vestigial vegetable theory
Brandon is en-twangled. Collin wants is breathing tires. We have thoughts on movies in medieval settings.
Where is the fall weather?
Landfill caught fire
The Hill: https://www.copenhill.dk/en
New York Highline: https://www.thehighline.org/
Airstream Club: https://airstreamclub.org/
Vestibular vegetable theory
Top 5 Movies with a medieval setting
Brandon
5) Kingdom of Heaven: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0320661/
4) Monty Python and the Holy Grail: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0071853/
3) The 13th Warrior: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120657/
2) Robin Hood: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0070608/
1) Knights Tale: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0183790/
Collin
5) DragonHeart: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0116136/
4) Braveheart: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0112573/
3) Hunchback of Notre Dame: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0116583/
2) Knights Tale: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0183790/
1) Sword and the Stone: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0057546/
Collin’s Haiku
Seventh inning stretch,
Crowd rises, singing with hope,
Game waits, hearts beat fast
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A VERY ROUGH TRANSCRIPT OF THE EPISODE
PROVIDED BY OTTER.AI
SUMMARY KEYWORDS
vestigial vegetable theory, landfill fire, Airstream rally, medieval movies, Dragonheart, Braveheart, Robin Hood, A Knight's Tale, Copen Hill, biomass energy, urban park, medieval setting, cooking techniques, nostalgic recipes, community bonding
SPEAKERS
Collin
Collin 00:04
Music. Welcome to Oh brother, a podcast where we try to figure it all out with your hosts, Brandon and Collin on this week's show, vestigial vegetable theory.
00:19
Ahoy. Ahoy. How is it going?
Collin 00:26
It's going good. I'm slightly stuck in my headphone cord. No. Now it's much better. Look at that being strangled. Oh no. I was entwangled in my chord here, so now I'm fine. Well, that was trying to scoot it over, and it was like, Oh, wait. No, hold on. Stop. Too far, too far. Yeah, yeah, no, sorry, it's gone it's
00:47
all gone wrong. Well, hopefully,
Collin 00:53
hopefully we can move onward and upward, you know, yes, yes. Now we're good. Now we're good. That's fine. Oh, man, it's got it got hot again. I know it's gross. I don't like it at all. Oh, it's pretty horrid. It was 90 something yesterday, and I was like, no, no, no, this is not okay. I agree. So, yeah, it was, yeah, it was so hot today. No gross. Maybe eventually I would like some, uh, fall weather. I'd like it to hurry up please, because it's only supposed to be like 70 degrees, or like 70s and 80s, like the next week. That's not okay? No, don't like pumpkins and mums. I expect ads, right? Like 45 degree mornings and 63 days. That's just not, yeah, well, the mornings are still, like, cold, kind of a little bit, well, the other other over the weekend, I was like, so we have a porch swing. I was sitting in it. It it was, it's like a, it's, I always call it like half a hammock, but it's like those chairs, like a swing chair. Oh, okay, yeah, on a porch. And I was in it, like, I had a blanket around me over the weekend, and I had, like, I was ready. I was ready for this. I love working out there on the really cold morning. I was just hot again, yeah, nobody wants to work out on a really hot morning. That's gross. No one likes that. That's not No, yeah, it's pretty horrible weather, still not a bit of rain in sight, and just way too hot. So, hooray. No, I mean, it's so dry up here that our landfill is catching fire. Yeah, that's a fun thing to just happen, right? I'm sure that's an exciting just alert to get like, Hey guys, well, just saying, so the landfill is a flame. Well, so here's the thing that's fun. Here's the it took over, like, an hour and a half before the city or county or fire department or police or anybody as official or that I pay my taxes to messaged about this. At first. They just thought you could see it. They're like, Oh, they could see it. It's fine. They know, well, we could see it as we are. We're not super close. But no, just a random citizen caught the initial combustion of this thing because they were over there. I say random. He's kind of like the town, like impromptu story guy. He he tries to go to all the events and has his camera on him at all times and things like that. So he was out shopping. Say, this sounds a bit conspicuous when you're like, Oh, the random guy about town who always wants to say things was just happened to be nearby when the fires. Well, but he's
03:58
unrelated. He's also
Collin 04:00
always, yeah, right, well, at least he didn't then try and, like, put it out. It's like, See, I saved the day. No, but like, he was out shopping and just, like, ran and grabbed his camera from his car and, like, took some shots and then uploaded them to Facebook. And was like, Huh, what do we think this is? And it was like, hmm. And then the smoke got really big and very, very, very black and boiling and rolling. Could be seen from places that were, like two hours away this giant column,
04:32
because
Collin 04:33
also, also, uh, no wind. There was no wind that day, so, yeah, sure, it just went straight up and hit the ceiling right and then spread it out flat again, yeah, yeah, yeah, which is fun. Pretty high spoke to that's a hot fire if it's gonna go that high. And it because, turns out what had happened. Open was the machinery that was laying out a new what they do is they weight down the liner portions with buckets and buckets and buckets and bucket loads of shredded tires to damp down the stuff. Ah, well, we are a few dollars of tires short as one of the machines doing this sparked again. How this happens? I have no idea, but it sparked, quote, unquote, and ignited the all of these shredded tires, and there's gonna be a pretty big Spark, because rubber doesn't just, like, combust. Well, everyone's like, like, No, it doesn't, you can hold a flame, yeah, rubber, especially tires, and they have to, like, try to burn it, right? Is that like, so then codo it accidentally burnt. No, that's not as like, Okay, well, is it was it also mixed with, like, business machine old and, like, leaking oil, oily, yeah, diesel, or things like that. And so it's kind of around, and they don't really notice that until it all goes up in place, because I saw, um, later, some footage released of a lady who lived just across the street from this, and you see flames. Flames are going above treetops. That is how hot this thing was burning on just tires, on tires alone. It was, yeah, you're watching this, and you know, everyone's like, how toxic is that? And people were like, just stay aside. And I didn't. I talked to my neighbor about I walked over to tell him, and at the time, I was still making jokes about how it was burning into the landfill, and I was very excited about getting my my government provided water filtration system, but he had spent time in Iraq, and what they did over there, yeah, burn oil burnings, yeah, well, and all the burn pits and Iraq and Afghanistan, where they would just, whenever the military needed to move, they were just like, I'm taking none of this with me. Burn it all. Oh, I was, I was thinking the first Gulf War when they were like, oh, we can't have this oil well fire. Ah, take that. Yes. Like, yeah, no. So he was standing on our back deck, and he was like, that looks like the pits we used to light on fire. And I was like, that's not comforting, because I heard some terrible things about those and the health impacts that they have on people. He was like, Oh no, no, it's not good at all. I'm going inside. I was like, Ah, I'll go inside too. So it took I wasn't I really was kind of like, okay, the tires are on fire. But then the fire department started to post things like, hey, we'll keep you updated if we need a Shelter In Place issue because of air quality. And I was like, oh, right, no. Well, that's fun. Something. I don't know about, yeah, so we didn't have one of those called, well, that's good. They ended up getting, like, Georgia, like, no, so I am anyway. So that was our that was our fun, eventful, like, four hour ordeal watch that is quite an eventful ordeal. You could keep that one to yourself. I would not like to share or participate in that in any way, shape or form. It was quite, it was a quite, quite the community bonding experience to come together and realize how terrible of a response system that we have as community. Well, probably at some point too. Some of that was people being like, do, do we have a plan for this? Where's the plan for where? Hey, where's that drawer? Jim, yeah. Like, I think some of that was like, oh, oh, no.
09:25
We need a more better plan than the one that we currently possess and
Collin 09:30
all of this. So, yeah, so it is a privately owned landfill. It's not a city landfill or county landfill. This is a private company, course, who runs an operation farms. All of this adding fuel to the fire of the currently, there are proposed three additional landfills in our county, because it right, because it because. Oh, and they were looking to file paperwork to expand and increase the height of our current wine. They don't have to now because it's burning down. That's what people were saying. They were like, Oh, they're just making space. Don't worry. They knew it was going to pass. They're just burning. It's out. Yeah, oh, see, this is even more conspiratorial. Look at this. I was like, this, they're just burning. They're just burning. They're tamping it down a bit. Don't worry, they'll feel packed it over. But yeah, so this is the we have these farms over landfills. Signs everywhere here, because our landfill was not filling up quickly. And so if you're a landfill operator, you need, you want to make money off of your landfill, so they started selling space to St Louis and to Kansas City to drive two hours or three hours out to dump trash in our landfill. What a weird I know. What a weird sentence. What a fit that is like, Yeah, well, when you own a landfill, you obviously want to make money, yeah, yeah. That's just a weird concept, like they put it, they dug a hole to put stuff in it, and they're like, bring on your stuff. And St Louis and Kansas City and, you know, Columbia, Jeff City were all like, Absolutely, we will do that, yes please, because our rates are way cheaper than the landfills over by those cities because they are getting full, so it's more expensive to dump there. So they are now looking at us and going, I will jump there, and then, oh, look, look at all this land out here. My goodness, this is a perfect place to put all of our trash. So the landfill catches fire in the middle of this political debate that's been going on for a year or more now, as people are being sued and counter sued and attempted to keep this out and from moving here as they fight for that. And so it really riled up a bunch of more people. And I was like, well, they're gonna, they're gonna get some good fundraising out of this, so if they would use that in their marketing of all of their ad campaigns, I'm like, Do you want more of this in your backyard? No, actually, I don't make sense. That is true, right? That, man, that's how weird is that? So yeah, it provided for some man, good bonding experience over sarcasm and angst. Was like, Yes, this is perfect, wonderful. This is a, yeah, that's really, that's very strange. I don't know what's it. That's Wow. The this has made me think of right? I forgot about this thing. Well, I know about it, but I keep like it comes up from time to time in my thought process. Have you? Are you aware of the the hill in Copenhagen, Denmark? No, are you? Are you're not? Oh, man, so this is like a trash waste to energy plant that is also a rooftop ski and like snowboard and climbing center, it's like right smack dab In the middle of Copenhagen Denmark.
13:39
This.
13:41
This is
Collin 13:42
this what, what I'm I'm staring at this. This definitely, this looks like something out of a Batman movie, but it's a Bond villain. A Bond villain lives in this. That's what this is. Ah, it's a, it's a biomass energy factory. I say that basically, oh, oh, okay. Branding people, I need you to get on this. It's called the Copen Hill. Well, I mean, yeah, but it's, you know, the Copenhagen Hill. I know. I bet, I bet the pun lands better in Danish, right? I would imagine, oh, right, I bet, I bet it sounds better in Danish, but, but, yeah, this is like a big, giant biomass, like waste to energy thing. But there's also, like, rooftop cafes, and you can, like, go up there and, like, go running and, like, hiking. It's like an urban the top of it's like an urban park. Yeah, I'm looking at this right now. It's, it's nuts. And then they had, it's like, this huge thing. And then it's like a it's like an urban park. And then it also has, like. Skiing, and they have like contests, right? Scandinavian team battle, 2024 you know, who takes their skiing super serious, the super Scandinavians, right? So it's a good time, but this is, it's just very interesting. I was just thinking about when you said the word Oh, they need to monetize their landfill better. I was like, I thought about this instead. I was like, wow, what two diametrically opposed methodologies of waste management, right? Like, we need to dig a bigger we, we built a hole too big. We need to contract other cities trash to put in our hole so that we can make money. Juxtaposed against, yes, this is a waste slash, biomass energy converter, power station that doubles as a park with restaurants, man, one of these is an innovative solution, and one of them is a hole in the ground. I don't know. I know it's a literal hole in the ground where you throw your money. It's a pit, Money Pit. It's a literal muddy pit, right? It's so because they've gone with this weird checked Mark pattern for the sides, and I'm not sure what that material is, but it is a little reflective. Yeah, it doesn't look real like when you see photos of this true it looks you immediately go, oh, this is a rendering. This is a rendering for somebody's, you know, master's thesis for this. Because it just doesn't there's, you go, oh, there's no way. No way at all, right, I know, but yeah, it's like this. It's like a open concrete lattice check mark, checker board, like, thingama thing, and it's like, there's like, climbing wall integrated, and it's got, like, all this, like, just, it's a very, it's an extremely interesting project, right? Like, it's just very, I think it's cool, right? Oh, it's like, incredibly interesting and neat. But like, it's also, it's like, so forward thinking on some levels, and it's like, That is weird, but also it makes sense, but it's weird, but it's cool, but it's like, because you see the hill, and what's interesting is, in some shots, like you see the hill, you see the big smoke, not smoke stack, but just stack right, right. That's just probably water vapor at that
17:50
point. And heat, just the heat exhaust, yeah.
Collin 17:53
And then on others, other um angles, you see the windmills also around it, and other stacks around. And it's very, I don't understand this at all. Yeah, I'm trying to, yeah, you like, get bigger pictures of this again. You go, No, there's no way this is real. But, yeah, it is. And here they are. It's, it's got them. That's not, it's an artificial surface so that you can go skiing on it. Yeah, yeah. Year round. It's one of the slicks that you see on this practice ski jumps and stuff, yeah. It's like, yeah. So that's how you can ski on it. You can, like, all the time. You can just rent skis and, like, mess around on it, I guess. But, but, yeah, yeah, it's very my town, right? This is what I'm saying. Like, this is, this is a far more interesting, useful solution, right? Clean energy plant, integrated ski slope, slash, urban park. Slash, you could just like, go. You can just like, walk up the top and just like, hang on, yeah. I says, No, I'm on Google. Just like, around Right. Kind of like, it's kind of like, if, if you've ever seen those projects, and maybe you've probably have seen them, but they are a when there is a river in a town, and people are needing to do great control on it, and then so that it stops head cutting, stops erosion, you know, impacting shipping lanes and things like that. What they'll do is they will put in the great control in the river, but then they'll also add like rapids to it, to make it an attraction for people to come and whitewater raft or to do extreme kayaking on this is obviously much bigger, yeah, like Minnesota, in those areas, well, I mean, yes, but this is reminding me of that too, of like, Oh, we're gonna have. The ugly building here. What can we do to get in with the green eco stuff, more outdoor things, but it's a building put it on the roof, yeah? Or the the High Line thing in New York, yes, yeah. That is really neat, right? It's like the old, like, elevated train tracks. And so they because they stopped running the elevated trains, because they were so loud and disruptive in that part of town, they just had this thing. And they're like, What do we do with it? And it's just like a green walkway. Yeah, they just planted a bunch of plants up there and made it like a path, and they're like, Okay, go for it, yep, and you can walk. It's got scares that, yeah, that go down to different parts, you know, below, yeah, they're like, where the stations were. They're just, you can still go down so you can walk. Like we walk when we were in New York last year, we walked, like, quite a ways on it, and it has like, places that are, like, built out that to like seat so you can just, like, sit and hang out and, like, take a break or, and then, like, over the road. So you can just like, watch the traffic from this big up thing, right? And, and you can go, like, blocks and blocks and blocks and blocks. Just walk for a really long time, and then, like, you know, then just get down and boom, there you are. There's your scene right there. Out here in the rural part of the country, we see these projects all of the time, don't we? We see abandoned rail lines turned into biking and hiking trails. I mean, the one here in Missouri, right the Katy Trail extends hundreds of miles across different state lines, too, and it's like, yeah, what do you do with that in an urban setting? You sure you could tear it down, but that's actually probably more costly, or whatever. So how can I like, I like projects where people go? What can we do to as a quality life, improvement. And things that New York does not have enough of, in my opinion, are green spaces and their opinion too, which is why they did it. Yeah, and safe walking this stuff too, like you don't have to be alongside a road or worry about crossing a street or being shoved into a tra, you know, a taxi or something, because yeah, just a walking path, yeah? And there's like, people, there's a lot of people out there, and there's like, you know, they police, patrol it. So there's like, dudes just walking around, you know, it's just, like any other part, you know, they that's part of the patrol route. That's part thing. So it is relatively, yeah, you know, it feels all right. You know, walking up there just people and big space, and some of the places is cool because they left the track. So there's like, you know, it's kind of like the the train walking paths here sometimes where it's like the tracks over there, and there's just like, trees in it, and then the walking path is, like, next to it, nice. So, yeah, it's pretty interesting. But that's what it's cool because it's like, I like that kind of stuff, just because it's like, it's definitely an exercise in, like, I don't want to be cliche, but like, outside the box thinking, like, just like, Oh, sure. Do with this. Like, we could, like, tear it down, and that would waste, that would take a lot of money, and, like, we would do, you know, it would cause disruptions and all this stuff. Like, what if we just did something else with it and left it there? Like, sure, you know, kind of, like, recycling it's still there. You're just gonna reuse it for something else. It's much more interesting that way use close the loop, right? Yeah, yeah. How many more things can we get in on this? I'm sure we could go for. Oh, so, yeah. All these are great ideas. I will need to present them at the next city council meeting. All right, yeah, which will the mini Hill? Right? Hit this hit this ski hill, talking about Missouri, mini Hill be cool. Could be awesome. So So, yeah. So we survived that. And then this week, we have been, we have been doing several months ago, our city came to us and said, Well, it's us and some other people's businesses. And said, hey, here in a couple months, we are going to have about 1000 Airstream people come to town for 10 days, two weeks, something like that. Um, they do this all the time. This is their it's kind of the International Airstream club. And once a year they do a big rally where they all get together and they just stay in one town. And so, oh, we're putting together a coupon book or advertising book, and we're gonna hand it all out to them, so get us your information. And we were like, Okay, this is weird. I've never heard of this before. Yeah, I knew, like, Airstreams were, like, a thing that people like, but like, I didn't know that. And meetups and like traveling processions, I don't know what called the airstream International Club. I'll have a link for that in the show notes. You can go learn more about that. People, yeah, it's intense. These people are some of the most intense individuals, because it's all, well, they have got, they've got chairs, and they've got committees, and they've got boards and they've got stuff like that join, and then they all get together in these rallies, and it's just, it's all in celebration of the their Love of Airstream. That's that's for our international listeners who may be going the What are you talking about? Yeah, an Airstream is a, like, travel trailer caravan type situation that you pull behind the car and go camping. And the airstream was, like, a super popular model of this in like, the 50s, probably, I don't know exactly, I'm gonna get yelled at by Airstream enthusiasts, but it's like aluminum. It's like, it's based on, like, old aircraft. It's what looks like, right? It has like the ribbing, and it's like teardrop shaped for like, aerodynamic purposes. It's like that, right? So think, like old, like, 40s, 50s airplane, but pulled behind a car as a camper trailer. That's what this is. And they're like, apparently, yeah, that's one of those things in America that people like obsess over, because it's like, nostalgic, or like their parents had one, and so now they're like, restore them and like, really obsess over the apparently super obsessed over the airstream lifestyle, which includes going to random towns in Missouri for club events. Yes, yes, I am on the airstream club.org I didn't know this was an international thing. I didn't know they can't Airstream. Oh, that's true. Canada, sorry, sorry, it's probably not England. They trace their roots all the way back to 1932 I did not know Airstreams were that old. Well, it wasn't an, technically an Airstream at that point. But the guy kept at it. He was, he was, it's the designer. So 1934 how Lee bolus, designer of Lindbergh, Spirit of St Louis airplane. There's the first riveted aluminum travel trailer for sale called the bolus road chief. Yes, and that's a very 1930s name. I'm hearing they closed in 1941 because of World War Two, needed aluminum for lots of other things. Aluminum said aircraft. Oh yeah, sorry, aluminum, my bad. My man, hello. One English listener, how are you doing? And so basic. In 1947 they restart this. And so you have all of these World War Two, right? GIS coming out here, yeah, and it's the we're roaring into the 50s and 60s here, where this is just like, but you're right, really big in the 50s and put some like roadside travel, like the little roadside like camping things were popular, right? Like all the Roadside Attractions popped up as people were traveling all around the country now, because the interstate has just been invented, yes, right after the World War Two. Also, you know, Eisenhower was like, yes, interstate go. And so we have an increased in interstate. Increased interstate means increase auto sales, right? And increased auto sales means a lot more traveling. So there's a lot of, like, random roadside stuff pops up. People are traveling more and more all across the country, and they go in a trailer so that you can just take your home with you. There's a lot of details here on this, but it would not be you can go to. To the world's largest groundhog. That's probably, you know, you can see that, yes, again, this, this was definitely written by a passionate individual, so passionate that this is three pages of excruciating detail, and sold and sold and bought, and where it was re um, reinforced. And it even breaks down like the shares of each individual owner in 1963 and who bought and sold them, and how things are put together. And, of course, it ends in the HMM. This completes a brief review of Airstream company history up to its purchase by Thor. It should not be relied upon as complete as many details have been omitted to keep article length manageable. How long is this? I want to see the I don't want to read it, but I want to see the full Monty here. Right? Is this like a this like a 50 page, like pamphlet, three page, two column thing. This is the with, like a brief summary, some details in here, the abstract, abstract for the complete history here. Oh my, yes, I'm so I kind of want to see the real one, but I'm also kind of afraid of the real is that, oh yeah, this is, this is intense, right here, yeah. So they so they get together and they, here's what they do, right? They rally so they actually get, uh Airstream, like legitimate, uh certified Airstream technicians on site to do any kind of repairs or upgrades or things like that that you right? So you can, you can actually call in saying, Hey, I've got this issue. They'll meet you at this rally. Now, again, this is all this isn't, this isn't run by Airstream or their owner. This is all passionate people leading this. But they reach out to Airstream and they're like, Hey, we got like 1000 people here. Why don't you come out and fix things? They have vendors there selling all the courts of doodads and upgrades and things that you can have as well, additionally. And this is, this is my favorite part about this. They solicit their members for speaking ideas. So, oh, no, you can. And there's a whole day, it's like a committee conference. There's like a one hour seminar about rivets, isn't there? Yes, oh, there's, there's, there's seminars on, like, Intro to Airstream life and, and there's all like, oh, there's a paper in here that I saw somebody presented that was, um, air conditioner introduction, and how to get the most out of your air conditioner. And but people could also, just like, tell stories or present on, and this is my favorite, any topic they are interested in, that's, that's, that's a dangerous, that's a dangerous door to open up, like, hyper accessed people, and then saying you can talk about whatever you want, yeah, like, submit it to a person. Like, hyper fixates on, like, one thing, like, Oh no, yes, oh. Talk about rivet riveting, riveting patterns 1950 to 1957 that's what like, oh, no, how does the change in the river technology? How this the upgrade and the expansion from, you know, a width of standard to plus four inches? Yeah, exactly. So this is least spring updates, 1940 to 1962 right? Like, ah, this is what they're doing. And I am so happy for these people, because this is completely bonkers. This is completely insane. There's no reason for this to No. There is not to exist. Um, but yes, and then they'll let anyway. It just makes me really happy to see this. And so we, yeah, there's like, a craft in flea market. So if you are an air if you're an airstreamer, this is not open. Some of this stuff is open to local artisans, as they have on their website. And I'm like, careful there, buddy. But also, if you're an airstreamer, you're a streamer, and you come in and you, like, sell tchotchkes or doilies. You can set up a little craft fair booth at the at the craft fair that they have going on, and they'll let you take care of it, and you can sell stuff there. And that's what some of these people do. They're retired, and they knit and they crochet, or they 3d print stuff, and they'll just bring it around so that you can, so that you can do that. Wow, I don't, yeah, yeah. And the pot holders, yep. And they are, they, the organizers of this, do a lot like. Got like they organized a golf scrambles for people to go out to. They organized a huge bike ride on the Katy Trail with a couple tour companies here in the area. They having, they have a tea Oh, no, they're having a bridgerton themed Tea Party. Of course they are, it's right. That's two obsessions that I bet overlap nicely, nicely and Airstreams and the mini mosaic quilt class and the All are welcome every evening jam sessions that you can Oh, yeah. There you go. And I laugh at this, because I just, you know that can these people? And you're like, oh how. And when you look at one of these aluminum things, you go, how. How costly Could these be? Right? Like, how costly they're so stupid, expensive. I I've been in two of these. Now we'll be in a third coming up. Because people have pets. They actually have a pet show, it turns out, oh, well, didn't ask me for any help, but whatever. So they people bring pets, right? They want travel with their pets. That's what they do. And people are coming from Spain, Canada, Oregon, Florida, Texas, all over. I'm I would be surprised if a state is not represented, sorry, Hawaii or Alaska, but maybe I don't know. I bet there may be Alaska. I don't know. I don't know. And they all come in, and so they've been contacting us because then they want to go out and they want to spend all day exploring the area, going on hikes, doing the bike tours, seeing vendors, things like that. So this has been a whole like, they show up and they're like, Okay, I need you. And like, so we don't do meat. We haven't done meet and greets, yeah. And we are trying to, like, make this work the best we can. So I'm like, Okay, here's what you're gonna do. They all have what they call their brns, big red numbers. Guess what those are. They're big numbers red, nice. And they're on their streams so that they can be identified as they come in to make sure that they're registered. And if you join these numbers, you're not allowed to enter the camp. Yes, fantastic. So I'm like, Okay, I need your brn. I also need you to take a picture of your your Airstream and how it's set up, so I can see what kind of flags or what inside, yeah, well, no, just outside. I want to be driving, right? I need to see, oh, what kind of flags Do you have? Do you have a, you know, a corny, kitchy flag on it, or a skeleton sitting in a chair? Like, haha, it's funny. Yes, they do. And then also, because they all do, I also was like, I'm also having people start saying, wait while you're standing at your Airstream, open your maps app, whether Google or Apple Maps, and I need you to take a screenshot of where you are, yeah, right, so I can find you exactly, and so we are. So that's, that's what we've been doing. It's been working out really great, but it's like also throwing us way back to where we started, of like, no meet and greets, fill out some quick hitting information, and here we go. That's true. I mean, because there's this is gonna be, like, a one time thing for most of you, so you're just gonna be like, Hey, this is why you're in town for the weekend, and then, like, you're never gonna see them again. So right, right. I'm never, yeah, never going to see that. So that's not so bad. I guess it's hectic and chaotic, but not necessarily the worst thing ever. No, so I've been trying to, we've been working around that, but I did go into these things because, again, you look out, they literally look like a tin can. They all look the same too. Yeah, true. That's the part. I bet that makes finding them the most difficult is they all the same. Some are just longer, yes, so I don't think that this is like anyway. So we, we are like, you look at these things again, tin cans. Nothing remarkable. But then you go inside and you go, Oh, that's where all the money's spent. And I had one lady who said, Oh, it's such and such. It's a 30 foot classic. I was like, okay, cool. So I showed up, I'm in there and, like, that's really nice. There's a touch screen on the wall that has an image of the floor plan or the unit. And as you touch it, you can turn on all the accent lighting and, like, drag your finger on it to change all the buttons to, like, turn on lights and stuff. They're not switches. They're like, out of an airplane. So they're pressed. You press them in, and they go, like, a nice like, like, it's fantastic. Feel very 1947 though, like, I don't know, is that loud? Is this the Yes, and um, and then, like, there's all, like, the niceties in there. Anyway, it's fantastic. And I went, Oh, how much could this be? And I went to their website, and I went to build one, and I realized that, oh, the 30 foot is, like, it's not the granddaddy, because there's a 33 foot one. And I didn't click on that one. But these do start with no additions, no upgrades, no changes. Base you just want this, which the coast didn't understand. They $195,000 it's disgusting. For the 30 foot one. They make smaller ones, and and they make vintage ones that are also mega expensive. Oh, oh, that's horrible. What a hobby, what? And the also thing is people saying good people say guitar playing because it's a hobby. They also weigh a literal ton. So, yeah. So you now, if you buy one of these, what are you towing it with? Big truck Reno. Big truck Reno, that like, also cost $100,000 like your f3 50, that's what you Yes, you don't, you don't get to, we don't know. We're pulling it with the Oldsmobile station wagon, not the we, because if you look at the history of that, that pamphlet thing, oh yeah, they're all sorts of things. Are pulling these because they didn't weigh anything, because they were aluminum again, right? They're, they're super light, nothing in them now, nope, that's not working. So, yeah, you gotta get full of batteries and water tanks and, uh huh, thicker, like, insulation. Like, yeah, wow. You've, you've got to get all that taken care of. I anyway, so I went, Oh, the other thing is, the doors. You can't. You have to, like, slam them. You can't just, like, Oh, I'm shutting a door. It's like, because I did, I went just, just kind of bump it closed and it just air, like, barely latched on it. So you have to, like, check it. Like, yeah, pretty much I anyway, so that was my that's crazy. I have I, you can tell me how far but off I am. I just feel like a person with an Airstream, they definitely have a dog named like Roscoe. Oh, right. That really feels, I really feel like it's oh well, so far we've had goggles, right? It's like a little bandana and goggles on it. St BROSCO rides around with him that. Yeah? Was that a scout, an Ellie, a jazz Scout, a CoCo scout? That's a classic. It's a classic. Yeah, so that's been, that's been fun. Been doing anyway. I just like, oh my gosh, what is, what is happening right now? That's pretty That's wild. That's you think, man, well, I've not done anything near exciting that this week, just normal, hectic school things that's really all nothing very exciting at all. But I did. I was thinking this morning, talking to Susan, and I was going to share this with you. Oh, I don't know if I've mentioned this before, but now I have a name to go with my theory, right? And it's brilliant. And so I just wanted to reshare it with you, if I hadn't already, uh, when you are, you know, on the old internet, looking at recipes as you do. Do you ever look at that and go, Why is that in there? What is that serving, right? Yeah, this, this also goes along with it kind of ties in to Airstreams, because, especially if you look at a lot of like vintage recipes, it feels like some of the ingredients in there, like some of these things are not like the other. Some of these things do not belong, right, and I was thinking, because there's a lot of things, right? She was reading me some Castle recipe that she found because she just thought it was interesting. And the the comments on it were really bizarre. But like, you know, they always put in, like, there's always like, celery in there for some reason, you know, or there's like, just this vegetable, and you're like, you. Why? Why is that there? So I've developed this theory that specifically revolves around celery, but also several other vegetables, right? So, so in cooking, right? Celery is one of those weird vegetables that's like an aromatic base in cooking, right? And so when you are doing, like, very traditional, like French cooking, or like some other types of cooking, you put celery in at the beginning as the aromatic, right? What? So this is for like, this is like a chef thing, right? This is, like a culinary technique, right? So I think over time, some of the technique and stuff gets lost, and you just go, some people just go, oh, this has celery in it, and the celery ends up just, like, chunked up and, like in the casserole somehow, right? So it's in there, but we don't know why it's in there, and we don't know how to use it, but we just know it should be in there, so it's in there, and I'm calling this the vestigial vegetable theory. We use these things in cooking practices because we just know that they're in there, but not necessarily why they're supposed to do in the food, right? A lot of dishes are like this with carrot as well, because carrot is another, like, aromatic thing. And it's like, you know, in certain dishes, like, when you cook it in the beginning, it's supposed to add, like, the sweetness to the dish, but like later on, you get these like weird casseroles, and it's just got like hunks of carrot in it, and it kind of is, it feels out of place and wrong and doesn't really taste right. So you're like, Well, I'm just gonna leave it out of there, because that's gross. But it it was supposed to be in there in a different way, sure, but the technique was just sort of lost over time. And they're just like, somebody just saw ingredients carrot. They're like, yep, flung it in there, and then it just kept going from there, right? And so it's still an ingredient, even though it doesn't really need to be, because it's not being used appropriately. It's just there. This is my, this is my vestigial vegetable cooking theory, right? And I want your opinion. Do you think this holds any water? Or you think I'm just overthinking things again? This is what I want to know. No, I do agree that there are things that are done in cooking, cooking, especially because a lot of these things do have very, very long tales in history of, yeah, and you pull from different traditions and all sorts of things. And it is interesting, it is to think about the building of a recipe. How do you build this. And so I do like, PBS has that American's kitchen or whatever. Yeah, yeah. I really like that, because they don't just monkey around with a little recipe. They don't try and go, Oh, what if I do a little bit less of this? A lot of times they'll just go, no, if I was building this from scratch, what would I do to make this? And there are times where they'll come up and go, so something we didn't expect to add, but we did test it out because we did this. Other thing is this, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah, to know, yeah. So that wasn't there for a reason, or it became a reason, but we've lost all sight of that. And so I think you can do that with vestibule, the vestigial vegetable theory also, like this vestigial like nut theory, because, Oh, that's true. Yeah, that's another one. Like, why is it here? This, this theory kind of dovetails into another thing that I think about sometimes, like, Why do a lot of like, Why do certain, like, Southern cooking and stuff like, why is there so much butter in it, right? Sure. Why is it there? I think, I think one of the answers could potentially be the French, right, like that, because a lot of this stuff comes from like New Orleans and places like that, originally, and then like, and then spread out through other places and like, who is in New Orleans The French who loves cooking with butter more than anything in the whole world, the French. So I think, yeah, I think maybe there is some sort of deep lost connection here too. It's just one of the ingredients, right? That, like that sort of just was available because. Is that, now that's not probably the only reason, right? But I just had this theory that it's got to be connected somehow, right? It's just that it's too perfect to not be, I don't know. No, we're, we're all, yeah, what this is just how you start every recipe? Like the guy who I see mixed paints, uh, he makes every color. He always starts with green. I don't know why. Always uses green, because it's like, well, this is what I just just need to do, right? And, yeah, okay, yes, there you go. I just, I wanted to share that either before, I think, but like, I think, yeah, I think I may be on something with the vestigial vegetable theory. So listeners, let me know if you can identify any vestigial vegetables, any dishes that you have seen made, right? This would explain why there's carrots in a jello mold. I know that that would be
50:54
horrible, like,
Collin 50:56
like 70s or 80s, like jello mold, like fruit meat, Jello mold things has all the horribles of it, carrots in there. Guarantee that that's that's a vestigial vegetable. Like, no, well, now, no, I'm in a bad mood thinking of jello molds. That's great. That's right. Have you seen, have you ever watched that, like, Dylan Hollis guy, or whatever, the Tiktok guy, he makes the like vintage recipes and tries to, yes, do you know? Do you know what vehicle he drives? He's an Airstream. Uh, no, hold, is it a Land Rover? No, you're excited. You're you're excited about this. It must be he drives a Cadillac Deville of, like, the 1960s for right? There you go, that yes, that feels correct, right? Like, I just, you watch this man. He's He's so slight and he's so small, Megan, yes. And he drives this car. It's it's miles long. It's so funny to know that the vintage recipe guy drives around in a car from 1963 and it's one of the largest cars ever produced. It's so fantastic. That is really a perfect thing. That's a good that's a good match. I approve this message. This is good. Dumb. Anyway, that's yes, yeah, that did okay. That maybe that brightened me up thinking about, there go. But what may brighten you up more, even more, yeah, although it was slightly traumatic once I actually sat down and thought about, this, is this week's challenge, ladies and gentlemen, way what's up our challenge top five movies with a medieval setting, yeah, in honor of finishing A Connecticut Yankee King Arthur's Court, which, of course, has a medieval setting. Uh, we decided to do this now I immediately thought of several movies, but then could not, for the life me, decide in which order to place them. And, oh, this caused me great consternation for many days in a row, like I could not I, I had to sometimes, oh, I'm gonna sneeze again. I am so sorry. That's right, it's the dry air in the dust and the burning landfill combines the entire article. Articles, really? Oh, it did when it was burning, like, really going. I stepped outside and I could my eyes, I swear they started itching. I was like, No, back inside. This means no, yeah, um, I when, sometimes, when I get stuck writing, I'll make a draft, and then it is much easier for me most times to instead of picking away at that draft, to either make it better or longer or shorter, I will just rewrite from total scratch, something else, and then compare the two. And I had to do that many times to make this list of, like, Okay, forget what I did there. Pretend like that didn't happen. Let's go do fresh research. Let's go do look at new things and, like, develop this, try and do some fresh eyes on it. And still, I don't know if I'm happy with this at all, but I do have a list. Yeah, I would agree. This is definitely one of those lists where I have this is the list of right now. Now, if you ask me, in two days, is this list still accurate? Maybe not right, maybe not right, I'm pretty happy with the movies on the list. What's the order that's kind of hurting me? Right? It's the I don't know. Which order I want to put them in. So this I settled on something today that I feel I again, I put mine in the order of my final criteria that I decided on is, if you asked me right now if I wanted to watch one of these. Like, how excited would I be to do it? That's kind of what I decided on, right? So my ranking is based on which one of these movies would I want to watch the most? Like, right this second? Sure. So that's okay. That's kind of my deciding factor. That's how I decided to do it. Which, again, it could change some of my list is this way, because, like, maybe I've seen the movie a lot, and I'm like, I would be, like, less inclined to watch it, right? You know, like that, what I mean? So, like, yes, that may be why things are in a certain place. Maybe I haven't seen a movie in a while, and it needs and it's higher just because I want to watch it right. Sure like that that could influence, that could have influenced my ranking here. So just there are asterisks. There are definitely some movies on here that I chose because of the impact they have on me when I watch them. Yeah, I don't. I will add caveat. I think there's a movie on. There's movies I wouldn't immediately like clamor to go watch, but yeah, they're, they're good, they're good. I I'm, I am happy enough with my with my list here. All right, so I'm intrigued to see how this goes. I want to see, yeah, yeah, yeah. So I will You can go first, if you'd like, I'll let you go first. Oh, okay, that's fine. I can go first, whatever, three times true. So, so we are going to start here. I think we're going to begin in 2005 right, right smack dab in the middle of the epic, kind of movie, mini comeback era, right? We have these, like big, grand, epic movies, which also just happened to coincide with the time of Orlando Bloom. So my number five film is kingdom of heaven. Whoa, okay, yeah, going kingdom of heaven a story of the 12th century, Crusades to Jerusalem oof, right? Not the best subject matter, but, you know, with the like Orlando Bloom's characters, like the lost son of Qui Gon, jinn, right? And like, can't remember that guy's name, so he learns how to be a knight. He goes to fight in the Crusades. There's some bad French guys, right? Templar people, bad block, right? It's just the journey and, like, epic battles and all the stuff against, like, Saladin in the crusade. So it's a pretty epic, big, like, kind of adventure movie, yeah, and I haven't seen it in a long time. It's definitely not my like, favorite movie ever. But as far as like, middle age setting movies go, I pretty like, good. It's always like, I'm gonna say, fun watch. That's not exactly it, because the tone is very like, serious a lot of time, sure. But like, it's a pretty good movie, right? It's pretty solid movie. I would say, I know some people, like, are down on it, whatever, but guys, it's pretty good. So I put it at my number five. Okay, yeah, solid. Pick. I did. I did see that one. I went for one that this is, this is going to be my this definitely had an impact on me, whenever I was when I first saw this, this is definitely much more fantasy in this. It's a little bit more unreal, surreal. This is actually coming from what 1996 some of the aspects of this don't hold up so well, but that is because I am speaking of Dragon heart.
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Oh, I
Collin 59:22
forgot about Dragon heart mind, and not because Sean Connery is in this one
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true
Collin 59:30
and this look, is it? Is it all wonderful? No, is it? You know, does just the CGI hold up? Also? No, no, but that's no 90s. Maybe we really know, but it's got Dennis Quaid in it, like does
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have disqualified in it, the other guy, but
Collin 59:50
the prior guy. I like that guy too. He's funny, oh yes, yeah, Pete's pulse. Weight is it? Mm. What is that? Pete, anyway, something like that. Yeah, yeah. Plays a fire guy, Sean Connery, is Draco the dragon. Like, oh my gosh, I stopped me now. I really like this one. I like this movie again. This impacted me greatly as a young child watching it. Because, my goodness, this is fantastic. Again, watching now you go, Okay, well, a little little weird, but that's true, but that is definitely that's firmly in the category of, is this a good movie? No, is this a fun movie? Yes. So yeah, you get to see Dennis Quaid swinging through a forest hanging onto a rope that's attached to a dragon's tail. It's fantastic. And what could go wrong? Yeah, yeah, as they befriend each other. Oh, so they go. So that's my entry here at number five. That's a good one. I like it. I forgot about Dragon heart. I'm not gonna lie, dang it. All right, my number four is firmly ensconced on number four because of the impact right now, I have seen this movie way too many times, which is probably why it's down on number four, but I think as an impact on my very own personal self, this is a quite high ranking movie, as previously discussed, for better or for worse. This is a Monty Python in the holy grail, right? This is this had to make the list. This had to make the list. It was mandatory. King records in this he was in the book movie. The I saw this movie for the first time in a sleepover when I was, like, in middle school, and I remember the first time I watched it, definitely had a response of, what did I just watch? Like, really understand what happened? Yeah, I watched it with my friends, and he was like, Yeah, we're gonna watch this. Was like, Okay. And we watched it. And I was like, okay, the same night we watched we watched Monty Python and the Holy Grail, and we watched dune and I definitely liked one of those movies way better than the other. That is a bad double feature. I It was a really weird double feature. I don't really know what happened. I don't know why this is what happens in the mind of the middle school boy. I dude was so weird and confusing that I've never watched it again. And Monty Python I've watched like, 7000 times. So that tells you a lot here. But like, Absolutely, like, this movie barely qualifies, because the setting is medieval. Literally, nothing else about it is except for it, like makes fun of kind of a satirical look at the whole thing, kind of like Yankee was with Twain. So they're related that way, I guess. But it does qualify on setting alone, and I do make far too many quotes or references or jokes about this movie in my life. So that's why I made the list, really for personal relevance to me. Okay, another good one. Good one. Hey, my other one, my fourth one here is staunchly. Is strongly in here because of cultural impact, references to this movie abound. No, it's not Monty Python. I'll just get that out of there. Sorry, but you do hear a lot of people talk about this movie. It's referenced in all sorts of stuff. I like it. It is an epic. It is fight for a country and freedom. I am talking about Braveheart. Braveheart, Braveheart, yes. Phil mill, yes, good ol Mel, or, you know, whatever, no Melvin is in the movie, yes, yes, before he went slightly crazy, yes. Yes. Again, it is good. I beautifully shot. Well done. Great movie. Again, great movie, start to finish. I had to put this at my number four. Oh, yeah, that's a good one. Yeah, that's pretty it's a little long, but again, I put Kingdom heaven on my list. So that movie's also a little too long. Yeah, that's a good one, though. One, though, don't see as much references to Braveheart anymore. I need to bring back Braveheart jokes. That's important. Yeah, my number three movie, it also qualify. I would qualify, like this movie, definitely. You can say, is this a good movie? Not really. But do I like to watch this movie? Yes. Now I don't really know why I like to watch this is just a movie that I've I saw it when I saw it like, I don't know if it was like, I don't really know why I latched onto this movie, but for some we're. Reason this I have right like this, maybe just timing in my life, in my young adult life, I don't know, middle school, high school age, right? I feel like that's that's when it came out, that's when I would have seen it the first time. And for some reason, I just sort of latched on to this movie, and I do reference it. Sometimes it's a little harder to reference, but I do watch it every once in a while, from time to time, and I still like watching it. I tried to make Susan watch it. She definitely fell asleep, and was not impressed. But my number three is the 13th warrior, oh, Antonio Banderas. I Yeah, good. That's a strong pick. I like that one, right? Bonus points for Omar Sharif. Okay, that's good. You gotta get that Omar Sharif reference in there. Oh, yeah, always right. I've always good. Is this movie always makes sense? No, is it like the best movie ever? No, but for some reason, yeah, I just really like this movie. It's not rational. It doesn't make any sense. Yeah, I like this movie, though. Man, that's one I have not seen in a very long time. I have I'm gonna have to go Michael Crichton direct, yeah, yeah. Oh, then it's based on what's based on one of his books. Oh, right, the eaters of the dead or something like that. Yeah, right. But the one of the guy, the guy in that movie, is like, I don't know there's, it's, I think one of the other reasons I like it, as I do, as mentioned before, I do like a getting the team together trope, and that is as mentioned before, yeah, as mentioned several times before. This definitely is that getting the band together to go on an adventure trope, and that's like what this movie is about. So absolutely, that probably plays into why I like it smudge, but I like this. There's a lot the side characters are really good for me. Like, it's not just carried by Antonio Banderas that there's, like, there's a lot of characters, and they're all, like, a little bit unique and different and, like, mildly interesting. I guess they're, like, at least visually distinct that you can tell. Oh, that's this guy. That's this guy, sure. And so I like that part of it too. I guess I like that. But yeah, that's my number three. Okay, well, my number three. I think I tried to think about this. And I don't know if this is true or not, but I think this, this movie, may have been my very first exposure to the medieval period. Granted, it's late medieval period, but it's still qualifies. We'll count it. Okay, we're gonna we're gonna count this. I still do think about this movie, not as much as I used to, but it has also one of the best villains, I think, ever written for the cinema. I am thinking of here, of Disney's Hunchback of Notre Dame. Oh, a prolo. I think this movie, I don't know, I don't think it gets as much recognition for or it's what it is, but it's, it's a fantastic movie. You get to see some wonderful architecture, singing, dancing, freedom, still, yet again. See it's all tied in together here. So Jason, darkest Disney song ever. Darkest this, this, seriously, is a very like a lot of dark themes here in this movie. So it's very not the your typical Disney movie at all. But it's not a happy, fun time movie, no, but I like it, so it comes in at my number 319. 96 is hunchback No, she's talking. Oh, very nice, yeah. Now here, here we come to probably the biggest decision that I made on this list. Oh, what to put at number two, okay? Because that means I had a long struggle with the number two. Number one, right? This was a this was hard, okay, this was difficult for me. And I thought long and hard about this, but I did pick, I did decide to put it number two. Even though this movie is highly quotable, I reference it literally all the time. I make jokes about it to Susan. We quote it to each other all the time. This is like a very emotionally important movie for me in my young childhood development, because it is like swashbuckling and adventure and OODA lolly. It's Robin Hood. I. Specifically Disney's Robin Hood Disney's, yes, I love this movie. Okay, very much, and I cannot watch any other Robin Hood movies. Like, they're all, they're just, I, they all pale in comparison. Like every single like I can't watch like the Kevin Costner one, even though, you know, Snape is in there being the Sheriff of Nottingham, and he's really going for it, right? It's really good, but like any other Robin Hood movie, just does not hold a candle to Disney's Robin Hood. I just love so much, no, and, yeah, yeah. That came out in 1973 and it's so good, though, it holds up. You still watch it. It's still fun. I love just like, anytime I get upset, I always go like, Mommy, oh, no, oh, oh, I What did I do the other day? I was some Oh, some, some, one of the kids asked what time it is, and I just went all, well, yeah, I do. I do that. Two
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o'clock. No, I
Collin 1:11:15
do that. Susan, every once a while, tells me that she will tie me in a knot, put me in a basket when I when I'm being obstinate. Can we? Can we talk about that? There is the anthropomorphization of animals, and then there is the literal brilliance of the scene in Robin Hood where a snake crosses our barbs and pouts in the bed. It's perfect. It's so good. There's so many like quips and one liners and just like funny little asides in that movie too. I just love Oh yeah, no, that's such a great movie, and kids have definitely seen that one. I even said the other day I like, I don't know, I smooshed a spider, uh huh. And the first thing I thought of was spiders, snakes and lizards, heads. If I tattled tail, I'll die till I'm dead. Yes. Absolutely. Why that's in my brain. Just it is though, yeah, no reason. All right, okay, that's a good one. That's a good one. I think this is this next one is, I think, the newest one that I have on my list. This is definitely much more, much more actiony, much more broody, but it's it had to be on my list, because when I think of medieval I think of knights. I think of jousting. I think 2000 ones with heat, Heath leather, A Knight's Tale. Oh yeah, number one. Here it's I like how it basically takes a underdog sports theme like you could see this as being like a football team or a soccer player or something like that, and makes it jousting, yes, and you think about this, hit me right at the age where this was particularly engaging and captivating and just very fun to watch and See. So I have very fond memories of this, and it's, I think it's also just a very good movie, and Heath Ledger is fantastic in it. So I say Knight's Tale, 2001 I agree so much. That's my number one movie. Okay, I like it for all the same reasons. Like, it's just a lot of fun to watch. Yeah, right. It's very fun. The underdog story, The Canterbury Tales esque aspect, because, like, Jeffrey Chaucer is literally in the movie, and, like, just all the again, we have the team coming together, right? We have all the stuff. We have the modernization with them. The part kind of throws me a little bit sometimes, but, sir, I just need less queen in my life, if I'm really honest with you. But other than that, it's, it's like fun, and it's like adventure, romp through the ages with twists and turns and excitement. I just like, I like, it's a fun movie to watch. And so that's my number one. No, it's a it is a very fun movie. And, no, I interesting. I, I'm going to be honest, I thought we were going to have the same number one. Oh, I really did. I when I picked my list one, really did I. Honestly, I mostly struggle whether to include dragon heart or not, but no number one really kept bubbling up to the top, and this is one that I think is, I'm gonna say, quintessential to this genre. But I think the story is that is part of this. This is just, I think about this movie, some of the humor of it still makes me laugh. I have seen this movie a lot. It's also has so many different elements of various other movies that I just really appreciate, mostly from the time period this was made, has one of the best fight scenes in it. I'm talking about 1963 the Sword and the Stone. Ah, yeah, see, I thought about that one too, because I do love that movie a lot, and I actually do own that still. And I do like, I do like I also quote that movie quite a bit. Also like shirts. I probably should have moved Kingdom heaven off my list and put sword and stone on there, so that probably should have actually happened. But I do know I I just this movie is, is a lot of fun. I I also love the, it's the, it's the quintessential story, right? King Arthur Sword in the Stone. But also told from kind of just a fun and whimsy way of trying to, yeah, get him there, and just the, the Pickering right between. It's so funny. Like, I just, I love the magic fight scenes and what they try and do. And, you know, just, it's still the wizard battle is hilarious. That's like the best that's is my all time favorite part of this movie is the wizard battle doesn't go on nearly long enough. And I, I will find myself, I will go and just watch that clip of the of this on YouTube. Just find that right? Just, it is so much fun. So I, I do enjoy that. So that that is my number one. It makes me laugh. It's gonna go, that's a good, yeah, it is a good one. I like that with a lot too,
1:17:18
very nice.
Collin 1:17:19
This is the first time we've had, like, drastically different lists in a long time. Yes, yeah, that's very interesting. It's very fun. Yeah, I was curious about that. Yeah. So good. Hey, Woo. So I'll have those links there, and I also have some more movies that I need to go watch. Yeah, get taking care of your I will, I will see us off with a with a haiku. Seventh inning stretch. Crowd rises singing with hope. Game waits, hearts be fast, Oh.
1:18:00
Yes. Don't know how many, how many more
Collin 1:18:07
of those I'm gonna be able to do, but it's good as far as seventh inning stretches. No, that's fair. Baseball games are kind of cool, but they're also like, they're too long. But you know, it's alright. Yes, very good. Well, that was fun. I Yes, I do have some I have some movies. Good. Well, we will wrap it up there and do this again next time. All right, okay, bye. You.