The Bechdel Cast - The Santa Clause - Part 2 with Grace Thomas
Episode Date: December 20, 2019This is part 2 of The Santa Clause episode with special guest Grace Thomas! Ho ho ho!(This episode contains spoilers) For Bechdel bonuses, sign up for our Patreon at patreon.com/bechdelcast. Follow ...@GraceGThomason Twitter. While you're there, you should also follow @BechdelCast, @caitlindurante and @jamieloftusHELP 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.
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Hey, it's Teddy Mellencamp.
And Tamara Judge, better known as the Twats.
Yep. You heard that right.
We're the hosts of Two Teas in a Pod.
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every week we break down every episode and give you our opinions.
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Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare. Can Kay trust her sister or is history repeating itself? Hello and welcome to the Bechdelcast. What you're
about to hear is part two of our very long two-part episode about the Santa Claus that we recorded
live in Denver. If you haven't listened to part one yet, we strongly suggest you go back and
listen to that first. And before we get into part two of the episode, we just wanted to remind everyone about some
upcoming live shows that we have. January 22nd, we will be in San Francisco at SF Sketch Fest
at the Gateway Theater, and we're covering the Social Network. On January 24th, we will be in
New York for the Brooklyn Podcast Festival at the Bell House, and we will be covering Black Swan.
And finally, on January 26, we will be in Philadelphia at Good Good Comedy Theater,
and we'll be covering The Sixth Sense. As always, more details and ticket links to our live shows
are on our website, Bechdelcast.com, and click on the live tab and enjoy part two of the
santa claus on the bechdel cast the questions asked if movies have women in them are all their
discussions just boyfriends and husbands or do they have individualism the patriarchy's effin' vast. Start changing it with the Bechdel cast.
You know, there's so much to unpack with this movie.
Where do we begin?
It's a feminist text, that much we know.
Well, okay.
It's on every list.
Yes.
I just want to mention there is a Denver connection
because at one point, Scott Kelvin is talking to
Bernard the Elf and he's like
can we take a direct flight back to reality
or do we have to change planes in Denver
and then we're like wow
that's why we did this here
why are you all clapping for the worst
part of Denver
the airport is the
worst thing the city has to offer I'm obsessed with the airport here i think
about it at least once a week i i'm dead serious i'm i love i love the story about how the scary
horse statue killed the artist i like everything if if on your way out if you have some very
specific denver airport anecdotal scary illuminuminati shit, I want to know.
I'm like, I'm consumed by it.
You all laugh and clap now, but that airport's going to kill us all one day.
And it won't be very cool and creepy and weird and quirky.
I passed the gargoyles yesterday, Grace.
I passed the luggage gargoyles.
I just...
I would let someone kill me there.
Okay.
Well, the first things I...
The first thing I want to talk about is...
The first thing we see in the movie
is Tim Allen.
He's receiving an award
for his Do It All For You dolly,
which, what is that?
What is that? let's not even think
about it for a second i don't but he has i forgot that he had a business partner he has a business
partner one of the few people of color in the entire movie yeah she is a woman who starts to
accept like she's like thank you and then he pushes her out of the way. He grabs the microphone out of her hand,
interrupts her, and starts being like,
let's fucking party.
That's what he does.
I can't really defend Scott there.
Right.
I would say that it's possible
it was a stage direction mishap.
Okay, no.
But probably not.
No, that's not what happened.
He should have let her finish her sentence and
given her thanks and then he could have leaned in with his stupid comment sure but yes i also
wasn't lost on us sure wasn't and then shortly after that he's driving home he's on the phone
with laura i think and he's lying to her because he's like oh man there's so much traffic I'm going to be so
late. It got too lit at the do it all
for you doll Christmas party.
Gross.
There's like that well I was going to say there's like that weird
comment that like alludes
to like one of his co-workers is
having sex with a secretary.
Yeah your wife's not here.
It's the co-worker that's dressed as Santa Claus
as well. Yeah. Which is significant, I'm sure.
It's foreshadowing?
It's really significant, but we're going to go into that on the Patreon version.
Oh, good.
Yeah, you can't get it for free.
And we're going to be checking subscriptions before we get into that part of the episode. But he's lying to Laura,
and then he pretends to keep this illusion alive
of there being so much traffic.
He pretends to scream at a woman driver
who I guess flipped him off in his imagination,
and then he's like,
oh, same to you, and that's not very ladylike.
And it's like, well, okay, Scott,
women aren't allowed to flip
people off what do you mean i think the point here is that he is a raging misogynist thank you
he's a raging misogynist not a raging alcoholic
which is better
I don't know my dad was both
so I haven't seen
I'm far more
disturbed by the other than him
like yelling at a person who does not
exist I'm more disturbed by the fact that
he flirts with a child
we've got bigger fish to fry
I'm just getting warmed up
we've got bigger fish to fry
I think that I mean again we we've got bigger fish to fry i'm just getting warmed up we've got bigger fish to fry yeah yeah
uh and i i think that i mean again we we sort of touched on this already but the the divorce
narrative i think is kind of interesting and then we meet laura we never find out anything about her
let's not we let's find out about judge reinhold like we we find out a lot about Neil. We find out what degrees he has.
We find out what his area of specialty is.
We never find out if Laura has a job.
Or has ever had a job.
Or knows how to read.
We don't know anything.
All we know is she wanted a board game
when she was little
and that her son got abducted.
The board game is also like
very like coded feminine mystery date so we learn way more about neil than we learn about laura
which i think is kind of like i mean you could easily just write out neil and have laura driving
that side of the story but they just don't do that. Because even later in the story
where Neil is the one who's the driving force
between we have to take this to a custody level,
he thinks he's Santa,
and Laura is more like, I don't know.
And I feel like it's almost she gets the illusion of agency
in that scene where she's with Neil,
and she's like, I'm not sure.
What's so wrong with believing in Santa Claus?
And so she's kind of reticent and pulling back.
But it doesn't matter that she feels that way narratively because they're already at the courthouse.
Right.
And he loses custody two seconds later.
So it's like almost giving her the like, oh, maybe she'll get to do something.
And then she doesn't.
Right.
And that's all we know about her.
That's all we know.
And that's the podcast.
And with the cops too
it's like when charlie calls her from the north pole it's like they're like keep him on the line
like she would not the fucking do that you know like she's not allowed to watch cop movies
right it's like and then i mean you touched on this jamie but like scott calvin's allowed to
be a single man but like they had to have her be like remarried or like partnered off with someone
else because god forbid we see a unmarried woman on screen if we if she if she was unmarried we
might need to learn what her job was would hate that yeah no i so i mean she's just like extremely i mean these are from the
creators of lola bunny so i guess like you know they're they're not was space jam lola bunny's
first appearance i believe so yeah wow yeah the more you know but yeah i mean she's she's like
it's it sucks because i don't think she's like a bad character
i think that there are a lot of tropes that are avoided yeah with her that you see a lot especially
if it's like a divorced woman you see people often go for like the shrill tropes or the like he's so
fun and she couldn't handle it like or she's like using all of his money right like you know like
she got like a huge settlement or whatever yeah like just all of his money right like you know like she got like a
huge settlement or whatever yeah like just kind of the basic stuff that you see a lot and the good
thing it sucks because it's like nothing is really written in place of those tropes um but like it is
clear that scott and laura and neil all very much care about charlie's well-being and that is like
they're driving like she doesn't want to be
talking to Scott but she will for short bursts right because she has to and like I don't know
that that I thought was like pretty well done yeah I mean in there there is just like a we were
talking about the Christmas industrial complex on the way over here and it is like a more so than
any other I mean there's the most characters associated,
I mean,
I think at least in American culture,
with the Christmas holiday.
And they're all,
I mean,
I'm grinched out tonight,
right?
We've got the Grinch,
we've got Santa,
we've got Jack Frost,
we've got,
who else do we got?
Frosty the Snowman.
Frosty the Snowman.
Scrooge.
That bastard,
Scrooge.
Rudolph. Rudolph.
Rudolph.
Bastard, right?
We got Snowmizer and Heatmizer, right?
What?
There's no time.
They have the best songs.
And also the only gay characters in all of Christmas lore.
That's true.
At least we get queer representation through Snow and Heatmizer.
I do love Snow and Heatmizer. I do love Snow and Heat Miser.
I feel like they're underrated.
But it's such a male... Jesus, right?
Oh my God.
The three wise men.
We forgot.
The other people who were there at Jesus.
There it is.
Jimmy Carter.
JC, just like Jesus Christ.
JC makes you think.
Wow.
It makes me think.
What if whoever kills Jesus Christ
has to become the next Jesus Christ?
This summer, Judas is in for a rude away.
Anyway.
So it is a very male-dominated
holiday.
And the movies, too.
It's like the most famous Christmas movies.
This is one of them. Home Alone is one Christmas movies. Like, this is one of them.
Home Alone is one of them.
A Christmas Story is one of them.
Three very similar kids.
Like, basically the same area, the same background.
Like, it's all, like, little white boys that you're supposed to, like, from fairly upscale families.
Right.
That you're supposed to be plugging yourself into for, like, most movies in general.
But it is particularly bad for for like this
genre of movie i will defend
there is a deleted scene from the santa claus where they do reveal
laura's job oh really yeah she's an anthropology professor really it's in it's it's in the month
where charlie's been kidnapped uh- been kidnapped and she she cancels
she cancels
student hours
what
I only went to college
a little bit
office hours
she cancels office hours
for a day
and the scene is just
10 minutes of her crying
in her office
I can't
you were saying
this isn't real
I was in the middle
I was like
she's lying
she's lying
I found out a fun,
my favorite fact I found out
about this film, sorry,
has nothing to do with women.
Here is what it is.
Towards the beginning of the film,
a brief exchange between Scott and Laura
takes place in which,
and this is from the original cut in 94.
You can't find it now.
A brief exchange takes place
between Scott and Laura in which
Laura hands Scott a piece of paper with
Neil's mother's phone number on it
Scott then says 1-800
spank me
I know that number
in the United States the exchange was removed
from all home media releases
of the film starting with the 1999
DVD release after a
1996 incident in which a child
from Steilacoom, Washington called the number,
which turned out to be an actual working sex line number
and racked up a $400 bill.
Now that you say that, I remember that.
I remember that from when i must have seen it
before they like cut it out but oh my god i it's yeah i guess if you saw it before 99 it would
still be in there and then one kid in washington ruined it for all of us
uh so anyways that's the only fact about this movie i was gonna say though that um i think like you
said jamie like this movie subverts some of those like tropey stereotypy things we see in a lot of
like children and family movies in in that like a lot of mom characters would be poised as like a
very shrew but she and scott are generally making an effort they're making an effort and she seems
to be like level-headed and just
like a reasonable person and we don't know anything about her other than that but and also charlie
really likes and respects her too which i feel like is i mean especially coming off of like a
home alone episode where macaulay culkin's like my mom is terrible like he's so he's a very furious little tiny person um but charlie is like he loves his mom
he also loves neil yeah um and they don't like demonize the step parent coming in and he know
charlie like knows all this all these this like psychologist lingo i bet if you try to dose your
well buterin he'd be like oh yeah i can do that right he's eight years old but like
i don't know yeah the way the parenting was treated i thought yeah nice it was yeah it was
fine it was i would say almost unrealistic yeah yeah do parents really care that much
can they be that respectful to each other after such a rift has formed let's see going
going my childhood would say otherwise Would they be that respectful to each other after such a rift has formed? Let's see. Going.
Going.
My childhood would say otherwise.
But I like the optimism.
Another woman in the movie.
There's two women who work at Charlie's school.
One is his teacher.
She doesn't know the word stepfather.
Because she's like, Charlie, bring up your your, your, your, your Neil.
You're like, alright, what is wrong with you?
And then his principal, who, do we
get a name for the principal?
I don't think so.
I think that's the only woman of color who has a speaking
role, right?
And then Scott's business partner
at the beginning, who he pushes out of the way.
Right.
So,
you know,
right.
Not good.
Both of those characters get my 30 seconds of screen time at most.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There.
And then there's a Judy,
the elf Judy,
the kid that Tim Allen hits on.
Yes.
Not only does he hit on her,
but she's like,
I'm dating someone.
Yeah.
I'm dating. I'm dating someone in rapping.
Which, again, just suggests a horrible reality.
And also, the North Pole, at least when Scott Calvin arrives in the first one,
is a pretty gender normative space where Judyy's really only doing domestic duties she's
like working as santa's assistant she's bringing him cookies she's making sure he's comfortable in
the bed exactly and then we see the entire elf military is all male right you know bernard's the
ceo and and you know so there's there's there's work to be done
at the North Pole I'll say it
I agree
one thing that I didn't hate about
this movie
besides everything
because it rules
it's not very good
oh I'm sorry
objectively untrue
Santa falls off a ladder.
Yeah, and my dad saw it with me.
Yeah.
So that makes it a brilliant piece of cinema.
Also, there's a British elf who is fun.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Was that a choice or was he really British?
I was on the fence. I mean, yeah. I mean, this a choice or was he really British? I was on the fence.
I mean, yeah.
I mean, this is a very American normative movie.
Most of the people in the North Pole are Americans.
Doesn't track.
But anyway.
One of the things that I don't hate about the movie
is that they at least acknowledge
that not everyone celebrates christmas
because in that line that line of questioning when neil is like well how could he be santa when
this this and this and charlie's like well not everyone celebrates christmas not everyone has
a fireplace aka not everyone's rich because fireplace equals rich And that's the end of my
statement.
I like Charlie
though. I think like Charlie is a cool, because I
think sometimes in movies
people will like
undershoot or overshoot like how
a child character is written. Like it's so
annoying to me when a kid is
written as like too smart or precocious
where it's like 500 days of
summer and there's like a little girl folding her arms like joseph corden levitt you don't
understand emotional labor i'm like shut up like i'm exhausted by that but it's like charlie
charlie is like a smart kid but not so smart that you're like this is unrealistic he's just
an emotionally intelligent stepson of a therapist he's just
and i love that for him he's an empathetic kid
definitely caruana galizia was a maltese investigative journalist who on october 16th
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.
To listen to new episodes one week early and 100% ad-free,
subscribe to the iHeart True Crime Plus channel,
available exclusively on Apple Podcasts.
I've been thinking about you.
I want you back in my life.
It's too late for that.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
One session. 24 hours.
BPM 110, 120. She's terrified.
Should we wake her up?
Absolutely not.
What was that?
You didn't figure it out?
I think I need to hear you say it.
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
This machine is approved and everything?
You're allowed to be doing this?
We passed the review board a year ago.
We're not hurting people.
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller
from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm. Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, I fell too seen.
Dragged.
I'm NK, and this is Basket Case.
So I basically had what back in the day they would call a nervous breakdown.
I was crying and I was inconsolable.
It was just very big, sudden swaps of different meds.
What is wrong with me?
Oh, look at you giving me therapy, girl.
Finally, a show for the mentally ill girlies.
On Basket Case, I talk to people about what happens when what we call mental health
is shaped by the conditions of the world we live in.
Because if you haven't noticed,
we are experiencing some kind of conditions
that are pretty hard to live with.
But if you struggle to cope,
the society that created the conditions in the first place
will tell you there's something wrong with you.
And it will call you a basket case.
Listen to Basket Case every Tuesday on the iheart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts
i i have i have a little context corner oh please yes okay so i went online i logged in okay and i
was curious because uh you know christmas is has so many looming male figures over it.
I was wondering what the history of women as Santa was.
And there was a great article that came out in Mel Magazine last year that breaks that down very concisely. And I want to tell you my favorite over the past 150 years, the various attempts of women to get involved in Santa
and the various ways in which they have been shut down and sometimes arrested.
What?
So in 1849, we have the first recorded moment of a woman as Santa,
or a woman as a part of Santa lore.
Mrs. Claus is first introduced as a
concept in 1849.
Right? 1937.
Quote, it's not quite female
Santa just yet, but we
see her first inklings when Charles
W. Howard found the
Charles W. Howard Santa Claus School in
New York, aka Santa University,
to train
up-and-coming Santas, and he lets two women train to be
Santas, only if all the other Santas are killed at Santa University.
What's that man's name again?
Charles W. Howard.
Gotta remember that.
He's a hero.
Feminist icon.
Yeah.
No, but he's actually not, because they say...
Oh, no!
The women who are trained as Santas
are trained to, quote,
greet little girls, learn what they want
in their Christmas stockings,
teach them how to play with dollies, dollhouses,
dishes, and clothes.
So, not so good.
1942, things get interesting.
The first female Santa.
It's World War II.
World War II creates a Santa vacuum
by shipping...
This is the best thing I've ever heard.
So there's a Santa vacuum
because all able-bodied men are fighting
in the war.
There's not someone around to be Santa.
Women step in.
There needs to be a league
of their own, but for Santa.
Well, let's make Santa University first.
First things first.
Let's make Rosie O'Donnell famous again.
For crying out loud.
With this film.
But it's okay.
So women step in to do, you know, a lot of jobs.
A lot of women enter the workforce
and Santa's no exception.
A Chicago department store throws a woman a bone.
Quote, the manpower shortage has even
hit old Saint Nick, unquote.
The Smithsonian reported at the
time. This lady, Santa Claus,
has turned up, dressed like Mr.
Claus except for the whiskers, at a
Chicago department store and youngsters
seem just as happy telling her which
gifts they're hoping for. That same
year, a New
Jersey Woolworth hires a female Santa because they are, quote, unable to find a man suitable for the
job, unquote. The mother of eight, Anna Michelson, wears the biopic, will wear a skirt instead of
trousers, but all the other stuff will be the same as the traditional Kris Kringle. This fuels outrage, but people eventually accept it.
But the Wichita Daily Times calls the ordeal
women, quote, invading another male bastion, unquote.
Oh, my.
Columnist Henry McLemore pens a national op-ed
calling it a, quote, minor horror.
Christine Kringle?
Sarah St. Nicholas?
Susie Santa Claus?
Holy smoke, unquote. It's
1942.
He also should have said Sandra
Claus. Listen, when it
comes to my opinion, Santa
Claus died on the beaches of
Normandy.
With all of her other good men and daughters.
You're really just adding to Santa University lore.
Because there is,
Santa University was up and operational
in World War II.
Listen, if you want me to write a novel,
I could use that.
1943.
British actress Daisy Belmore
accepts the job of a female Santa in New York
for Saks Fifth Avenue.
The beardless Belmore is called Mrs. Claus
but is given her own throne
and full Santa wish-granting powers.
That same year, Max Factor releases a photo
of the ideal Santa, ladies included.
Aside from portraying the female Santa with nail polish,
women portraying Saint Nick are instructed
to masculinize the performance in every way,
including puffing their cheeks with cotton,
lowering their voices, and putting on a fake bulbous nose.
1944, women begin dressing as female...
This is, I'm going to say, every year up to the present.
I'm kidding.
Women begin dressing as female Santas around the holidays for charity,
and a 62-year-old Phoebe Seabrook,
where's the biopic,
is notably, wears the beard as well.
1995, for half a century,
there's little kerfuffle over women and Santa Claus.
Then, Donna Underwood of West Virginia
is hired to portray Santa for a local mall.
A mall manager complains.
The mall fires her.
She sues them.
She loses.
Oh!
1999.
Marta Brown is given the part of a female Santa at a Louisville, Kentucky Walmart,
then loses it when a customer complains.
She sues $67,000 for lost wages.
And like Underwood, she loses again.
This is the end of Women of Santa.
Who got arrested?
Oh, I guess I meant they lost in court.
Oh, okay.
Same thing.
Last year, two women volunteered to play Santa
in a Christmas parade in England,
and the town protested.
What?
And the outcome as of the time of writing
was undecided of whether they would be
allowed to march. And then this year
there's been a lot made of, there's an
Anna Kendrick vehicle coming out on Disney
Plus where they're like, it's female Santa.
Don't be fooled by
the big mouse. She plays Santa's
daughter. The fucking patriarchy has upheld
santa does she become saint in the end i don't know it's not out oh yeah so uh all that to say
the fight continues uh santa is a woman yeah yeah i know okay that's what Okay. That's what I had to say. Thank you. You're welcome.
Let's see.
I wrote down feminist icon soy milk girl.
Oh, she was so sweet.
Judy?
No.
What was her name?
Judy is the elf.
Judy is the elf.
Right.
I forget.
She's anything.
Yeah.
She might not have been named.
She has an arc, but she doesn't have a name.
Right. Because Scott Calvin shows up the first day he's like santa claus is for
idiots and then he comes back and he's like i've changed my views and i see your political point
the next year jamie what episode was it recently that you were talking about how
almost every story ever made is like a father-son story oh i i think it really could be
anything but there i think it was a matrion episode but yeah there's just like so many
stories that even when they like even sometimes where a movie i noticed it lately and i don't
think this is spoiling anything but even when i saw parasite which i loved that movie so much but like even when there are well-written female characters in the movie
there's still just a core of like but it's really about a father and a son and what they mean to
each other right and you're just like come please please also this is something we've talked about
probably more on the the patreon aka matreon but, because we've covered a lot of Grinch and Muppets Christmas Carol
on that.
But yeah, yeah, yeah.
So many Christmas stories
end up being like
male redemption stories,
and this is also no exception,
where like he starts out,
sharts, oh my God.
Oh my God.
Caitlin, it's the boards day.
That was another scene cut from the DVD.
You do hear him fart when he
starts to gain weight, but anyway.
That's how it works,
actually.
I gain about a...
Every day I gain a pound, I shit my pants.
Okay.
So sad.
Listeners, listeners.
I'm 340 pounds.
I don't know why I'm saying that.
I just don't want them to think I'm real skinny.
I just make it fun saying to think I'm real skinny.
Making fun saying that fat people shit their pants every day.
I'm not saying that.
I'm saying I shit my pants every day.
That's what I'm saying.
I really think our listeners are going to benefit from that clarity so scott calvin starts out as a shitty dad see where i accidentally almost said
shart yeah so he's a shitty dad and the his whole arc is this redemptive,
like, oh, I have to embrace being Santa so that I can have my son love me.
And it's just, I'm very, very tired of male redemption stories.
And here we have this one.
Well, yeah.
I mean, I think that there is something to say.
I think that there's just too many of them.
To defend Scott Calvin. I think that there is something to say. I think that there's just too many of them.
I think... To defend Scott Calvin.
Grace red-pilled me.
Scott Calvin,
I do think that there is something to be said.
As much as I will agree
that there's a lot of male redemption stories out there
and there's so many people that are underrepresented,
I think that it's good to
have male redemption stories in which the man has to demonstrate some sort of growth sure um and that
is a generally positive thing for you know because like the the way masculinity is portrayed in media
is so skewed and you get the idea that men can do nothing and still be granted a redemption arc for
no reason because that happens in real life a lot.
I appreciate that at the very
least Scott Calvin demonstrates
a change of mindset
a change of priorities
and appears to grow
as a person. And that change
sticks.
Throughout the other two movies he remains
Santa. In Santa Claus 2
in the beginning little portion,
he lets all these elves just
beat him at football and he's like, this is fun.
You know? Old Scott would not
have done that. Yeah, Old Scott
wouldn't have done that, you know? He would have fired them.
Yeah, and he's all hugs
and kisses and he's like, I love cookies.
It's, you know. It's good.
Like, I like
where Scott Calvin ends. we didn't need another male
redemption story but speaking of which we are going to cover the michael keaton jack frost on
the matron this year which is the wildest male redemption arc you'll ever encounter i used to
be so scared of that movie because michael keaton dies and then comes back to life as a snowman and then dies again.
There, oof, you hate to see it.
It's alarming, but yeah.
I think that's kind of all I had.
We only had two hours worth of things to say
about the Santa Claus.
I'm honestly shocked.
Most of it was us just describing the plot.
No, we got, I honestly think we got 1,000% more discourse than I thought honestly shocked. Most of it was us just describing the plot. No, I honestly think we got 1,000% more discourse
than I thought was possible.
True.
Yeah, no, I think that that's all I had.
Oh, the joke that I thought was,
that I'd never noticed before that really got me this time
was when they're in the classroom
and the parents are presenting and we cut into
the middle of the scene where a fire it's someone's parent who's a firefighter and he's like
and that's why third degree burns are really bad and the teacher says thank you so much we're really
sorry about your firefighting partner oh so we're led to believe that this traumatized man
just told a group of children
about how his friend lit on fire.
It's, I think,
the most slept on joke
of this hand of glass.
It's very funny
and I'm shocked they didn't cut it.
It's on par with 1-800-SPANK-ME.
That's all I have to say. Yeah, yeah have to say anything else Grace do you have any other
important insight
defenses
I'm genuinely curious if you
could pitch us
what you would do for the Santa Claus
4 what would you do
Tim Allen is gay now
oh he's not gonna like that what would you do? Tim Allen is gay now.
Oh, he's not going to like that.
But he's like bi.
He's like gay and he's bi at the same time.
And he can do that through the magic of Christmas.
Wow.
So there's like Toy Santa, Toy Santa's gay, and Flesh Santa's bi.
And they've worked through their differences.
Uh-huh. And it's like they're married, but Flesh Santa is still married to Mrs. Claus, the principal.
So wait, are they poly?
Like, it's kind of poly, but it's illegal to be polyamorous in the North Pole.
Oh, no.
Well, that's troubling.
So they can't be open about it.
But then Bernard finds out one day.
Oh, no.
And he finds out in a way where he would have kept it a secret.
He would have kept it a secret.
But what?
But he's caught in a lie from the little elves.
I don't know what the lie is,
but the lie forces him to reveal to the elves
and also Father Time, who's back,
but not played by Frank Lloyd, R.I.P.
Right.
Sadly impossible.
And then it turns out that there's a clause
that's the fourth clause, right?
I mean, of course.
The fourth clause.
Canonically, there has to be another clause
yeah and
what is it
what is the clause Grace
and it's actually the
what is the clause
don't fuck this up
Grace
you only get one
this is your eight mile This is your eight mile
This is your eight mile
This opportunity comes once in a lifetime
Are you quoting Eminem?
It's
It's called the Santa Claus
for
the Cummy Claws.
That was worth the wait.
You fucked it up, Grace.
You fucked it up.
Now you have to make that movie.
I have a check for $11 million.
You have to go make the
Comey Claws.
The film is about
Tim Allen
and Toy Santa
and Mrs. Claus
trying to prove that
polyamory can work
and they don't.
They don't at all.
And so Toy Santa gets killed again.
And then they're kind of back to one.
It's kind of about how we commodify love as a society.
Yeah.
And how it's not just a toy.
Oh, metaphor.
Yeah.
You brought it full circle.
Yeah, yeah.
Let's applaud that.
I would see it.
I would see it.
And there's probably a joke in there that's like,
like Santa Claus being like,
okay, I'm coming out of the closet as polyamorous.
And then Bernard's like,
must be a pretty big closet to have all your partners in there, huh?
And then everyone goes, very funny, Bernard.
And then he Frenches me.
Wait, is it closet?
Is it closet spelled like C-L-A-U-S-E-T?
See, you're way ahead of me,
because that was going to be one of the big reveals.
Oh, I'm a screenwriter.
I have a master's degree.
Yeah.
I see things coming.
Bernard takes out a magnifying glass
and there's a tiny T next to a clause.
He's like, this was the real clause.
Wow, I love it.
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.
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Daphne exposed the culture of crime and corruption
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And she paid the ultimate price.
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I've been thinking about you. I want you back in my life
it's too late for that
I have a proposal for you
come up here and document my project
all you need to do is record everything like you always do
one session
24 hours
BPM 110
120
she's terrified
should we wake her up?
Absolutely not.
What was that?
You didn't figure it out?
I think I need to hear you say it.
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
This machine is approved and everything?
You're allowed to be doing this?
We passed the review board a year ago.
We're not hurting people.
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
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Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I felt too seen.
Dragged. your podcasts. I felt too seen, um, dragged. I'm NK and this is Basket Case. So I basically had what back in the day they would call a nervous breakdown. I was crying and I was inconsolable.
It was just very big sudden swaps of different meds.
What is wrong with me?
Oh, look at you giving me therapy, girl.
Finally, a show for the mentally ill girlies.
On Basket Case, I talk to people about what happens when what we call mental health is shaped by the conditions of the world we live in.
Because if you haven't noticed, we are experiencing some kind of conditions that are pretty hard to live with. But if you struggle to cope, the society that created the conditions in the first place will tell you there's something wrong with you. And it will call you a basket case. Listen to Basket Case every Tuesday on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, everyone. I think we have a few minutes
for a few questions or comments
from the audience.
Yeah.
What's about the nipple rating?
Oh, we'll get there.
We'll do this first.
We'll do this first, yeah.
I'm so sorry.
It's quite all right.
I memorized the format.
Yeah, I'm going to,
so that you can talk on the mic,
I'll come up here.
Hello.
This may be a very obvious question,
but who would Alfred Molina play in this movie?
I'm so glad you asked.
Thank you for that.
Well, listen, I mean,
clearly there's a lot of roles for him to play.
Do I think he could pull off Charlie?
Yes.
Imagine, if you will,
Alfred Molina fully in his 40s
when this movie comes out
as Tim Allen's
son, it would be
incredible. For my purposes,
it's gotta be Bernard, right? Because
Alfred Molina
in a problematic dreads
wig,
it's like that. I think it's a
very obvious pick. I don't think
he would be, I don't think he has Scott Calvin
energy. What a lot of people don't know
is that Alfred Molina is the one who
fell off the roof. That is just
canonically true. He
volunteered his body. He just loves
Christmas.
If he was in a minor role,
I think he could have made that judge role really
pop. The judge
is pretty forgettable, but if Alfred Molina
was there... If we get Molina in there,
all of a sudden... Why couldn't this have been a courtroom
drama?
I think that Alfred
Molina really would have sold the line where he's
like, it really pains me
to do this around the holidays.
And I think we would have gotten the suggestion
of a tear, but not an actual tear. He's a pro.
His eyes would have been closed, too.
The judge's eyes are open.
He would have been doing a flawless Midwestern accent.
It really pains me.
It's a weirdly tight shot.
You're like, oh, are we supposed to be focused on you?
And then it sort of just takes off,
and then we kind of just forget that santa
claus happened and we just follow him through his life yeah yeah
the answer is charlie thank you what's your name
eric thank you so much um who else okay here it comes
uh can we dissect the fat shaming scene with the business meeting
did they fire him for being too fat? Great question.
Yes, thank you for bringing that up.
Yes, so there is, yeah,
during the Santa transformation sequence,
there is like a fair amount of fat shaming jokes
made at Scott's expense.
But yeah, that scene in particular,
where there's a scene where he shows up at work I think we're supposed to
believe that he's gained 45 pounds
overnight in the course of a
week I think the course of a week yeah and
then he has a number of desserts
and I
mean maybe they fired him
for being too fat or maybe they fired
him because he was only supposed to spend 30 bucks
on money
he went out of his per diem He fired him because he was only supposed to spend 30 bucks on money.
He went out of his per diem, which is an unforgivable.
This is ridiculous.
I don't know.
I was like, I feel like they gave kind of like a half-assed,
I feel like they tried to give a better explanation, but kind of didn't.
Where his boss like follows him out after lunch.
There was a fat shaming element to it. But then he was also like, Scott, you're acting
very bizarre and you're
acting out of character.
Maybe you should talk to someone. He says like you
should talk to someone. I don't know. I wasn't
sure what to make of it either. His boss
is played by Frank Lloyd, who also
plays Father Time. I think the only actor
who plays two different characters in the
universe.
Great.
I'm just trotting out my little, I'm just showing off. who plays two different characters in the universe. Wow. Great. Oh my God.
I'm just trotting out
my little,
I'm just showing off.
I'm sorry.
That doesn't relate
to the box here.
She's just doing laps around us
trivia-wise.
I'm so sorry.
But I mean,
there is a fair amount
of fat shaming in the movie
and then Tim Allen's character
does it before he becomes Santa
and he's like fat shaming
the Santa who he killed and then he starts to become Santa and then he's fat shaming the Santa who he killed
and then he starts to become Santa
and then people are fat shaming him.
Yeah, it seems like he might have gotten fired
for having gained weight.
Or at least put on leave.
Right.
They're just like, hey, take a...
Yeah, I wasn't sure what to...
I feel like that was a plot necessity
from the writers to be like,
we gotta free him up to be a Santa.
He can't be having obligations.
It's also when he goes to the doctor to figure out what's wrong.
The doctor's like, I don't know what to say.
You're so fit.
Your body's in perfect shape.
You're just fat.
And that's presented as a magical thing.
Wow.
That's impossible, usually.
But this fat man can run.
Whoa.
That's Christmas magic for you.
Right.
Yeah.
And unfortunately, that's one of the more,
I feel like that's a scene that a lot of people remember,
is the transformation scenes.
They definitely stuck out to me when I was a kid, too.
Yeah, same.
And the messaging, folks, it's bad yeah it's bad for sure yeah a couple others
hi what's your name hey uh i'm alex um i was just wondering like the elves seem really chill about
a new santa so how often does santa die in this universe Because they're like, a new guy?
Come on in.
We love you.
I don't know.
I also took note of how they were like, yeah, it's you.
I feel like what I would like to imagine
is it's like when Saddam Hussein's statue was pulled down
and everyone was like, yes.
I feel like they just finished a celebration
because the last Santa was
such dog shit. I think he was horrible.
They were just thrilled.
They're very concerned about protecting his life.
Yeah.
There's a whole sequence at the end of the film where it's like
you have a fire retardant suit
now, which we didn't give the last
one.
Right.
Yeah, it seems
like they do...
It's not that they don't care about any Santa.
They just did not like the previous one.
I mean, it seems
like Santa can die easily.
Is that a suggestion?
You fall off the roof of a two-story
house into snow
beneath you. You don't die. You might break
some bones. And he didn't die
because he waved bye bye.
Which is not what dying
people are known for doing.
The elves don't know the extent of
Santa's power. That's what I think.
I think it's like if you were friends with
Jesus you'd be like he's cool
he can do some cool shit but I don't
know if he's the son of God.
I think they think he's a cool person but they don't know if he's the son of God.
I think they think he's a cool person, but they don't maybe know. They don't know exactly what he's capable of.
Sure.
Interesting.
Yeah, I mean, I think that maybe it was just the indication of the end of a cruel regime
and the beginning of something beautiful.
These are really Bush-era films.
Yeah, they really are.
Other questions? We have time for a few more we have a question over here since his beard can grow back do you think if he got lipo he would just immediately
get fat again i feel like we're led to believe that that's the case you certainly would yeah
yeah yeah it's a part of the deal i don't mean to dismiss the
validity of the question no i think i think the answer well you're the expert he's like well i
mean in this world you are the preeminent scholar i've only seen three films you see
i just love your use of the word certainly. Well, other questions?
Yes, my name is Joe.
And do you think that Peter Boyle was actually intended to do a spinoff movie
where he kills Father Time and actually takes the role in the second film?
Oh, wow.
That's really great.
I hadn't even thought of that.
Thought provoking.
It would explain why he plays
two different characters
and
I
god
some galaxy brain shit
is it a good
is it fun
to be father time
I would think not
I feel like
it's punishing
just the
yeah
I feel like
it's punishing
maybe he's in hell
maybe this is his house
I would say this kind of goes back to the Grimm's fairy tale nature of these movies.
Like when you're a kid, you're like, oh, obviously anyone would want to be Santa, you idiots.
Like, obviously.
And then you're an adult and you're like, well, maybe he enjoyed his life in a toy company, you know?
There's no karaoke bars in a toy company, you know, like there's not, there's no karaoke bars in the North pole.
You know,
there's,
there's good things about,
about being like what I want to be Santa.
I don't know.
I think I would love the optics,
but I couldn't handle the responsibility.
And that's,
I'm just being honest with myself.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well,
I mean,
if the job offer ever comes along,
we'll circle up and we'll really consider it.
We'll really think about it.
I mean, female representation of Santa
has been lacking, as you talked about, James.
I mean, yeah.
You could lose thousands of dollars.
It's our responsibility for feminism.
Yes, exactly.
It's our responsibility.
Fine, I'll do it.
Yeah.
We were trying for one more question.
One more, yeah.
One more. Caitlin, you pick picked this one i can't handle
the pressure go back it's gonna be someone who i can easily walk back to go far back
oh okay i have long arms you have long arms someone's bragging about their arms
okay all right you said something so here
so in the context of a new feminist text Christmas icon,
is Last Christmas a rom-com, a Scrooge tale, or a jukebox musical?
Oh no, I haven't seen it yet.
I got good news for you.
Oh, great to see it.
The fourth film I've seen is Last Christmas.
I forgot.
I saw it very recently.
It's not a jukebox musical.
It isn't because they hardly sing any of the songs.
They sing, like, I think three,
and that doesn't cut it for me, you know?
Last Christmas is a George Michael discography-based Christmas movie.
Who's seen it?
Clap your hands.
Oh, my gosh.
Oh, no, it's just her. It's just her. Three people. It's killing it? Clap your hands. Oh my gosh. Oh no, it's just her.
Three people.
It's killing it.
It's so
tough to define it. I think
it's a rom-com that misfires.
And
I think that it could have been so weirder
than it actually turned out to be.
And there's not
enough smooching.
That's critical. And there's not enough smooching. And...
That's critical. That's critical.
And also, this isn't a big spoiler,
it ends in the spring.
The last scene is Emilia Clarke's character
just sitting in a park in the spring smiling.
And that's not how I want my Christmas movie set.
They should all end with Tim Allen
taking off into the net.
Regardless of whether he was in it or not.
It would have been a great ending
if he just picked her up and was like,
hey, sorry.
God, we can't really talk about this movie.
No, we can't.
I was like, hey, sorry all that bad stuff happened to you.
And that you're a failing actress and everything.
But now you can be my wife.
I am excited to take another.
Everyone's plan B is to be Tim Allen's Santa wife.
Well, maybe those wives will talk to each other,
which brings us to the Bechdel test.
I mean, does anyone conceivably be
no no it doesn't pass not even close i think the only scene where women interact is the scene
in charlie's school where the principal and laura are there but we don't know her name and they they
only talk about charlie and santa. So not even close.
Nope.
Not even close.
Well, and yet it's a feminist text.
You know, as we say, it's a flawed metric.
It's not endorsing that.
It's presenting that.
All right.
So now the holiday nipple scale.
The holiday nipple scale. Comes withipple scale once a year it's red
and green and it's five nipples based on its representation of women uh you know
it's not high it's like a i guess like a half nipple because it doesn't the movie doesn't
like outwardly hate women but it
also just doesn't really care about including them or giving us any information about the women
and yeah it's just not what's so funny about how grace is definitely gonna say five
i'm just like preparing myself for it well hopefully
mine brings the average down
but yeah like
a half nipple
it just sucks that there aren't any like
family Christmassy movie
where are all the movies about
non-Christian holidays
where's the winter solstice
movie is what I'm saying I guess there actually is one but I've never seen it about non-Christian holidays. Where's the winter solstice movie
is what I'm saying.
I guess there actually is one,
but I've never seen it.
Well, now you're part of the problem.
I'm part of the problem.
It's like we're forgetting
eight crazy nights exist.
Right.
What a nightmare of a movie.
It is real problematic.
I've never seen it.
It's upsetting,
but we should cover it at some point
yeah it's just like
it's like why don't little girls
ever get to be
the protagonists of these movies
anyway so half nipple
and I guess I'll
give it to Comet
the reindeer I don't know how many
nipples a reindeer has
but I'm gonna guess four and then we'll leave it at that don't know how many nipples a reindeer has, but I'm going to guess four.
And then we'll leave it at that.
Don't fact check me.
I'm going to go with a generous one and a half
because I,
well, I agree that Laura is not a character
we would refer to as written.
Her character does avoid the fate of many characters in this genre in her position
where she isn't made out to be a shrew.
She isn't made out to be a bad person.
She's a good person.
We understand where she's coming from,
maybe more than any other parent in the movie.
I appreciate that. I also appreciate pro-divorce. we understand where she's coming from maybe more than any other parent in the movie i appreciate
that i also appreciate pro-divorce most people should get divorced like it's a smart move for
most and you know just like uh seeing seeing a functional i mean like grace you were saying
maybe a little unrealistic to be like and then the happens, and then you got two giant houses in Chicago, baby. But it was nice to see a divorced family
and have it be normalized, right?
And Tim Allen shouldn't have flirted with the kid.
We all agree.
But on the grounds of I like Laura's character,
I don't know what happens to her in the other two movies,
but I appreciated her,
and I was in her corner for the whole movie.
So I'll do one and a half nipples,
and they're going to Bernard.
Wait, can I give you an update?
Female deer have four teeth,
so was I right or was I right?
Good for you.
Thank you.
I'm very good.
Grace.
I'm not going to give it five nipples.
I'm not.
She's subverting the narrative.
Because I learned a lot today.
Okay.
But I am going to give it two nipples.
Okay.
And the reason is simply that's the amount of nipples Scott Calvin has.
Feminist hero.
And I will be placing those nipples firmly on Scott Calvin's chest.
You screw
them in yourself.
Those fireproof
nipples of Scott Calvin's.
Well, that's
the word on the
Santa Claus 99 TV people have been
begging
no they haven't
this is an episode
literally no one
asked for it
okay
truly
never been asked for it
Grace asked for it
first time it's been
requested
well Grace
thank you so much
for being here
give it up
and Grace is a Thank you so much for being here. Give it up for Grace. Give it up.
And Grace is a Denver-based comedian,
so go see her everywhere she performs all the time.
Can I plug my thing now?
Yes, yes, you may plug.
Where can we find you online? The only reason I'm here.
What if I told you that me, Grace Thomas,
a Denver-based comedian, has a new show? What if I told you it me, Grace Thomas, a Denver-based comedian, has a new show?
What if I told you it's a sci-fi comedy show with almost no stand-up,
and it's a hard sci-fi show with a sex robot and a super galactic pop star, which is me,
and a bunch of other cool space stuff, and the name of the show is Wet Galaxy,
which is the best name.
And the first one is going to be on Saturday, January 11th at 9pm at New City Relief Center,
which is the DIY space and you have to email me to get the address.
But it is going to be very successful.
So I would get in on it now.
Where can people contact you and email you to find out the address?
So you can DM me on Twitter at Grace G. Thomas,
or you can send me an email to gracegloriathomas at gmail.com.
And my email is also on my Twitter account.
And my Twitter account is not good.
That's not true.
Those are some good things to know.
It's great.
I have bipolar disorder, so sometimes you're just going to get anger.
Listen, they already follow me, so it's all good.
It's good.
But yeah, come to White Galaxy, please, January 11th.
Is everyone going to be there?
Please clap if you'll be there.
She justed herself.
That's a promise.
That's a promise. Those two didn't
clap, so they didn't make a promise.
But everyone who did clap
made a promise. The Grace Thomas class.
Oh, man. Well, that's our show show thank you so much for coming out
all right that concludes our two-part episode on the santa claus we have a lot of people we
want to thank starting with uh our guest, Grace Thomas.
Thank you again so much to her for being on the show.
She was so, so, so, so funny.
I've truly never laughed harder at a live show.
So thanks again to Grace.
Please follow her on social media and check out her upcoming show in Denver.
Also, thank you to Buntport Theater.
Thanks to Sam for having us there. And thank you to Buntport Theater. Thanks to Sam for having us
there. And thank you to Ron for recording the show. Thanks to everyone who came out, everyone
who asked questions, everyone who bought merch. We loved meeting you and chatting with you before
and after the show. It's always such a joy to do that. So thanks for coming out. Jamie and I also
did a couple stand up shows when we were in Denver
at Bar Max. So thanks to everyone who came out to those. And we also wanted to thank Marshall and
everyone at Bar Max for having us there. If you live in or near Denver, check out their
Punching Up comedy series. Go to barmax.co and subscribe to their newsletter for more information about those
awesome comedy shows. Also, thank you to Becky and Ariana for helping us check people in at those
stand-up shows. That was a huge help. Thank you so much for doing that. And once again, speaking of
live shows, don't forget about the ones we have coming up in January 2020 in San Francisco,
New York, and Philly. Once again, go to our website, Bechtelcast.com, click on the live tab
for more info. And then as always, you can follow us on social media at Bechtelcast.
You can subscribe to our Patreon, aka Matreon, by going to patreon.com slash Bechtelcast. It makes
for a great gift to a loved one during this holiday season because you get access to two
bonus episodes every single month, along with our entire backlog of bonus episodes for only $5 a
month. You can also grab our merch at tpublic.com slash the Bechdel cast. We have some
great Grinch themed merch and then all the classics feminist icon, strong female protagonist,
feminism is the law now, feminist icon, Alfred Molina, you name it, we got it. And I think that about does it. So thank you for listening.
Have a happy and safe holiday season. Bye. Crooks Everywhere unnerves the plot to murder a one-woman WikiLeaks. She exposed the culture of crime and corruption
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Hey, it's Teddy Mellencamp.
And Tamara Judge, better known as the Twats.
Yep, you heard that right.
We're the hosts of Two Teas in a Pod.
For all the housewife lovers out there,
every week we break down every episode and give you our opinions. So join us as we stir the pot
and get ourselves into some trouble. Okay, maybe a lot of trouble. Listen to Two Teas in a Pod
on iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
Can Kay trust her sister or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm. itself. There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing. They're just dreams.