Episode Transcript
Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.
Use Ctrl + F to search
0:01
From KT Studios, the number
0:03
one podcast, The Idaho
0:05
Massacre is back. The
0:08
new developments in the University of Idaho murder
0:10
case. It was an
0:12
unimaginable crime. One house,
0:15
four victims, only one
0:17
accused. If this is
0:19
true, then this guy is the real
0:21
life Dexter. Listen
0:23
to season two of The Idaho Massacre on
0:25
the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
0:28
get your podcasts. I'm
0:30
Gary Veter and I have a new limited
0:32
series podcast, Number One Dad. Over
0:35
this 10 part series, I'll go searching for the
0:37
truth about my father, a con man, who I
0:39
haven't spoken to in 24 years. He
0:42
wants me to act like my
0:45
injury is even worse for a
0:47
payout. He's posing as my attorney
0:49
in a court. There were moments where
0:51
Manny would assume the role of undercover
0:53
police officer. Listen
0:56
to Number One Dad on the iHeartRadio
0:58
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get
1:01
your podcasts. The
1:03
Medal of Honor is the highest military
1:06
decoration in the United States. Since
1:08
it was established in 1861, there have been 3,517 people
1:10
awarded with the medal. I'm
1:16
Malcolm Gladwell and our new podcast
1:18
from Bushkin Industries and iHeartMedia is
1:20
about those heroes. What they
1:22
did, what it meant, and what
1:25
their stories tell us about the nature
1:27
of courage and sacrifice. Listen
1:30
to Medal of Honor, Stories of Courage, on
1:32
the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
1:35
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
1:38
I'm Jordan Gonsalves and I'm a
1:40
journalist. Join me on my new
1:43
podcast, But We Loved, where queer
1:45
elders recount the amazing history they've
1:47
lived through. In the middle of
1:49
Wall Street, they stopped traffic, they
1:51
were doing a dying. And
1:55
in the process, share little gems
1:57
of wisdom for the next generation.
2:00
The key is to understanding
2:02
yourself, learning to
2:04
love and embrace yourself. You
2:07
can listen to But We Loved on
2:09
the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
2:12
you get your podcasts. Alaska's
2:16
largest city is your base camp for adventure.
2:19
Hop on a flight to Anchorage, then hit the
2:21
trails. Go hiking under the
2:23
midnight sun, find glaciers, bald eagles,
2:25
and beluga whales. Immerse yourself in
2:28
rich Alaska culture. See the tallest
2:30
mountain in North America, then relax
2:32
and recharge with Anchorage's wide variety
2:34
of hotels, restaurants, and entertainment.
2:36
In Anchorage, you can do it
2:38
all. Enjoy the perfect mix of
2:40
urban and wild. Start planning at
2:42
anchorage.net. Three
2:57
cookbook videos have arrived! Sabrina,
3:05
was there a time in your life
3:18
you would go back to right now if you could?
3:20
Would you change your age right now to go back
3:22
and redo something? Not even redo, I'm going to take
3:24
that back. Just to relive
3:26
again, those couple of years of
3:29
first meeting Jordan and us first
3:31
starting our relationship. I loved that
3:33
time. I
3:35
was doing such a fun work
3:38
situation. I was in Vegas
3:40
working at the Tropicana doing
3:42
the Dancing with the Stars Live in Las Vegas.
3:45
And then we did cruise lines. There
3:47
was just so much fun stuff. Meeting
3:50
him after dating. Not
3:55
the best guys. Finding this love and it being
3:57
what everyone else that I knew. at that age
3:59
was talking about. A lot of my friends were
4:01
married by that time and it was like, this
4:06
is amazing. So yeah, I think that
4:08
might be that. Nice. Corny. No, not
4:10
at all. Is yours as corny as
4:13
mine? That's great. I think that's good.
4:15
Yeah, I have
4:17
two answers. The first one is totally ridiculous. It's
4:19
just so cliche, but it's true where I'm the
4:21
happiest. I think I've ever been up the age
4:23
I am right now. I wouldn't want to change
4:25
it at all. Yeah, that's awesome. And then my
4:27
other answer is to the first time I meet
4:30
Jordan. That's when I'm going to go on a,
4:32
I'm going to change my age. I'm going to
4:34
go forward in life to whenever I meet
4:36
him. Because he sounds like a great
4:38
guy. Yeah, he'll change your whole world. I bet
4:40
you he will. I'll bet you he will change
4:42
my world. Well, welcome back to Magical Rewind, the
4:45
show that makes you want to grab your friends,
4:47
your PJs and your popcorn and go back to
4:49
a time when all the houses were smart, the
4:51
wave tsunamis and the high schools musical. I'm Wilford
4:53
L. And I'm Sabrina Bryan. Well,
4:56
once again, we have found ourselves back in
4:58
a time travel conundrum. So
5:01
hide the goldfish, because we're going to
5:03
break down the 2001 sci fi comedy,
5:05
the DCOM, the Poof
5:07
Point. We are two weeks in a
5:09
row here, people first minute men. Now this,
5:12
the Poof Point debuted on a
5:14
rather precarious day for a time travel movie
5:16
first showing on the channel September 14
5:19
2001. So this is three days after you
5:21
know, our country I just got one of
5:24
the worst days in history. Yeah, the movie
5:26
is based on a 1992 children's novel of
5:28
the same insane title, written by Elaine Weiss.
5:31
And we can acknowledge that once again, we have a strange
5:33
title that does it no
5:35
favors. It has very 13th year vibe. And also
5:37
kind of sounds a little bit dirty, or at
5:39
least like a movie. Well
5:41
about farts. So you can watch this movie not
5:43
about farts. Thank you on Disney Plus. So go
5:46
check it out now or later. You've
5:48
all got free will. So use it. Anyway,
5:50
we once again enter the sci fi
5:52
genre for this, but also into a
5:54
really surreal slapstick space as well. Worth
5:57
noting that not only in the world of Disney, but
5:59
also in the world of Disney. D coms but also
6:01
on television in general in 2001 it was rare to
6:03
see a story centered around a black family and a
6:05
black family of scientists at that so once
6:08
again kudos to the Disney Channel for always being
6:10
just a bit ahead in the field of inclusivity
6:12
they really have been you name it they get
6:14
there first it's awesome with that said
6:17
the proof point is one of the lowest rated D
6:19
coms when it comes to reviews clocking a 27% of
6:22
Rotten Tomatoes and regularly mentioned when
6:24
listing the worst releases from the
6:26
genre and well
6:29
one of the reasons is because we once again go back
6:31
to one of our favorite tropes unbelievably
6:34
awful neglectful parents the premise is
6:36
so dependent on that and boy
6:39
does this movie have plot holes not
6:41
to mention it looks like it
6:43
was shot on a camcorder Sabrina as
6:45
always I'm gonna ask this did you know
6:47
anything about this movie before the words the
6:50
poof and point no we're put
6:52
on your schedule not at all
6:54
I was super stoked to see
6:56
our guy Taj who we love
6:58
here on this podcast so much
7:00
love to know excited to see
7:02
him and a lot of great
7:05
amazing actors you know that
7:07
I was excited when I first
7:09
turned it on and then it sort
7:12
of happened to you it's the same thing to
7:14
me it was happening to me and I couldn't
7:16
make it stop I couldn't I couldn't it was
7:18
it was a tougher movie for me to get
7:20
through unfortunately I hate saying anything
7:23
about about the Disney Channel because you
7:25
know I am a Disney girl
7:27
through and through but this was it was
7:29
a tough one it was rough and
7:31
this and again they can't all
7:33
be great they can't love every
7:35
movie I can absolutely say that
7:38
even in this film Taj
7:40
is great he's Taj yes there's a
7:42
reason he was one of the stars
7:44
of the channel he shines in everything
7:46
he's in he's really really good they
7:49
always talk about it like when you see especially
7:51
a child actor yeah they have it he
7:53
has it he just does yes also
7:56
another actor that we've seen now that
7:58
breaks the fourth wall and talk straight to
8:00
us. And again, that is
8:03
really hard to do. It is. And
8:06
he did a great job. And we'll get into that because
8:08
I have a theory that I
8:10
call the Sean Astin theory. And we'll get into
8:12
my Sean Astin theory in a bit. All
8:15
right. But before we find ourselves magically
8:17
de-aged back into middle school, or before
8:20
we turned on this movie, let's get into the
8:22
synopsis. A married scientist
8:24
couple are forced to enlist the help of
8:26
their children after an experiment goes wrong and
8:28
makes them younger and younger. This
8:31
is where we do our early thoughts. I think we both
8:33
just kind of said it's not great. We don't need to
8:35
dwell on the fact that it's not great, but it's really,
8:38
especially because we've been seeing some
8:40
kind of bangers. Yes, I know.
8:42
For different reasons, stuff we loved.
8:44
This just seemed like, I mean,
8:46
I look at 2001. I
8:50
mean, when did Cheetah Girls come out? 2003,
8:53
okay. We filmed in 2002. So
8:56
you filmed a year later, and this again,
8:58
it looked like it was shot on
9:00
a camcorder. Like it looked bad.
9:02
The stage was, the
9:04
props and everything was just kind of, I
9:08
thought when we got the information, it
9:10
was gonna be from a different producing
9:12
company that Disney bought, like the scene.
9:14
Yes, okay. Because it didn't, to me,
9:16
it did not correlate with the rest
9:18
of, or not the rest, but so
9:20
many DCOMs. It
9:22
just really looked different. It did. It
9:25
felt different, it read different. I agree 100%. And
9:28
I need my good old DCOM.
9:31
I need it. I need it. I know. Well,
9:33
halfway through this movie, I was like, I never
9:35
thought I'd say this, but I wish they'd break
9:38
it a song or they start dancing on the
9:40
Teen Beach. I know. Go up high, do something.
9:42
Anyway. Yes. Let's get
9:45
into the cast. The movie stars, obviously we've
9:47
talked about him, Disney legend, and someone we
9:49
love to imagine every single DCOM because he's
9:51
amazing, his whole family is young Taj Moray,
9:53
Taj playing Eddie Ballard in this movie. He's
9:56
best known as TJ Henderson on Smart Guy,
9:58
Teddy on Full House. and it's the voice
10:00
of Wade on Kim Possible. Wade, can you
10:02
help me out here? He
10:05
also crossed over a few times as TJ
10:07
on Sister Sister, a show starring his twin
10:09
sisters, Tia and Tamara, and produced
10:11
by the same people. Taj was also back
10:13
on Disney last year as one of the
10:15
stars of the Muppets Mayhem TV show. He
10:17
is ridiculously talented and it could
10:19
not be a nicer human being. Raquel
10:22
Lee is Marie Ballard, the older sister of
10:24
the family. She was a performer on the
10:26
first season of The Amanda Show and would
10:29
later voice Nubia on The Proud Family and
10:31
appear on The Hugh Lees and The Bernie
10:33
Mac Show. She also recently appeared on Disney
10:35
for the Proud Family reboot, Louder and Prouder.
10:38
Mark Curry is Norton Ballard, their father and
10:40
a bumbling scientific genius. Mark was a, the
10:42
character, not Mark Curry, he's neither bumbling. He
10:45
might be a scientific genius, I don't know,
10:47
but he's not bumbling, but Norton Ballard was.
10:50
Mark was a TJF standout for his hit
10:52
show, Hangin' with Mr. Cooper, that ran for
10:54
five seasons. You also see him
10:56
in the movie Armageddon. And on shows like
10:58
See Dad Run, Living Single, The Jamie Foxx
11:01
Show and Family Reunion with Tia Morey. And
11:04
then Don Lewis played his wife, Marigold Ballard. She
11:06
is best remembered for her time on the show
11:08
A Different World, where she played Jaleesa
11:10
Vincent. In addition to that,
11:12
this is a very fun fact. She was also
11:14
one of the composers of the theme song, which
11:16
is really cool. But her first job ever was
11:18
in one of my favorite movies of all time,
11:21
Keenan Ivory Wayans, at his best writing and
11:23
directing a film that is hold your gut
11:25
funny from beginning to end, called I'm Gonna
11:28
Get You Suck Up, very important in the
11:30
Friedel family. And she's been
11:32
in so many things, including hanging with Mr. Cooper
11:34
with Mark Curry before doing this movie. Girlfriends,
11:37
Young Rock and Better Call Saul, but she
11:39
can now be heard as an exceptionally busy
11:41
voiceover actress. She is, she works all the
11:43
time, most notably as Bernice Hibbert on
11:47
The Simpsons, but also on Star
11:49
Trek Lower Decks, Futurama, World of
11:51
Warcraft, Doc McStuffins, and as Detective
11:53
Terry Lee on Spider-Man, the animated
11:55
series. Yes, she works all the
11:57
time, but seriously, go watch,
11:59
suck it is so good. Now
12:02
very important here, because you know how
12:04
much we dwell on this, but online,
12:06
you get a very different number. But on
12:09
Disney Plus, this movie runs a very
12:11
short, mercifully 79 minutes,
12:14
which is great, which is in contrast to the
12:16
number listed on most of the internet sources, which
12:18
say 90 minutes on the dot. But
12:21
that is not true lies people. These are
12:23
lies. Do not believe them. This was no
12:25
bullseye. Don't listen to them. I
12:28
call pants on fire. The
12:30
movie is directed by Neil Israel,
12:32
whose filmography is insane.
12:35
He directed some of the classic
12:37
80 adult theme movies like Bachelor Party with
12:39
Tom Hanks, which if you go back and
12:41
watch is not good, and
12:44
Moving Violations, and also wrote the
12:46
first police Academy movie, Real
12:48
Genius with Val Kilmer, which is one of
12:50
the greatest films ever made in the history
12:53
of the world, and a few
12:55
Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen movies as well. He
12:57
also go on to direct I'm blowing past Mary
13:00
Kate and Ashley Olsen, by the way, because nothing will beat
13:03
Real Genius. He also goes
13:05
on to direct TV shows like The Wonder
13:07
Years, Lizzie McGuire, Nash Bridges and Phil of
13:09
the Future. Such an eclectic career. And is
13:11
Neil Israel has been around forever, which made
13:15
me wonder about this movie a little bit because
13:17
it just didn't look good. Anyway, I'm
13:19
not gonna dwell. I tried to watch
13:21
it as an 11 year old and 11 year old me was
13:23
sitting there going, Wow, this movie doesn't look good. And
13:27
then Poof Point is written by the D
13:29
com daddy friend of the podcast great guy
13:31
Stu Krieger. Go check out our interview with
13:33
him. He's amazingly fascinated and we hope to
13:35
get him back soon. So we're not gonna
13:38
say anything about the writing because it
13:40
really kind I mean, the writing wasn't great. But I don't
13:42
think this was Stu through and through. I don't
13:45
know why I bet you there's a story behind
13:47
this. I don't know what it is. It didn't
13:49
feel like a Stu Krieger movie. It didn't, frankly.
13:51
I mean, yeah, how many have we watched now?
13:53
There's been a bunch. So yeah, it didn't. Yeah,
13:55
and we want to have him back on and
13:57
I'd like to talk to him about this. It's
13:59
also worth noting that Darlene Morey, Taj's mom, was
14:01
a producer on this movie, something she would only
14:03
do three times, and the other two movies are
14:05
17 again, and double wedding with
14:07
her daughter. Okay, so getting
14:10
back to what you said in the beginning. So
14:12
you said that we've only, and this is right, we've
14:14
only really seen this in quince, where the actor's talking
14:16
directly to the camera, which then led to us talking
14:18
about a couple times, Parker Lewis can't lose, which you're
14:21
gonna have to go and watch this if we can
14:23
even find it anywhere. But
14:25
it starts with Taj
14:28
speaking directly to the camera, but just
14:30
a single shot of him, like he doesn't move,
14:33
he's in front of a chalkboard, and he's
14:35
just addressing the camera directly. Here's
14:37
my theory about this, and here's why I call it the
14:40
Sean Astin theory. So one
14:42
of my favorite movies growing up with Sean Astin was
14:44
White Water Summer, and I had a chance to talk
14:46
to him about White Water Summer. White Water Summer, I'm
14:49
just gonna do this very quickly, it's
14:51
a movie about a bunch of kids
14:53
that have nothing in common that go
14:56
on a camping trip, it's like
14:58
a summer program with Kevin Bacon as the
15:00
lead of the camp, and Kevin Bacon kinda
15:02
turns out to be crazy, and
15:04
all this shenanigans happens, and
15:07
the kids have to essentially first beat
15:09
up Kevin Bacon, and then rescue the
15:11
fact that it's really a bonkers movie.
15:13
But I had a chance to talk
15:15
to Sean about that, and throughout the
15:18
movie, they keep cutting to him, talking
15:20
to the camera about the movie,
15:23
but he looks older. And
15:25
so I said to him, I was like, hey Sean, I
15:27
wanna talk about this, and he went, well what happened was
15:29
they cut the movie together, and they didn't like how
15:32
the story was flowing, so like two
15:34
years later I had to come back
15:36
and shoot these interstitials, and
15:38
with the way this was shot with Taj,
15:40
it almost seemed like they put the movie
15:43
together, and the story
15:45
didn't quite work. They needed to
15:47
help out with some extra. And
15:49
they shot extra things with Taj
15:51
to stick in throughout the movie
15:53
to keep the story going. I
15:56
could totally be wrong. No, yeah,
15:58
but that would make a lot of sense. Didn't
16:00
it feel like that a little bit? Yeah, even
16:02
the end. I mean, I don't want to jump
16:04
forward, but the end where they've came back from
16:06
a holiday. Yeah.
16:10
Yes, it didn't. None of it made any sense. And
16:13
that's the only thing going through my head was
16:15
they cut this movie together. It did not work
16:17
the way they had it cut. They
16:19
went to Taj with these interstitials. They
16:21
did extra shooting days and then they
16:23
cut them in through the movie
16:25
because he does. There's certain ones where he's explaining
16:27
things like, well, the only way we then got
16:30
my parents who were now seven years old together is
16:32
by blocking him in a room and making him work
16:34
it out. And then they cut to after. So you
16:36
didn't have to see what he was just talking about.
16:38
It was strange. Yes,
16:40
it was just explained through words. No
16:42
visual to see any of it. And
16:45
it's not even like they had him
16:47
in different locations talking to
16:49
the camera. It was just him in
16:51
front of a chalkboard. Yeah. I think
16:53
he's in the same outfit the whole time. I could
16:55
be wrong. For most of it, until the end. Until
16:57
the end. Yes. So it just seems like something they
17:00
threw in last second. But we could be wrong. From
17:08
KT Studios, the number one
17:10
podcast, The Idaho Massacre
17:13
is back. The new developments in
17:15
the University of Idaho murder case. It
17:19
was an unimaginable crime. In
17:21
the early morning of November
17:24
13th, 2022, four University of
17:26
Idaho students killed. Police
17:31
have no suspect and no murder
17:33
weapon. A nationwide manhunt captivates
17:36
the world. Moscow
17:38
PD saying today they're now looking
17:40
for a white hondylantra. Then a
17:43
shocking arrest. There is now
17:45
a suspect in custody. This
17:47
is a PhD student in criminology. This is
17:49
the guy. Will
17:51
he be found innocent? He claims he has
17:54
an alibi. Or face
17:56
death. Listen
17:59
to season two of the... Idaho Massacre on
18:01
the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
18:03
or wherever you get your podcasts.
18:09
Medal of Honor is the highest military
18:11
decoration in the United States, awarded
18:14
for gallantry and bravery in
18:16
combat at the risk of life above and
18:19
beyond the call of duty. Since
18:21
it was established in 1861, there have been 3,517 people awarded with
18:23
the medal. I'm
18:29
Malcolm Gladwell, and our new podcast
18:32
from Pushkin Industries and iHeartMedia is
18:34
about those heroes. What
18:36
they did, what it meant, and
18:38
what their stories tell us about the
18:40
nature of courage and sacrifice. Without
18:44
him and the leadership that he exhibited
18:46
in bringing those boats in and assembling
18:48
them to begin when they're bringing them
18:50
in, it saved a hell
18:53
of a lot of lives, including my own.
18:56
Listen to Medal of Honor, Stories
18:58
of Courage, on the iHeartRadio app,
19:00
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
19:03
listen to podcasts. I'm
19:11
Gary Veter, and I have a new
19:13
limited series podcast called Number 1 Dad.
19:16
It may have been the greatest scam for
19:18
a sports fan. In the 90s,
19:20
my dad and I ran a con
19:22
for years where we snuck into the
19:24
world's most prestigious arena, New York's Madison
19:27
Square Garden, and I interviewed some of
19:29
the biggest athletes in the world, even
19:31
Michael Jordan. But
19:34
this wasn't the only scheme my dad was pulling.
19:39
Everything my dad did was a scam. My
19:46
father's never-ending string of lies ultimately
19:49
broke apart my family, and at 15 years old,
19:52
I completely cut him out of my life. That
19:55
was 24 years ago. I
19:58
have no idea where he lives or what he does. up
20:00
to but my goal is to track him down
20:02
and get to the truth about who my father
20:05
Manny Beter really is. Brooklyn
20:09
Federal Court House. My father was involved in
20:11
a case from the early 90s and I'm
20:13
just trying to get information. You better hope
20:15
that your dad doesn't find out about this before
20:17
you're ready to talk to him. Inside,
20:21
you have reached a number that has been
20:23
disconnected or is no longer inserted. Listen
20:26
to number one dad on the iHeart Radio
20:28
app or wherever you get your podcasts. Happy
20:36
Pride! It's time for a brand
20:38
new podcast. Do you love weird
20:40
pop culture facts? Like, I
20:42
don't know, what is Tori Spelling's favorite
20:44
salad? Well, then you're gonna love the
20:47
podcast I do with my best friend,
20:49
Celebrity Book Club with Stephen and Lily.
20:51
You've probably seen books at Barnes and Noble
20:53
and thought, uh, those look silly. I wonder
20:55
what is inside of them. We've decided because
20:57
we are grown, consenting adults that we're gonna
20:59
read a book every single week. And here
21:01
we are. You probably don't have time to
21:04
read books. Let us do it for you.
21:06
We discuss the inner workings of
21:08
the minds of these authors
21:10
at great detail. From Abraham
21:13
Lincoln to Lauren Graham, John
21:15
Stamos to Sylvia Plath, we
21:17
cover lots of celebrities' books,
21:19
be they memoirs, poetry, children's
21:21
books, or cookbooks. And
21:23
we discuss them in nauseating
21:25
detail. It's pretty academic. It's
21:28
basically literary criticism. So get
21:30
your degree, put your glasses on. And listen to
21:32
Celebrity Book Club with Stephen and Lily on the
21:35
iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get
21:37
your podcasts. It's
21:40
Intern John and Sauce. Summer is
21:42
here and Safeway has everything you
21:44
need for this summer. Select, bag
21:46
your order, even pick up your prescriptions from the
21:48
pharmacy and bring it all right to your car.
21:50
Spend more time enjoying your summer by
21:52
shopping at Safeway. Download the
21:55
Safeway app today and start shopping.
21:57
Safeway, your summer headquarters. Let's
22:03
start the Poof Point at the beginning.
22:06
So again, starts with Taj giving us some straight
22:08
to camera intro and overview asking if we can
22:10
believe our parents ever used to be young, which
22:13
is a question we've all thought before. You know,
22:15
you see your parents. We've talked about this on
22:17
Podmitorl and I've talked about this with friends where
22:19
it's a beautiful and
22:21
strange day when you finally see your
22:24
parents as humans and
22:26
not just parents. You realize they're flawed and they're just
22:28
like you and they're trying to figure it out the
22:30
entire way. And you obviously don't
22:32
get that when you're 14 and you can't get that 14.
22:35
So the premise, great
22:37
kind of premise. Like what would your parents be like
22:39
back to the future? Or
22:42
thinking about your parents as a
22:44
teenager, as the age that you
22:46
are currently. That is a weird
22:48
thing. No my parents
22:50
aren't going through the first jitters
22:52
of being around a boy you
22:55
like or finding yourself. Things
22:57
like that. You just don't really ever want
23:00
to see your parents that way. And
23:02
when you're a kid, you're
23:06
absolutely convinced that you're the first person to ever
23:08
experience any of these emotions that you're going. No
23:10
one's ever felt like this before. That
23:13
kind of thing. That is so, so
23:15
great about being young. It is
23:18
right. You're just I'm the only one who's ever
23:20
felt like this ever. In your own world. Nobody
23:22
understands me. And never will. I
23:25
hear this, you might be able to tell me this, I hear
23:27
this happens when you become a parent too. All of a sudden
23:29
you're the first person to ever parent. So it's like, here's how
23:31
we do it. And your parents like, yeah, we've done this 32
23:33
times. And like, yeah, yes,
23:35
but we do it a little bit differently. So
23:37
yes, I think it always switches. Yeah,
23:40
so we've all thought before and then he
23:42
says he's actually lived with his parents as kids and
23:44
that this is his story, which
23:46
includes then instantly seeing his parents
23:49
acting like toddlers, which
23:51
is very off putting right off the beginning. Instantly
23:54
went, oh, right. Oh, no.
23:56
Right. Oh, it did. I
23:59
don't like this. I don't like it
24:01
already and I'm two minutes in.
24:03
I agree with you 100%. I feel terrible
24:05
saying that. I know. But it was that scene
24:07
with her on the ground whining and like
24:09
a baby. Yeah. And it might be
24:11
because I have a toddler who kind of does stuff
24:14
like that to me right now. And I'm like, no,
24:16
no, I cannot take any additional. It might be because
24:18
of that. But yes, right from the start I was
24:20
just, ooh. And you know, if they did want to
24:23
suck us in, also kind of spoils the end, if
24:25
I'm honest with you. Yeah. To
24:27
see these grown people acting
24:29
as if they're toddlers, it
24:31
did kind of take away from
24:34
when they do progress to that
24:36
age. I agree. So then we see
24:38
that and then he kind of says, but you know,
24:40
we don't want to start there. And so boom, we
24:42
go back to the beginning of the story where young
24:44
Eddie and Marie, our brothers and sisters, they
24:46
are stuck with their two very uncool and
24:49
uptight scientist and mentor parents who
24:51
have the most irresponsible ideas. They make the
24:53
house and neighborhood shake. They
24:55
obviously have, you know, they're causing explosions in
24:58
the house. We will find out a little
25:00
bit later that the university they work for
25:02
specifically had them build their laboratory in their
25:05
home to get them off campus because of
25:07
what they're doing is so. So put it
25:09
in a neighborhood? Yeah, so put it in a residential
25:11
neighborhood with your children. So
25:13
they're really awful parents. There's
25:16
no other way to say it. They're just neglectful,
25:19
awful parents. They immediately have
25:21
forgotten that both the kids, so Taj's character is
25:23
very smart and has skipped a grade. So he's
25:26
in the same grade as his
25:28
older sister, and they are both graduating
25:30
from middle school. Both the parents have
25:32
completely forgot that they're graduating that day.
25:34
So sad. So sad. Especially because we
25:36
are in graduation season right now. You
25:39
see the balloons in every grocery store
25:41
right now. It is such a big
25:43
deal for kids to go up into
25:45
that next level. My little
25:48
nephew just went up. He's now in
25:50
middle school, and I mean, it's huge.
25:52
You cannot imagine forgetting that. Completely
25:55
and totally forgot. They forgot not only that, but
25:57
they lie about the fact that they forgot. Yes.
26:00
And then they're like, no, we remembered.
26:02
Then about an hour
26:04
later, the father forgets again. And
26:06
she has to remind him again. And the
26:08
worst part is the kids are anticipating this.
26:10
They fully know this is going to happen.
26:13
This is how bad they are. Yeah, they're
26:15
awful. And then at the graduation,
26:18
the parents don't even pay any attention to
26:20
the graduation itself. They're focused on the laptops.
26:22
They're missing the kids' commencement. And
26:25
they don't know their kid's friend's
26:27
name. They know nothing about them. Literally
26:29
nothing about their children. So sad. Awful,
26:33
awful parents. Now, OK, if
26:35
we're ranking, where
26:37
do you put these up with? I mean, you
26:39
think about Brink Dad, but he was doing it
26:41
for a reason. He
26:45
was cranky. He wasn't necessarily 100%
26:47
the worst dad. He
26:50
was just cranky. The Quince parents,
26:53
they were overwhelmed. They weren't great, but
26:55
they were overwhelmed. Pixel perfect dad wasn't
26:57
great. Pixel perfect
26:59
dad was really self-centered. Yeah. But at
27:01
least he was trying. He was having
27:04
meals with his kid and kind of
27:06
trying to do stuff. These,
27:08
to me, were the worst parents we've seen on camera so
27:10
far. Both these
27:13
babies were oops-a-daisy babies. Right? They
27:16
weren't even born on purpose. These were
27:18
scientific experiment kids who happened to be
27:20
born. Yes, exactly. If
27:23
they couldn't get any worse, we also learned
27:25
that the dad hates dogs. Forgetting
27:28
your children isn't a bad enough trope. We
27:30
also hate dogs and keeps calling your
27:33
dog a mongrel. Maybe don't get
27:35
a dog. Yeah, right? Don't
27:37
get a dog. How did that happen? I thought
27:39
at some point we were going to find a
27:41
reason of why that happened. We find a reason
27:43
why he doesn't like dogs, but
27:46
why did you get one? Yeah, what's the point?
27:48
You don't like your kid? Maybe that he wanted the dog to
27:50
raise the kids because they weren't going to do it, which
27:53
is possible. Another thing we learned here is
27:55
that Eddie plays guitar. Now,
27:58
I'm going to mention this once and for now. and then we won't harp on
28:00
it. I don't
28:03
believe that. Go ahead. Todd's
28:06
a great actor. Mark
28:09
Curry, good actor. This
28:11
is the worst fake guitar
28:14
playing ever. I mean, it's
28:16
bad. Why not just
28:18
don't shoot their hands? Or
28:21
just do an insert of the hands of
28:23
somebody who at least knows how to hold a guitar?
28:25
I mean, they literally don't even look like they know
28:28
how to hold a guitar. Yeah.
28:31
And how good they are makes
28:33
it worse. Right. You know, what
28:35
you're hearing makes it worse. Yes. It'd
28:37
be one thing if he was new
28:39
to guitar playing. Or
28:41
can strum a few chords. Yeah, just
28:43
interested in it. Interested in it, right?
28:45
But they are shredding on the guitar
28:47
while literally not moving their fingers. I
28:51
mean, it's bad. That is
28:53
when I take my seatbelt in the car and I
28:56
strum on my seatbelt for my air
28:58
guitar. That's as good as it
29:00
got. Okay, wait, please tell me that you're not driving
29:02
at this point because that's a two-handed thing. I'm
29:05
a passenger. I'm a passenger and I
29:07
do all my good moves and Jordan
29:09
gets all of it. Lucky
29:12
him. That's great though. This is why you want to
29:14
go back to when you first met him. So you can just
29:16
sit there and play fake guitar for him forever. But
29:19
it's not, again, good actors. This was
29:21
not good. They
29:23
love it. But his parents are
29:25
so science-focused that they don't want this for him,
29:27
obviously. He's like you said, he skipped a grade.
29:29
He's very smart. But the next year in
29:32
high school, he wants to join the band Urban
29:34
Slugs. Great band. Another
29:37
great name. Great band name. Did your parents want you
29:39
to learn anything when you were little? You
29:41
seem to be very artistic. Did they push you towards that
29:43
or was it more like go find you and we're good
29:45
with it? Yeah, actually, when
29:47
I wanted to start acting, they told
29:49
me no. They didn't
29:52
want that for me because it
29:54
just was not, you know, they
29:56
felt my grades were going to
29:58
take me somewhere else. They
30:00
just, that was when, you know,
30:02
actors were getting emancipated from their families,
30:04
suing their family. There was a lot
30:07
of kind of crazy stuff
30:09
happening financially with
30:11
families in the industry. And so they
30:14
were not super stoked. I really had
30:16
to break them down and get them
30:18
to just give me just at least
30:21
a background, a background agent.
30:24
And so then it trickled into doing more
30:26
and more, but yeah, they were not super
30:29
stoked. Did they not see your guitar
30:31
playing? They didn't see
30:33
the guitar playing because that was kind of not,
30:35
that wasn't... You hadn't hold that yet? Yeah, I
30:37
hadn't hold that yet. Okay. My
30:41
parents were kind of the same. They didn't want me to
30:43
be an actor, but they were very supportive of everything I
30:45
did. So that was sweet. Unlike these
30:47
parents, we just were bad. Well,
30:50
they didn't care at all. No, the ballad kids,
30:52
they love their parents, but they're embarrassed by them.
30:54
That's a typical thing that everybody loves their parents,
30:56
but is embarrassed by them when they're kids. They
30:59
asked them not to talk about science, but to talk about
31:01
little Bow Wow and Shaquille O'Neal. They
31:03
just wish they had normal parents like their neighbor
31:05
who every time they look outside are like perfectly
31:08
throwing the football or that kind of thing. And
31:11
they know much like now this is
31:13
where it got real for me because this was
31:15
very much like me growing up. They
31:17
knew that their mom and dad were in the middle of trying to
31:19
create a time machine. And today was the
31:21
big test for two goldfish. Now that's happened
31:24
to me a hundred times. Okay. Very
31:26
simple. Yes, I see. Like this
31:28
is where we then go into their lab,
31:31
which is probably where the vast majority of the
31:33
budget went. And it looks like it's kind of a cross
31:35
between Bill Nye the Science Guy and Pee Wee's Playhouse and
31:37
it just doesn't look good.
31:39
No, it didn't. It didn't.
31:42
And we have seen so many
31:44
amazing sets already. Amazing. The D
31:47
coms we've watched. Yes. This
31:49
was the shocking part. This was when it really was
31:52
kind of, oh, yeah. What
31:55
happened here? I agree. You
31:57
could tell that's where they put, I mean, most of the
31:59
movies. happens in this little
32:02
realm and it just didn't look great.
32:04
That then led me to a question and I wanted
32:06
to ask you because I couldn't remember. Is
32:08
this the first movie we've ever seen where
32:11
there's nothing in a school? Well
32:13
the graduation was in a school. I guess technically
32:16
for like two seconds that well yeah no they
32:18
did the thing with the yeah. It was a
32:20
really quick scene. So it's the start of summer.
32:22
Yeah that's what it
32:24
is. Okay. They're graduating and then
32:28
you see which I
32:30
don't know any schools that have this
32:32
where they have snacks and refreshments and
32:35
things for after after graduation which is
32:37
not normal but that's the only time
32:39
and then it's in and out and
32:41
you don't see the school. You're right though
32:43
so it's summer so that's why you wouldn't see
32:45
the school. Okay that's on me then that's that
32:48
totally makes sense. The time travel
32:50
trial doesn't go as planned when
32:52
the mongrel dog howdairy
32:55
who literally was the cutest dog in the world and just
32:57
lying there trying to be happy. Maybe
33:00
just love me dad. Chase is a cockroach
33:02
and then that leads to a part
33:05
opening up on one of the machines that somehow look like
33:07
it was from the 60s and
33:10
he pulls the thing out. We
33:12
don't know what the part does but the
33:15
dog now takes it and
33:17
so when the experiment
33:19
starts a fatal error has hit
33:21
and instead of anything
33:24
happening so we don't it looks like
33:26
nothing happens with the fish. Right. And
33:28
then we start to see them
33:31
once they leave then this voice
33:33
on the machine says two
33:36
fish whatever deaged by however long
33:38
so that's what the poof point
33:40
is which is a scientific term
33:42
I believe invented for the
33:45
book and the show because I don't know
33:47
if poof point is an actual scientific term
33:49
is where the fish will
33:52
at least we learn this with the fish when they
33:54
age enough they just disappear that's the right point they
33:56
poof out of existence so we
33:59
go to the graduation The parents stand
34:01
out by having horrible social skills, even performing
34:03
a scientific experiment with the principal's
34:05
glasses. They set him on fire. Everyone
34:08
in the entire building hates the
34:10
fact that they're dorky, scientific people.
34:13
But there's good news. Good news is coming
34:15
out of this. Eddie has
34:18
a chance to audition for Urban
34:20
Slug. He has one chance to
34:23
join the band. Yes, the audition of
34:25
a lifetime. The audition of a lifetime. Now, there's
34:27
a question here in our notes. Where
34:30
they'd like me to ask you if you were ever in a band. But
34:32
I already know the answer to this. And I'm going to answer for you,
34:34
which is you had your rock
34:36
band banned. Yes. That
34:39
one of the, it was like Mel
34:41
Kardashian or whatever. I don't know who
34:43
it is. Was plate drums, right?
34:46
Yes. And yeah, so I know, I'm not already
34:48
getting to know you. This is all right. I
34:50
know the answer. There you go. Fake
34:52
banding it. Through
34:56
and through. I love it. Make it till
34:58
you make it. Make it till you make it, my friend. Which
35:00
is what they did in this movie. And it never really quiet.
35:02
Oh, man, never really made it. I
35:04
think I already told you about my first band, Rude Awakening. I
35:06
didn't know how to play any instruments. And I also couldn't sing.
35:09
Back at the lab, the ballads realize they come
35:11
back. The fish are gone. So
35:14
like any good scientist, they, instead of figuring
35:16
that out, just try the machine again.
35:19
Yes. But instead of anything. Don't even look
35:21
for parts missing. Nope. Nothing. Let's
35:23
not check any wires from our 1960s stuff. Let's go
35:26
back into Bill Nye the Science Guy's spinny room. Yeah.
35:29
And just press Enter again. Right.
35:32
The machine then lassoes the parents and
35:35
spins it around and turns them
35:37
younger. So now they're on, let's
35:39
call it the Poof Point scale. They're starting to poof.
35:42
They're starting to poof. So they're
35:44
21 years old now. The kids race
35:46
down to the lab, feeling the explosion of what just
35:48
happened. And I don't
35:52
want to, not going to harp too much on the acting. But
35:56
now the two leads
35:59
are playing two. 21 years
36:01
old and they're doing that by saying
36:03
things like totally cool and slamming in
36:05
a slightly higher pitched voice The
36:08
mom even thinks it's a practical joke being
36:11
played on her and that when they ask
36:13
hey who's the president? They say the Ron
36:15
man meaning Ronald Reagan. He's their political hero.
36:17
Nancy Reagan's hot. It is a weird Unhinged
36:20
kind of scene the mirror the
36:22
mirror that now look they look
36:24
into they can see themselves They
36:27
can see themselves but never happens
36:29
again. They don't ever get put in front of
36:32
a mirror again You don't get to
36:34
see them young maybe one of their tongue to get
36:36
to see mark curry one more time I don't
36:39
remember that maybe not maybe not because they don't
36:41
want to deage him again But this is where
36:43
we learn something very important, which is
36:45
where when they do Poof
36:48
or whatever it is that they're calling until
36:51
the final poof which is different than Europe's
36:53
the final countdown Which is a great song,
36:56
but before they get to the poof they're gonna
36:59
Every time they age
37:01
they forget everything they
37:03
just knew Right,
37:06
right. So this is an important thing So
37:08
the kids try to knock some sense into mom and dad But they're
37:10
just too happy 21 year
37:12
olds who obviously don't ask to see
37:14
a newspaper They aren't at all fazed by the technology
37:16
in the 2000s of their house until they finally see
37:19
a computer So many ways they
37:21
could have realized that they were in
37:23
modern times, but yeah didn't do any
37:25
of that But one hole
37:27
is again kind of fixed when you you
37:30
want to say well just go look at yourselves in the mirror You
37:32
can see your 240 year old people But they go look at themselves
37:34
in the mirror and they see
37:36
they're 21 years old for some reason
37:39
mark curry is dressed like Prince Which
37:41
I don't understand. He just like Prince.
37:43
I don't what why I mean,
37:45
I think to put more hair on him
37:48
I'm guessing is why wick was was
37:51
used. It just was Strange.
37:53
Yeah, I agreed strange choice and
37:56
then like all 21 year olds do in
37:58
the presence of two young teenagers start to
38:00
tongue kiss in front of the children. The
38:03
big problem is if they're starting to realize, or
38:05
at least the kids are starting to realize, if
38:07
the fish have poofed out of existence, when
38:10
are the parents going to poof? They're starting
38:12
to realize that this is a very bad thing and
38:15
the parents get into it and have calculated
38:17
very nonchalantly, by the way, they've
38:20
started to kind of realize that something's wrong,
38:22
but have calculated they're gonna disappear the next
38:24
evening, hence the
38:26
title, The Poof
38:28
Point. Do you
38:31
think there was a better title for this movie, Time
38:34
Flies or maybe Back to the Future?
38:39
I mean, The Poof Point, I don't
38:41
know, it just didn't feel part
38:44
of the movie, really. I know
38:46
that they are going to poof,
38:48
I guess, and go away, but there's
38:51
just so many, I think, more
38:54
creative ways that they could
38:56
have explained. I think they were going
38:58
for kind of big
39:00
goofy fun romp, like big
39:03
with Tom Hanks, had
39:06
some goofy points, but was
39:08
also kind of a morality play
39:10
about what it takes to be an adult,
39:12
a child losing his innocence, whereas
39:15
vice versa with Judge
39:17
Reinhold and Fred Savage,
39:20
which came out around the same time, that was more of
39:22
a goofy, switch your body's, fun
39:24
kind of romp, and I think that's what they
39:26
were going for here, but it
39:28
just kind of never worked. It
39:31
all felt really strange. It
39:33
did, it did. There was a lot
39:35
of other things that I think was hard to
39:37
get over to
39:40
be able to accept this name of
39:42
the movie, too. I agree, and again,
39:45
Sabrina said this in the beginning, I'll say this, too,
39:47
we don't wanna be crapping
39:49
on these movies, we really don't, we
39:52
love going down the rabbit hole of the DCOM
39:54
movies. Not all of them are gonna be amazing,
39:57
and you can see from the reviews and from
39:59
the Rotten Tomatoes. This was one that just
40:01
people didn't like. And I
40:03
think rightfully so. And it's probably
40:05
one of those things where it's no one person's fault.
40:07
It was just not a great project.
40:10
But it appears at this point that the parents have
40:12
accepted the truth. We get a montage of them now
40:14
at 21 years old working to try to fix everything.
40:16
And then bingo, they figure it out.
40:19
But just when it looks like everything's gonna work
40:21
out, they start to glitch, which is the first
40:23
time we've seen these kind
40:25
of special effects. It's almost flubbery where it's like,
40:28
and they- Yeah, and hiccups. Yes, they
40:30
hiccup and they fade in and out
40:33
of existence. Makes me worried to ever
40:35
hiccup again. Right? Well,
40:38
hey, if I can hiccup maybe not five years off my life,
40:40
that wouldn't be the worst thing. So
40:42
we know now it's also putting it in our
40:44
mind. They showed it with the fish. Now they're
40:47
showing it with the parents. We know now that
40:49
when we see this kind of matrixy glitch, when
40:51
the glitching ends, they're gonna
40:53
have de-aged again. Again. Once
40:56
again, forgotten everything that they had just
40:58
learned. So they were just on the
41:01
realm or the cusp of figuring out how to
41:03
fix themselves. Boom, they've de-aged
41:05
again, and now they can't remember. And
41:09
now they're 14, which
41:12
is the same age essentially as their
41:14
kids. So, which again, you think this
41:16
is where the movie's really gonna take off, because now you've
41:19
got a bunch of 14 year olds together. Yes, I
41:22
felt that, I started to get on
41:24
board now. Okay, that would
41:26
be crazy to have my
41:28
mom be the age that
41:30
I am. That would be bonkers. Nuts.
41:33
And so you think that's gonna happen, but not
41:35
really. This is where we find out that the
41:38
mom and dad actually grew up together. They had a
41:40
crush on each other when they were in school. But
41:43
again, the biggest problem that they have is
41:45
that they've forgotten everything. So once again, their
41:47
kids have to explain everything that's going on.
41:49
And it just feels like they've now put
41:52
themselves in a loop where
41:54
this is gonna keep happening. And for the
41:56
story. Starts to drag. Yeah,
41:58
because it seems like. Well then
42:00
we've got to fix this right now because this is going to
42:02
and you just know it's going to keep happening. I was just
42:05
the first time it happened. I was like, okay, so
42:07
they're going to just about to figure it out again and
42:09
it's going to happen again. I knew it was going to
42:11
come up again. From
42:19
KT Studios, the number one
42:21
podcast, the Idaho Massacre
42:24
is back. The new developments in
42:26
the University of Idaho murder case. It
42:29
was an unimaginable crime. In
42:32
the early morning of November 13th, 2022, four University
42:34
of Idaho
42:37
students killed. Police
42:42
have no suspect and no murder
42:44
weapon. A nationwide manhunt captivates
42:47
the world. Moscow
42:49
PD saying today they're now looking for
42:51
a white Hyundai Elantra. Then a shocking
42:54
arrest. There is now a
42:56
suspect in custody. This is a
42:58
PhD student in criminology. This is the guy.
43:02
Will he be found innocent? He claims he
43:04
has an alibi or
43:06
face death. Listen
43:09
to season two of the Idaho Massacre on
43:11
the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
43:14
or wherever you get your podcasts.
43:20
The Medal of Honor is the highest
43:22
military decoration in the United States awarded
43:25
for gallantry and bravery in
43:27
combat at the risk of life above and
43:29
beyond the call of duty. Since it
43:31
was established in 1861, there had been 3,000 and
43:36
national organizations to improve the health of
43:38
New Yorkers. In Brooklyn, Anthem teamed up
43:41
with the Liberty to provide nutritious food
43:43
to families and support to women owned
43:45
small businesses. Learn more at anthem.com/nyliberty anthem
43:47
Blue Cross and Blue Shield is the
43:49
trade name of Anthem Health Choice Assurance
43:52
Inc. Amazon
43:55
One Medical presents painful
43:57
thoughts. you
46:00
won't believe this, the guitar. And
46:02
he is, A, as amazing as his son,
46:04
and B, as bad as holding it as
46:06
his son. I mean, it just looks bad.
46:11
But this also brings us right back to
46:13
reminding us that Eddie's audition is coming up
46:15
for urban slugs. Urban
46:17
slugs, urban slugs. And so all the focus
46:19
has been on the
46:22
parents having a crush on each other and
46:26
constantly getting together and breaking up and doing
46:28
all this stuff. But it's
46:31
also trying to show that Taj
46:33
and his dad have a lot
46:35
in common actually, and
46:38
are trying to find common ground. They do
46:40
that more than they do the daughter and
46:42
the mom. Yeah, the
46:45
daughter and the moms, their
46:48
meeting point and their commonality
46:50
was crushes on boys. Boys,
46:52
that was it, boys. That was it, yeah. And
46:55
it doesn't really come out until later.
46:58
She hears the mom's issues with
47:01
Norton, but she doesn't expose
47:04
her crush on Taj's
47:06
friend that comes in
47:08
now. Oh, don't even get me into Taj's friend. You can
47:11
bleep this, but. So
47:13
then, of course, what happens next is the parents
47:15
run away. When Eddie does finally catch up with
47:17
his dad, a obvious
47:20
stunt double grabs his son's bike and
47:23
starts jamming on this thing. Jumping
47:26
up and down stuff like this guy, it's incredible,
47:28
and you think, well, this is gonna come to
47:30
a big bike chase scene. Never seen again. No,
47:32
no. Never seen
47:34
again. Never again. He's
47:36
obviously, he's very upset because it looks
47:39
like he has just broken up again
47:41
with his future wife is now girlfriend.
47:44
And that's when we find Marigold,
47:47
the wife, who's apparently
47:50
drunk on milkshakes. Yeah,
47:52
that was strange. Hugging
47:54
a jukebox. Hugging a jukebox at
47:58
a diner, sad about her breakup with Norbert. and
48:01
the whole second act is kind of about the parents'
48:03
teenage love, which is a
48:05
strange detour and weird
48:08
pill to swallow. And puts Norton in a
48:10
very bad light. He
48:12
is very... just
48:16
doesn't think girls can do anything. You
48:18
know, she's fighting for him to
48:21
accept how smart she is. This is like...
48:23
this part was really strange to me. Yeah.
48:27
I guess because they just really don't
48:29
lean into that with movies anymore. But
48:32
it's also... there's supposed to be 14 at this
48:34
point. Yeah, exactly. You don't walk around at 14
48:37
going like, girls can't do stuff. No,
48:39
that's for little. Little
48:41
kids think that. Boys
48:43
can't do this. Boys can't wear a bean. You
48:46
know, things like that. Little
48:48
kids do that. A 14-year-old is not going to say
48:50
any of that stuff. So that started to get... Yeah.
48:56
Yes, I agree. And
48:58
Marigold, of course, finally opens up to her daughter about everything.
49:01
No, I'm kidding. She opens up to her daughter's
49:03
enemy. Yeah. Another random
49:05
character thrown in there. Yes!
49:09
Why did we need her? We didn't. We
49:11
didn't at all. But
49:14
through all the rough seas of romance, the 14-year-olds
49:16
think they've figured out what they need to fix
49:18
the time machine. But it's
49:20
3 o'clock. That's right. It's
49:22
time for the slug's audition. He's
49:24
also apparently auditioning to be the third
49:27
bass player in the band. There's a lot of them.
49:30
It's a 19-piece band, it looks like. And
49:32
there's like two bass players already. So I'm
49:34
assuming, in my head... Again, I'm
49:36
trying to justify everything. I know. So
49:39
in my head, the bass player was a
49:41
senior and graduating the following year, and they
49:43
were auditioning his replacement. You added another storyline?
49:47
I did. I had to. No one else
49:49
did. We both love him. I
49:52
had to. There
49:54
were so many storylines. So many,
49:56
many storylines throughout this movie. Why
49:58
would you do that? because Billy loved
50:01
playing bass, but Billy's a mathematician,
50:03
he got into MIT, and he's putting his
50:05
bass down forever. This was actually his last
50:07
slugs performance. I have a whole backstory for
50:09
Billy. Okay, all right. But it also looks
50:11
like the girls that Marigold ran into and
50:14
opened her heart up to at the diner,
50:17
turned the audition into a
50:19
school-wide party, and
50:21
here was the thing that I thought was funny,
50:23
I could totally be wrong, but the best friend,
50:25
again, the best friend, comes
50:28
and says, hey, I've got a
50:30
bunch of cases of root beer, and I
50:32
also saw some people have some bags of
50:34
popcorn. And in my head, that
50:36
was the writer, whether that was Stu's line or not,
50:39
getting through cases of beer and bags of weed. That's
50:41
how I got that in my head. Popcorn?
50:43
Because nobody says, and I've got some
50:45
bags of popcorn. That was a nice
50:47
wink wink, we got weed and beers.
50:50
Oh, wow. I'm telling you.
50:53
I did catch the root beer, I did
50:55
not think about bags of popcorn. Okay, all
50:57
right. Wink wink, yeah. Wink wink. Sticky sticky
50:59
icky weed, that's what that is. Okay, oh,
51:02
okay. The crowd also includes
51:04
one white redheaded student with long
51:07
braids, and I'm
51:09
amazed if your entire sebrena sees it's
51:11
not about this random, obviously
51:14
tripped on acid. I
51:17
mean, this kid dropped Mescalyn before he
51:19
ever came to this eighth grade party. This was
51:22
the most non-Disney
51:24
character I have seen in
51:26
a D-Con. This could not
51:28
have been more off of
51:30
what you expect on
51:33
the channel. He
51:35
was such a strange character again. He
51:37
looked like he was from The Matrix.
51:40
Yes, yes, and again, not needed. He
51:42
didn't add anything to this movie. Nope,
51:45
no offense to him. No. I'm
51:47
sure he's a very nice guy. This character
51:49
did not add anything, it was weird. And
51:51
again, just another thing, I just feel like
51:53
I was just ping ponging
51:56
around in this movie, just like ding,
51:58
ding, ding, ding. I'm trying to... fake
52:00
everything in, thinking it's gonna matter, none
52:02
of it does anyway, moving forward. It
52:04
also felt like they just kind of
52:06
pointed at people and went, all right, you're a
52:08
weird looking kid, come here, come here. I
52:11
want you to walk by and pretend you're just
52:13
on acid. Like a background actor. The kid was
52:15
like, I am on acid. It was, yeah. So
52:18
the house is now overtaken with kid partiers, all
52:20
while the parents work on their machine with just
52:22
two and a half hours left. And
52:25
as if the poof point doesn't even exist,
52:27
the urban slugs play with a carefree
52:30
Eddie and they rock. Now, the
52:33
band, I bet you
52:35
that was a real band somehow. I
52:38
thought so too. The girl looked like she was
52:40
actually singing. That lead singer looked like she had
52:42
a record deal somewhere. Oh, it was, it was,
52:44
okay, we've got a producer saying
52:47
it was. Okay, cool. Because you could tell that that looked
52:49
like a real band. Was the kid, guys,
52:51
was the kid with the red, the
52:54
Joey Fatone red patch in front,
52:56
was he a real part
52:58
of the band? Cause he was
53:00
also acting. So I wasn't sure if he was actually
53:02
part of the band. Yeah, I'm sure, I'm sure he was part of the
53:04
band. Okay. So he's
53:07
jamming with the urban slugs. He's
53:09
playing really well. But now
53:12
the neighbors, here's the strange
53:14
thing. Okay, so I don't know
53:16
if it's this scene or a scene before, but
53:19
at one point they call the daughter, the
53:21
ballad's daughter into their house. And they say, we want to
53:24
show you all the damage that your parents are doing. And
53:26
the first thing they show them, this is
53:28
before the party. The first thing they
53:30
show them is he's cleaning
53:32
up broken plates on the floor. And
53:35
she says, this is from last week. You've
53:38
had broken plates on your floor for a
53:40
week. That was one of my supremacy. You
53:43
kept these here for a week? Just to make
53:45
a point to bring the girl over? What?
53:49
Take a picture. And
53:51
back then you had to get your pictures printed.
53:53
You could have gotten it printed before the time
53:55
you saw this girl. You could have
53:58
painted it. I mean, seriously, you kept the. The
54:00
broken plates on the list, all
54:02
the neighbors were just, it was ridiculous. They
54:04
were so strange. So yes,
54:06
they... And
54:09
why are you calling Marie in
54:12
to talk about the parents? That was
54:15
another adult weird
54:17
moment because you would never call in
54:19
a child to
54:22
talk to them about their adult parents.
54:24
And you always have the dad. They always had the dad going, well,
54:27
honey, I don't think we can blame Marie. Like, well,
54:29
of course you can't. She's 14. She
54:31
shouldn't even be here. Yeah, what is
54:33
she doing here? It is completely ridiculous
54:35
that you'd be talking to a teenager
54:38
without her parents. Exactly. Maybe sweep up the
54:40
shit on your floor that's been there for a week and a half
54:42
before you call a 14-year-old. That should be your bigger
54:44
problem. Yikes. So
54:46
the neighbors, they want the ballads evicted, even
54:48
though their own daughter snuck over there to,
54:51
quote unquote, drink root beer. She wanted some
54:53
of that sticky icky weed. Yeah. And
54:55
then her parents figure out that the dog
54:58
was the problem and
55:00
they need to find, because keep in mind, as
55:02
this party's going on, we keep cutting back and
55:04
forth from now the 14-year-old
55:07
parents trying to kind of figure out what's
55:09
going on, but then also wanting to go
55:12
to the party because they're 14. Right.
55:16
This is where they
55:19
glitch again and
55:21
now they're younger again. But
55:24
this time, the white
55:26
kid with the braids sees
55:30
it all happening and he crosses through and he
55:32
says this. I'd love to play this for you
55:34
if I could. Wow. Trip it. Trip
55:38
it. Trip
55:40
it. And
55:43
this was the extent of this guy's
55:45
part. He just kept walking through with
55:47
these one liners. What did you
55:49
think? Did you think he stole the movie? No,
55:52
I didn't. Should it be called the braid
55:55
point? I wanted him off my screen so
55:57
bad because he did not fall in line
55:59
with a normal. Disney
56:01
Channel. I don't want to see that
56:03
kind of stuff. I will watch older
56:05
movies more age-appropriate if I want to
56:07
see a character like that. Trip
56:09
it. He could... Wow.
56:14
Trip it. Trip
56:17
it. I
56:19
just couldn't. I couldn't. So the party
56:21
rages on. Party is raging and the
56:23
urban slugs think Eddie did great but
56:25
he's pulled away because his parents are
56:27
now seven years old riding
56:29
around on scooters and throwing their inventions all
56:32
over the house causing chaos and
56:34
eventually making even the white kid with braids
56:36
this this thing they invented which is just
56:38
a ball that spins with light which makes
56:40
no sense. The ball is the newest
56:42
random character. Then they've got a hose
56:44
for some reason. It was a long
56:46
scene. Yes. It just seemed like a
56:49
very long scene for whatever this was
56:51
supposed to be. And it's spinning around
56:53
the party and they're spraying it with
56:55
a hose and they're spraying all the other kids
56:57
at the party. They're trying to swat it with
56:59
a thing. It flies up the white braided kid
57:01
shirt. So he's now on the
57:04
ground having a tickle fit. But
57:06
now Marigold and Norton are horribly
57:09
annoying and they're really young and back at square
57:11
one. Again remembering none of the progress they had
57:13
just made that they needed the ball or that
57:16
the dog had stolen it. All that is once
57:18
again gone. This is a disaster.
57:20
The cops are now at the house. The
57:23
neighbors are there. They're breaking up the party. But their
57:25
daughter is also there and she says that the
57:27
ballads are actually great people and spontaneity
57:29
is not a crime. I actually liked this part and
57:31
here's why I like this part. I liked
57:34
this part because it's very Disney where it's like
57:37
the whole point was the ballad kids
57:39
would look over and see this quote
57:41
unquote perfect family. And
57:43
just wish their family was like that. And
57:46
here's the girl explaining we're not a perfect
57:48
family. I wish my parents were more like
57:50
yours. And that is very Disney where every
57:52
family has their own foibles and every kid
57:54
wishes they were in somebody else's family. Yes.
57:56
At some point. And it was like hey
57:59
Disney moment. I started to
58:01
finally feel like the D combs
58:03
that I love. Disney moment and
58:05
this girl was good. I
58:08
was gonna ask if the producers
58:10
that love high school musical, the
58:14
one friend that was really short, I
58:17
think also is in high school musical.
58:19
I don't remember what her character was, but I
58:21
wanted to see at some point
58:23
to ask them if this
58:25
was maybe her first Disney job before
58:28
she booked high school musical four
58:30
or five years later. So her, you know,
58:33
Spot 80 is not a crime. She
58:35
wants to stay with her. So her family's like, her dad almost
58:38
sounds like Winchester from MASH at this point
58:40
where he's the neighbor like, well, honey, you
58:43
don't need to go crazy about it. Hmm.
58:46
Mm. It's so strange.
58:49
So they say, fine, we'll give your family one
58:51
more chance if the party's broken up. Getting
58:54
his side card for sure, the white kid with the braids
58:56
has one more line as he walks in and goes,
58:58
bummer. It's
59:01
now an empty house. The ballads cannot
59:03
find the part that was just missing.
59:06
Now the kids have figured out that it's a
59:08
part that's missing. Yes. They can't
59:10
even explain to the parents anymore who are
59:12
now have de-aged so much that they can
59:14
barely be spoken to. It's
59:16
getting bad. And so
59:19
everything looks dismal. Let's have Eddie
59:21
himself explain the issue here. Can we listen to clip
59:23
two? If they poof this time,
59:28
it's gonna be for real. Oh. Heart-ratching.
59:32
Poof this time, it's gonna
59:34
be for real, Sabrina. And with the
59:36
music in the background, it was
59:38
a moment. And then to make things
59:40
worse, their parents glitch again and they are
59:42
now what? Two-year-olds? Doesn't
59:45
she hold up two? No, they're three-month-old babies.
59:47
Is that really how they get to
59:49
be three-month-old babies? Well,
59:52
the- But it can't be, because he has to pee.
59:54
I think they're two, because she says how old are you and he
59:56
goes, I'm two. I think they're two
59:58
at this point. Yes. The
1:00:01
dad is in the bathroom covered in toilet paper and
1:00:03
he's spraying baby powder all over
1:00:05
the place. She's covered in
1:00:08
spaghetti. Makeup and spaghetti. This
1:00:11
is where we saw them at the beginning. They're
1:00:13
obviously have no help now. They're sucking on popsicles.
1:00:15
They're crawling around. But guess
1:00:18
what Norton finds? He
1:00:20
finds the part that's missing while playing with
1:00:22
the dog. So he started to like the
1:00:25
dog now. And
1:00:27
hey, I found the part that's missing. Now as
1:00:29
a baby, he loves dogs. Again,
1:00:32
it's just so interestingly
1:00:34
strange. The kids
1:00:36
now have to fix the machine. They
1:00:38
wrangle their baby parents right
1:00:41
as they're about to get there. You think
1:00:43
we're gonna, hey, this is almost over.
1:00:47
They can't get in the machine because the
1:00:49
dad has to pee. True
1:00:51
in toddler form. You are trying
1:00:53
to get out of the house.
1:00:56
A whole freaking car is packed up.
1:00:59
Baby ledgers in the car. Monroe has
1:01:01
to pee. Okay. We
1:01:04
got pee pee time people. Which
1:01:06
I was wondering how they were gonna handle this
1:01:08
part because then they leave the
1:01:10
toddler, the two year old in the bathroom by
1:01:13
themselves, which is not really what you would do
1:01:15
with the toddler. But you hope he remembers at least how
1:01:17
to, how to do something. I
1:01:19
would have just thrown him in the time machine and let him pee his
1:01:21
baby. Let him pee his baby. Dad, sorry.
1:01:24
This is what had to happen. It's a little hard.
1:01:26
Less than a minute left. Their parents are about to
1:01:28
poof, but last second they're saved. They're brought to
1:01:30
the brink of poof. And now
1:01:32
they're adult selves with fuzzy memories of what happens.
1:01:35
Their daddy remembers that he said something about making
1:01:37
a pee pee, which it
1:01:39
was a strange joke to bring back again. Yes.
1:01:42
Norton now also loves the dog. He remembers the dog
1:01:45
enough. We get a family hug and a celebration that
1:01:47
the kids are actually scientific geniuses. The family's
1:01:50
a full unit once again. We
1:01:52
don't exactly know how the urban slugs turned out, but we
1:01:54
assume he's gonna be in the band. The
1:01:56
ballads are regular barbecuing inside the house
1:01:58
because of course when you... You grill, you
1:02:00
always grill inside. They're spending time
1:02:03
together. And Eddie, it
1:02:05
ends again with Taj talking
1:02:07
to the camera, but this time dressed as
1:02:09
a Rastafarian, saying they just made a
1:02:11
trip to 1975, where
1:02:14
Eddie got to play with Bob Marley.
1:02:17
And the Whalers. And the Whalers. Now, I'm
1:02:19
thinking what happened is, at
1:02:22
one point in the movie, which we did not address, they're
1:02:26
glitching and trying to fix the machine. The
1:02:29
kids don't know what to do, so he hits
1:02:31
undo. And
1:02:33
it brings the parents back, essentially
1:02:36
solving the riddle of the
1:02:38
time machine. I
1:02:40
think he essentially fixed the time machine
1:02:42
by hitting undo. Okay. So
1:02:44
now they have a working time machine, which of course
1:02:46
they did not really talk about. So they made a
1:02:49
family trip back to 1975, where
1:02:51
he can play with Bob Marley. Roll
1:02:54
credits. There's
1:02:56
your movie. This was
1:02:58
a tough one, folks. I'm sorry. For anybody out
1:03:00
there that loved this movie, you gotta love what
1:03:02
you love. Yes. Unapologetically love what
1:03:05
you love. But this one
1:03:07
was a little rough for me. I'll be honest. It
1:03:09
was, it was. I
1:03:15
often get asked why I'm such a big fan of
1:03:17
wrestling. And it's all thanks to
1:03:19
my grandma. Growing up,
1:03:21
we would watch matches together, and
1:03:24
that bond turned me into a lifelong
1:03:26
fan. Hi, I'm
1:03:28
Freddie Prinze Jr. And on
1:03:30
my podcast, Wrestling with Freddie, we
1:03:32
know how important it is to have the right teammate, because
1:03:35
things can get pretty tricky quick. So
1:03:39
when things get complicated and you need help, State
1:03:42
Farm gives you options. They
1:03:44
show you what's possible for ensuring what matters
1:03:47
to you. One of the
1:03:49
things that matters to me, sharing
1:03:51
memories and revisiting wrestling's greatest moments.
1:03:54
And with State Farm's support of the Mike
1:03:56
Altura Podcast Network, I get
1:03:58
to do just that. flavor
1:06:00
on your favorite proteins. Holiday season?
1:06:02
Shake some more and add some Latin magic
1:06:04
to your favorite holiday roasts. Goya Adobo, your
1:06:07
all-in-one seasoning for all seasons. Find it in
1:06:09
the Goya section of your local grocery store.
1:06:11
If it's Goya, it has to be good.
1:06:14
With AT&T In-Car Wi-Fi, elevate your adventure
1:06:17
by transforming your vehicle into a reliable
1:06:19
Wi-Fi hotspot. Connect up to 10 devices
1:06:21
up to 50 feet away from your
1:06:24
vehicle, making it ideal for camping and
1:06:26
road trips. Don't miss out on the
1:06:28
fun! Embark on your next adventure today.
1:06:31
Visit att.com/incarwifi to check if you're eligible
1:06:33
for a free trial. Always pay careful
1:06:35
attention to the road and don't drive
1:06:38
distracted. Wi-Fi hotspot intended for passenger use
1:06:40
only when vehicle is in operation. Compatible
1:06:42
device and vehicle required. Ugh,
1:06:45
when my kids get on my phone, they turn into
1:06:47
little zombies. And they want me to get them their
1:06:49
own phones? They're not ready. I
1:06:51
know a way you can get your kids back. Get
1:06:53
them a TikTok Kids Smart Watch. A
1:06:56
TikTok Smart What? A TikTok 5
1:06:58
Smart Watch for kids. No social
1:07:00
media, no games, no internet access.
1:07:03
So it's a watch. A smart watch.
1:07:05
You can use it to make voice and
1:07:07
video calls and even group chat. Plus it
1:07:09
has free streaming music powered by iHeartRadio
1:07:11
family. My kids love it. But
1:07:14
I love the safety features. Safety features?
1:07:16
Yeah, the TikTok parent app lets you
1:07:18
track locations and messages, receive SOS emergency
1:07:21
call alerts and even set up trusted
1:07:23
contacts. There's actually dozens of parental controls.
1:07:25
You had me get your kids back.
1:07:28
Introducing the TikTok 5. Stay
1:07:30
connected with your kids as they ease into
1:07:32
their first tech experience. They'll love all the
1:07:34
kid friendly apps and you'll love all the
1:07:36
safety features. TikTok 5. Discover
1:07:38
more at mytiktok.com. That's
1:07:40
T-I-C-K-T-A-L-K from TikTok 5
1:07:43
and iHeartRadio family. Well
1:07:49
let's see if it was rough for everybody Sabrina. And
1:07:51
I think we should do our real reviews. Yes, there
1:07:54
is definitely someone out there with
1:07:56
a five star on this bad boy.
1:07:59
A nameless review. It
1:10:00
just it would be like a head a stick
1:10:02
ah okay. I'm gonna
1:10:04
say Three
1:10:08
I'm gonna go for oh No,
1:10:10
it's for oh No,
1:10:13
something's happening Okay,
1:10:15
I'm gonna read this exactly as written having a baby 29.
1:10:17
Yeah, it's 29 But
1:10:21
I do think that's kind of crazy cuz having a baby is
1:10:23
29, but getting married is 32 that is that is strange yes
1:10:30
By the way, I have no children and wasn't married till
1:10:32
I was 40. Thank you very much Starts
1:10:34
to like looking at themselves in the
1:10:36
mirror Seven
1:10:41
five seven five who are
1:10:43
you people this is six months? They
1:10:51
recognize that it's themselves in the I
1:10:54
think they Think they're
1:10:56
looking at just someone. Are you
1:10:58
guys raising vampires? No,
1:11:02
there's no reflection Moving
1:11:05
out of your parents house no,
1:11:08
it's gotten a lot older it
1:11:10
has I would say I'm
1:11:14
gonna say 28. I was gonna say 26 Well,
1:11:19
it's 23. Okay, that's a
1:11:21
little better. Yeah, and
1:11:24
here's the last one hops on one foot
1:11:26
11 don't get
1:11:29
it to Three
1:11:36
This is all the pressure you put on yourself The
1:11:41
answer is five Hop
1:11:45
on one foot five, but she's got
1:11:47
a dancer's pedigree. That's true. There
1:11:49
you go. Oh My all
1:11:51
right. Well, thank you once again producer
1:11:54
Jensen for one for the ages
1:11:56
and by the way, I just want to go on record I
1:11:58
have no connection to this. I think some of this is Which
1:16:01
one would you like to pick this week Sabrina? I
1:16:04
think I'll go with the
1:16:07
non-moving. The non-figure moving
1:16:09
guitar riffs. The non-figure moving guitar
1:16:11
riffs. Okay. I don't remember
1:16:13
if you went first or me at this point.
1:16:16
I think you went first
1:16:18
last time. I can't remember and it sucks that
1:16:20
I have to go first on this one. I know.
1:16:22
You go first then. This
1:16:26
is going to be my lowest rated Dcom
1:16:28
yet, I believe. I'm sorry to say
1:16:30
again for anybody out there
1:16:32
who loves this movie. We can only take
1:16:35
them as they come. Yeah, it's just not
1:16:37
my favorite. I'm going to give this three
1:16:41
non-moving finger
1:16:43
guitar riffs. It just this this movie did
1:16:46
not hit for me on so many levels
1:16:48
and props to my friend Taj
1:16:51
who is will always be a star.
1:16:53
There's a reason he's a star. He
1:16:56
was not even bad in this movie and this was not
1:16:58
a good movie. But no one could look and say the
1:17:00
reason this was not a good movie is because of Taj.
1:17:02
He did his damnedest in
1:17:04
this film. Absolutely. It just this project
1:17:06
did not come together for me. So
1:17:08
I'm going to give it a three.
1:17:12
Yeah, I think I'm
1:17:15
going to hit you right there
1:17:17
with another three of non-moving finger
1:17:20
guitar riffs. Yeah,
1:17:25
it was a bummer because like I said,
1:17:27
I saw the cast and I was excited
1:17:29
for it. But and again, I don't think
1:17:31
it was really necessarily them. I just think
1:17:34
there was a lot. It seemed now that
1:17:36
you brought in that idea of the Sean
1:17:38
Astin situation that
1:17:41
makes so much sense. Something
1:17:43
could have absolutely happened
1:17:46
during filming and things just not working
1:17:48
and you know, but yeah, the
1:17:51
four main cast members in this movie
1:17:54
are not bad actors. No, they
1:17:56
just are not bad actors,
1:17:58
not a single one of them. and this was
1:18:00
not the project for them. It just wasn't, it
1:18:02
just didn't hit. No, this was tough. It didn't. This
1:18:05
was tough. Well. Oh man. And that
1:18:07
is the end of the Poof Point. Thank
1:18:09
you everybody so much for joining us this week.
1:18:13
They can't all be amazing, but some of
1:18:15
them are, and we're looking for them out there.
1:18:17
We're looking for the gems and they're out there.
1:18:19
So remember to subscribe to our feed, and you
1:18:21
can follow us at the magical rewind pod on
1:18:23
Instagram. Thank you so much. Don't
1:18:26
poof out. Bye
1:18:28
everybody. Bye. Bye.
1:18:31
Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye.
1:18:35
Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye.
1:18:38
Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye.
1:18:41
Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye.
1:18:44
Bye. Bye. Professional
1:18:46
wrestling, like real life, is
1:18:49
full of surprises. Hi everyone.
1:18:52
It's Freddie Prinze Jr. And
1:18:54
it's no surprise I can talk wrestling all
1:18:56
day, any day. Kind
1:18:58
of like how State Farm agents can talk
1:19:00
insurance and help you choose the right coverage.
1:19:04
When it comes to important insurance decisions, let
1:19:07
State Farm support you with the coverage you need
1:19:09
backed with 24 seven support. Like
1:19:13
a good neighbor, State Farm is there.
1:19:15
Does money stress you out? Let Facet flip
1:19:18
your financial chaos into clarity. We feel
1:19:20
way more confident and secure in our finances. And
1:19:22
with that comes a sense of freedom. Financial
1:19:24
planning from Facet is here to help you
1:19:26
improve your life today, tomorrow, and every day
1:19:28
after that. Facet was really the place where we
1:19:31
saw all of the tools and the people coming
1:19:33
together. Visit facet.com, f-a-c-e-t.com to learn more. This ad
1:19:35
is sponsored by Facet. Facet Wealth is an SEC registered
1:19:37
investment advisor. This is not an offer to buy or
1:19:39
sell securities, nor is it investment, legal, or tax advice.
1:19:41
These testimonials are from current Facet members who were not
1:19:43
compensated. All opinions are their own and not a guarantee
1:19:45
of a similar outcome. The one and
1:19:47
only, Goya Adobo All Purpose All-in-One Seasoning,
1:19:49
perfect for all seasons. A simple shake
1:19:52
is all it takes. Spring,
1:19:54
elevate your veggies with a shake and enjoy
1:19:56
a secret blend of Latin spices. Summer, step
1:19:58
up your grilling game by... Shaking adobo's bold
1:20:00
flavor on your favorite proteins. Holiday season?
1:20:03
Shake some more and add some Latin
1:20:05
magic to your favorite holiday roasts. Goya
1:20:07
adobo, your all-in-one seasoning for all seasons.
1:20:09
Find it in the Goya section of
1:20:11
your local grocery store. If it's Goya,
1:20:13
it has to be good. Dearest
1:20:16
listener, allow me to unveil a
1:20:18
delicious-
Podchaser is the ultimate destination for podcast data, search, and discovery. Learn More