text stringlengths 0 2.35k |
|---|
**Johnny Boursiquot:** Oh, man. You can't even buy a lollipop for 100 bucks anymore, can you? |
**Carl Johnson:** No. \[laughter\] |
**Mat Ryer:** Yeah. I also like how in Back to The Future, when he goes back and someone dies in the past, then he looks at the Polaroid he's taken, and it's kind of like half fading away. So at some point, there was a semi-transparent tombstone there... But to be fair, you would take a photo of that if that happened. ... |
**Carl Johnson:** I don't know. |
**Mat Ryer:** ...I love that. They're probably my favorite film. |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** Don't look at Back to The Future to reason about time. That's it. |
**Carl Johnson:** Yeah. |
**Mat Ryer:** Yeah. |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** \[unintelligible 01:05:08\]. |
**Mat Ryer:** Primer you want for that. I don't know if you've seen Primer? There's also a great Spanish one called Time Crimes, which is another one of my favorites. I really recommend that. |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** Hm, okay... |
**Mat Ryer:** And actually, the Adam Project is a more recent one, which is kind of more family-friendly movie about time travel. To be honest, I like any film with time travel in it, and it can be a really bad film, and I'll love it. For some reason, if it's got time travel in it, I'm in. |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** So have you seen Tenet? You should see Tenet. |
**Mat Ryer:** Yes. |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** Because that's a mind trip right there. |
**Mat Ryer:** Yeah, that's a good one. |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** You might have to watch it a few times. Yeah. |
**Carl Johnson:** Can I give my complaint? This is like the nerdiest possible complaint that somebody can have, which is that, okay, so Star Trek-- |
**Mat Ryer:** Are you sure it's more nerdy than storing a timestamp instead of a boolean? |
**Carl Johnson:** Oh, this is so bad... So Star Trek - they've done a million time travel episodes, and in the Star Trek time travel episodes, the rules are always that at the end you have to get things back to where it was, or close enough. There can be like little changes, but nothing big. But then they had the Star ... |
\[01:06:34.13\] If they wanted to reboot and say, "Okay, it's a new thing. It looks like Star Trek, but it's a parallel universe, where there's different things", that would've been fine, too. I think everybody would've been happy. There's like a million Batmans. Nobody thinks that the Batman in Batman 1989 has to have... |
**Mat Ryer:** Yeah. |
**Carl Johnson:** It just makes me crazy. |
**Mat Ryer:** Yeah. |
**Carl Johnson:** It's my nerdiest complaint about movies, I guess. But then all the other movies in Star Trek, it's not like they don't do time travel in Star Trek. They do it all the time and they have very consistent rules except for that one movie. |
**Mat Ryer:** Yeah. That is quite nerdy, I'll give you that... But I'm with you, actually. If there's contradictions in films, then I'm just out. And that does apply to time travel films. But there's things like -- any time there's like a horror film... And my partner loves horror films. She's always like-- she loves t... |
**Carl Johnson:** Maybe you just have-- you're invisible except for your pupils, and people just don't notice that the pupils are floating. They just think they're like two little nuts, or something. |
**Mat Ryer:** Well, if that's the case, if there's just two retinas floating around-- |
**Carl Johnson:** Yeah. |
**Mat Ryer:** ...then fine, then at least it's consistent. |
**Carl Johnson:** Yeah. That's like a good movie. That's what we all want to see, is those two little retinas floating around... It's called Retina. |
**Mat Ryer:** Retina. \[laughs\] Christopher Nolan could make that. He'd do a really good job. The other thing about Star Trek I like - and my friend, Aaron Adel, made this point as well... It's when they go onto another ship and they see all this alien technology they've never seen before, and they're like, "Hmm, this... |
**Carl Johnson:** \[laughs\] |
**Mat Ryer:** Like, I've got an iPhone. I don't even know how-- if I pick up someone's phone, I'm like, "Yeah, you do it." It's like, "What do you mean?" It's like, "Mr. Data, can you--?" |
**Carl Johnson:** This is like one of the problems of the 21st century... It used to be when you went to somebody's house and they had a television, you knew how to turn on their television and turn it to whatever channel you wanted to watch. Now, when somebody comes over to your house, like somebody's got to take care... |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** I just want voice control. |
**Carl Johnson:** Oh, yeah. |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** \[01:09:56.12\] Can I have voice control for all the things? Can I just get-- do away with remotes; just voice control. |
**Mat Ryer:** Yeah, but then what's the trigger word - I don't want to say the trigger words in case people listen to this, on those devices. And then we can hack... |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** Peanut butter. |
**Mat Ryer:** Okay. So you get to choose your own. |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** Yeah. Why not? Yeah. |
**Mat Ryer:** Why would choose that? What if you want peanut butter though, Johnny? \[laughs\] You have to whisper-- |
**Carl Johnson:** Very confusing. |
**Mat Ryer:** ..."Can I have peanut butter? \[laughs\] |
**Carl Johnson:** You should make it something you don't ever want. So like liquorice; it's like, "Well, I would never ask for liquorice, so..." |
**Mat Ryer:** There you go. I hate liquorice. |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** That's an unpopular opinion, if I've ever heard one. |
**Mat Ryer:** "I hate liquorice." Bling! "Oh, no, I was just telling someone." "I'm sorry, I don't know what you mean." "No, I wasn't talking to you. "Oh, I'm not--" You know... |
**Johnny Boursiquot:** "Would you like some peanut butter?" \[laughter\] |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.