Weekend Watchlist: Men, Emergency and Chip ’n Dale: Rescue Rangers
[Izon by Trent Walton fades in, plays alone, fades out]
MIA Hiii, welcome to Weekend Watchlist, a look at what’s screening and streaming, brought to you by Slim...
SLIM Hello!
MIA And together we’ll dig through what’s dropping this weekend, last weekend, recent trends on Letterboxd and we’ll also take a peek at our own watchlists—all under 30 minutes or your money back!
SLIM Mia, there was a lot of Twitter scuttlebutt this week, when someone allegedly uncovered Margot Robbie’s Letterboxd . Do you see this circulating online?
MIA I did see this. I felt left out because I wasn’t part of the Slack chat. What the heck? [Slim laughs]
SLIM There was a lot of tweets. I was getting at replies from random people that I don’t know about Margot’s Letterboxd , where someone allegedly—and I’m using allegedly just for legal purposes—uncovered her Letterboxd . Because there was like lists for prep for some of the movies that she’s going to be in, like Babylon and Barbie. So I did some internet sleuthing on, you know, I did some triangulating, you know, Charlie from Always Sunny in front of that big thing with the map.
MIA Pepe Silva.
SLIM Yes! [Slim laughs] And I regret to inform everyone that we do not believe that this was a real Margot Robbie . So I’m sorry to dash the dreams… and one of the clues, you know, back to my sleuthing, there was like fan-casting years ago for Margot Robbie allegedly in a Devil May Cry movie, and there was a list for like “Devil May Cry movie prep”, so I’m not sure if Margot Robbie would be prepping for fan-casting. What do you think?
MIA I don’t believe so. I do not believe so.
SLIM Margot... If that was your , Margot, call us. Come on the show. We’ll discuss it.
MIA Oooh.
SLIM This week, we’ll be covering Men, Emergency, Chip ’n Dale: Rescue Rangers and we’ll look back at our own community reviews from the last week. And of course our own watchlists.
MIA First up, we have Alex Garland’s Men—very ominous, very harrowing title, Men. Ooh, scary! The synopsis is: “In the aftermath of a personal tragedy, Harper retreats alone to the beautiful English countryside hoping to find a place to heal. But someone or something from the surrounding woods appears to be stalking her. What begins as simmering dread becomes a fully formed nightmare inhabited by her darkest memories and fears.” And this is on 58,000 watchlists.
SLIM Wooow. This is Alex Garland. Our boy.
MIA Our boy!
SLIM We’re big Alex Garland fans, aren’t we? That’s safe to say right?
MIA Yes, we are! I saw Annihilation three times in theaters. And it’s in your top four, correct?
SLIM It’s in my top four right now. So if you need any more proof, we’re not fake Garland fans. Okay? This is the real deal. So we have a new Garland in theaters. We’ve both seen it. We both have some thoughts. But how would you position, you know, this new Alex Garland movie for people that maybe are going to dip their toe into something brand new for them?
MIA So I’ll just, I’ll recap my very short little Letterboxd review which was just: “Alex Garland is in his mother! era. Make of that what you will.” And genuinely, make of that what you will—a lot of people really enjoyed mother! A lot of people really did not enjoy mother! So, you know, it depends. But my comparison to mother! comes from the fact that they’re both like very, they use religious imagery, they’re both kind of chamber-horror films. And then they all kind of have a crazy third act, which I obviously will not speak about. But yeah, I think that they’re similar in that way. Both I think polarizing, I think Men will be very polarizing.
SLIM Men are very polarizing.
MIA That’s true! In general, yeah. [Slim laughs]
SLIM I saw this last week or the week before in Philadelphia. The mother! vibes are very real. So very metaphorical, you know, read-between-the-lines in this movie. Jessie Buckley is very, very good. Visually, very gorgeous, this movie.
MI AOh, yeah. Beautiful cinematography.
SLIM This might not be a date-night movie, or it might be a date-night movie. If took your partner to see mother! [shouts] mother!
MIA [shouts] Mother at the disco! [Slim laughs]
SLIM Then maybe this is for you. So I’m excited that Alex Garland, really—I made this mental note when, you know, Annihilation came out, kind of flopped in US theaters, didn’t even go to international theaters. And that one, I guess, maybe was hard to pitch to people. So now he’s back and making an even harder movie to pitch to people in theaters. He’s like, “I don’t give enough an eff! I’m gonna make it weirder if I’m back in theaters.” So I respect that. I’m anxious to see what the world at large thinks of Men.
MIA Yes. I also want to mention that I attended a Q&A and he said that one of his inspirations for the film was Attack on Titan, the anime series.
SLIM Interesting, did not know that.
MIA Yes!
SLIM What a pick. Okay.
MIA Yes. It’s anime-inspired because of his daughter. I guess he has an anime daughter and they were watching it and he was like, “Ooh, this is gross. This has some gross body-horror stuff. I’m inspired.” So... anime fans! Check it out. [Slim laughs]
SLIM Yes, anime fans, it’s time to embrace Alex Garland. So enough about Alex Garland. Now let’s move into our next film Carey Williams, written by KD Dávila. Emergency, this is in theaters this weekend. But it’s on Amazon Prime the week after. So it’s on nearly 6,000 watchlists and the synopsis: “Ready for a night of legendary partying, three college students must weigh the pros and cons of calling the police when faced with an unexpected situation.” So we both watched this this week. This is based on their award-winning short of the same name. And it does start out as like a fun college movie, almost buddy-dramedy. Like, “Let’s go party and have some fun.” And then it, you know, this isn’t really a spoiler, but the film kicks-off with they go back to their apartment and find a young student ed out in their apartment. And, you know, they’re Black students. So do we call the cops at this point? Some of us are pretty high right now and we’re a little drunk. Like, are the cops going to believe this story that we just literally just walked in on this? And the rest of the movie unfolds from there. So I dug this movie. What did you think?
MIA Yeah, I thought it was a really, really interesting and well done interrogation of how race and college culture and, you know, the horrible history and present of Black men being falsely blamed for hurting white women. And how the police do not exist to help people. They exist to help rich, white people. And they’re bad at that, too. [Mia laughs] So yeah, it was a very effective condemnation of a lot of stuff wrong with America... to be honest.
SLIM Yeah.
MIA And then I also really enjoyed the lead performance from Donald Watkins. He really balances both the humor—there is some light humor sprinkled throughout. It’s not like an entirely difficult experience—but he’s able to balance that humor with the gravity of the situation. And I was really impressed by him.
SLIM Yeah, RJ Cyler, I enjoyed, maybe some folks might from Power Rangers, the theatrical experience a couple years ago. Mitchell, co-host of this very podcast, gave a positive review for Emergency: “Navigates its themes well, along with the transition from Superbad ‘one-wild-night’ comedy to the harsh reality of being Black in America — and the fact that no matter ‘what kind’ of Black person you are, the white supremacist systems that hold the country up are still just going to see you as Black.” So another positive review for this movie.
MIA Jack also had a review: “Hilarious, emotional, heart-poundingly thrilling, very thoughtful, utterly relevant. I dug it a lot, even if it’s a bit derivative in certain places. Whole-hearted execution elevates it during its weak spots.” Yeah, I agree!
SLIM Justin’s review calls out: “I would definitely have attended precisely zero parties in college if I had to get es for them.” So I don’t I don’t think I would have been invited any college parties if I need a .
MIA No, the es... I opted out of the Greek...
SLIM No way.
MIA System.
SLIM No need.
MIA When I was in college.
SLIM Yeah. Do we need es for our next film?
MIA Oh, no! We have another emergency! Oh, no! Ah! We better call... Chip ’n Dale: Rescue Rangers! [Slim laughs] They’re gonna rescue us with their synopsis: “Decades since their successful television series was canceled, Chip has succumbed to a life of suburban domesticity as an insurance salesman. Dale, meanwhile, has had CGI surgery and works the nostalgia convention circuit, desperate to relive his glory days. When a former castmate mysteriously disappears, Chip and Dale must repair their broken friendship and take on their Rescue Rangers detective personas once again to save their friend’s life.” It’s on 5K watchlists. And it’s directed by Akiva Schaffer of The Lonely Island fame.
SLIM Wooow, I have been kind of staying clear. This was one of those movies where I was like, “Yeah, I’ll probably fire this up on Disney+, when it comes out this weekend.” But yeah, The Lonely Island connection, I actually didn’t know ahead of time. So the director of Hot Rod, directing a Chip n’ Dale movie.
MIA One of the greatest comedies of all time, I want to say. Hot Rod is truly one of the greatest—
SLIM Yeah, I’m not going to disagree with you on that. I’m confirming your opinion with my own opinion of that film. [Slim & Mia laugh]
MIA Thank you very much.
SLIM So I think that that’s a good enough pitch for people to check this out. If you liked Hot Rod, maybe you need to fire this up on Disney+, maybe it’s time.
MIA That’s why I’m gonna see it. I trust The Lonely Island with everything, they make me laugh so much, consistently. Akiva is so funny. It also stars Andy Samberg, so we got another Lonely Island member in there—Andy and John Mulaney. I don’t know if Jorma Taccone was busy? Is he is he involved with this film? I’m a little bit worried.
SLIM That’s a really good question. That’s a real good question. Let’s ask Margot Robbie’s Letterboxd , if she has any thoughts.
MIA Yeah, she’ll know. [Mia laughs]
SLIM Last movie will spotlight this week for our dear Gemma, would be Downton Abbey: A New Era directed by Simon Curtis, written by Julian Fellowes. This is going to be in theaters. Three and a half thousand watchlists. I don’t believe either of us are big Downton Abbey heads necessarily. Is that true?
MIA I am... an American. [Slim laughs]
SLIM So you will never know anything about Downton Abbey because you are a warm-blooded American. Is that right?
MIA Yes, suddenly I’m a patriot and I can’t stand these pip-pip-cheerio... effers. No, that’s not true at all. [Mia laughs]
SLIM We’re I’m gonna get so many negative iTunes reviews based on your scandalous Downton Abbey comments.
MIA My Anglo-phobia. [Slim & Mia laugh]
SLIM So Gemma rated—not rated—she left a review for this movie rating-less and heart-less, but I know that she’s a big Downton Abbey fan. “Not sure what is more intense: John Lunn’s score or Hugh Bonneville’s perma-tan.” So Downton Abbey fans, this weekend is your time to check this film.
MIA Also, you know, if you really Paddington 2, you would every cast member and Hugh Bonneville is a Paddington 2 cast member. So...
SLIM Yeah, the Paddington mafia.
MIA If you’re a true fan...
SLIM Yeah, don’t be a fake Paddington fan.
MIA Yeah, go Downton Abbey: A New Era. [Slim laughs]
SLIM So let’s look back at last week. We have a slew of releases last week. We usually spotlight two or three things from each co-host that we want to highlight. The main thing I want to call out will be On the Count of Three seems to be very good with the Letterboxd community. 3.7 average right now on Letterboxd. So it’s cool to see some reviews coming in. I’ll spotlight one or two. KK Slider’s: “Christopher Abbott definitely kills his performance, like oh my gosh, he is going places.” So, much recommend folks check out On the Count of Three.
MIA I think the buried lead there’s that KK Slider of Animal Crossing is a Letterboxd . [Slim laughs] You know that little dog from Animal Crossing?
SLIM I’ve never played Animal Crossing, sorry. I’m an American. I don’t play Animal Crossing. [Slim & Mia laugh]
MIA Well... the little dog is named KK Slider. So I think that this should be bigger news.
SLIM Maybe Twitter will blow up with this too, just like Margot.
MIA Yeah, KK Slider.
SLIM Call us.
MIA Yeah, Christopher Abbott is also a Letterboxd darling, in the sense that I think a lot of people in Letterboxd really like him and have adopted him as one of the like, alternative-Hollywood Chrises. You know, there’s like Chris Messina, Christopher Abbott, and probably some others. But, he’s cool.
SLIM The real Chrises.
MIA The real Chrises
SLIM Phillip’s, I’ll spotlight Phillip’s review too: “The execution was not flawless (winky emoji) but there’s a lot to ire here. I look forward to Jerrod’s next film!” Yeah, Jerrod’s directorial chops are there, so super impressed with that as well.
MIA For those Zac Efron heads, Firestarter is out and sitting at a pretty 1.9 average! So... woohoo!
SLIM 1.9... That might entice people, those low-average horror movies. There’s a running joke in the 70mm Discord that I have for my other podcast, where that scene in Arrested Development, where he opens the fridge and it’s like a bag of, it says “dead doves”.
MIA Yeah, “Dead dove. Do not open.” [Mia & Slim laugh]
SLIM Yeah, and he’s like “I don’t know know what I expected.” So when people in our community watch bad movies and give it bad ratings, we just call it a “dead dove” situation. Like, what did you really expect going into that movie? But people have fun going into those bad movies. And, you know, maybe give low ratings, but it’s still fun.
MIA I have fun. I have an illness where I have to watch movies like that, where it’s about like a college professor falling in love with a college student. And I’m like, I have to watch these terrible movies that are like 1.5 and are so icky. [Slim laughs] I have that disease.
SLIM There’s no cure, by the way. There’s no cure for that.
MIA There’s no cure! You’re just gonna keep watching them being like, “This movie made me mad!” And it’s like, well yeah...
SLIM The dead-dove disease. Triple D. [Mia laughs]
MIA Yeah, I am a proud sufferer. I also want to spotlight Pleasure by Ninja Thyberg. It’s a it’s a really well done exploration of the reality and power dynamics of sex work. It’s shot and acted in like a cinéma vérité style, like it’s done very realistically and actual adult-film stars are a part of the cast. I really, I really enjoyed it. It reminded me of the Mitski lyric, “Stay soft, get eaten, only natural to harden up.” [Slim laughs]
SLIM I dug Pleasure. I’m looking forward to seeing some more reviews on my timeline on Letterboxd to see what folks think of it. Last week, The Innocents came out. Did you make time to see that or did you not see that? Because I know there was a connection there that may prevent viewing.
MIA Yes. So I... there is some cat trauma in this film. I wasn’t aware of it until I went to the press screening.
SLIM Oh no.
MIA And the industry person who was there told me, she was like, “Just so you know, there’s a very violent cat death in this movie. It’s very upsetting.” Like she told me before I went in. And I was like, “Oh my God, thank you for telling me!” I guess I just radiate cat-woman energy. [Slim & Mia laugh]
SLIM You weren’t wearing a T-shirt with Brad on the shirt that was like a clue to anyone?
MIA Covered in Brad fur—that’s my cat’s name, Brad. And I was very thankful for her warning, which was why I told you guys, like please warn people about the cat thing! It’s very upsetting.
SLIM There’s a list too, isn’t there? There’s like a list on Letterboxd that we can link in the Letterboxd episode notes.
MIA Let’s link the cat harm list. It’s just like a list of every movie with a violent cat scene. Which is helpful... for me. It’s why I haven’t seen Gummo.
SLIM That’s on that list, I’m pretty sure.
MIA Yes, it should be. So yeah, The Innocents, interesting film, just be just be wary. Okay, you guys? Watch out.
SLIM Prepare yourself.
MIA And then the last thing I wanted to spotlight, Reversing Roe is streaming on Netflix. I highly recommend it. It is a documentary that is extremely relevant right now and it delves deep into the history of abortion law, revealing the contradictory ways in which women’s bodies have been used to further political and ideological agendas. 3.7 average. I thought it was extremely informative and well made. I was learning quite a bit. I was getting angry in a good way. Harness that rage. Let’s make some change. Yeah, streaming on Netflix. Check it out, very easy to access.
SLIM In the episodes, we have a Letterboxd list for all the movies we talk about each week. It’s updated weekly. So any of the movies we’ve mentioned that you also want to add to your watchlist, by all means, and any reviews that you leave in future weeks, tag it with “Weekend Watchlist” and we’ll see if we can weasel it into the show and read it on air.
MIA Yes!
SLIM We also have a segment with Jack. Jack, our facts man, puts together The Letterboxd Top 50 of 2022 and it’s updated weekly, so you can see kind of what are the top movies of the year, maybe get some clues as to how the year is going to end up. And Jack has historically said that The Beatles[: Get Back – The] Rooftop Concert, it might never be topped this year. Those Beatle fans, those nuts. They’re not rating that less than five stars.
MIA No! Beatlemania forever!
SLIM Beatlemania forever. So this week the main notable is Andrew Dominik’s This Much I Know to Be True, jumps to number six. It’s part documentary, part concert film, part visual album, from Nick Cave and Warren Ellis. So that is number six for this week. And my main boy did not crack the top ten, Mia.
MIA What?
SLIM How do you feel about my main boy not cracking the top ten? Tom Cruise, Top Gun: Maverick? It’s number eleven this week on the list.
MIA It didn’t crack the top ten?
SLIM No.
MIA For real?
SLIM It makes me sick.
MIA Okay...
SLIM It makes me sick.
MIA Yeah, it’s disgusting! This is disgusting! [Slim laughs] Wow, I guess Top Gun: Maverick is going to flop in theaters and it’s going to make no money. [Slim & Mia laugh] That’s what it looks like!
SLIM That’s what it sounds like!
MIA Yeah, I think that that’s what the data says. [Mia laughs]
SLIM So those are the main things we wanted to spotlight for the new, the Top 50 List of 2022. But, the most popular section of the show is when we shuffle our watchlists and find us a new movie to watch before we meet again on this podcast. And last we met, you shuffled. What did you get? And did you watch it?
MIA Yes, I watched On the Town, it was delightful, by Stanley Donen and Gene Kelly. It is about three sailors who let loose on a 24-hour in New York and the Big Apple will never be the same! So it’s about like these three horny sailors who want to get laid, but it’s 1949. So it’s not, you know, explicit but that is the goal.
SLIM That’s a better synopsis. That would get me interested in watching a ’40s movie if that was the synopsis. [Slim & Mia laugh]
MIA Yeah. So yeah, they’re basically just trying to find like... babes.
SLIM Uh huh.
MIA And it’s Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra and Jules Munshin. They’re these sailors. They’re singing around New York. This is great, because I’m going to New York for the very first time [Slim gasps] in about a month for Tribeca Film Festival.
SLIM Yes, that’s right.
MIA So I was learning a lot, because they’re also like touring it and going to all these like tourist spots, you know. So I was like, oh, I got to see every single place they visit in On the Town now. But it’s lovely, they have a nice little song that they sing. It’s like, [sings] “New York, New York. A hell of a town! The Bronx is a up and the battery’s down. The people ride in a hole in the ground. New York, New York!” [Slim laughs]
SLIM Are you gonna be doing that when you get off the train in Manhattan?
MIA Yes.
SLIM You’re gonna be walking around—[Slim laughs]
MIA No, exactly. I watched it with my friend, who I’m going with her, and we were like, “Oh no, we’re just going to be singing this song everywhere about—[sings] ”The Bronx is up and the battery’s down. People riding...”
SLIM Those horny sailors.
MIA Those horny sailors, yeah. So it was fun! It was fun. I had fun.
SLIM Okay.
MIA But I mean, it’s Gene Kelly, like I’m not gonna have fun? Come on.
SLIM Right, of course not.
MIA What did you watch?
SLIM When I shuffled when we were last together, I had Nightmare Beach. it was like the motorcycle helmet and the reflection was that person murdering a young girl—
MIA A woman? Yes, murdering a woman. [Slim & Mia laugh]
SLIM Yeah, so this was on my watchlist, maybe from just the poster alone. And... Spring Break in the ’80s, you know, rampant sexism and murder. And the main bad guy is going around killing people on this motorcycle. And it’s like the least villainous motorcycle I’ve ever seen. It’s like one of those, kind of like, traveling motorcycles. It’s got like the big sides. It’s almost like a Winnebago motorcycle, those like, old-school, large, long-journey motorcycles. It’s so lame. But he was like, electrocuting people to death. He would like pull off a cord from his motorcycle and just like shock their skull until it melted. It was pretty intense. [Slim laughs] Your face just dropped.
MIA Wait, melting skulls?
SLIM Yeah, he would like hook it to their neck and like, you know, their face would just melt off, on screen.
MIA Oh, okay, I was picturing a skull melting, which is why I was so horrified.
SLIM Oh no, that would be intense. That’s a lot of heat to melt bone. But I did have fun. It was kind of like, bad ’80s, which I appreciate. I have fun watching like really bad ’80s horror-action movies. So I had fun, Nightmare Beach.
MIA Nightmare Beach!
SLIM We do have some friends that tagged their reviews. You know, they’re shuffling each week. So Kingston shuffled their watchlist: Boogie Nights. “Does this movie have the greatest soundtrack of all time?”
MIA Yes.
SLIM Could you imagine shuffling your watchlist and getting Boogie Nights?
MIA And getting Boogie Nights? Oh my God! That’s maybe my favorite PTA besides Phantom Thread. They’re like tied, because I love them both in such different ways.
SLIM The Alfred Molina seen in Boogie Nights.
MIA Oh my god, it’s so funny. The firecrackers! [Mia laughs]
SLIM Oh my god! So good. Steven also shuffled and got St. Elmo’s Fire, which was big with my brothers and sisters growing up.
MIA Ooh.
SLIM “I came for the streets of Georgetown and then stayed for the Twin Peaks vibes.” I might have to rewatch St. Elmo’s Fire.
MIA Twin Peaks vibes in St. Elmo’s Fire, huh. DiddyRose’s The Duke review: “A really uplifting Robin Hood-esque film that is unbelievably true. Watching an elderly rascal of a man upset the establishment is just delightful.” Now that’s nice.
SLIM I love the word “rascal”. I need to start adding that to my vocabulary.
MIA Yeah! And he’s elderly too!
SLIM Elderly rascal. [Slim laughs]
MIA An elderly rascal who’s upsetting the establishment.
SLIM What more do you need?
MIA Bernie Sanders?! [Slim & Mia laugh]
SLIM So let’s head back to our watchlists. If you’re curious if you want to try this on your own, just go to your watchlist on the web or the app and head to the filter button, filter service by “Stream Only” you know, that’s how we do it just because we have easy access to our preferred streaming services. And then sort by “Shuffle” and then we usually go by the first movie on our list and that’s what we’re getting. [shuffle sound plays]
MIA I just did... [Mia laughs]
SLIM What did you get? What did you get? She’s covering her face right now.
MIA I’m covering my... so this is a movie I added because of my Colin Farrell disease.
SLIM Uh huh…
MIA Yeah, I’m a big fan. And so I got Winter’s Tale, 2014.
SLIM What?!
MIA Sitting at a beautiful 2.3 average on Letterboxd. Colin Farrell stars...
SLIM Oh my god...
MIA And it is a Shakespeare adaptation...
SLIM The regret in your face right now.
MIA “A burglar falls for an heiress as she dies in his arms. When he learns he has the gift of reincarnation, he sets out to save her.” And it says “This is not a true story. This is true love.” [Slim laughs]
SLIM Oh boy... Mitchell has reviewed this. Mitchell’s rating for this film, Winter’s Tale, one and a half stars.
MIA Yes! [Slim laughs]
SLIM Oh, I can’t wait to hear about this one in two weeks. Let me shuffle mine. Where’s that shuffle button? Here it is. [shuffle sound plays] Oh my word... I got Werner Herzog’s Nosferatu the Vampyre. [Mia gasps] 1979. Holy smokes.
MIA That’s on my watchlist too!
SLIM This is on Shudder right now. It’s on Pluto. A bunch of things. Oh my god, Peacock, Arrow, Tubi. So for anyone wants to me on this journey, it’s available for free pretty much.
MIA I might have to you.
SLIM Are you gonna do it as well?
MIA I might you on that journey. Yeah, because it’s on my watchlist as well.
SLIM Holy smokes.
MIA So like... I might as well. And then also for LA folks, Werner Herzog, they’re doing a whole series of like all of his films at the Los Feliz 3 and the Aero through American Cinematheque if you are a fan in the LA area.
SLIM Get ready. “Jonathan Harker, a real state agent, goes to Transylvania to visit the mysterious Count Dracula and formalize the purchase of a property in Wismar. Once Jonathan is caught under his evil spell, Dracula travels to Wismar where he meets the beautiful Lucy, Jonathan’s wife, while a plague spreads through the town.” Wow, what a poster.
MIA Yeah, it has, it’s like one of my favorite posters, so I should probably see it then.
SLIM Alright. We got a big week ahead of us. Big watching week.
MIA Big week. Winter’s Tale...
SLIM Winter’s Tale, what a pick!
MIA My new favorite movie... [Slim laughs]
[Izon by Trent Walton fades in, plays alone, fades out]
SLIM Thanks so much for listening to Weekend Watchlist, brought to you by Slim—that’s me—and our HQ page on Letterboxd using the links in our episode notes. You can also look at our brand new list, updated weekly in those episode notes.
MIA Thank you so much to our crew and thanks to Letterboxd member Sophie Shin for the episode transcript. And to you, of course, for listening. Weekend Watchlist is a Tapedeck production.
[Tapdeck bumper plays] This is a Tapedeck podcast.