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#56 The 1980's

2021/7/21
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Nate Bargatze
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Nate Bargatze: 本期节目回顾了80年代的流行文化,分享了他在高中时期穿着时尚方面的一些尴尬经历,例如穿着与一位女生相同的Coca-Cola衬衫以及穿着New Kids on the Block的T恤。他还谈到了他高中时期的经历,例如向一位篮球运动员索要签名,以及他对80年代电影和音乐的看法。他认为现在的电影缺乏原创性,大多雷同,并表达了他对好莱坞缺乏多样性的担忧。 Brian Bates: Brian Bates主要参与了对80年代流行文化的讨论,并分享了一些他自己的回忆。 Aaron Weber: Aaron Weber也参与了对80年代流行文化的讨论,并对Nate Bargatze的一些观点进行了补充和回应。 Brian Bates: Brian Bates主要参与了对80年代流行文化的讨论,并分享了一些他自己的回忆,例如对80年代电影和音乐的看法。他还参与了对一些80年代重大事件的讨论,例如挑战者号航天飞机爆炸事件。 Aaron Weber: Aaron Weber也参与了对80年代流行文化的讨论,并对Nate Bargatze的一些观点进行了补充和回应。他分享了一些他自己的回忆,例如对80年代电影和音乐的看法,以及对一些80年代重大事件的讨论,例如挑战者号航天飞机爆炸事件。

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The episode begins with a discussion about high school fashion mishaps and transitions into a rant about today's movies, contrasting them with the iconic films of the 80s.

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这一集,我们将回到1980年代。Breakfast分享了一些他的高中时尚失误,Nate对今天的电影发表了一番长篇大论,而Aaron再次了解到MASH大结局并不是电视历史上观看人数最多的事件。

</context> <raw_text>0 Hello, folks. Or let's go, folks. I was going to say, you've gone back. I don't know. Well, this is obviously, I don't know if it's obvious, but it's recorded before the poll. I don't know if the poll's been out yet. But maybe it has, maybe it hasn't, so it's hard to comment on it yet. So I'm still just playing it down the middle right now until we get a decision.

uh from the from the top top down hello folks or let's go folks i think that's still being decided uh obviously i'm still not home i think i'm in i think i'm in las vegas when this comes out or something i don't know uh uh welcome to the nate land podcast i'm nate bargetzi aaron weber brian bates uh thank you for uh whatever just the stuff dude

for being you, you know? Thanks, man. Not you. Unless you were a different you. If you had kept your Planet Fitness thing, you might be a different. You showed the Planet Fitness you lost weight without them. Yeah. I did. I did. You're weaker than you've ever been, but. That's true. Probably. Yeah. Yeah.

I think on an offensive line, you would just get shoved over. Oh, dude. Yeah. Yeah. I weighed a lot less when I played offensive line, but I was sturdy as a rock. Yeah. My center of gravity is at my neck.

That's what I like to say. I'll fall over so easy. Yeah. Now, but then. Then, yeah. You would be able to. That was okay. His wife pushed you over once at Zaney's. She did. She weighs like 90 pounds. That was when I first met Laura. Then she was like, want me to walk you to your car tonight? She trashed me about it for a while. It's funny. It's funny. All right. Comments. As always, YouTube, Instagram, Nateland, Facebook, fan page. Is that us? Our fan page?

No, that's a fan. Someone fan runs that Facebook page. Twitter, the subreddit, uh, Nate land subreddit. So if people are, that's the younger, the subreddits popping, dude, there's a lot going on on there. I think it's great that it's there. I like it. The people are talking and that's what people can discuss.

People that don't know the Reddit world might be like, oh, I don't know. But maybe that's good. They wouldn't be left alone. Maybe they like being down there and be like, just get away. Get away from us. We're down here minding our own business.

Casey Jones. So I heard Nate on your mom's house and thought he was hilarious. Went and checked out this podcast last Monday at work and am already on episode 30. Hoping to get caught up by next week's episode. Watching it all unfold is like a less intense Breaking Bad. You guys are amazing, even bark. Goodbye, folks. Welcome, Casey. I love that. Yeah. You know, flying through them. Right.

We're very similar to your mom's house, I think. And Breaking Bad. Very similar vibes. And Breaking Bad. Yeah, your mom's house. It's just a cleaner version of that. You know? That's all it is. BJ Maxwell. Nate's reading cadence is like a theme park roller coaster. He speeds downhill by stringing seven to eight words together. Then he hits the climb and chugs through five to six words until he hits the slope again. Well worth the wait in line. That's almost good, Ray.

to describe my reading. If I have to, before I read, I would tell people that if I had to read in public. So just so you guys know, this will be like a roller coaster. So I'm going to go quick, then it's going to slow down. Then it'll speed back up again. It's almost a perfect way to describe it. Sarah Meech.

When my husband and I were dating long distance, he flew to visit me in Chicago. It happened to be during the Olympics. So my mom and I made a 15-foot sign that said, welcome home, and put Olympic rings on it. We told everyone else waiting for the flight he had just won a silver in wrestling because no one knew the wrestlers. No one knows the wrestlers. When he walked off the plane, everyone started cheering. It's pretty good. It's pretty great. Yeah.

It's a fun prank. He just has to. He has no idea why. You just have to take it at that point, right? Yeah, and he goes, where's your medal at? I checked it. He goes, I didn't get it. Oh, so we can't see it? No, they don't. Baggage claim right now. Yeah, I hope it's not stolen. Matt Gable.

Listening to you guys talk about losing weight really got me motivated. Today was the only nearby restaurant was a McDonald's, but I was determined. I pulled up to the drive-thru speaker and confidently asked for a Southwest chicken salad and a bottle of water. The lady taking my order responded with, sir, we haven't sold salads in over a year.

I decided at that moment that the diet was no longer for me in order to double quarter pounder with cheese and a McChicken for a side sandwich. There it is. Lesson learned. Side sandwich. Side sandwich is the move. Everybody knows. I don't know. Probably not everybody. I know what you're talking about, that side sandwich. I'll take a number one, no onions, Diet Coke, a little cheeseburger, no onions on the side.

I do a McChicken a lot on the side. It's a popular side sandwich. You tell me it's a meal. I have a little different definition of what a meal is. It is. I just put it with the other meal. You need a side sandwich. Side sandwich is, you got to get it. Yeah. I mean, that sounded good. Order in a bottle of water. McDonald's.

Do they no longer serve salads or just his McDonald's? I don't know. I'll be honest. I haven't looked into that. He got the answer he wanted. He didn't question it. That's what he was hoping. She might have said, sir, we've been selling so many salads in this past year, and he heard we haven't sold salads over here. He's like, scratch that. I'll take that. He heard what he wanted to hear. That's how I – oh, man. That's a tough one.

You know, you're like, there's no other restaurant. I don't know what to do. Get yourself a side sandwich. I ordered a quarter pounder with cheese by accident. How did that happen? We had a nice restaurant? No, no. Because I wanted number two, but no onions. It was two cheeseburgers. But that's been switched. Oh, I thought you were trying to order something healthy and you accidentally got it. No, no.

No. He's got the number wrong. I got the number wrong. Well, they changed the number two to the quarter pounder. And so I just, well, I've ordered so many that I don't even know what I'm, I'm just blurting out my order. And then I get it. I'm like, why is it in one box? And then, and so I ate a quarter pounder. I don't ever get quarter pounders.

A fun fact. It'll be on the Nate Land game board. Never get a quarter pounder. Nate eats quarter pounders. He doesn't. Move two spaces. Jeff Harden. When my buddy Carl was in college, he played football and needed another credit. The coach got him in a golf class. Due to conflicts with practice, he told him he didn't have to go to class. After graduating, Carl was interviewing at an accounting firm, and the guy noticed on his transcript he took golf in college.

He asked Carl what his handicap was. Carl was floored and his mind was racing. He couldn't imagine how he could have known he had a handicap. He told him he had a club foot when he was born, but they corrected it when he was young. The interview bursted out laughing. Oh, that's...

That's very funny. He's got to play it off as a joke at that point. In that situation, he's like, this is the adult world. They want to know what's your handicap before we get going. And he goes, all right, of course, yeah. Had a club foot when I was born, but they fixed it. So it won't be a problem around the office. I don't think it'll be a big problem around the office. I think I can still do my job. And they go, I don't know. But that club foot, I doubt it.

Jordan Gibbs. Hello, Nate. You mentioned in an earlier episode that you were writing a song. Is this something that you're still working on? Thank you, Nate Lanteen, for this podcast. I look forward to it every week. We did write the song. The guy's got a new song out now. Walker Hayes is who I wrote it with. He's got a great song out that Laura sent me. Yeah, I don't know. No way we'll be able to play it, right?

No. I would play a second of it. Yeah, you can play like up to, I would say seven seconds of it. Fancy like? Play seven seconds of Fancy Like. But get in the, get a little bit. Yeah. And then, this is tough. It's a great song. Oh, geez. Yeah. I mean, they just shut down the whole, not at the beginning. You're wasting it. I thought this was an ad. Sorry. All right, maybe 27 seconds? Yeah, let's try that. Yeah. Nailed it, Aaron.

Oh, there's your line. Yep. Fancy like Applebee's. You sure this isn't the song you wrote? It's a great song. I know it is. Now it's Walker Hayes, me and him, the ones that wrote it. We still have it. I don't know. I'm going to ask him where it's at now that he's blowing up from this. He was already doing good, but now that it's going great, so I'm going to be like, hey, man, I see our song got pushed behind. What happened? Was I not good enough for you, Walker? Abigail Ray.

When I was eight, I was going to Mexico with my mom and dad, and it was my first plane ride. We were getting in the car, and Nate came to tell me bye and said, hey, don't worry about the flight. Only worry if you get peanuts. If they give peanuts, it means you're going down.

I assumed he was kidding when I got them since the plane was fine. About five minutes after we were given peanuts, the landing gear messed up and we had to have an emergency landing. There were fire trucks and an ambulance and the wheels were on fire. We had to be evacuated from the plane. I kept yelling at my mom, they gave us peanuts. They gave us peanuts. So for people, that is my sister. Oh, okay. Yeah. Okay.

She lived a different life than me. She went to Mexico with my parents. I have a whole new joke about all this. So I can't, I won't dive into too much. But yeah, they, I mean, it's crazy. They had to do, they had to do the, where they had to like let the gas go and like, you know, and they, like you see on TV, just bzzz in it. And they, all that stuff. Yeah, how old were you? She was eight. So I was 17.

I guess I'm nine years older than her. Yeah. 17, 18. So they were doing this, you know, and I was kind of like, you're like hanging out more, you know, when you're not eight. But yeah, it's crazy. Pretty good though. The odds of that really worked out for me. For the joke of the peanuts. It's a pretty good joke. They give you peanuts. It's not good. Telling an eight-year-old that is too...

I mean, Harper's about to be nine, but that's Wes Griffin, Nate Aaron and back nine. I have a comedy trick that always annoys me and was curious if it annoys you too. I hate it when comedians first come to the stage and say something like, I know what you're thinking. I look like blah, blah, insert option one mixed with option two. Curious your opinions on that cheap trick.

Aaron, you still open like this. So what? What do people say you look like? Do you feel the audience hate it? Yeah. I hate that too. Did you ever do one? No. I'm sure maybe you have some. You always have a form of that. Yeah.

Yeah, everybody kind of does. It's not a good, I don't know. No, you don't like it, but I always understand it. And so the way I look at it is usually it's when you first start. You have a lot of jokes that are kind of, I mean, I had airplane jokes about the seat not going back when I first started because you don't know that that's very hacky to do. So I had, I mean, I would do airplane jokes in open mic, which is mortified.

I mean, I think about that because they had to be just judging me so hard to be like, this dude's doing airline stuff. About the peanuts? Not about the peanuts. That'd be, that'd be a good, I might tell that story actually. Yeah. The peanut story on, I could try that on stage. Maybe. Well, another thing is that it's sometimes it's awkward to just get started. Yeah. Like it's, it's hard to just start the set. So using a stock kind of structure like that. I know it just ain't easy. Well,

Well, sometimes it works. You know, like Ryan Hamilton says he looks like Seinfeld and Chris Rock, right? I don't know. It's something like that. And it's kind of dead on. He says he looks more like a comedy club logo than a comedian. Yes, which is kind of dead on. It's very funny. So if it's done at that kind of level, the guy would be like, oh, wow. You'd be like, yeah, I get it. But it needs to be great. If you're going to do it, it needs to be great.

Or you need to be pretty young into comedy and you don't know what you don't know how to start a show. And then you learn how to do it. Then you learn to kind of stop doing that kind of stuff. So the answer is kind of I do agree with you, Wes. When I took a comedy class, the very first class, he had us each get up on stage where we didn't know each other at all and have people write down what we thought this person, what they did, where they're from.

Just so you get an idea of what people think you are or who you are. What do people say about you? I don't even remember. I count it or something. Yeah. Look worried. Yeah. That girl that said that nailed it more than anybody. Ben Dukes. Nate, you mentioned in a previous episode that Netflix gave you positive feedback about the ratings after The Tennessee Kid was released. Have you heard any news since the release of The Greatest Average American? I'm a big fan of the podcast. Keep up the great work.

Yeah, they did tell us a little bit more. I'm not allowed to say. But it was great. It did great. Everybody's very happy. Everybody's... So thank you for everybody, every single person that watched it, everybody that you told people to watch it. If you know anybody that hasn't watched it, keep go watching it. I appreciate that. My...

Success all comes from you people listening to this and telling people. I'm very much a word of mouth comedian. So I owe it to all of you, all the folks and the fans of stand up. It's completely you guys. And it's so we're, yeah, as always, I'm very grateful of that. And,

We'll never take advantage of it. But yeah, it did really good. And they were very happy and which was great to hear. And, you know, Netflix does like when they look at stuff, they look at stuff like very early from the beginning. Right when it starts, they kind of see what the numbers are. Then they do it like I think a month later or something like that. And then it kind of lives up there. So I don't know if they don't like keep tracking. But I mean, they know everything. They know every second someone's watched every person.

So something you got to think too, like how many people are watching this stand-up special alone? I don't think I'm, I think I'm a, I know when people come to shows, it's couples, it's families. People do watch it alone. I'm not saying they don't. I watch a lot of stuff. You know, you like comedy, you watch something alone or whatever. But so you hope more, you know, than all those families that watch it together. But it was good. So thank you.

Jennifer Landris, while visiting with some good friends in their home, a neighbor came to visit. The neighbor had the worst teeth I have ever seen. So much so that it affected his speech. At one point, he went to the restroom, came out and announced that he was out of toilet paper at his house and had stuffed some extra TP in his shoe to take home with him. We were all trying so hard not to laugh and hurt his feelings. For almost half an hour,

Full of socially awkward interactions where we refused to make eye contact with one another or we would not be able to contain ourselves. We were working so hard to be kind and matters got worse when he attempted two magic tricks with a deck of cards bombing terribly. Then the third trick was mind-blowing and super impressive. It turns out the neighbor was Nate's dad, Steven. He had dentures professionally made to...

to play this hillbilly role. He proceeded to perform the most amazing magic show for us and our friends in the living room. I was not at all surprised when I saw Nate on Jimmy Fallon several years later and recognized the last name. Thanks to your whole family for bringing joy and laughs to our family. Yeah, that's great. That's, yeah, my dad would always, he had, him and Wayne Denton, his buddy Wayne, they would do it together, but he would just be

He's very good at doing that, like sticking with that and like having it, you know, and we'd watch him. He'd do it. He'd go in a gas. He just put these crazy teeth in and just go to a gas station. He'd go in a gas station. He'd order something and you would be like, you just go in there and sit and it's just looks like, you know, there's something wrong with this guy and you watch them just have to be nice to him, you know, and he's just gets them doing and he goes and buys gum or something. Yeah.

I asked your dad about this and he remembers this particular episode. There was more to it that they put in there. Like he wore like a blue Walmart vest and all kinds of stuff. He has like a windbreaker jacket. It's not going to be a jacket you'd wear. Yeah. Yeah. It's like, it's not far off from your outfit. Oh yeah. I can see it. It's always like, uh, yeah, it's something that, you know, you got the, you got the flip flops, Walmart flip flops. He'd love those. They would fit in great. I'll get them a pair. Yeah.

You nailed that reading, by the way. Yeah, it was a lot. I mean, so I look at sentences, some of those sentences, you're like, I hope this was the next sentence. That's what I think. The whole, all of them, you were flying through them. You nailed it. Yeah, we're getting better. You know, practice. You guys are going to watch me learn and get better. I want to go find out if I have dyslexia. Maybe. You know? If you do, you've conquered it, man.

I just one week. One week. No, I'm demeaning your whole life. We're coming off quickly. You talk. Cut Larry. And to go, I don't know how much I'm conquering. I mean, yeah, I've made a living. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. Yeah. But I don't think I think a lot of people have. I don't think dyslexia. I'm trying to put a good spin on it. Yeah. People with dyslexia. There's like most of us don't make it out of a closet. We're just.

And they're just like, that's our uncle Randy. He's got dyslexia and he can't. He's been in that closet for 10 years. Doesn't know how to get out. We've saw food under the door. He lives there now. He thinks that's the world because this is a big world. Aaron says you could be their spokesperson. You're the role model. Yeah. For dyslexia. Yeah. I mean, who's another celebrity that has dyslexia? Joe Biden. Doesn't Biden have it? I don't know.

uh that would be terrible he's a yeah he's a president i don't know if it's a celebrity uh they go shack yeah yeah y'all mean that you're about to say kardashian jake i'm a president of the united states of america who's another one that oh kim jong-un that's a celebrity that has uh he just started naming just putin yeah who's that famous guy in russia oh putin uh

celebrities with the delixia so sorry for saying but he does not have it i don't know why i thought tim tebow's cover by reading that yeah yeah steven spielberg they all did real good yeah justin timberlake has ad oh henry winkler dyslexia and math issues i mean that feels like just someone doesn't like him there's no reason to put that in there

Dyslexia and doesn't smell good. You're like, oh, all right, dude. Just the question was who has dyslexia. It wasn't going. The rest of them are conditions. His is just math issues. Math, yeah. Five plus five, nine. Henry, come on, buddy. Come on, five. Hey. He goes, oh, God. He doesn't get it. What is wrong? Speaking of dyslexia.

Henry Winkler? Yeah. 80s? Yep. That's the topic today. Wow. That worked out. Yeah, that worked out. Was that show in the 80s? Happy Days? Probably. Started in the 70s, jumped the shark in the 80s. Oh, there you go. But he was famous in the 80s. Yeah. And 90s. And he keeps going. He's still famous. He's done very good. He's got dyslexia and math issues. We just watched The Waterboy. Oh, right. He was the coach in that. I forgot he was the coach in that. Yeah. Yeah.

So a lot of fun stuff in the 80s. I bet so. The AIDS epidemic swept the country. Yeah. No, I learned my lesson. Not so much gloom and doom. I remember basically everything about the 80s. You weren't born. Anything in particular you want to start with that you remember from the 80s? So born in 79. I remember, I guess, 89. I was 10. Yeah.

No, I mean, I remember it. There's nothing that, and I'm sure when you bring up stuff, I'll probably remember stuff. There's nothing that was like, I don't, you know, when do you become like super early? Like, oh yeah, I remember everything. I'm not a good member, remembering person. I have remembering issues. You don't have a good memory? Dyslexia and remembering issues. Yeah. What if I, this doctor comes in, he goes, you have dyslexia. I've told you this before. I'm like, God, I forgot. Yeah.

And then they have to put that in remembering issues. He has dyslexia and remembering issues. And some math stuff. Just some math stuff. Just some other things. It just gets very broad. And some English nonsense. But I don't know. We can go et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.

He doesn't know what that means. Et cetera, et cetera. You think he's going to keep going? He doesn't know what et cetera means. You're like, oh, so it ends? Yeah, yeah, it's not et cetera. It means he doesn't know what that means. Well, I'll start with some inventions that kind of became big in the 80s.

It started in the 80s with cameras. It was still the Kodak, the Polaroid, pop out. By the end, disposable cameras was the way to go. So I remember that. But that would have been the 90s too. Yeah, but they kind of took off in the 80s. Yeah, so those were big. Do you remember disposable cameras? I do remember disposable cameras. And you still see them occasionally.

At like, you've been at like a wedding where they have them sitting at the table and stuff? Yeah, because they're like a dime now. Yeah. They're barely hanging on. But that used to be your camera. Was it just a disposable camera? Oh, yeah. Yeah. You take them to Walmart or Walgreens or something. Take pictures. I don't know what you take them there to take pictures. Well, let me know. There's a Walmart open. There you go. Right. Yeah. Picture Brian. In front of it. Yeah. Yeah.

这一集,我们回到1980年代。Breakfast分享了他在高中时的时尚失误,Nate对今天的电影发表了一番激烈的看法,而Aaron再次了解到MASH的结局并不是电视历史上观看人数最多的事件。

</context> <raw_text>0 你把他们带到沃尔玛,拍照。有一张白头鹰的照片,就坐在那里,在新沃尔玛前面拍打着翅膀。他们不得不退得很远才能把它全部拍进去。我记得它来的时候。沃尔玛来了?是的。把Kmart打得落花流水。你们去了吗?哦,是的。是的。是的。就像去那种大商店,我确实记得。就像去,你很兴奋。你会想,哦,他们有新的。是的。

好吧,我记得我... 我是说,在购物方面,我在高中时有几次衣橱故障。关于购物...

Goodies是黎巴嫩的首选商店。你要跳过你的衣橱故障吗?好吧,我会讲这个,但我只是给你铺垫。你知道Goodies是什么吗?不知道。Goodies还存在吗?是糖果吗?它是糖果,但我有点知道这个商店。对我们来说,它是黎巴嫩的高端时尚。那是唯一的商店。所以有一年圣诞节,我和我妈妈去了Hickory Hollow Mall。大旅行。这是一次大旅行。那是40分钟的路程。

40分钟的车程。是的。尤其是我们住的地方。这些可口可乐的衬衫在80年代曾经很流行。你听说过这个吗?商店里有一件衬衫,上面写着可口可乐休闲装1987。这是1986年的圣诞节。它很亮眼,显得很突出,我觉得这是最酷的东西。所以我问我妈妈我能不能要它。它大约30美元。所以她说太贵了。但她知道我有多喜欢它。所以放进了可口可乐休闲装1987。好的。是的。

但是她在圣诞节给我惊喜了。所以现在我有了这件衬衫,那件,没错。亮眼的那件,第二排,第二排。哦,就在这里。是的。就是它。左边的第一件。哦,那是一件酷衫。是的。但是你现在应该穿它的方式。你穿它的时候,是的,没错,我穿了它。所以我很兴奋。你现在应该买那件衬衫,而不是,哦,抱歉。我在圣诞节后的第一天穿着它去上高中,

因为在黎巴嫩,每个人都穿同样的衬衫,因为每个人都在Goodies购物。所以每个人都有同样的新衬衫。所以我想,我会变得很酷。而我当时是个二年级学生。有一个高年级女孩穿着同样的衬衫,她对此非常生气,因为这个书呆子,她在高中非常受欢迎。我走在走廊上,她非常生气。

所以我们两个穿着它都很尴尬,因为那件衬衫太显眼了。大约两周后,它再次轮到我穿,我穿着它去学校。她走在走廊上,穿着她的衬衫。我能听到她对她的朋友说,难道你现在在开玩笑吗?她非常生气和尴尬。我再也没有穿过它。就像,我不能这样做。我不能冒这个险。也许在她高中毕业后,但到那时已经是88年了。是的。衬衫已经旧了。现在你看起来很傻。

所以这是其中之一。然后另一个,不知怎么的,我错过了男孩乐队对男孩来说并不酷。因为New Edition,他们曾经很流行,但那是唯一的男孩乐队。在我高中的最后一年之前,就在我们开学前,我和我的朋友去看了New Kids on the Block的演唱会。我们没有意识到这对男孩来说并不酷。所以我在Starwood Amphitheater买了一件T恤。

在我高年级的第一天穿去学校。大声明。好吧,人们很快让我知道。这有点... 是的,我是为了正式场合买的。是的。我在高年级的第一天穿着这件衬衫去学校。结果并不好。男孩们很快让我知道这...

我是说... 这并不酷。就像一个即兴剧团。是的。你会去参加一个音乐会,你会说,不,我是从某个女孩那里偷来的。那应该是你应该说的... 你会说,好吧,那很好。我打了个女孩,抢了她的衬衫。我是说,我是如此自豪。花了第三节课的人们才开始问,伙计,你在干什么?在我意识到这是一个巨大的错误之前。我必须穿着它... 整天。整天。是的,我是说...

我不能回家。你能把它翻转过来,像是,是的,这很搞笑,我穿着这个。我可以,如果我聪明的话,但不。我花了半天才意识到这并不酷。你制造了一个时光机。我们可以回去修复它。你觉得你能做到吗?是的,我可以做很多事情。我可以做很多事情。还有很多事情我可以做得不同。再多一点。我在高中时走到一个男孩面前,问他要签名。等一下,谁是?

我不知道。那是... 天哪。

你没有上我的高中。你在高中吗?我当时是个新生,我是世界上最大的体育迷。我从头到尾读了每一本Street and Smith的大学篮球杂志。他们列出了即将进入的顶级高中球员。一个叫Carlos Groves的家伙在East Robertson高中打球。他被田纳西大学招募。

他在我的杂志上。我非常兴奋他来我们高中打球。他就像个名人,我走上前去让他在我的杂志上签名。他的朋友们在取笑他。是的。几乎就像如果有人现在走到我面前。这真是荒谬。每个人都在嘲笑他。是的。

是的。但他在田纳西大学打球。他最大的成就是“黑客沙克”,当沙克无法罚球时。他们会把他放进比赛中,像是打了一场斗殴。我记得那场比赛。犯规很重。把他拉倒了。大打出手。是的。是的。那是更著名的大学篮球斗殴之一,对吧?LSU和田纳西?是的。就是他,Carlos Groves。是的。是的。那是一场巨大的斗殴。我记得那场比赛。是的。

这非常有趣。所以我不知道你们是否发现了一个趋势。我在高中并不那么酷。不,我想我们明白了。这里有...

他就像在法庭上为此辩护。法官说,好吧,伙计,够了。告诉我们Costanza。是的,他说,我们不需要其他任何东西。这里是Andrea Dora。Andrea Dora。布莱恩,这里是他吗?我想,也许现在,但你找不到他大学时的照片吗?我想知道他是否会记得你。我敢打赌他会。我是说,有很大的机会。是的,那是那场斗殴。那是一场巨大的斗殴,伙计。

我是说,那是一场巨大的斗殴。当他们... 我是说,他太大了。看看他在沙克旁边。是的。是的,他们为此发生了如此大的斗殴。我记得那场比赛。我记得我看到沙克打球。那是你感到老的时刻之一,我们像这样谈论它,你看到那些家伙。就像,我看到沙克在大学打球。你几乎看到了他的整个职业生涯。我是说,他是我开始记得的最早的球员之一。我是说,他知道。哦,我能记得在三分线之前的日子。我真的能。

这对Vandy来说是个大事,因为我们总是有很好的外线投手。哦,是的。我完全记得。你还在为此感到失望吗?关于三分线?你是否接受了它?你一开始生气吗?这违背了比赛的精神。不,我喜欢它。我喜欢它。Vandy的连胜纪录在我结婚那天被打破。

我们在我的婚礼招待会上,Keith Alberstadt给我发短信,愤怒不已。那一瞬间,我在婚礼招待会上非常生气,但后来我就释然了。是的,我们在Vandy有一个活跃的连胜纪录,或者他们有。自从三分线设立以来,我们每场比赛都投中三分球。你能说出其他在那条连胜纪录上的球队吗?UCLA。不。

我们不必太多。我给你两个猜测。一个是显而易见的,另一个则不是。杜克?不。北卡罗来纳?普林斯顿。好的。还有UNLV。

我总是说UNLV,每个人总是表现得像,哦,显然。你会觉得这根本不显而易见。UNLV让我感到震惊。但我想他们以前会投三分球。但他们有Larry Johnson。我想到UNLV时,更多的是他们不会投三分球。但现在只有UNLV和普林斯顿,因为Vandy的Jerry Stackhouse打破了连胜纪录,这很艰难。

这是一件艰难的事情,因为他们会说,连胜继续。他们每场比赛都会这么说。就像,这是我们拥有的伟大事物。然后Stackhouse来了,打破了它。我对此也很沮丧。就像,拜托,伙计。几乎就像他做了。并不是说我对Jerry Stackhouse有什么意见,但这让我生气,像是,你知道吗?我们有这个事情在进行。我们喜欢它。

我知道这并不重要,但并不是说我们赢得了冠军,然后失去了连胜纪录。我们表现糟糕,然后连胜被打破。所以他有点加重了。但后来他就像无所谓。对你来说这并不重要,因为你刚到这里。你可能不会永远待在这里。是的。但我们会。所以别搞砸了。我对此非常沮丧。

是的,所以那条连胜纪录从87年左右持续到2019年。去年?是的,2020年初。三分线是在87年设立的吗?是的。是80年代中期。哇。大学之前NBA就有了?不是很久。 我完全不知道是那么近。我觉得NBA可能在70年代末就有了,然后大学是在80年代中期。

是的。是的。好的。所以手机开始出现了,像那种大盒子的。我们有一个。

我记得我爸爸有一个在包里。但我意思是,我们从来不能用它。就像,我想每分钟要几美元。是的。就像几乎,我不知道,就像,嗯,以防万一有紧急情况。那时他们都开始了紧急情况的概念。当你想到这一点时,他们都以“如果有紧急情况”开始销售。

所以一切都在紧急情况下销售,这有点疯狂。就像你看看保险,保险都是为了应对紧急情况。然后你再看看现在的手机,我们需要这个包。所以我们卖给你这个手机,万一发生紧急情况怎么办?

所以你为这个紧急情况存钱。我父母给了我我的第一部手机,他们说,只需把它放在手套箱里,以防你出故障。我甚至没有打开它。我只是把它放在手套箱里,如果我抛锚了,我可以- 如果它没电了怎么办?它就会死掉。我想。我的意思是,我想如果你从未打开它,它会保持充电一段时间-

我不这么认为。我不认为电是这样工作的。我认为它最终会耗尽,但你可以保持一段时间。我不知道。但底线是我根本没有打开它。我只是把它放在那里。如果我需要联系某人,我就会立刻把它关掉,放回手套箱。真疯狂。如果我离开房间没有我的手机,我会转身去找它。是的。我对手机感到厌倦。

我去,我前几天去。昨天我去,我只戴着手表,然后把手机留在这里,去邻居家坐着。我想把它留在那儿。我根本不想要它。太多了。就是太多了。我收到很多短信。个人电脑在80年代中期出现,第一台Mac在84年推出,这在某种程度上引发了革命。你惊讶了。

在你妈妈的子宫里,你妈妈说是的,感觉到了吗?我在子宫里待了七年。是的,花了很长时间才出来。我慢慢来。你是什么时候出生的?91年。91年,CD在1988年超过了磁带的销售。我以为那会更晚。88年,CD。是的,我记得磁带,但我...

CD更贵。是的。我是说,那是人们只是认为他们不会... 就像,如果你是一支乐队,你在卖CD... 我是说,你根本无法想象音乐会发展到现在的地步。我是说,我相信那些确实有的人得到了很好的报酬,因为他们预测到了这一点。但是,我是说,肯定有很多人会说,是的,伙计,你只是在卖CD和...

你知道,磁带和你的,广播是巨大的。一切都很庞大。那时候一切都很大。广播是如此重要。电视是如此重要。所有这些东西都如此强大。有趣的是,这些东西中的一些已经稍微回潮了。就像黑胶唱片现在已经流行了一段时间,但你知道,磁带又回来了。你去一些这些时髦的,

唱片商店和音乐场所。是的,有磁带。像新艺术家?新艺术家现在会把他们的专辑放在磁带上。你甚至能在哪里听到它?我不知道。我车里没有一个。你有磁带。好吧,你必须买一个磁带播放器。是的。是的。车里还有CD播放器吗?我不知道。我的车已经10岁了。是的。新的可能没有。没有。是的。我忘了提到第一部手机的价格是4000美元。是的。

所以我希望你锁上了手套箱。花了,嗯,那没有这个。那比一辆车还贵。是的。那部手机只能存储30个号码。充电需要10个小时,通话时间为30分钟。4000美元。想象一下有人在使用它。他们,打电话要多少钱?我不知道。是的。没必要去看。我没有。是的。

如果有人在那时经常使用他们的手机,我是说,天哪,那一定是个富人,能够花四千美元,这只是一个声明。如果有人需要它,是的。是的,335,哦,没关系。以为我有那个号码,完全误读了句子。虚惊一场。330?是的,按小时335美元。没办法,那是对的。

谁会打电话一个小时?那可能是分开的,基本上是每小时3.35美元。如果你打了10个小时的电话,那就是30美元。30美元一天。我想我可能有阅读障碍,因为每小时3.35美元是1984年的最低工资。这是我读到的。

我想我在1997年赚得比这还少。1997年的最低工资是多少?我以为我在Opryland主题公园的第一份工作时每小时赚3.25美元。你可以提起诉讼。是的。获得一些补偿。那是谁感谢的?现在的最低工资是多少?那么1997年纳什维尔的最低工资是多少?或者不,是1997年。是94年,差不多。

95年。是的,425。所以也许就是这样。所以也许是425,而不是325。听起来对。是的。索尼Walkman在80年代推出。他们希望在第一个月售出5000台。他们卖出了30000台。这是一个大热门。你记得那时候吗?

你在中学还是高中?我想我在中学。是的。我不太记得。好的。我记得割草时听Walkman。所以Walkman,最开始你不能有CD播放器。但后来Walkman,然后他们就像,你得去CD播放器,你得随身携带。

Walkman至少和磁带一样大。你可以夹在腰带上。它不会跳。然后你得到一个CD播放器和Walkman。我记得割草时用它。你会戴着那些小耳机,听到所有的噪音。现在一切都关于体验。这些耳机覆盖着你的耳朵。基本上就像把它关掉。你听到一切。

然后你得到CD播放器会跳,然后他们有那个不跳的按钮。Gary Goldman有一个关于这个的笑话,非常有趣。关于没有跳过的按钮,所以它不会跳。但它跳了。现在你可以听音乐,你可以戴着手表,耳朵里有蓝牙耳机。这真是太疯狂了。有时我觉得

我们有点忘记了。你慢慢适应这些东西,所以你真的习惯了。但事实上你可以在FaceTime上看到彼此,我是说,这并不是很久以前。你什么都做不了。80年代销售的床垫中几乎四分之一是水床。你记得水床吗?我有一张水床。你有吗?是的。挺有趣的。我记得我叔叔有一张。

因为他比我父母年轻,所以在我们出生时他还住在我祖父母或他的父母家。所以我们总是,因为他的房间很酷,因为他19岁左右。他有一张水床。然后我记得,我有一张。我记得我买了一张。然后人们会告诉你在里面放沙子。代替水?是的。真的吗?我想是的。我从来没有水床。睡得好吗?挺重的。是的。是的。

是的,我是说... 我是说,这是水。它相当重。那可能是编造的。但我很确定有些人会说在里面放沙子。是的,那会非常重。但水床很重。这就是我所说的。无论如何,它超级重。真有趣。你为什么要睡在水床上?它们现在的受欢迎程度一定下降了。我认为他们不再卖了。你认为是因为人们变胖了吗?

波浪开始冲击。我们刚开始。你得在睡觉时有一个低波浪区。你只是把你的妻子扔出床外。她直接飞到空中,正面撞上衣柜,这个折叠衣柜。你得把它们关上。她,抱歉。是的。Murphy床?是的。Murphy床水床?是的,是的,是的。

我知道公寓综合体或公寓,我认为他们要么不允许,要么你必须让他们知道,因为如果它们破裂,会漏到每一层。是的。我认为他们遇到过这个问题。是的。我认为他们不再卖了。我敢肯定他们会。我想买一张。我会查一下。这是给你的,Aaron。是的。1984年,第一辆迷你面包车。不错。道奇大篷车和普利茅斯旅行者。

你呢?我有一辆克莱斯勒城与乡村。我认为普通的面包车很流行,倒车,知道的,就是那种你可以滑开门,把孩子扔进去然后出发的那种。我不知道我一生中是否记得有新型汽车推出。像迷你面包车,那是完全不同的东西。特斯拉?好吧,特斯拉。但那是... 电动车。你知道我的意思。形状,形状。我会说一些卡车,他们有那种扩展驾驶室的东西。

就像你在后面有座位。我是说,现在的卡车就像一辆完整的四门车。是的。是的。所以有了那额外的,我是说,你坐在后面,有很多空间。是的。但如果你看到那辆卡车经过,你不会想,那个东西是什么?是的。我想象第一次看到迷你面包车时,你会想,那是完全不同的东西。我想你见过面包车,12人乘坐的面包车和那种东西。哦,他们有面包车。就像是你家能负担得起的那种。

好的,所以他们有那种大15人乘坐的... 我想是的。他们可能有班车。机场班车。是的,类似的东西。我的观点就此结束。是的,我不认为你会想,那个是什么... 就像直升机在小区中间降落。所有这些孩子都从里面出来。他们有多少人在里面?你惊讶了。现在他们还卖普通面包车吗?是的,我想是的,肯定的。像12人乘坐的面包车?是的。

呃,我想就像像Scooby-Doo那种面包车。对吧?是的,他们肯定有。哦,是的,我认为那变得流行了。是的,面包车生活很流行。是的,人们,哦,真的?现在他们正在制造可以像那样的面包车,有公司你可以住在里面,它是床,它是任何东西。你知道的,是的,我认为你现在可以得到任何你想要的东西,我认为很多东西都回来了,你可以得到任何你想要的东西。我敢打赌水床又回来了。我敢打赌一切都回来了。我认为你现在可以得到任何你想要的东西。

人们想买这个。现在一切都关于小众市场。所以一切都是小众市场,有足够的小众人群想住在旧面包车里。这不是那种人,面包车在摇晃,别来敲门。我在想18岁,这可能在你之前,但他们有一辆面包车。是的,现在我记得18岁。如果是迷你面包车,那会是一个完全不同的节目。是的。电视,皇家婚礼。

查尔斯王子,戴安娜王妃,超过十亿人观看了它。是的。1981年7月29日。就像在读新闻。我是说,缓慢的转变。这就是今天电视的全部内容。好了,让我们把它交给Nate来报道天气。嘿,还有Aaron来报道体育。如果我们是一支新闻团队,你会是谁?我的意思是,你是首席主播,还是你是那种在现场的搞笑家?

我认为他是Ron Burgundy。你是Ron Burgundy。因为你会在提词器上读任何东西。是的。是的。他们放在那里的任何东西。是的。我可能是Steve Carell。我本来要说,我不记得那个家伙的名字。是的。David Kagan。我是Christina Applegate。你抢了他的工作。是的。达拉斯的“谁射杀了JR”大结局,在那时是电视历史上观看人数最多的电视节目。

你们听说过吗?是的。我是说,我记得所有这些事情。是的。那不是悬念吗?好吧,你对New Kids on the Block感兴趣,所以这可能正合你的胃口。不错的肥皂剧。你和所有的妈妈们一起看。这是80年代初,我妈妈看了所有这些节目。达拉斯,王朝,结网。

你爸爸看过吗?我的意思是,我们只有一台电视,所以。他不得不看。是的。是的。但是我们有周五晚上的《危险公爵》。是的。可怕的绿巨人。是的。达拉斯。然后你们会做广播。是的。然后我们会倒退。听Yeehaw。

但这是一个季末悬念,你必须等整个夏天才能找到答案。关于谁射杀了J.R.有很多猜测。还有关于它的歌曲和所有小报。他们不会告诉演员。我想他们拍摄的方式只有射杀他的人才知道。是的。他们不想让演员泄露秘密。所以这真是太疯狂了。谁射杀了他?他的情妇。是的。

这一集,我们回到1980年代。Breakfast分享了一些他在高中时的时尚失误,Nate对今天的电影发表了一番长篇大论,而Aaron再次了解到,MASH的结局并不是电视历史上观看人数最多的事件。

</context> <raw_text>0 这是个惊喜吗?我的意思是,到了人们对每个人都进行了猜测的地步,所以不会有惊喜,因为他们真的列出了每一个人……比如他的妈妈或者……所以我觉得这并不是一个巨大的惊喜。是啊,难怪他们感到回报。他们对此感到满意吗?是的,人们对结果感到高兴吗?我的意思是,我觉得人们现在会更加苛刻,因为我们刚刚……

现在知道的更多,我觉得那时候有点新鲜,就像哦,哇,我简直不敢相信我觉得她的名字是克里斯蒂娜,我觉得有时候像这样的节目,当他们把它炒得那么大时,根本就没有办法让每个人都满意。那时候我觉得你还是可以做到的,因为……是的,他们没有那么多的频道,对吧?我的意思是,你一开始只有那么多频道,所以你根本没有竞争,因为你所能做的就是成为最好的20个节目。是的。就这样。三个频道。太疯狂了。三个频道。我记得当频道开始增多时,开始有很多频道。你有四个或五个频道?不,是当你开始有20个频道时,我的意思是,很多频道你是收不到的,因为你必须为它们付费。你可以去HBO,但它会被加密。或者其他什么。但当频道变得更多时,真是太疯狂了。天哪,有这么多频道。

是的,我的意思是,我觉得我表弟有基本的有线电视,他们可以收看WGN和TBS,观看小熊队和勇士队的比赛。我非常嫉妒,因为那是在80年代,但我们没有——我上大学之前没有有线电视。我们住在乡下,那里没有有线电视,我们也不想为一个像我们房子一样大的卫星碟付费。你在大学时的室友就像——你就像,哎,这是什么?你来自哪里?

你为什么穿着“孩子们在街区”的T恤?是的。他说,他带来了你的可口可乐T恤。然后你就问,这是什么?你得上床。把他的签名框起来挂在墙上。那个家伙。卡洛斯·格罗夫斯。我见过卡洛斯·格罗夫斯一次。你就像,哦,他是那个替补上场的家伙吗?你这个失败者。你在问那个家伙。这甚至不是主要的家伙。你得到了沙奎尔的签名吗?不,没有。我得到了卡洛斯·格罗夫斯的签名。

所以在1983年,MASH的结局播出。人们以某种方式就知道这将会是一个大事件,我的意思是,广告商,他们知道这将会是一个巨大的交易。所以他们开始以450,000美元的价格购买30秒的广告,这比那年的超级碗还要贵。在播出的那天,加利福尼亚的大部分地区因暴风雨遭遇停电,这使得许多人无法观看该系列的结局,持续了三周。好的。

呃,但它有1.06亿观众。它超过了谁射杀了JR,成为有史以来观看人数最多的剧集。从1983年到2010年,它仍然是美国历史上观看人数最多的电视广播。嗯,直到超级碗最终超过了它。我觉得MASH非常符合那个时代。我没有看过MASH。我记得,我的父母看过MASH。我记得人们在看MASH或其他什么。

但我觉得这是一部不再被谈论的节目,作为世界上最大的节目,像《宋飞正传》,我们仍然在谈论它。它每天都在电视上播放,整天播放。安迪·格里菲斯,我觉得。是的,我想说安迪·格里菲斯比它活得更久,我觉得。MASH感觉就像是结束了就结束了,观看它的人喜欢它,然后之后就再也没有人谈论它了。好吧,他们尝试了一部名为《MASH之后》的衍生剧,讲述他们回到美国后的故事,但它很快就失败了。

是的,几乎就像每个人都已经结束了。是的。几乎就像MASH是第一部大剧。也许不是,但。MASH的结局也很黑暗。是的。真的很黑暗。你在看那些吗?

我的意思是,我记得是的。你被允许看吗?我想是的。我小时候没有看MASH,但我觉得我们知道结局是如此重要。所以你只是想看看会发生什么。那时候电视上有没有一些不适合父母让孩子观看的东西?还是一切都算是无辜和健康的呢?好吧,确实有一些当时说过的话,现在是不会被允许的。

是的。像一些诺曼·利尔在70年代和80年代的节目。我的意思是,他们说了一些现在会被取消的东西。你有不被允许观看的节目吗?是的。《辛普森一家》对我来说很重要。我也不能看《辛普森一家》。但是他们……我想说什么?我不知道。没关系。好吧,80年代的热门节目,《达拉斯》主宰了80年代的前半段。然后后半段……

《考比秀》在80年代连续五年排名第一。上周我说,你能相信《家庭万岁》吗?好吧,下一个十年也是如此。连续五年,第一名节目。哇。真的吗?去年,《辛普森一家》排在第28位。1989年,90年。它仍然在播出。哦,哇。那是从89年开始的吗?1989年,90年的电视季。是的。哇。

《宋飞正传》也开始了,对吧?是的。那一开始并没有火吧?直到92、93年才真正火起来。好的。但是你总是听到他们谈论的东西。你知道,我谈过,天哪,我谈过,我知道菲尔·罗森塔尔,他创造了《人人都爱雷蒙德》。所以我们喜欢,当我和他交谈时,我会问他关于《人人都爱雷蒙德》的问题。

而且当你……听他谈论他们竞争的节目时,听起来很有趣。像他对一些我喜欢的节目的看法,他会说,那个节目最糟糕。就像我不是说他一定会这么说,但这就像是那种想法……因为那是他的竞争对手。所以你会觉得,是的,在那个时刻,他是……

与这些人竞争。你喜欢《家居改善》。他们会说,你知道,他们把我们放在……他们会说一些关于在顶端的坏时段。当他们把我们放在这里时,我们终于得到了,我忘了大家是什么时候播出的。是星期一吗?也许是星期一,或者我不记得是星期一还是星期五,但就像,他们把我们放在这里,我们没有人观看。然后他们把我们移到这里。然后大家……然后我们火了,大家都喜欢它。听起来很有趣,听到他们的节目。

你知道,《家居改善》是我们的强大力量。那是我们成长中的一部大剧。是的。这都是90年代的事。是的,我们会深入探讨。所有这些都混在一起,伙计。所有这些都混在一起。80年代推出的其他电视节目,CNN于1980年6月1日成为第一个24小时有线新闻频道。频道。哦,是的。不是电视节目。就像它发明了一个新频道。是的。是的。就像那个面包车。是的。

这是一种全新的事物。另一种新频道MTV于1981年首播。早期有点消退,现在MTV。好吧,我想MTV,我想,但他们……他们有那种青少年妈妈的节目。这是他们的大节目。现在有八种不同的变体。是的。

只是迎合它。只是青少年妈妈。而且有多个MTV,对吧?是的,MTV2。我想,是的,维亚康姆拥有所有这些频道。尼克儿童频道。第一部视频是由巴格尔乐队演唱的,叫做《视频杀死了收音机明星》。那是第一部视频。他们写那首歌可能是因为……我不认为他们这样做。我认为他们只是讽刺地播放它。我认为他们已经有了那首歌。是的。是的。

不过,广播电台有点回来了,像Spotify之类的东西。现在你可以听到你想听的东西。人们听这个播客,或者他们听任何东西。你的车程很长。他们在开车100英里每小时的路上看《白宫风云》吗?

65呃,刚刚在里面转来转去,呃,顺便说一下,我还没有开始,我昨晚想过,我在想我不知道。哦,你看过试播集吗?就是那里吗?是的,好吧,我很喜欢。我可能看过几集,然后呃,是的,我昨晚试图,我想,哦,我要再看一些东西,我在看《曼彻里安候选人》。

这是一部电影。新的还是旧的?旧的,丹泽尔·华盛顿。那是新的。那是新的。哦,2004年?好吧,有一部是60年代的。哦,是的,是的,是的。是的,这和我想象的有点不同。不过,挺好的,伙计。是的。

我不知道。丹泽尔的未来一片光明。是的。他的职业生涯不错。有些东西,你无法相信是2004年。就像,丹泽尔·华盛顿,你会想,他在80年代就已经出名了。然后你会想,这是他第一部大电影吗?不,他在1990年凭借《荣耀》获得了奥斯卡。《荣耀》可能是我第一次记得看的电影,奇怪的是。真的吗?是的,其中之一。

我喜欢《荣耀》。我们有它的VHS,我以前经常看。你一开始就很激烈,是吗?看电影?一开始就很激烈。你不看《美女与野兽》吗?我去,我们做了《荣耀》,然后我做了《程序》,然后我做了……《辛德勒的名单》。辛德勒的……不,我忘了我们为什么有《荣耀》。我们在某个录音带上录制了《荣耀》。是的。我记得我看过很多次《荣耀》。

他在《圣地》中。他是《圣地》中的一名医生。然后我认为《荣耀》是他第一次大突破的角色。这是一部伟大的电影。在89年。好的,所以它甚至算数。是的。好的,你们想猜猜80年代的热门电影吗?是的。《星球大战》。鲨鱼。我的意思是,前两名肯定是《星球大战》,对吧?哦,你是认真的。是的。因为你说过《星球大战》是70年代的热门电影。是的,但没有更多的电影出来吗?好吧,如果你甚至要猜测,至少要说出电影的名字。

《帝国的反击》。那是第三名。好的。第二名是什么?我不知道。我甚至不知道。就说吧。你上周猜过。E.T.是第一名。哦,是的。我第一次看的电影。那是什么时候出来的?85年?你刚说过《荣耀》。荣耀,是的。现在,E.T.,我不记得E.T.,但我三岁。我的父母带我去看E.T.,

好的。是的。尖叫?是的。尖叫是我最喜欢的。我记得《荣耀》。E.T.,我父母带我去电影院看。87年?E.T.? 是的。82年。82年。你三岁。是的,所以,我是三岁。所以,是的。我的意思是,是的。但是E.T.是第一名,《绝地归来》第二名,《帝国反击战》第三名。

E.T.比《星球大战》还要大?我不知道它那么大。好吧,《星球大战》是在70年代,但……我的意思是,是的,那两部电影,我的意思是。是的。是的,E.T.是巨大的。E.T.是一部大电影。好莱坞的顶级……从未看过。你从未看过E.T.? 不。是的。我们刚刚展示……他们前几天看了。现在太晚了吗?看E.T.?是的。所以我在……这就是我去看《曼彻里安候选人》的原因。我有点在……

就像我总是被困在电影中。就像我经历了一些军事情绪。所以我的意思是,我做了《孤独的幸存者》,《美国狙击手》,《绿色区》。我不知道,我经历了一些军事情绪,我得找一些更多的。我不知道,我快没了。然后我可以再看《荣耀》。所以《曼彻里安候选人》是昨晚。我看了《鹈鹕简报》。所以我喜欢,我会进入这些……

做事情的情绪。我们这一切的意义是什么?我们在说什么?哦,这些老电影。是的。有时你会意识到,哦,因为我也一直在追求,觉得现在每部电影都是同样的电影。每一部电影,我都觉得,我以前总是觉得,我支持连锁店和所有这些东西。我不是说我不支持,但……

所有的电影都是漫威电影。所有的东西。所有的东西都是超级英雄电影。那个洛基或其他什么,他在一个商业广告中。他在现代汽车的广告中。好吧,他现在在Apple Plus上有一个新节目。那他为什么开现代汽车?就像……是现代汽车,对吧?现代汽车。抱歉,迪士尼Plus。是的,就像他现在只是开着那辆车。然后感觉很恶心。你会觉得,哦,所以你们只是……

我甚至看不到你们想让我看到的东西。你们都结合在一起。你们都像,给我第五个。现在所有的超级英雄都聚在一起。每一部电影都是超级英雄电影。所以你得回去看看这些老电影,我对它们的欣赏多了一点。就像,哦,这是一个故事。哦,这是一些原创的东西。这是一些被思考过的东西,而不是像,现在钢铁侠要去火星。

我不知道。随便吧。然后他们说,好吧,如果我们把钢铁侠和这个家伙聚在一起呢?现在他们来了,这个洛基,我甚至不知道这个洛基是谁。这是他们正在构建的世界。他们在做《星球大战》。他们在做《曼达洛人》,这很棒,但你能相信《曼达洛人》吗?是的,伙计,他们在做同样的事情。所有出来的电影都是这些巨型电影。没有什么像是设计良好的……

像悬疑那样的真实表演,你知道的,我的意思是,你看到奥斯卡上都是你从未听说过的电影,因为也许那是它们唯一的地方。我是说,现在你知道,表演是……是的,伙计,你将成为一个超级英雄。你知道,就像,是的,我的意思是,你可以整天戴着面具,我们将讲述一个故事,这是……这是同样的故事。是的,你是蜘蛛侠,你是如何被咬的?哦,我们会再给你展示一次。

我们再做一次。他们正在制作一部新的蜘蛛侠,里面有所有旧的蜘蛛侠。我是说,这正是我所说的。就像,它甚至不再有趣了,伙计。就像,他们不是……这真的是……这真的是一个……

像是一个赚钱机器,你会觉得,我不想参与其中。你甚至无法不参与其中。你知道,NBA总决赛将是NBA。所有的运动都会像,我们拥有一切。我们将把这一切塞进你的喉咙。你永远不会看到一个原创的电影创意。他们在这方面遇到问题,关于电影和试图销售电影。现在,人们就像电视。这就是为什么电视有点回归,因为电视是一个可以讲述故事的地方。它是……

而电视现在是你可以讲述的方式,你知道,你可以有《绝命毒师》。你可以有所有这些正在做的节目,而电影就像,如果它不能赚到十亿美元,那就不要浪费我们的时间。是的。如果全世界都不会去看这部电影,那我们就不在乎。嗯哼。

然后你失去了所有的……你失去了所有那些优秀的演员,你没有……丹泽尔·华盛顿……所有这些疯狂的演员都变得巨大,但他们不再制作那种东西了。就像……这是同样的电影。我的意思是,《速度与激情》,他们正在做……这是第十部。根本不重要。他们有第十部要出来?有多少部?九部还是十部。根本不……

谁在乎?根本不……我喜欢……我支持《速度与激情》。我想我看过前三部,然后你就会觉得,好吧。然后他们继续下去。你甚至还没到一半。甚至还远远不够。然后这一切都变成了,好的,是的,伙计,他们都值5亿美元。然后,你知道,祝他们好运。他们可以去参与一些东西。我不是说你不会说……我不责怪演员。你不会拒绝这些东西。但这似乎都是由……

我的意思是,都是同样的东西,伙计。没有原创的想法。没有原创的人。没有原创的……这都是你的手机。这是苹果或其他什么。我小时候最喜欢的电影是《夺宝奇兵》。我被告知,我不知道这是否是真的,但这是第一部电影,你知道现在几乎每部电影,尤其是动作片,主角会有一个开场场景,对吧?

在我们甚至进入主线故事之前,他们会建立角色,做一些疯狂的事情。然后它才开始真正的故事。《夺宝奇兵》。我被告知这是第一部这样做的电影。

直到那时,电影只是慢慢展开,但《夺宝奇兵》的前10-15分钟是那场疯狂的洞穴场景,他做的所有事情与故事的其余部分无关。是的,它永远改变了电影,因为现在他们都这样做。是的,它立刻让你上瘾。是的,是的,它建立了角色是谁,然后你开始进行你正在做的主要故事。你有点忘了,他们正在制作一个新的。

那可能是。但你甚至不再那么兴奋。我是说,再一次,这些人都在同样的电影里。都是一样的。汤姆·汉克斯,哈里森·福特。你就像,我不知道。我什么时候没见过你?我每天都见到你。一直都在。所以我怎么会兴奋?当他们重拍蜘蛛侠时,真是太令人兴奋了。我想,你在开玩笑吗?然后像超人,为什么……他们无法正确处理超人,对吧?人们不……就像我会对他们做一个稳固的超人感到兴奋。对。

或者当他们做蝙蝠侠时,当所有这些东西开始时,就像,哦,伙计,我们迫不及待想要它,我们想要它。但是,他们,这就是问题所在。所以他们得到这些,我知道这只是因为在写节目和与所有这些作家在一起,

基本上是同样的事情。嘿,我们只是想再推出这个。就像,它会是人们去看这个,它不会,几乎就像主题公园。你只是在创建主题公园,你就像,没关系。你只是不断地把东西推出去。他们说,他们会去。他们需要做点什么。他们会去。现在他们只是回到HBO。伙计,你现在可以在家里看它们,或者去电影院看。就像,没关系。只是把所有东西都推出去。就像,

这不是一件好事。当你看这些老电影时,你会觉得,哇,所有人都真的很出色。我更欣赏表演,或者更多。你知道,你只是更意识到这一点。你知道,只是,我不知道,也许你变老了,你只是像,我不想要这种华丽。我不在乎,你知道。我几乎会觉得,也许再来一部变形金刚电影。我可以做到。是的。

我觉得他们没有做太多。完全相反的事情。再来一部忍者神龟?变形金刚是你看到的第一部电影。最后一部变形金刚是什么时候?我的意思是,我想他们刚刚有一部出来,不是吗?所以也许我不想要另一部。他们可能因为COVID而推迟了几年,但有一部要么快要出来,要么已经出来。我记不清了。

看,我一直以为他们做了两部。哦,他们做了五部。没关系。还有大黄蜂有自己的东西。好的。我错了。我错得很离谱。迈克尔·贝。所以就像,这只是,是的。所以我对变形金刚错了。我有点失去。我以为他们做了。2022年会有一部新片《变形金刚:野兽崛起》。所以我得赶上。这次不同。

所以我错了。好的。所以我对变形金刚错了。但停下吧。不要再做这些了。但这只是这些同样的事情。他们没有制作像样的电影。就像,谁在乎?电影中一片混乱,你会觉得,我觉得这很好。我不知道。我是说,他们只是让你正如我总是说的,我对音乐的看法,你不知道。你在音乐中更能注意到这一点。

即使当你听到这些老歌时,他们,你知道,歌词很多。现在他们就像,他们基本上整首歌都在说“嘿”。是的。他们说,“嘿,嘿,嘿,嘿”。是的。然后,blah,blah,blah。并没有说太多。我的意思是,作为一名词曲作者。作为一名词曲作者。是的,但你可以写一首歌,速度很快。你认为部分原因是你记得真正好的音乐,而我们忘记了糟糕的音乐吗?

这可能是事实。就像我总是想到《通往天堂的阶梯》。那一年《通往天堂的阶梯》发布时,第一首歌是阿奇乐队的《糖糖》。那一年。现在没有人关心那首歌。

但每个人都喜欢《通往天堂的阶梯》。好吧,仍然会有糟糕的音乐。那时仍然会有糟糕的音乐,但我不这么认为。我是说,但你可以,现在,这关乎旋律或,你知道,像节拍或其他什么。这就是它的作用。你知道,我喜欢这些歌曲。你知道,你听它们,它们很有趣。就像,我不……你知道,再次,我不听歌词。我不……当我听到一个故事时,它不会引起我的共鸣,就像,哦,这个故事是关于……我的意思是,我会问哈珀。

我会问,她会说,这是什么?他们在说什么?因为我,她会说,哦,这是这个,这像是一个小故事,我不……我就像,他们一点都不点击我。就像我完全不明白。呃,

但是,是的,关于,我不知道。我只是觉得,像,是的,电影和这些东西,正在变得越来越糟。都是同样的事情。这就是为什么好莱坞会变得越来越小。它没有变大。它变得越来越小。你做了一部好电影,我们会让你做50部。你知道吗?汤姆·克鲁斯还活着。他也在做这些。汤姆·汉克斯还活着。朱莉亚·罗伯茨,布拉德·皮特,所有人都还活着。洛基将和你组队。洛基将开一辆公交车。是的。

我们正在做与《灰狗》相关的事情,所以他现在开公交车。你应该相信这个超级英雄的事情。超人是真的吗?好吧,我以为他是真的,直到他在Avis拿回我的钥匙。我想,也许他不是。我想你经历了艰难的时光。但这就是一切。这些人不让路。你不让路,你就得不到新东西。

然后它变得太……就在下面,它变得非常分散。就像没有人真正崛起到顶端。就像很难突破。然后年轻人,他们不是新的演员。这就是你创建电视节目的时候。所有的一切都在说,哦,年轻人?让我们找一些年轻人,这真是荒谬。因为你会觉得,年轻人不花钱。他们不看这个节目。他们不在乎你的节目。

这一集,我们回到1980年代。Breakfast分享了一些他的高中时尚失误,Nate对今天的电影发表了一番长篇大论,而Aaron再次了解到MASH大结局并不是电视历史上观看人数最多的事件。

</context> <raw_text>0 他们不买你卖的任何东西。他们不是什么。所以他们没有人真的很好。就像丹尼尔·戴-刘易斯,没有,那个是谁?我想是哈迪。

汤姆·哈迪?汤姆·哈迪可能是那种类似的类型,他非常私密。你真的不知道他在做什么,但如果他要参与某个项目,你知道那一定会非常好。所以我不是想说没有伟大的电影,但确实很少,你知道,对吗?很少见。很少见。是的。

重复很多旧的想法。我是说,一切都像是,让我们再重做一次。我觉得人们对此已经厌倦了。人们想要原创的想法。这就是为什么,你知道,我不知道。就像,当《盗梦空间》出来的时候,或者所有这些东西。但即使是某些东西,我觉得他们变得太内向了。

棒球。他们太聪明了。但市场不会决定人们何时厌倦它吗?我的意思是,他们只会给你十亿美元。如果你只能去看《变形金刚》,那还有什么?你不能去做其他事情。人们只是想去做点什么。

而且你有孩子,他们知道你有孩子。所以你会这样,然后,他们就会来我们的主题公园。那里也有所有这些东西。你唯一被允许享受的就是他们想做的事情。就像没有什么,没有原创的,这无所谓。你是,我们会让你成为蝙蝠侠,现在你会去,嗯,哈利·波特,我认为哈利·波特实际上是一个,可能是一个伟大的作品。所以那可能是其中之一,你知道,他们也在重拍哈利·波特。真的作为HBO系列重拍。嗯。

他们就这样做。他们就这样做。是的。是的。我会对此感到兴奋。所以你是在说,也许你现在的年龄会是,那将是,我的星球大战。那是你的,你会看到那个新东西,然后说,哦,天哪,我太高兴能重温这个,因为你对小时候观看它有如此美好的回忆。所以也许这只是一个年龄的循环,而我正好是你40岁时的年龄。

我42岁时,你会说,我不想再这样做了。这太荒谬了。做点新东西。然后你就去看旧的东西。可能是,你知道。80年代的票房明星。第一名,哈里森·福特。

他是汉·索罗和印第安纳·琼斯。我是说,这两个角色都相当不错。相当疯狂。是的。两个相当大的职业转变。同一个人。是的。我是说……仍然在。是的。仍然在。仍然在制作。而他们当时最大的两部电影都是用同一个人。我是说,伙计,好莱坞总是谈论多样性。这是地球上最不多样化的地方。甚至不仅仅是关于种族,只是关于……我们甚至不使用不同的人。我们甚至……我们有同一个人,我们只是用他来做所有事情。嗯。

艾迪·墨菲排第二。《48小时》、《比佛利山警探》,所有那些电影。会有什么不同吗?他的电影感觉不同。比佛利山警探不止一部,但他做了很多不同的,《美国之旅》、《金童》,诸如此类。我觉得艾迪·墨菲得到了自己的明星。他成为明星是因为他。也许这也是。他建立了这个,因为他是一个单口喜剧演员。他得到了那个观众。电影是在之后来的。