spk_1: 0:01

Ah,



spk_0: 0:03

welcome to the inaugural episode of Stay at Home Kins.



spk_1: 0:06

That's right. Stay if Home Kins, a quarantine podcast hosted by a married couple. And that's us. What's your name? My



spk_0: 0:14

name is Jamie Had a Tom can. My



spk_1: 0:17

name is Paul F. Tompkins. Were married. We live in Los Angeles.



spk_0: 0:21

He's a comedian.



spk_1: 0:22

She's an actress.



spk_0: 0:24

We've been married for 10 years.



spk_1: 0:26

That's right. 10 years in April. Yes. And now we are experiencing a great test of our relationship.



spk_0: 0:32

Really? Actually, yeah. Let's hope his podcast is not some kind of like witnessing Thio. An unraveling of a company



spk_1: 0:41

would be great podcasting, though, people to talk about it.



spk_0: 0:48

Oh, my God.



spk_1: 0:49

Oh, my God. So this is now This is not This is the most we've ever spent on things



spk_0: 0:56

like, Okay, we've actually enjoy one another's company. So we're already ahead of the game in that department. Very for like, a self isolation. Stay at home. Social distancing, safer at home order. We're not in quarantine. Thankfully, we have not been around anyone diagnosed yet with a virus that we know of and neither one of us have symptoms. However, I'm waiting for the other shooter. How many times a day did you have? You thought you had grown over? Because I spent a few times a day being like, Oh, I got



spk_1: 1:31

you know, we're different in that way. I don't think that I have it



spk_0: 1:36

already. Know you don't,



spk_1: 1:37

but I think I'm going to get



spk_0: 1:39

Oh, see, I'm convinced I'm like carrying.



spk_1: 1:41

I know you're No,



spk_0: 1:43

I might be. You don't know that people carry the



spk_1: 1:46

volatile, for sure. But I know you,



spk_0: 1:48

ace and dramatically.



spk_1: 1:49

I know you. And you're not that type of person.



spk_0: 1:52

Uh, I'm not the type that Oh, I would have it symptomatically. I actually, you know, it's true. I probably would, because I'm like a very I'm very sensitive, like in my body and in my sight key and in my like Like I was just telling someone today about how, like, if you were to talk to me about something that skis me out like rodents or insects Or like, for example, like, if I go to the natural history Me,



spk_1: 2:20

This is a true story.



spk_0: 2:21

Yeah, I go like the natural history. This is just like an example. Ah, the National History Museum. They have these late glass boxes with live insects in them. And there's if I walk



spk_1: 2:35

towards crazy book just



spk_0: 2:37

crazy, like like, terrifying like Problem Story. Yeah, if I walk toward one, you can watch the hair on my arms raise. If I step back, it goes down. If I go toward it goes up, it's literally like some kind of like primal survival response in my body that so, like any little little kids, like any twinge I have, I'm like, I got Corona got Kobe 19 you know are a new strain of it or something, or I had a yahoos. Wait, what do



spk_1: 3:11

you you, Adam a mutated version of it?



spk_0: 3:14

Because it's gonna happen because that's how it goes. That's how it goes. I guess we're all gonna get it at some point.



spk_1: 3:24

I mean, the here's the thing is that yeah, everyone seems to be guessing what is going to happen. Is it new? They don't know. That's what they call the novel Corona. Um, but I don't know. I feel like there. Yeah, maybe it makes sense to be kind of fatalistic about and say it's gonna happen, and the best I can do is try toe mitigated as much as possible. Catch it as early as possible. Yes, because



spk_0: 3:55

they they I read something about. So basically, we're in this for, like, a long haul, like an 18 month period because there won't be a vaccine for a long time and they can treat viruses. There's no cure for viruses, and it's gonna wax and wane, By the way, I think now's a good time to say that neither one of us are scientists.



spk_1: 4:14

Honey, Good catch. Yeah, we said at the top,



spk_0: 4:17

we're not Scientists were not. We just, like, read shit on my



spk_1: 4:23

just like you. So don't judge us.



spk_0: 4:25

I consume a lot like every morning, like I'm ready to consume it, but like, it's gonna wax and wane like it's even possible that it could subside and in the summer, months, like the flu and then come back. And then those second and third waves could be worse than this first wave that we're seeing.



spk_1: 4:45

Yes. So it is not good and not going to be better?



spk_0: 4:50

No, I guess I don't know. Well, hopefully they'll, you know, figure out how to vaccinate for it or that will develop what? You know what herd mentality, herd herd mentality Heard



spk_1: 5:03

I know about her immunity. From what I understand herd immunity. I first heard this term because of the anti vaccine movement. Is that



spk_0: 5:17

right? Because they would say we could not develop. Isn't that right that we could not develop herd immunity?



spk_1: 5:23

You're not doing vaccines If you're not, vaccinate your child against these old diseases, huh Um, that you weaken the herd immunity because you're bringing back these? You're bringing back these diseases, so everybody, I can't I can't explain it. I feel like it's what I feel like. I know what it means. Yeah, I can't explain. Basically, the idea is we as our heard, uh, have built up certain immunities to things like overtime because we've had these vaccines and everything I see. But the more people don't do that, the more people don't vaccinate, Then the more the diseases can overtake us, that makes



spk_0: 6:07

sense. So basically the end, the anti vac. That's why everyone's mad at the anti vaxxers. Because it's not that



spk_1: 6:13

Should we look it up, I



spk_0: 6:15

think let's do for the next episode. Oh, however, we're



spk_1: 6:20

gonna do this way



spk_0: 6:22

that is a good question. That is,



spk_1: 6:25

we're gonna do this. We



spk_0: 6:26

can do like a Twitter poll,



spk_1: 6:27

I don't know, never left between her design, I think Weekly at at the most



spk_0: 6:34

frequent one week in Stay safer at home orders feels like a year to me. Well,



spk_1: 6:41

but that's the thing is you have to have. There's not gonna be much to talk about. If we were to do it on a nightly basis,



spk_0: 6:46

No, but maybe we could Oh, do we have to say, When can people just, like, hit the button and subscribe and be like, excited when there's a new one?



spk_1: 6:58

That's true, We could just drop it on whenever we feel like it.



spk_0: 7:00

I mean, there are no rules anymore. We're living



spk_1: 7:03

in this. There's no more rules



spk_0: 7:06

there, I say, hopefully weekly. But if we get like a wild hair like we might want to date night on, like a Tuesday Great. Because



spk_1: 7:21

this is our date night.



spk_0: 7:22

This is a date night.



spk_1: 7:23

We've been indoors for a week, but this is our team



spk_0: 7:27

tonight. Is that tonight is our date pandemic pandemic date night? Yeah, I don't know. We'll figure it out as we go. Guys, this is all unchartered waters.



spk_1: 7:38

Now, what have we been doing? We have been staying inside, watching TV, pretending like it's new that we watch a lot of TV. My



spk_0: 7:45

hat. Guys, this is what's funny about me and Paul or I mean, this



spk_1: 7:49

is what was funny about us. Honey, what's funny about us? Brace yourselves. What's funny about us?



spk_0: 7:56

We watch. Oh, love me. That's right. Like we're really into television.



spk_1: 8:01

Like many couples, we have our shows that we must watch together.



spk_0: 8:04

Yeah, we have shows that we worked separately. Yeah, I am like, uh, Paul watches, like, I don't know, Like more fantasy sci fi stuff without, like, he was Picard and Star Wars and stuff without me. True. You were shaking your head notices. I'm gonna go,



spk_1: 8:21

because when you just because of high, like those things more than you do doesn't mean that that's what I am.



spk_0: 8:31

I didn't think what you



spk_1: 8:32

want to use that balls like he's like sci fi fantasy fantasy



spk_0: 8:37

now, but that's you watch without me. Yeah,



spk_1: 8:39

that's what I watch with that. But see, I had to make it clear to the listener because you paid me with this broad brush.



spk_0: 8:47

Paul Know you are You contain multitudes? That's right. I would never Who? I'm large. Large, I think that march



spk_1: 8:59

March I couldn t



spk_0: 9:01

isn't more. Eyes it, Marge. Isn't she from The Simpsons? Yes,



spk_1: 9:08

there is a Marge.



spk_0: 9:09

I thought it was like a from the I thought there was. That was the Simpsons reference that I didn't know about



spk_1: 9:18

because I stopped



spk_0: 9:19

watching The Simpsons. And when I was in my



spk_1: 9:21

22 the the I have I contain multitudes. The beginning of that phrase is I am large. I contain multitudes, but everyone cuts at large



spk_0: 9:33

in a way because it's unflattering. It's not nice. No, it's like, you know,



spk_1: 9:37

you don't want to start saying I am large and then have somebody immediately before you could get out. I contain multitudes. Why don't you join Weight watchers large? Why don't you join? Wait,



spk_0: 9:49

I get dame all that. That's like the Thanksgiving dinner conversation. Then your aunt like whoever is like, honey, why don't you try and wait lodges and you're like aquatic biology. Well,



spk_1: 10:05

you tell the it's an insult to the family story. Oh, uh, okay, guys, So was one of my favorite story.



spk_0: 10:12

This is lately. My dad. Okay. Okay, guys, I feel like I don't even know how to dull story. You're the good guy. Like Paul isn't there about, like, basically like, I'll have this big Lebanese family they all live in. Most of them live in West Virginia, which is where I was born. And, uh, ma, one of my cousins had brought home a girlfriend, and we were all gathered at, like one of my aunts. My dad is the youngest of six. They all, you know, had like, a gazillion babies. Not my dad. My dad's name was to six, but they were like, uh, they have, like, 22 1st cousins or something like that. So anyway, so he brought home some cool friend. And my aunt is, like, a big deal. Like my aunt like, makes all those like, uh, Lebanese food by hand. And so we were there, and then, um, we were driving away, like down the mountain in West



spk_1: 11:12

Virginia's mountains. Your dad



spk_0: 11:13

and my dad, My step mom,



spk_1: 11:15

Just the three of you,



spk_0: 11:16

Just the three of us. My brother was on there for some reason I was like they're visiting, I don't know, like right after college or something. And, um, my stepfather gives Well, I don't know if you noticed, but, um is she said, my cousin's name. His girlfriend did not eat any of the great believe roles that air Peggy made by hand, and my dad slammed on the brakes. He took his hand and he banged the roof. And he goes, It's an insult, Really. It was a guy. It was like a gag. It wasn't like, really, but he, like, just slammed the car like it was like, dark, like, 10 o'clock at night, like in the winter. And he slanted because hey said And so I mean, I was like laughing czar like tears rolling dollars. Now it's so stupid. That was that story. It's funny. It's funny gag because he was It was like going on and on Lee the conversation, and he was like being silent like you didn't even really know he was, like, kind of listening, you know? And I was like, Oh, she didn't



spk_1: 12:38

She talked. She talked about it for a while.



spk_0: 12:40

Yeah, like we're really kind of going along and going along, and it was like he it like the gag was like, Here's, like, building this Reed shot it. But, like, no one really David shit. Really? Yeah. I mean, that girlfriend I don't think lasted. You know, it wasn't like one of many When you have, like, 21 1st cousins or, you know, like you can't even keep up with people. You have a lot of cousins, too.



spk_1: 13:06

I do? Yeah. I've, um, seven on my mom's side and eight on my dad's side.



spk_0: 13:14

Mm. I have zero on my mom's side. That's right. Mama is an only child. Yeah.



spk_1: 13:23

Man, Catholic all the way. Everybody was Catholic.



spk_0: 13:25

Yeah, there's had the Catholic stuff. Yeah.



spk_1: 13:31

What were we talking about anyway? So we



spk_0: 13:33

were talking about



spk_1: 13:34

We re watch Band of Brothers. I am, Which is great, Highly recommended. If you've never seen it, it's on HBO. Go. It's really good. It holds up like crazy.



spk_0: 13:44

Yeah, well, yeah, because it's about a really thing.



spk_1: 13:48

True, but there's some things about real things that don't hold up that well.



spk_0: 13:53

What do you mean? Well,



spk_1: 13:54

I think that there's there's other just because it's about a real event doesn't mean they're automatically holds up its well done. It's well that in addition to being about a very, you know, huge, you know, historical, historical. Yeah,



spk_0: 14:12

One of those things, because I've seen it. I think I've seen it now, like, three times, I think. Yeah. And, um, what really struck me this this recent viewing is how senseless war is. And like, it wasn't completely Ah, like a hammered over your head theme of the story. Because, really, I think they were just honoring these this these particular men's great bravery and on and ah store, you know, story.



spk_1: 14:41

I'm trying to say this is what it was like. You know,



spk_0: 14:43

exactly. This is what it was like.



spk_1: 14:45

As close as we can come to that.



spk_0: 14:46

Yeah, I'm trying to tell the story with empathy. Um, but it was, like, kind of like, Oh, you're watching it. And they're these, like, young people who are doing this. He just like putting themselves in this trauma For what? I mean, it's so crazy when you think about it.



spk_1: 15:04

You can't help a trip out on when you see just the idea of armies, you know, on either side of the line shooting at each other. It just seems demented. It really doesn't help a trip out on how



spk_0: 15:18

well it is. It's like murder. And in broad daylight, it's like sanctioned murder out in the open lawlessness in broad daylight.



spk_1: 15:28

But then, just when you're thinking that they hit you with that second last episode where it's like where they liberate the camp, Uh, like, this is spoiler, but they



spk_0: 15:37

liberated the camps. Guys,



spk_1: 15:39

this is why this is why they did it. That's why it was necessary at the time, you know? Right, But anyway, so we did that, Um, we have been, I



spk_0: 15:51

want to write. Here's what I want. If there are any Hollywood executives out there listening, I have an idea for a streaming channel that would really appeal to me. And



spk_1: 16:05

this is a great pitch. So far,



spk_0: 16:06

I think I'm not. The only one is kind of where I'm going with. I love movies. TV made for TV movies and miniseries is from the seventies and eighties, So I would love a library of all of that content available on demand. Starting on, you know, right now during this quarantine, right? How do we get



spk_1: 16:34

it. Um, What's the closest network that's doing that?



spk_0: 16:41

I don't know. I mean, I I found some old like TV movies on Amazon Prime.



spk_1: 16:45

Amazon has a lot of that crazy old. Yeah.



spk_0: 16:48

Ah, but it's not like you can't really access it like you can't be like TV movies from the eighties, and then you find it.



spk_1: 16:55

It's probably stumble across your the problem. What is that you're talking about? A channel that has Ah, finite. Well,



spk_0: 17:05

then Amazon prime needs to create, and they need. They need to acquire all of it. All of the rights, like it should be on one place. It should be like like a you know, like a segment of Amazon



spk_1: 17:19

here saying he liked what AMC used to be. Yeah, where they would show our Turner classic movies. Yeah, they were. Just show old movies.



spk_0: 17:27

Yes. And I also have another idea. Hollywood executives. If you're listening like every now and then, I would like to dip in, you know how, like, you know how like people will do like, oh, this day in history. In 1968. On March Ah, 19th in 1968. This happened this was signed into law. This person broke this record. I would lay thio like hit like the Year 1935 March 19th and watch whatever was on like the TV.



spk_1: 18:02

That's fun. Yeah, that would be



spk_0: 18:04

like I want to relive, like, certain days of my youth. This is a generation X idea. Okay, because gen x there were in the nostalgia, you know, And we were raised by television. Essentially, I



spk_1: 18:19

was Well, we were the first. I think we were the first bigness algae generation in that way. Yeah, the other. Is there



spk_0: 18:25

another nostalgia generation?



spk_1: 18:27

Every generation after us is still, like, very much obsessed with. So they saved by the bell and stuff like that. Yeah. People that we were the first generation, I think, to not let go of things in that way. Yeah. Where, like, Scooby Doo is Justus Good now, as it was then, it's like, No, it was a terrible show Children when we watched it. Yeah, you know, But I think everybody now that's just that's just the way it is now is that you hang on to these things from when you're a kid and you give them equal weight with things that you enjoy as an adult.



spk_0: 19:03

But one of the reasons why I think our generation is super obsessed with nostalgia is because we, um the older we got some more flooded with information we got like, you know, first we had three channels, then we had cable and we had, like, MTV. Then we had, like, HBO, you know, like we kept getting flooded and flooded and there was never There's never been a moment for a reflection, and it just, like, came and came and came on us. And now we have the Internet, and now we have Lake, you know, YouTube and quit B or whatever the hell that is. So like, there's like we I think we we crave those, like, simpler times when media was shared in real time together. I don't know, maybe I'm wrong. That



spk_1: 19:49

could be, I mean,



spk_0: 19:50

is that every generation, because some people were born when they had, like, no indoor plumbing and then by the time inside there were like we got a telephone or whatever. I mean,



spk_1: 20:02

I used to think about the things that my mother saw in the span of her life because I was born in the twenties. Yeah, 29. Wow. And that they died in 2006? Yeah, Depression, baby, for sure. And so, to see all the things that she saw developed in her lifetime



spk_0: 20:19

because you lived through the both wars. Yeah. Oh, wait. Now,



spk_1: 20:22

one, just the one. But Vietnam, Vietnam, Korea, you know? Yeah, But all the inventions, all the all the advancement. So the chronology, vaccines, everything.



spk_0: 20:32

Like they didn't have TV when she would like. They didn't have, like,



spk_1: 20:37

you know, by the end of her life, she was using a computer



spk_0: 20:39

like they were all, like sitting around a radio, like when she was a k A. You know, like, little. Yeah. Yeah,



spk_1: 20:46

but then think about all the stuff that we've seen.



spk_0: 20:49

Oh, my God.



spk_1: 20:50

Get accelerated in such a crazy um but also, we were the last generation, I think, to experience pop culture just as it happened. Like we were getting VHS is you know what I mean? So you had tapes, but you we were old enough. We weren't like little kids were watching the same tape every day, right? You know,



spk_0: 21:15

right? We didn't really have that capability



spk_1: 21:17

like the Simpsons is is a is a big demarcate. Er, I think because we watched it when it was on Sunday night. Yeah, we did. But then generation after us watching in syndication so they'd like, come home from school. They'd see these episodes again and again and again and again, right? And it's in their consciousness in a way that it's not for us.



spk_0: 21:36

It's so crazy to me that, like they washed it differently, like when Simpson's was out in the nineties and for I remember when I was like, a short like on The Tracey Ullman Show and all that Blake. When it came out, it was like the night was a big deal because it was also X Files. That's so like I would go to my friend Aaron Ginsberg's house and, like we would all gather on Sunday nights specifically like at his apartment, Tow, watch, Simpsons and X Files. Like it was a big deal. Yeah, absolutely. And exiles, I would argue, was the big main event, like over Simpson's



spk_1: 22:12

Yes, because the symptoms it was a fun comedy show, but The X Files was who knew it was gonna happen and What? Ah, you know, crazy drama. Yeah.



spk_0: 22:22

Yeah. And they were so good, right? Like David, You cover me and, um, to cuff me. I got into the way. I feel like we would watch stuff together, like in college. We'd I'd go to my friend Allie House apartment, and we'd watch, um, 91. $01 please. And I would argue Melrose Place was the main event over 91 up. That was just me. Those is my preference steam here. Yeah, I was the steam year. Remember when the big earthquake hit and I was like, Oh, my God, is the cast of Miller's plays okay? Do you remember



spk_1: 22:59

when that happened? I was not there for your concern about the guest of



spk_0: 23:04

Yeah, I want you were in there of your first full. I feel like I saw a thing in people magazine about it where they're like, Oh, my gosh. Like so And so's okay. She was here when the earthquake hit people's



spk_1: 23:16

lives. But how How was the cast of milk?



spk_0: 23:20

I don't know. You were not here during the earthquake.



spk_1: 23:24

I got here right after it. I got here and I got here the same year. It happened in February and I got here in April.



spk_0: 23:29

You have freaked me out about the pandemic. Well, cousin Utah, like, two days ago, they had an earthquake, and it not It knocked out the current virus hotline. But it wasn't. I guess it wasn't like



spk_1: 23:41

we didn't request their songs. You see, guys, that was what you've been waiting for. Listen, if you have any song, if you have any songs you want to play for the Corona virus leaving the comments,



spk_0: 23:57

someone service s so far, someone out there has covered my Sharona in my kurono so far, right? That's happened.



spk_1: 24:04

Probably somebody else. Weird, al. Actions like



spk_0: 24:06

a mean,



spk_1: 24:06

weird AL actually tweeted. I'm not going to do that. Thank you. Because of your house in undated.



spk_0: 24:11

Yeah, he was like, Come on, guys.



spk_1: 24:13

I didn't



spk_0: 24:13

come up with my own ideas. I'm weird out on that, You know,



spk_1: 24:19

we're not. I



spk_0: 24:20

give up with



spk_1: 24:20

my own ideas. Guys



spk_0: 24:22

also, like first thought, Not always. Best thought when you're weird out like you go for, like, you go a little outside the box. Yeah, people, people are going



spk_1: 24:32

to try to tell Weird Al his process and



spk_0: 24:34

wrong there. Ah, you have a weird AL story, which I'm sure you told on television.



spk_1: 24:39

I have. Yes, it's on laboring on delusions. Guys, they're special from 2006. Ah, later than that.



spk_0: 24:49

That was, like 2009 or something.



spk_1: 24:51

I think it came out 2010 or 2011. But you can buy it online, guys. Labor. Big pleasure is like



spk_0: 24:59

our big plug. That's the set up



spk_1: 25:03

we're gonna do. We're gonna plug one thing per episode.



spk_0: 25:06

We're not really ready for charity.



spk_1: 25:07

We're not



spk_0: 25:08

ready. Not raising money for charity. And no one? No. Okay. No ad, no sponsors, no nothing. Guys know nothing. Recordings by candlelight. I just want everyone out there. The reason. Another reason why I want to do this. Besides the fact that we're stuck at home and we have nothing else to do and we have recording equipment. Um, did we talk about the fact that the recording equipment was in their garage and I'm scared of the garage and



spk_1: 25:33

we did not talk about that either. Recording. Quinn was in the garage. Cheney scared of the garage. I'm not brush, so I went and impacted Brought it in.



spk_0: 25:42

Yeah, because we we discovered other people were doing stay at home podcasts as well. But and you know



spk_1: 25:49

that we talked that we talked about.



spk_0: 25:50

We did talk



spk_1: 25:51

about that. And the less we say about that, the better.



spk_0: 25:54

Okay, well, I'm just saying



spk_1: 25:55

competition. There's room for everybody. Do this



spk_0: 25:57

for everybody because, um, we can't leave our house. Yeah,



spk_1: 26:03

everybody should be doing this.



spk_0: 26:04

So we're stuck. Okay, So there's another reason why I want to do this is because, um, not just like, oh, we don't have anything to do. And we have this thing, that record or whatever and we're not scientists, and we have no information to offer and we have no ability to raise money for charities. But there's another reason. And that is a connection commission which can be more valuable sometimes, like we're all sort of experiencing this weird time in our lifetimes. And, uh, I think it's gonna take us a really long time to make sense of it. Like we've been like, five years from now on, everything's fine, and we've, like, cured cancer and maybe viruses, like, five years. I have to think five years out right now.



spk_1: 26:52

Well, you can think five years out, but I don't think we're gonna cure cancer in five years to you.



spk_0: 26:57

Well, well, Biden is leading in the election, and he said he was gonna cure cancer.



spk_1: 27:03

Was kind of pie in the sky.



spk_0: 27:04

Well, my point is this five years from now we're gonna first of all, Alex, give me if you're listening. I'm a big fan. I hope that you will be doing a docuseries about Corona virus that I can watch in five years. First of all, I think you'll win an Emmy for it. Second of all. Ah, you're docuseries air. The best things ever.



spk_1: 27:29

What if it was a dramatic 80 style miniseries about the Corona virus? Well,



spk_0: 27:33

that can happen to because, you know, they're doing that whole thing with the drop out the Theranos Lady Elizabeth Holmes. They ran the gamut, Okay? They ran the gamut. They started with a book which I read the book. My personal opinion. Maybe the book is the best of everything. Then secondly, after the book, they did the podcast right, which covered a lot of the book. Thirdly, Alice Kidney docuseries big fan if you're listening. I love everything you d'oh! Um And then, fourthly, a miniseries is in development.



spk_1: 28:17

That's correct. Which I auditioned for Yeah, I did not get



spk_0: 28:20

You don't know that I got put on Hold



spk_1: 28:23

it. I'm sure I put everything I put on hold But I think I knew before I got put on hold



spk_0: 28:27

Yeah, but they said it wasn't Start shooting until April on casting and hey, listen, guys, listen, if you're casting that money's first of all, first of all, I know I said the booth listening I know, I know. I said the book was the best. Maybe the miniseries will be the



spk_1: 28:45

best Has yet to be proven has yet to be proven



spk_0: 28:48

I'm just saying Like as faras Coben 19 Corona virus 2020 Pandemic goes There can be books. There can be articles. There can be an 80 style miniseries. Okay, there can also be in Alex. Give me Doc ese, with that, you know we're not really sure what? What? It what you made though. You know what? What? It It's



spk_1: 29:16

a thing that people like. I've never been quite clear on what it is. Isn't afraid I don't know what the difference is between mango and enemy.



spk_0: 29:23

Ah. Is there animation involved?



spk_1: 29:28

Um, I guess not. I guess it's Ah, Maybe that's the crucial difference. Maybe it's just like a comic book. It's Amanda. And once it's animated, if he comes an enemy



spk_0: 29:38

Well, you know what? In five years, we might need a mango. We might need an anime. We might need the doctor surgeon mine. Either book. We might need the eighties measures in order to understand this period in history with my point.



spk_1: 29:52

What about a 200 part Siris on Quimby? 10 minutes at a time.



spk_0: 29:57

You think in five years quick, he's still gonna do you think?



spk_1: 30:00

Oh, so you don't think they're



spk_0: 30:01

listening? I quickly executor listening. He's listening. Casting director of the dropout. Quippy doesn't have a sense of humor.



spk_1: 30:13

Quippy. You gotta laugh.



spk_0: 30:14

You think they're not making the same jokes in the halls of quit be about their own products?



spk_1: 30:19

Look, honey, on the sea. So survivor Okay. The show. It's hurt my feelings.



spk_0: 30:25

See, So was a very short lived. I know. I'm not supposed to explain things right.



spk_1: 30:29

We don't explain things. We explained things to each other. We don't explain things to the listener. Look at they couldn't have time things up. Now



spk_0: 30:39

what if we get some senior citizen listeners air a little? I still have time, but I don't want to make them have to Google. See



spk_1: 30:47

style. Come on. It'll be fun. Like they let them make their kids do it.



spk_0: 30:51

They're gonna wiki. They were gonna



spk_1: 30:53

read the page. If you're a senior citizen listening asked. Make your kids tell you, what's he So is



spk_0: 30:59

if you're a senior center citizen listening, I hope that you are being looked after and that you like our pockets and we offer you a laugh. Paul did get a really good one off there in the middle. I can't remember what it was, but it was really good



spk_1: 31:14

that came from Okay. All right. Why don't we wrap this up? Um, what



spk_0: 31:22

was the date night over



spk_1: 31:24

for them? These creeps waiting in a deep



spk_0: 31:28

tom are binging. Oh, you know what I'm very excited about.



spk_1: 31:31

Okay, so we did manning brothers. What's next for us? We were talking about The Sopranos, which we haven't seen since we went off the air. I



spk_0: 31:37

know, but I kind of want you to watch the original roots, which I'm obsessed with. I don't even know if I can find it.



spk_1: 31:43

We'll look for it. We'll find it.



spk_0: 31:45

Have you seen the original?



spk_1: 31:47

It's been awhile, but I've seen it s so good. I mean, I definitely saw when it was on. Well, that was a kid. Yeah, it was a bit is a huge deal.



spk_0: 31:56

I'm sure I saw it when I was on, but then I saw it as an adult, and I was, like, So blown away by the acting like every actor in it is so insanely present and like so, you know, like, dedicated to the storytelling of it in such a way that is visceral. It's still thinking Good



spk_1: 32:20

is a hugely impressive cast.



spk_0: 32:22

It is so good. You know what I'm excited about That's coming out, and I don't know how to consume it. But, I mean, it's on HBO. I mean, like, it's gonna come out every week, which I don't want. I want to kind of binge it, but it's so so the my brilliant friend Siri's of books. There's there. It's a cuadrilla ji, and it's so good. It's called like the Neopolitan Siri's there. These four books that this Italian writer wrote in her like identity was Secret forever and, you know, like that kind of thing. And it's basically this epic story of this female friendship from childhood to, you know, late adulthood. And it is, like, so absorbing. And they already did the first book on HBO, My bill in front. So Season two has just dropped, and they found they went on the like, this crazy big search for the actresses for the mini for the kids because, like, they're not gonna be the in the whole Siri's, they're only gonna think being the first to they probably introduced the adult versions at the end of this one. And, you know, it was like this whole big thing where they found them and, you know, and it's it all takes place in Italy, and it was shot in Italy, and now Italy is going to this horrible trauma with the Corona virus. So I know small way. I guess I'll feel like I'm supporting Italy. I don't know. Anyway, that's what I'm excited about next, but I don't know if I should watch it all at once and wait for it to How am I gonna do that? I'm stuck home. Well, for for



spk_1: 33:58

people listening, that's a bend recommendation. The first season of my brilliant friend. Definitely. I'd also like to recommend. Of course, Band of brothers is the way



spk_0: 34:06

we talked about Sopranos.



spk_1: 34:08

Here's to recommendations for people. The Siri's Patriot, which is Amazon Prime Show,



spk_0: 34:13

which I haven't seen



spk_1: 34:14

on Lee two seasons. You can watch that very entertaining show. Um Lodge 49 another show that only got two seasons. It was originally on AMC, but I think down who, Lou Now it's a terrific show. We love it,



spk_0: 34:29

and then we'll



spk_1: 34:30

have a small cameo in an episode towards the end of the last season. Um, you know, and of course, ba jillion dollar properties.



spk_0: 34:38

Oh, you gotta watch,



spk_1: 34:39

which I'm in and myself. Things I've ever done.



spk_0: 34:42

Paul's character in Bazillion Dollar Properties is maybe the most underrated over looked comedic. Honey, I'm serious.



spk_1: 34:54

Very sweet of you, Like a



spk_0: 34:56

we I'm not I'm not blowing smoke. I know. I know. You mean it like it's I can't breathe. Sometimes when I think about like this the bits like he came up with in Bill Gillian, and it's free on puto, right?



spk_1: 35:08

Ludo TV.



spk_0: 35:09

We have



spk_1: 35:09

four seasons. It's a great cast. It's improvised comedy. So funny.



spk_0: 35:14

Our friend cool up. Meet it.



spk_1: 35:16

Yeah, it's so maybe the best job I've ever had. It was so much fun.



spk_0: 35:20

I hated that It that was the sea. So that was this. So um,



spk_1: 35:25

it was very messy. So scar.



spk_0: 35:27

It's the sea. So wound. It's a



spk_1: 35:29

wound that never close.



spk_0: 35:31

It's a wait. Do wounds close? They don't close



spk_1: 35:35

Well, I mean by saying wound. He makes me think that it's still open because I said Scar, you can say open wound E you can



spk_0: 35:47

to me wound means like it could be closed, but you



spk_1: 35:50

were psychologically damaged. Little old war wound. But I'm just because I said scar and then you changed it. A wound. I thought you meant that was a sore.



spk_0: 36:02

Yeah, we don't always know what the other one is saying. That is like a thing.



spk_1: 36:08

Marriage, baby.



spk_0: 36:09

It's not married. Some marriage couple. It's like they know. Some married couples know what the other one is saying. Seriously,



spk_1: 36:20

like there's a married, couple of the decks. Troops.



spk_0: 36:23

They know like it. It kind of is wild to me sometimes because I'm, like, nose like we're trying to communicate, and it takes all the effort. Sometimes. That's way I wanted to make my recommendation. No stopping you. I wanted to mention honorable mentions being of AMC, where you can find large 49 er holding catch.



spk_1: 36:53

Yeah. Good one. Yes. Holden, catch fire. We discovered after it had already. All right.



spk_0: 36:58

Got aired on Netflix. Yes. Um, and



spk_1: 37:02

you know, it is on the foot's. Now it's



spk_0: 37:03

on That likes now



spk_1: 37:04

might not be who help it is. If you could find it, might you might have to buy it. I don't know, but if you seek it out, it's It's so good. It's such a bummer. If you would be a bummer, I hope it's still streaming somewhere for free.



spk_0: 37:15

Okay, So basically, we're like, Oh, this this is a cool like eighties period show. Let's check it out. Because we liked Madman at the time. And then we started watching it. Really? The news, guv. Moonman. And then I had, like, this whole rediscovery resurgence. Maybe after it got on that Flix there, son.



spk_1: 37:37

Yeah, we had just watched the pilot, and then, um, we didn't watch it again. And then we kept hearing how good it waas? Yeah, And then And then we watched it on guys.



spk_0: 37:49

O M G a



spk_1: 37:52

Oh, my God, it's so good.



spk_0: 37:54

It is. So I like things about the creative process. I don't know if you enjoy. Do you like watching things? I don't think



spk_1: 38:00

I do like topsy turvy, topsy



spk_0: 38:02

turvy. Ah, like things about the creative process are so wildly interesting to me. Um, and that's what it is about. Yeah, in my opinion,



spk_1: 38:12

it's a great It's a great show with four main leads and then a couple other people that are our main characters throughout the show. Everyone's terrific. So it's really well written.



spk_0: 38:24

The female characters, the women characters in it are, like some of the best, like treated, in my opinion by show creators. And, um, I think it is like to do to win the show runners.



spk_1: 38:38

Yeah, yeah. Christopher Cantwell and way. They're both named Christopher. Chris Stiff, right? Yeah. Christopher Cantwell on Christopher. See Roger s. I see the title card now in my brain



spk_0: 38:55

to Christopher's. Do you think Agent Christopher's the two current thank you to the two Christopher Christopher's? Well, I guess that's our first steps.



spk_1: 39:04

Yeah, we did it. Wait, we said, We're gonna wrap up. And then we talked for 10 more minutes.



spk_0: 39:09

Well, that's a wrap



spk_1: 39:10

up. It's a 10 minute wrap up



spk_0: 39:12

here is crazy. I talk a lot. So for me, this genre



spk_1: 39:18

falling off a log.



spk_0: 39:20

What does that mean? Muses Easy. Why log? It's



spk_1: 39:25

not hard to do,



spk_0: 39:27

but when you have never the explosion before, why are you on the long? Why you on it you want you want a backstory



spk_1: 39:34

for an expression?



spk_0: 39:35

Is it for those people that run across the the you know, the the Ponds with the Longs? Here's



spk_1: 39:44

the log roller like people do log rolling. Yeah, no, as easy as falling off a log means, like, if you're sitting on a log, you fall off of it.



spk_0: 39:52

Why would you? That's no, it's I kill you. Never heard this expression before, maybe



spk_1: 39:59

demanding a backstory for it.



spk_0: 40:01

I think it's the log runners. Okay, we could look it up. His desire is we could let's desirous Quinn sitting. It's not about it's not a risk. It's about what's easier to do. Guys, let's just say if you if you didn't love this episode, go fuck yourself. I love when pockets Billy. Ah, y'all! That is like the best when he had, like, Philly like he gets Philly, by the way, he's wearing a filly sweatshirt. Right now, I'm like no spontaneous nation hat. So if you didn't like this inaugural episode, hang in there with us because



spk_1: 41:00

every other episode will be exactly like this.



spk_0: 41:05

And eventually you'll be so bored with your life staying home that



spk_1: 41:09

you have to listen. You have gone through everything else



spk_0: 41:13

you'll start. It'll be like like, what is the thing when you fall in love with their kidnapper stock home



spk_1: 41:19

circles in its full love? What



spk_0: 41:23

about good?



spk_1: 41:25

You identify with your captor,



spk_0: 41:27

identify we so that's gonna we should call that Stockholm syndrome with Paul and Jamie now



spk_1: 41:35

stock F. Sandro's Wait, you know what? Did the artwork



spk_0: 41:40

wait? Stock F syndrome is the sequel for When we Are allowed In. We'll have kidnapped her listeners during the corn during the pandemic once. Okay, everyone, please stay sane. Stay healthy.



spk_1: 41:57

Stay home.



spk_0: 41:58

Stay home. Stay compassionate. Ask about folks. By the way, we had our neighbor over. Um, we put a chair out in the yard, Okay? She was taking a walk and we put share on the yard. We sat on our stoop, We stayed up. I want to say, like, eight feet apart outside. She sat there. We set where we sat and we we were able to have interaction. So I don't know, you might you might be in New York City. You might not be able to do that. You have to use technology. That's that's also good. But there are, like, creative ways that you can still interact.



spk_1: 42:36

Absolutely. And you know what? Checking on people. I've been checking in on people. People been checking in on me. It's really a wonderful thing. Um, we are all in this together. Even if we do not want to be. That's just the way it is. But



spk_0: 42:51

I don't know who to be mad at. We'll talk about that in the next episode.



spk_1: 42:54

Sure, sure. That constructive use of our time. All right. Well ah, I guess we're signing off. Thanks. See you next time.



