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The Poof Point

The Poof Point

Released Wednesday, 26th June 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
The Poof Point

The Poof Point

The Poof Point

The Poof Point

Wednesday, 26th June 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
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Episode Transcript

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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

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awarded with the medal. I'm

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Malcolm Gladwell and our new podcast

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from Bushkin Industries and iHeartMedia is

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I'm Jordan Gonsalves and I'm a

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The key is to understanding

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yourself, learning to

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can listen to But We Loved on

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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

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the world. Moscow

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PD saying today they're now looking

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for a white hondylantra. Then a

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shocking arrest. There is now

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a suspect in custody. This

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is a PhD student in criminology. This is

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the guy. Will

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he be found innocent? He claims he has

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an alibi. Or face

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death. Listen

17:59

to season two of the... Idaho Massacre on

18:01

the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,

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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

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it was established in 1861, there have been 3,517 people awarded with

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the medal. I'm

18:29

Malcolm Gladwell, and our new podcast

18:32

from Pushkin Industries and iHeartMedia is

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about those heroes. What

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they did, what it meant, and

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what their stories tell us about the

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him and the leadership that he exhibited

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Listen to Medal of Honor, Stories

18:58

of Courage, on the iHeartRadio app,

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listen to podcasts. I'm

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Gary Veter, and I have a new

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limited series podcast called Number 1 Dad.

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It may have been the greatest scam for

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a sports fan. In the 90s,

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you have reached a number that has been

20:23

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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

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PD saying today they're now looking for

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a white Hyundai Elantra. Then a shocking

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arrest. There is now a

42:56

suspect in custody. This is a

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PhD student in criminology. This is the guy.

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Will he be found innocent? He claims he

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has an alibi or

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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

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1:03:28

Freddie Prinze Jr. And on

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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

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