The Bechdel Cast - Bad Moms
Episode Date: May 7, 2020Caitlin and Jamie tackle Bad Moms! Happy Mother's Day!!!(This episode contains spoilers)For Bechdel bonuses, sign up for our Patreon at patreon.com/bechdelcast.Follow@BechdelCast, @caitlindurante and ...@jamieloftusHELP on Twitter Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th 2017 was assassinated.
Crooks Everywhere unearthed the plot to murder a one-woman WikiLeaks.
She exposed the culture of crime and corruption that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
That's right, the only, Katherine Hahn is joining us on Las Culturistas.
That's right, the queen of comedy herself.
Get ready for a conversation that's as hilarious as it is insightful.
Tune in for all the laughs, the stories,
and of course, the culture.
Don't miss Katherine Hahn on Las Culturistas.
Listen to Las Culturistas on Will Ferrell's
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Hey, I'm Gianna Pradenti.
And I'm Jermaine Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
There's a lot to figure out when you're just starting your career.
That's where we come in.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the answer, we bring in people who do,
like negotiation expert Maury Tahiripour.
If you start thinking about negotiations as just a conversation, then I think it sort of eases us a
little bit. Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts. Are all their discussions just boyfriends and husbands or do they have individualism?
The patriarchy's effing vast.
Start changing it with the Bechdel cast.
Hi, mommies.
How's that?
Good?
That was great.
Mommies.
Welcome to the Bechdel cast, mommies and non-mommies.
But you know, this week, mommies come to the front of the cast mommies and non-mommies but you know this week mommy has
come to the front of the line that's right i make no mistake not just good mommies but bad
mommies too bad mommies as well welcome bad mommies to the bad mommies episode of
i was almost gonna say like this is how traumatized I am at this point where I was almost gonna say
like Caitlin we can be bad podcasters but you know that that's just giving an asshole like a
template of a mean iTunes review so I'm like yeah better not do it okay so this is this is our you
know annual Mother's Day episode I miss I miss my mom yeah I miss my mom. Yeah, I miss my mom. She's doing okay. Although her health is not, she has Lyme disease, I think.
And she has a lot of pain from that.
But then she's like, well, what if it's COVID-19?
So no one knows anything.
But my mom's health is a little precarious at the moment.
But I think she'll be fine, I think.
My mom, yeah, similar deal.
My mom has rheumatoid arthritis and has been, I think it's just like,
if you already have chronic pain, being cooped up in your house nonstop just doesn't do it any favors.
For sure.
And she's also, shout out to Jill, because I'm pretty sure she's been a loyal listener throughout the choir.
Oh, Jill, hi.
Mainly because she has been teaching her second grade
class still um right through quarantine through zoom through zoom which i'm like i shot i mean
shout out to where this is a weird start to the episode but it's a quarantine episode so it doesn't
matter uh but shout out to like all the parents and teachers right now who are making school happen over zoom i truly
cannot wrap my head around that yeah students too like it's just who it's it's amazing not to brag
or anything but i teach online screenwriting classes which i always forget to plug on the
podcast but if anyone's interested in learning screenwriting from yours truly someone
with a master's degree in screenwriting uh that i absolutely hate to bring up but um i teach classes
through zoom but i only have like i cap it at five students per section and they're all you know
adults so and i'm like i can barely handle that well it's like that's the thing it's
like i've been in a writer's room like during the days and i'm like i am an adult woman who i
it's so hard to pay attention it's so hard i'm like why am i on ebay like i this is my job i
hope no one i don't think that but anyways i've been on been on eBay and I'm doing my job, but I'm like
on eBay.
So, you know, we can all be, it feels good to be bad.
A wise person once told me.
Well, that's sort of the theme of the movie.
It feels good to be bad and we're back.
Welcome to the Bechtel cast.
This is, if you're a new listener, what a weird start. This is our
podcast about the representation of female identifying characters in movies. We use the
Bechdel test as a jumping off point for discussion. But what is the Bechdel test? I ask myself
each and every week. I'm happy to answer your question.
It is a media metric originally developed by cartoonist Alison Bechdel, sometimes called
the Bechdel-Wallace test.
And it requires that the narrative have two female identifying characters with names who
speak to each other about something other than a man.
And the specific metric that we use is it has to be a two or more line exchange of dialogue.
And a lot of movies cannot manage this simple metric.
And interestingly, and we'll be talking about this iconic duo.
I mean, when people say like Caitlin and Jamie name a this iconic duo. I mean, when people say, like,
Caitlin and Jamie, name a more iconic duo,
I automatically say John Lucas and Scott Moore.
But, you know, many movies that the writers of this movie
have written in no way passed the Bechdel test.
We've got a weird one today.
There's pros and there's cons.
But we're here there's discourse i wanted
before we get into it because it's we're it's just the two of us today um so i was curious i
have i've just been interested in hearing like other podcasters that i listen to just like what
is like a thing in quarantine that you've like gotten into or like a show or a thing that you're like oh i have been re-watching um a
show that i really enjoy that i had only seen once but over the garden wall it's oh yes you
recommended that to me yes i i can't recommend it enough it's short it's fun it's kooky um it
was originally on cartoon network it's on hulu now i really enjoy it um so
any any over the garden wall heads out there you let me know i'm gonna recommend a show that i've
been watching really because i i've also been like working three jobs in the choir which is like it
doesn't make any like it's very lucky but it also is uh like just really fucks with your head a little bit sure but i
watched the first season of on becoming a god in central florida and it's really good kirsten dunst
is great nice and i love it so that's our core rex yeah core re. Let's talk about Bad Moms. Let's do it. So yes, we don't have a guest today, but I wanted to get some opinions of moms and whether
or not this movie resonated with moms.
So I have a few little tweets to share and stuff like that.
Mom tweets.
What was your history?
Do you have a history with this movie?
No, I don't i had never seen it nor its sequel a bad mom's christmas didn't i just skipped them i based on
what i knew about them when they came out and like who was making them and stuff i was like
i don't think these are going to be for me.
Yeah.
I was right.
Same.
Not because of the premise, more just because of the writing style
and the comedic sensibilities of these writers
and stuff like that.
I just like the bloated, big-budget comedy genre aesthetic.
This specific aesthetic and tone't it's not even
really i guess it's kind of a genre it's also not for me uh yeah so this movie came out i mean
fairly recently i had seen i've seen bad mom's christmas i watched it because christine baranski
was in it and i i didn't love the movie but but I did love Christine Baranski.
And Susan Sarandon's in it.
She's good in it as well.
Honestly, I will say I really preferred Bad Moms Christmas to Bad Moms.
Okay, interesting.
But I think that that might just be because you get like twice the amount of...
Twice the moms.
Twice the moms.
You have Cheryl Hines christine baranski and
susan seren like those they're all like you know knocking it out of the park even though the
writing still say with me sucks yeah uh but you have like twice the amount of fun performances
so it's it just was more fun but sure yeah i saw i watched watched bad moms i it's it's frustrated because it's like
and we'll talk about this a lot because it's like a really good premise and like a really strong
cast and everything i dislike about the movie has to do with the way it's written and directed
and then when you're like oh it was written and directed by the hangover guys of course i don't like it
yeah so it's it's kind of a bummer because i i'm sure that it would have been impossible to make
this movie without their co-signing of it which is frustrating in itself and then everything i
don't like about the movie is them getting in the way of a good premise and a good cast so yes um
i'm glad it exists, but generally was like,
we got to be able to do better than this.
Come on.
We most certainly can.
And I think that we have.
That was another thing that before we super jump into it,
I did a little research, as I've been known to do.
Wow, brag.
Perhaps some context.
I was just looking into like where moms have been
represented in comedic movies and there's really not that much there is not a ton there's a lot of
movies that have moms in them but are not about moms so it's like this movie was a huge hit it
made 180 million dollars off a 22 million dollar budget so to me that indicates it's like this movie was a huge hit it made 180 million dollars off a 22 million
dollar budget so to me that indicates you know like this is clearly a market people want this
movie for sure and it was like reasonably well received but yeah because there this there's just
not really moms represented as like a central focus in movies where you do see a lot and I think like a
lot better than what this movie has to offer is there's a lot of TV that's come out in the past
couple of years that is comedy focused around motherhood and so it's just I I hope that and
I mean god knows how or if movies will be made anymore um This is the end of the industry as we know it.
Probably.
But it's like Christine Baranski is going to be in like a plastic bubble.
You know, it's going to be a whole thing.
But I hope that, you know, I was encouraged at least to see,
I mean, there's a ton of comedy shows of all different like genres of comedy.
There's like network comedy.
There's niche.
There's blah, blah, blah about mothers mothers but it just is not represented in movies so this is just kind of like what there is
right now um wild but you know if you're if you're a mom looking for i'll um when this episode comes
out i'll try to do a little thread of like TV recommended watching because it seems like that's where the options are.
Yeah, that'd be great.
Yeah.
And with that, should we do the recap and go from there?
Let's do it.
So the story of bad moms, bad mommies.
We meet bad mommy number one, although she's not bad mommy yet.
She's good mommy.
They're all good moms, but they're bad sometimes they're all like good moms but they
also go through really long montage sequences that i fast-forwarded yeah like shop truly like
we i can't talk about visual jokes in the because i just and they're all three minutes long it's too
every these guys they just love a long expensive montage And I just don't care about it. That are like in slow motion.
There's like some, you know, poppy bop in the background.
And it's just like this.
You get one of those.
Don't have 14 in your movie.
Yeah.
And like, can it be three characters that we at least know?
Like there.
But by the time the first like at length cameo comes in I'm like I think I
know one thing about Kristen Bell's character how am I supposed to be like reveling in this like
wow like you don't know you really only know I would argue you really only get to know Mila
Kunis in this movie I think you know one thing about Kristen Bell which is that her husband
sucks yeah and that I mean that's just John and Scott Moore, no matter who they're writing
for, they only know how to write broad stereotypes.
For sure.
A hundred percent.
So you just don't get to know Kristen Bell and Katherine Hahn.
You just don't.
But first we barely get to know Amy Mitchell.
That's Mila Kunis' character.
Were you frustrated?
Okay, I'm sorry.
I'm like, this movie was really fun.
Were you frustrated in the first scene where they're introducing her when she's like,
I sweat in workout class.
And you're like, you're Mila Kunis.
Give me a break.
I don't like when movies are like, Mila Kunis give me a break there don't I don't like when movies are like
Mila Kunis is so awkward and you're like no she isn't she isn't I think she was miscast in this
role but also who would have been cast in a such a broad stereotyped role like this I mean who would this be good for
I really I think Mila Kunis is so talented we've seen her be amazing and I feel like she is yeah
she is very miscast in this movie yeah so is Kristen Bell I think that true like of the main
cast I think that like Christina Applegate and Catherine Han are pretty
well cast but it's only because they're playing characters that they've been forced to play before
that are not fair to them where it's like oh Christina Applegate is going to play like an
uptight rude person and she's been she's had to do that forever and like Catherine Han's gonna play
like a very you know it's like and I hope they had fun and they did a good job but it's even when it's properly cast you're like this still is like not very nice i don't know
okay where were we we have we met amy we've met amy boring she's boring she's uh she's overworked
she's underappreciated she had her first kid when she was 20. She is now 32. She has two kids, Jane and
Dylan. They do a bunch of extracurricular activities, which she's always trying to,
you know, make it to like go to the, you know, events and the games and the recitals and whatever.
But she's always late to everything. That's her thing. she's late to everything oh she's such a bad mom she has a
part-time job at a hipster coffee company working in sales i think we'll talk about that but this is
a piece of writing that is so like roll your eyes into the back of your head okay boomer that i i
was so annoyed by it where it's like just clearly two out of touch dudes being
like millennials
in the workplace they take
two weeks off when Jon
Snow dies and you're like
Mila Kunis
is a millennial what are you talking
like they're so like avocado
toast like they're just
stupid they're stupid
and that anytime the workplace thing came up I was just deeply annoyed because it just made it made no sense.
It was very frustrating. Yes. But that's her job. And she just always has so much going on. And she's worried that she might be a bad mom. There's also this group of judgmental moms that shame Amy for like having a job and being so busy.
The queen bee of them is Gwendolyn, which is Christina Applegate's character.
And then she has two friends played by Jada Pinkett Smith and Annie Mumolo.
Give Jada Pinkett Smith more lines.
She was barely a character.
I want to think best case scenario there's like a whole like there
are scenes with jada pinkett smith that just like had to be cut for some reason because i'm just
like why would you go through the trouble of getting someone who is like truly awesome in a
movie where it is like very very white and then get this like iconic black actor and then give her no lines right so it's annoying on many levels truly yes
and then like annie mamalo who co-wrote bridesmaids like she's just like pigeonholed
into this like idiot type but like she's funnier than that like give her opportunities to shine
and also well that's like seeing annie mammolo in this movie is super frustrating because you're just like why didn't you let her write this movie right she's we like
she's she is infinitely more qualified to do it and you're just gonna make her like again another
like very talented person in this movie who has three lines and you're like what i hope she got
a boat but like annie mummolo is a parent She is the same age as like the writer directors of this movie.
She already had Bridesmaids under her belt when this came out.
Why couldn't she have written it?
Like.
Great questions.
Great questions all around.
It's it's befuddling.
Yep.
So that.
OK.
So Amy has a her husband, this guy, Mike.
Also infuriating storyline.
Yes.
He his whole thing is that he's pretty immature he's kind of a doof he like doesn't really do anything to help around the
house and then one night amy catches him masturbating to a cam girl um which she apparently
has been doing for 10 months so she kicks him out of the house the next day she
has a terrible day you know she spills coffee on herself she spills spaghetti on herself oh she's
such a klutz caitlin she's such a klutz she's such a bad mom her dog has vertigo because modern parents be having vertigo dogs you're like i'm just like
there's some things in this that you're just like this is more of a rich person thing
dogs on vertigo medication sounds kind of like a rich person thing uh they're like there i also i
mean there is like a storyline with the husband, but it was like another frustrating.
I feel like the writer directors, John and Scott, are are kind of like both cutting themselves slack and telling on themselves through the husband character, because it's kind of like a character we've seen before of like, oh, he's not a bad person.
He's just like kind of a doofus he's just dumb he would never
hurt his wife on purpose right i mean i think it's like goofy and fits the tone of the movie but it
also just means like oh no guy is gonna like super recognize themselves in that character or
interrogate anything about themselves they're like oh he's dumb i'm an amazing husband I'm I'm a good dad yeah so that was annoying for sure so Amy has had this
horrible day and at the PTA meeting that night Gwendolyn who is the PTA president is like Amy
you're on the like police force at the bake sale or some poor Christina applegate just like she's a star why does she i mean yeah you know but yes
her her character is like bitchy obstacle yep so amy is like no i'm not gonna do your thing
fuck it i quit and we're like quit what being a mom? What's happening? But then she's like, yes.
Christy, another major writing flaw in this story is that the writers bravely, instead of examining where do these pressures on mothers come from?
What systems are enforcing it they instead make the reason that things are difficult
for all mothers be christina applegate right it's her fault that that every modern mother
feels pressure and feels insecure and inadequate it's actually christina applegate's fault
and by ruining christina applegate and and by that I mean to say pit women against women
for really no reason, you can solve that. Yes, but before all that really transpires,
Amy decides to be a bad mom. So basically, she goes to a bar to blow off some steam.
And there she sees Carla, Katherine Hahn hans character who is this horny
irresponsible single mom type and kiki kristen bell's character who is an isolated stay-at-home
mom with four kids and no friends type so you can see there's an attempt here to show different kinds of mothers but then the
writing doesn't really do anything to subvert or expand on those types and it just ends up being
types right exactly it there's like no nuance they are these one-dimensional characters right
no thought was put into them aside from just like identifying them as these stereotypes
and writing them as such and it's i guess i to be fair is the wrong preface to this sentence but
like that is all john lucas and scott moore know how to do with characters of any gender if you
look at the hangover you also see like three types of bro that like they're not challenging in their
writing um to put it lightly and so yeah you just end up like it's nice that you have three different
types of mothers you have like a working mom in a relationship you have a stay-at-home mom you have
a single mom this all sounds like cool all right different kinds of moms
let's explore it but then we just don't explore it and we kind of just like nope that's it they
got to step one yep so at at the bar they talk about how hard it is to be a good mom in this
day and age how there's so many rules and expectations to be perfect so then amy is like screw it let's be bad moms parentheses 2016
written and directed by josh lucas and scott moore that's the name of the movie that was when
my boyfriend walked in during that scene and he was just like oh boy and then he just like left
after that line he was like i'm gonna go get lunch yikes um all right let's let's take that
moment to take a quick break because we're at break time and then we'll come back and keep going
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16, 2017, was murdered.
There are crooks everywhere you look now. The situation is desperate.
My name is Manuel Delia. I am one of the hosts of Crooks Everywhere, a podcast that unhurts the plot to murder a one-woman WikiLeaks. Daphne exposed the culture of crime and corruption
that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate price.
Listen to Crooks everywhere on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. The only Katherine Hahn is joining us on Lost Culture East. That's right. The queen of comedy herself.
Get ready for a conversation that's as hilarious as it is insightful.
Tune in for all the laughs, the stories, and of course, the culture.
I feel some Sandra Bernhardt in you.
Oh, my God.
I would love it.
I have to watch Lost.
Oh, you have to.
No, I know.
I'm so behind. Katherine Hahn can sing. Oh, you have to. No, I know. I'm so behind.
Katherine Hahn can sing.
Oh, I'm really good at karaoke.
What's your song?
Yeah, what's your song?
Oh, I love a ballad.
I felt Bjork's music.
I just was like, who is this person?
I got to hawk this slalom, Ludi.
Not hawk the slalom.
I absolutely love it.
It was somehow Shakespearean when you said it.
It was somehow gorgeous.
Yee, my slok, you hollum.
Listen to Las Culturistas on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, I'm Gianna Pradenti. And I'm Jemay Jackson-Gadsden. We're the hosts of Let's Talk
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The only difference between the person who doesn't get the job
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Yeah, I think a lot about that quote. What is it? Like you miss 100% of the shots you never take.
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We're back.
Okay, so the good moms have decided to be bad moms now.
They're bad moms.
They said it was the end of the first act, and we're like, all right, they are bad moms.
They get drunk at the bar.
Then they go wild at the grocery store uh the next morning amy is all hung over from her wild
nights and her kids are like what the heck and she's like i'm a bad mom now make your own freaking
breakfast she takes her kids to school in her husband's muscle car she skips work and goes to
the movies uh and lunch with her new friends, Kiki and Carla.
Then we've got the bake sale scene there.
Amy flirts with Jesse, this hot widower dad.
But then Gwendolyn comes over and she's like, Amy, if you don't stop being a bad mom, I'm going gonna make your life a living heck then a scene happens off screen
where amy learns that her husband is staying with his internet girlfriend this information
happens in a scene that does not play out on screen right and then you're just like
like that's not good writing it's not good writing and then i was just like i also don't
care like yeah i don't care.
Yeah, I don't care.
I'm not rooting for them to get back together.
But I'm also not rooting for this random widower character who comes in.
It's almost like they're shoehorning a romantic plot into the movie where no one cares about it and it doesn't really belong.
Perhaps.
But anyway, so this scene happens off screen but then the aftermath is carla being like
amy you need to get laid and she's like yeah i do so the three of them go out to a bar but not only
is amy a bad mom now she's also a bad flirter she's bad at flirting cue montage yeah another montage uh another long horribly
edited might i say montage it was showing her being bad at flirting but then jesse the hot
widower dad shows up and they start flirting and then they have a a little kiss a little
we're like okay she got what she wanted.
I do want to talk about that kind of romantic storyline a little later on.
Because there's some interesting things there.
But anyway, so the next morning, Amy wakes up to her husband having returned.
And she's like, get out of here.
And we're like, all right, he was a character for a minute.
Yeah, I wasn't sure just because like
they're not good writers i'm like i wonder if he's just never gonna be mentioned again but he
is mentioned again but i still don't care about him so it just ended up kind of being like a moot
point i was like hmm well i guess that that's what's happening right they could have written
him out if they wanted me to want to see him they could have written him out. If they wanted me to want to see him, they could have written a better character.
Right.
Then Amy finds out that her daughter, Jane, got benched for her soccer game because Gwendolyn blackmailed the soccer coach, basically.
So Amy is like, okay, well, then I'm going to run against you for PTA president.
And we're like, okay, guess this is this the plot now
everything you're just like i know the shift because she says like i'm gonna be a bad mom
and then she's like i'm gonna be the pta president and you're like i feel like these goals are at
odds yes with but when she says she's gonna be a bad mom she doesn't really this is just like it's
it's i mean we're not moms it goes without saying but i
was like okay she says i want to be a bad mom but i think that i mean what she's actually saying is
i want to be a mom and my own person right like why can't they just say that like i know that
that's not as punchy but it's confusing for her to keep saying i want to be a bad parent
when which what she means something else like right it's still very clear that she like,
they all love their children very much,
but they're flawed people.
So like,
that's fine.
You know,
I don't get it.
I mean,
I get it,
but I don't like it.
Like I want to be a mom who doesn't have to live up to such rigid
expectations and high standards that are placed upon me by society and the
patriarchy that doesn't
fit into onto a movie poster well but bad moms well when you say when you say uh society and
patriarchy i think you mean christina applegate oh oh right i'm so sorry it was actually her fault
that this is all happening so that's why we have to defeat her in the election question mark unclear unclear it also seems like she doesn't
like logistically does Mila Kunis have the bandwidth for this her whole thing is like I
don't have bandwidth for anything and then she's like she's already too busy the goal is she's like
I'm gonna hurt she says I she don't think she means this but she's like I'm gonna be a worse
parent because I am too bogged down with the expectations
for work and parenthood
and all this other stuff but then
the focus shifts and she's like I actually
want to take on an additional
responsibility to prove
something to that I don't
know what it is
right okay okay just making sure
that that is what's happening
whoops that is what's happening. Whoops. That is indeed.
Maybe it don't make sense.
Oop.
So now that she's running for PTA president, she throws a meet the candidate party that no one shows up to at first.
But then people start to arrive because they've got free wine and it turns into this wild party.
And then Jesse shows up at the end
as it's winding down
and then they have a little kiss
and a little sex.
Ooh.
And we're like, yeah.
And then there's another scene
where Amy's husband is back again
and they go to a couples counseling
with Wanda Sykes.
Again, her talents are wildly underused yeah i had just watched and this is like really embarrassing i just watched as a joke
we were doing her on zeitgeist movie club which we've already done in this show
and um listeners will know we don't love it we don't love it um but i watched so i
watched jexi instead as a joke that adam divine movie it's really bad and wanda sykes is also
inevitably in that movie being wildly underused and so it's like just two days in a row of seeing
wanda sykes enormous talent just wasted.
I just hope that she's just like, they offered me so much money that I could not say no.
I can't imagine that's true, though.
It wasn't that big of a budget.
It was only, what, $22 million?
It's true, $22 million.
What if Wanda Sykes was $21 million of the dollars?
Oh, fingers crossed.
Hope so.
Let's headcanon yeah but yeah she is
very under you're just like this is a waste of wanda sykes but i'm glad she's there um but she's
like wow you guys should just get a divorce which is like we know yeah it's like uh duh this is all
to say that uh we're reaching the low point of the movie amy's marriage is crumbling she gets
fired from her job that she has not been showing up to and she's like why are you firing me sure
i've skipped work for the past week in a row but like i don't get it and then they're like our
avocado toast is dry and they're oh god that whole yeah so it's something it's not her fault that she didn't show up to work
right it's millennials fault what and then to top it all off um gwendoline has planted
weed in amy's daughter's locker and gets her kicked off the soccer team so everything's just
crumbling in amy's world and her daughter gets really mad at her
and calls her selfish and then she's like i'm gonna go stay with dad so things have fallen
apart so it's the night of the pta election amy eventually shows up late because she's always late
that's kind of her thing she's not like the other girls and she gives this speech where she's like hey
most of us are bad moms and that's okay because being a mom is really hard vote for me and
everyone's like woohoo and she wins the election then there's like a little bit of a reconciliation
between her and gwendoline her kids back. She gets rehired at work.
The movie takes a very long time to end.
I was like, kind of like,
did you feel that as well?
We were just like,
the writing gets kind of scattered in the second act.
And then they still managed to tie up
every kind of random storyline
they had set up in the very long second act.
But it takes a while where they're like
okay there's a climactic third act scene which is like the third actiest i don't even really mean
this is a bad thing but you know she goes up she says the title of the movie she says the
statement of the movie and everyone's like woohoo you win the big game yeah but then it's like
scene where you find out what happened with her and her kids scene where you find out what happened
with the widow scene where you resolve the christina applegate thing scene where you find out what happened with her and her kids scene where you find out what happened with the widow scene where you resolve the christina applegate thing scene where katherine
han's character gets resolution you didn't realize that you were supposed to want uh there's just
like there's like five daniel mont scenes that you're just like all right let's i don't like
this movie very much sorry and then yeah that's pretty much it yeah and then we get this uh kind of like not post credits but
like as the credits are rolling we get all of the the actors in the movie just them with their moms
in real life having conversations and we're like oh this is more endearing than the entire movie
i was saying this before we started recording k Catherine Hahn's mom is funnier than the whole movie.
Catherine kept watching the scenes with Catherine Hahn and her mom and Jada Pinkett Smith and her mom were so delightful.
I also think that Jada gets more screen time during the credits than she does in the movie.
Hundred percent.
I found Kristen Bell's mom to be a little threatening.
I was just like something about Kristen Bell's mom is not rubbing me the right way.
Mila Kunis' mom seems like a delight.
Same for Christina Applegate.
That's my review of everyone's mom.
Incredible.
Something about Kristen Bell's mom has a bit of a sinister energy.
Can't quite place it.
Sure, I see that.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Well,
let's take another quick break and then we'll come back and really do a deep dive.
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Oh my God, I would love it.
I have to watch Lost.
Oh, you have to.
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Katherine Hanken's thing.
Oh, I'm really good at karaoke. What's your song? Yeah, what's your song? Oh, I love. I'm so behind. Katherine Hanken's thing. Oh, I'm really good at karaoke.
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And we're back.
So we've been chatting a little bit already throughout the recap of things that have, you know, bugged us.
Yes.
I think I just want to start out the official discussion by saying,
like, I can see why this movie would resonate with people,
especially moms.
For sure.
Because it does a little bit to recognize how difficult it is to be a mom, how mothers are often underappreciated, overworked, how they often have to do a lot of the household and emotional labor to keep a family going.
And this movie is about a group of women who are just fed up with those expectations that are placed upon them to be perfect moms.
And then they say, fuck it to those expectations.
Absolutely.
Like, I really do appreciate that there is like and again, for movies that have come out even remotely recently, this is the option of a movie that expresses these like really commonly held frustrations.
So it's like i i'm glad this
exists for that reason and and i'm glad that it like resonated i'm interested in your mom tweets
yes because yeah this is the only movie of its kind for better and for worse
um i'll read a few of the responses i got from moms and for our listeners who are moms feel free to reach out on social
media and let us know how much or how little this movie resonated with you because we are
very curious for sure um but anyway here are a few takes give me that sweet mom intel they were
a bit mixed but basically my tweet just asked um are you a mom? Have you seen Bad Moms?
Did it resonate with you?
Thoughts?
One of the first responses was, I am a mom and I loved it.
I also saw it in a theater full of moms and it was an awesome bonding experience.
Okay.
Another one said, big fan. I relate to Mila Kunis and Katherine Hahn.
My husband left me for another woman and I had to struggle to
figure out how to keep my household afloat with two kids aged three and five at the time while
shedding my wife slash mother identity and figuring out who I was. Another response was saying that
she is a mom. She did not finish the movie. It did not resonate with her at all so again mixed responses
i guess i mean like a lot of what you hear and then i think around the original coverage of
this movie because this movie was reviewed mixed as well um and i was happy to see it that a lot
of the reviewers of this movie were not just women but also were mothers um and it seems like
moms are also split on this.
But I mean, even the responses that you've shared, and thank you to those people for sharing,
seems to indicate that like, this is the first time they've seen those kinds of problems
represented in a big movie. And in a way that isn't. And I think we've talked about this with
a number of different identities that are held primarily by women of
like it's nice to see a mom struggling in a way that isn't framed as like this is the most tragic
thing in the world this is like and then it's just a sad because i feel like there's a lot of movies
about like sad moms but this movie is about bad moms there might yeah and and i i could definitely see how seeing this movie
in theaters with other moms would be really cathartic and fun totally i just think we
can do better yes for sure and that that's my thesis statement of the film which is that like
it's a movie about being a mom and the pressures of
being a mother and it's written and directed by two cishet men who are known for being cruel to
women yeah yeah and i know that we we've done research into what these guys were saying on the press tour for this movie, which was like,
look,
just very like I,
my,
my suspicion going into researching the production of this movie was that
John Lucas and Scott Moore wanted money,
right?
Okay.
That is what a lot of directors want.
Right.
But by 2016, you can't necessarily just make another hangover.
You can't like bro comedy is really not as much in demand, you know.
And so it just seems kind of like it just seems like someone reached out and was like,
John Lucas Scott Moore, women are so hot right now.
So we need you to like don't don't like get out of your comfort
zone or anything but we need a movie with some ladies and no you can't kill them uh and it just
it just feels like a studio note like it just yeah i have like i have some of these interviews
and i like i want to play some clips from them because they're so frustrating to hear these guys talk it's just I'm frustrated by them like they should have just known better
they should have been like well we're not moms why would we write a movie about moms yeah but
what have they done in their career that would indicate that they would pass money on to a
marginalized creator like there's nothing that they've ever nothing no they they got offered
the money and they took it which also makes me very frustrated at the you know the studio who was like hey men write this
movie about ma like yeah yeah i am i am at least mildly encouraged and appreciated by like i guess
that kristin bell had a lot to do with this project existing as well from the research I'd done on the production.
She was like, I think, the star attached that made the movie get made.
And she was the one that convinced Mila Kunis to do it.
And so there is like more women behind the scenes of this movie than your average John Lucas Scott Moore movie.
But that's saying literally nothing.
So, yeah.
Well, let's hear a little a few things they have to say, shall we?
No.
Yes.
So this is an interview with the co-writers and co-directors, John Lucas and Scott Moore,
about just sort of their experience developing and directing Bad Moms. And here are just a few choice quotes from them i am on a
youtube channel called film is now movie bloopers and extras just to cite this source as properly
as i can yeah so here's the first clip uh yeah. Well, I think, you know, the movie, the genesis of the movie was looking at our wives lives were both dads and our wives or moms and seeing how intense a world it was and how ripe it was for comedy. We went to enough mom events that got a little off the rails that were like, oh, we're not actually entirely making this up.
This is something that actually happens.
The three martini play date or whatever it is.
Not my wife, by the way.
She's very well behaved.
But other moms, of course.
But we just thought it was a world full of really intense social interactions.
And it was just a world that hadn't been, in our minds, done to the nth degree yet.
And so we thought we could oh there it's very and i mean and the quotes get worse from that like it it just i
really don't like it there it's so i mean it's like i i feel like that quote alone just like
you're like yeah this was a studio note they were asked to write a movie about women. They asked their wives three questions a piece and then just wrote the movie.
And I really don't like this.
Okay, let me know if I'm getting off the rails here.
But I do feel like there is,
especially in this genre,
there's this repeated media narrative of
women should be allowed to be raunchy too and
like it just comes off a little like condescending like it's like okay well then like let them and
also you don't need to write like there's just no i hate i just there couldn't be two people i
would want behind a project about motherhood less right i mean i'll play a couple more little clips from
this but like yeah so there's this monologue that amy mila kunis's character gives in the movie when
she's talking to her son about how her son like needs to do his own homework and she basically
she's like you're entitled which means mommy and daddy have been spoiling you and now you think the
world owes you something but it doesn't and if you don't learn how to work hard now you're going to
grow up to be another entitled white dude who thinks he's awesome for no reason and then you'll
start a ska band and you'll be mean to girls and you'll grow a mustache to look interesting but
you won't actually be interesting and i'm not okay with that so please do your own homework so she's
like talking about male basically the directors of this movie who are entitled and think they can just
do anything but then they also like but then they also do that thing where they make it sound goofy
and not like themselves enough that they just sort of manage to slip out of it they're like right
like i feel like that's the same the same issue I have with the way they wrote her husband where um I agree with our listener that it's it's like there is some visibility and
like a shitty husband that cheats on their spouse with not a lot of guilt I mean that's unfortunately
a pretty common thing that happens but the way that they write the character makes it seem like he's just not smart enough to be able
to be a loyal husband it has nothing it is barely a reflection on his character and and i feel like
that is a way that they let themselves and other men off the hook by just writing a character that
really no one is going to see themselves in and we've had this discussion in different genres too where it's like we've had discussions about like when a man is and i guess trigger warning but like when a man
assaults a woman in a movie it's very often by a character that is so brutally evil that no
or like no average person would recognize themselves in it and so then it just becomes
like well what are you supposed to
take away from that, you know, and this is a much less version of that. But I do think it is like
kind of a flavor of like, these guys are not actually writing it. The one thing that they
could do and use their lived experience to do is write a dad character that right isn't so ridiculous and they can't even do that it's just
without getting like too like oh well i'm not like this this guy's dumb like it's like okay but like
they just can't self-examine also john locus being like, though, she would never misbehave. She's perfectly behaved.
I'm just like, did you miss the point of your own shitty movie?
It sounds like it based on that comic.
It sounds like it.
There was a piece I came across from,
I was just looking through some of the coverage in both directions,
the pro and con
from when this came out in 2016 and there was a piece I found in Slate that I actually uh
quite liked and I thought it was someone who like a writer named Alyssa Strauss who enjoyed the movie
but kind of had all of the same points that we have about why it's like well this isn't really she was like
it's a fun movie but it's not really like the mother's experience where so i just wanted to
share a quick passage from that that i think like ties in a lot of things that we've been
talking about so far yeah um she says in real life a harried mom like amy seeking some relief
would probably recognize that her unhelpful husband and unrealistic boss are her main problems. The annoying mom at school would be nothing more than a pebble in her
shoe, something that bothers her for a moment, but can easily be resolved. Personally speaking,
I know few moms who have been exhausted or wounded by inter mommy tension. I asked other moms I know,
including those with office jobs and those who are their family's primary caretaker,
and they all felt the same. Moms are not at war with one another, we concluded,
and most of us don't care about what parenting
or employment decisions other moms are making.
We might become irritated when a mom thinks
she is better for making a particular decision,
but the crime there is hubris,
not how they are feeding their baby
or how many extracurriculars their kid is enrolled in,
which I feel like is a big flaw of this movie,
where it's like the way the problems
that mila kunis's character chooses to address versus what she doesn't like yeah they make the
villain another woman we don't know very well as opposed to any system that being her job which is
like even that like gets conflated because of the shitty writing
where it's like with her workplace it would be very I think smart and the most logical choice
to make it a workplace that is not welcoming to mothers it's not offering flexible scheduling
right and and that should be a clear but they don't do that they make it like oh these millennials and their coffee beans and their game of thrones like the the problem is like people who are five
years younger than Mila Kunis it's not the fact that workplaces are unwilling to accommodate
mothers and maternity leave and stuff like that like yeah it doesn't even come it barely comes up so that is like conflated and then
the clear issue of like her husband is cheating on her she wants to divorce her husband it finally
gets resolved way later but men are not like obstacles in this movie the way that other women
are well that brings me to perhaps another little clip even all that because it's like one
of those media interviews where it says like john lucas on why women should be allowed to be raunchy
even like the introduction to their clips is cringy the movie doesn't really get into a lot
of dadding and we unconsciously chose to like every time we felt as guy writers ourselves
injecting guy stuff in we sort of wanted
to treat men in this movie a lot like how women are generally treated in guy comedies which is
sort of like love objects and a little bit of comedy here and there but we really wanted to
get it not about like the relationships between like the struggles between moms and dads this
is a mom movie this is not a movie about the two things okay i mean i don't even disagree that that's like a fun inversion but then it's
like that sentence continues with like also i don't know what it's like to be a mom i didn't
do a lot of research and i don't know what i'm fucking talking about so the whole movie comes
off a bit weird they're they're so lucky they had like three talented leads who are mothers to make this movie remotely convincing.
Truly.
And the writing doesn't do them justice of what they are capable of.
Anyway, here's another clip.
And this is Scott Moore talking now? So John may have said this, but we didn't so much as write this script as listen to our wives and the moms around us and write down what they were saying.
And so really a lot of it is just observing the moms around us and putting it into a movie.
And I have to say, you're talking about sort of cutting loose.
I know my wife would love to cut loose every day, but there's so much responsibility placed on her that eventually she gets to the end of the day and it's like midnight and she's got to go to bed and it's
that frustration of not getting to do anything that she wants all day and so this movie is what
if she got to just like do whatever the hell she wanted can we start like a go fund me for these
wives they're like we need to get them out of there they're the way they talk about their wives
is literally like their possessions.
Like they're just, my wife would love to cut loose,
but unfortunately I'm making a ton of money like off of her experiences.
So I can't really like do much to contribute because I'm writing bad moms.
Like you're just like, do you hear yourself?
So, and then I have one last clip to share.
I know it's, and then I'm done, I promise.
I think there are less pressures and less expectations on fathers.
It seems like if you show up at an occasional soccer game, you're a hero for being there.
But moms sort of have to be at every soccer game and make sure they brought the treats
and make sure the kids are on time, make sure they have all the gear and that they have the shin pads.
And there's just a lot that I feel like our society has placed a lot more pressure on moms to be perfect
that dads, for right or wrong, probably for wrong,
are just expected to be at work and occasionally show up.
But moms are expected to do everything.
I personally feel like I get a lot more applauded for doing very little.
And my wife does a lot and doesn't get any. You do very little lot more applauded for doing very little and my
wife does a lot and doesn't get any very little and i do very little consciously uh no but i think
there's i think that's i we could get into a really deep philosophical conversation as to why
it is but the truth whatever whatever cause you want to point to it is reality that moms are held
to a far higher standard and it's not fair yeah okay but what have you done but what have you done but what have you done you know they
just they're like um i think i've heard of this thing called the patriarchy um not really sure
what it does or who it is but it seems really shitty i would be so pissed if that were me so i guess what i'm saying is wow really sucks and bye yes these are
the doofuses who tried to write like an empowering mom movie yeah they did not succeed um that then
that's all i have to say about it they just just did not succeed there. I really hope that in a couple of years,
we like look back on this episode when a,
I would love a run.
Like it's not,
don't misunderstand us.
We would love a raunchy comedy starring moms written by anyone else.
They're written by like someone with experience,
someone who has at least researched it.
Like it just there couldn't be a more cynical like Hollywood choice for someone to be in charge of this movie.
It just shows a complete distrust in lit.
I mean, and having Annie Mumolo there really was like a knife to the gut for me of like you have cast someone in a shitty tiny role of someone who could be doing
circles around it's just ridiculous totally yeah and and especially because like to have these
two men write this movie about motherhood and it like them being like but like you know it's
it's bad moms it's moms like what if moms could be bad and raunchy and drunk and have sex and like all this stuff.
And it's like, great.
Yeah, that would be cool to see.
That would be a subversion of what we normally see on screen.
But like, again, it always it just comes down to like, these are not the people to tell this story, because these are guys whose comedy relies almost entirely
on punching down and writing dialogue in a way that like i really don't like women it's very
like katherine han's character the way that she's always like oh my cooter my cooch my pussy you're
like that's how 50 year old men talk about women that is not how women talk about themselves like i unless there's something i'm
missing but like i've never known any one of my generation or my mom's that has spoken of
themselves in that way and my and that's not to say that my mom and her friends don't talk about
themselves in gross ways they do but not right but they don't talk about themselves like i feel like there is this weird sometimes there are semi-good monologues that i theorize
were rewritten later on because they're just like this is too like mila kunis will occasionally have
a good small monologue that is yes extremely on the nose but at least it's making a competent
point like when she's at the bar and
she's like there's so much pressure on us blah blah blah like you're just like okay yes i agree
with this cool nice but then it's like for the most part it's moms talking to each other the
way their husbands talk about them and not how they talk about themselves because of who's writing the movie and so so and i just want to clarify something i want to clarify what
we mean uh i i don't think that men should avoid writing movies about women or avoid writing female
driven stories i think oftentimes it's awesome when men want to write compelling female characters. Like I have
a lot of students in my online screenwriting classes. Wow, another plug. Incredible.
It can be done really well. Like it can be done really well as long as you're,
you know, doing it with empathy and you're informed like that is the key. And these
writers have a very trackable history of that not being
the case. 100%. Yeah, like, there's a way to do it responsibly. And there's a way to do it not
responsibly. And like, again, like the students in my class, if I'm not mistaken, every single one of
them is writing a screenplay with a female protagonist. Like they are, I know they like
they want to be contributing to inclusivity,
and that's awesome, and we encourage that.
Yes.
But yes, it's a matter of these specific filmmakers
is who we are railing against.
John Lucas and Scott Moore,
they have this terrible track record.
And I think I'm also like,
we just came off of that Hangover episode
that we did on the Matron.
We have very fresh
memories of how bad these writers are yeah at writing women and i think that it also speaks to
i mean if you're writing i mean i i think it's wonderful that like where i mean as writers
opening up more inclusivity but it's like women should be allowed to the front of the line
on this story for sure and and it's and it's i
think another example of like the bajillionth time that an all-male uh screenwriting duo gets a
million chances to do something well and never does it well and here we are talking about it
right like they don't deserve another chance that's what i'm saying
they don't in in the other like but people don't care another thing i think is worth talking about
is that like this isn't to say that people can't change and like writers can't grow over time and
that like people don't deserve redemption because like a lot of hollywood screenwriters should be
trying to change and should be growingriters should be trying to change and
should be growing and should be trying to course correct but and I like you know I do admire
that when people do put in the effort but still like these guys but it's not these guys yeah
they don't qualify for that conversation it's not these guys I just am insulted by them trying to
write this like female driven story that I think is attempting to like be empowering for moms.
But it just like falls flat on its face.
I don't even know if that's true.
I think that that interview with them is for me, that interview is the nail in the coffin of like this was a very cut and dry cash grab.
Yeah.
This story does not mean anything to them.
They like reference their wives as if it's like the 1950s.
Like that.
I don't think that this,
I mean,
I've had very hard to believe that they went in to this project more wanting to make women feel seen than they did just want millions of dollars.
Right.
Yes. want millions of dollars right yes that's just one of the examples of how to write a female driven
story irresponsibly and not doing it responsibly which is what we are encouraging people to do
you know if you're a man who wants to write stories about women and that include women
great please do that yeah just do your fucking homework that's literally just do your
fucking homework and and ask yourself you know like who else do i need to include in this process
in order to make it an authentic story for sure idk my bff jill remember that oh my gosh
is your best friend slash mom my best friend i've truly in quarantine I think I think I've told you
this a little bit I so I like digitized all my family's home tapes and there's like 60 hours
of them and so I feel like I've been with them non-stop and the way my mom narrates things is
just like I'm gonna edit this thing down and she's gonna win an oscar for cinematography her slow zooms and her
omniscient narration is unmatched incredible i've seen a few of like the little clips you've posted
on instagram there's i'm currently getting through this really long video of my parents on their
sixth anniversary my mom like puts her wedding dress on and my dad is like this is weird and
then my mom's like it's actually fun and i'm like now this is what we need in a movie whatever's
going on here where is bad jill loftus bad jills we need bad jills bad jill and bad laurie i would
watch that movie that would be so fun.
And then Jada Pinkett Smith would also be there and actually get to have a line this time.
Yes.
Yes.
My mom, not to brag, but my mom would let Jada Pinkett Smith talk.
In fact, she would only, my mom would not talk at all.
She's like, Jada, you have the floor.
I know.
And then my mom would go around talking about like telling everyone for the rest of her
life how Jada Pinkett Smith is her best friend in the world.
It would be a whole thing.
Oh, moms are great.
If only they had a better movie to watch.
It's true.
Okay.
Here's some things that I didn't hate about the movie.
And again, like, oh, I just, I know there's a lot to like about this.
There is some small attempt, even if it's by the wrong people, to explore certain aspects of being a mom.
It tries.
It does try.
So I do want to include some things that I like.
Sure. enjoy that between amy's two children more focus is given on the mother-daughter relationship than the mother-son relationship with the whole like soccer that is true uh storyline and they go to
the spa and they bond at the spa and they have a nice little time um i enjoyed that and then what
little we do see with amy's son is her, like, don't grow up to be an entitled white guy.
And because she's like, you need to do your own homework.
You need to cook your own breakfast.
He teaches himself how to cook.
So you see he makes frittata.
So you see a boy learning a domestic skill, which I feel like you almost never see in a movie and he's not mocked for it either
which I feel like would have been another easy writing choice that they didn't go with I liked
that too I liked I liked that uh her daughter was also uh on a sports team and that the main
tension with the daughter I mean there was mother-daughter stuff but it was also like
my daughter really wants to be on this sports team so they didn't relegate the daughter
to like traditional you know stuff there either she's an athlete right they also do she takes
mandarin classes and then says some racist stuff about mandarin and then also and then mila kunis
also says wow that's a little racist and you're like this is not a funny joke for this year like that's in response to um her daughter like worrying about whether or not she's going to be
able to get into an ivy league school and she's like yeah they they're rejecting asians these days
and then mila kunis is like oh that's racist but it's like yeah that's another like having it both
waysiness that you're just like right that's not that doesn't if you just like that's just another like dumbass like directors of the hangover
thing.
They're like, well, if we say it's racist, then that absolves us.
Yeah, you're just like, no, that's not how that works.
Yeah, I won't go through my whole list.
But there's a lot of like punching down.
Yeah, I mean, substantially less than you would expect from a movie from these guys,
but still bad.
But it's still present for sure.
Yes.
Some other stuff I did like, I actually really enjoyed,
although I did not think it needed to be there,
but since it is there and we have to talk about it,
I liked the romantic subplot between Amy and Jesse.
If it had to be there, they could have done a lot
worse. They could have done worse. And the reason I like it is that he treats her far better than
certainly we've seen these writers and directors having male characters treat women. I know,
I know. But that it's also like, I like that it would have been worse if he treated her badly,
obviously. But then I'm also like, these guys went out of their way to treat a male character kindly
that they would never have done for a female character.
That's true.
In the same position.
But I am glad.
I mean, I liked I liked I know nothing about him, but he's nice.
He has for consent.
There's like he's doing the bare minimum on a very high level.
That's true yeah he
he asks if she's okay when he learns about like her husband having just cheated on her he he
doesn't neg her right we're mostly saying things that he doesn't do as opposed to things that he
does which just like speaks to the sad state of the way women are treated, especially in like romantic context, because we've so we're so accustomed to seeing men being so shitty to women and like negging them and stalking them and wearing them down and surprise kissing them.
In this movie, she surprise kisses him, which, you know, is also not good.
Good, but different.
Different.
He compliments her on her parenting skills
you know again this is just bare minimum the decent thing to do but because we're so
conditioned to see men treating women terribly uh we're like wow give this man a medal
they also they objectify men far more than they do women in the movie to the extent it's often
a joke where like when we meet jesse he's introduced in this like slow-mo gazey shot
that's like you know panning up his body um to you know draw the audience's attention to the fact
that this is the guy that the moms think is hot yep there's the
like movie the fake movie that they watch in the movie theater where like this man is like in space
with this woman he's like love is stronger than space and then he like rips his shirt
exposing his chest and stuff so it's like okay yeah i mean and again this movie i mean like every movie in this kind of very bloated
genre it can't possibly happen if everyone in the movie isn't pretty well off absolutely and
by extension there's very little diversity in the movie at all you just see a lot of different kinds of rich white moms yes this is
100 a movie about like middle class to upper middle class white women i mean did you see their
house i mean amy's house yes i would say that like i mean like carla is more like middle class
but like yeah amy it seems quite well to do and this is something that we see in media where moms are allowed to be boozy
and like distant and irresponsible
as long as they are financially stable white women.
Right.
Because when that's the case, it's funny.
It's a joke.
It's hilarious.
But like if you're a black mom or a low income mom
and you like step out of line as a mother for one second there's a million
other ways that you're going to be stigmatized and treated poorly totally and that's not to like
lessen you know it's like it there is pressure on the bad moms but it's like there's really no
like indication that the writers are aware that like this is on the low end of difficult you know
also like another thing the movie does again it makes the ever so slightest attempt to try to hold
men more accountable to be good fathers but which is like something a movie could and should do like i would like to see more
movies with those themes but like it's really glossed over there's like just not enough of
an attempt to actually hold men accountable like the closest thing we get i think is that
little through line with kiki's husband kent who we see him being like really controlling and borderline maybe abusive
to kiki and then she has a cathartic moment at the end where she yells at him and that's like
the only thing we know about her and it's also just like that's the lowest level of resolution
you could possibly get for the very little we know about this character is like she told off her husband one time to go to a pta meeting like that's like but then and then like the scene we get after that
is like i don't know his behaviors change and he's like oh mom so sorry i forgot the backpack
i'll go back and get it and meanwhile she's like there's a weird the way again these directors like their visual language that they use to
indicate certain things yeah is really off because like in this scene kristen bell is wearing makeup
and before she hadn't been wearing makeup so now that she's a middle part and then at the end she
doesn't have a middle part love this love this arc for her like now that she's in control of her life she she's makeup now she's
wearing makeup now there yeah you're like sure great and like i like makeup just as much as the
next person but like these filmmakers are like oh well um makeup equals confidence right and i feel like that's just such an
oversimplified male understanding of being a woman yeah and it's like who let you make this movie oh
i mean who wouldn't let them who with influence and power would not let them make this movie
unfortunately um so yeah i mean just moms deserve i i'm glad that this this
is this is i feel like kind of a classic example of like a tiny step in the right direction so
that's good but it's also infuriating to be like wow progress sure is slow isn't it uh but yeah i don't know i i personally blame this all on christina applegate
it's actually been her fault all along she invented patriarchy and if she hadn't done that
none of this would be happening i think my final thoughts are just that like this is unfortunately because this is like one of the only examples of a like female
mom driven narrative that is also like a romp because there's other there's a few other like
movies that explore motherhood that came out around this time and i mean there's there's
narratives about this all throughout film history but like some more recent ones were things like 20th century women tully the baba
duke you know can't beat the baba duke feminist icon the baba duke but these and queer icon the
baba duke absolutely true but they these aren't romps so the fact that like kind of the one
example of like a mainstream broad comedy mom romp is a movie made by people who don't know what it is firsthand to be a mom
is just such a frustrating misstep and that doesn't mean like if you like this movie
i can see why there are some things about it to take away that would be very relatable and that
that would resonate with moms but i long for the day that we get moms writing mom movies
and directing mom movies.
Because I think that they will resonate with moms even more,
believe it or not.
I wholeheartedly agree.
But it does pass the Bechdel test.
So there's that.
A fair amount. a fair amount,
a fair amount.
There are whole scenes where they're just talking about dick.
Yeah.
But there's also whole scenes where they're not.
That's true.
Sometimes they're talking about their cooters.
Sometimes they're talking about their cooters.
The most feminist thing that we do,
we do it all the time.
I think it is funny that you're just like,
yeah,
they're talking about their vaginas.
So it like, it passes the Be i think it is funny that you're just like yeah they're talking about their vaginas so it like it passes the vectal test but i don't want it to because of the people who are writing
the lines but it does it does pass it does pretty handily it does and i think it might not pass the
reverse vectal test i don't think we see men interacting really at all except which is kind of nice and it's kind of nice i think
there's one there's a few exchanges where amy's husband and son just have like a quick exchange
but other than that yeah i think it is not men talking to each other really at all so hey so there's that thankful for small miracles what would you rate this movie on our
nipple scale uh you know on from zero to five nipples based on how well you feel it portrays
women in the movie i will give it two i was feeling the same way. Because and again, I want there to be much more representation
of moms from all walks of life, not just rich white women, the whole spectrum of people.
If they are parents, I want to see that we don't really get much of it at all and when we do see it it is very limited the types of moms we are allowed to
see on screen I've never seen any mom like my mom Lori I've never seen anything remotely resembling
my mom on screen same which means I need to write a movie about my mom yeah I agree I I kind of like and just based on
the way that we've had to tiptoe around ourselves kind of throughout the discussion of this movie
because it's the only movie of its kind I kind of I kind of resent a little bit that we have to
you know keep being like but it's okay the movie's okay because it's just like
there that's just such a clear indicator that there are not enough options in this genre it
is the only option i don't think it's a good movie i i'm glad that it portrays a few different types
of moms in a very specific area of the world and not that every movie needs to represent everything
but it's like this is a movie written by people who don't know how to write female characters right oh it just this movie just feels like so focus grouped and i'm
glad that there are elements of it where moms feel seen but it's i mean it's like it's so
frustrating that it's like oh we have to like give this movie points because it has mom representation
but then it's like but it's not a good movie like moms deserve a good
thoughtful movie that can still be raunchy and funny but like just let someone who knows what
they're talking about right write it and sorry and that's the police coming to arrest john lucas
and scott moore yeah i live in their neighborhood uh no but yeah. And then just like we talked about
just how intensely like whitewashed
this movie and this genre is
to the extent where you can have
Jada Pinkett Smith in the movie
and not give her a line.
Like outside of like,
yes, Christina Applegate.
Just, I don't know.
I feel like there's a lot of broad stereotypes
that these guys are known for perpetuating
for all genders, races.
They only know how to write in stereotypes
and that doesn't really service
what I feel like is needed
in terms of portraying moms in a cool and funny way.
I feel so, I don't know.
For now, watch TV instead.
Two nipples.
One to Katherine Hahn and one to Jada Pinkett Smith.
Nice.
I'm going to give one to Wanda Sykes and one to Vertigo Dog.
Feminist icon, Vertigo Dog.
The best character in the film.
Truly, I felt like I had vertigo this whole movie
well there you have it bad moms happy mother's day to all the bad moms the good moms the whole
the whole beautiful spectrum of moms we love you all and thank you for what you do and yeah and
then just for everybody we hope you're doing well.
We hope you're staying safe.
What a time to be alive.
Truly.
Right.
And then I guess we should say where we can be found. Yeah.
You can find us on Twitter and Instagram at Bechtelcast for starters.
For starters, you can subscribe to our Patreon, a.k.a.
Matreon, if you have not already.
And if you are able.
It's a fun time.
It's a fun time.
It's May, so it's my birthday month.
Yeah, we're doing fun ones.
We're doing some fun.
We're doing Shaun of the Dead and Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
Just so much feminism oozing out of these films that I'm very excited.
It'll be fun.
Unfortunately, they are some of my favorite movies.
And that's my cross to bear.
Those are my picks for my birthday.
Maytreon.
Maytreon.
But we've been really, I think, cranking out the hits over on the Maytreon recently.
Oh, yeah.
Head over there.
Join the community.
Have some fun with us
you can go to get some merch at tpublic.com slash the bechdel cast they're selling masks now
we're selling masks now so that's if i mean we all need one one another you get now for Molina mask. Go, go, you know, go cuckoo.
And... Oh, and if you are interested in taking my online screenwriting class,
you can go to caitlindurante.com slash classes for more information.
Or feel free to just tweet at me, at Caitlin Durante,
and let me know that you're interested.
And with that, have a happy Mother's Day.
Or a happy bad mom's day.
A very bad mom's Christmas.
Bye-bye.
Mother's Day, in a way, is just bad mom's Christmas.
Okay, bye.
Oh, that's true.
Bye-bye.
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th, 2017, was assassinated. Bye-bye. days. Listen to Crooks Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. Hey, everybody, this is Matt Rogers. And Bowen Yang. We've got some exciting news for you.
You know, we're always bringing you the best guests, right? Well, this week, we're taking it
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That's right, the queen of comedy herself.
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Tune in for all the laughs, the stories, and of course, the culture.
Don't miss Katherine Hahn on Las Culturistas.
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