Wonderful! - Wonderful! 324: Dinner Milk
Episode Date: May 15, 2024Rachel's favorite extruded cheese! Griffin's favorite television comedy!Music: “Money Won’t Pay” by bo en and Augustus – https://open.spotify.com/album/7n6zRzTrGPIHt0kRvmWoyaWorld Central Kitc...hen: https://wck.org/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, this is Rachel McElroy.
Hello, this is Griffin McElroy.
And this is wonderful.
Welcome to wonderful.
It's a show where we talk about things that is good,
that we do like and that we are into.
If you've never listened to the show before, welcome.
We're so glad to have you.
If you have listened to the show before,
this one's gonna be a repeat.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
A clip show?
This is a clip show.
We gotta get up. But once you hit 500 episodes of podcasts,
you reach syndication.
We so badly want this show to start airing on TBS.
God, we'd be perfect for TBS.
God almighty, we would be perfect
for the Turner broadcasting system.
Up there, it would be us.
We would come on after every Atlanta Braves game.
Oh, perfect.
Yeah.
Isn't that weird to think about how there used to be
a channel that you could go to watch Atlanta Braves,
where you could go to watch the baseball games of one team?
Isn't that kind of weird to think about?
I feel like in the Midwest, that was WGN.
Oh.
And it was like Chicago stuff.
Okay. That's cool. I don't know if that's right. And it was like Chicago stuff.
Okay.
That's cool. I don't know if that's right.
That's cool to think about. Sounds right though.
I like that.
Anyway.
You could pretend that you live there.
That's what it was like to live in that city.
Yeah, absolutely.
Like I'm just watching the things that they watch.
Do you have any small wonders for me?
I do.
I wanted to talk about the fact
that we brought little son to the doctor
and he is perfectly average.
He is average in height and weight.
This is a boy who went from being enormous as a baby
to way too small.
Yeah.
And now just right.
Yeah, he's that perfect porridge, just how we like it.
Nothing considerable or concerning
about his height and weight, just A-okay.
He is the model boy.
He is the perfect specimen child.
That's far from true.
That's true.
He's got, he could sleep better.
It is always nice to take your child
to a doctor's appointment and not have them be like,
ooh, have you, oh.
He goes, what?
I gotta refer him to my guy that handles this.
Yeah, absolutely.
I'm going to say, I really like when you go
to get your haircut and they shampoo your hair for you.
That's a really nice feeling.
Do you go like, oh.
No, I don't go, oh.
Yeah.
Rachel, do you do that?
No.
You understand that that's.
To me, that is the funniest thing in the world though,
to like go to a place where you're treating yourself
and just really let out some groans.
I have reflexively done that once or twice
during like a massage where I've been like particularly
sore or tense and then, you know, they get up in there
just right where the pain lives and it just escapes mine.
And you go, ooh.
No, I don't, what do you think?
Maybe this could be an issue where like,
maybe you don't understand that as a fella,
if I make those noises.
Yeah, it's true.
There's a certain content.
It's a little creepier.
Yeah, it's way, way, way, way, way, way creepier.
Less charming, I guess.
Yeah, if you were to do that, it's cute. If I were to do that, just gotta fuck out of here. way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way
way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way
way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way
way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way
way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way I'm stalling as you open up your MacBook. You know you don't have to do that. We have a lovely editor that will just take out the time
between you asking me and me bending over
to pick up my laptop.
Yes, that's true and yet.
You're real, you know?
Like you like to keep things real.
Yeah, exactly.
You like our audience to know
what it's really like in the studio.
Right.
Yeah.
It's a little bit humid.
I'd love to get that door open there,
but there might be a little bit too much outside noise.
I mean, do you want me to open it?
Do you mind?
It's raining out there,
and you know how I like that Petrichor funk.
Ooh. Isn't that nice?
Ooh, it's chilly.
Yeah.
This is May.
Yeah.
Ooh. Ooh. Yeah. This is me? Yeah. Ooh.
Ooh.
Ooh.
Ah.
Ah.
Ooh.
Wow.
It's been a while.
It has.
The wonderful thing I wanna talk about this week
is string cheese.
Excellent stuff, this stuff.
Excellent stuff, this perfection string cheese.
The unfried mozzarella stick of my heart.
I love this guy.
I think, I mean, I've always enjoyed,
well, I don't know that I've always enjoyed string cheese,
but as I became older and more mature,
I started to enjoy string cheese.
Sure.
And now I like it because it is a thing
that our big son will eat. Sure. And now I like it because it is a thing that our big son will eat.
Yes.
And I know that it has vitamins and nutrients
and some good things for him.
Yes.
And...
Comparatively, compared to some other shit
that he might also eat,
this one we can feel pretty okay about.
This one's like, oh, you're getting something from this
that will help your bones.
Not big milk drinkers, this fam, I would say as a rule.
No, well, yeah, I mean, Henry in a cereal,
sometimes on the side of a happy meal.
Yeah, but not just because.
Which I, as a Midwestern woman,
I definitely did grow up having a glass of milk
with dinner every night.
I definitely had some dinner milk as well.
Yeah, should we be doing that?
Dinner milk?
Yeah.
Do you know what, for me, now?
No, not, when I say we, I mean,
should we be bringing that tradition to our sons?
I mean, I'd love them to have like huge bones,
like huge, huge crazy bones.
I think Anna would be into it. Okay.
We should try it out.
Let's become milk guys.
Milk guys.
Okay, string cheese.
This is another one of those things that exists in the world
and to my knowledge has always existed in the world,
but that is very much not true.
No.
Like somebody had to invent string cheese. and to my knowledge has always existed in the world, but that is very much not true. No.
Like somebody had to invent string cheese.
Invent is a word that I find challenging for string cheese.
Somebody had to create a new configuration of cheese.
Yes, someone had to extrude cheese
from a small circle.
Exactly, I mean, you've just done my whole segment for me. Oh yeah. extrude cheese in a small, from a small circle. Exactly.
I mean, you've just done my whole segment for me.
Oh yeah.
I imagine extrusion, is that a word?
I imagine extrusion is the order of the day.
There's no mold.
There's no string cheese mold that you-
They like shoot liquid cheese into?
Yeah.
No.
You're right.
It's some kind of squirting.
I wish I could just-
Squirting, but I don't wanna say extrusion
because I'm not sure it's a word.
It's okay, all words come from somewhere
and this could be where this word comes from.
How tight would it be to just put your mouth
right in front of that extrusion nozzle
and just catch yourself a-
A whole mouthful?
Catch yourself a rope of string cheese.
That would be so good.
That's my only thing with string cheese
is sometimes I wish it was like three to four times longer
than it would, like a nerd's rope of string cheese.
Oh, whoa.
What's wrong?
That's weird.
Nerds wouldn't be on it.
Yeah, I'm just picturing like the packaging
of a nerd's rope, but string cheese in there,
and it's a strange.
It could be tasteful.
I'm imagining it like hanging like a fancy dried know, like a fancy dried sausage at a deli
or something like that.
You would just go and you'd take it from the artisanal.
Or like a sausage on a rotating pole,
like on the Bachelor.
Precisely.
What an extremely specific pole.
Okay, string cheese.
There is no patent on string cheese, so.
Let's go make some fucking string cheese
and get rich quick then.
So the origin of it is a little uncertain,
but an Atlantic article from 2014
called The Secret Life of String Cheese.
Oh, I always knew.
I always suspected.
Doesn't that sound like a parody article
like you would see in like an episode of like a show?
Like, oh, I just read the secret life of string cheese in the Atlantic. Yeah, that's out, yeah. That's a parody article like you would see in like an episode of like a show like, oh, I just read the secret life of string cheese
in the Atlantic.
Yeah, that's out, yeah.
That's a real article.
I mean, there's a reason people say that shit
about the Atlantic.
Yeah, I know.
They do write that stuff, man.
So, Baker Cheese is the outfit that claims
at least the origin of string cheese in the Midwest.
Baker Cheese?
Baker Cheese, the last name of the family is Baker.
I see, I see.
Not this is cheese for bakers to use specifically.
No.
Initially in 1916, they began selling cheddar cheese
in St. Cloud, Wisconsin.
Okay.
Which is exactly what you wanna hear.
Sure, yeah, no, it's, yeah, I assumed.
This is something I always forget
and every time I read it, it blows my mind.
But the whole origin of this mozzarella cheese phenomenon
came in the 1950s when the soldiers came back
and they were like, we love this thing called pizza,
we can't find it anywhere.
Is that really?
We've talked about pizza before on this show
and that is 100% true.
It came to America because people had been spending time
abroad and were like, man, this stuff is good.
This shit's so good, yeah.
And I guess mozzarella, we weren't big into mozzarella
before, wow, that's tragic, man.
That's a shame.
I feel like this nation really didn't get started
until mozzarella showed up.
You know what I mean?
There are people alive today
who can remember the pizza invasion.
Right, it's like when, I remember how when the iPod came out,
it like changed the way we all listen to music.
It's like them for cheese.
I remember when the cordless telephone came out.
I, yeah, I remember that also.
Wild.
Wild.
This is cordless cheese though, and that's exciting.
Okay, so pizzeria start blowing up, Pizza Hut 1958,
Little Caesars 1959, Domino's 1960, just bam, bam, bam.
I didn't realize I guess that the story of Mozzarella
was so intrinsically linked to pizza mania
in the United States.
So let me tell you the story as told by Baker Cheese. linked to pizza mania in the United States.
So let me tell you the story as told by Baker Cheese.
They switched over to mozzarella
and they would make six pound loaves
or 20 pound blocks of cheese that restaurants
could then cut for their pizzas.
Okay.
Just like a six pound loaf of cheese.
I mean of mozzarella, I would, mozzarella is,
I think mozzarella is my favorite cheese.
I think mozzarella is my favorite cheese.
Even more than like a Gouda or a Brie?
More than a Brie, yeah.
Wow.
I mean, here's the thing.
I love a Brie specifically.
I would, I, you know, you know, have some apples with it,
a little honey or walnut in there,
and you can get some bread, whatever.
Ooh!
I'm gonna make this sound the whole time.
I'm into that, but I can eat mozzarella anytime,
anytime, any day of the week,
and it would scratch the itch.
And what is the itch exactly?
Cheese itch.
Cheese itch.
Inside cheese.
I call hunger like a tummy itch, like an inside itch.
And then I scratch it with this cordless cheese.
Did you know our friend is now living
in Cheese Itch Village?
Cheese, what's that?
I was making like, you said Cheese Itch
and it reminded me of Greenwich Village in New York and so I said Cheese Itch Village.
Do we have a friend who lives in Greenwich Village though?
No.
Okay.
So that confused me on two different levels.
Well, I mean, I don't know anyone
that lives in Greenwich Village
so I didn't know how to structure the joke.
Okay.
This is why.
I'm not an improvisational comic.
I don't think improvisational comic.
I don't think that's true. I think you're very, very sharp.
Well, not in this case.
Okay, so we're talking about big blocks of cheese.
At this point, we are in the third generation
of baker cheese as far as who is managing the business.
But grandpa Frank is still around.
Mm-hmm.
Ha ha ha!
You didn't, I feel like you needed to introduce
Grandpa Frank earlier in the,
so I could start getting like excited.
Getting hype for Grandpa Frank.
Well, so I love, I just wanna,
I wanna quote this directly from the article.
So the interview is with Brian Baker,
who is like current tip top when this article was written.
And he said, my grandfather, Frank,
was playing around with mozzarella in the plant.
That's cool.
Yeah, I mean, I imagine if you have that much cheese
on hand, eventually you do start just mucking around with it.
Like, we gotta set aside a few pounds,
Grandpa Frank's coming in today,
and you know how he loves to play with the stuff.
Yeah, I mean, it's moldable, it's pliable.
You can play with that.
You play with cheese, sure.
So Frank started creating these one pound packages.
So taking this continuous flow of mozzarella
and chopping them into strips.
He would cut off strips by hand and roll them
and cut them into ropes ropes into these little three,
four, five inch pieces.
He'd soak them in salt brine and that would give the cheese
the stringing characteristic.
That's what, okay.
This is interesting because here's something I forget
about string cheese, that you don't just grab it
and hum right off.
I mean, I would say that that is exactly what our son does.
Is peel it or he like chomps it?
He chomps it.
Yeah, I chomp it too.
I don't peel it.
You don't peel it?
No, I chomp it.
I'm busy.
I have one hand that's doing business.
I don't have the luxury of using two hands
to peel my cheese and one, for one thing,
that's not like cheese.
What if it came pre-peeled?
What are you talking, what does that mean?
So it's like a string cheese,
but deconstructed and peeled for you.
You know what I always really liked?
I'm about to go so fucking far down a rabbit hole,
and I apologize for this in advance,
but in the hit Nathan Lane comedy, Mouse Trap, in which two brothers
own a cheese business and are thwarted by a mouse
who lives in the cheese business,
they try to kill the mouse a lot.
Is this the film based on the board game?
No, maybe, no, I don't think so.
At the end of the movie, spoilers, they befriend the mouse,
which is what happens in most mouse-based sort of media.
Yes, true. And they realized that they can use their old
like yarn weaving equipment,
and then they can make balls of like actual strings
of cheese that you roll into a ball.
How dope would that be?
You just have a ball of string cheese in one hand
and you can just sort of, you know,
thread it into your mouth and just like, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I,, thread it into your mouth and just like, I, I, I, I, I.
Like bubble tape.
Like a big ball of bubble tape.
But that's not real, it doesn't exist.
No, it doesn't, yet.
There's no patent out there, we could start that today.
We could, sorry about that.
Just use some old bubble tape containers,
put cheese in there.
That would be dope.
So, Baker Cheese began testing this string cheese
by just going to parties and bars
and asking people, what do you think?
They should have string cheese at bars though.
I know, so they would just roll up with, I guess,
a big, I don't know, what would it be?
Like a big tray of cheese, or maybe like a bag
that you like pull newspapers out of, except it's cheese.
Yes, a sling bag, or a bandolier of string cheese.
No, I like that too.
That's cool.
So originally it wasn't like we're making this for kids.
It was like, we're making this for people to stand on.
This is an adult snack that we loan to children sometimes.
So they took this three to five inch model,
but made it a thinner, more holdable and lighter option.
Apparently, so the average string cheese now is 28 grams.
Back then it was 40 to 45.
Now we're fucking talking, baby.
It was thicker, it was like a can of beer.
Yeah, absolutely.
This was a can of beer on one hand
and then your string cheese in the other. That's perfect for me, that's actually great. That's too much cheese, absolutely. This was a can of beer on one hand and then your string cheese in the other.
That's perfect for me.
That's actually great.
That's too much cheese.
I don't think so.
I don't think so,
because I do need to down two of these puppies
to even feel it, to even feel something.
You know what I mean?
God, I want me double cheese.
I mean, we have that downstairs right now.
I know, I'm going to eat string cheese.
Well, we're going out to dinner tonight.
We're going out to dinner.
I don't want you to pregame on cheese.
Okay, so that was the 1970s.
A few years later when string cheese had become
cylindrified instead of the twisted rope status,
and there were retail opportunities,
that's when they started looking at putting it
in the individually wrapped tubes
because people would buy these like one pound bags
and then have to throw a chunk of it away.
So that is, I mean, that's string cheese.
There's not more to say.
I enjoy the peeling.
Now I am of the leisure class.
I have the peeling. No, I am of the leisure class. Right.
I have the time to peel.
I genuinely do feel like there's several different kinds
of like snack cravings that I can have.
And sometimes it's like, I want fruity, gummy, chewy.
Sometimes that's what I like.
I want salty, but sometimes I want something kind of like
mellow and a little bit filling,
like mellow and a little bit filling. And mellow and a little bit filling, and string cheese
is like the only thing that can scratch that.
Yeah, I started to get really excited
because our sons have a series of snacks
that come in no particular order throughout the evening.
Yeah.
And anytime Henry says he'd like a string cheese,
I feel like, yeah, we're doing it.
But then it's gone, because I ate it all up.
Because I also need my bones to,
it's actually more important for me where I'm at.
You're still growing.
At this stage of the game.
Well, I don't know about that,
but now it's more sort of like reinforcing
what's already there with the power of string cheese.
Can I steal you away?
Yes. Hello, teachers and faculty.
This is Janet Varney.
I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is
part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so
many more is a valuable and enriching experience. One you have no choice but to
embrace because yes, listening is mandatory. The JV Club with Janet Varney
is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls!
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I-R.
Hmm, are you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ah!
We are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
Can I do my segment, please?
Please.
Because it's one I bet you'll like.
I'm gonna talk about a television show that we talked about last night, and now we're gonna talk about it for content,
and that is The Good Place.
Oh my gosh, I guess this has probably been a small one.
It has been a small wonder.
Cause I got on wonderful.fyI
to make sure we had not done a big wonder on it.
First of all, we haven't talked about it in several years.
Also, the context in which we spoke about it
is that the official Good Place Twitter account
tweeted at us, I guess, once,
and we were fucking stoked.
How it reminds me. Oh my God.
I do not remember that for the life of me.
I don't either.
So, the Good Place,
I mean, we were talking about it in the context of,
is it time for a re-watch?
And I don't know, man,
the further we get
from the ending of The Good Place,
the more I have felt like it deserves its own topic here
because it is such a very, very special television program.
If you did not watch The Good Place,
it is a fantasy comedy series.
It ran for four seasons starting in 2016,
and it was created by Michael Schur,
whose hit rate is kind of bonkers.
He wrote and produced some of the Office,
he co-created Brooklyn Nine-Nine and Parks and Rec,
but this show was like his baby.
This show was like, he was at the spearhead of it,
and it is without a doubt like the weirdest show,
I feel like, that his name has been involved with.
So, The Good Place.
It follows Eleanor, played by Kristen Bell,
who has died before the show even starts
and has gone to The Good Place,
which is basically an analog for heaven.
Important to note that a lot of the,
maybe traditional Judeo-Christian kind of heaven stuff is hugely absent
from how this show depicts the afterlife.
It is very sort of like-
It's more like presented as like
what a lot of people think, which is like this like utopia.
A modern utopian society where all of your needs
are catered to and everything is perfect.
However, very quickly, Eleanor realizes
that due to a clerical error,
she has taken the place of another Eleanor.
I don't remember her last name.
I feel like I should. I don't either.
And her unearned presence here in the Good Place
starts causing all kinds of weird chaos and like glitches
that is kind of like ruining the experience
for everybody else in the Good Place.
As she kind of tries to reconcile this,
she meets other humans who are starting to kind of struggle
to settle in, including Tahani and Chidi and Jason.
She befriends this omnipotent intelligence named Janet
and has frequent run-ins with Michael,
who is the Good Places administrator.
Michael, of course, played by Ted Danson.
Ted Danson.
Maybe the, I don't know that I adored Ted Danson
until this, because I didn't watch Cheers
or like a lot of other Ted Danson.
He's incredible on Cheers.
He is like one of the most likable humans. Yes.
You know, it's like watching him on screen,
you can't imagine anyone else playing that role.
No, absolutely not.
I would say that's true of everyone on this show.
I can't fathom anyone else.
Everybody turns in a pitch perfect performance.
And it's so much so that this is a show where like,
now whenever I see anyone else,
you know, whenever I see Jamila Jamil in something else,
I'm like, oh hell yeah!
Like it's because I have gotten excited about this person
because they were in this show,
which is one of my favorite shows ever.
So like, I just described the plot
of season one of The Good Place.
At the end of season one, something happens
that flips the show completely on its ear,
and then it's about some completely different shit
from that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Which is interesting.
I feel like that is, I don't know,
in a much, much smaller way true of Parks and Rec.
You think about Parks and Rec as a show
that like after season one, like it kind of turns,
and it's sort of about a different thing.
This is that times a million.
The entire premise of the first season
is not really upheld from that point on.
Yeah, which is wild,
because I remember watching that first season
and feeling like I could be okay with this show
for a while, you know?
Like I didn't feel like, oh, thank God they switched it.
Yeah, in so doing, in changing the show
as dramatically as they do,
it evolves from this like situation comedy
about this woman wrestling with this cosmic guilt
for getting into heaven and seemingly ruining it.
And it becomes so much more.
It becomes this lovely meditation on morality
and mortality and existentialism
that like,
you do not necessarily expect from a 30 minute
sort of comedy show.
And it's so smart because they, you know,
they present these characters as kind of like
these archetypes, you know?
There's like a professor type and then like a fancy,
like upper crust woman type.
And then they really dig into kind of the humanity
and struggle of each of those characters.
And it's just so lovely and surprising.
I am a sucker for what this show does.
I think specifically maybe because like growing up
in the church really filled me with this kind of inextricable curiosity
about the afterlife.
And so I have always been kind of fascinated
with depictions of that in media,
like anything, right?
From Dead Like Me or like fucking Beetlejuice
or What Dreams May Come with Robin Williams,
like anything that like shows like,
here's what the afterlife is like.
I don't know, I've always found that very, very interesting.
And I think that probably resonates
from a very deep and existential part of my being.
Well, yeah, and this idea, I mean,
the very relatable idea that you would end up
in a place like that and not feel good enough for it. You know? Yeah, and this idea, I mean, the very relatable idea that you would end up in a place like that and not feel good enough for it, you know?
Yeah, absolutely.
Like, I found that just really compelling.
Like, even though Eleanor is this cartoonish character
at the beginning, you feel like, yeah, no, I mean,
it would be weird to be in this place
where everybody seems so admirable
and you're so certain that that's not you.
Yeah, I feel like The Good Place is my favorite version
of this, like here's what we think the afterlife
could be like, or not that explicit,
but here's a version of the afterlife
that you've probably never seen before,
and you have not.
The amount of world building that takes place
across this show's 53 episodes is fucking bananas.
A lot of it is played for laughs,
and usually that circles around like these humans
encountering some aspect of the infinite divine
that their mind cannot comprehend.
My favorite of which, the most memorable of which,
is in one episode, Chidi accidentally falls through
a portal and is just kind of floating through the ether
for a few seconds before someone pulls him out.
And he talks about how he sees infinite realities
collapsing upon themselves like infinite sheets of metal
until forming a blade in existence.
And then Michael's like, oh yeah, you saw the time knife. definite sheets of metal until forming a blade in existence.
And then Michael's like,
oh yeah, you saw the time knife.
Yeah, the time knife.
That kind of like element of like humans seeing things
that they cannot possibly comprehend
because of their infinitesimal nature
in comparison with eternity.
But like it also gets into like heavier stuff too.
Like I feel like this show has a lot to say
in how it presents heaven and hell
and particularly like eternity.
You could argue that like the way it depicts hell
is that this like cartoonish torture factory
where demons are like, yeah, it's time for your six o'clock
red hot poker in your eyes stuff.
But like also that is kind of how the Bible also sort of
talks about hell sometimes.
But like it has a lot more to say than just that.
Like this idea of how do humans comprehend their place
inside of infinity?
How does a human work in eternal life, right?
That is like a super heady kind of scary concept.
And the gentleness and thoughtfulness and cleverness
with which this show treats that subject
is just beautiful and remarkable
and really makes this show stand out
from being like a great comedy
with great characters and really touching stories
and great moments.
It also has this thing to say about like existence
and that's fucking huge, man.
Yeah, that is.
The ending of this show is one of my favorite finales,
maybe in the history of television,
mostly because like how tricky a needle it is to thread
to end a show about eternity, right?
How do you give characters good send-offs?
How do you give the story a good send-off
when like, I don't know,
you're talking about this infinite space?
I remember watching the finale of this show,
like anxious, like filled with dread
that this thing I had loved, there's no way
that they're going to be able to do it,
and they absolutely do.
And it is truly beautiful beyond compare.
I have tried very hard in this segment
not to talk about any kind of specifics
about the things that actually happen on this show
because I think-
I think there are a lot of people that probably missed it.
I think there are too, because here's the thing I will say.
I think, I was late to it, because I think there are a lot of people that probably missed it. I think there are too, because here's the thing I will say, I think I was late to it,
because I think the premise of the first season
is a little bit single faceted, right?
It's like, oh, this woman's in heaven
and she's not supposed to be and everything's going wrong.
And I hope she gets to the bottom of it.
But it really, I mean, you could make the argument
that that is what the first season is about.
I don't think you could make an argument that any is what the first season is about. I don't think you could make an argument
that any of the three following seasons
are about any one thing.
Like it really, really, really,
each episode really delivers a lot
of really interesting stuff.
And so like, yeah, I could see there being people
who watched a few episodes and they're like,
eh, I get it.
I like Kristen Bell and Ted Danson's incredibly handsome, but it just kind of seems like I get it.
I promise you, if you get to that moment
at the end of the first season,
that moment at the end of the first season was like,
oh, I'll watch every episode of this that they care to make.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think the ending of this show specifically
cements it as one of the greatest pieces
of comedy television ever created.
And it is one of those shows that any time a clip of it
pops up in any of my algorithms in any of my feeds,
I'm like, yeah, I'm gonna go ahead and watch this clip.
And I do actually think I would be down for a re-watch.
I do think it's-
Yeah, we don't typically do that anymore.
It really tended to be our thing
if we were like kind of stuck in a limbo period,
like if we had a new baby, you know,
or like nothing going on.
Yeah, well the Blues didn't make the playoffs
and we don't have no babies.
Yeah.
But I do think, I do think I would be down for that.
53 episodes too, that's nice.
And in the grand scheme of things-
That's true.
That's pretty tight.
Yeah, you could easily get through that in a couple months.
Sure.
Do you wanna know what our friends at home
are talking about?
Yeah.
Alex says, my office is about half a mile away
from the spice factory,
also known as the McCormick Flavor Manufacturing Center.
Whoa.
I didn't even think of the fact that like-
I've heard of that.
That's gotta exist somewhere.
Yeah.
McCormick's gotta make that stuff somewhere. It's surreal and wonderful to roll up to work
at the start of the day and smell coriander, pepper,
cinnamon, or Old Bay in the air,
almost like an olfactory horoscope.
I like that a lot, Alex.
That's beautiful.
That's beautiful, Alex.
I do like, on the west end of Huntington
is the Heiner's Bread Factory.
Anytime I would drive by it on my way to work at Tri Data,
under the oppressive thumb of Tommy Smurl,
I would get that good bread smell,
because it just always smelled like freshly baked bread,
like within a block of that building.
There was a part of Chicago
that smelled like cookies for a while.
I can't remember what it was.
I was after the Great Cookie Fire of 2008.
I remember it, sadly.
Jeremy says, drywall anchors.
These little guys pack a punch and let me put a shelf wherever I freaking want, and says drywall anchors. These little guys pack a punch
and let me put a shelf wherever I freaking want.
And that's wonderful to me.
It makes my apartment just feel a little bit more
like my own space where my stuff
is exactly where I want it to be.
Yeah.
I do love a drywall anchor.
Yeah.
No, I mean, that's brilliant.
It's like such a like seemingly innocent
little piece of, you know, plastic.
I remember, watch, I got pulled into tool talk at some point,
the tool talk algorithm.
Oh, okay.
And it was a comparison of different drywall anchors.
And so it was like screwing these anchors through the wood.
And sometimes there's like crazy gizmos in them,
like a bar that pops out as you screw it in
and then twist and then pulls back.
It's drywall anchor technology is pretty fucking wild, man.
And I got a lot to say.
Thank you to Bowen and Augustus
for the use of our theme song, Money Won't Pay.
You can find a link to that in the episode description.
And thank you to Maximum Fun for having us on the network.
Go to maximumfun.org, check out all the shows
that they got there.
When you're listening to this,
we're on tour doing Mbim Bam and Taz.
If this is out on Wednesday,
we're doing Taz tonight in Tacoma.
And then tomorrow night, Thursday, we're gonna be doing Mbim Bim and Taz. If this is out on Wednesday, we're doing Taz tonight in Tacoma. And then tomorrow night, Thursday,
we're gonna be doing Mbim Bim in Tacoma.
If you live in the Seattle, Tacoma,
Pacific Northwest area, come see us.
It's gonna be a fun show.
We got some new merch over at MacRoyMerch.com,
including a DJ Thumb sticker from Taz versus Dracula
and some other stuff that was designed
by Lucas Hespenhine, it's great.
That's gonna do it for us for this episode.
Thank you so much for listening.
Thank you so much for being here.
Thank you for your attention.
There will be a test.
What if we did have a test?
I don't know what would be on it.
I'd be like, how many times did they reference
quantum leap in this episode?
Like an ARG, you know what that is?
No.
Is it like an alternate, I think an alternate reality,
actual reality game or alternate reality game?
It's like when, I'll explain it, this is so boring.
This is like the most boring fucking anime.
Let's go back to talking about drywall anchors
because I really feel like there's more there.
What can't they do? I don't know What can I do?
I don't know