Suggestible - Rutherford Falls
Episode Date: May 6, 2021Suggestible things to watch, read and listen to. Hosted by James Clement @mrsundaymovies and Claire Tonti @clairetonti.Sign up to Claire’s weekly bonus newsletters here – tontsnewsletterThis week�...��s Suggestibles:The Zero F*cks Recipe BookWelcome to ConsentRutherford FallsColonyMidnight ChickenSet Me On Fire: A Pooem For Every FeelingThe Dick Cavett Show on YouTubeSend 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)
Hi, this is Katnett Unfiltered.
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I made a mistake, James. What's the mistake, James?
I made fish stew and I fished up a house. You did. Well, you're just saying what I said
before the show. You've taken my excellent line about fishing up the house.
They made a fish stew.
It was delicious but we've been dealing with the consequences ever since.
I know because the paper from the fish because I was all in a blithery,
dithery, I don't know, whatever this week.
You had fish madness.
I had fish madness.
Mercury poisoning.
I put the wrapper from like the paper that it was wrapped in
in the recycling bin instead of in the regular bin and I forgot about it
and it just stunk out everything.
And even though I put everything in the rubbish bin, it still stinks.
I don't know why I'm telling everyone this.
Unless you're doing a fish finger, which is prepackaged, frozen or whatever,
you're going to get that fish situation.
It's going to happen.
You're going to fish up your house unless you're really careful.
Yeah.
I feel like even if you are really careful, it still happens.
So what do we do?
I think we have-
We could destroy the oceans.
I think that's already happening.
Oh yeah, cool. Lucky.
Lucky. Oh God. Anyway, on another note, we are Suggestible Podcast. I'm Claire,
James here also. We are married and we recommend you stuff. I've just had a low-cal hot chocolate and it wasn't very good.
That's life.
You either eat well and you're happy but also miserable or you eat.
No.
What are you trying to say?
You're miserable either way.
There's a trade-off.
You either eat well and you have great food and you're having a good time.
Yes.
You know what I mean?
Yes.
But maybe you're not in as good shape as you want to be or the other way where you're
in another thing and et cetera.
Okay.
Yeah, this is the constant swing of my life, right, because I love to cook.
I love it.
And I really enjoy eating a lot.
Wow.
I know.
You're so unique.
I know.
Shut up.
You're not like other girls, Claire.
James is loving because that's something that I'm talking about
on a different podcast that I'm creating.
Eventually I will release that bloody thing.
It's getting there.
It's getting there.
It's coming along.
Got some good guests lined up as well.
Yeah, I'm really excited about it.
Anyhoo, on that note, on that delightful note where James told me
I'm not like other girls and I have realised it's a really sexist line.
Yeah.
Because what's wrong with other girls?
Other girls are awesome.
No, they're not.
Well, also I secretly love that you said that to me too.
Oh, my God.
Which is the whole horrible.
Look at your internalised.
I didn't even mean it.
It was like.
Terrible internalised misogyny.
It was clearly like a joke.
A joke.
I know.
Yeah.
But that in itself is the horrible crux that women find themselves in. So true. I know. Yeah. But that in itself is the horrible crux that women find themselves in.
So true.
I know.
What are we recommending today on the show where we recommend things?
Well, I have a few things.
Do you want to go first or do you want me to go first?
You can go first.
Excellent.
All right.
Okay, cool.
I have a book for tweens and teens this week.
Perfect.
What do you got?
What's it called?
So have you heard of a thing called consent, James?
Have I heard of a thing called consent?
Yes.
Imagine if I said no.
What's that?
No.
Anyway.
I don't think so.
It sounds made up.
Dr. Melissa Kang and Yumi Steins, both of whom,
so Dr. Melissa Kang is an adolescent health expert
and Yumi Steins is an author and writer.
She's also written
the recipe book series Zero Fucks, which is a really excellent recipe recommendation,
if I do say so myself. Her sticky chicken wings are a thing to behold. But she's also a commentator
and just really funny and creative and great. And a host, I think, of a lot of different things.
That's right.
And she and Melissa have released a book in this series called,
it's like a welcome series.
So the first one was Welcome to Your Period for tweens
and it's all about, it's kind of got funny illustrations
and it's written in a really lovely way aimed at teens
about talking about your period and all of the stuff
that goes along with that.
And the second book, which is the one I'm recommending today,
is called Welcome to Consent.
It's an inclusive, frank and funny guide to navigating consent
for tweens and teens of all genders.
So whether you're a curious 11 to 14-year-old or the parent of someone
with a bunch of questions, this book is reassuring, interesting
and full of the info you need.
Oh.
Yeah.
I need info.
Yeah, do you?
Oh, good. Excellent. Yeah, yeah. Correct. Well, excellent.
It's really well done because consent obviously is something that I think particularly for parents
at the moment, a lot of people are talking about. And when we talk about consent, what we really
mean is allowing young people to voice when they're not comfortable and when they are comfortable.
Exactly, and checking in.
Yeah, exactly.
And obviously this is around sex and relationships,
but it can also just be, as the book outlines,
just in friendships and relationships.
Absolutely, yeah.
Even within family members about what you're comfortable
and not comfortable with and being able to voice no
and then also being able to accept that someone has said no
in a really friendly and positive way.
Yeah.
And actually that is one of the massive thing I think
about this content in this book and also about consent more broadly.
It's not just about empowering young people and adults,
people of all genders, to be able to say I'm not comfortable
in this situation or this is what I would like and this is what I need
at this point in time, which I think can be really hard,
particularly in relationships, right, to be able to say I'm just
not comfortable in this situation.
I think particularly when you're a teen and a tween.
Definitely, yeah, it changes the whole dynamic and I know people are like,
well, is this person not going to like me anymore or whatever?
Quite frankly, if they're bothered by that, then no good.
Get rid of them.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Well, I think, yeah, completely.
I think the other side of it is, yeah, just like what you said,
if someone says no to you, not being offended
by that and taking that to heart as meaning they don't like you or they don't want to
be around you, it's that particular thing that you've offered isn't something that
they're okay with.
And it might even be like that particular time or whatever, you know what I mean?
It's an ongoing discussion and checking in.
Yeah, exactly.
And so it's really just about communication and being
really clear between the two of you and being really vocal about what you need and what the
other person needs. And so having enthusiastic consent and just always checking in, you know,
if you're getting down to the business, just checking in and making sure that's okay or this
is okay and where you're at. I think it's so important. The other thing this book talks about which I find really interesting
is that whole idea of flight.
I'm going to get this wrong.
Fight, flight or freeze.
Do you know what I mean?
Whoa.
Do you know what I mean by that?
Yeah, I do.
Do you want me to explain it?
Do you want me to explain it?
I'll explain it.
I'll tell you if you're doing it right.
Excellent.
I appreciate it. So that's that'll tell you if you're doing it right. Excellent. I appreciate it.
So that's that whole idea of when you're in a situation
that makes you feel uncomfortable, some people will fight, right?
They'll go on the attack and be like, stop doing it, run,
get really aggro and angry and aggressive or rude in order
to kind of get out of that situation.
Yep.
Some people will flight, which means that they'll just bloody book it out of their
Leg it out of there, make your kisses and go.
They'll just leg it.
Yeah, exactly.
Men won't even say anything but just get out of there as soon as they possibly can without
articulating anything necessarily, just running.
But some people, which I think is really difficult and is a kind of place that I can do this too when I'm in an awkward
situation is freeze. And I found I do this just in general with just, I don't know, strange
situations. Like for instance, when I was riding my bike as a kid and I went down our driveway,
which is super steep and halfway
through riding down the driveway I just like realised I just froze.
I got so terrified and I forgot how to use the brakes
and I just froze on the bike and sailed right across the road
and right down the driveway of our neighbour's house
and like crashed into their back wall of their carport,
scraping both their family cars.
Anyway, so and that's kind of a tricky situation to be in.
That is a tricky situation to be in.
Isn't it?
I was wearing an orange stack hat and everything on my bike.
We all were.
Yeah, anyway, but I think if you're someone that freezes
in those kind of situations, people might say to you,
well, why didn't you just say something?
Why didn't you speak up and say this was bothering me or why didn't you, you know, fight back or whatever? And it's because literally your body
just freezes up and you can't do anything. Automatic response. Yeah.
Yeah, exactly. Anyway, I think it's a really beautifully illustrated book and you can also
get an ebook. So you don't even have to buy the actual hard copy.
And a book. You can buy it as an e-book from Booktopia.
Air book.
An air book.
So it's a really good in to have this kind of what can be quite an awkward conversation
with your tween or teen.
Cool.
But super, super important.
No, I think that's a really important conversation to have or not even a conversation, just give
them the book and be like, I don't want to talk about this.
And actually, Yumi Steins is the one that I got the idea
of the word pineapple from, which I thought was really great.
So that's that idea that if you're in a situation with kids
where you're mucking around or tickling or whatever and playing,
you kind of agree on a word that allows them to say stop.
And if one person says that, it completely means stop.
It means all hands off, that's it, they're not comfortable.
Yep.
And so we use pineapple but you could use any kind of word.
You could use any fruit.
Any fruit.
Or vegetable.
Anyway, but I just like the idea with little kids of teaching them
that tiny little thing so that they feel empowered.
And it sows that seed for later.
Yeah, because I think tickling is a really great example of that
because you can be saying stop but what you really mean is this is hilarious
and this is really funny and it hurts but in a good way.
Yeah.
You know, I'm laughing so much I can't breathe.
This is fun.
So if you have that word in there, then that's already starting
to teach kids about their own boundaries and their own safety.
Yeah, absolutely. Anyway, there's a little parenting tip and we've own boundaries and their own safety. Yeah, absolutely.
Anyway, there's a little parenting tip and we've used it
and it's been great.
Yeah, I agree.
It's worked really well.
That's it.
Are you ready for mine?
Yeah.
Rutherford Falls.
There's a show that I watched.
Why did you say it like that?
Ten episodes called Rutherford Falls.
It's created by Ed Helms, who people would know from The Office
and The Hangover.
Egg Helms. Egg Helms.
Egg Helms.
I was going to say he produced Auntie Donna's series for Netflix.
Michael Schur, who worked on The Office as well, created there.
And Sierra Teller, or Nales, who's one of the showrunners on this as well,
who's actually Navajo American, and that ties into this show.
So it's a comedy.
It's in a sleepy town called Rutherford Falls in the heartland
of America somewhere, wherever that is.
I don't know.
But you know what I mean?
It's kind of like a porny kind of, you know,
from Parks and Rec kind of town.
But it's more kind of more.
I thought for a minute you were like it's kind of porny kind of town.
I was like, well, how awkward is that?
So it's a sleepy town and it starts with the idea
of that there's this statue in the middle of a roundabout
which is a descendant of Ed Helms and people keep crashing into it
because it's in the middle of the town and it starts off with like.
Does it look like Ed Helms?
No, not really.
It's just a guy with like a pilgrim hat or whatever.
And it starts with like we should move this statue
because it's a traffic hazard.
But it becomes kind of a lot more than that.
And also one of the leads as well is Yana,
I'm not sure how to pronounce this, Shmeiding?
And she basically runs a cultural center for Native Americans
in the middle of a casino.
And it's this thing that like nobody visits.
And she's like, why am I bothering with this?
And she's very well educated, but she also wants to do the right thing but she also wants,
you know, do you know what I mean?
So it's kind of this, she's between like I need to make money and exist but also this
is part of my heritage and I think it's really important.
How do I get people involved?
And one of the standout characters is Michael Greyeyes who owns a casino and at first-
And has grey eyes?
Well, I guess he does.
That's his name.
This is his real name in real life.
Ah.
And you think he's like a con man because he owns this casino
and he's just, you know, you think he's just fleecing the town
and patrons for money.
But it's interesting because all these characters,
they're fleshed out in really like interesting ways
and it delves into not only the history of the town
but also the history of them and how they all kind of relate to each other and friendship like there's one
moment with the casino um uh with a with a casino owner where a big city lawyer kind of rolls into
town to kind of get him to back down from this lawsuit that he's building and he just like
demolishes this guy and it's really quite funny and um and because they're kind of like oh this guy doesn't know what he's doing he's just from this small town or whatever And it's, it's really quite funny. And, um, and because they're kind of like,
oh, this guy doesn't know what he's doing. He's just from this small town or whatever. And it's
just, he just like dismantles this dude and sends him like crying out of the, out of the room.
So yeah, it's about like identity and family and history and like the clashing of cultures. It's
also like deeper than you think. It kind of goes into themes as well of all of those things in
really interesting ways. and it's quite funny
and it's not it's not pandering it's just kind of it's just interesting and good and well worth
a look so if you're overseas in the u.s for example it's on peacock but here it's on stan
all 10 episodes and i think it's been renewed which is good because it's a really good show
it's one of those shows where you watch them and then you're like ah now i gotta wait a year or
whatever for whenever they get around to this again.
That sounds really good.
Where can I find it again?
You did tell me that.
You can watch it on Stan, but it's on Peacock.
All right.
Okay.
Excellent.
I will enjoy that.
You will.
You would like it.
It's really good.
All right.
Okay.
I'm really into that.
I'm also really excited to watch that Russia Space thing.
Oh, yeah.
For all mankind.
Yeah.
I'm looking forward to that.
We're going to talk about it.
Yeah.
We will talk about it.
We will on a different date to this date.
Agreed.
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It's time for an ad, James.
Are you ready?
Yes.
Our old friends at ExpressVPN are here.
Are they?
Oh, what do they have to say about it for themselves?
What are they doing?
How did you choose which internet service provider to use, James?
Well, we picked the one that was, I don't know, whatever, I guess.
The sad thing is most of us have very little choice
because ISPs operate like monopolies in the regions they serve.
Exactly.
That feels familiar.
They then use this monopoly power to take advantage of customers.
Data caps, streaming throttles, the list goes on.
But worst of all, many ISPs log your internet activity
and sell that data on to other big tech companies or advertisers.
I knew it.
To prevent ISPs from seeing my internet activity, I protect all of my devices with ExpressVPN.
Me too.
So what is ExpressVPN, James, you might ask?
I was asking that.
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it through a secure VPN server.
Tunnel, tunnel, tunnel.
So that your ISP cannot see any of your activity.
Just think about how much of your life is on the internet.
Sadly, the list of people you've messaged, well, yeah,
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I will.
Thank you for asking.
Now back to the show.
Back to the show we go.
We're never going to stop.
We're doing the show and we're not going to stop this show until it's over.
What else are you doing?
Ooh, all right.
Rutherford Falls.
Rutherford Falls.
It's got like Paul F. Tompkins makes a cameo in it as well
and he's really awful and hilarious.
He's a great comedian.
Ooh, excellent.
All right.
So I have a kind of terrible recommendation and then a great recommendation.
Wow.
You know how sometimes I stick my cheek?
It's one of the marriage and the other one marriage, am I right?
I'm sensing a fever.
You've just been looking after kids all day.
I have.
And it's been driving you bananas.
It's been good.
No, they're good.
They're good.
They're good ones.
Yeah.
All right.
So my first kind of one that is terrible is a show called Colony on Netflix.
Oh, yeah.
What's that?
Okay.
So I started watching it because I thought it would be right up your alley
and I just felt like watching a post-apocalyptic kind of movie
with alien sort of vibe.
I feel like this is a thing I looked at and then went, nah.
Yeah, so it's only three seasons.
They cancelled it after three seasons.
So I've only got through like the first half of the first season.
Oh, my God, that guy from Lost or whatever.
Yeah, exactly.
It's a TV series and it's basically set after an alien invasion
of the Red Hats, whoever they are.
But it's about insulin?
Oh, there is a part of it about it.
Oh, no, that's episode four.
Okay, yeah.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Anyway, go on.
James is going to tell me about the show.
Anyway, so basically from what I can tell, it's about a family of four.
It's on mute so I can't hear what's happening,
but they seem very distressed about something. No, sorry,
go on. Can I
goddamn explain my
own show? You made the show?
Yeah. You should have made a better show. Look, it's not
very good.
However, I kind of was
watching it and got kind of into it
in a really
ridiculous kind of way.
Look, it is kind of interesting.
It basically follows this family of four and their son is missing
on the other side of the wall, you find out.
Oh, the wall.
There's like a wall.
I know it's just got all of the tropes of a post-apocalyptic thing
where aliens have kind of landed and now the government has a huge control
over everybody's lives.
It's like the TV show Under the Dome.
Yeah, exactly.
And they're kind of living in this society that's based now
around bartering and around, you know,
disappearances of people all the time.
The government's always like coming in to take people to the factory.
Whoa.
Whatever the factory is.
Is it a death camp?
Yeah, kind of.
Yeah, it's that kind of vibe.
At some point they were taken into a room, stripped down
and then like put lots of gas around and somehow then they walk off
into a light.
I don't know yet exactly what that means but I think it gets the vibe
of like the aliens are using human beings as fuel or some kind
of vibe like that.
I don't actually know if that's true but that feels like the vibe.
Sounds to me like this is a show you're never going to go back to.
Correct.
You won't ever know.
You know what?
I do like what is interesting and this is a tiny spoiler.
The husband in this is like an ex sort of CIA kind of guy.
You always are.
Yeah.
I'm not in that life anymore.
Yeah, exactly.
And they basically, yeah.
And that wife's like, you told me you'd given it up.
He's like, what am I supposed to do for my family?
This is what I do best.
Yeah, because basically they threaten him and they say,
if you don't do this then we will not like help you to find your son
and your family will be in danger or something.
What am I supposed to do?
You'll get all taken to the factory.
So he has to go and help them actually fight.
There's a group of people who are like the resistance.
I'm the best at what I do.
Yeah, and this ex-CIA guy is charged with like taking
down the resistance group.
Twist, his wife, is part of the resistance.
Oh, my God, does he know?
No, not initially.
I don't know if they find out.
I think she does.
How could you compromise us like this?
You should know better than anybody that I always stand up for the right.
This goes against everything.
Don't you know my job is dangerous?
I'm the CIA.
I feel like you've watched a lot of shows like this, James.
Anyway.
I'm going to be honest with you.
I hate everything about this thing that you said.
Sounds boring and generic.
Look, it's not.
And just like a show that either it's on for like a season
or it goes for ten years and you're like, shit, that went for ten years?
But three years apparently this one.
I did get into it for a little bit.
But what lost me on it actually was how boring it was.
Well, that was the way it was.
In the end.
No, I don't know.
Maybe I'll watch a little bit more of it and I'll see.
But it does just feel like a bad version of a lot of these kind of films
that we've seen.
Like a bad version of Greenland or something.
I liked Greenland.
Yeah, I know, but like a bad version.
Anyway, so that's my anti-recommendation.
Wow, we're doing anti-recommendations now.
That's great.
No, we're not.
Because my list is crazy long for that.
No, we're not doing – no, we're positive on this show.
And look, I do kind of enjoy it.
And you enjoyed it.
Yeah, exactly.
Because the female characters in it, there are some really great ones
and the wife in it particularly is quite badass and great.
Great.
I really enjoyed that.
It's terrific.
There is a ridiculous scene though where she gets –
I think this is what turned me off.
She joins the resistance and then she ends up going on like a mission
where someone gets shot and it's the first time she's ever seen someone killed.
So she sees this guy get shot on the road and she's like super traumatised by it.
I know what happens.
There's that high-pitched noise and like all the sound drops
and there's a muffled voice person going whatever.
There's a person bleeding out and then the sound goes and it comes back
and then all the and it starts up again.
Do you know what I'm talking about?
Yeah, correct.
That was very close.
Thanks.
Accurate.
It's almost like you've watched a lot of these, James.
Look, I've seen every episode, all right?
It's my favourite show of 2004, which sounds like when it was made.
Look, it's not that bad.
I'm enjoying it.
Anyway, but this is what got me because then she sees that.
She gets home.
Her husband doesn't know that she's like in the resistance
and seen someone killed basically.
And instead like but she gets all kind of weird and she sees him
and as soon as she sees him she immediately decides,
I know what I want to do after I've just seen someone.
Sex.
I knew it.
Yeah, and the sex scene goes for like two minutes.
Nice.
And it's just so ridiculous.
That's way too long.
Who has sex for two minutes?
It's ridiculous.
No, but there's no – it's just like this weird scene where like she clearly –
like what woman in their right mind has been married to someone for 20 years,
sees someone murdered and then immediately goes,
I know what I want to do when I get home.
She just wants to take her mind off everything.
Oh, God.
Anyway, I don't know.
It just – but I –
And then the end is like what came over you?
She's like, I don't know.
I just wanted to take my mind off something.
He's like, it sounds to me like you're keeping secrets.
That's exactly the line he said.
He's like, oh, I'm not complaining.
But that seems like – that is genuinely what he said.
Wow, this show sounds amazing and that's why I've seen every episode
of the prison wall.
The colony.
The colony.
Which is, yeah, anyway.
I told you this is my job.
I told you that.
I'm sure he says that line.
You made a promise you'd never go back to that life.
Yeah, but things are different now.
Ever since the war came down, our son's on the other side of the wall.
Let's have sex.
Two minutes though.
All right.
Yeah, because that was also what happens.
He sees some terrible thing and then comes home
and immediately has sex with their teen.
Nice.
Imagine if they both saw terrible things at the same time.
Jesus.
They put holes in each other's heads just clashing into each other.
I imagine.
All right.
Can I quickly do my good recommendation that I love?
They just run into each other and explode.
They atoms merge and split.
The whole town is eviscerated.
Anyway.
Now I would watch that.
Me too.
I totally would.
Oh, and that kind of segues really well into my recommendation.
Do you remember Midnight Chicken, James the book,
the recipe book that I talk about a lot that I love?
Do I remember that book you never stop talking about?
Ella Rich Bridger.
Yeah, well, I bloody love her.
Anyway, she's written a poetry book.
Well, not written.
It's an anthology of poetry.
It's called Set Me on Fire, Don't Say Poetry,
or I Can Hear in Your Brain what you're going to do,
Jimmy Jam, James over there.
I don't say anything.
I've never said anything.
All right.
Anyway, it's a beautiful anthology of a lot of poetry
that you may not have heard of.
Oh.
Which is really lovely.
Which would be all of it.
Go on.
Anyway, it's a collection of fresh, vibrant voices from poets
all over the globe, both living and dead,
with an intuitive, accessible feelings-first format.
These are poems for the moments when you really need to know
that someone else has been there too.
So this poem is about eating and kissing and having too many feelings,
about being outside and inside and loving someone so much
you think you might die.
Oh, my God, I'm overwhelmed by being inside. I've got so many feelings. I'm going to go die. Oh, my God, I'm overwhelmed by being inside.
I've got so many feelings.
I'm going to go outside.
Oh, my God, my feelings are also, it's too much out here.
Maybe I'll just stand in the doorway.
Oh, there we go.
The perfect balance.
They're about breakups and getting back together and, oh, God,
it's complicated, don't ask me moments.
They're about wanting and waiting and having, about grieving and life
after death and the end of the world.
They are, in other words, about being alive, James.
Sounds amazing.
Was that a poem or was that just like a description?
No, that's just a description from the website.
But I wanted to read it out because I felt like you would immediately hate it.
My brain shut off when you started doing that.
That's why I couldn't tell it was a poem.
It's not a poem.
You going to read one?
No, I'm not going to read one.
What are you recommending this book for then?
Because it's really great and I think it would make a really good gift
for Mother's Day if you're in Australia and Sunday is Mother's Day.
So there you go.
That's it.
Your turn.
That's incredible.
I love poetry.
Thank you for sharing that beautiful book description with us.
Really, it was very moving.
Last one I've got is it's a show.
It's called The Dick Cavett Show.
Ooh.
It aired from 1968 to 1986.
Imagine if your name was Dick.
Imagine.
Imagine.
Yeah, that's a pretty good name.
Imagine. Imagine. Yeah, that's a pretty good name. Imagine. So as mentioned, it was cancelled in 1986,
which was shortly after we were born.
But what's interesting about it is they've uploaded a bunch of these clips
and interviews from the time to YouTube and it's this really bizarre
and interesting time capsule of a particular period in time,
or this like a bit over a decade.
And the amount of like interesting guests, a lot of which are dead now,
some of which aren't, is just really fascinating because even some
of the ones who are alive now, it captures them in a completely
different moment in time.
So they've got like Orson Welles, Citizen Kane.
He wrote and directed Citizen Kane.
But it's got – who's an amazing storyteller.
It's got Eddie Murphy, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin in her last interview,
Marlon Brando who sucks but he's very interesting in an interview
because he's the worst.
Sure, Robin Williams.
So, yeah, it's just this amazing collection of these people
from a particular point in time,
just like smoking cigarettes on a chair, just having a chat.
And I think what's good about those interviews compared to interviews today or even interviews of the time is it's very kind of informal
and he's really disarming and he's really low key
and he kind of gets into the groove of whatever the guest is kind of feeling
and he manages to get information,
like really interesting stories and information out of them.
He's a really good interviewer.
Like I'd never heard of this guy because it's a show that didn't come here.
You know, we don't get everything obviously but it's just kind of like it's got a really interesting Paul Newman interview as well.
I think you might have been on a few times.
I do love Paul Newman.
You would kiss Paul Newman.
I would kiss Paul Newman a hundred times. He couldn't stop me. But yeah, it's just this thing
that I've just gone down this rabbit hole of this show that kept popping up in my recommendations
and I kept watching and I'm like, I should just subscribe to this channel that I watch nearly
every interview of. Yeah.
I love those kind of interviews.
Yeah. It's really, really good. Yeah.
And that's my favourite type of interview style.
Yeah.
I really am not a massive fan of ones where it's very scripted.
It's boring. Yeah, and obviously there's different interview techniques
and sometimes if you've only got five minutes for an interview,
that's why people do them that way.
But that's why I love shows like as much as I've found out Parkey's a bit
of a misogynist and all the things.
He's a great interviewer.
He's a great interviewer and I loved, I watched every episode of Parkinson.
I loved that.
And I also loved Enough Rope with Andrew Denton for that reason
because they're kind of conversational but then somehow get right to the heart
of that person's experience.
And well-researched and it's not just the same.
What's it like being an actor?
It's like really interesting questions, you know what I mean,
or they take you certain places.
Yeah, yeah.
And in a way where the interviewer makes it look effortless.
So they have all this well-researched stuff in the back of their brain,
but they're not reading from a sheet of questions. They're just kind of grabbing onto those pieces
of information as a good conversationalist. Yes. Some of the ones that I've done, which is very
few, and you're better at this than I am because you've done it more, is yeah, you just store a
lot of information. You have a kind of of a rough idea but then just kind of talk
and don't like read off a list of questions.
You just like have a conversation.
And you might not get what you want necessarily depending
on the timeframe allocated.
But, yeah, you're really good at that, I feel.
Oh, thank you.
Like catching people off guard.
I got you.
I got you to say something personal.
No, look, I think some interviews I've done have been better than others.
I don't know.
I find it really hard when I have written questions.
I very rarely actually read them.
Yeah.
And when I do, it breaks the flow.
Totally.
I've been, I know exactly what you're talking about, yeah.
Because I think as well if you come, I also have discovered over time I don't
like to have a laptop if I do an interview and I don't like to have an iPad
or a screen.
Yeah.
I'll have a notebook with some notes or a piece of paper that I've printed.
Yeah.
But I think people immediately feel on what's,
I can't even really describe it.
It's just an energy in the room that if you come
in with a laptop with things on it, people go, okay, this is what this is. This is like,
I ask you a question, you answer it. And they immediately get to be quite formal.
And that's one style of interview. That's not the way I like to do it. I just want to have
a conversation. Usually the people I've asked to be interviewed are the people that I just
genuinely want to have a conversation with Usually the people I've asked to be interviewed are the people that I just genuinely want to have a conversation with.
Yeah, absolutely.
And because of the delicious thing about podcasting is people say yes
and then you get to have these conversations with people
that you've found interesting that you've always wanted to meet.
Always my secret hope is that we'll then become friends
and that really happens.
So occasionally it has.
Maybe one day it will.
Maybe.
No, it has.
A couple of people I've interviewed have become friends.
But, yeah, that's my favourite style.
Have you been interviewed?
Yeah, a couple of times, yeah, bits and pieces.
Actually, I interviewed you.
You did, but I prefer when it's more like a conversation
than like an interview.
But I don't really get interviewed and I say no to a lot of things.
You say no to most of them.
I'm just tired.
It's not personal if you are, yeah. If you've reached out, try again. Maybe I will. I don't
know. Maybe you don't want to, which would be more reasonable. I think it's more just that at
the moment, there's just so little time. Yeah. You know, we're both so tired. I also like it when
it's well organized, when it's like, okay, we can do it at this time and I need you to, because I, for example,
I did a podcast with Charlie Clawson and I did one with Andrew Levens
earlier this week and it was just, we just both organized beforehand.
It's like, right, I'll record on my end.
Right, we'll do it at this time.
Right, we're going to roughly talk about this, but whatever.
And then that's kind of, that's good going into it,
like knowing what it is, do you know what I mean?
And that, you know, I like like that kind of stuff and it's on time,
do you know what I mean?
Because I don't have time to be sitting around waiting for like someone
to –
No, or fixing tech and shit.
I don't have no patience for any of that shit.
And I know that stuff happens anyway but it's annoying, you know.
Yeah, it absolutely is.
I know the most mortifying thing that happened to me when I was doing
interviews for Just Make the Thing was I interviewed Luke McGregor
and Celia Pakola, both of whom I really admire and think they're
incredible. And I just got the address wrong and I turned up at the wrong house. And so I was like
20 minutes late and I was mortified because, and that threw me for the whole interview because
all I could think was they're writing today on, you know, they're writing their TV show.
They don't need some random girl turning up at their house late
and I just felt so terrible.
And now they're not your friends.
No, well, no.
Oh, well.
No, they're great.
They're great.
They're so lovely.
Oh, thank you.
Oh, look.
Anyway, yeah, but there is something about being organised and on time.
Totally.
Yeah.
Anyway, that's the show, James.
I agree.
Do you have any reviews for us?
Oh, my God, I've got so many.
So I've just got this one, though.
I'm just going to do one.
We need more reviews, by the way.
I think I'm running out, so we need more reviews.
This one is from Is Every Nickname Took?
That's who it's from.
Five stars.
Delightful pod with delightful hosts.
What a great podcast.
If I could, I would suggest Listening to Suggestible
To the two hosts
Claire and James
Suggest things to watch
Listen, cook and eat
And banter along the way
Listen to it you old boot
You can review in app
You open up your app
And you're like
Bam
Five stars
Or less
But five is preferable
And you just
It can be as short
Or as long as you like
And we really appreciate it
Don't we Claire
What have you got there
What are you working
We do.
I forgot.
We've got a voice recording today.
You didn't tell me I had a voice recording.
I know.
I'm sorry.
We're so unprofessional speaking of professionalism.
I can't remember.
Yes, I did.
I did it.
Good thing my professionalism, you don't need to do that,
makes up for your lack of professionalism.
What?
Yeah, this is true.
All right, here we go.
Look, there's a reason why you're famous and I'm around.
Both of us are so famous.
What's next?
What are we doing?
Okay.
Okay, you ready?
I'm ready.
All right.
This is a lovely email from Mark Smee.
He lives in the UK and you can also do a voice memo just like this
if you write into suggestible.gmail.com.
Maybe I will.
All right.
Dear James and Claire, as a Brit, I loved this Keeney Pasta episode
of Suggestible.
I listened to it on my way home from work.
It really cheered me up.
I actually know Jamie Oliver and I managed to secure a voicemail.
I hope you like it.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
I said some terrible things about Jamie Oliver, maybe.
I know.
I also made fun of his lovely, bubbly, lovely, lovely jubbly.
We get a lot of emails or messages like, yeah, fuck Jamie Oliver.
I'm like, whoa, that's, I didn't.
No, that's not what we meant.
They're like, he ruined food.
He ruined our school cafeteria food.
Anyway, let's give it a listen.
Are you ready?
Jamie Oliver.
Hello, Jamie Oliver here.
I had a little listen to that zucchini pasta.
Got to say, I don't remember doing an interview on your podcast,
but I must have done because that's more voice.
Anyway, got to go.
Gordon Ramsay's coming over.
Got to just step on his bollocks, lovely bubbly.
Bye.
Oh, thank God.
He didn't find out what we said about him.
Thank goodness.
Genuinely, Jamie Oliver.
I'm writing you to our little old podcast, James. Of all people. I goodness. Genuinely, Jamie Oliver, writing into our little old podcast,
James. Of all people.
I know. Oh, goodness gracious.
Well, if you also know... Oh, sorry, go on.
You go. I was going to say my favourite Jamie Oliver
clip I've ever seen. It's a behind
the scenes of him getting a
photo shoot for the Herald Sun, which is
one of our terrible papers in Australia,
where it was around footy season
time while the AFL had him pretend to eat pretend to like eat a football on like a platter
and he's like, what the fuck is this?
He's like, I don't normally do this dumb shit.
Fine, I'll do it, whatever.
And he's just like, why am I eating a football?
The fuck is this?
And it's a video.
Yeah, I'm like, this is great.
This is the kind of content I'm here for.
And also great questions, Jamie Oliver.
Yeah, all great questions.
I love that because normally he's so positive.
Good on you, Jamie.
Yeah, but that is bullshit.
It's like, yeah, do a dumb thing.
But that is such a photo you would find in the Herald Sun.
Yep.
I only remember it because I remember him.
I get fun of it.
But anyway, go on.
Nothing to surprise me.
Anyway, if you too know Jamie Oliver and would like to send us in a voicemail,
just like Mark, you can email the show at suggestapod.gmail.com,
use the voice memo straight in your app, chuff it away,
and we'd love to get it.
We'd love to get it.
We would, and that is the show for the week.
That's right.
Jim Bob, thank you as always to Collings for editing our ramble.
Oh, my God, he does it every time.
I know.
And that's it. That's it. All right. Okay. Thanks, everybody Collings for editing our ramble. Oh, my God. He does it every time. I know. And that's it.
That's it.
All right.
Okay.
Thanks, everybody, for suggestibling with us.
Suggestible, suggestible.
As we say here every week.
It's the bestible.
Bye.
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