's just it's just really nice to read if you're
someone who's got a small child if you're about to have a baby and you just want to hear all the
stuff that nobody tells you yeah you know all the really warts and all, not beautiful Instagrammable pictures.
I think I've discouraged some people from having kids from just being like,
people lie to you.
And I didn't, I was on a note, you know,
I didn't think that going in would be easy,
but it's harder than in ways that you don't expect, I guess.
Yeah.
And so without like explicitly telling people, because you really can't, it's one of those
things you can only truly experience.
But yeah, it's, I've discouraged people by being like, people lie to you.
People say like birth's magical and whatever.
It's horrible.
It's like being in a horror movie.
Yeah.
And look, some people do have those magical unicorn births.
And that's what she says too.
Like all of this comes with like a disclaimer because there are those magical unicorn babies
that sleep through the night.
And some women do just like pull their babies out and have this like wonderful orgasm as they're like doing it all.
And it's just these roses and candles.
Kids grow up to be ice addicts though, generally.
Who knows?
But she said, but they're the rare people.
Do you remember when, I'm sure you remember when you were giving, when you were in labor.
No, I've forgotten.
And you're like, put on. Yeah, of I've forgotten. And you're like, put on.
Yeah, of course I do.
And you're like, put on the music that I love.
Oh, my relaxing like a bird.
And as soon as I put it on, you're like, no, fucking turn it off.
No.
I'd rather nothing.
I'd rather just hear my own screams.
Yeah, exactly.
My one memory of that whole birthday is like me being in the worst state of my whole life.
I ended up with so many drugs on board and all these things,
and I look over and you're eating a chicken burger.
I was eating a big sandwich.
A big chicken sandwich.
That's my one memory, and I remember thinking,
that goddamn asshole.
I want to specify, we went there at like four in the morning,
and it was like maybe two or four in the afternoon.
I have no idea.
I hadn't eaten all day.
Yeah, it was like 16 hours.
And the nurse said, go and get something to eat.
So we got a chicken sandwich or whatever.
I didn't just disappear and go get a sandwich.
It was a chicken burger and you were sitting there with your feet up on the side of the
bed, chomping away.
I loved it, mate.
Mate, it was brutal.
Anyway, she talks a lot about that, about the difference between the reality and the
expectations and how funny it is and how the things that you say before you have kids like,
oh, our kids will never watch television or like our kids will only eat healthy meals
made by a unicorn lady from the side of the road or something.
I would not buy any food from a unicorn woman from the side of the road.
I don't know.
I make no sense at this time of night.
Anyway, yeah, it's just great.
And if you've got someone in your life who's just had a baby.
I do, but we've got to wrap it up, Claire.
We don't have time for these shenanigans.
And you should also go follow her on Instagram,
thelaurendubois, D-U-B-O-I-S.
It'll all be linked below.
Sounds good.
She's fun.
She does lip sync battles.
They're awesome.
Fantastic.
She stole that probably, I'd imagine, from other.
Isn't that TikTok?
Doesn't matter.
Hey, listen, Claire.
Listen up.
Listen up.
Do you have any recommendations of the people who have written in?
I certainly do.
I'm just getting them in.
While you're doing that, I'm just going to say, if you want to review the show, you can
do it right in app.
This is from Bobby.
Bobby.
Bob's 64.
It says, wife approved.
This is one of the few podcasts my wife will listen to with me.
The Weekly Planet is too nerdy for her and Do Go On has too many Simpsons references.
Both of those are excellent podcasts, by the way, that they've said.
Anyway, I love the chemistry between Mr. Sunday Movies and Claire Tonti.
It's like they're married or something and have gotten some pretty solid recommendations already, e.g. I Am Mother.
So he's picked one of my recommendations, obviously, because why wouldn't you?
Because I know what I'm talking about.
Mine are the best.
Well, he didn't mention anyone.
My brother also said, I liked your podcast.
I listened to Watch My Mother.
I'm like, what about my recommendation?
Anyway.
All right.
I've got one from Aaron Filler.
Thank you, sir.
I know you guys liked Fleabag.
Check out Back to Life.
It is another short six-episode BBC dark comedy drama and is very good.
I think you'd like it.
I'm just looking at this now.
Ooh, that sounds right up my alley.
I really am into that.
But what is it, though?
That's not said, Aaron Filler.
What do you mean, what is it?
He just told us.
Yeah, I know, but specifics.
It's a six-episode BBC dark comedy drama.
Mary Matheson returns from prison after 18 years
and attempts to integrate back into her old life.
Ooh, okay, interesting.
It's directed by Chris Sweeney.
I don't know who that is.
I don't know who that is either.
Okay, another one here.
David Molofsky of AP2HYC on Twitter says,
James, if you liked Making Comics by Scott McLeod,
you should check out How Comics Work by Dave Gibbons, 90, and Tim Pilcher.
Another great book about making comics and can be enjoyed by non-comic creators and creators
alike.
I saw that.
That's a great recommendation.
I will check those out.
Correct.
Exactly.
Also, I have another awesome review from someone.
Okay.
This guy is Native Sonindy.
I don't know.
Well said.
He says, the cow story is worth it.
Love these two's chemistry.
Both will crack you up.
And the cow story in the You Can't Read a Horse episode made me laugh so hard
I broke out of an anxiety-filled funk.
Amazing.
Thanks, mate.
That is a solid story.
That's great.
Well, yeah, it's true.
It is, actually.
It's completely true.
It's a true story.
Yep.
You'll have to listen to the last week's episode to find out about the cow.
All right, we've really gone over time this week.
How much time we we at now?
We're at like 34 minutes.
This is outrageous.
We need to end the show right now, forever.
We've broken what this show is about at its core,
and that is not going over 30 minutes.
Goodbye forever, everybody.
We'll be back next week.
I enjoyed it.
It just has to be four minutes shorter next week.
I've got more recommendations.
We're doing 26 minutes next week.
No. I'm at MrSundayMovies on Twitter. Send us some stuff. I'm at Claire20 on Instagram and
at MrSundayMovies on Twitter. And you should follow us on our suggestible pod. And I need
to go to bed. Good night, everybody. You can get anything you need with Uber Eats. Well,
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