The Weekly Planet - Quibi's The Golden Arm - Caravan Of Garbage (ft Aunty Donna)
Episode Date: November 12, 2020Quibi is dead, but it's legacy will last a...month. Today with the help of Sam and Zach from Aunty Donna (Netflix series out now) we take a look at The Golden Arm, the first in what was to be 50 chill...ing stories from the 50 States Of Fright anthology series. Anyways it's hilarious. Thanks for listening!Aunty Donna Netflix! ► https://www.netflix.com/au/title/81009617SUBSCRIBE HERE ►► http://goo.gl/pQ39jNVideo Edition ► https://youtu.be/z0OENPQhfcEJames' Twitter ► http://twitter.com/mrsundaymoviesMaso's Twitter ► http://twitter.com/wikipediabrownPatreon ► https://patreon.com/mrsundaymoviesT-Shirts/Merch ► https://www.teepublic.com/stores/mr-sunday-moviesThe Weekly Planet iTunes ► https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-weekly-planet/id718158767?mt=2&ign-mpt=uo%3D4The Weekly Planet Direct Download ► https://play.acast.com/s/theweeklyplanetAmazon Affiliate Link ► https://amzn.to/2nc12P4 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome back to Caravan of Garbage, a show where we go
Hey, let's look at this thing
That's what we normally do, isn't it Mason?
And we never ever have guests, ever
Well I mean, normally we don't have guests
But I feel like the format's getting a little bit stale.
Agreed.
Just for this week, though.
I'm sure next week will be fresh and fun.
We won't need to have any guests.
This will give us the boost that we need,
and then we'll throw them aside,
and then we're back to stronger than we've ever been.
Absolutely right, yes.
Leave a like if you could.
We're joined by two members of Aunty Donna here,
Sam and Zach.
They've got a new series on Netflix,
out today, actually,
the day that this video's going out.
Aunty Donna's big old house of fun.
Sounds exciting.
Don't watch it yet.
Watch this video first and then...
But then watch it immediately after this video.
Correct.
Did you know...
What time does it come out?
This will be for the extended edit.
I honestly thought you were going to ask,
did you know you have a series coming out on Netflix?
Do you know what?
It's so funny.
I just had a conversation with someone yesterday
and they're like,
what time does it come out?
And I was looking at daylight savings time.
I was looking at all of those things and I was like,
this is so exhausting.
What are the chances?
I'm going to look tomorrow night.
What are the chances between now and tomorrow night?
Someone's going to go specifically.
What time is your show coming?
In Australia?
It's midnight Pacific time. Okay okay that's what i know okay midnight
1201 pacific time pacific daylight time didn't i don't know zach i'll stop you right there
listeners just figure it out yourself it's not hard it's on netflix they'll send you a reminder
just give him a break that's a good idea put it a good idea because you can put it on the watch next or whatever. Put it on the watch
next or sit
down like I did with
the weird
online calculator
converter thing. I've got like
eight of those that I use and they're all the worst.
It's just a terrible, terrible
thing. Do that or the watch
list. One of those options.
It's a great show and it's very exciting.
I mean, it's exciting that you guys got a TV show,
like an honest to God amazing TV show,
on the second best streaming platform in the world.
Because there's one, there's a big dog, isn't there?
Yeah.
It's called Quibi.
Oh, yeah.
Emailing with Broden to be like,
what do you want to talk about for Caravan of Garbage?
And he was like, Zach has opinions on 50 States of Fright specifically.
Did he really?
He did.
Thank you, Broden.
Thank you, Broden.
He knows me too well.
He knows me better than I know myself.
It seems that way.
I have a question.
Is it Quibi or Quibi?
Because I've never heard it said out loud by anybody who runs quibi or quibi.
And it's supposed to be quick bites of entertainment.
But here's my problem.
With a diphthong, I believe it's called, where the vowel takes two sounds to make,
that's too long.
When you're saying quibi, we're spending too much time
and we're not capturing the energy of a quibi.
Yeah, I can appreciate that. So quibi, for people who don't know, it's a dead streaming service we're spending too much time and we're not capturing the energy of a Quibi yeah that's very true isn't it
I can appreciate that
so Quibi for people who don't know
it's a dead streaming service
or soon to be dead
where they take four minute chunks of things
and it's like
it's like the internet but on your phone
how would you guys describe it?
so think of a bad idea
okay
and put a lot of money behind it
I don't have any money but I'll give it a whirl
I mean yeah that's Quibi.
Yeah, that's it.
I need to be really honest here.
I think Rodan's put me and Sam in this room together
when he booked this appointment because when we were in LA,
everyone was talking Quibi when we were developing this show.
Oh, really?
In post-production, we were in a post-production house
and we kind of are micromanagers
with the edit and all editors hate us.
Are you thinking that we've jumped on board the wrong platform?
We should have been on this Quibi.
Well, everyone's doing Quibi.
Across from us is Quibi.
Down the hall is Quibi.
Everyone's editing their Quibi and they've got the best layer
because if you don't know this about Quibi,
their, what's the word, their, not IP their their point of difference is that everything you watch you can watch either
horizontally or vertically is that true absolutely i do know that that's incredible wow and um and
you can turn it and it and it and and so basically you can either watch it as the filmmaker intended or awkwardly cropped vertically.
And every other editing suite had one horizontal screen
and one vertical screen.
Oh, my God.
And Sam was just like, this is a terrible idea.
This is a terrible idea.
Why are they doing this?
And I was so like, give it a go.
You never know.
I read one article in the hollywood
reporter about how they're being clever with the vertical thing and i think it took you like a day
before you approved right is that maybe i feel i feel like maybe i was insane because i heard the
idea and i was like that's not gonna work yeah and then you just start talking to people and
everyone's like there's so many shows everyone's doing it i'm like And then you just start talking to people and everyone's like, there's so many shows, everyone's doing it.
I'm like, maybe.
Maybe you're crazy.
Maybe I'm crazy.
And then it comes out and it all comes crashing down.
Maybe this 75-year-old man is right.
Maybe he's got the finger on the pulse.
But I guess that also, like one of the other downfalls of Quibi
was that it was like, it's the perfect thing to watch on the train.
You're just holding it in one hand,
you're holding the strap in the other hand,
and you're like, but then all of a sudden,
nobody's taking a train, nobody's taking a bus.
Well, they did blame a lot of the crash of this on the pandemic
when every other streaming service is booming, hardcore,
and people are hungry for content, scary content in particular.
And there's no scarier location to watch a scary movie
than, again, on a train.
It's just a guy's armpit just leaning into your face.
Were you guys scared?
Were you, like, scared about the, like, quibby coming into your commute space?
Sure.
It crossed my mind, definitely.
I like the other pictures, like, waiting in the sandwich shop.
Like, you know, you're just there, you order your sandwich,
you go stand in the corner and you watch someone, like,
get their arm hacked off with an axe. you're like right this is what i want
to do exactly this is the great point the idea of like a sandwich shop they're like oh sorry there'll
be about a 10 minute wait on the sandwich you're like that's perfect because i want to know what's
going to happen to liam hemsworth next so you mentioned the cutting off of the yard because
we're here to talk about specifically the episode The Golden Arm.
The three episodes, yeah.
Which is based off an old fable which was a spoken word story
which was written down something like 200 years ago
and Edgar Allan Poe told his versions
and there's been different iterations of it over the years.
But this is, fuck all that, don't worry about that.
This is the modern day.
It's hot and fresh. It's hot and fresh.
Hot and fresh.
And it's Michigan, as you pointed out.
So this series was going to be a different spooky legend or story from each state in America.
And each state was going to get three episodes.
So ideally they were going to do 150 episodes of this.
How far did they get?
Does anybody know?
Like 35 or something?
That's pretty good.
That's pretty impressive.
35 episodes or 35 states?
I think 35 episodes, yeah.
That's not as good.
It's not quite as good.
It just reminds me of when Sufjan Stevens
released a couple of albums that were like,
each one of these is based on a state,
and they're like, is he going to do a restate?
And then he just stopped doing it.
If there's anyone, I love that notion.
If anyone's had time, Sufjan, you have right now.
What are you doing, mate?
Just knock them out now.
What have you been?
At home.
I would have loved either Sufjan or the producers of 50 States of Scary to...
I would have loved either of them to commit because it's not so much the last...
Because they would have saved a few good ones or the first, you know, because Golden Arm
is just perfect.
It's the middle. It's that like, alright,
we're a year and a half into this project.
We've got a year and a half to go.
I guess we could tell a
spooky story about Wisconsin.
Do the episodes also reflect the states?
I wondered about that. I'm wondering, like
if people in Michigan watch this and go,
Dan, this is Michigan through and through.
That's the golden arm, like on our flag.
Yeah.
So can someone summarise the golden arm for me?
It's a classic love story.
Boy meets girl.
Boy accidentally drops a tree on girl.
Boy then amputates girl's arm.
Girl then convinces boy to build her a golden arm to wear.
Yes, which poisons her.
She won't take it off because of vanity.
Because of vanity.
Because she wants to impress the local children.
Yeah, that's right.
But the funny thing about that was,
Ashley's laying there dying and she's covered in sores,
but she's gripping her golden arm.
It's like, you look worse.
Like, I know you're vain
but you look terrible.
Like, people aren't looking at the arm.
They're looking at you and going like,
don't do that.
What are you doing?
Sometimes I write notes for these episodes we do
but I only have one note for this
and it's just all in caps
and it says pulmonary gold disease.
And there's three exclamation points, because that's the disease she got.
Yeah, so real disease, apparently.
Really?
Or you can get poisoned by, I guess, any metal or anything
if you've ingested enough of it.
That's amazing.
Through the six square inches of the stump of your arm.
I guess so, yeah.
Put a sock over it.
I think the best part of all
of it though is that's the story
I knew about. That's the story that went viral
when the person, because again
another quick criticism of Quibi
A quitticism.
Was that you couldn't share
the videos on social media.
So famously someone
put, played on one phone the uh quibi episode
and then filmed it with their partner's phone on the bed posted that video on twitter and it went
quite viral and it was around this notion of a lady with a golden arm and and all of the thing
we just described what shocked me was that's the first two episodes or the first 10
minutes but then there's another episode yeah and i was like where is this gonna go yeah it takes a
hard turn but i just want to also quickly mention sam ramey directed this oh yes he wrote it yeah
and with his brother ivan and it looks like it looks good and to be like it's insane but it's captivating right was
that just me i was like i'm in like i'm a hundred percent committed to this what when i watched saw
the credits and it said written by sam ramey and ivan ramey for a minute i'm like i'm gonna feel
really bad if like sam ramey wrote this with like his grandson and i'm like well it's, it's dumb, but they're just a family doing the thing.
And I'm like, oh, it's his older brother who wrote this.
Okay.
It's literally, I remember when I watched it,
I realised it's literally what happens when you give an artist free reign,
when the only note is make sure it's vertical.
If you're curious what Sam Raimi,
what happens with Sam Raimi when he has free reign, except for the fact that he needs to crop it, you get this.
Do you think, though, he knows what he's doing and it's an intentionally funny piece of work?
Because he is very tongue-in-cheek.
You look at, like, The Evil Dead or even something more recent, The Drag Me to Hell.
He's got that kind of sensibility.
Do you think this is like,
he's going for laughs and ridiculousness?
Is this,
is that what this is?
No,
maybe not.
I think the final shots pretty funny.
Yeah.
Like I think,
I think he's going for a certain kitsch.
I think he's going for something that,ch. I think he's going for something.
That last third almost makes it work,
but there's a certain kind of...
I'll give him like it was an experiment.
I'll give him like the same credit I give Jon Favreau
for the Lion King remake,
and I think I'm one of the few people that gives it.
He's like, what happens if you make him realistic?
Oh, it turns out it's not as good.
But, you know, give it a crack.
Yeah, yeah.
I think that he was like, could you make a story out of this fable?
And the answer was, no, it's a bit weird when you actually see the person.
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...committing to the art.
You know?
I feel like he also really leans hard into it.
And I guess the lesson is supposed to be
as well that, what a bitch.
Do you know what I mean?
It seems like she's really like,
she's so vain and so stupid
And she's taking advantage of her husband
And even the fact that
Because he makes her the golden arm
Even though he's like
I haven't got any money
And then he goes and gets it back
And she's like
How dare you
And it's like
But it's
You cut her arm off
Yeah
Give her that at least
Give her an arm
But he needs The gold to live
Like it's not like he went there
Because often the fable is like
A grave robber
Is selfish and whatever
But for this it's like
His business is dying
And he needs the money
Do you know what I mean?
And then it's like
Well fuck you no
Like that's not your arm
Yeah like what is the moral?
Like the moral makes sense
Initially it's like
Oh it's immoral
And the moral is to people like her
To But then like By the third act and the moral is to people like her.
But then, like, by the third act,
is the moral don't marry selfish, vain people?
I guess.
I guess?
The only thing that she gave him was, like,
writing her name in the floor of his barn.
And that's nothing.
So, like, she's not painted... By the way, beautiful performances.
Some great cast members in this.
But sorry, Sam, you were going to say.
Well, they do give her the wonderful redeeming feature
of she's on the fundraising committee,
which I really enjoyed.
I was like, she is a three-dimensional character.
She's not just out to impress the town's children.
You know, she is on the fundraising committee as well.
I love that notion of, like, maybe there was one more note.
And it was along the lines of,
look,
we worry this character is very archetypal,
very sexist,
very old fashioned.
Could we give her some dimension,
but keep that episode under five minutes.
Like maybe we could put her on the fundraising committee.
How do you do that?
It's,
it's,
it's,
it's pretty phenomenal.
Yeah.
I love it.
I love it.
I love Quibi.
I love the gore.
Like when she's pinned under the tree.
I wish I didn't know about this going in, by the way.
Like I wish I hadn't heard anything.
Yeah.
Because when that tree falls on her and the blood sprays up
and he's trying to yank her out from under.
But it's like, dude, you're a lumberjack. some like leverage and then you just cut the wood cut the wood he
also doesn't seem to why is he even using an axe have you ever tried to cut down a tree with an axe
because he's like i just got to quickly cut down this tree before the end of the day you just need
to help me that would have taken like four hours to get through that tree so he's already dressed
for a different thing and he's like no no, this tree has to come down.
Like, right now.
Also, it's just, they're just in a clearing.
Like, he could have just chainsawed it and run.
Yeah, that's right.
The odds that it would hit him was pretty low, right?
So he's got, like, his computer with his 3D modelling program
and an axe, but not a chainsaw.
That's where he's existing as a lumberjack.
If they had more minutes, there should have been a scene where he changes the settings
From period era furniture
To prosthetic limbs
In the CAD program
He just changes the tab
I'm a big fan with these sorts of shows
I've been watching a lot of old stuff recently
Just to watch more old stuff
And there's this sense sometimes
I've realised
Because I keep saying I'm the big fiend for like,
why didn't they go to the police?
Why are they solving this themselves?
And then you watch any movie before 1995 and it's like,
oh, because like they did go to the police
and that scene always plays out exactly the same.
It's always like, hey, I think there's a ghost talking to me
and the cop's like, a ghost?
Oh, yeah.
In this haunted town?
I don't think so.
All right, mate.
Come back to me when you've got some real evidence.
And you don't need that scene.
Whereas this, I think even with another hour, there might have been some holes.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, okay, so it takes a turn.
Sam, you know this better than anybody.
Oh, doesn't it take a turn?
It goes into spooksville.
Yeah, it does.
But there's no, like, hint of this is a spooky universe.
No.
It's just she's a zombie.
Yeah, the doctor isn't like, I don't understand why you're dying.
Maybe it's the ghosts or whatever.
It's just like.
It should have been a line like that.
It should have been a line.
They could have added a line in post.
Yeah. She had a
dream. That was the only set up. She's like, I've had
a dream. And then like, and then
magic. Yeah. Like just out of nowhere.
Okay. The bit when I knew it was
really turning ghostly was when the
photographs of her were changing.
And one of it is her threateningly holding
an axe. Like it's changed.
It's changed to that.
My favourite layer, I watch this this I've got a really special reveal that I actually watch this
you you sent us a file because I don't think we can watch quibi anymore I actually watched this
show on quibi with my three months free trial oh my god uh quite a few months ago um re-watched it
of course for this but I still I still remember that exact moment when the ghost
is changing on the on the frame and and that the picture is changing and i remember thinking i
should be scared but all i can think of is as i look at my phone my television is in my periphery
it was literally that moment i'm not scared because I should be watching this on the television.
Was your TV on?
No, no, it was just off.
So an off television was distracting you from the ghost story you were watching.
Here I am watching this.
I was watching it in vertical, in horizontal.
I had decided at that point that horizontal was better.
So here I am watching this show in horizontal. I had decided at that point that horizontal was better. So here I am watching this
show in horizontal on a
much smaller screen than the one available
to me and I thought, maybe
Sam's right about Quibi.
He knew. Sam, I feel
I must ask also, so how did you,
did you cheat? Did you watch it on a laptop
or a television screen? I watched it on a laptop
so I did cheat, unfortunately.
No, I didn't get Quibi because I thought it was a bad idea.
Okay, that's interesting.
Interesting take, Sam.
We'll see how that plays out, won't we?
To be fair, though, I think Sam Raimi is a master of horror
and horror comedy, and I think it's unsettling
when he's under the blanket.
You get that, you know, it's kind of, yeah,
I think maybe because I watched it on a laptop,
so I was getting the full effect also.
But it reminded me of like being a kid and you're under the blanket
and you can't really see what's going on and she's getting closer and closer.
And then she takes the arm back and then takes the time to reattach it
and then run back in and cut his throat.
I did love that.
It was great.
I will say that the last episode of the three was the best of the Quibbies.
Sure.
That was very – it was one of those ones where it was great in spite of –
I remember I saw a criticism of all the Quibbies.
It was a particular one, actually, where they said it felt like a sizzle reel
for a good show.
The best Quibby felt like. And it felt like a sizzle reel for a good show the best Quibi felt like and it's like yeah
this is the problem with Quibi
I can imagine this being a full length good show
and one of my favourite
parts, I had a couple more favourite parts that I wanted
to talk about. Isn't it wild that it's like 17 minutes
long but we've got so many favourite parts
this video will be longer
than the actual show but there's a
moment where he presents the first arm
that he makes for her and she's just like
get that out of my face.
And presumably
he made it also
because he's got the software base.
She's like you need to add the gold
titanium alloy from the Seraphim tactical satellite.
Throw some hot rod red on there
you know what I mean?
Really Iron Man it up.
Absolutely.
And the other part that I loved, and it really kind of hit home at the end,
is it's sort of filmed like a documentary because it's a man telling the story.
It's like Sarah, whatever her name is, she was always too vain,
and in the end nobody goes near that grave.
And it's like, oh, yeah, this is like a documentary sort of
with flashbacks to a ghost.
And there was just an element, like there was nothing he said,
but I was like, there are details to this story that the man knows.
How did he know what happened in that house that night?
Yeah, yeah.
Absolutely.
Well, maybe that's the thing.
Maybe it's all from his perspective.
Like maybe he did use leverage to get her out from under that tree.
Maybe it was just one man living on the balcony,
kind of recalling it a bit wrong.
That's a show I'd watch.
Definitely.
So you,
you delved into more,
uh,
50 states of fright.
Did you not so much the 50 states of fright,
but I watched,
um,
I want,
there's something fascinating about Quibi because what Quibi did,
there's two things I love about Quibi.
The first thing that I love about Quibi is I remember when we were pitching
for our Netflix show, we pitched to three streamers.
There was kind of a strategy that our production company broke down for us,
and we pitched first to three big streamers, and then they're like,
when they say no, we'll go to these guys, and then when they say no, we'll go to these ones.
And then we didn't even get to Quibi,
but that's right down the list.
But it was on your list?
It would have been.
I'm sure we would have pitched to Quibi eventually.
I honestly had the thought when I finished watching this,
I'm like, you know, I reckon Aunty Donna
could do some really great sketches on this.
And then I'm like, oh, that's YouTube, I guess.
They do that.
If only there was a platform that you can watch on your commute
that has high-quality 15 to 20-minute videos.
That's what you were saying, you were pitching.
But actually, if this worked,
this would be suited to some of the stuff that you've done.
Oh, look, there was a huge amount of there,
but for the grace of God, go I.
When I was watching Quibi, just thinking like,
oh, I could see us pushing our Quibi show.
Meanwhile, there's Medium articles being written by the CEO going,
we fucked up.
But no, the layer that I loved about Quibi was
what are the pitches that don't get through?
When J-Lo has an idea for a reality show or when someone thinks,
oh, let's do a show that's like Nailed It but it's about making big weed things,
what happens?
What are the ideas that HBO, Netflix, Disney, all of the basic cable networks,
all of the networks say no to.
What are those ideas?
And Quibi for a brief moment gave us a hint of the shows
that didn't make it through everyone else
because I think they were just like,
yeah, all right, if you can make it vertical, please God.
I feel like also there's a layer below that of things
that didn't get through.
So what does that look like?
What didn't get onto Quibi?
But it's sad because there was some great stuff on it,
but it was just a bit of a funny little platform.
Worth $1.75 billion.
Oh, my goodness.
It's a funny little platform.
I kind of hope, because apparently if you make something for Quibi,
you own it, so you can shop it around to something else. I kind of hope that it'll all come to for Quibi you own it so you can like shop it around
something else
I kind of hope
that it'll all
come to Netflix
but just in like
a really narrow band
in the middle of your
television screen
I also feel like
a lot of this stuff
isn't actually
really made for Quibi
because this is
it's a 20 minute show
that's what this is
and the second episode
is like 9 minutes
do you know what I mean
so it's not even
formatted
4 minutes
4 minutes 4 minutes or whatever there's probably a lot of people in the
back of their mind just thinking like we'll get this back when quibi falls we'll just sell this
to hulu it's like the cobra kai show it's now on netflix people are loving it but you know what
else is on netflix oh i love this um tiger king Is it Enola Holmes?
Yes, those are absolutely correct.
You've got one more guess, and if you get it wrong, you're out.
Fifty States of Fear.
No, Sam, that was on Quibi.
I think that was a little bit of a – it's an industry thing.
I know you're one of the writers, but it's more of a hint for us
to then promote our show, which is, what was it called again?
God, they're bad, James.
They're bad at this.
I don't know what they're doing.
We've just said it.
I mean, we're not good at this, but they're worse at this.
It's weird.
And they're on Netflix.
I don't understand.
It's Aunty Donna's Big Ol' House of Fun out November 11th, 1201 AM.
Oh, no.
He's fallen into the trap again.
If you're watching this, it's probably out.
It's probably out.
And look, you guys have probably seen a bunch of their skits before on YouTube.
You may have heard their album.
You might have seen some of their live shows.
You may have heard their podcast.
You may have heard Broden and Mark on our podcast, The Weekly Planet.
But it's so incredible that you guys got this opportunity and it's really exciting.
We couldn't be happier for you guys to be on a platform
that's relatively stable and that people can see your work
on such a huge network of interconnected cables.
It's very, very exciting.
We are a little sad that you can't see it on a vertical screen.
I know, yeah. We tried to get that through I could probably re-edit and put it on Pirate Bay
if you wanted
if you could give it a crop that would be awesome
but yeah
super exciting and thanks so much for having us
no problem, thank you for being the first and probably
only guest on this show, we're locking it down now
aren't we? No more guests after this
we really appreciate it.
And thank you for the suggestion as well.
Yeah.
Because Broden, who's not here, I guess.
I think he was just throwing us to the wolves
so we'd have our big quibby disagreements.
But here's the fact.
Sam was right.
Jeff Katzenberg, maybe he's lost his golden touch.
Yeah, wow.
Yeah.
Wow.
Also, here's a hint towards next week's thing.
We put in a thing.
I don't know what it is.
I often don't know week to week.
And then this goes in the extended edit and whatever,
and people don't really listen to it, to be honest.
Well, as we say every week here over at Caravan of Garbage,
bury me with my golden foot.
I have a golden foot.
It's a new part of the continuity.
We probably won't mention it again, but why don't I?
I love it.
I love it.
Thanks, guys.
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It's up to you.
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