Suggestible - The Grinch of All Things
Episode Date: November 7, 2019Suggestible things to watch, read and listen to hosted by James Clement @mrsundaymovies and Claire Tonti @clairetonti.Watchmen/WatchmanOur Souls at NightShe SaidSecret HitlerTrinny Woodall (@trinnywoo...dall)AnnihilationFollow 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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We wish you a Merry Christmas.
No, we don't wish you a Merry Christmas.
James, it's the time of the year when Christmas is upon us.
Oh my goodness.
Christmas comes earlier every year.
Next it's going to be hot cross buns in the store.
It should come even earlier.
I love the carols.
I love the lights. Yeah, I know. It should come even earlier. I love the carols. I love the lights.
I love the decorations.
I love the two early Christmas trees up in the shopping centres.
I'm very excited.
I love the way that you don't have to go to a shopping centre anymore
for Christmas.
You can just like buy stuff online.
Then you don't have to elbow an old lady off a balcony to get to the last
whatever.
Yeah, you're that kind of person.
You're the Grinch of Christmas.
As I've said to you before, the Grinch of Christmas is just the Grinch.
You can apply that to other things.
You could say you're the Grinch of sports.
You're the Grinch of eating red apples.
Right.
You're the Grinch of life, specifically Christmas.
Anyway, I'm Claire, you're James,
and this is a podcast about recommending you things to watch,
read and listen to.
That's right. What have you got for us this is a podcast about recommending you things to watch, read and listen to. That's right.
What have you got for us this week, Grinch of all things?
You fucking grub.
Jesus.
Oh, my goodness.
I don't usually start the show like this.
I'm sorry, listeners.
That's okay.
Anyway, get on with it, mate.
The first thing I thought I could talk about.
I am sorry.
That was forceful.
I'm okay, Claire.
Look, the thing about me is, the thing about the Grinch is,
he's got a very small heart.
He's miserable and angry all the time.
Or doesn't he come good?
You have a soul that's black and a heart of rocks.
Doesn't he come good at the end?
Isn't that the point of the Grinch?
I think he does, yeah.
Great.
I'm waiting.
One day.
I just knocked the mic as well.
It's not happening.
I'm not doing that.
Okay, so the first thing I want to talk about, look,
we're probably going to do a bigger episode on this on the Weekly Planet,
my other more successful podcast.
But it's Watchmen, the TV series.
Success doesn't equal quality.
That's true, but in this case it doesn't.
So, wow.
You are on fire, Claire, for things that you find funny
that hurt my feelings this week.
That's my favourite.
That's the whole basis of our marriage.
So the Watchmen, the TV series, it's a sequel to the 1986 Alan Moore graphic novel.
It's not a sequel to the movie.
It's not a sequel to all the other weird spin-off stuff that's been going on.
You probably haven't read many comics.
I'm assuming you haven't read Watchmen, one of the seminal.
It's called one of the greatest pieces of literature of all time.
I've read Asterix.
Not the same.
I've read a little bit of Tintin.
Yeah, again, these are not relevant to what I'm talking about today.
Damon Lindelof, who you know from Lost, which I'm not a fan of
because of the way they just spun their wheels until they went,
I don't know, they went to heaven?
Whatever the fuck.
Get out of here.
It was great for the first few seasons.
I think it had a lot of good ideas and it was cast really well,
but they were clearly spinning their wheels.
But then he did The Leftovers, which was like three seasons,
but it was really tight and it made sense and it told this really concise story.
So he's very talented and Watchmen seems to be headed
in that particular direction.
Famously, Watchmen has been said to be unfilmable,
even though it was filmed as a movie.
It's a fair shot, the movie.
We recently did A Caravan of Garbage.
I really enjoyed that movie.
I think, look, there's a lot of good stuff in it.
I think even if you'd seen that, you'd probably get this show
or maybe you wouldn't even really need to because there's only kind
of one key element that's changed from the comic, which I won't spoil,
which is in that movie.
It involves a giant squid.
But anyway.
Oh, that's one of my scariest creatures.
I'll quickly spoil the ending of Watchmen though,
but you should read it.
Okay.
Spoiler.
Yes.
Spoiler alert.
The giant squid eats everybody.
Not exactly.
And then there's one man watching called the Watchmen.
Wouldn't it be Watchman?
Wouldn't it be Watchman?
Not Watchman?
I thought it was Watchman.
No, it's Watchman.
There is a Watchman in it because there's a guy who repairs watches
who becomes the blue guy who turns into a god.
Anyway, in the movie, the world is on the brink of nuclear war
in this alternative 1986 when Nixon is still president
and Russia and the US are going to destroy each other, right?
All right.
That sounds very familiar.
Yeah, it is.
To the existence we're living now. It's basically if the Cold War had have kept going, right? All right. That sounds very familiar. Yeah, it is. To the existence we're living now.
It's basically if the Cold War had have kept going, right,
and Nixon just kept getting re-elected, like beyond his two terms.
I see.
Okay?
So in the movie what Ozymandias does, who's a good guy slash villain,
he causes this giant explosion in New York and makes it look
like Dr. Manhattan, the blue guy, right?
Yes.
But in the comic what he does, he genetically creates this squid
that's made to look like an extra-dimensional being
and drops it into the middle of New York dead
and it kills a bunch of people through the teleportation.
So people around the world unite around this common enemy,
this alien race, which is not coming.
Because it's actually just a giant genetically engineered squid.
Yes, but it's made.
Dead one.
Yeah, but it's in.
There's a dead one at the Melbourne Museum in a fish tank.
You can swim with it.
It's really fun.
You can't.
No, you can't.
Don't touch it.
Oh, my gosh.
So the idea is that the world is then united.
But then it kind of gets out that maybe this thing isn't real.
So cut to the modern day and it's basically it's an extent,
it's not our world today, it's an extension of that world in 1986
where all those things happened.
And there's a lot of like issues that are covered today including
like white supremacy and gun control and police accountability
and things like that.
There are some characters from the original comic that show up
and they're now, you know, 60, 70 years old plus, right?
So they were originally, you know, these crime fighting,
caped crusader people.
And hang on, this is a TV show.
It's a TV series, yeah.
This is not the comic.
No, but it is an extension.
Made by the guy who did Lost.
Yes, but it is a sequel to the comic.
Like it's based off the world of the comic because the comic
and the movie are different enough where, yeah, it makes more sense that it's based off the world of the comic because the comic and the movie are different enough where, yeah,
it makes more sense that it's based off the comic.
I see.
So basically, look, you probably don't need to know any of that going in.
Or any of it at all.
Snooze.
Boring.
Oh, my God.
It's actually a really excellent show.
I mean it's only three in us so far.
No, it actually does sound really interesting.
I think if you enjoy, like if you like, you know,
like your Game of Thrones and, you know, I don't know,
if you like your high quality kind of HBO kind of fantasy sci-fi television.
Xena, Warrior Princess.
No, it's not like that.
Well, that's better than Hercules, I guess, I think.
Anyway, I like Lucy Laws.
Me too.
And, again, we're probably going to come back to it.
But as of so far, it's probably the best follow-up slash adaptation
that we've had of The Watchmen so far.
Again, we're three in, so it's very early days.
But it shows a lot of promise and it's a beautiful show
and it's really intriguing but in the best way.
It doesn't seem to just ask questions and then kind of whatever,
don't worry about it.
Because you're living in New York.
There's little interesting things like the cops in this
because they were attacked a few years prior.
They say forget about it. They. They say forget about it.
They don't say forget about it.
Give me a pizza.
Hail me a cab.
It's not said in New York.
It's not said in New York.
No, he said it was said in New York.
No, the first one was said in New York.
But now the police wear masks.
So it's the idea of, well, they're hidden from the public
so they can't come to their house.
But at the same time time is there less accountability
if you're a masked police officer?
So it's that kind.
And then so we've got also white supremacists who are also wearing masks,
like the Rorschach mask.
I don't know if you remember that character from the first one
who have kind of adopted this twisted ideology of what he believed in
and it's just this interesting idea behind vigilantism
but then the comic was that it was hinted that Robert Redford was going to run for president and he got in It's this interesting idea behind vigilantism and –
but then the comic was that it was hinted that Robert Redford
was going to run for president and he got in
and he's just been president for 30 years.
I like Robert Redford.
Yeah, Robert Redford's quite politically active
so it kind of made sense at the time.
And it still does now.
As the actual actor playing himself?
There's images of him but he hasn't shown up as of yet.
I don't think he's in it at all.
But he's playing himself though.
He's not in it but there's Images of him, but he hasn't shown up as of yet. I don't think he's in it at all. But he's playing himself, though. He's not in it, but there's like images of him.
The actor Robert Redford.
The actor Robert Redford is the president.
Yes, the actor Robert Redford is the president.
He's great in stuff now.
He's great in everything.
He's terrific.
That really amazing book that I read, and now I can't remember what it's called,
and it's also a Netflix series, and it's about ageing,
and it's an older couple.
Our Souls at Night. Our Souls at Night.
Our Souls at Night.
I haven't seen that.
Which is hilarious because if you say it fast it sounds like
Our Souls at Night.
It does sound like Our Souls at Night.
But it's actually a really touching romantic film about love
at an older age.
Yeah.
And the book is excellent reading.
Oh, I'm going to check this out.
But the Netflix show is really beautiful.
Really?
It kind of makes you cry.
It's about love and cool.
It's great. It's a little bit like an extended version of A Modern Love. Yeah, okay. You know the show we. But the Netflix show is really beautiful. Really? It kind of makes you cry. It's about love and – it's great.
It's a little bit like an extended version of A Modern Love.
Yeah, okay.
You know, the show we talked about on Amazon Prime.
Well, one of my favourite movies is – I mean, of a lot of people's is Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, which is a Robert Redford film.
And the Sundance Film Festival, which was started by Robert Redford,
is named after that movie as well.
And, yeah, so anyway, check out Our Souls at Night.
I guess that's what we're talking about now.
No, The Watchman.
I would say, yeah, Watchman.
Watchman.
Watchman.
The Watchman.
The Watchman.
Okay, no, I genuinely think that sounds great.
I'm sorry I made fun of you.
It's just I'm in a fun mood for making fun of you today.
Well, I'm in a fun mood for being respectful,
which is what I bring to this podcast.
Respectfulness and just general grumpiness.
It's true.
Grinch of the Sunday household.
Other than assholes at night, which is an excellent recommendation.
I love saying that.
It's so funny because the movie is so serious and heartfelt.
Anyway.
I think assholes at night are pretty serious.
Yeah, only at night time though.
During the day they like to have a few laughs.
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What are you doing today?
I know what you're doing, but, like, what's happening?
I had some ice cream before we went on air.
Oh, okay.
I've had a sugar high.
Well, I'm on a very much a sugar low.
I need a nap.
I can tell.
I know you've aged a thousand years in one day.
Okay, my recommendation is actually quite serious, but excellent.
It's a book called She Said.
It's written by New York Times reporters Jodie Cantor and Megan Toohey.
The two were responsible for breaking the sexual harassment story
that helped ignite a movement.
And the story I'm talking about is the Harvey Weinstein story
and the movement is, of course, the Me Too movement.
Yes.
So we've gone from a comic book to something important, James.
Watchmen's important.
It's got social commentary, Claire.
I know.
Actually, comic books are great and important.
Anyway.
It's also a graphic novel. Okay. Well, I've been so excited to read this book and I
couldn't put it down it kind of almost reads like a thriller even though you know what happens
so the first half of the book just what's not over yet no it's still not over yet I know
the first half of the book kind of opens with them just looking at potentially doing this story.
And Megan Toohey had just kind of been burnt from looking at the Donald Trump story.
So she was the one that was responsible for breaking open the grab me
by the pussy, sorry for anyone with little E's listening,
story as well as all of the sexual kind of harassment
and assault allegations against Donald Trump.
What?
There's more than one.
I know.
And she had been sort of really harassed by the public and just had had this really kind
of harrowing experience of even having Donald Trump call her and be really aggressive towards
her on the phone and threatening over Twitter and all kinds of things.
Yeah.
And so she was really reticent to take up this story of Harvey Weinstein, A, because
she wasn't even sure whether or not it would become a story and B, because she was really nervous about the backlash that would happen. And Jodie
Cantor, I guess, was the same, but they decided to embark on it. And it's just incredible because
so often these kinds of stories never see the light of day for legal reasons.
Well, there was, I don't know if you saw on Twitter today, but Jeffrey Epstein is trending because the ABC had a story
from three years ago that had a lot of evidence towards Bill Clinton
and Prince Andrew and they killed the story.
Wow, because it couldn't be corroborated?
Well, no, because the person in charge was like,
nobody cares about Jeffrey Epstein, but it's also like,
is this some massive conspiracy and whatever?
And did Epstein kill himself?
Spoiler alert, definitely fucking not.
Yeah, but is that true?
Is that proven?
No, there's a leaked clip of this woman saying like an ABC news reporter,
she's saying we had this story three years ago and we got threatened
by the palace for all sorts of legal actions and we ended up killing her.
Yeah, but what –
Anyway, sorry.
But Jeffrey Epstein, who for anyone who doesn't know was a billionaire.
A billionaire pedophile.
Yeah, who was in charge of the pedophile ring
and then went to jail and died in jail.
Yes.
And the theory was, or the sort of statement that's come out,
is that he committed suicide.
He committed suicide with the cameras off while two guards were asleep.
Yeah, and he was previously on suicide watch.
Yeah, because what this woman says, this is not the time for this,
I guess, but two weeks earlier they said that he had an attempted suicide attempt
but there was a rumour that what she said.
I've only just seen this that somebody inflicted that on him
to make it look like he was going to attempt suicide.
And look, it does seem very convenient that he hasn't been able to go to court
to talk about all of the things that he was doing.
There's way too many people like even hinted at involved in this
that like the chances of him being killed are, I mean,
what are the odds?
I mean, come on.
I know.
I mean, look, and who knows?
We don't know for sure.
All of this is allegedly.
I'd like to say allegedly, allegedly, allegedly.
However, anyway, let's go back to what she says.
So all of that was really interesting.
And then Megan happened to be reporting when Hillary Clinton
lost the election and so they started this investigation
on the backdrop of Trump being elected as president,
which is also a really interesting time.
Anyway, really they started with nobody, with nothing.
They had kind of vague rumours and links to Harvey over time
and some kind of evidence of settlements being made to him
but it was all very blurry and nothing concrete.
And you kind of, it was in the atmosphere.
Either, yeah.
I guess like people, like I'd heard.
People had said rumours.
Heard that he's like a dog of a bloke and whatever.
You're like, not that I'd hear from anybody but you hear
from people online and whatever, you know what I mean?
Yeah, exactly.
It was kind of like an open secret in Hollywood that you just don't be alone
with Harvey.
But I think the culture in Hollywood was so prevalent with actresses being
treated horribly and being forced into situations,
particularly sexual situations they may not have wanted to be in,
that it was almost accepted as just kind of this thing that was just a downside
of the industry for women.
And so one of the pivotal people who really stepped up was Ashley Judd.
Yes.
Because really the story needed a big name to start the ball rolling.
And in order for them to get Ashley to talk, there was so much that they did with her.
She's so interesting.
She's an activist.
Just looking at her, the strength of her character was really, really interesting.
And she'd gone back to uni and looked at gender studies
and looked at leadership and was really active in fighting
for women's rights in lots of different situations.
So her story arc is so fascinating and when she decides to go public
and have her name in the paper and in the story that they finally break,
you just want to give her a big bunch of flowers and cry and have her name in the paper and in the story that they finally break, you just want to
give her a big bunch of flowers and cry and hug her because it's just such a risk that she was
taking. She's really interesting too. She doesn't follow her any comments and stuff online. And when
the story broke, she just went by herself camping in the wilderness. So she had no idea. She had no
reception. She had no idea what the take was of the story, what was going to
be the fallout or anything. It was really, really interesting. And then women that were affected,
it was just such an incredible amount of journalism and journalistic integrity and the
level that they went to, to corroborate every woman's story, to get people to trust them,
to find people who were working in the 90s in his offices who
were the subject of harassment and rape in certain situations.
And then to get these women to go on record when they also discovered that Gwyneth Paltrow
had a story that they previously had no idea because she was seen as Harvey's golden girl.
They had no idea that she actually had her own story.
So when she, and she ummed and ahed about being in the first story
and in the end she was in the middle of a Jade Egg group scandal
and so decided –
Classic.
But the second story after Ashley Judd had been so brave
and the other women in that story as well came out,
she then told her story.
But what was interesting is that Harvey was also threatening Gwyneth
and kind of turning up at her house and things because he'd actually,
as it sort of comes out in the book, and I won't spoil all of it,
there's so much great journalism and this isn't really a secret,
that it turned out that he'd been using Gwyneth as an example to say to women,
if you sleep with me, if you massage me,
if you do all those horrible things in my hotel room,
I can make you a star just like Gwyneth because that's what she did to get there, which is totally not true. Anyway, it's just so complex and kind of
heartbreaking, but also really satisfying to see that justice had actually been brought.
And the number of settlements, his company have so much to answer for. They knew what was going
on. It was such a clear pattern. And there was so many, like millions of dollars worth of company money was being spent on
keeping women quiet.
And even the legal system is set up to kind of silence victims.
So you have this settlement, but then you have the settlement, but only if you stay
silent, when really you should be paid and able to say, have your justice and tell your
story.
So anyway, such a great book. I can't recommend highly enough. paid and able to say and have your justice and tell your story. Definitely.
Anyway, such a great book.
I can't recommend highly enough.
The second half of the book looks at Christine Blasey Ford, yeah,
which was really interesting and her statement and how she ended
up kind of coming to speak forward about her experiences
as a teenager against Brett Kavanaugh and he became part of the Supreme Court.
Yeah, good stuff.
System works.
But she really – just the length that she had to go to and her team had to go
to to get her to end up on that stand.
She had never anticipated having to do that and in a lot of ways her life was
completely destroyed and upended.
And also like to what end now at this point.
The thing about that is as well like you can defend that guy,
that's entirely up to you because they didn't really look into it.
Like it wasn't properly screened like at all, you know what I mean?
That was an inquiry but that was more of a,
that was just more like a job interview in the public than anything else.
Like they haven't looked into that properly at all.
I mean and it is really hard because it happened so long ago when they were teenagers. So there's
a lot of kind of he said, she said stuff going on.
But it's worth exploring though, is what I'm saying.
There is this beautiful moment at the end of the book when they're all, all the women who,
or a lot of the key women who came forward for the Harvey Weinstein story and Christine Blasey
Ford are in Gwyneth Paltrow's, like a beautiful house of Gwyneth Paltrow's,
and they all kind of share their stories and do a group interview.
And it's so interesting.
But Christine says, and they do come out with this kind of conclusion,
that even though Brett Kavanaugh still became part of the Supreme Court
and the fact that Christine came out allowed so many more women
to tell their stories.
Yes.
And that was part of what Harvey Weinstein and coming out against him was,
that it emboldened more and more women to say this is my experience,
this is how I feel.
And so, you know, you have to, your walls don't just crumble in a day,
you have to chip away.
Anyway, I'll stop banging on.
I really recommend reading it.
That's really interesting, yeah.
It's a really fascinating read. So that's my recommendation. Well, that'll stop banging on. I really recommend reading it. That's really interesting, yeah. It's a really fascinating read.
So that's my recommendation.
Well, that's an excellent recommendation, Claire,
and I have nothing negative to say about it because, again,
I greatly respect you and I greatly respect the process
of Suggestible, the podcast.
Now, we went to New Zealand for five days.
We were kind enough to be invited by friends of ours.
Oh, my God, it's a dream come true.
I hope you never listened to this, but it was the best week of my life.
And Queenstown particularly.
We flew straight direct there.
It's just such a beautiful place to go.
We've been there before.
We went there for our honeymoon.
We did.
But just for a trip away from Australia, it's super easy to get to.
It's so easy.
It's like a little chunk of Europe and Switzerland.
It's just amazing.
And it's like Australia in a lot of ways because I can drive
on the same side of the road and everybody understands me.
Last time we were there you jumped off a giant thing into a canyon
bungee jumping.
Yes, I did.
We didn't do anything like that.
What was your favourite part of the trip?
Well, one I wanted to talk about, a thing to recommend,
is a board game which we played.
Do you want to name the people that we went with?
I guess it's Jamila Rizvi who is a friend of ours. Yes, correct, correct. And her partner and yeah, they're all very awesome. Maxi and Nick.
Amazing. What did they play? What did they play? So they've been talking about this game,
Secret Hitler, which is a game developed, it's a board game, which normally I'm against because
the reason I don't really like board games is because I find often when I'm at a bad thing,
people will pull out a board game and I'm like, this is going to make this bad thing even,
even worse. Can't we just talk and drink or something?
You know what I mean?
But anyway, this game, it's developed by Goat, Wolf and Cabbage.
Okay, excellent name already.
This is the description.
It's a fast-paced game of deception and betrayal.
Secret envelopes from five to ten players are handed out.
And basically the idea is that it's set in 1930s Germany.
Players are divided into two teams, liberals and fascists.
You don't really know who's who. The fascists know who the fascists are. The liberals don't know who's a liberal and
who's pretending. And the idea is to kind of make people distrust other people and try and figure
out who the fascists are, in particular, who Hitler is. And the idea now it sounds kind of
complicated. And when I heard the description
of it I'm like that's, you know, so how does this exactly work?
But it's basically incredibly simple.
All you've got to do is put down a series of cards and if you put
down the most fascist cards you win.
If you put down the most liberal cards you win.
That's essentially the idea.
It's easier obviously if you play it but the idea is that you need
to figure out who the other people are.
Yeah, it's kind of like poker without all the confusing cards.
So if you're excellent at lying and accusing people,
then you probably –
Which you turn out to be amazing at.
The first time, the first round we played ever,
you pulled out Hitler and somehow pulled it off and won the game.
I mean, I had help.
Jamila was also in my team at that time,
which helped.
But, yeah, it's a really excellent board game and I think it's a really fun one to play with friends
or even people you don't know well because you end up just standing up
and going, you're a fascist.
Like you just see all of the people.
Yeah, I really agree.
But the thing is you don't really know,
so you've got to be watching people's poker faces.
Some people are more obvious than others because when they're liberals,
they're busy accusing other people.
When they're fascists, they're kind of really quiet and being like
and kind of like shifty-eyed.
So it just depends on how you approach it.
But anyway, it's really great.
It's also a really beautifully designed game.
Like they've got like it's like wooden cards and beautiful boards
and like artistry kind of on it.
And it's very simple.
Like there's not a lot of moving pieces or anything like that.
It's really straightforward.
And I just think Secret Hitler is just like a really fun party game to kind of give a go and
again especially when you go away with friends yeah definitely great game for that or a dinner
party game as someone who's highly skeptical skeptical of board games this was great and you
can have lots of players yeah you can have up to 10 yeah we had six i think yeah which was really
fun so yeah look I definitely recommend it.
Excellent.
Yeah, and as someone who does not like board games at all,
especially Monopoly, which sucks.
He's usually the Grinch of board games.
I am the Grinch of board games.
I will accept that.
But not the Grinch of Secret Hitler.
No, which is a great game.
It's awesome.
Claire.
All right, well, I recommend Secret Hitler 2.
I loved it.
It was really fun.
I especially got to shoot you at one point. You did. You were pleading with me. I was like, I'm a liberal, Claire, and I was. I'm like, I recommend Secret History. I loved it. It was really fun. I especially got to shoot you at one point.
You did.
You were pleading with me.
I was like, I'm a liberal, Claire, and I was.
I'm like, don't shoot me.
You're shooting the wrong person.
And little did I know Claire was a fascist and shot me.
It was interesting.
Oh, good Lord.
Anywho, my next recommendation is on.
It's really fun.
It's an Instagram account.
It's super light and great.
There's two of them actually, at Trinia Woodall.
I don't know if you remember Trinia and Susanna.
They had a TV show where they helped women to just like dress really nicely
and they dress for your body type and all that stuff.
Well, Trinia Woodall has kind of come back on the scene in a big way
because she's 53 now and has launched her own makeup range called Trinia London,
which is also just cool to follow and lots of fun.
But her Instagram account is just so fun.
It's just full of her.
She has collected clothes for over 40 years and she just has the most incredible outfit
choices.
They're just spectacular and colorful and great.
She has a lot of really practical advice, which I need because I always struggle with
what to put on myself. She's 55? Yeah. She looks amazing. 53, I thought? I think it's 55. Well,
she looks amazing as well. I mean, she's had a lot of Botox and things, but she's very into
skincare and routines and she takes a lot of supplements and all those sorts of things.
But her layering of clothes is great. She does these Instagram TV, which is actually really fun.
These longer form videos, they could be up to half an hour, where she takes you just through blazers and how to wear blazers, how to choose a great blazer,
how to choose the right colors to kind of lift your face. And then she looks at like,
she's got a collection of amazing sequin jackets and how to wear sequins during the day. And
then she'll look at like winter coats. How do you wear sequins during the day? Do you put them on
the outside of your body or the inside? Explain it to me, please. You eat them. No, I know you wear them as a hat. What?
I used to have like a rainbow sequin hat in the nineties. Used to? She wears it most nights.
It was black. Yeah, I do. She wears it when she does the dishes. I thought you were going to say
something else when I do the dishes. That's what I was going to say. Do the dishes. Doing the
dishes. It's my favorite thing. Anyway, outfit. And she also, you know, she has a great one on how to wear white sneakers
and the best kind of ones to choose.
How do you wear them?
Do you wear them on the inside or the outside of your shoes?
Or dresses and like just how to wear a great dress
and how to buy the perfect shirt.
And her videos aren't perfect in any way but they're just fun and silly.
Oh, it's just a slice of life.
It's just real, you know.
No, she's just funny and fun.
And I just, I really think there is something in someone who's done
that level of styling and fashion and hair and everything for that long.
So she's just got so much wisdom.
And also her makeup looks really fun.
I haven't actually bought any of it, but it looks really fun too.
So that's a recommendation at Trini Woodall on Instagram.
Well done, Trini Woodall, and well done, Claire,
for doing that thing that she said.
It's suggestible.
It's a podcast because you can review the show.
It actually helps the show by reviewing the show.
What are you saying?
You're just rambling now.
So listen, it's the end of the show so I'm wrapping it up is what I'm saying.
All right, wrap it up.
So basically you can do it right in app.
You open up your app, you give it a bloody whatever stars
that you think are appropriate.
I think five would be the best amount of stars,
but obviously it's down to the individual.
This is from Swinfort.
It says, you guys are pretty epic.
I'm probably too young to be listening to a podcast
where two married people talk about stuff they like,
but I feel like you guys are helping me grow into my own as a person.
Thanks.
Aw, that's so lovely.
It's great that you like it for now,
but you'll turn on us as all young people do. No, I support young people. That's so lovely. It's great that you like it for now, but you'll turn on us as all
young people do. No, I
support young people. Young people are awesome.
Me too. Including myself,
because I'm younger than you. Yeah, by like
a year,
maybe. Two years. Oh, podcast dog!
She's entered the studio.
How's she got in? I was wondering how
the dog... Oh, she's eating a fly.
Podcast dog is the ultimate fly catcher
She's like the Mr Miyagi of dogs
Alright
I would also love to say
Well technically Daniel LaRusso was the one who caught the fly with the chopsticks
Miyagi was merely demonstrating
But he taught
He taught Mr Miyagi
No he was trying to do it
And he said
Have you ever caught a fly
And he said I've never done it
But it's just like an exercise
In reflexes
And then Daniel LaRusso does it in like three turns
Fine
Daniel LaRusso Daniel La. And then Daniel LaRusso does it in like three turns. Daniel LaRusso.
Daniel LaRusso.
Daniel LaRusso.
Our dog, podcast dog, is the Daniel LaRusso of fire catching.
But when you think about it, Mr. Miyagi was technically the more skilled combatter.
So maybe she is the Miyagi of.
Will you shut your pie hole?
Give it some thought.
No, I never give anything any thought.
That's clear.
Especially marrying you.
Oh, God. I've really been mean to you today.
No, I guess I deserve it.
I guess I deserve it.
You do, Grinch.
Okay, so there are lots of recommendations that we have,
but we also love to hear recommendations from you.
You can do them at SuccessfulPod to us on Instagram or on the Twitters
or on the Facebooks.
We would love to hear from you.
So this one is from I am Josh Stratton.
Hello, Josh Stratton, a British tourist.
Oh, wow.
Yes.
I'd like to recommend perhaps something for both of you, Annihilation.
It's a short book by Jeff Vandermeer and then later Netflix film
by writer-director Alex Garland.
I've seen the movie.
I haven't read the book.
Annihilation.
Was that the one with Natalie Portman?
Correct, yes.
Oh, I liked that.
Excellent.
Even though I don't like scary films, I really like that.
It's a terrific movie.
And the casting is brilliant.
I love Alex Garland as well.
He did Ex Machina.
Oh, that's brilliant.
And he wrote the movie Sunshine.
Amazing.
Oh, my God.
How have you not read this book?
It's apparently really short.
Anyway, when making the film, Alex didn't try to remake the book into a film.
Rather, he based the writing on how he remembered the book.
Due to it touching on some semi-cosmic events,
the end result is two different stories with similar themes,
each playing to the strengths of its medium.
Probably won't change your life, but it's good.
Two hands up.
Well, thank you so much, Josh.
What does that mean, two hands up, like this?
Yeah, it's an emoji, a two hands up emoji.
No one can see you. It's an audio medium. Do you mean like this? Yeah, it's an emoji, a two hands up emoji. No one can see you, it's an audio medium.
No, it's two hands.
Like this. What the fuck does that
mean? Well, who knows, and who cares?
Emojis are a young
man's game. Are they?
I actually feel like they've crossed over it to
being an old man's game, because my brother, who I always
feel is on the pulse
of what is cool, he
always doesn't send me emojis anymore and I always do
and I feel like it's an old person thing now.
Let me tell you something, your brother who sometimes listens to this show,
he's not as young as he bloody thinks he is, man, I'll tell you that much.
He's pretty bloody young.
He's eight years younger than me, which means he's 50 years younger than you.
So why did you marry someone who was that many years older than you, Claire?
Because you'd be dead and then I could take all your money.
What money?
You're an idiot.
Yeah, good point.
I was banking on you being a bit smarter than you are.
All right.
Are we done?
That's it.
We're done.
Excellent.
See you soon.
I guess this episode's called The Grinch of Christmas, I assume.
We wish you a Merry Christmas.
We wish you a Merry Christmas.
That's an arsehole at during the day.
I'm looking at an arsehole during the day right now,
I'll tell you that much.
Stop the show.
No.
Fine.
Beep.
This podcast is part of the Planet Broadcasting Network.
Visit planetbroadcasting.com for more podcasts from our great mates.
I mean, if you want.
It's up to you.
Hi, I'm Jessie Cruikshank from the number one comedy podcast, Phone a Friend, which
I strongly advise you listen to.
You know what else I suggest you look into?
Becoming a host on Airbnb.
Did you like that segue?
Thank you.
I recently started putting my guest house on Airbnb when I'm out of town,
and I didn't realize how easy it would be until I did it.
If you have a spare room, you could Airbnb it.
Or your whole place could be an Airbnb.
It's a great way to make a little extra money by doing not a lot.
Which, frankly, is my mantra in 2024.
To learn more, go to Airbnb.ca slash host.