Lived It

BYO Special: Aunty Donna

Episode Summary

In this bonus episode with special guests Aunty Donna, ‘Indiana Jones: Raiders of the Lost Ark’ and ‘Moneyball’ make up a short and sweet meal full of surprises.

Episode Notes

In this bonus episode with special guests Aunty Donna, ‘Indiana Jones: Raiders of the Lost Ark’ and ‘Moneyball’ make up a short and sweet meal full of surprises. 

Follow us on Spotify and wherever you get your podcasts. Check us out at @netflixanz on Instagram and Twitter, and tag #thebigfilmbuffet.

Episode Transcription

Susie Youssef:

Hello. My name is Susie Youssef.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

And my name is Alexei Toliopoulos.

Susie Youssef:

And this is the Big Film Buffet.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Where we usually serve you up a three-course feast of movies based on the Netflix flick of the week.

Susie Youssef:

That's right, Alexei, you do know the podcast. Normally it's a dinner party with a planned menu, but this week, we decided to go a little bit loosey-goosey and ask Aunty Donna around to our share house, which we definitely live in.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

That's the truth.

Susie Youssef:

And we asked them to bring a plate.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

We're joined by Zach and Broden today in a BYO plate party. They'll be sharing with us the movies they love so much, they want to share it around the table.

Susie Youssef:

But, let's be honest, this is just an excuse for us to hang out with Aunty Donna. We didn't actually even give them a brief or a theme, so it's just potluck at it's most dangerous.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

They're here.

Susie Youssef:

They're joining us from Melbourne, remotely. We're so excited to have them here.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

And they're here because of their new Netflix show, Aunty Donna's Big Ol' House of Fun. Hey guys, welcome to our podcast.

Susie Youssef:

Hello, Broden. Hello, Zach. Not a hello to Mark.

Broden:

We're the sensible ones, as you can see, we've come in top and tails. We've got our monocles in and we mean respect for your podcast. We come here to say thank you for having us, and let's talk film.

Susie Youssef:

Let's do it.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

I got to be honest. I got to be honest with you right now, Mark was invited and he was coming, and we saw him at the door of the podcast theatre, where we make all the podcasts happen. I saw him at the door and he was wearing a tee-shirt, shorts, thongs.

Zach:

Oh gosh.

Susie Youssef:

The level of disrespect.

Zach:

No, no, no.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

It was so embarrassing. And we just said, go home, get changed. And I don't think he's got the appropriate clothing.

Broden:

He doesn't even frikking own a top nor tails.

Zach:

No.

Broden:

He has a tail.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Is it weird. I got to know this. Now that we've got it out in the world, is it weird that Mark has a tail? Let us know, message into Netflix.

Susie Youssef:

Is it a Shallow Hal situation? Is it like a tail that he's ashamed of that in the end Gwyneth Paltrow will fall in love with him?

Broden:

Well, he doesn't know he has it. So I only noticed, we were on tour, we were touring England, and we were in a little town called Milton Keynes. And he said, I'm just going to take my pants off and change my pants. He takes down... I thought I'd take a little peek at his bum, and he's got a seven inch tail just sitting above his coccyx bone. And I thought, that's weird. And I said to Zach, have you seen, and he went the tail.

Zach:

You're talking about the tail, aren't you? Yeah. Because I'd been telling Broden about the tail for months. I saw the tail on a tour of New Zealand. We were in Christchurch...

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Kia ora.

Zach:

Kia ora to any New Zealand listeners.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

This is the official podcast both nations, so they appreciate the shout out.

Zach:

But yeah, he has a tail, but we're here to talk film.

Susie Youssef:

Broden, do you remember the first movie that you ever saw?

Broden:

I do. I was young, at the cinema I saw Bambi. It was a redistribution, it wasn't 1951 or whatever time that film came out.

Susie Youssef:

I thought we got the scoop of your real age.

Zach:

He's old.

Broden:

Yeah, I'm 94. I just remember doing laps of the cinema though. So I wasn't moved by it sadly.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Zach, what was your first movie in the cinemas?

Zach:

Do you know, it's funny that Broden just said Bambi, because mine was also a Disney film, a Disney decade, modern classic. I saw the wonderful Lion King.

Susie Youssef:

Oh wow, first film ever.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

That was mine too. That was my first movie at the cinema.

Zach:

You might've been like me my first time seeing the Lion King as a young buck, I was like, wow, you know what, mom, this is just like Hamlet.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

You're a very eloquent smart young man aren't you.

Zach:

I know every movie factoid that you could ever tell me, I will be able to back it up with scholarly facts and sources no matter what it is.

Broden:

Who directed Jurassic Park?

Zach:

Directed Jurassic Park, is a guy called Steven Spielberg, and he's made lots of other movies.

Broden:

Correct.

Zach:

He's actually a brilliant filmmaker. He's really strong. The way he jumps between art house and munching on your popcorn entertainment, just blows me away every time.

Broden:

There's no one quite like him and everyone actually wants to be him. That's what I reckon.

Zach:

I love Spielberg. I wish I'd... oh, I am bringing, I did bring in a Spielberg-y thing.

Susie Youssef:

Oh, you did.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

I see you've got a little plate with you here. And on it, it's got the name directed by... it is Steven Spielberg.

Zach:

Steven Spielberg, I forgot. I just started talking about Steven Spielberg because I just love him. I think he's so good.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

So Zach, you brought a plate today with a movie on it. What is it today?

Zach:

A delicious plate of Raiders of the Lost Ark, or Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark as it was known.

Indiana Jones:

Snakes, why’d it have to be snakes?

Susie Youssef:

Well it's Indiana Jones, colon, Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Zach:

Indiana Jones, colon, Raiders of the Lost Ark. But it wasn't known as Indiana Jones anything when it was first released because all Indiana Jones was, was the lead character in the film Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Broden:

Just some frikking guy, basically for people back in the day.

Zach:

Just some dude, looks like Hans solo could have looked like Tom Selleck, but looks like Hans Solo. And it's about a man, who's a professor at a university, a little bit like James Bond, but also a professor, but really, truly let's be real, I'm bringing in the whole trilogy and yeah, I said it, trilogy.

Susie Youssef:

And no more. Three and no more.

Broden:

Wow.

Zach:

I'm not counting bloody Shia LaBeouf. Look, I've seen all of the Indiana Jones films a few times. I've actually seen the third one the most.

Susie Youssef:

Last crusade?

Zach:

And the third one, Last Crusade, I've seen many, many times. And the reason I've seen the Last Crusade so many times was because in the mid to early nineties, McDonald's did a deal where every few weeks you could get, if you spent $20 or more at McDonald's, you'd get a free VHS of Indiana Jones. And they did the whole trilogy. It was like a multi-week promotion. And my brother was a big Indiana Jones fan and my parents didn't take him to McDonald's for the first two films.

Broden:

Oh no.

Zach:

So all we had was that one. So I have a very fond memory of that film. And it's strange to me that Sean Connery's not in the other ones. And it's strange to me that the other ones don't feature it. So I have this really topsy-turvy view of that series, but I love them all. They're all great.

Susie Youssef:

Last Crusade is my absolute favourite. I reckon it's definitely my top 20 films of all time. I've watched it way too many times because as kids, we used to stand in doorways and put your leg up, and you'd say only the penitent men will pass, which is a messed up thing for kids to shout at each other, it's just a stupid thing to say.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

I couldn't even say that. Couldn't even say it out loud now. There's actually a film theory going around that the character that Sean Connery plays in Last Crusade, he passes away before the crystal skull comes around and his soul is actually rejuvenated through Mutt Williams. And Mutt Williams is actually the soul of Henry Jones, senior.

Zach:

Because really it's a story of fathers and sons. They established, they got it by the third film. And they're like, we need more of that, but instead of the greatest lead actor of his age, we're going to do the guy from [Suburbicon 00:00:07:34].

Broden:

Disturbia, actually dude.

Zach:

Disturbia, I'm very sorry.

Broden:

I love that frikking movie dude. It's awesome. It's an awesome movie. It's directed by D.J Caruso. I love Disturbia. It's hectic.

Susie Youssef:

Would you say that Raiders of the Lost Ark, or any of the Indiana Jones films are movies that you've seen the most in your life?

Zach:

No. Do you know the most? The films I've seen the most is the first X-Men, and the first Matrix. I had both of them on DVD when I was about 11 and I watched them... I watched the first Matrix every weekend.

Susie Youssef:

What's your favourite line from the Matrix?

Zach:

Every single weekend.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Not like this, not like this.

Broden:

When Switch gets un-jacked, that's awesome.

Zach:

Oh man. I knew someone who knew her, who knew Switch. And apparently they're like, that's been the last 20 years of their life.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Whenever they hang up the phone.

Zach:

Not like this, not like this, not like this.

Broden:

Hey, film aficionados, do you mind if I call you that? Susie and Alexei?

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Yes, yes.

Susie Youssef:

You can definitely call Alexei that.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Susie and me, yes, yes.

Broden:

Now has Spielberg said that he is now just doing films about American history? Or is that... has he just decided that? Trying to do every American history film. And he also produced the John Adams series, which is one of my favourite TV series.

Zach:

You love Paul Giamatti, Don't ya?

Broden:

I love the G.

Zach:

He loves the G, the G dogger.

Broden:

He, in that film did one of the greatest performances ever from a comedic character actor, transferring to lead actor, and he's just really going for it. And I think it's an awesome performance, but it's also funny on a level as well of just like the hey, what are you doing to George Washington, is pretty great.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Wow.

Zach:

From Big Momma's House to John Adams.

Broden:

He's one of the great nugget style actors. That's why I like him.

Zach:

He is a nugget.

Broden:

He's a nugget style actor.

Susie Youssef:

But he's a transformer nugget. He can do anything, don't just put him into the nugget box.

Broden:

The six pack of nuggets box.

Susie Youssef:

He's not just a six pack, he's a 20 pack.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

When you were building the Giamatti pie, what's it called? Wine, what's wine called?

Broden:

That's called Sideways, directed by Alexander Payne.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Sideways.

Broden:

Yes.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Correct.

Broden:

Thank you so much. Thomas Haden Church also stars.

Zach:

Yes, he does.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

That really blew out his pie and brought a whole different territory. Sideways was a big one. And there you look at Giamatti, the G in a whole new way. I love the G.

Zach:

I often think about spoiler alert, if you haven't seen Sideways yet, are we allowed, is the spoiler period ended on that one?

Susie Youssef:

You're going to upset someone. Zach, just say it. Just say it, it doesn't matter.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Officially you guys, we're opening up the frikking flood gates for Sideways spoilers right now. So if you haven't seen it yet, pause the podcast, find it on whatever app it's on and watch Sideways.

Zach:

Are we going to break down the Easter eggs?

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Avengers, Avengers. They only gave you a few, a couple of weekends. We've given you over a decade-

Susie Youssef:

I think we've given you 20 years.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

... to watch Sideways. Almost 20 years since Sideways came and redefined wine culture around the world. And now you can find out why. Zach go ahead with your spoiler.

Zach:

I was just going to say it was rel sad when he drinks the wine out of the cup, I reckon.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Do you know, but that makes me think, I do want to have a cheeseburger and wine. I think that's quite, it could be good. I always think that looks kind of yum.

Susie Youssef:

Do you know they do the cheeseburger and wine in TV a lot. So it's like, oh, we've got no money left. Well, we're just going to celebrate over a romantic dinner of cheeseburgers and wine.

Broden:

Oh yeah.

Susie Youssef:

Can I think of one reference? No, I can not, but I feel like I've seen it everywhere.

Broden:

But we know deep down it's true.

Zach:

So that's our review of Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark guys. We all clearly love it.

Broden:

I only saw Indiana Jones... I never saw any of the films. I'm one of those kids, but when we go to Disneyland, Zach and I go to Disneyland together all the time. And when we go, the Indiana Jones ride is so fun. So I gave them a watch recently. So I don't have the emotional connection that you guys have, but I do love the ride and I love waiting in the line and the big English man, what's his name Zach?

Zach:

John Rhys-Davies.

Broden:

John Rhys-Davies, make sure you put your seat belt on. It's important to keep your arms in the ride vehicle at all times.

Susie Youssef:

Do you prefer the ride to the movies Broden?

Broden:

Yeah, because I'm more connected to them and sometimes you think that some locals are blowing dart guns into your... But it's just wind. It's really fun. It's really fun.

Zach:

It's transformed you.

Broden:

But the movie is boring. It's just on TV.

Susie Youssef:

Zach, thank you for bringing your plate Indiana Jones, colon, Raiders of the Lost Ark. What a beautiful selection. Broden, you've also brought a plate. What do you have for us today?

Broden:

Well, today it's Bennett Miller's Moneyball.

Speaker 6:

I asked you to do three.

Speaker 7:

Yeah.

Speaker 6:

To evaluate three players.

Speaker 7:

Yeah.

Speaker 6:

How many did you do?

Speaker 7:

47.

Zach:

Superb choice Broden.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Wow.

Zach:

One of my faves also.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

I've actually never seen it.

Susie Youssef:

I've also not seen this movie.

Broden:

Wow. Okay.

Zach:

Wow.

Broden:

This is great.

Susie Youssef:

So Broden, tell us about it.

Broden:

Well, you are in for a treat.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

I can't wait.

Broden:

One of our favourite streaming platforms, so you can go and watch it right after we record this podcast.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Amazing.

Zach:

Which one?

Broden:

Netflix.

Zach:

Oh, okay, good.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

I love that.

Broden:

It's the story, a true story of a manager of a baseball team in the mid two thousands. Baseball is an unfair sport where there's no cap to the wages that teams can pay each other. So the rich teams always win. New York Yankees have $300 million budget to buy baseball players. And this team, the Oakland Athletics has a budget of 46 million. They're in the same competition and the Oakland Athletics have to find a way to compete with a team that has so much more money than them, it's completely unfair.

Zach:

All Moneyball.

Broden:

That's it. And that's, they do say that line in the movie. You will see that when you watch it.

Zach:

That's the kind of catch phrase where... That moment when they say the title in any movie and it's, they haven't said it, they're like, what's this process he's using, what is he saying? And then like two thirds in he goes, ah, geez, that's a big old money ball.

Broden:

This general manager found a way with a percentage of the budget of big teams to be able to compete on the same level. And he did it by pretty much breaking every old rule. It's a film about innovation. It's a film about challenging accepted norms. It's a film about trying something different and believing in yourself even when no one else believes in you. It's brilliantly directed by Bennett Miller. He has an awesome tone to the way he directs films. And it's incredibly gripping. I've watched it a hundred times because whenever it's turned on in front of me, I just sit there and I can't look away.

Zach:

You have to watch.

Broden:

And it's not a thrilling film. It just very gradually happens in front of you. And for me it gets five moneyballs out of five. No, it gets 406 million moneyballs.

Zach:

Whoa, that's some of the most moneyballs I've ever heard of.

Susie Youssef:

Broden Kelly, would you say this is the film that you have watched the most in your life?

Broden:

It would very much be up there. Yes, it would. Probably... there's probably some cool... Funnily enough, Dumb and Dumber I've watched. If we're just removing comedy, I'm a comedy man, my life is comedy. I travel from town to town and I do the comedy. If we're removing comedy, it probably is. But I've seen Ace Ventura. I've seen your Dumb and Dumbers. I've seen your Simpsons movie, shout out Spider Pig.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

I love the Simpsons movie.

Broden:

It's the best. It's truly the peak of the Simpsons, isn't it?

Alexei Toliopoulos:

I'm thinking of trying to check out the TV series one day, but I love that movie.

Zach:

It's okay. They peaked with the movie to be honest. I just want to say to Broden, it's really interesting that Broden, similarly to what he had just said, I hadn't seen Moneyball, I experienced the Disneyland ride of Moneyball first.

Broden:

Wow.

Zach:

Yeah. So, yeah, and it's an adventure. It's a real adventure and you're jumping around and you go into the room where-

Broden:

You get to see all the graphs and stuff I guess.

Zach:

[crosstalk 00:15:47] Yeah. He's talking about this won't work, this guy can't throw, and Brad Pitt's like, just trust me on this. And then I watched the film.

Susie Youssef:

He is sitting in a board room? Is that the...

Broden:

Yeah, exactly right. Yeah.

Zach:

Yeah, he is just sitting in a boardroom.

Broden:

Jonah's like, Jonah Hill comes in, his charter's like, come with me, come with me.

Susie Youssef:

He wheels you in, that's the extent of the ride. You sit on the chair and they push it into the room.

Zach:

Yeah. You're just sitting in a little wheelie chair.

Broden:

And then for absolutely no reason, there's a dead drop into a big pool at the end, there's almost like vertical, and you get your photo taken as you're going down. And that's not in the movie.

Susie Youssef:

Have you ever seen a Richard Pryor film called The Toy? Have we discussed this before?

Broden:

No.

Zach:

No.

Susie Youssef:

Okay so this is a really old Richard Pryor film, and in it there's a... Gosh. I can't remember the actual premise of the film, except that Richard Pryor is with a kid in a toy store at midnight. And they get to play with everything in the toy store.

Broden:

Wow.

Susie Youssef:

He steps into a giant ball, and they... Where you can... It's like a...

Broden:

Like a zorb.

Susie Youssef:

Yeah. And where you can run around in it. Anyway, that's what I thought when you said Moneyball.

Broden:

Wow. We got to get in the zorb. You become the Moneyball.

Zach:

You are the Moneyball.

Susie Youssef:

You are the Moneyball.

Broden:

Wow.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Have you seen Stir Crazy, talking Richard Pryor?

Susie Youssef:

No.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

See, I think there's a whole world of Richard Pryor films I need to see. I've only seen Stir Crazy.

Susie Youssef:

Well, The Toy was a very rude movie. I remember it actually fell off the back of a truck.

Zach:

Not for me then.

Susie Youssef:

And so we had a VHS when we were kids and there was a portrait in it where it was a woman laying on her side, and if you pressed a button, all her clothes came off.

Broden:

My God.

Susie Youssef:

I think that was the rudest thing we had ever seen.

Broden:

I got to get that tape. That's amazing.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Can I ask a question about Moneyball? The main character's name is Billy Beane. Does anyone in the movie go now, that sounds funny.

Broden:

Yes. Yeah. That's the thing that people say is that, what is that, a funny name? And he goes, I haven't got time for this. I got to Moneyball.

Zach:

He says it like 17 times, he's like, I've got a Moneyball guys.

Broden:

It's one of the worst written films ever.

Zach:

Hey, we money balling here.

Broden:

Yeah... And oh, sorry, I forgot, and there's a lot of that kind of stuff. It's a masterpiece in my opinion.

Susie Youssef:

Is that the byline though? Is it money ball? Hey, are we money balling here question mark? Is that it?.

Zach:

Hey, are we money balling here? It's got the guy from Superbad in it.

Susie Youssef:

McLovin?

Zach:

It's McLovin and he's the Moneyball expert. So Brad Pitt's like, hey, I've got this kid and he's the best. And McLovin's just so horny all the time.

Broden:

Wow. This is true. This is all true.

Zach:

And Philip Seymour Hoffman's like McLovin, you got to stop. You got to stop being horny and you got to start money balling.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Wow. He's just sitting over there with a pale money ball, he's just going I'm moneyballed over here. If I Moneyball good enough, maybe I'll pick up the hottest girl in school.

Susie Youssef:

Oh my gosh. I have to stop, my whole face is cramping.

Broden:

The original name was Superbad two.

Zach:

Wow. I feel like I lived Superbad.

Broden:

Yeah. So did I. I was in year 12 when that film came out and I thought this is similar to my experience, in quotation marks get laid, as they say, that's your drive at that time as a young-

Zach:

As a young buck.

Broden:

Yeah, as a young gentlemen, out on the town. And I watched that film and I thought there's me up there on the screen.

Zach:

Hey can I just back Broden on that. Moneyball is one of my favourite movies as well. And it's one of the best movies of all time. It's a classic and you all should definitely check it out. And McLovin's not in it, and I've really, really hurt a movie's chances of becoming part of the canon there.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Well, it sounds like we'll all have to sit down and share a big ol' slice of Moneyball together one day. It sounds like a treat for the eyes and a feast for the soul.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Thank you so much for listening to the Big Film Buffet. You can do yourself a favour in this world and follow the podcast on Spotify or wherever you get your podcast to make sure you get those new episodes as soon as they drop every single Tuesday and comment and rate and review and tell a friend and send us all that love that you couldn't even dream about.

Susie Youssef:

Okay, Broden and Zach, we play a game on the podcast every week. It is Alexei's brainchild. It is called film or movie. So it's where we debate whether the title of a motion picture is either a film, which is-

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Film is all about existentialism, about all the feelings from within the soul, all about all the artistic nature of cinema.

Susie Youssef:

Whereas a movie would be more popcorn.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Popcorn, comfortable. I love to watch and lose my mind, escapism

Zach:

You're talking American Honey versus American Pie.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Well, I would argue differently, but you know...

Susie Youssef:

Oh, boy.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

But we're going to give you guys a title, and you must declare whether it is a film or a movie and talk it through.

Susie Youssef:

So whoever takes their position first gets to fight whatever they want to. And then the other person has to fight the opposite position.

Broden:

Oh, I love it.

Susie Youssef:

Okay. Alexei.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

And the motion picture we're handing you today to discuss is Fight Club, film or movie.

Broden:

This is clearly a movie It's loved... What's the demo love for this movie? If you're 20 and a boy, you love this movie. You sit, there you go, oh let's go watch the sick movie. It is a movie. Brad Pitt at the lead of it. Sure, it didn't do well at the box office. But I would say the DVD sells more than make up for that. This is clearly a movie friends. And if we don't think this is a movie, then there is no movie at all. It is one of the archetypal movies.

Zach:

Well, I disagree Broden Kelly. As those towers come down at the end of the film we see in that moment, the frailty of masculinity, the way that men destroy the very world they have thought themselves to have created. Broden, this is a film.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

You almost said movie.

Zach:

I almost said movie, but terms are arguably interchangeable.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Wow. I actually, I'm going to come down on this one.

Susie Youssef:

So you get to decided?

Alexei Toliopoulos:

I get to decide. I'm deciding today. I feel powerful, well we can decide together, but I think you've touched on something Broden, in your argument that makes me believe that this is neither film nor movie. This is a DVD.

Susie Youssef:

Oh there he is.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Fight Club, we're declaring it today, it's the first DVD.

Broden:

So I did so well that I created a genre.

Zach:

Oh god, that's great.

Broden:

You created a whole new form.

Zach:

That's so good.

Susie Youssef:

You broke the game.

Zach:

It's that and Donnie Darko, those are the only two I can think of at the top of my head.

Susie Youssef:

Zach and Broden, we love you so much. We're so glad to hang out with you. Movies aren't the only thing on Netflix though. Surprisingly, they have a whole TV section which you are now a part of, it's a brilliant new series. Can you tell us a little bit about that?

Broden:

Yes. We're in it. It's called Aunty Donna's Big Ol' House of Fun, and Zach was going to say it and I just jumped in over him.

Zach:

It was really rude.

Broden:

And if you like us jumping over each other, you should watch Aunty Donna's Big Ol' House of Fun.

Zach:

It's loud. It's brash. It's exciting. It's fast paced. Look, it's not for everyone, but if you're cool and you're interesting and you can handle alternative comedy, then come on board and join Aunty Donna's House of Fun, a new six part sketch comedy series, starring Broden, Zach, and Mark who couldn't be here.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Well guys, thank you so much for coming over to dinner and sharing your beautiful plates of movies with us. I believe if I think back, we talked about Indiana Jones Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Susie Youssef:

I think we also spoke about Moneyball.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Oh, we talk the heck up about Moneyball and the Billy Beane movie.

Broden:

It truly has been a film buffet, but I'm having a great time. This is the best podcast we've ever done.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

Thanks for joining us guys.

Broden:

Thank you guys. What a pleasure.

Susie Youssef:

If you want to see more of Aunty Donna and why would you not, then head over to Netflix and watch Aunty Donna's Big Ol' House of Fun.

Alexei Toliopoulos:

And if you want to hear more from me, you can head on over to the podcast Total Reboot, where me and Cameron James talk about reboots, remakes and rip offs in cinema. We actually just had Zach on the podcast talking about Hannibal.

Susie Youssef:

And if you want to hear more from Alexia and I, we are back next week for The Princess Switch, Switched Again.

Susie Youssef:

This episode was hosted and written by Susie Youssef and Alexei Toliopoulos. It was produced by Michael Sun and Anu Hasbold, edited by Geoffrey O'Connor, executive produced by Tony Broderick and Melanie Mahony. What a good bunch of eggs.