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3 Cocktails In
Addicting conversations between friends who have been there, done that and still want more.
We are 3 friends who got this crazy idea to start a podcast based on our friendships, family lives, professional lives and experiences! This idea kept coming up in our conversations, especially after a cocktail or two or maybe three, and we finally decided to ACT on it!
We don't claim to be experts on too many things, but friendship? Well, we've got that down. We're making our way through major life changes, searching for work that excites us, busting myths associated with 'old' people, and keeping a sense of humor about it all.
Self employed, boss - CHECK
Mom, wife, single - CHECK
Rural, suburban, urban life - CHECK
Vodka, gin, wine - CHECK
Make sure to subscribe to our channel ~ FOMO is real and it sucks.
Amy, Kitty & Stacey
P.S. Isn't our intro music great?! Yah, we think so too. Thank you, Ivy States for "I Got That Wow".
3 Cocktails In
Beyond the Envelope: Our Take on Oscar Films Two Months Later
Two months after the Oscars, it's time to revisit the award-winning films with fresh perspectives and honest opinions. Did these movies truly deserve their golden statues, or were some victories more puzzling than impressive?
"Conclave" emerges as the unexpected star of our conversation. This papal election drama gained eerie relevance following recent Vatican events, with all hosts agreeing it deserved more than its single Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay. The film's exploration of church politics, stunning ensemble cast, and nuanced storytelling make it a unanimous recommendation.
Meanwhile, Best Picture winner "Anora" proves divisive. Described by one host as "incredibly depressing, disgusting, and dirty," this so-called "indie dramedy" raises questions about what makes a film Oscar-worthy. The revelation that Academy voters weren't previously required to watch all nominated films before voting casts doubt on the legitimacy of past winners, suggesting some victories might be more about marketing than merit.
Other films receive varied verdicts: Bob Dylan biopic "A Complete Unknown" surprises Dylan non-fans with its engaging storytelling and Timothée Chalamet's committed performance; "The Brutalist" proves worth its three-hour runtime with Adrian Brody's captivating portrayal of a Holocaust survivor; while horror-satire "Substance" prompts discussion about why established actors like Demi Moore choose such unusual projects.
Beyond film analysis, we propose a new segment for future episodes—"Weirdest Thing on Social Media"—sharing bizarre findings that left us scratching our heads. We also touch on Nicole Kidman's impressive work ethic, appearing in countless diverse projects while rumors swirl about her personal life.
What Oscar films have you caught up on since March? Which deserved their accolades, and which left you confused? Share your thoughts and recommendations for what we should watch next!
Amy, Kitty & Stacey
P.S. Isn't our intro music great?! Yah, we think so too. Thank you, Ivy States for "I Got That Wow".
All right, look I got that. Wow, who wants some handsome right now? We got that. Turn it up loud. I know you're wondering how I got that. Wow, here I go, here I go, coming. I can't ever stop. I'm a tour de force running. Get me to the top. I don't need a.
Speaker 2:Good evening everyone. How are you? Hello, better now. Alright. Hello and welcome to another episode of 3 Cocktails In. You've got Amy, stacey and Kitty checking in for another addicting conversation.
Speaker 3:Certainly.
Speaker 2:We are going to revisit an earlier conversation that we had on our Oscars, the Oscar nominees, the Oscar winners this year, and we wanted to give ourselves a few weeks. Let's see, we talked about this back in March, right, and we are now into May, so we wanted to give ourselves and our viewers and our listeners some time to take in some of the movies. We did not watch all of them. We just wanted to have another follow-up conversation on it. So that's where we're going tonight.
Speaker 4:Yes, so how many people? Pretty much how, and I'm talking to everybody now Did everybody get to watch Conclave now so we can understand what's going on?
Speaker 2:I mean, how incredibly timely right Isn't that just crazy? Yeah, I learned so much watching Conclave.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 4:Yeah, and I'm sure, if it's in the movie, it's true. I'm sure, absolutely.
Speaker 3:Yes, you know, and the yeah, the process. I'm sure that's kind of true. You know all the drama behind it. I question that, but I never know.
Speaker 4:Well, I think there is drama. Yeah, I'm sure there's drama. You know different factions, that you know, like everything, to develop some cohesion.
Speaker 2:a quorum yes, that's right, and so now they've been, as they're getting ready for the real conclave, they were installing the chimney for when they give the signal that the new pope has been chosen, and they were also talking about burning the ballots, and that was something that I didn't know anything about. So I loved it. I thought it was a. I was, I was glued to it. I thought it was great. Bill enjoyed it too.
Speaker 4:Did you watch it before or after the Pope died? After? Oh, you did. Okay, really interesting, okay, yep, yep, that was one that I managed to watch before the Pope died. Okay, that was one I was really interested in and, from the movie standpoint, to me that is what an Oscar-type movie in my mind. That's kind of what I think of when I think of an Oscar winner. That cast was amazing.
Speaker 3:Amazing. Yes, based on the huge cast, the movie. I'm going to be the statistician tonight. The movie got nominated for eight categories, but only one won the best adapted screenplay.
Speaker 4:Oh yeah, won the best adapted screenplay. Oh yeah, why did they think they won for costumes, which made me laugh, because I'm like how tough was that they were nominated for costumes though, weren't they?
Speaker 3:might have been, might have been, but yeah, the only one they won was best adapted screenplay. It was a book, a novel, so that got you know that's where it was adapted from, that. So yeah, I really liked it too, and again, most of those actors in that you know I like anyway. So yeah, surprised that it didn't do better.
Speaker 4:I don't usually watch. I mean other than the classics I don't usually watch. I mean other than the classics. I don't usually watch movies multiple times. And by classics I mean Wizard of Oz, dirty Dancing, you know those right up there.
Speaker 4:But I think I would watch this again because I feel like Now that I know what the story is, now I would like to watch it For the nuance. You know, like when you read a really good book You're just in it for the mystery, that you kind of miss Some of the details. I think that would be a good one to watch again.
Speaker 3:So I think from that Are we saying three thumbs up for Conclave. Yeah, yes, should watch, if you haven't watched it. Yeah. So I think from that are we saying three thumbs up for Conclave. Yeah, I think, yes, yeah, should watch. If you haven't watched it, you should watch it.
Speaker 4:And here ends my participation in this conversation. Oh, I did not.
Speaker 3:Of all the movies too. I think you can watch it for free on Prime Video, so that's one. I didn't have to pay for A lot of them. I did have to pay for a lot of them I did have to pay for.
Speaker 2:Yeah, okay, um, so well, amy, you saw with you I thought you saw wicked.
Speaker 4:Oh, I have never seen wicked, not on stage.
Speaker 3:Okay, not anything, and I never read the book it's a book I'm the, I'm the outlier, yeah, I guess um so wicked was the one that won for costume design right yes, costume design and best production design whatever that is nominated for 10 awards, won those two, which I would agree with. The costume design was pretty great.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, amazing. Yeah, I think you know in this conversation and maybe I'm more interested in a conversation around why are they Oscar worthy, how does the voting happen and things like that, because Anora was the big winner and I watched it. Bill didn't watch it. It was one of the movies that I watched during the day while I was working and I was so incredibly disturbed by it.
Speaker 4:That seems like, oh, I could watch Days of Our Lives, or Nora, I know.
Speaker 2:I'll pick that. I just I found it to be so incredibly depressing yes, and disgusting and I'm not a prude, but I had a hard time watching it and I had to keep turning it off and then I would go back and turning it up Because it just it was so disgusting and dirty in. You know certain parts of it For those of you who watched it, you know what I'm talking about and I was just like, yeah, I just don't care for movies like that.
Speaker 4:Yeah, um, I know this is one of those that made me think, um, that we just found out that now everybody who votes has to watch the movies. We were all blown away by the idea that you, that you didn't have to watch the movies and you could vote right now they do, but it's weird that they didn't used to, which makes no sense to me yeah so kitty when you're asking why is it? Why is it a winner? Why isn't one?
Speaker 4:I wonder if I mean again. I wonder if everybody had to watch all of them, if it would have been the same.
Speaker 2:Well, yes, that's a good question. So I think this one in particular was getting a lot of press this year, so it clinched five Oscars Best Picture Director, original Screenplay, best Film Editing and Best Actress and it's considered an indie drama. No, indie dramedy. So there was a comedy aspect to this, but I'm just like what? No, I don't get it. No and um, but I think there was sort of a focus on these smaller productions and I think we see that across some of the other movies as well. But, okay, we need to look up that term Indie Dramedy.
Speaker 4:Well, I think that I've heard it a lot more. The whole idea that it's a, a dramedy. Is that what they're calling? I've heard it before and all that means to me is it's a really there's smartassery in this drama. It's a really they're smart assery in this drama. Is it a term that they're trying to use to make it seem so it's not like this dark, depressing movie to try and get other people to watch it. It seems like a marketing ploy to me.
Speaker 3:Yeah, because I mean it's not the least bit funny ever. Because I mean it's not the least bit funny ever. You know I swear. Based on that it won Best Picture and Best Actress, just like the winner last year, which I had it on the tip of my tongue, and now I don't know. You know both. Just very shocking. You know what I mean. I wouldn't say the story was good and I wouldn't say anything was good about it, but it's shocking, you know. Way different than than a conclave and a wicked and a dune, and you know what I mean. Very way out there, that's for sure.
Speaker 3:So sure so yeah, yeah, I don't know. Like I said, I wouldn't have, I wouldn't have picked it. I also would not have picked her for best actress as well. I mean, you know, there was certainly better um, her character was. You know, I'm sure it took a lot to do the movie, but was she the best actress? I don't know.
Speaker 2:Okay, I just I've got a little intel on this. So Anora is considered a dramedy because, while it has a funny premise a stripper marrying a Russian oligarch's son that's the funny situation it explores deeper themes like love, control and independence. So yeah, no, I know, okay, yeah, so what? Amy touched on a little bit earlier and I think you sent us that little piece of information, or maybe Stacey did. One of you sent us that you don't, as a voting member of the Academy, you don't have to watch all of the movies. You don't have to watch all of the movies. They've now changed that requirement and now you do so. We were kind of blown away by that and for me it takes a lot of the clout away. For any of the winners in the past Kind of takes the clout away.
Speaker 4:For me it becomes a popularity contest yeah, 100%, it becomes a marketing award. Yeah.
Speaker 2:Yeah Well, and so drawing a comparison here, picking the next pope is the same thing, right? So, as we learned in Conclave and maybe this is more common knowledge to people it just wasn't to me. I'm not Catholic, I didn't really know anything about how a pope is selected, but if you are one of the cardinals who is favored to be the next pope, you're basically in the conclave and you're volleying for your position. You're trying to get people to vote for you.
Speaker 2:That's a popularity contest as well yeah, I agree for a very important position yeah, yeah, yep, you guys, we should do one of our what's in your Google History again sometime soon. I've got a whole bunch of stuff related that you were asking that you're researching yes, yes, including. How much does the pope make?
Speaker 4:oh, yeah, how much does the pope make?
Speaker 3:a lot millions a lot, but don't they usually not take it? I mean, I think this what?
Speaker 2:do they usually give it back? Yeah, yeah, well, this, they don't have any heirs. The most recent Pope did not take an income because he was wealthy on his own before he became Pope Extremely, yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 3:You want to rise to Pope? Is that why you were looking, were not looking?
Speaker 2:no, just curious and since we've got pocket calculators bill and I are always like hmm, I wonder that yeah, google that uh, kitty, did you see the brutalist?
Speaker 3:no, I did not watch that one. Okay, I'll give you a quick. So this is a post-World War II epic. A Hungarian-born Jewish architect who survives the Holocaust immigrates to the US where he struggles to achieve the American dream until a wealthy client changes his life. So that's a quick synopsis. I really liked it, even though it was like a three-hour movie. It had an.
Speaker 3:I think was it the one that had the intermission, I believe it was Oddly dark, but I kind of liked it. I really did, and I can understand, for this one, why adrian brody won for best actor um, it also won best original score which that one surprised me, by the way, just on a side note, because I don't remember any of the music you know to it, so that's interesting and best cinema photography, which I would say that was probably good. So yeah, I really it. I give a thumbs up to that one if anybody's wondering whether to watch it Okay.
Speaker 2:Yeah, and I mean, what I'm hoping comes out of these couple of conversations that we've had about these movies is that maybe it will prompt someone to pull them up and and and take a look at them. I mean, really most of them are available to us on any number of the streaming services that we have, and so it's because everybody's always looking for content, right.
Speaker 4:Or is that?
Speaker 2:everybody watching.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I would like to watch this one, just because I'm such a history buff.
Speaker 3:Yeah, you would like it. You would really like it yeah it was interesting Except for the three-hour part. I know, yeah, but I didn't know. You know, sometimes you're just really bored and it's like, oh my gosh, is this ever going to go on? And it's like, oh my gosh, this ever gonna go on? It drags was not draggy it I. I thought it was okay.
Speaker 2:I liked it a lot all right, I think you'd like it, okay, good, yeah, so, stacey, how did they do an intermission?
Speaker 3:well, I mean streaming. It just said intermission and it just stopped for I don't know how long. Um, you know what I mean. And then I just fast-forwarded through the intermission. I'm sure they just you know, let everybody go get it everybody probably. I don't know how long it would have been in the theater, but yeah, I thought that was interesting. So anyway, okay, what else did you watch?
Speaker 2:Kitty, a Complete Unknown. So, and that one, I didn't really think that I was going to be interested in watching it because I've never really been much of a Bob Dylan fan, but I really enjoyed it, just like I've enjoyed some of these other biopics that have been done, like Freddie Mercury and Elton John, and I really enjoyed it. And again, you know, I've learned things that I didn't know before and I really enjoyed Timot, timothy Chalamet.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I was surprised. I think I'm doing some research on it. I think he sang, I mean, I think it was him really singing, which is interesting how he, you know, did that. I agree, I liked it fine. Not near as well, as you know, know the elton john and and um queen, but um, it also nominated for eight, one zero, if you can believe. That didn't win any awards, so, but yeah, it was a solid movie.
Speaker 4:you know I like yeah and I wonder if that one in particular, because I remember, because, kitty, what you said about it was very similar to what my sister Ann said when we had her on. She wasn't a Bob Dylan fan, she didn't really know anything about him, she didn't think she was gonna like it. And it turns out she really did like it because she learned so much about the music scene at that time. So I'm wondering if it didn't win anything Because A not everybody had to watch it. Who got to vote? Maybe they just assumed it was going to be another biopic, like the other music picks that were out there and like, yeah, I'm not into that. So they didn't vote for it and they didn't give it a chance. Yep, could be I, I would watch that one too. I will say that's another one, that. So so far I would watch the last three, just because, just because, just because I'm not either a big Dylan fan.
Speaker 2:It's kind of before us, yeah, and I mean it's got really cool Minneapolis history in it as well, because he was from Minneapolis so that was kind of fun to see pop up in the movie and there's a lot of love and affection for him in this city, so that's always cool too. Yeah, yep, I'm. I'm guessing, amy, that the substance is not going to be on your playlist either no, no, and yet I love that actress. Mm-hmm.
Speaker 3:Yeah, really Maybe you should watch it then. That's one I've missed. I haven't caught that one yet. I want to watch it, but that's one I haven't seen, yeah, so you'll have to tell us all about that, kitty.
Speaker 2:Yeah. So it's basically a horror movie, but it's like horror satire and it's one of those horror movies that when it starts creeping into the horror aspect of it, you think, oh my God, this is going to be so good and, keeping in mind you guys know how much I love horror, so started going down that road and we're all in. But then the satire comes into it and then it sort of starts to lose me. It's just, it's very, very outlandish and um and weird and disgusting all at the same time. But I kept asking myself the question why would demi more do this movie? Why would she do this movie?
Speaker 3:well, it was a pretty big cast as well. I mean there's others in it that this wasn't a yeah, your typical b actor.
Speaker 2:You know horror flick, so yeah, it's interesting yeah it just you know, she know she ends up becoming a disfigured monster in the movie. Basically that you know implodes and so it's just weird, but seems to have done good things for her career. Seems to have done good things for her career.
Speaker 4:There are times when I have watched things and, like you, question why some of the cast made the choice to be in the film, and I do remind myself that what the script said isn't necessarily what gets presented in the movie. You know, who knows what's on the cutting room floor that they maybe thought was the thing, and you know so the writer's vision isn't always the same as the director's vision or the editor or those things.
Speaker 2:Well, and I don't I'm not criticizing I don't want this to come across as criticizing her and I think there is something great about doing something that you've never done before. We talked about this on a previous episode about how there are actors who tend to do the same roles over and over again. Yeah, and you know what challenge is that after a period of time, and again no no criticism there either because we love those actors.
Speaker 2:We love them for the roles that they play. And you know, I want to sit down and watch Matthew McConaughey take his shirt off and fall in love with someone you know, fall in love with what's her name in the beautiful yellow dress? Yeah, we love we love those movies, so I guess you know what Good for her for doing something completely different.
Speaker 4:Yeah, has she been in anything? Has she had such a large role in a while? Like I can't remember the last movie where she was, I don't know what it would have been A primary player.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 4:Which might have had something to do with it too.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I mean, you know it was the leading role. I can see why she would take it. Sure, yeah, especially if she you know it was the leading role, I can see why she would take it. Sure, yeah, especially if she's not getting offered a lot of other things. Yeah, and in this instance, as odd as that role is, you're right, it's not hurting her career any, you know. So, yeah, it is.
Speaker 2:It's curious how actors look at scripts and what they. You know what they read and go. I have to do this versus scripts that actors have passed on and you know, and then might and maybe regret, regret, yeah oh, can I?
Speaker 4:can I go on a tangent here? Should I make us a little. As we talk about actors and roles that they pass on, what do you guys think about actors and actors in general, who pass on roles, don't say anything about it and then a couple years later they're in an interview and then they like to name drop. Well, well, I was, that was offered that first I didn't take it. I heard kate. I love kate hudson. I heard her do that about the anne hathaway role in the devil wears prada and for the first time I thought um.
Speaker 4:That didn't come off very good, you know yeah, I followed up with, oh, I love annie. Annie did such a great job. That was a little yeah, I think that was weird. I didn't think.
Speaker 3:I don't like it when they bring that up. I mean, you know you, you made a mistake by turning it down, so I don't think you get to bring it up and say, oh, they wanted me first, you know, mm-hmm oh gosh, that's.
Speaker 2:That's funny to think about now if she had been in that role yeah, doesn't seem.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah, she doesn't seem. She could pull off the real plain Jane part of it in the beginning.
Speaker 4:But whatever, who knows.
Speaker 4:I don't know. I I do like it and I understand why people conducting the interview ask, because it is really juicy to know yeah, and there are actors that have said that, yes, they, you know they regretted not doing and they and that person was so fabulous and it just worked out all for the best. Yeah, I think Jennifer Lawrence gets asked that question a lot, so she must have, you know, been up for a lot of roles, or she's also really good about saying, yeah, I auditioned for that but I didn't get it, they didn't choose. Yeah, that, I think, is a wonderful way, because you're answering the question, you're saying you wanted it, but you're being endearing about the whole idea that yeah, yeah, even you, even she didn't get it.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4:Or other people who just say, oh, of course there are, but I don't, I don't need to tell that, we don't need to talk about it. Yeah, I like that too. So I thought it was kind of weird. So sorry, sorry for that little detour.
Speaker 3:No, I was a good detour. What else do we?
Speaker 2:have we talked a little bit about wicked? I think we also saw a real pain.
Speaker 3:That one was a best supporting actor I did watch that right, not nominated for um best, not our best movie, but yes it was. Yeah, it was for that um. I think in the one with ann I talked a little bit about amelia p Perez because I had seen that I liked it Very interesting movie, to say the least. Was the most nominated for 13. Did win two. You know interesting. See, to me that's an original movie. You know it was a musical kind of a dark theme, just really interesting to me. I kind of liked it.
Speaker 4:Was it nominated for an original screenplay or was it an adaptation? Is there a?
Speaker 3:I don't know what the 13 are, so 13 nominations would be for a lot of different things, but the two it won for was Supporting Actress Zoe Saldana and Best Original Song, el Mal, sung by I don't know who, so I don't know. Like I said, I kind of liked it. I would, I would watch it, I obviously watched it, I would suggest you watch it, just because it was the most different thing, I think, of all of them for me, okay, whatever, there was Dune Part 2. So if you love Dune Part 1, which was a big box office hit, you obviously liked Dune Part 2. Not for me, again. I think it was super long and nominated for five one best sound and best visual effects, which I would agree, that would be that category. So interesting that it was, you know, nominated for best picture as well, because it was just a, you know, sci-fi type movie kitty, did you watch that?
Speaker 4:no okay, I'm probably not going to watch that one. I'll just tell you guys right now yeah, sorry about that it was more like I suffered through the whole thing just because the closest I got to watching Dune was one night when I was scrolling through all my available soundscapes on my Calm app when I went to bed, one of them was Dune Winter and one was Dune Summer. And I tried and it was just blowing wind wind.
Speaker 3:Uh-oh, oh, there you are, you're back, kitty left, and now she's back. Oh, she, she's blinking. We've had technical difficulties this evening, so, just like usual, you just never know. Well, my dog you're holding on strong I don't know if she, maybe she can't hear us anymore yeah, what other movies did you watch?
Speaker 3:stacy um ones that we haven't covered yet no, the only other two that we haven't talked about are two I didn't see that's nickel boys, which is a drama of two young men incarcerated at an inhumane school for boys in Florida. Nominated for two awards, one zero, and the last one was I'm Still here, and at least these are all the ten that were nominated for Best Picture Film based on a true story set in 1970s, rio de Janeiro, when Brazil was living under military dictatorship. Nominated for two won best international feature. I think it was you know, mostly for that reason I think it was you know. Foreign film probably. I think it's hard. I can't see where it's streaming um anywhere, so I don't know where you would watch that for sure.
Speaker 4:I thought that I saw it as an option.
Speaker 3:Oh, did you.
Speaker 4:By the time I'm ready to watch a movie at night, like I think that was the one that Ann was talking about, with the subtitles, but then also the audio assist and they had subtitles over the audio and it was, yeah, very challenging. So maybe, maybe, if, after I'm done, um with all my at-home studies, there you go you can pick them up, right, yeah, or at least you have, a least you have a list, um.
Speaker 4:So I know that this isn't, um, you know, part of the oscar conversation, but I did hear today that I think memorial day weekend, um lilo and stitch, a live action movie of lilo is opening now. That that was one of our my girls favorite movies, um, when they were little, and that has got awesome soundtrack because it's elvis. It's elvis in hawaii. Um, I'm thinking I'm I might have to go, or at least wait until it's on streaming.
Speaker 4:I would watch that how's that for a weird thing coming up, so all of us probably have kids that are that grew up watching that yeah that age. Yeah, that was one of my favorites, so or grew up watching that, yeah that age.
Speaker 3:Yep yeah, Lee Lowenstein oh cool.
Speaker 4:That was one of my favorites, so yeah, well, poor Kitty is she looks lovely, by the way, she does look more than lovely.
Speaker 3:Better than lovely, oh, always. But I don't think she can hear us and I don't think she's talking, so we'll just look at her and continue on with our conversation. Yeah.
Speaker 4:Okay, let's. We kind of talked about all of the the movies and what we should see and what we shouldn't. So with that in mind, we've got still, you know, everybody has some, some options coming up here of things to do. So what do we think? Do we have shots?
Speaker 3:Stacy did you have a shot. I have a. I know what you're one of the things you're going to say, so I'm going to go after you, so you go first. Oh I didn't have a shot. I thought you had a comment about something I don't know no, kitty had a pet peeve, she was gonna share yeah, okay. Well then, I'll go on with me. I would like to um suggest we add a new segment segment to our show called weirdest thing on social media oh, is this because of my, my story that I shared?
Speaker 3:yeah, so, um, my weird thing, weird thing of the week that I saw was ke Urban singing Pink Pony Club. Now it was good, I'm not, that's not the weird part, I just think it's very weird. Why, number one? Why? Why would he sing it? And you know, I really like Chapel Rowan, I really do and I really like the song, but Keith Urban singing it, that's a little weird for me. So there you go.
Speaker 4:Yeah, the weirdest thing I saw on the internet this week and I shared it to my Instagram story was a woman with a manicure that looked just like hard salami, holding a sleeve of hard salami. It was so gross. I don't know why, and also I don't know why my algorithm thought I needed to see that I don't scroll anything that says give me manicures that look like food.
Speaker 3:I know I swear some of those things are AI, like I've seen the one where the pedicure looks like eyeballs, like again, really, I don't think so and I think somebody just did it in ai. I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 4:Just yeah, I think that would be. I think that would be a really good way, like, if you don't have a shot, we can at least share the weirdest thing we saw on the internet weirdest thing we saw.
Speaker 3:in our opinion, because of course that's my opinion I'm sure everyone that likes keith urban thought it was fabulous and it was good. I'm not saying it wasn't, it was just weird for me.
Speaker 4:Yeah, speaking of Keith Urban, I heard a little tidbit on the radio. I got nothing to back this up, folks, but the people in the blinds were talking. We're talking that Miss Nicole Kidman stepping out with a younger man while Keith Urban is roaming the country looking for the next young country star, but it further said he doesn't care. Interesting, interesting. You know, I could see that maybe that marriage wasn't going to last. She's been working like a crazy woman for the last two years. She's everywhere.
Speaker 3:She has, and that full circle back to when we talk about. You know, why do people, why do actors pick the movies we do? She is in a million things a year I think I've brought that up before and just really all different, yeah things. You know, like she'll. It's almost like she will take any role, you know yeah, oh, speaking of that, that's my shot.
Speaker 4:Then I'm gonna I'm gonna say um, there's a new season of nine perfect strangers. Is that that what it's called?
Speaker 3:Yes, Nine Perfect Strangers.
Speaker 4:Nine Perfect Strangers. Nicole Kidman's this health guru but she's into psychedelic drugs and microdosing the people and they're chosen for something specific that they need to get through. I watched that first season. Melissa McCarthy was in it. Some other famous people were in it. Go watch the first season. You've got in it. Some other famous people were in it. Go watch the first season. You've got to be able to find it on one of the streaming services. I actually think it was on Apple or Hulu it's on.
Speaker 3:Apple or Hulu, because I don't have those right now, and I did realize that I'm going to have to re-sign up because the new one is coming out, I think maybe the end of May, and I'm super excited for it yeah, I told you that I hadn't seen it and I had, which, which kind of shows you what I thought, which I thought of it because I didn't, I didn't remember until the first, you know, two minutes of me watching the first episode. It's like, oh yeah, now I remember it, yeah, so I've seen it.
Speaker 3:I think titles don't reflect on content yeah, no, not really but that, but that's what it is there really are nine perfect strangers when they start.
Speaker 4:Yeah, yeah, huh so that that's, uh, I don't know if it's viewing season for everybody. I think that sometimes you, it's always viewing season in my world. Yeah, yep, yes, all right. Would love to hear what other people, if they watched any of the Oscar movies since the first conversation that we had. Where people came down on what side, what movie did they like, what didn't they like, and would love to hear what we should be watching next. Yes, I agree, where people came down, on what side, what movie did they like, what didn't they like? And, uh, would love to hear what we should be watching next.
Speaker 3:Yes, I agree.
Speaker 4:All right, great Is that a wrap?
Speaker 3:It is All right. People have a good week. Bye.
Speaker 4:Bye, see you next time.
Speaker 2:Bye.
Speaker 1:Goodbye, all right, oh bye, bye, see you next time. Bye, I got that wild. Here I go. Here I go, coming. I can't ever stop. I'ma tour the forest running, get me to the top. I don't need an invitation. I'm about to start a celebration. Let me in Brought a good time for some friends. Turn it up loud past ten, turning up the crowd when I hit them with the pass.