Alex Edelman, Nava Mau & The Dare?

Alex Edelman, Nava Mau & The Dare?

Released Friday, 20th September 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
Alex Edelman, Nava Mau & The Dare?

Alex Edelman, Nava Mau & The Dare?

Alex Edelman, Nava Mau & The Dare?

Alex Edelman, Nava Mau & The Dare?

Friday, 20th September 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.

Use Ctrl + F to search

0:00

Trying to figure out what to eat for

0:02

dinner yet again? With NorSides and bullion as

0:04

your not-so-secret ingredient, you can skip the drive-thru

0:06

and do dinner at home. Nor

0:08

Taste combos provide a menu of delicious,

0:11

affordable, and well-balanced meals that you can

0:13

prepare in 30 minutes or

0:15

less. Visit nor.com to get

0:17

quick and easy recipe ideas for your

0:19

home-cooked weeknight dinners. It's not fast food,

0:21

but it's so good. We

0:30

are. Hey. We

0:32

are. Come on. Hey. Aren't

0:35

you the same? Welcome to Who We Leave, the

0:37

podcast where you'll learn everything you need to know about the celebrities

0:39

you don't. I'm Bobby Finger. I'm

0:41

Lindsay Weber. Quickly buy

0:43

tickets to our live shows. Tour

0:46

is still happening. Who We Leave are us. We're

0:48

coming to the Midwest. We're coming to the West. We're coming to

0:50

the South. That's going to be great. My

0:52

voice sounds terrible because I have a cold. Future

0:54

Lindsay here, it was

0:57

not a cold. More importantly, there's nothing

0:59

I can do about it. There's nothing I can do about it. I

1:01

just sound like this to there. No one's

1:03

trying to be you. Live

1:05

your truth. But I really want to play

1:07

this clip from Tyler Henry, the medium. The

1:10

medium. Doing a read of Jerry

1:13

O'Connell. Oh my God. That's so real.

1:15

He went from doing readings to doing a read. It's

1:19

a read, sweetie. It's a read, sweetie. Here's

1:21

Tyler Henry, who is a scam artist.

1:24

No, stop. Telling Jerry O'Connell.

1:26

Say allegedly. Allegedly. You

1:29

don't have to say that. Here's Tyler Henry, who

1:31

is allegedly a total

1:33

fraud and scam artist. Reading.

1:36

Allegedly lies about every single fucking thing that

1:38

he says about these people. Here he is

1:40

reading the House Down Boots, Jerry O'Connell. This sounds

1:42

so left field, but any tragedies around

1:45

trains or any situations I'm hearing, choo,

1:48

choo, choo, choo, choo. I

1:51

sound like a lunatic, but it keeps coming good.

1:53

No, you're absolutely right. This is... Does that... Do

1:56

you want me to elaborate on this, or do you...

1:58

You know what the choo-choo thing is? I do. The

2:01

only way to describe it is this feeling of

2:03

this death. I hear choo choo and the feeling

2:05

of how do we move forward and family forever

2:08

changed, not being able to have the tools to

2:10

really bring closure to the situation. People

2:12

moving on with that person who passed that

2:14

way. There's just kind of a sense of

2:16

taking things down or not being able to

2:18

like... He always uses the same phrasing.

2:21

Like, such a liar. How

2:23

do I get a sense of family not being able to move

2:25

forward, changes being made? Closure, closure, closure.

2:27

The way that he speaks is so

2:29

unique though. I know you really don't like

2:32

him. I like him more than you. And

2:34

I also am like total fraud, but I

2:36

have a real fondness for him because I

2:38

do think that he, between the scribbling... I

2:40

think he's really created his own language of

2:42

this, which I find very charming, where he is

2:45

able to... It's even hard to do an

2:47

impression of because it's so unique, where

2:50

he's like, I'm getting a

2:53

sense of like, ah, woo, God,

2:55

can you let me know? Like

2:58

a woo, like a woo, God. Like a

3:00

woo, God, and like a, oh, low, low,

3:02

low, low. Was a grandfather,

3:04

a great grandfather

3:07

killed by a

3:09

giant coyote that was driving a

3:12

Model T, perhaps? I'm just, I'm feeling

3:14

kind of a heaviness, almost like a giant anvil

3:17

has fallen on my head. I

3:19

know that's so silly and like I might be off

3:21

track, but like it's because, you know, like John Edward

3:23

Ducell only be like, the name starts with J. Tyler

3:26

Henry is giving a full sequence

3:29

of events. He's giving sounds and

3:31

smells. They're doing different things. John

3:34

Edwards was doing the, what do

3:36

you call that? Cold reading? He

3:39

was fishing. Yeah. He was going, J, J, anyone

3:41

with a J? Anyone with an L? L, M, P, Q, R? Death

3:44

by anvil, death by piano, death by tongue.

3:46

What? Tyler is like

3:49

typing into google.com, Chrishell

3:52

Stow's tragedy. Yes. He's,

3:55

I do believe though, because I, I did

3:57

this when Tyler Henry show was on TV.

4:00

I would watch the clips and then I would google

4:02

to see how much was publicly available And

4:05

it wasn't always Publicly

4:07

available often it was but with Jerry

4:09

O'Connell's Grandfather's brother who was killed by

4:12

a train and apparently that created some

4:14

sort of horrendous generational trauma that exists

4:16

through this day choo-choo

4:18

choo-choo Oh my

4:20

gosh, I could not find any

4:22

stories about the choo-choo killing it

4:24

But that doesn't mean anything that

4:26

just means that Tyler Henry has

4:28

a really really dedicated research team

4:31

They're going to libraries. Okay, however, he

4:33

did it getting Tyler Henry to say

4:35

choo-choo Does that mean anything to you and then it does

4:37

and then Jericho I was like, oh

4:39

my god My grandfather's brother was hit by a

4:41

train a terrible train accident that changed the nature

4:43

of our family I mean that is and you

4:45

know Jerry O'Connell's

4:48

grandfather was the mayor

4:50

of Jersey

4:52

City, how'd you did you find this

4:54

out? That's on Wikipedia Oh,

4:56

so he's a prominent up the rest a

4:58

prominent person Yeah, so you can just go

5:00

into the archives and like Jersey City and

5:02

find out that his brother died I

5:05

found his brother's grave site. Okay, he died in

5:07

his 30s. You don't need to do the research

5:09

Tyler already did it he's I just

5:12

want to know how much is just there for the

5:14

taking no cell on my body Believes that he's speaking

5:16

to a ghost. I'm just like I need to know

5:18

how you're doing this What if I told you I

5:20

believed it? I think we'd have to have a long

5:22

conversation off Mike Lindsay Have

5:26

a long conversation off Mike

5:29

What if I was fully on board and believing everything? That

5:33

you're not listen, I just think his

5:35

flourish and his con artistry is Talent

5:38

and that's more what I'm kind of like looking

5:40

at tragedies around trains or any

5:43

situations. I'm hearing choo-choo My

5:45

gosh I

5:47

sound like a lunatic, but no you're absolutely right

5:50

This is you're listening to who's there with the

5:52

call and show we take your questions comments and

5:54

concerns at 619 who them Let's

5:56

start with some comments. Oh my god

5:58

the number of people who called about Survivor, I was

6:01

like, well we gotta play one of them. Hey

6:04

Lindsay Bobby Timmy, I

6:06

am of course calling

6:08

about the new

6:10

It couple, Amanda Probst, and Austin

6:12

Lee Coon. I just

6:15

wanted to give some more context

6:17

for the statement from them

6:20

that you guys read. When he

6:22

says, I'm sure this

6:24

is a surprise given how season 45 ended,

6:28

that is because that season

6:31

ended with Austin coming in

6:33

second to D. Valladares, who

6:35

he was in a pretty

6:37

steamy and adorable showmance with.

6:39

The two of them were a

6:41

really dominant duo in a very

6:44

strong alliance of four, and

6:46

I think many

6:48

would agree that Bull on

6:51

the jury chose D over

6:53

Austin because he really

6:55

didn't have any secrets from D, but

6:57

she made a few strong moves without

6:59

including him that he wasn't even aware

7:01

of until the very last moment. It

7:03

was a very dramatic reveal that she

7:05

made. They really gave the

7:08

sense that they were really into each other

7:10

on the island and it was really cute,

7:12

but as soon as the season aired, in

7:14

all their exit press they were being pretty vague

7:17

about they were still together and it was kind of

7:19

just giving we don't live in the

7:21

same state and we respect our

7:23

privacy with their vibes, but D

7:25

is really cool. All the gay

7:27

guys that I watch Survivor with would agree she's one

7:29

of the strongest, most well-rounded

7:31

players and winners of the new era.

7:35

Mostly I wanted to say I feel like Austin,

7:37

as someone who was in

7:39

a pretty popular showmance who came

7:41

in second and is also hot,

7:46

I feel like he had a really good shot

7:48

at playing again.

7:50

Season 50 is going to

7:52

be all returning players, but

7:55

I feel like dating Amanda Probst

7:58

probably disqualifies him. interesting

8:00

if he is willing to

8:03

sacrifice another shot at a million dollars. He

8:06

must really care about

8:08

her and that's really cute. But anyway,

8:10

showing whole Leanne Cuisine. That last bit

8:12

was not mentioned by a lot of

8:14

the callers and I think it's one

8:17

of the more important aspects of this,

8:19

which is that like I was like trolling some survivor

8:22

message boards and Reddit's and

8:25

people were talking about Dee in Austin and like they

8:27

had this showmance and then he's

8:29

dating the niece now or whatever. A lot

8:31

of people are like, oh he's trying hard to get

8:34

on survivor 50. He's trying hard to get on survivor

8:36

50. Now he's guaranteed to be on survivor 50, but

8:39

this caller is like this may in

8:41

fact disqualify him because he's dating the

8:43

host's niece. It's true. So he's not

8:45

trying that hard. So he's not trying that hard. He just wants

8:47

love over money. Anyways, I'm watching this

8:49

season. I mean I am. I

8:51

haven't watched yet, but I am watching this season. I'm

8:53

getting involved. It's time for me to

8:56

get involved. It's time for me to get involved. I'm

8:58

stepping up. Okay,

9:00

next call about a television

9:02

show. A long-running television show.

9:04

Hi, Bobby. Long time, long

9:06

time. Sorry, I'm walking. I

9:09

don't know that there's like a... I don't

9:11

even know if you care about this. I

9:13

don't know if there's scientific answers here about

9:15

leaving SNL early, but as an SNL megastan,

9:18

I do think that three seasons

9:20

is the dividing line. Like I

9:22

think if you save for four or more

9:24

seasons, it's not considered early and there is

9:26

a reason. And that's because the

9:28

first two seasons you're there, you're a

9:30

secret player and then on your third

9:33

season you're generally upgraded to a repertory

9:35

player. So only being a repertory player

9:37

for one season would be kind of

9:39

considered an early exit. You have to

9:41

put in your time to get promoted to the main

9:43

cast. But again, this

9:45

is not a science. This is not a theory. Okay,

9:47

Cribs friends, love you, bye. I love a theory like

9:49

this just because like I

9:52

love an opinion that's so fun

9:54

to me. So this person is

9:56

like I'm an SNL superfan and the

9:59

reason why leaving... being early after

10:01

one year is so kind of, it's

10:05

a break in the make or break, it's

10:08

because you leave as a day player versus

10:11

being a repertory, I forget what she

10:13

used, there's technology, but you don't get

10:16

like bumped up to being main

10:18

cast. So like you kind of do leave

10:21

with a blip. My thing is

10:23

like, in my mind, SNL

10:25

doesn't make you famous if you leave

10:27

early, it's just that their casting is

10:29

really good, so therefore they catch people

10:31

who were already on their way up.

10:34

So like in the case of, let's say,

10:36

Jenny Slate, where it's like she left after

10:39

one season, I don't think like SNL probably

10:41

helped, but I think she would have gotten

10:43

there no matter what, because of their, and

10:45

the way that they found her was because

10:47

she was already in that trajectory. So it's

10:49

hard to say whether somebody who's

10:52

been on one season of SNL and then gets big,

10:54

it's because of SNL, because it's just like, it's

10:58

not a fair scientific assessment. There's just, it's

11:00

not, you know what I mean? Because

11:03

then you have people who like almost made it

11:05

there, like I think about Tim Robinson too, sorry,

11:08

where it's like Tim Robinson was a

11:10

huge flop on SNL, but now he's

11:13

making moves all over Hollywood, you know? A

11:15

huge slay, right? Netflix, HBO, like independent

11:18

film, like it's all happening for Tim Robinson,

11:20

but it took a while, you know? Post

11:22

SNL, it took a while. Well, it wasn't

11:24

like the right fit for him or whatever,

11:26

but yeah, I mean, I just think like

11:28

there's, it's hard to say like, you

11:32

need to be there for three years to make any

11:34

sort of impact. I totally get that. Or

11:37

totally, but the right amount of fame. You still

11:39

might not make an impact, but yeah, totally, totally,

11:41

yeah. Let's move on

11:43

to normal questions. Hey

11:46

BLT, long time, long time. I have

11:48

an Emmys question for you. So

11:50

I was thinking about it, and really

11:53

my question is, can

11:55

winning an Emmy make

11:57

you a them anymore? I feel

11:59

like it... It did at one point, but especially

12:01

with streaming and just the amount of television there

12:03

is out there, it seems

12:06

to me like you're either already a them

12:08

and winning an Emmy might increase

12:10

your prestige, but it doesn't move you from

12:12

who to them or you're a who and

12:14

you win an Emmy and you're a them

12:17

to people who watch your show, but you're

12:19

still a who more broadly. So

12:22

is this no longer a

12:26

path to graduation? Was it ever a

12:28

path to graduation? We'd love

12:30

to hear your thoughts. Crunch crunch. No,

12:33

winning an Emmy doesn't make you a them anymore. Uh-huh.

12:35

Did it ever? Well, I was

12:37

looking through the history of the Emmys, obviously, and

12:39

then I was thinking about how television is fractured

12:42

over the many, many decades of the Emmy's history

12:44

where it's like, whatever. And

12:46

I think that back in the day, typically, if

12:48

you won an Emmy, you were already a them.

12:51

Because there were like three TV shows. There were

12:53

four shows that were all Seinfeld. Right. So

12:55

it's like, but no, I'm thinking about like the sixties and the

12:57

seventies too, but there just wasn't much. Right.

13:00

That's a very good point. Like the TV landscape

13:02

wasn't so varied. So it's like, it wasn't like

13:04

you got to watch a beef. Like it was

13:06

just like, we're all watching Seinfeld. Yeah, exactly. Exactly.

13:08

But the other thing is like, if

13:10

you win an Emmy these days and let's say

13:12

you're a them now, let's look at, I'm just

13:15

thinking top of mind, Jeremy Allen white. He

13:19

didn't need the Emmy to become a them. That

13:21

show was already really, really popular

13:24

and broke through the sort

13:26

of like the, the

13:28

noise of streaming and the noise of television

13:30

and already made an impact. Oh, are you

13:32

watching the bear? It's vindicating, I guess, but

13:34

I think it has nothing to do with

13:36

them dumb or them status or achieving. Certainly

13:38

getting nominated for an Emmy does not them

13:40

you at all. Even close. That

13:43

doesn't matter. We'll talk about these,

13:45

um, some of these people like, um,

13:47

not, you know, to the audience one,

13:49

right? Like, we'll talk about these people

13:51

from, um, some of these specials

13:55

and TV shows. And it's just like, I

13:57

don't know that they are them just because they want.

14:01

because these shows are still relatively small.

14:04

Right, well it's also like some

14:07

of them are not even the star of the show

14:09

or not even the show's not even something that is

14:11

like on a streamer that is popular. You know, it's

14:13

like there's so many elements of, I

14:16

don't know where to watch this or a

14:18

lot of people are not watching this. It's

14:21

just like loved by critics. I think that's

14:23

the main thing where now it's like the

14:25

critical and the popular are so far separated

14:27

versus it was always that case. Now even

14:29

more so because of the nature of streaming

14:32

and how it's so siloed. Like now

14:34

like you hear about shows that critics love and you're

14:36

like where the fuck am I supposed to watch that?

14:38

And he's on like Showtime and that I can only

14:40

get if by a sub screen. You know, it's not

14:43

just something that's added onto my cable package. I have

14:45

to go like find it or it's like on Roku

14:47

or it's you know, that's it's not crazy

14:50

for these shows to kind of come out

14:52

of the left field and be like critical

14:54

darlings and maybe they'll get on Netflix in

14:56

like three seasons. But like that's the issue

14:58

is it takes it takes a while for

15:01

sometimes a random thing to like come to the mainstream.

15:03

Like how Schitt's Creek worked, you know, like Schitt's Creek,

15:05

no one heard of it for its entire run. And

15:07

then it's last season was like on Netflix. Somebody was

15:09

like, oh my God. Oh my

15:11

God. So I don't know. Like

15:14

I think it has to do with those two

15:16

things. Meanwhile, winning an Emmy for your career as

15:18

an actor is huge. Maybe doesn't

15:20

make you a them, but it makes you a

15:23

them to every single person in that industry because

15:25

I do think that it's like in

15:27

Hollywood, your job is to know who's won an Emmy. Oh,

15:30

for sure. And you become an industry them. Absolutely.

15:33

Your number one concern is to be, you know,

15:35

Matt Bellamy and like know like the freaking football

15:37

stats of all these people, like the RBI is

15:39

like you got to know what they've won and

15:41

when they won and what they want it for.

15:43

So I think that to that, like to get

15:45

you in the room with people changes your life.

15:47

Yeah. Changes your life. I

15:49

think actually my parents watched Shogun so they will know

15:51

who these people are. But let's go back one year.

15:53

Like when Sarah snook won the Emmy for succession last

15:55

year, I don't think my parents were something like, Oh,

15:58

who's this Sarah snook woman? and we keep hearing

16:00

about like, no, that didn't happen. But it did

16:03

happen with her being on succession. But also, here,

16:05

Yuki Sonata was already very famous. Jean Smart,

16:07

already famous. Jeremy Ellen White, already

16:09

famous. Sure, sure. You

16:12

get what we're saying, come on. If

16:14

you do an interesting speech, if you have an

16:17

interesting moment, if you, and you know,

16:19

like, we're gonna get to Alex Edelman, but

16:21

like, if Alex Edelman had like this kind

16:23

of like interesting moment up there, like that

16:25

can make a difference. Cause like, you're getting

16:27

the screen time of television. Your award is

16:29

being presented on live TV. So like, you

16:32

do have that. We'll get there. Wait,

16:34

let's play the first. We'll play the first,

16:36

I like this one. Hi here

16:38

weekly. I'm sure you're getting

16:40

a ton of Emmy's calls, but

16:43

I'm just calling to say that

16:45

I'm obsessed with Lorraine

16:48

Newman's absolute hatred for

16:50

the bear. And I

16:53

think I might agree with her. Anyways,

16:56

crunch crunch. First of all, do people

16:58

know that Lorraine Newman, who is an

17:00

SNL cast member in the eight seventies,

17:02

eighties, early. She's in the original

17:05

SNL cast. That's why I'm to be in here.

17:07

She is a character in the new movie. Oh,

17:09

she is. She's played by Emily Farn. Oh my

17:11

God. That's so funny. Emily Fairn, who plays Lorraine

17:13

Newman in the new right man, Saturday night

17:15

movie plays the Michelle

17:17

Williams character in Brokeback Mountain. And

17:19

Michelle Williams, iconically says, Jack twist,

17:21

Jack nasty. You don't go up

17:23

there to fish. So she plays

17:25

that role. Twist.

17:31

Jack nasty. Jack nasty. Okay. Shout

17:34

out to Emily Farn. Good for

17:36

you. Lorraine Newman, again, comedian. She

17:38

is the mother of, drum roll

17:41

please, Hannah Einbinder. So

17:43

Hannah Einbinder, we've talked about giving, it's giving

17:45

an Eppow baby. We've talked about

17:47

this before. I think she's like broken free of that

17:49

a little bit because people don't seem to really know

17:51

or put that upon her. Well, here's the issue. What's

17:53

the antidote to being called an Eppow baby? People have

17:55

to like the shit that you're in and people like

17:57

Hacks. They like it. People like Hacks, they think she's

17:59

good. et cetera, et cetera. So

18:01

when the bear beat her, when

18:04

she didn't win, she's now been

18:06

nominated what, two years in a row and hasn't won, three years in a

18:08

row? Two years in a row, maybe. Who

18:10

deserved it? Because the actress from the bear wasn't the only

18:13

good episode of the bear this season. Sorry, don't talk about that.

18:15

I just, it was like they did a, what

18:18

do you call it, bottle episode? Liza Colonzias. Okay,

18:20

everyone was talking about her. So she was

18:22

nominated with her Carol Burnett, Hannah Einbinder, Janelle

18:24

James, Cheryl Lee Ralph and Meryl Streep. What

18:27

is Carol Burnett being nominated for? We

18:29

love Carol Burnett. Paul Royale. The show that cost

18:31

$100 million on Apple TV. One.

18:35

That is like. Watched. Crazy. So

18:38

Lorraine Newman tweets as Emmys are alive,

18:40

she tweets, fuck the bear, deletes it.

18:43

And then she tweets, I think the bear is a

18:45

great show, but in my honest opinion, it's not a

18:47

comedy. Not even a dark comedy. And

18:49

this is not the first time she's tweeted

18:52

about this. Every time I think about the bear being

18:54

in the comedy category for the Emmys, I can feel

18:56

an ulcer developing. So obviously there's two reasons. One, you

18:58

think of this woman as a comedian. Two, you think

19:00

of her daughter losing an Emmy two years in a

19:02

row. Three, I get the sensitivity on the bear not

19:05

being a comedy thing, because not just

19:07

like, oh, is the bear a comedy?

19:09

Well, it's not funny. That's basic. What it is is

19:11

that Hacks is a comedy and it's about comedy. And

19:13

I think that makes it even more, I

19:16

think that's what I think gets people more riled

19:18

up because it's like. It's literally about comedy.

19:20

It's like if 30 Rock was competing against,

19:22

what's another show that's like The Sopranos?

19:25

And people were like, The

19:27

Sopranos is actually funny in so many ways, which is true. The

19:29

Sopranos is funny. The Sopranos can be funny. But

19:32

if it was going up against 30 Rock, I would

19:34

be like, that's not even fair. Because

19:36

the 30 Rock is like pumping out the

19:38

jokes. It's like a joke a second. It's

19:40

like a totally different format. So like, I

19:42

do feel like they're not in the same

19:44

category. These shows are probably more closer in,

19:47

these are probably more closer connected because the

19:49

Hacks while being a comedy is also kind of

19:51

dramatic. There are dramatic moments. There's dramatic acting, whatever.

19:54

And the bear has funny moments, funny characters, also

19:56

dramatic acting, whatever. I mean, personal opinion.

19:58

Also, it's just like. to me,

20:00

so fucking funny. Like, it's just so

20:02

funny. It's so

20:05

funny. So people kind of got mad because they were like, can

20:07

you like get your mom to stop, like tell your mom to

20:09

stop tweeting, but also she's a comedian, so I'm kind of

20:11

like- She's a comedian. She's old, it doesn't matter.

20:13

It's funny. Yeah, like, it's funny. And

20:15

also she's old and I'm just like, let

20:18

her live. But the worst thing

20:20

is that now it's like journalists are

20:22

going around asking actors. I believe- Is it

20:24

better comedy? Is it better comedy? The like

20:26

TikTok video that the LA Times released of

20:28

their journalist walking down the red carpet, asking

20:30

everyone, is the bear a comedy? What do

20:33

you think about the bear being a comedy?

20:35

And they're asking like the cast of hacks.

20:37

I was like, this is so cruel. It's

20:40

so shady. I would never think about it. And then

20:42

the only people who said the right thing were like

20:44

Josh Jackson. And I was like, yeah, he's not on

20:47

the show. He doesn't have a dog in this fight.

20:49

What was he in, fatal attraction? He doesn't give a

20:51

shit. Yes, it is played straight by the

20:53

actors, but the scenarios are absurd or

20:55

heightened and geared towards calling out

20:57

the absurdity of the situation, which to me is

20:59

a comedy, as opposed to playing into the pathos

21:01

of a situation, which is then a drama. His

21:03

shows are hilarious. He's about to be in Doctor Odyssey. He's

21:06

about to be a doctor on a boat.

21:08

That's directed by Ryan Murphy. Doctor,

21:16

welcome aboard the Odyssey. Whoa, in

21:18

the ice. This

21:21

ship is heaven. Do it

21:23

together. Our mission is

21:25

to preserve the dream. And

21:29

that's why you're here. I'm in. Keep

21:35

these dreamers safe. Oh my, I cannot

21:37

wait for that show. People are now just like normal

21:39

people. Like our friends are now like discovering that that

21:42

show is happening. Like especially during the Emmys when they

21:44

were playing the ads for it. People were like, what

21:46

is this, Sean? I was like, welcome. You don't

21:48

know about Doctor Odyssey? I was like, welcome. You

21:50

don't know about Doctor Odyssey? Don

21:54

Johnson's there. You're like, Josh Jackson

21:56

is literally gonna like, cure a

21:58

man's like, scene. sickness like scurvy

22:01

Josh I'm like you have scurvy I bet

22:03

the first episode someone gets scurvy or something

22:05

all sorts of things can happen on a

22:07

cruise ship literally everything you could fall you

22:09

could hit your head you could go overboard

22:12

you could I around to diarrhea it's everything

22:14

it's literally everything but what if you're such

22:16

a reaction oh you're gonna you're gonna get

22:19

involved in so many weird funny little miscommunications

22:22

and mishaps oh it's gonna be great someone on

22:24

reddit wrote this won't be popular based on the

22:26

comments but Joshua Jackson's response that everyone is crazy

22:28

is just been painting the comedy definition with the

22:31

daily broad brush to encompass the bear and I'm

22:33

just like I felt the same way I'm like

22:35

he was eloquent he was articulate yeah but like

22:37

he wasn't really saying anything which is an actor's

22:42

gonna say it's not a cop no one on

22:44

my carpet is gonna be like I don't support

22:46

the people that are not if that's just bad

22:48

form you gotta be tweeting from home you're not

22:50

gonna be on the carpet being a bitch so

22:52

it's like and I still haven't seen the bear

22:54

so I don't know you'll never know one day you

22:59

will watch the bear and you'll be like damn it's good

23:01

but it'll be like in 30 years you'll

23:03

you'll have no one to talk about because we all

23:05

will have forgotten the show god

23:07

what is that oh it's an episode of

23:09

the Simpsons the itchy and scratchy movie comes

23:12

out and Homer doesn't let Bart see it

23:14

and he bans him from seeing the itchy

23:16

and scratchy movie and the episode ends with

23:18

them like old and he takes

23:20

his dad to go see the itchy and

23:22

scratchy like retrospective like 50 years later and

23:24

it's very sweet and I'm just like that's gonna be

23:27

me watching the bear me and you going

23:29

into the night hawk and being like now's the

23:31

time they're showing season

23:33

one and one go my

23:37

last words are gonna be that fucking sucked and then

23:39

I'm just gonna fly no I think

23:41

you're gonna be like I should have watched

23:43

it sooner so I could have a conversation with my

23:45

friends for my number one

23:48

show didn't win anything really so slow

23:50

horse no the morning show

23:53

I'm kidding I'm kidding I'm kidding I'm kidding I'm kidding how

23:55

did you missame it my cat is very

23:58

particular especially since the pandemic now that he's

24:00

get so much attention. Oh boy. For the past

24:02

four years, just more attention than ever. He's become

24:04

pickier than ever. He's become needier than ever. It's

24:06

hard to find him a cat food that he

24:09

likes. And we've started using Small's and he is

24:11

kind of gagged for it in a good way.

24:13

Old cat food that we used was really stinky,

24:15

gross. Every time you had someone over to like

24:18

watch your cat while you're gone, they're like,

24:20

oh, I hate, if they're not familiar with

24:22

cats, they're like, I'm so disgusted by this.

24:24

That's not the case with Small's at all.

24:26

Stinky, bad, wet cat food, disgusting kibble. That's

24:28

the thing of the past. Small's cat food

24:30

is protein packed recipes made with preservative free

24:32

ingredients you'll find in your fridge. And it's

24:34

delivered right to your door. You take them

24:36

out of the box, put them in the

24:38

fridge. That's why veterinarians.org rates Small's 10 out

24:40

of 10 for ingredient quality. My cat's favorite

24:42

flavor is the chicken one, which is very

24:44

weird. You'd think that cats would all be

24:46

about fish, not mine. He loves chicken. It's

24:49

actually very strange, but fortunately there's a chicken

24:51

recipe that he loves. Small's was

24:53

started back in 2017 by a couple of guys

24:55

home cooking cat food in small batches for their

24:57

friends. A few short years later, they've served millions

24:59

of meals to cats across the US. At this

25:01

point, you might be wondering, why can't I just

25:04

be my cat kibble? Believe it or not, your

25:06

cute kitty descended from a ferocious desert cat who

25:08

hunted live prey for food. And your cat isn't

25:10

any different. They need fresh protein packed meals to

25:12

be at their best. And this is the best

25:14

time to switch to Small's. Head to smalls.com/who and

25:17

use promo code who at checkout for

25:19

50% off your first order, plus free shipping.

25:21

That's the best offer you'll find, but you

25:23

have to use my code who for

25:26

50% off your first order. One last time,

25:28

that's promo code who for 50% off your

25:30

first order, plus free shipping. I'm Jean Marie

25:32

Laskus. I'm a journalist. I spent my career

25:34

helping Americans understand the lives of other Americans.

25:36

Coal miners, gun shop clerks, staffers in the

25:39

White House mail room. In my new podcast,

25:41

Cement City, I tell the story of an

25:43

entire town, a dying town that you

25:45

have absolutely no reason to care about but trust

25:47

me, you will. Listen to and

25:49

follow Cement City, an Odyssey original podcast

25:51

in partnership with Cement City Productions. Available

25:53

now for free on the Odyssey app

25:56

and wherever you get your podcasts. I

26:00

got the Lola V in the mail and I was

26:02

so excited because I put it in the outdoor shower

26:05

right and people were down and they were using the

26:07

outdoor shower and they said

26:09

Lindsay I used that Lola V scalp

26:11

scrub what a scalp scrub they have

26:13

a scalp scrub they used it and

26:15

it and it felt so good the

26:17

lather it like brings up this big

26:20

beautiful lather and I was like damn

26:22

is that not the endorsement of a

26:24

of a lifetime like it's great after

26:26

the beach using your Lola V it's incredible

26:28

it's so good for your hair it feels so nice

26:30

in your hair you gave me your I

26:32

already had some myself but you gave me your

26:35

styling cream because you don't use it what do

26:37

you know I have to I think it's great

26:39

because you don't want styling cream that's too like

26:42

thick and weighty I like the texture of this it's

26:44

not too heavy on the hair I was talking

26:46

about the perfecting leave-in which is a conditioner

26:48

and I was also talking about the exfoliate

26:51

and detox scalp shampoo a leave-in conditioner

26:53

a leave-in conditioner makes me feel like a celebrity

26:55

like a celebrity I use the Lola V leave-in

26:57

I'm like Jennifer Aniston uses

26:59

leave-in conditioner I'm like Jennifer Aniston check

27:02

out all Lola V products at your local

27:04

Ulta Beauty location to experience the luxurious scent

27:06

for yourself or head directly to their website

27:08

at Lola V comm as our loyal listeners

27:10

you'll get an exclusive 15% off your entire

27:12

order when you use code who at checkout

27:14

that's 15% off your order at

27:16

lol a vi e comm with promo code

27:18

who please note that you can only use

27:20

one promo code per order and discounts can't

27:22

be combined after you purchase they'll ask where

27:24

you heard about them so please support our

27:26

show and tell them we sent you your

27:29

hair will thank you how

27:34

much of this same it hey

27:36

Lindsay Bobby and Timmy longtime longtime

27:38

who is Alex Edelman he

27:42

is halfway to an e thought I figure

27:44

we got a note about him crunch crunch me

27:46

at home oh and

27:49

the Emmy goes to Alex

27:54

Edelman This

28:01

is the first Emmy win and

28:03

nomination for Alex Edelman. You must do

28:05

my own thing, Andrew! Whoo!

28:18

Okay, hi, Steve. Um,

28:21

okay, um, thank

28:23

you so much for this. Uh, this is...oh, God,

28:25

you're crying in front of Carol Burnett. Fantastic. All

28:28

right. What's cool about these

28:30

variety specials is that it now includes

28:32

stand-up comedy and theater stuff that's transferred.

28:35

And now that stand-up comedy that is now kind

28:37

of like storytelling, Mike Prabiglia style, The Moth style

28:39

is now more popular. A lot of these shows

28:41

are like either going to Broadway or going to

28:43

Broadway and getting like picked up

28:45

as specials, and then they get nominated for

28:48

Emmys because they're technically on television, like, televised

28:50

or whatever. That rocks. Like, in

28:52

this category, you literally had Alex

28:54

Edelman with Just For Us. You had Jacqueline Novak,

28:56

which was one of the best shows I've seen

28:59

in a long time. And you had John Early,

29:01

whose show also fucking rocked, was on HBO. And

29:03

Declan's was on Netflix. So it's like, that's

29:05

really cool. Like, that, to me, is awesome.

29:07

I mean, who is Alex Edelman? That's what's kind

29:10

of crazy. He's just like a comedian guy. He's

29:12

Hannah Einbinder's ex. That's also

29:14

crazy. He's Lorraine Newman's daughter's ex. He

29:17

literally dated Hannah Einbinder for a long

29:19

time. And if you're wondering, I thought

29:21

she was queer. She is. Yeah,

29:23

she's queer. You could be queer and date Alex Edelman,

29:25

please. You definitely can't. You

29:27

definitely can't. You could be queer and date

29:29

Alex Edelman, I'm sorry. This show was good. I liked

29:31

his show. I have a high bar to,

29:34

like, watch comedy specials. Like, I really need to be locked in,

29:36

and I need to be a fan of the person. I

29:38

saw it off Broadway. I saw it live. I think that's,

29:40

for me, the kind of, you know, the big

29:42

bit. Because I liked, I already, well, you had pressed

29:44

me on Jacqueline Novak for so long, and I was

29:46

familiar with her, and I like her. Love that. It's

29:49

giving kind of like, what's their face? Hannah

29:51

Gatsby. Where's Hannah Gatsby? Where are

29:53

you? Where is Hannah Gatsby? We haven't

29:55

heard from Hannah Gatsby in a while. Remember when the

29:57

name on everybody's lips was Hannah Gatsby? Truly. on

30:00

everybody's lips was Hannah Gatsby.

30:03

I'm sorry, I just went to Hannah Gatsby's, hold

30:06

on, I went to their Instagram. They're

30:08

doing stuff, aren't they? No, their username

30:10

is Hannah underscore Gatsby. Sure.

30:13

And then the bio says, Dr. Hannah Gatsby,

30:15

where have I been? Okay, so

30:17

they got their literal medical degree while we

30:19

were like, where's Hannah Gatsby? Doctor of what?

30:22

Why did they get a doctor in it? I mean, whatever, if

30:24

I had an honorary doctorate, I'd ask everyone to call me doctor.

30:26

So I allow you to do this Hannah

30:28

Gatsby. So there really is nothing else to know

30:30

about Alex Edelman. It's funny, because a lot of

30:32

the things I know about him are from the

30:34

special, like from the show. So it's like, if

30:37

you watched it, you learn, his brother is a

30:39

bobsled Olympian. If you watch it, you learn, you

30:41

know, he's from Boston. Like those are

30:43

the things, you learn all these things about him.

30:45

One time I saw him at a party. Like

30:47

there's nothing else to know, it's kind of boring.

30:50

Me leaving Alex Edelman on

30:52

Broadway. Wow, I can't believe he's from

30:54

Boston. Can

30:57

you believe he's from Boston? He's

30:59

from Boston, and I saw him at a party. Who

31:02

is Nava Mal? That

31:04

might not be how you say her name,

31:06

but I don't know. But

31:09

who is that? Please tell me. Aviat

31:13

Yungen, hi-hi. You watched

31:15

Baby Reindeer, right? I did, yeah, I did, I did.

31:18

And so Nava Mal is the- She's

31:20

good in it. She's dating Baby

31:23

Reindeer. Wait, in the show? While he's

31:25

getting stalked, yeah, in the show. In the show,

31:27

he- Because this is a show I kind of

31:29

can't bring myself to watch. It's hard to watch.

31:31

The show he's getting stalked, that is a very,

31:34

but part of it is his own identity

31:36

because he also experienced

31:38

sexual assault, so he's also kind of figuring

31:40

out how he exists in the world and

31:42

what his sexual expression is

31:44

and whatever. And so it's like he's dating

31:46

a trans woman, and a lot of it

31:49

is his shame, his own shame, and reflecting

31:51

it on her, essentially. And she's like, I don't have

31:53

shame. I am not letting you- Why are you making

31:55

me feel uncomfortable? Totally. So I feel like a

31:57

lot of people talk about this show and they just talk about the

31:59

stock. aspect. And yes, that actress is really good. And

32:01

she did win an Emmy, the woman who played the

32:03

stalker. She was very good. But like, the

32:06

there's like, there's like B plots that

32:08

are also kind of like compelling and

32:10

interesting and different. And it's like, that's

32:13

usually not the conversation. So I'm glad that she

32:15

was nominated because it did make it did make

32:17

her character like, more important on

32:19

the show kind of in retrospect. Well, I'm

32:22

glad that you said that because I was feeling

32:24

the same thing. Because I was

32:26

like, wait, I thought this whole thing

32:28

was about a scary stalker. And like, it's a level

32:30

of darkness I didn't want to watch. And

32:33

I didn't know that there was like all this other

32:35

shit going on. And like, I didn't

32:37

know about the novel Mal character. And I was like, okay,

32:39

maybe I will watch baby reindeer. Yeah, I watched it because

32:41

I really wanted to see and I'm not seeing it. I

32:43

don't know where how to see it. But I want to

32:46

see his his one man show that what inspired it because

32:48

like, this was another kind of God

32:50

what's her face freaking jumpsuit lady. Wait,

32:53

what? Fleabag,

32:56

what's her name again? Oh, Phoebe Waller

32:58

bridges. Okay. In my mind, it's

33:00

like that jumpsuit. Okay. Yeah. That

33:02

show that I that her show that

33:04

inspired inspired Fleabag. I got

33:07

the chance to see live

33:09

like, randomly was very

33:11

lucky and like, or the show show. Yeah.

33:14

And like, loved the kind

33:16

of seeing the like adaptation of the show into a show.

33:18

So it's like, okay, cool. I want to like watch this

33:20

because I want to go back and like see a show

33:22

and like see how they did it and like what what

33:24

came from where and like how because that the

33:27

TV shows are good. But the but kind of

33:29

the one man aspect of telling a story that

33:31

is so rich and good that it ends up

33:33

being able to be made into a show is

33:35

so much more to me like impressive.

33:38

I've also never watched Fleabag. You know

33:40

this. It's fine. Let's just like, let's

33:43

just not that to me is like

33:45

even crazier than the bear. Like Fleabag rocks.

33:47

My TV consumption has been so wonky my

33:49

whole life, but especially lately. Like I know

33:51

I watched all of a perfect couple of

33:54

over two days. I was sick, but the

33:56

dumbest shit I've ever seen in my entire

33:58

fucking life. And I watched six episodes. Do

34:00

you wanna know who did it? No, actually I'm gonna make it a Patreon

34:02

thing tomorrow. I actually have a game plan. Okay, let's talk about it tomorrow. Cause

34:04

I do know who did it cause I watched one episode, said I will not be

34:07

watching this and I looked it up. So fucking funny. So

34:09

fucking stupid. Okay. So okay, but I'm

34:12

saying Fleabag is so good. Nava Mal

34:14

was nominated alongside Jessica Gunning, also from

34:16

Baby Reindeer. She won. Then Dakota Fanning

34:18

was there. His speech was so

34:20

good cause he was like, it's so crazy

34:22

that this show like even got here. And

34:24

it's like, that's true. It is crazy, considering.

34:26

They are all so random. The show

34:29

is random. Like Nava Mal, her biggest

34:31

thing before this was being

34:33

on Generation, which was that HBO flop.

34:36

I know, it really was. I wanted to

34:38

like that. But she's like not a them

34:40

by any means. So she's like working her

34:42

way through the industry and

34:44

is acting and stuff. She's producing and

34:47

stuff. She's like doing like production assistance

34:49

on stuff. Well,

34:51

what's cool is that she was a production fellow on

34:53

Disclosure, which was that big documentary about

34:55

trans people being more in media. And

34:58

she's from San Antonio, which I love. Has

35:00

sort of been like chugging along in

35:04

Hollywood for over a decade.

35:07

I was crying when I was reading this profile

35:09

of her in Elle cause it was like

35:11

after completing work on a few short films,

35:13

Mal was couch surfing in Los Angeles when

35:15

she received a suspicious DM on Instagram from

35:17

a random account offering her an audition. The

35:19

message included a typo. So she figured it

35:22

was spam, but like many hungry actresses, she

35:24

was eager enough for a lead that she

35:26

sent over her email address and

35:28

as it turns out the message was more than

35:30

legitimate. It was an offer to audition for the

35:32

HBO Maxo Generation. And I was like, that says

35:34

a lot about Generation and why that show didn't

35:37

last as long as it did. Who

35:39

was the creator? I felt like that that show I

35:41

got really excited about and then it was bad and I

35:43

was so upset. It was

35:45

the Nepo show member, father, daughter,

35:47

duo, Zelda and Daniel. Yes, Zelda

35:50

Barnes and Daniel Barnes. Oh,

35:52

it wasn't Justice Smith in it. And we were

35:54

like, we stand Justice Smith cause of Detective Pikachu.

35:57

Daniel Barnes was like a show runner or like a

35:59

TV writer. directed that movie Cake with Jennifer Amiston, which

36:01

people thought would give her Oscar, but

36:03

then everyone was like, what are you talking about this movie, Seth? She was like,

36:05

I'm ugly. Yeah. Generation

36:08

comes out. He co-created it

36:11

with his daughter. Do you remember this? We

36:13

talked about this in 2021. No, truly. Because

36:15

people did think this was gonna be a thing. And also this was like post-Euphoria. This

36:19

was like a euphoria. And they brought up, it was like they

36:21

were trying to do a new euphoria because

36:23

they brought in Martha Plimpton. They always are. They

36:26

had Timmy's Fave, Chase, Sweet Wonders was there. Of

36:29

course. But Nava Mal was one of

36:31

the leads of the show, along with

36:34

Justice Smith. To go back to the conversation that we

36:36

started with, which was does winning an Emmy make you

36:38

a them? No. No.

36:41

But obviously what it does is make Nava Mal a

36:43

them to everyone in the fucking- Gets you cast in

36:45

the new season. Just the nomination. And she didn't win.

36:47

Of you, one episode of the new season of you.

36:49

No, I think obviously she was in

36:52

this episode before she won this Emmy, but she taped

36:54

it. And now that I know that she's in

36:56

it, I'm actually intrigued to watch Baby Reindeer. So, yay.

36:59

They'll never watch Fleabag

37:02

or the bear, but you will watch Baby Reindeer. I- Whatever.

37:05

Let's just move on. Hi, Who

37:07

Weekly. Long

37:10

time. I'm Dawn

37:12

of Time. Charlie

37:16

Puth is married. A

37:18

few questions here. Is Charlie

37:20

Puth, who

37:22

are them? I saw the pictures and

37:25

I didn't even know that that's what he looked like.

37:28

I'm thinking who. And then

37:30

second question, who's his wife? Is

37:33

she anyone of note? Hey,

37:37

love you guys. Bye. Listen, we've

37:39

talked about Charlie Puth's new

37:42

wife, Brooke Sansom, AKA Brooke Puth.

37:45

Say- I can't believe she's Brooke

37:47

Puth now. Brooke Puth. There's something kind

37:49

of, the way that we're so used

37:51

to Charlie Puth's name being Charlie Puth,

37:53

that a new person's name being Puth,

37:56

it reminds you of how crazy

37:58

his name is. Brooke Puth. Brooke

38:01

Puth, Mrs. Puth. Miss

38:03

Puth? Miss Puth? That's Mrs.

38:05

Puth to you. That's Mrs. Brooke Puth to

38:07

you. They got married shockingly

38:10

in Montecito at his family house.

38:13

His house, yeah. And what's cute

38:15

about them, but also makes it just kind of boring,

38:18

is that they've known each other for a long time. Their whole

38:20

lives, basically. We talked about her.

38:23

I guess they were friends for a long time. Then

38:25

one day it was like, oh, damn, we should date.

38:27

And then they dated. And then they got engaged. And

38:29

now they're married. And they're both from New Jersey. And

38:31

literally that's it. It's like, it's

38:33

so boring. Like, she's beautiful. She's

38:36

kind of model-y. Again, not really sure what

38:38

her job is. Didn't someone pull

38:40

up her LinkedIn? We found her LinkedIn. She's a digital marketer

38:42

and PR coordinator at Butter and Aginters. Or she was at

38:44

one point. She was.

38:46

Maybe she doesn't have to work anymore, just to guess. But

38:49

like, there is like a funny old

38:51

tweet of her dad being like, my friend's son Charlie

38:53

Puth on the red carpet at the Grammys. Very cool

38:55

stuff. And then they were like, oh, I'm a great

38:57

kid. This was in

39:00

2014. So it's like, it is kind of like, oh, we went on

39:02

vacation together so many years.

39:05

And these kids were always like fated to get together. And

39:08

they just like kind of never did. They're

39:10

very much the stuff of romance novels. But they got

39:12

married. It was in Vogue. What I

39:14

loved about the Vogue piece was it was all her talking. Like,

39:16

even though she's clearly the not kind of like,

39:19

she's great, but she's not Charlie

39:21

Puth. Yeah, of course. The reason why it's

39:23

newsworthy. You are. It's Charlie Puth.

39:25

It's just like her, her voice, her

39:27

interview, whatever. So I thought

39:29

that was kind of interesting. It's very

39:32

like, how do I know I'm going to be

39:34

like, it's the bride's wedding. She planned it. Yeah.

39:37

I went to her Instagram and I found involved.

39:39

Do you see that thing on the cat on

39:41

the screenshot that we have that says like her

39:43

bio is just another Instagram account at the closet

39:45

next door. I was like, oh, is this her

39:47

business? But it's just

39:49

like, what is it? Well, she rebranded her

39:51

Instagram to Puth Brooke. Yeah,

39:54

it's Puth Brooke. It's weird.

39:57

It's just like a basically outfit in

39:59

spout. it's sort of like a mood board

40:01

for like outfits you can put together, like, here's

40:04

like well curated outfits. And then she links out

40:06

to where all these things are. But it's like,

40:08

are you making money on this? I don't know.

40:10

Anyway, he's off the market. Love

40:13

him. He's hungies no more. He's

40:15

been satiated. I saw a viral

40:17

tweet of someone retweeting Charlie Puth, like a

40:20

wedding announcement from Pop Quave or something. And

40:23

they added, they quote tweeted

40:25

with the iconic screenshot

40:27

of Britney Spears finding out that

40:29

Ryan Seacrest isn't gay. And I

40:31

was like, no. I

40:34

was like, where have you been? No, Charlie Puth is not gay.

40:36

No. And I'm the first person

40:38

to call someone gay. You really are. Yeah,

40:41

he does not give that energy. No, not

40:43

at all. He's a soft

40:45

boy for sure. But he

40:48

gives, oh, my wife. He really does.

40:50

Like he does. No,

40:52

totally. My girl. No,

40:54

he is being so nice to you at a party, but then

40:56

being like, my girlfriend, I've dated for 25 years. And

40:58

you're like, oh, what? You

41:02

know? And you're like, oh, OK, then. Yeah, you

41:04

meet him at a party. And you're like, is this going

41:06

somewhere? And it absolutely is not. And then you're like, well,

41:08

of course, am I a fucking idiot? Of course, I wasn't

41:10

going anywhere. It's Charlie fucking Puth. Right.

41:13

No, it's of course. And you're like, where's Brooke Sansom

41:15

tonight? And he's like, you mean Mrs. Puth. And

41:17

I'm like, OK. Oh, Brooke, who's my wife? Where's

41:19

Mrs. Puth? Brooke Puth, my

41:21

wife. Can we? Hi,

41:24

BLP. Long time, long time.

41:27

I am just calling to see if you guys can talk

41:29

about the dare. Who

41:31

is he? I feel like I have

41:33

seen him online, but I keep

41:36

seeing his suit and tie everywhere. And would

41:38

just love if you guys could talk more

41:40

about him. I think he's reached two of

41:42

them now. So just

41:45

don't want to Google. I'd rather hear

41:47

you guys talk about him. But anyway,

41:50

Tim Tebow lesbian, crunch, crunch. Bye.

41:52

I want to really, very much

41:54

lived through, Bobby did too, the

41:56

kind of indie sleaze era as

41:59

almost. I was like a 18 to 24 year old person, which

42:04

is kind of like the ideal age. And I went

42:06

to NYU, that wasn't really my, I wasn't that cool,

42:08

but I'm saying like, all

42:10

the bands and all the vibe and

42:12

like the skinny, the skinniness and the

42:14

small, the little tie and like all

42:16

that, it is wild to see like

42:18

this pastiche back in action

42:21

from someone that is so

42:23

like, that's cool

42:25

again, basically. That's cool. And without

42:27

irony, it doesn't have as much irony

42:29

as you would think. I think that's kind of like what

42:32

makes it. That's what makes it tolerable. And

42:34

he's getting the right like name checks

42:36

and like shout outs from people who are

42:38

cool, like Charlie, who are seeing it as

42:41

like, not embarrassing and seeing it

42:43

as like a full circle and being like, it's just

42:45

people having fun and like people just want music. They

42:47

can have fun too and dance too and like rave

42:49

too. And this is like what this is. Cause this

42:51

guy essentially like was in

42:53

a kind of, Bad band.

42:57

He went to Lewis and Clark and started a

42:59

band called Turtleneck. And if you listen to their

43:01

music, you're like, oh, this is so funny because

43:04

this is what the music that he like kind of really wants

43:06

to make, but like no one wants to hear this. And there's so

43:08

many bands like this. And then as a

43:10

joke, he like wrote a silly song and

43:12

then was like, oh, I have a persona.

43:14

Oh, now my persona is the dare where

43:16

I like wear sunglasses and a suit.

43:18

And a black suit with a skinny black tie.

43:20

And every song sounds kind of like the

43:23

same, but if you see it live, it's

43:25

hype. Yeah. Not

43:27

that I have, I've seen him live, but I will

43:30

say a friend of ours whose music tastes I trust

43:32

so much and works in the industry about it a

43:34

year or two ago, it was the night that I

43:36

saw Titanic. I asked her like, who are the artists

43:38

that you're excited about? And she was like, oh, the

43:40

dare. And I was like, okay. Like you're, you

43:43

don't even like, oh, everybody. She was like, basically everybody wants

43:45

to sign the dare. Right. There

43:47

was a bidding where he writes about this in his, or

43:49

he spoke about this in his GQ profile. He's like, the

43:51

person says, I asked him what it was like to be

43:53

pursued by record execs. Quote, it was really crazy. Smith says

43:55

again, his name is Harrison Smith. I went to a lot

43:58

of lunches. I think I went to every single key. McNally

44:00

restaurant twice. Republic Records ended up signing

44:02

him and they released his first EP

44:04

and his first album which just came

44:06

out like last week. This guy has

44:09

been bubbling up for so long and

44:11

now the Charlie getting big and him

44:13

producing the guest remix. The guest remix.

44:16

That then had Billy, that then went number

44:18

one because of Billy, Let's Not Lie and

44:21

that is what's getting him now this new and then he

44:23

has a new album out and I think people are very

44:25

much like who the fuck is this? Fair. ["I

44:28

Like The Girls Are Too Drush"] I

44:51

was resistant to like the dare because I was

44:53

like this is so irritating to me like whatever

44:55

you're doing. Knowing that it's essentially drag and knowing

44:58

the background of like oh I was in this

45:00

band and then I did this as a gag

45:02

and now I'm kind of stuck doing it. I

45:04

was like I don't like this but

45:07

when you listen to the music it is so, like

45:09

Lindsay said, I think we are just in

45:12

the perfect sweet spot of having

45:15

like come of age when the rapture was big. So

45:18

like I listen to this and I'm like at

45:20

a very cool party when I'm 19 years old.

45:23

Like in a co-op building in West Campus. I

45:25

can't hate it because it makes me feel young

45:27

or something. It does. It makes

45:29

me think of like the bands that I loved

45:31

in college and like loved them so like unironically

45:33

and I'm just kind of like cool. I'm glad

45:35

that like early is good to have that experience

45:37

too or something. You know like that's

45:39

fine. Like I don't need to go to the party where

45:41

this is playing but I'm like you're probably having fun. It's

45:44

like we still live in New York. I can't be mad

45:46

at this. Like I still live here. It's like I didn't

45:48

even move. Like I can't be mad. Like

45:50

it'd be one thing if I was like yeah and fuck NYU,

45:53

fuck New York, I got out of there, whatever. It's

45:55

like no I'm still like here. And

45:57

people my favorite thing in here that I didn't know until.

45:59

you or Timmy put it in here was that people

46:02

make fun of him because he sounds so much

46:04

like James Murphy of LCD Sound System. And just

46:06

LCD Sound System generally, that people call him STD

46:09

Sound System, which is a good one. It's a

46:11

good one. That's so funny that he was like

46:13

a substitute teacher in Williamsburg, like just being a

46:15

normal kind of guy. And then he like put

46:17

on a suit. He was being interviewed

46:19

by Zane Lowe. I watched his ass

46:22

interview the day, which is so annoying. But

46:24

then he was just like, yeah, for a

46:26

while he junkled both things. He was a substitute

46:28

teacher and then he would DJ. For you, what

46:31

drew you to teaching? I know we had talk

46:33

about music, but I'd love the transition you've made

46:35

from education to art. And I see a commonality

46:37

in both, obviously. Yeah, I don't know. I guess

46:39

there's just like a few teachers or professors that

46:41

I've had that were both

46:44

artists and educators and were

46:46

also just really cool. And

46:49

I always kind of looked up to them for

46:53

guidance and just as like a model

46:55

of somebody who can help

46:57

other people either through making art or

46:59

just imparting those skills on other people.

47:01

And yeah, so there's a giving to

47:04

it. Yeah, and I received that at

47:06

a young age with music and with

47:09

English literature and whatnot. How did

47:11

you receive it? My

47:13

lamp broke. I bought this lamp, this

47:15

old lamp. It was

47:17

cute. I looked at some antique shop in the neighborhood and I

47:19

was like, this is a cute lamp. But guess what? It broke.

47:22

Oh no. It was like old electronics inside it.

47:24

It just stopped working. You know where I got a new

47:27

lamp for my nightstand? From Wayfair. Amazing.

47:31

Wayfair has folding tables, long games, coolers,

47:33

grills, but also great things to make

47:35

your home a little warmer, a little

47:37

cozier when you start having people over

47:39

indoors. So when someone's

47:41

like, where am I gonna get this new table for

47:43

entertaining? Oh, where am I gonna get a nice chair

47:46

I can put outside that'll like survive in the elements?

47:48

Wayfair. I'm like, just go to Wayfair, okay? Oh yeah.

47:50

And I'm using Wayfair to kind of get inspired too because I'm

47:53

just typing in like cool chair and I'm

47:55

like scrolling, scrolling, being like, that's a cool chair. Okay,

47:57

that's a cool chair. And then it's leading me to

47:59

other cool chairs, you know? Yes. Wayfair

48:01

is the go-to destination for everything tailgating, no

48:03

matter your style or budget, from fan headquarters

48:05

to the fortress of the Grill Master. Make

48:07

your space truly yours. You can get grills,

48:10

patio furniture, cornhole sets, and more go-tos for

48:12

game day. And if you don't really deal

48:14

with game days like myself, you can just

48:16

get a really nice lamp or a nightstand.

48:18

Well, it depends on the game. It depends

48:20

on the game. What game are we talking

48:22

here? Yeah, exactly. So pick

48:25

your all-star lineup of tailgating

48:27

essentials at wayfair.com or get

48:29

the Wayfair mobile app. That's

48:31

wayfair.com. Wayfair. Every style. Every

48:34

home. Vet

48:36

bills can be expensive, but spot pet insurance can

48:38

give you up to 90% cash back on vet

48:40

bills, so you

48:42

can worry less about high vet bills.

48:44

Yep, up to 90% cash back on

48:46

vet bills for unexpected accidents, illness,

48:48

and even routine care. And with spot pet insurance plans,

48:51

you can go to any vet you want in the

48:53

U.S. or Canada. There's no

48:55

network you need to stick to, so

48:57

visit your favorite vet. And you can

49:00

save money on expensive vet bills. That's

49:02

spot pet insurance. It's no wonder spot

49:04

is America's favorite pet insurance. Visit spotpet.com

49:07

for a free quote today. For all

49:09

terms, visit spotpetins.com/sample-desh policy. Spot pet insurance

49:11

plans are underwritten by either Independence American

49:13

Insurance Company or United States Fire Insurance

49:16

Company and produce spot pet insurance services

49:18

LLC. This is an independent ad from

49:20

spot pet insurance services LLC. Rakuten

49:24

is the smartest way to save money when you

49:26

shop, because you can earn cash back at over

49:28

3,500 stores. We're

49:31

talking fashion. We're talking beauty. We're

49:33

talking electronics, home essentials, travel, dining,

49:36

concert tickets, and more. When

49:38

I bought some new socks on Nike, I didn't

49:41

have a code. I bought some new socks. Yeah,

49:43

they had a sale. What kind of socks? Like

49:45

high or low? Ankle,

49:47

because they're for the gym. Oh, they're low socks.

49:49

Okay, interesting. I know that the high socks are

49:51

very trendy, but I always feel like I look

49:54

like a total freak show when they're high. I'm

49:56

not sure that's true. I think

49:58

low socks are almost worse. Because they really define

50:01

you as a millennial. Oh my god. But

50:03

at least you saved money on them. At

50:07

least you saved money on them. That's all that matters.

50:10

It's totally true. Because with Rakuten,

50:12

your favorite stores, like as I said,

50:14

Nike, Adidas, Zappos, buy some new Birkenstocks

50:16

for the summer. They pay

50:18

Rakuten to send them shoppers and then Rakuten

50:20

passes on a part of that payment to

50:22

its members as cashback. The cashback is deposited

50:24

directly into your PayPal account or Rakuten will

50:26

just send you a check. You

50:28

can even maximize your savings by stacking cashback on

50:30

top of other deals like store sales and coupons,

50:32

which is what I did. If you're already shopping

50:35

at your favorite stores, why not save while you're

50:37

doing it? It's a no-brainer. Membership is free. It's

50:39

easy to sign up. Any generation can get the

50:41

Rakuten app now and join the 17 million members

50:43

who are already saving. High sock,

50:46

low sock, whatever kind of sock. No show sock. Cashback

50:49

rates change daily. See rakuten.com for

50:51

details. That's R-A-K-U-T-E-N. Your

50:53

cashback really adds up. I

50:57

want to be famous. Hi,

50:59

who did Diana Agron go to Greece

51:02

with since he's a lesbian?

51:04

I love this call because you can hear someone laughing behind them.

51:08

You know who she went to Greece with if

51:10

you're asking us this question. Diana

51:13

Agron, by the way. We found it. It's

51:16

Agron. Diana Agron, who is kind of a star of one of

51:19

my live pieces. Let's answer the question before

51:21

we get into the Agron. Thank

51:23

God Diana Agron Upstates continues their

51:25

journey on Instagram because they are

51:27

Brazilian so they were kind of

51:29

kicked off Twitter, but they

51:31

are going strong on Instagram. So I need to

51:34

make that kind of public announcement because I think

51:36

they're kind of like, everyone, I'm still here. I'm

51:38

still doing the work. I would

51:40

argue they're going stronger on Instagram. I'm

51:43

seeing their content more and more on

51:45

our Instagram. Are you? Well,

51:47

I follow them. Diana Agron went viral. That's what this

51:49

is kind of about. Let's forget

51:51

about the Greece thing for a second. She went

51:54

viral because she did this event for completed

51:56

works for London Fashion Week. Again, don't know

51:58

what any of those words mean. I mean like. It's

52:01

a jewelry brand. Great.

52:03

And so she did this interview with them. It's like sustainable jewelry.

52:05

It says their website. Yeah. Hi, I'm Diana

52:08

Agron. And you're here with Grazia in

52:10

Gordon Square in London on a beautiful,

52:13

sunny, and warm day we're having.

52:15

So warm. Here with completed works. Sort

52:18

of a powerful one. But if you had

52:20

a warning sign, what would it say? Caution,

52:24

pleasure seeker. And

52:28

people were like, first of all, I didn't know how many.

52:30

I didn't know this many people knew what Diana Agron was

52:32

supposed to sound like, basically, which is funny. It's

52:34

like you tweeting this and being like, what is this

52:36

accent? Is the kind of assumption that you knew what

52:39

she's supposed to sound like, which like, I don't know

52:41

what she's supposed to sound like. I haven't heard this

52:43

woman speaking forever. She's barely anything. That's the whole journey

52:45

of her. She's always like not doing stuff. And that's

52:48

Diana Agron's number one problem with Diana

52:50

Agron. She's not in anything. Diana Agron,

52:52

you're saying Diana Agron updates main problem

52:54

with Diana Agron is that she's always

52:57

unemployed. In Gordon Square in London on

52:59

a beautiful sunny and

53:01

warm day we're having here

53:03

with completed works. Yeah, it's giving I absolutely

53:06

loathe hydrangeas. Yeah. Do you hear when I

53:08

was in Toronto, I found

53:10

their cadence very catchy. And I

53:13

found myself doing it. Oh, the Canadian

53:15

cadence? Yeah. Just the kind of way

53:17

that a lot of Canadians speak, I found

53:19

very alluring. And I kind of like would

53:21

hear myself speaking that way back to them

53:23

and being like, whoa. She's

53:26

from Savannah, Georgia, by the way.

53:28

She's from a place with a

53:30

very famous and obvious accent.

53:33

But she lost that accent long ago, I'm sure.

53:35

I'm sure she's kind of a neutral accent. I'm

53:37

just saying she's from a place that has an

53:40

accent, that has a notable American accent, like deep

53:42

south Savannah, Georgia. Sure, sure, sure. So who

53:44

was Diana Agron in Greece with? I don't

53:46

really know. But if you go through Diana

53:48

Agron updates, it's like

53:50

everyone. Chloe Wise, Fotis Evans,

53:53

Hedy Stanton. Camille Charyar. You

53:56

know who was in Greece with Diana Agron, which I

53:58

love, Maggie Rogers. I'm like, these two are friends. Okay,

54:00

because you know, Dinah Agrón's thing is that she also sings.

54:02

So she's like, I'm a singer. Well, she used to sing at the

54:04

Cafe Carla. I remember that we've talked about this before. You know,

54:06

she dated Mumford and Sons guy or was married to her.

54:08

Are they divorced now? Did she divorce Mumford and Sons? They're

54:10

divorced. Yeah. She did because he went crazy. Yeah. They

54:13

divorced like right at the beginning of the pandemic. Great caption

54:15

here. Did you see this last caption? Always in

54:17

Greece and never beating the allegations that she kept Mumford

54:19

and Sons on the divorce. Dinah Agrón, partying

54:22

with friends recently. But who is she with? The

54:24

easiest answer to your question is that she's

54:26

with a bunch of influencers. Right. Like she's

54:28

with a bunch of people whose job it's

54:30

also whose job it is also to

54:33

go around the world and party with friends.

54:36

You know, like Dinah Agrón is making money

54:38

during these travels. Like don't forget that part.

54:40

But what I like about following up with her,

54:42

like kind of keeping in touch with her through

54:44

Dinah Agrón updates is you're also getting updates or

54:47

I'm also getting updates from them about Twitter and

54:49

Brazil. So they posted Twitter changed its server in

54:51

Brazil so they can escape

54:53

from the ban. So everyone has access right now.

54:55

But TBH is not worth getting back because

54:57

the timeline ain't really working. You can't see any

55:00

images or videos. Also, because Leon Musk is a

55:02

piece of shit. So hope this backfires and he

55:04

gets sued again. So it's like, if you're wondering

55:06

what's the update on that, it's not

55:09

going well. Like people are finding ways around

55:11

it. They're still figuring out how

55:13

do you ban Twitter in an entire country, whatever.

55:15

I mean, I guess China has figured out how

55:18

to ban internet stuff before. It's not the first time,

55:20

but like it's messy. So you're going

55:22

to see some stuff. You're going to not see

55:24

some stuff. But Dinah Agrón updates is not back

55:26

on Twitter. They're saying like, this is bullshit. And

55:29

I'm not leaving. And then they posted this on

55:32

top of that. They posted texts. They wrote also because

55:34

we have nothing else to post. Dinah left London is

55:36

back to wherever she's hiding. We're not getting anything before

55:38

next week. So they're like, don't worry.

55:40

You're not missing anything from us. Our

55:43

girly is still giving unemployed. I

55:46

love them. I love them so much.

55:48

Let's play a couple more calls. Hi,

55:51

Lindsey Bobby, to me. Medium

55:53

time, medium time. I'm just calling because

55:55

my sister and I were chatting about

55:58

peace. and the

56:00

Tooth Fairy, and she brought

56:03

up the idea of your two

56:05

front teeth being the most famous

56:08

teeth because there's a song about

56:10

them, and I was wondering if

56:12

you could rank from who

56:14

to them the different teeth.

56:18

I guess your front teeth would be the

56:20

most famous, but I feel like wisdom teeth

56:22

are also pretty famous,

56:26

and so would be your molars, maybe your

56:29

canines. I don't know, I would love

56:31

to hear your input. Thanks so much. Bye.

56:34

We're ranking teeth. We're ranking teeth.

56:36

Okay, there are four, okay, I had to look up how many

56:38

types of teeth there were. There are

56:40

32 teeth, and the teeth

56:42

may be divided into four categories.

56:45

We've got incisors, canines, premolars, molars,

56:47

and a wisdom. Yeah, I just added

56:49

wisdom because I think wisdom are actually

56:51

technically molars. Wisdom are molars? Okay,

56:54

so can we see molars slash wisdom? They

56:56

are technically molars, but let's call them

56:58

wisdom because I think they are so

57:01

iconic. I do think that they're

57:03

the most themmy tooth because wisdom teeth are kind of

57:05

just like the teeth that we're talking about that

57:08

are causing us the most drama. I agree.

57:11

They're the most themmy. If you have to deal with your teeth, you do

57:13

have to deal with lots of your teeth at all points, but the main

57:15

teeth you'd ever have to deal with if you had no teeth issues in

57:18

your whole life, you'd still have to deal with your wisdoms, which

57:20

are your molars. I think molars is the themiest.

57:22

I think the whoiest is premolars because I never

57:24

think about those. What are those though? I don't

57:26

even know. I get it. I get

57:28

it grammatically, but I don't really... Between the

57:30

canines and the molars. I'm going to have to ask

57:32

Dr. Dan next time I see him. Oh, Dr. Dan. Molars

57:35

are. After wisdom, are we going molars? No,

57:37

no, they're the same. They're the same. Wisdom

57:40

slash molars. Well, wisdom slash molars, but I think if

57:42

we're going to separate them, I think it's actually a

57:44

wisdom. We're not though because they're the same

57:46

category. But a molar isn't a wisdom, even though

57:48

a wisdom is a molar. It's like a square and a rectangle. Wisdoms

57:51

are molars, but molars aren't wisdoms, which is why I think we just

57:53

have to make maybe one... One

57:56

bullet point A is molars. Okay,

57:58

that's fine, but to me they're wisdom slash molars. because

58:00

we're not, you know, if wisdom teeth are molars, then

58:02

they're the same category to me. Well, that's the

58:04

problem. Wisdom teeth are molars, but molars aren't

58:06

necessarily wisdom teeth. That's fine with me. Molars

58:09

are up there with thems too. After

58:11

that, do we do incisors or canines? I

58:13

think canines are way themier than

58:15

incisors. Really? Yeah. I

58:18

always think about incisors because they're the right, they're the

58:20

front, they're the sharp ones. Yeah, but I

58:22

think about canines because people are always getting their

58:25

canines fucked up or sharpened or my canines, they're

58:27

like, there's always something. That's tough. Because the two

58:29

front teeth are incisors. Like when people say the

58:31

two front teeth. No, I do know

58:33

that, but I'm just saying, I feel like canines are more

58:36

in the conversation. If

58:38

the incisors were called front two front teeth,

58:41

do you think they'd be themier? Like if it was

58:43

two front teeth versus canines or incisors versus canines. I

58:45

mean, I guess if you're seeing any teeth, you're seeing

58:48

your two front teeth and then that way they're really

58:50

front and center in terms of like somebody's teeth health.

58:52

If you're like, oh, you have nice teeth, you're gonna

58:54

see the front teeth first. Let's just

58:56

do canines. Canines,

58:58

incisors, premolars.

59:01

Canines barely edge them out. They

59:03

are the sharp ones. They're the sharp ones. They

59:05

help you really like get a bite. Incisors

59:07

are kind of deceptive because you think they're

59:10

helping you, but they're kind of there for

59:12

you to knock out. They're dangerous. My

59:15

incisors what cracked, you know? Yeah,

59:17

I also have a chip on my incisor. I have a chipped incisor that I

59:20

had to put a fake tooth on and now I can't even bite

59:22

into an apple. I haven't been able to for years because they're like,

59:24

it might pop off. Well, they're always like, And

59:26

you can. I have an apple that's gonna pop off. And I

59:28

was like, well, damn it. I also have a chip and

59:30

it's not big enough to get replaced. I fell after drinking

59:32

too many margaritas on a curb. Oh my God. I

59:36

think I was on the way somewhere where you were. I

59:38

didn't, wait, when? Was this a long time ago? Yeah.

59:41

And it's got a little chip. And then like, I kind of

59:43

realized that I was in denial and then I went to the

59:45

desk and they were like, you know, you chipped your tooth. And

59:47

I was like, what? When did

59:49

that happen? I knew exactly when it happened. Mine

59:51

was, I- But it's kind of dulled down.

59:53

I fell in front of my apartment after like

59:56

meeting up with our dentist friend. And then

59:58

I got home and I was like, like, damn,

1:00:00

can you fit me in tomorrow? Didn't you go?

1:00:02

Right, you went right to him, and he had

1:00:04

to accept. He was like, LOL, just come in

1:00:06

tomorrow. He fit me in. That's why it's good

1:00:08

to have a dentist, right? I know. OK, so

1:00:10

wisdom slash molars, canines, incisors, premolars. Great.

1:00:13

Sure. You know what we should do? Why

1:00:15

don't you text this to Dan? Oh, I'll text him. I'll ask

1:00:17

him next time I see him. Actually, I think I'm going to

1:00:19

the dentist in like a week or so. Oh, good. So maybe

1:00:21

I'll bring this up. Don't be scared. I've

1:00:24

done this before. Show

1:00:27

me your teeth. Show

1:00:31

me your teeth. Show

1:00:37

me your teeth. Shout out to

1:00:39

More Famous Birthdays, our game that a wonderful

1:00:41

hooligan turned into an actual game that you

1:00:44

can play online. What's the URL for that?

1:00:46

We'll link it in the show notes. OK,

1:00:48

great. And what we're going to do is play

1:00:50

the game next week. Next week, for sure. So

1:00:53

everyone who hates that game, tune

1:00:56

in for that. With that, we can end.

1:00:58

Thank you for listening to another episode of Who's There. Thank

1:01:00

you for suffering through my cold voice. It's

1:01:02

not cold, but it's just cold. Future Lindsay here

1:01:04

once again. And I'm just going to have to

1:01:06

repeat myself. It's

1:01:08

not just a cold. Feel

1:01:11

better, Bobby. Support us on patreon.com/WhoWeekly for bonus episodes,

1:01:13

a Discord server, commentary tracks, and more. You can

1:01:15

also get the audio only, audio only, by clicking

1:01:17

Subscribe within the Apple Podcasts app. While you're there,

1:01:19

rate and review us on Apple Podcasts. We love

1:01:21

your ratings and reviewings. Thank you to Katie and

1:01:23

Eric of The Who's for providing our Read the

1:01:26

Themes segment on Tuesdays. Thank you to Timmy, our

1:01:28

research and editorial assistant for researching and editorializing. Oh

1:01:31

my God, we'll see you Tuesday. Keep listening

1:01:33

for Cold, you're doing amazing, sweeties. Bye. Bye.

1:01:37

You will drive us. Yo, yo,

1:01:39

yo, they wanna know. Hey. Mia.

1:01:43

Hey. Mia. Come

1:01:46

on. Hey. I want to be

1:01:48

famous. Hi,

1:01:50

Bobby, Lindsay, Timmy. I

1:01:53

was walking through SoHo

1:01:55

with three of my Gen Z employees

1:01:58

yesterday. we saw Louisa

1:02:01

Gummer and obviously none of

1:02:03

them knew who she was.

1:02:06

So she's definitely still a who, but

1:02:09

I had to explain to them who she was. And

1:02:12

then this one of my direct reports was

1:02:14

like, oh, I

1:02:16

think I met Meryl Streep's nephew at my

1:02:18

gym. He was telling me the story. And

1:02:21

then I had this story

1:02:24

unlocked in my brain, which is that I went

1:02:26

to summer camp with Meryl

1:02:30

Streep's niece, this guy's sister.

1:02:33

And she stole all my friends because she

1:02:36

was boy crazy and I wasn't. And

1:02:40

I cried calling my parents all the

1:02:42

time, and they let me leave early.

1:02:45

So started on a high, this

1:02:48

story ended on a low. Crunch

1:02:50

crunch. So

1:02:52

I just learned that the

1:02:55

longest sentence written by

1:02:57

a monkey was

1:03:00

written by a monkey named Nim

1:03:02

Shimsky. The

1:03:07

sentence was, give orange me,

1:03:09

give eat orange, me eat orange,

1:03:11

give me eat orange, give

1:03:14

me you. Do we

1:03:16

think that Noam Chomsky knows

1:03:18

who Nim Shimsky is? Hey,

1:03:22

BLT, I'm listening to a week's

1:03:24

episode, and I get a text

1:03:26

from my sister-in-law. And

1:03:29

she said that she's taking

1:03:31

the kids to see Megan Trainor tonight. The

1:03:34

kids are four and six. So

1:03:38

whatever that means, I will

1:03:40

report back on how much

1:03:42

they enjoyed it. OK,

1:03:44

good for both, or crunch crunch showing

1:03:47

whole. Bye. Hi,

1:03:49

Lindsay Bobby. I am just calling

1:03:52

as your chicken salad chick correspondent

1:03:54

from the greater Nashville area. I

1:03:58

realize I've never been to a chicken salad. after

1:04:00

listening to your episodes. So I brought it

1:04:02

up to my husband, who actually had an

1:04:04

infection to one. So I think

1:04:07

that's where we go while we were

1:04:09

running errands on Saturday. We

1:04:11

did, and I don't think based on your

1:04:15

description of your meal

1:04:17

that you ate it in situ in the

1:04:19

chicken salad trick. So I do wanna let

1:04:22

you know what you were missing in

1:04:24

the bathroom. So I went to the bathroom before I

1:04:26

left, it's four signs, and this is

1:04:28

the one I want to read. If

1:04:31

your husband or boyfriend brought

1:04:33

you here today and you have a question about

1:04:35

how much he loves you, dot, dot, dot, let

1:04:38

us put it into perspective for you. There

1:04:40

are plenty of barbecue joints in the area.

1:04:43

He is sitting here amongst a sea of

1:04:45

flowers, wooden and salad. Now

1:04:47

get that broccoli out of your teeth, feel gorgeous

1:04:49

and have a great day with that rock star.

1:04:52

So I went back outside to my husband and I said, I

1:04:55

know you had no intention of going through that

1:04:57

thing before we left, but I need you to

1:04:59

do some recording on what the signs and the

1:05:02

men's rations says. And there are four signs and

1:05:04

the men's restrooms of similar tenor, but I will

1:05:06

just read this one. Gentlemen,

1:05:08

dot, dot, dot, the

1:05:11

porcelain pegs, rusty pails and washboard decor,

1:05:13

your barbecue joints, and just a bit

1:05:15

of Narfum and entity. So

1:05:17

we don't think it is too much to ask of

1:05:19

you to say the stupid names and sit in a

1:05:22

few flowers for an hour. Thank you

1:05:24

for understanding. It means a lot to us. Anyway,

1:05:27

I have the one with

1:05:29

the onions, which is problematically called the

1:05:32

glitzy kiss, but it was indeed delicious.

1:05:34

And we will be going back. Thanks

1:05:36

crunchy crunchy. I

1:05:39

also wanted to call and tell you

1:05:41

that Ann Adelvie did something similar during

1:05:44

the pandemic where if you

1:05:46

subscribe to her Patreon, and

1:05:48

she was like, what do you get if

1:05:50

you subscribe to my Patreon? You got the

1:05:52

opportunity to be able to buy like an

1:05:55

NFT or something like that. Like it was

1:05:57

like a similar type of scam.

1:06:00

It was so silly and crazy. And

1:06:04

then also, per the Helena Bonham Carter thing,

1:06:07

is there was this famous

1:06:09

Goya portrait of this woman naked.

1:06:14

And they were like, we think this might be

1:06:16

like this famous princess. And it would be so

1:06:18

crazy if Goya painted

1:06:20

this princess naked. So

1:06:23

they dug this princess up and measured

1:06:25

her bones to see if they're the

1:06:27

correct ratio. But it turns out what

1:06:29

happened was he painted the princess, but

1:06:31

he just imagined her naked. Anyway,

1:06:35

so crazy. Kind

1:06:37

of reminds me of the Helena Bonham Carter

1:06:39

thing, of like they're trying to manufacture, or

1:06:43

not manufacture, a scandal, but the painting could

1:06:45

apply a scandal. And so then

1:06:47

it kind of generates its own height,

1:06:49

like this Goya portrait. OK, crunch, crunch.

1:06:54

Hi, Lindsay and Bobby. I'm a little behind. And

1:06:56

I just heard you guys talking about laundry and

1:06:58

how much Lindsay hates it, and Bobby loves it.

1:07:01

And I have to say, I also love

1:07:03

doing laundry, because that is almost exclusively the

1:07:05

time when I listen to your

1:07:07

podcast. So I get a little

1:07:09

fun treat of hearing from weekly

1:07:11

when I get to do laundry. So that's

1:07:14

all. I'll be a T. onion. Crunch, crunch.

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features