Back Row and Chill with Jahannah James and Noel Clarke - Stay Home Special Series - Episode 22 - Viola Davis, Matthew & Jeffrey Postlethwaite, Anto Sharp, Alex Hobern
Episode Date: January 30, 2017Noel is back and he’s here to give away signed prizes! Aside from that and Noel fighting with his chair, we had a packed show full of guests. We had Matthew and Jeffrey Postlethwaite, Anto Sharp and... Alex Hobern. Also in the episode, we played out Jahannah’s interview with Viola Davis when they met to speak about new film ‘Fences’.
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Back row and chill with Johanna James and Noel Clark on Fubar Radio.
Good afternoon. It's Friday. It's 4pm. It's back row and show.
This is the third show of the year, I think. I've got my maths straight. We're nearly in February.
Whatever. We've got a massive show coming up today. Me and Noel Clark.
Noel Clark is back finally, but he's not quite yet in the studio.
We have got twins Matthew and Jeffrey Pothelthwaif.
Wait, let me see if I say that again.
Possible Thwait, there we go.
They run Peky Blinders, and Matthew is in the new film The White King.
We've also got YouTuber, Alex Hobbin, YouTuber and Vine star, Anto Sharp.
Lucy Patterson's back in for her film review.
So it's all kicking off.
And we have an exclusive interview with Viola Davis for her new film Fences with Denzel Washington.
So, oh my God, loads of stuff going on.
We will be going Facebook live later.
So if you want to tune in to us, we're going to be going live from my Facebook account, which is Johanna James, on Facebook.
And if you want to get in contact with us, chill at fubaradio.com.
That's our email address.
Email us in.
We will shout you out.
So if you want to ask me or Noel or Anta Sharp or Alex or anyone any questions, then just email in.
We have also got some prizes for the first time on the show today.
So if you want to win, get on to the Twitter.
Get on to Fubar, Fubar's Twitter at Fubar Radio.
Make sure that you sign up, or sign, make sure that you follow our Twitter.
And you could be up for winning some signed DVDs and posters and what not.
So, kicking off the show, let's get some music on.
I went to see the brand new film, TrainSpotting 2 this week.
I got an exclusive screening at Sony, and it was amazing.
So all of the music today is inspired by the original train spotting film
and the sequel, which is about to be out or it's just out now,
if it is, go check it out.
So the first song was
from Wolf Alice called Silk.
Love that. Now I'm going to play
a little bit of Queen Radio Gaga, which
features massively in the new movie.
So stay tuned. You're going to be with me
for the next two hours. Let's start
the weekend.
Food Bar Radio presents.
From Lauren. I love bagels.
My boyfriend loves them too.
What a God.
I'm going to get a witness. Oh, amen. Amen.
Amen, Chad.
We wanted to incorporate them in bed.
We'd stacked four bagels and put them on his hard dick.
By the time I got to the second one, I was so aroused and excited that my teeth missed the bagel and went straight for his head.
We haven't tried again.
How do I explain to him that I'll be more careful next time and want bagels wrapped around his dick again?
Why?
Every Wednesday.
Payton Sylvester Incorporated with Michael Payne and Harley-Solvester from Rizzle kicks.
From 4pm on Fubar Radio.
Boom.
Right, we're back.
It's Friday.
Noel has arrived.
And he's here.
He's here.
It was the central line.
Blaming it on the Central Line.
I am blaming it on the Central Line.
I would like to take this moment
and like an award show
to thank the Central Lion
for being the shittest fucking lion
ever invented by TFL or whatever the fuck they are.
Someone, one of the staff members,
forgot their train.
How do you forget your train?
It's not a fucking bath toy, is it?
How do you forget your train?
train. He forgets his train and delays
the whole line, delays me for my own fucking show
with JJ. Unbelievable. Someone's getting the sack,
I hope they get in the sack. I hope they
end up on the fucking district line, which is like, hell,
that's even worse. Actually, that's the worst line of
district line. But Central Line, you were a close
number two. Well, no, I was just telling
fucking Sunday League line that is Sunday League.
We've got a massive show coming up. We've got our first guest
about to come in the studio. Fantastic.
But we've got loads of entertainment news
which I thought we'll whist through... Fantastic.
We've done a little bit about that now. But first of
How are you? How the fuck are you?
How the fuck am I? I'm straight from the set of
10 by 10. Straight from the set of Luke Evans' starry.
I had to leave Luke Evans' beautiful little face
and Kelly Riley's beautiful little face and come straight here,
which I wouldn't miss for the world this show, obviously,
but straight from the set of 10 by 10, I'm good, I'm good.
It's going to all right.
What time to get up this morning? Is it early?
What time did I get up this morning?
I got up early this morning.
I'm just laughing because you guys are fucking with this chair again.
They're laughing at me because I know they're winding me up.
You guys do this on purpose.
I must do this on bobbas.
They do this on bobbas.
You know, they fuck me with this chair, man.
I swear they want me to break my back.
Look at this fucking shit.
How am I doing?
I got up early this morning.
Early.
Early.
No, but no, no, not because of the filming.
I'm usually up early because of the filming, like, five.
I was at the American embassy today getting my new...
Passport?
My new working.
No, I'm not an American citizen.
I thought I was going to get a passport.
I was swinging that.
I was like, how are you swinging that?
My new working visa.
Oh, because you're going to be working over the state size?
I'm working.
That's all I roll, baby.
So I won.
I know or were.
So, okay.
They don't mess about
in the embassy either.
Really?
You guys who want to be
actors and stuff like that,
you ever go to the embassy
to get your 01 visa,
this is my fourth,
by the way,
darling.
If you ever go there
for your visa,
they do not fuck about,
do not make jokes in that place.
Okay.
Don't be like,
Hey, USA!
Then just be like.
Don't say anything about Trump?
Don't say anything
about anything.
Okay.
Just nod and smile
and say yes, sir.
Or yes, ma'am.
Say,
say ma'am if it's a woman,
because if you say sir
to a woman,
she will not be pleased.
they do not like it.
I totally do that.
I was always the kid that called the teacher like mum and stuff
and it was a man.
Man, I mean, sir.
Right, okay.
So, okay, so 10 by 10's going good.
Yes.
You're making a lot of American things.
That's all good.
I'm doing various bits, man.
Before we start the show,
I want to remind people this is the first time
we've got prizes to give out today.
Prizes.
I've missed you as well.
I've missed you today.
You're like a little prize to me.
Oh, thank you.
Friday's prize.
We've got signed.
I assume by you.
Yeah.
DVD.
It's a DVD, the soundtrack, and a post, movie poster for Brotherhood.
And I'm going to get the best British film of the year, surprisingly.
And I'm going to get a vinyl.
The soundtrack did so well, they put it on vinyl.
Like record?
Yeah, like a record.
Yeah, record.
That's your, record.
That's your era.
No, I think it's more than that era.
I wasn't about when records were about.
So, yeah, we're going to.
But that's retro.
Apparently, it's not old anymore.
It's retro.
It's the new new.
Yeah.
It's the old new.
The new old, I don't know.
But if you want to win that, if you want to win the sign memorabilia from Brotherhood.
Are we given all?
We're not giving it all away today.
No, we're giving it every week.
But this week, if you want to win a DVD and a soundtrack and a poster, then all you've got to do is go to the Fubar Twitter, follow them and then retweet the tweet the tweet about winning this thing.
And we're going to be picking a winner and announcing it next week.
And wait, does the winner win all three things?
They win all three things.
Yeah.
Fuck.
You know, if we gave them one thing, we could stretch us out for like half the year.
But we've got every week.
But we've got four sets of it.
So we're going to do one a week.
One a week for a month.
If you're going to win a prize, win a fucking prize.
Let's win all of them.
Let's win all of them.
And, you know, you're on the poster.
I'm in the, I'm in the soundtrack cover.
And you're in the film, more importantly.
But somehow I managed to make it in the soundtrack cover twice.
Are you on the soundtrack cover twice?
Yeah.
It must have been a mistake.
I must have been a misprint.
Right, no, my mug's in there.
More than your...
No, maybe not more than yours.
Maybe not more than mine.
Righty-tighty white.
We've got a crack on.
We've got a crack on.
We've got a guest.
We've got a guest.
Matthew and Jeffrey Posselsway in the studio.
So I'm going to pop to soul.
What?
Twins up in the house.
I know.
And they're gorgeously dressed as well.
They are very well dressed.
They look like they're getting to church.
Why have you dressed so well, boys?
It's beautiful.
I like a man who dresses up.
Oh, they're going to a premiere.
Oh, that's why.
What premiere are you going to?
Wanky?
The white...
Oh, the movie that he's actually in.
The what?
the White King
Oh yes
We're gonna be talking about that
The film that we're talking to
You're going to your premiere today
Fantastic
In just a second right
We're gonna play Run DMC
It's like that
And we're gonna be back
It's back row and chill
This goes a little fuck like this
Back row and chill
With Noel Clark
And Johanna James
On Fibar Radio
Boom
Boom
We're back in the room
With our first guests
Double guests
Double guests
Twins
Twins
You're our first twins
On the show
Yeah
Yeah.
That's amazing.
Well, usually it would be my fantasy.
They're very good.
Not my type, guys.
But good looking, none of the less.
Totally, totally my type, my fantasy.
Okay.
It's great to be here.
Thank you.
Welcome to the show.
Thanks for coming, well.
So, to,
if you want to introduce yourself to our listeners
because you're both actors.
Yes.
And you've both been in things like
picky blinders.
Yes.
You've got a new film that you're promoting.
So, we want to introduce yourselves?
Yeah, so I'm Matthew Posterthway.
I play really.
Remus in the White King that comes out tonight.
And I'm Geoffrey Pots the way.
I play Rumulus, a franza that comes out tonight.
So the premiere is at 7.30 tonight at Regent Street Cinema.
Boom.
So we're looking smart.
They're completely upstaging us.
Dress up for radio.
We're here in sweats.
Guys, the White King premiere, for those of you that are already not popped out in the cold,
is at 7.30 tonight at the Regent Street.
Theater.
Exactly.
You guys can't miss this. Come on, guys.
The White King.
It's the White King out here.
And for anyone who, yeah,
doesn't know what that is about.
Do you want to just pitch the film?
It's kind of like a dystopia, futuristic, really gritty drama.
Sci-fi.
A little bit sci-fi, a little bit.
It's very drama-heavy, which is perfect.
Yeah, it's all too timely with everything that's going on currently, with everything.
A little politics.
Yeah, you can throw it up, but we don't care, man.
So it's based on a Hungarian novel, is that right?
Yes, it is.
We actually filmed it in Budapest as well.
Is this a famous Hungarian novel?
Is this like well-known?
It is.
It's won loads of awards in his country.
Then there was a transcript which got translated into English.
It was like 200, no, 20 different languages.
It's in it at the moment.
And it landed on the top of these directors' table.
This husband and wife duo, they both directed it,
which is really interesting, Yorg and Alex.
Yorg actually stayed more behind the camera.
Alex was with the actors.
So it was, it was interesting to see the dynamic.
dynamic, yeah.
Then they turned it into a screenplay,
then we shot it in Hungary, Budapest, yeah.
And how long did it take to make?
We were actually in Budapest for three weeks it was, wasn't it?
We were, yeah.
The whole film was about three months.
No, no, I think it was a bit less than that.
Was it?
Yeah, maybe two months, let's say two months.
That's like bad, though, like three weeks.
Had you guys ever been to Budaphas before?
No, and actually when we got there,
we had three days where we could just explore the city and just...
That's rare.
Went to all the baths and, yeah, it was amazing.
Yeah.
They're on my love.
So it's Alex
Helfricht and Georg
Didell?
Correct.
Husband and wife,
eh?
Yeah,
husband and wife duo.
Okay.
Was that a bit like
sort of having,
sort of,
you know how you play parents
off the other?
Be like,
well,
she said.
Did you ever just do your own thing?
Like your own performance
and then be like,
well,
yeah.
Jorg said I could
do what the fuck I want.
Right, yeah,
no,
we should have utilised it more.
But it was interesting
to see their dynamic
and our dynamic as well
because,
well,
this was the first,
film that we've done together.
So it was interesting to go back to our roots
and play Twins again.
So where are you guys from?
The Lake District originally.
But we've been living in LA for about three or four years
kind of on and off.
Same with our working papers.
We've been doing that recently as well.
Yeah, but you've adopted the action.
I have, no, but I switch back.
I was talking to my friend in America
and as soon as people, American, I'm like,
you just switch back.
I do that.
You're kind of a bit more chill.
Yeah, I am.
Yeah, I'm from the North of England.
So I'm kind of like, everyone's going.
Yeah, great, great.
And who got into acting first?
Is one sort of got in and brought the other?
Or did you both go in together?
It was actually me that I got in first.
Matthew.
Just to specify, you know, Matthew's like the rock now.
Matthew's like the rock now.
Matthew's like, the rock, sir.
It was me, Matthew, though.
Yeah.
I think I ended up doing a commercial first.
He did, yeah.
Yeah, he was kind of, I was at university.
We were studying business studies.
Wow, so quite late, eh?
Yeah, it really was, yeah.
We always wanted to be actors, but coming from the Lake District, Cumbra,
there wasn't that many avenues other than, like, your plays and stuff,
which we did a few, but then we quickly moved over as soon as we went to.
Man, that's a thought.
So, I mean, you guys are what, 20, what now?
25.
So, this is, you've only been doing this, what, like three years, maybe?
Oh, like seven, eight.
Hold on, he said university, though.
Yeah, 18.
I was 18, 18, 18, wow.
seven years.
Wow, that's amazing.
Yeah.
That's amazing.
You guys have done so well,
huh?
Yeah, that's really proud.
Yeah.
How's his mom and dad
from the Lake District?
They must be well.
They love it.
They're actually down tonight.
They're not getting into acting too, are they?
No.
Whole family.
Well, my mom actually enjoys it.
She's like,
I can do that.
It's funny when we always have a script as well
and we're not rehearsing with each of her.
She's like, I'll rehearse with you.
So she goes to read the lines and she's like,
Terrible.
The castle on the hill.
She goes for it.
Really.
go.
That's good though.
That's good.
You're going to have a rehearsing buddy.
Yeah.
And your characters in the films
and in the White King,
obviously your brothers,
I'm assuming you're close,
I don't know,
but your brother's in the film
are your characters,
I'm assuming, are twin brothers too?
Are they always together
or is there a sort of separation thing
without giving too much of worse?
Actually, no in the film
they're always together, aren't there?
Yeah, yeah.
They are kind of these
bad characters.
We always seem to play bad characters
for some reason.
Bad is not bad characters,
but bad characters,
evil guys. It's so different to who we are there as
people I think that's what they were saying.
We're not really super villains.
That's what they were saying, right?
And how did
Peekee Blinders come about?
I was in final year of
university this time when we first got
cast in that. Yeah, Peekey Blinders is set
on an actual story
and most of the characters are real.
There was actually
twins, Nipper and Henry
in the actual Peekee Blinders
gang so they needed twins to be cast.
I remember when we went for the audition, it was Otto, Bathenhurst that was there.
He actually was the bathtub for it.
Yeah, we literally, our first audition was with the director and producers into this room.
And me and Matt, to be fair, we were still quite new to the industry.
So we just went in, oh, this is how it normally is.
Some of a different.
But yeah, from there, we got cast.
And it's been, it was such an incredible experience, it really was.
I can imagine.
Great, great, great show.
You guys must have absolutely loved it.
Yeah, like Killian Murphy and Helen McCorry just to be around.
of course
Sam Neal
is just incredible
we learned a lot
from that show
I think you can only
ever learn
though with those guys
yeah
exactly
it's just amazing experience
yeah
and then Otto
do the whole
of the first season
no he did
three episodes
three episodes
in season one
then Tom picked over
for season
no for the last
three episodes
of season one
Tom Harper
yeah
I know
I know what these guys
yeah
yeah
I'm my friends
I know
I know
no friends
but you know
I know Tom
probably more
actually
but yeah
yeah you know
Helen McCory
as well
Helen McCorry is phenomenal.
She's in 4321.
Oh, I'm in my film.
4321 I directed.
She plays Emma Roberts' mother.
Oh, yeah.
Nice.
There you go.
Connected.
Oh, yeah, everyone, it gets smaller and smaller.
Yeah, smaller and smaller.
Yeah, it does, right.
That's awesome.
So what's next for you guys?
You fly back out to L.A. and Saturday.
No, tomorrow.
Tomorrow.
Yeah, Saturday.
Pilot season.
Pilot season, that whole crazy fun thing.
Yeah.
Yeah, so you fly out on Sunday
So we didn't communicate the days
That we're flying back
For some reason
He's actually flying back
Like 20 hours after me
What was the reason for that?
We just didn't end
We talk about loads of things
But we just know
Yeah, well, you've got the twin thing
We talk about work
But we don't talk about
How we're trapped
Do you guys live together in LA?
No, we don't
No, we don't
Okay, interesting
That's interesting
Okay, that's...
Too much
Independent twins, that's cool
Yeah
But we were producing a show
In LA
Yeah
Yes, kind of a working title, kind of a few networks are interested in that.
What's it about? Fantastic. What is that?
Can you say what it's about? We can't say exactly what it's about, but it's kind of like a mix between House of Cards and Game of Thrones.
Oh my gosh.
So season one, how can you do that?
How can you do that?
What?
A mix between House of Cod?
If you get, if this show goes right, it's going to be fucking the best show.
Be honest.
Yeah.
You know where I'm right.
So season one's row, season two and three.
There's an outline for it.
but there's producers that are,
we're just working out which one we want to go with.
Have you guys written it as well?
No, to be honest, to be honest,
I'm dyslexic, so anything that did.
I know, we're both dyslexic to verify.
I say that as well, man.
It's just really because my maths and writing is terrible,
it's great and terrible, but, you know.
So we've got a, we've got a,
we got a writer who did the original transcript
for the new Terminator film.
So he actually came on board
and took our ideas and what we wanted
and changed it and changed it and change it again
so it's like a completely different story of what we wanted to.
It's a co-creation between you two and that guy.
Absolutely, yeah.
That's fantastic.
Well, good luck with that.
Thank you so much.
I love it when people are making their own work as well
because it's extra, the extra passion in there, I think,
rather than following someone else's.
It's important to always create.
I mean, you know, you guys are doing so well
so I don't want to give you any old man patronising it.
You know, one thing I've learned is always create
because, you know, sitting there waiting for the founder,
you never know what's going to happen.
And had I not created my own stuff,
you know what I mean?
We wouldn't have the greatest British trilogy of all time.
There you go.
One of the only British trilogy.
But you get my point now, you know,
to always create and do your own thing, man, it's important.
And are you related to the great Pete Possible?
We are distantly.
It's been asked a lot in interviews.
It's such an unusual name.
No, no, no, no.
It's not my father.
my
dad has told us
how we're related
but
I'm still waiting
for the family tree
I think he definitely runs
in the blood somewhere
the name
have you met him
I didn't meet him
my father met him though
yeah
oh your dad hasn't met him
yeah
but we didn't get the chance
to meet him
yeah he was fantastic
well this is
this is really really exciting
I'm gonna
I'm still yet to catch up
on the peekie blinders
it's on my like top
to do list
Great.
Well, I've not seen The White King though, so I want to see that.
No, yeah.
And that sounds.
So when's it going to be released and when can people go and see it?
I think the premiere is tonight, why we dress up in suits.
Premise tonight at 7.30 and then I think it goes to DVD.
Is it pretty quick release?
I think it's doing a few more cinemas up and down the UK.
Then I think it should be out pretty soon to a DVD.
Oh, great.
So, so collapse windows.
So basically it will be in the cinemas for a period of time.
Yes.
And then it will be on home entertainment quite quickly.
so the fans can catch up.
Lap it up. That's the way a lot of things are happening these days.
People just want to.
Because before, you go to see something at the cinema
and then six months later, all the DVD.
And now people kind of, if they just miss it or something,
they're like, oh, you know, everyone's appetite's getting quicker.
So you've got to keep feeding.
Feed that fat baby.
Feed that fat baby.
Well, dude, I'm going to be looking forward to that, man.
And looking forward to a lot more stuff with you guys
together as twins and individually, man.
Just keep doing this thing.
We'll be live on Instagram tonight, so we'll be like filming most of it on our phones.
Get all the social.
All those socials, that's the way.
That's the way.
Well, thank you so much for being like the first official twins.
Twins ever.
Thank you very much for having it.
You should see the next ones I'm inviting.
You guys might want to come back here.
Yeah, we'll be back.
Twins on twins.
This is amazing.
All right, thank you.
I'm going to pop to a song now.
I'm going to go over a bit of Iggy Pop.
Oh, don't.
No, don't know me.
It's a classic.
He hates my music I play.
He listens to Backrun.
Jill, Noel Koch and Johanna James.
Fubar Radio presents.
Screen Talk with Dan Clark.
If it could go wrong, it goes wrong, but that's a really...
I watch that on an aeroplane.
And have you found that airlines now show movies
that you can't quite believe they show on airplanes?
100%.
Like, flight.
Flight is on there.
You want.
Planes have...
They just make a good film even better.
What is that?
It's true.
Watchable.
So true.
I don't know what it is.
This is a new podcast.
So true.
Films on planes.
Every Friday
From 12pm on Fibar Radio
Mad poo
Big up to repin all them years from
Noel is doing a Facebook live as we speak
So we're live on the radio
We're live on Facebook
We're going live all over the place
Oh live on Instagram
Yeah because I haven't done it before
So I thought I'll try it
We're just going to take Noel's Instagram live virginity right now
How are you? I'm fine
Let's carry on with the show
I'm going to carry on with the show, guys.
We need to carry on with the show.
So I'm just going to put you down here.
It's back row and chill.
They're just going to watch in the, from the sly.
Just going to watch on the slide.
Behind the scenes.
See how that works behind the scenes of the radio show.
Okay.
So we just had guests, the lovely Matthew and Jeffrey Posslethwaite.
They're amazing twin brother actors.
Not that often you see two good-looking twin brother actors.
25-year-olds.
That was a treat.
What a treat.
Yeah, they weren't bad looking.
You know, they weren't Clark out here, but they weren't bad looking.
They weren't chocolate.
Okay.
Right. Entertainment news, because there's so much going on right now in the world of film.
Because we've got all these awards ceremonies going off.
This girl says she'd poo on my tits.
Do you have tits?
Yeah.
Your man titties.
Live video has ended.
Oh, she ended it.
She ended the fun.
How does it end it?
Do I end it or do they end it?
Anyway, sorry, carry on.
I'm talking about the entertainment news.
Well, apart from that girl who wants to poo on Noel Clark's breasts.
Other things that are going on
So, Sundance film festivals
Happened, is happening, has happened.
And that's where all the social media outlets
sort of like Amazon and Netflix,
they all flock down there and then they try and buy
all the movies.
So Amazon bought Manchester rights to Manchester by the sea.
Who bought it Amazon?
Amazon has won, and they got it for $10 million.
They paid for that film to be on,
exclusively on Amazon.
That's just...
That's a bummer.
Is it still going to come out in the cinema?
Yeah, yeah, it's out of the cinema,
but it's just the rights to it online,
I guess, because that's getting a really big market.
You mean home in?
Yeah, like Home In Entertainment.
So, La La Land was nominated for 14 Oscar nominations,
which is...
Equals the record of the highest amount of Oscar nominations ever.
Which is just like...
I actually terribly don't know what the other film was.
Can we find that out, please?
What the other film was?
Yeah, okay.
that had the highest Oscar nominations.
Which I kind of agree.
And I saw La La Land and I thought it was really good.
But I didn't think it was maybe worth 14 Oscar nominations.
I've seen it.
Also seen it.
La Land is a very good film.
I'm kind of with Johanna here.
Like I feel like it was really good.
14 Oscar nominations.
I don't know.
It's like, I'm not hating because Whiplash.
He deserves eight just because he did Whiplash before.
Whiplash and then this.
It's like,
So he deserves a whole bunch.
But it is to, you know, I've seen some, a couple of the other things.
Like, I'll be playing in a moment.
I got to meet the lovely Viola Davis.
And she, I saw the film Fences is what she's in with Denza Washington.
And I saw her performance against Emmer's.
And I, you've seen Fences.
Of course.
Yeah.
Okay, all right.
You get around, now get around.
Then I think I would vote Viola if I was voting.
Yeah, but she's nominated as well, isn't it?
Yeah.
So if I had that vote.
She's nominated for both, I think.
After an Oscar?
Yes.
Yeah, I don't, with all due respect to Emma Stone,
I don't see, with the performance that Viola Davis does in fences,
because, you know, guys, this is a film show.
I feel like if you guys watch that performance,
you want to act, you watch that performance.
I don't see how Emma Stone wins any of the awards.
It was just absolutely, I mean, I was in tears.
But saying that, you know, I've seen hidden figures too,
and there's some performances in that film,
and I don't believe any of them are nominated.
That film, Smashbox, that got more, I think,
then it beat Rogue 1 in the opening.
There was something massive.
I think Rogue 1 was in its second week, but yeah.
Yeah, Hidden Figures like top that.
Oh, just got in, we've got the news.
So the most nominations received by single film was three films have received 14 nominations.
Titanic, All About Eve and La La Land.
Titanic.
Titanic.
So that's a long time.
I mean, I don't, but then again, I don't think Titanic deserve 14 Oscars either.
Nearly 20 years later
For 20 years
There's nothing's touched Titanic
And then boom
Yeah well technically
Technically guys
Anyone who's paying attention
It is 20 years later
Because it's 2017
Not 16
If you
And that does say
2016
So it's 20 years later
Yeah
Yeah you could do your mouth
What the fuck
They can correct it from over there
Yeah
We've got a thing called a split screen
A shared studio
Guys you just don't want to see
The Voodoo I just saw
I'm looking at the screen
They've corrected something
In their little room
over it and I've just seen it correct
it's crazy it's pretty yeah the technology
freaking technology look at you today I'm so proud
of you Instagram live learning about
shared screens good job Noel
look at these fuckers so if I type some shit
back will you see it there yeah you better
fucking hope I don't go over there and start
typing shit um so with everyone being
nominated and stuff there are some people that
were snubbed at the Oscars
so the film Martin Scorsese
silence was
snubbed didn't get nominations
um which
No nominations.
Deadpool, again,
oh, Noel's trying to fix his chair.
We're trying to talk about serious things.
I'm listening, I'm listening.
Deadpool doesn't deserve any Oscar nominations.
Well, I found it's so entertaining.
Deadpool's massively entertaining, right?
I like Deadpool.
I really do.
I like Deadpool.
Action-packed, good performances.
Funny.
But is it an Oscar film?
You know, because I would argue
that Brotherhood deserved BAFTA nominations.
We had a funny, action-packed smart film.
We didn't get any BAFTA nominations.
so why should Deadpool get any Oscar nominations?
And it's not a tip-for-tat thing,
but I feel like the films fall into the same category
of they're kind of entertaining more than considered artie
and thus the establishment will ignore them.
The establishment, yeah, didn't think Deadpool was good.
Amy Adams, she didn't get nominations
and she was up for, well, the two, she had two kind of runs at it, really,
because she was in Nocturnal Animals, Tom Ford's movie,
as well as being the main lady in a rival.
Yes, she was in arrival at all.
No, I think one day you're going to get your fingers stuck in that chair.
I'm telling you, you're going to get me off with this fucking chair, man.
Live.
So Amy Adams apparently quite, she dealt with it gracefully, but I think she's pretty gutted.
Amy Adams is pissed, man.
Toothpire.
Amy Adams will be peeved.
And do you know what?
She seems like, I think when you meet celebrities off camera, it gives a massive indication of what they're like.
And I bumped into her in a corridor.
And normally you can walk past them there, just ignore you, whatever.
But she, I bumped into her.
And she sort of went, oh, hello!
And, like, she was really lovely and sort of like, I'm sorry.
And we just had this little small interaction of dancing around each other in a corridor.
And I just was really surprised.
I was like, oh, I didn't think she was going to look me in the eye and acknowledge me and stuff.
Well, I mean, people are just people, like, you know.
But I've had other celebrities who have just walked, you know, straight by.
Nothing.
Same deal, man.
Some people are just rude, aren't they?
I quite like Amy Adams just because of how she treated me.
And then Aaron Taylor Johnson was also snubbed for his nocturnal animals' portrayal of the psycho.
rapist,
which I thought
was good.
Nothing.
You used to have
a tumble weed
I think I did
if he's gone
what do you want
What you don't think
Aaron Taylor Johnson?
I've supported him for years.
His performance was
just,
he freaked me out
in that movie.
He's great in the movie.
Made me chilled.
But like,
he's great in the movie
but you have five choices
you have five choices
and so, you know
they're on Casey,
Andrew Garfield,
Ryan Goslin,
Vigo Mordinson
and Denzel Wajon.
To be honest,
I have not yet
watched Captain
fantastic but I've watched the other films
and the performances
there was other performances that deserve the nominations
I would argue that
hold on is Kevin Costner in best supporting
I would argue that Kevin Costner deserves one too but he's not there
he got snubbed for Michael Shannon
who he co-starred with he was the detective
who was after him he played the psychorapist killer
and there was a detective who was after him
who had the cancer
but I would agree with that
I don't know
I think I go more with Aaron
I love Aaron
I would always
I'd put Aaron
for best actor
if I could
but you know
it's
but if I'm breaking it down
on actual performance
you know
mate I'd have myself
in there but it's not possible
because people would say
well your performance
like you know
my performance was sick
in the last film
but you know
would it match up
to these performances
probably not
if you're
if you're breaking it down
and I just don't think
that I think that
these five here
in the names
including Dev
in Lyon
just happened to
happen to get it
I would
I tell you
Actually, I take that back.
Lucas Hedges, I would not put in Best Supporting Actor.
Aaron Taylor Johnson should be Best Supporting Actor there.
Yeah.
Instead of Lucas Hedges from Manchester by the sea.
That's what I would say.
I would definitely agree with that.
I thought his performance was so strong.
It made me really feel not okay.
That's what I would say.
Finding Dory got a snubbed.
What if I animated?
Yep. Normally Disney smashes the animation,
but the rumor is it's because it's a sequel,
the powers that be.
they deem that they want to give it
to more original storylines.
Yeah, where is that? So what got
the animated film?
Finding
Kubo.
God, this, the Oscars
must go on for about four years.
Moana, I mean, I've seen Moana as well.
I would have to agree with that, I think.
I mean, Funny Dory was funny, funny film, but yeah
I kind of agree that, you know,
for a... Oh no, Zootopia's...
Zootopia deserves that.
Zootopia should be getting that, I think.
My life is a zucchini.
I really want to see that.
I don't know what that is,
but this is the title grabs me.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
What's a zucchini in English?
Zucchini's the American one.
Zucchini.
Some vegetable, I don't remember.
It's a, oh, we're going to work on that.
Can someone find out what zucchini is?
What is the zucchini?
But best actor, I mean, I can't really argue.
I can't really argue with those.
I mean, Casey Affleck, I would kind of, for me,
I'm on the fence.
with that but the others yeah
and then you know best actress
Ruth Neger brilliant in loving
um
oh yeah it's hard in the heart
you know but technically I would put Joel um
from loving with Ruth Neger
I'd put him for best actor and he's not there
you know it's very difficult to decide who
were going to get the choices like they're not easy choices if there
was 10 people then a lot more people that
I guess people would want would be in there but essentially
when it's like that you can't always
it's hard to work out how
political the Oscars are and how
you know oh we've got some
we've got some tweets in
um
lias at lyos gat oh
zukiis a corgette
that's why it was
there you go um we've got
a tweet in saying that
Noel I've seen you in Star Trek man
you're amazing from Lyos Gap now
yo Elias thank you so much man
that's so kind of you and thanks for listening
yeah I've got it been my mom
my mom saw Star Trek
before I did and um she didn't
you're in it. It was just like, no, made me cry.
You know, I always make your mom crying
in different ways. You know, it's always nice.
We won't talk about it always. I'll make them quiet.
Okay, so, and finally, Netflix
has added, or will be adding in February,
He-Man. Were you a He-Man fan?
Or a cartoon? Yeah.
Sickness. They're going to get all the,
because I think they're going to get all about the vintage
retro cartoons. It was great. He-Man was great.
So, yeah, I thought you might be happy about that one.
But have you seen this?
The Razzie, you know.
Razzies, I was having a little look through there.
The worst, so the annual Golden Raspberry Award nominations, the Razzies.
Worst picture, worst actor, worse actors.
Let's just say, this has been going on for 37 years.
I think it's almost like an honour to get a Razzis.
No, it's not an honour to get a Razzie.
Some people kind of play it down and they turn up,
like Haley Berry turned up once for Catwoman.
She won like worst actress for Catwoman and actually turned up and was quite gracious and stuff like that.
But trust me, you don't really be one of getting one of these.
But it's interesting.
So Batman versus Superman
Dawn of Justice is up for worst picture
as is Dirty Grandpa, gods of Egypt
Independence Day 2, Zoolander 2
Worst actor
Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill
Robert De Niro for Dirty Grandpard
Butler, Ben Stiller
Yeah, worst actress
Megan Fox
This is the insult here, worst actress
What's the second one on the list?
Tyler Perry
Who's a man?
Yeah
But he plays Medea in his film
like, you know, like a big mama type character.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, I mean, that's, that is pretty, that's pretty terrible.
That's quite funny.
But Julia Roberts is in there?
For what film?
For Mother's Day.
And Shailene Woodley.
I like Shailene Woodley.
Shalene Woodley, I mean, they are not messing about, man.
Like, this is, you don't want to be on a Razies, man.
This, this, getting a Razzie nomination can affect your, your shit, man.
Like, really.
I think some of these guys are probably immune, but when you're kind of mid-level,
you don't want to get a Raziel.
Will Ferrell, Nicholas Cage and Johnny Depp.
We're supporting that to Jared Letto,
suicide squad.
Why is Jared Letto on Worst Actor? He was great.
In Suitor's World, I mean,
you know, they take this as seriously
as, you know, they have proper, like,
committees that vote on this stuff, you know?
This is crazy.
I called Worst Prequel.
Did you see that film, Gods of Egypt?
I didn't see Gods of Egypt.
I watched it the day, but I fell asleep,
so I didn't actually get to finish it,
but it was one of those, like,
awfully bad, but still great.
So it was bad.
So it was, you know,
It wasn't anything special, but visually, oh my gosh,
they spent millions on the costumes
and the CGI.
Well, he's up for worst director too, Alex Pryas.
Worst director for gods of Egypt.
But I kind of like, it was a bit predictable and boring,
but it was just what it was.
It was just like a perfect Netflix and chill movie.
There was just loads of gorgeous Egyptian goddesses,
loads of hunky men throwing around.
So here's another insult I was spotted in here.
Worst prequel, remake, rip-off or sequel.
Alice through the looking glass, okay.
Batman versus Superman Dawn of Justice.
right, I'm going to skip one for a second.
Independence Day,
to Teenage Music Ninja Turtles
Out of the Shadows to Zoolander 2,
but also on the list,
they're right in the middle
for worst nominated,
for worst prequel remake ripoff or sequel
is 50 Shades of Black.
It's not even out yet.
Yeah, it is.
50 Shades of Black is the spoof,
Marlon Wayans.
Oh, thank God.
I was like, they are really insulting
that 50 Shades of Grey
if they've already put it on the list.
No, no. 50 Shades of Black is the spoof
50 Shades of Grey
with Marlon Wayans.
I interviewed him for it.
Forgive me, guys.
Okay.
Yeah, that was terrible.
No, no, I was like,
I've seen it and it wasn't the greatest.
Terrible.
Yeah, but it was, you know,
it was all those spoofy,
spoofy kind of things.
Well, I hope I'm not up for one of these next year for anything.
Well,
let me too, I guess,
if you can dodge the Razzies.
Right, so let's go to the complete other end,
the lady who I just deserve,
thinks deserve the Oscar.
There we go.
Yes, Viola.
Let's listen to Viola,
because she was amazing.
So I went to see the movie.
And then the very next day, I went to interview her.
And it was crazy because in the movie,
she plays this 50s housewife.
And the drama is set.
It's all set entirely within the house and the garden.
Do you know why that is?
Because I didn't know this when I went in,
but halfway through I went,
this feels like a play.
And then I researched it afterwards.
I was like, yeah, of course it was a play.
It used to be a play.
Because it's all very contained
and it's all putting drama on like a little hot plate
and she plays his 50s housewife
who then all the family foods
won't give way too much
but opposite Denzel Washington
so she plays this kind of like
you know grey hair and curlers
and sort of very
sort of duddy housewife
and then I went to meet the lady
and I was like for a second
I thought it was a different woman
She does not play man
She had this red lipstick
and this gorgeous dress
and this leather belt
and she just literally looked like 20 years younger
Did you tell her you work with sexy club
Did you shut me out?
I think I did
I mean, I was pretty, I was pretty, I was in awe of this woman because she's just amazing.
And, no, she was just so down to earth and she really took time to talk to you.
So I'm going to stop blabbering.
Let's just play the bloody viola.
You know, Denzel directed at a zoo as well.
I thought he was a producer.
Director, Denzel Washington.
Oh, he was, I think he should have been up for something.
I'm a bit surprised he wasn't.
He's up for best actor.
Oh, is it?
At the Oscars, yeah.
Oh, thank God.
I know, I think it was, was it Golden Globes that he wasn't up for something.
Maybe not.
Because I was a little bit like, hey, give Denzel something, because he's bloody great.
It's not easy to play characters that aren't very likable.
Really? I wouldn't know that.
Yeah.
Wouldn't know that.
That's you.
Never played a character called Sam Peel, who wasn't very likable.
Who wasn't?
And became a hero.
Anyway, Viola Davis.
Viola Davis. Here we go.
Fubar Radio presents.
Not that one.
Here we go.
Wrong.
Back row and chill with Johanna James and Not Clare.
on Subar Radio.
The movie's obviously based on a play,
which I didn't realize before I went in,
but I worked out pretty soon.
Oh, okay, this is interesting.
It's all based around the one house
and the very intense.
So in making that,
did you film it like a play?
Did you do it in linear order?
What was the process in making it?
We did it in, yeah, we did it sequentially.
So that was really important.
Otherwise, it would have been just too much.
The first scene is 33.
pages. There were 11-page monologues, four-page monologues. It just was very important. There was a
lot of times that one set. And I shouldn't call it a set. It was an actual house on the Hill District.
So, yeah, but it helped us a lot because, see, the thing about August Wilson is all of his plays take place in tight
confines of a backyard because it's metaphorical towards us being roped in,
roped in by a culture, roped in by circumstances, and wanting to bust out and be a big
man and make our lives worth something. So it would not have worked if we had different sets,
like, you know, shooting and, I don't know, just some big department story.
or somewhere or out on the street.
The backyard became another character.
No, definitely.
And I want to just really home in on your performance
because I was in tears in this screening
to the point where you're trying to keep it in, but I couldn't.
What was your process, just from an actor's point of view?
How did you get to that intensity?
And how did you go, okay, how am I going to?
Besides breathing and all,
of that. It's all the boring acting stuff that no one wants to really hear about in terms of
doing bios and creating Rose. When you're first introduced to Rose and she's coming out
and she's crocheting. And what you see is a woman, even with her hair gray, her apron,
her wide hips, someone who's very much middle age, always cooking, always in the kitchen,
Always offering someone food, always saying come, come into my heart, come into my life, because that's my only purpose.
That's it.
It's 1957.
It was very important for me to create that specific character.
So that by the time Troy gives me the news, I can't prepare that because it's a surprise.
I couldn't sit and go, okay, I'm going to play that character in the big monologue.
I'm going to play her first.
so I'm going to come out mad, pissed off, all of that.
I had to create the joy.
I had to create the investment of love and that investment of 18 years.
So by the time it's taken away.
It can just...
Yeah, no, totally.
And I was so surprised at how it's all...
It's set the 50s culture so strong, and it's so shocking.
It's so close to us nowadays, but so backwards.
And I...
You just absolutely, my heart broke for your character.
Absolutely.
But also how relevant any woman being told that,
50 years ago, 100 years ago or tomorrow, it's the same raw. And you just absolutely nailed it.
So that's why it really upset me. And probably anyone who could ever have their heartbroken.
I was like, oh. Absolutely. And just quickly to round off with the Golden Globes.
Do you, what was that like personally being there? And did you, did you, was it all a blur? Did you black out?
Was it like? It's never a blur anymore. I try not to make it a blur because I try to remember it.
At 51, it becomes very important for you to remember every moment of your life.
It really does.
You'll see.
It was very important for me.
Merrill Streep said, I will be at your Walk of Fame ceremony and introduce you if you give me the Cecil B.
DeMille Award.
I did not see it as a favorite trade.
But I wanted to honor her in introducing her.
I wanted to honor her how much she contributed to me and every artist out there.
Because you know what?
Here's the thing about acting.
It is not rocket science, but it is an art form.
And it's an important one in a world where people walk around blissfully unaware of themselves and others.
And we can't do that.
We expose.
And she does it so beautifully.
I wanted to honor her
and I just felt like
I was awake for the whole thing
I was metaphorically
I was awake
and I had a fabulous time
It looked like it looked amazing
And yeah
Meryl like hats off to Meryl
She also made me cry
It's been an emotional year
I was just blubbering the whole time
Well that's all I've got time for
But thank you so much
Back row and Chill
With Noel Clark and Johanna James
On Fubar Radio
Why have we got that noise
Is that you?
Super sexual no
isn't it? Oh my gosh
no, leave that chair alone.
Now, do you know what, right? You guys
we're going to fall up. When they're just going to fall up?
Would you like to swap chairs for me? Oh Alex, how are you doing?
Alex, Hobbin. Welcome you on a second.
It's actually Hoban.
Hoban.
Dude, I have this problem every day
of my life. Seriously, we are going to fall out.
Me and you or you in the chair.
Me and this chair and these guys because I know
they do it on purpose. You guys start your thing.
Swap it. Swap it. Swap it with mine. I'll have a broken one.
Yeah, from now one.
Yes. There's a chair here as well if you need.
go. Yes, thank you, sir. From now on, what we're going to do every week when I come in, every
week when I come in, what we're going to do is I'm going to swap chairs with Diana,
that you like are not going to mug me off every week.
Can we just pre-put his chair with mine and then it'll be great.
Okay, so. Baptism of fire here.
Alex Hoban. Yes, that's it.
This is a good chair. I called you Hoban because it stops me from saying Holben.
I know. This is a thing. So ever since I've been a kid growing up,
it's either been spelled H-O-L-B-R-N like Holben.
On the central line, what a joke, by the way.
What a fucking joke makes it.
And then, trust me.
And then, or H-O-B-U-R-N can never win.
Back of all my football shirts, but I was in goal, so it doesn't matter.
Doesn't.
No one sees it, but the fans.
Exactly.
Well, welcome, welcome to the show.
Welcome to the show.
If anyone doesn't know, well, wait, however you spell your name,
your name is pretty famo on the internet right now.
Because you've started up, well, a bit like, exactly like myself.
Yeah.
Last year, 2016, you started to make comedy content online and it kind of just took off.
That's it, yeah.
I mean, took inspiration from people like yourself, being in the game for a long time now.
I just thought, yeah, create some relationship situations.
Well, it started out as myself and then I realised I need someone to bounce off.
My girlfriend Millie involved shout out to Millie, by the way.
Millie is beautiful.
She's like the fittest thing.
Thank you very much.
above your weight, bro, or what?
Yeah, just a bit, actually.
Every comment on every video.
Oh, me.
It's there.
It's there.
Top comments as well.
She's gorgeous.
Millie J.L. on Instagram.
Millie J.L. on Instagram.
That's the one.
I think she looks like the girl from Game of Thrones.
What's she called?
The ginger one.
No, no, no.
The one who plays the Queen of Dragons.
Old Dineries.
Millie Logan, yeah?
That's the one.
Woo!
I know, right?
Bro!
She's fit.
Bro!
And you know how fit is?
This is my boyfriend said,
Oh no, make sure you get on the mic.
But when
Minnie distracted me when my boyfriend saw your videos
with your girlfriend, he went, whoa, she's the kind of
pretty where you don't even have to, like, she can wear
anything, you don't have to dress her up, she's just pretty. I was like, hey, okay.
So basically saying that you have to dress up basically is what I said.
Well, you know, because I think she was wearing dungarees or something.
Me, let me tell you some old man advice, boy. Get your claws in and don't let go.
I'll do my best, mate. I do my best. Get your claws in and don't let go, man.
You just, when she walks, get dragged behind like a motherfucker.
but keep holding, hold it strong.
I don't know what happens already, but yeah.
Use that goalkeeping shit that you got and just grip.
That's it.
That's it.
That's it.
I'm telling you.
But yeah, so just started that out and then did a video on jerk chicken.
Oh yeah.
When your white friend eats jerked, it tries jerk chicken for the first time.
And that was where it really started.
That's where it kind of blew up.
And from there it's just being, yeah, a lot of momentum and trying to carry it.
And working with yourself as well.
Yeah, we've done a couple of Christmas.
We did a Christmas vid?
Fantastic.
Did I watch that one?
When your drag, when your girlfriend drags your Christmas shopping?
which went quite fun
and we ended up filming
we filmed in Debenams
just like guerrilla style
for like two hours
and they were fine with it
they were fine
and we were just like rolling
all around Debenums for two hours
and they were all right
did you tell them what you were doing
or nobody even asked
it was great
I felt a bit sorry for your brother
who had to film us
were putting bras on mannequins
and all sorts
this is my little bro
shout out to Zach
shout to Zach
he had such a balls
filming that
Zach will be hitting
WWE soon bro
don't worry
I got you
I got you
oh you just reminded me
so if anyone
who has just joined us, we've got prizes to give away
today on our Twitter. We have prizes. So if you
want to get a signed copy of the Brotherhood DVD,
the Brotherhood album and the Brotherhood
poster, then go to our Twitter
at Fubar Radio. At Fulbar Radio.
Follow us and just, all you have to do is just retweet
that tweet. Retweet the tweet
that I retweeted about winning stuff and you
may win the stuff and they're giving away stuff
for weeks. Yep, we got a whole pile
of this shit. A whole pile. I'm signing
these CDs and these things
can I get signed nude instead
of a poster? Who sent that?
Gracie B on Twitter.
So Gracie B, I think I know who you are,
but whoever you are,
how about you send your nudes to Fubar,
radio, and if you do that,
then Johanna James will send you sign nudes.
Deal.
Hey, not from me in it.
Done.
I'm excited.
I'm assuming she's talking to you.
She doesn't mention anyone's a name.
Okay.
Well, maybe.
There's only signed copies of fast girls over there at all.
No, do you know what?
No, I don't carry those with me.
You imagine if you just had a little rucksack of all his film memorabilia.
I would be great.
I just had my awards.
Oh yeah, Alex came.
Alex was at the Brotherhood Premier.
You had the Brotherhood Premier.
I was.
Fantastic.
It was, mate, spot on.
Your speech at the beginning was great.
I don't even remember what I said, but thank you.
Neither do I, but it was great.
And the after party as well.
That was a decent party, yeah.
Yeah, I was in the toilet and somebody comes and stands next to me,
absolutely, I can tell, very tall guy.
You know, you're in the urinal and you don't want to do that turn
because then you're that guy, right?
Yeah.
Well, lucky I didn't.
And with him, if you had turned,
you would have been that guy because he, I know what you're talking about,
and he's about eight foot, and you would have been right at penis level.
That's it, Stormzy.
Oh, it was there.
Yeah, I was there, and I was just like freaking out.
Of course, you don't want to see that.
That's it.
I was like, I don't want to be put in shame for the rest of my life.
Stormsie was there, and then I thought about battling him battle bars in the toilet again.
But I thought he could do whatever to me there.
There's no one watching.
That's the problem.
He would just finish you with me.
Exactly.
In the line up to the film, all the cast members came out,
and I was next to Stormzy.
and yeah he is tall i was in big heels he was even taller and um he blessed him he was standing on
i had like a long train on my gown and we're like trying to then i was trying to get his attention
for ages but he was i think he was a bit just like sort of he's alleged he's alleged big storms
and i was just like excuse me sir stormy you're on your headlight he's working hard for that
album so let's i'm looking forward to you yeah yeah no i really like stuff coming out nice
yeah love it um oh i just breathe that was interesting
that was not a flam
what was I going to say before I did choke myself
back to the online content
because what inspired you to start
doing it apart from myself
obviously
mixture of things basically is
so I just leave so you can suck your job
so I've
worked in content for a while now
I work for a few Facebook pages
worked for Unilad at the moment
and I've seen people
evolve and develop content and I thought
I'd like to have a go at that and I'm quite
passionate about making videos anyway I used to do it
sort of for extreme sports
came in and I've started seeing people do
comedy content I thought well I can't and then
Millie gave me the inspiration she's like
get a camera do it so
yeah claw is creeping on
so can I just ask quickly before you carry on
when you say oh I quite like to have a go of that
is it was it like that seems like
or was it like I can do better videos than this
a bit of both I saw I saw some of the videos
and I thought I can one up there
for sure.
But that was my approach at first
and then it just developed into like a real passion
and then it just kept coming
and the ideas keep coming.
I basically take whatever winds me up
about day to day life and put it into a video
or something relatable.
So what advice with you guys?
Because remember this show was all about the listeners
and what advice would you guys give to,
you know, we talk about acting and stuff a lot of the time,
what advice would you guys give to young people
that are out there on the, you know,
wanting to make their own content
and do a YouTubey, Snapchaty,
sketchy stuff like you guys do.
First thing is
I would say get a camera and you don't
have to spend a lot.
Alex was on that introduced me to the camera
that I bought and it was just a couple of
hundred quid.
250 pounds or 300 pounds for the basic
camera. I mean even on your
phone there's people that are killing
it on just... And then edit an eye movie
or whatever. Exactly. You can do the whole thing on your phone
but the first thing you've got to do is do it.
That was the biggest step for me was
to get over the line. To make a pain you feel like
absolute idiot you make a Facebook page
about yourself which is like
what is this? And then
slowly people start and encouraging people to like
like it first is just your friends then it's friends of friends
and then it's just randomers and
I learned to edit
I kind of self-taught myself using YouTube tutorials
so you got to
you know just do that like basic
like I said I movie I started off on I movie and then
eventually went up to premiere and
more stuff and then
you kind of just got to do something that you were really
great at which was just introducing
yourself.
It's a self-promotion,
yeah, reach out,
reach out.
Everyone's really cool.
Like, we have,
like, for example,
we have a Facebook page,
but you don't go to people,
hey, come on to my page.
You just have to chill.
It's there and you just let people
find it,
whereas your thing is you need the people to come.
You have to self-promote yourself.
And I mean,
I'm not sure what it was like
sort of a few years ago,
but for me,
the way I see it now is that
if you want to be an actor
or you're an aspiring actor,
you've basically got a show reel
from your Facebook page
if you create content on there.
So make videos,
get creating,
And then you can go in somewhere and go to someone like yourself and be like,
this is what I've done.
This is how I act.
And it's there already.
And if it's a passion of yours,
you're going to get people liking it.
You're going to get people's feedback on it as well from that social platform.
So use that to push your acting side as well.
One thing that I was going to say,
because a lot of people,
they assume,
like, YouTubers that you're just making,
like, loads and loads of money off our videos.
Actually, there isn't money a lot of time to be made.
So it has to be a passion project,
and it will take up all your time.
every weekend that I've had the first six months of my boyfriend,
we were working and filming.
We realized, wait, we've actually not done anything
that's not to do with our work.
Like, we're always just,
it takes up pretty much all your life.
Amazing how much time goes into 50-second video.
Yeah, so do you merely spend your weekends making videos and stuff as well?
Or do you get time to chill out?
So it's actually gone one step further than that.
We've now started making vlogs.
So then you've got to push yourself to go out and do something
to make it interesting.
for the audience as well.
And I've seen, we've both been making vlogs.
Johanna's on it as well.
So that's trying to, YouTube and Facebook are two very different beasts.
They're very different.
So what's the vlogs for YouTube?
Yeah, longer content, more.
People buy into your personality much more.
Whereas Facebook.
I know I see like there's a girl that used to work with someone I know.
There's Tanya Burr.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
She used to work with someone I know.
And now, I mean, now they just, she can do anything.
She can go up and go, oh, I'm going to sneeze and sneeze.
And there's like 10 million views.
She has a book.
She got a new book about it.
Like, it's amazing.
She's amazing.
The whole YouTube culture is just crazy.
And I was advised.
I've been advised recently to really, like, get on that.
It's hard.
It's a hard one.
It's hard, but it's easy.
I find Facebook is, it's quicker.
You can be.
Once people buy into your personality, like literally there are some guys you just go to the supermarket.
Yeah.
And go, what should I get today?
Oh, I'm in the supermarket.
What should I buy?
Yeah.
And then they're going to call, L-O-L.
That's not funny, is it?
Yeah.
And they both have their, both have their,
difficulties as well. On Facebook it's
we call it stopping the scroll
so as you're scrolling through the content
because it's a feed
where there is on YouTube you're going to actually
look at someone in specific in particular. Yeah you got to type
them. Yeah type them in. So two separate disciplines
for you guys. Yeah so and
both the content has to be a lot
different as well. You have to
grab them in the first
three seconds, you've got three seconds to get someone's
attention on Facebook and
you have no longer than a
minute 30. So ideally under
a minute for the whole story of your joke
which is just like
oh my God
yeah you cut out a lot
well you taught me that as well is to cut out
so much time there's so much
so many shots where you're just
you don't realise it but there's actually a lot of spare time
even though it's just a split second because at the end
it all adds up and you can
cut sort of your video and it's like a mini version of
what you do in the edit when you're editing the whole movie
and there must be because you edit it how much did you edit
out of Brotherhood? An hour
yeah when we
end the rough assembly of
the film was
two hours, 40 minutes.
Whoa.
And so do you have like a director's cut of it?
No, the director's cut is what is what you saw.
Okay.
Because I did the, I was there every day and we did the cut.
But the rough assembly when you put it together
was two hours 40 and the film ended up being one hour 40.
And there's whole, I mean,
there's whole segments out of that film
that the audience will never know about.
And there's, yeah, there's different, like,
sub-storylines that kind of got cut and...
Yeah.
It's crazy to think that you've had to
watch that that many times.
Yeah, you watch it like from day one, you watch it like 80 times and you get to the end,
start again, get to the end, start again, and each time you're cutting minutes and minutes and
minutes and by the end, by the last day, you're cutting seconds, seconds.
But actually on the last day, we did cut five minutes.
One of the bosses of Lionsgate was like, I think you should take that segment out and
just put this there, move something there.
Yeah.
And I was like, oh, we had a look at it back in the edit and we're like, yeah, let's do it.
And we just chopped five minutes out on the last day.
That works.
Because we had a chat actually when we were shooting our video together about
that song at the beginning of brotherhood
I can't remember what it's called now
which one the chip one or the
slow one yeah regularly
regularly yeah
and I was like I love that song
it's so good what is it and Janice was like
don't even ask me about that song we listen to it
50 times yeah
and then you must have heard it
so many more times
it's very catchy but then it's one of them's
I find myself later on me like
do you know what I can still play it I'm not bored of it
I really?
Yeah, I like it.
It's a good time.
I listen to it quite a lot as well actually.
I tend to roll back to the Brotherhood soundtrack.
It's a really good soundtrack.
Yeah.
Well done.
And there's five of them there.
It's a giveaway.
We've got fun to give away.
So keep between.
Oh, we've got a quicker email in.
Hey Noel.
Nice to have you back.
Would you ever consider making a film in the US with an all-American cast?
I'd like you to work with Michael Shannon from Martha.
Martha, you sexy beast.
I would love to do an American film.
And I've got plans, girl.
And you know when I have plans,
I'm hoping you are a girl called Martha.
just, you know when I've got plans,
you know, I don't really talk about them, but I get them done,
but there are plans of foot and things are happening.
And Michael Shannon, yeah, he is an absolutely brilliant actor,
so 100% I'd love to do that.
And thank you for welcoming me back.
It's glad to be back.
And how's your American accent?
Great.
Did you hear it?
Is that how good that was?
Great.
Great. Great.
Can you do an American accent?
No, not really.
Not American.
Can you do an American accent?
I can, yeah.
Is yours great?
Should I bring up your audition?
for that. Oh yes.
I had to audition in a...
Don't you not have that.
You do.
You have it.
Just carries it around all the time.
Just to show off for Pins of people.
Did you have to put an American accent on?
She did.
Oh, how was it?
It was okay, apparently.
Out of 10, Noel?
Well, I mean...
Wow, I mean...
Actually, you know what?
One of the first things I ever did when I ever met you on a film set, Noel,
is you said, what accents can you do?
And I was like, I don't know.
And then I remember I came up to you,
I spoke in a southern accent.
And what did I go?
That's pretty good.
It's in South England accent.
No, no, Southern Bell.
Southern England, yeah, the South of England.
Well, hey there.
Brixton, shout to Brickston where I'm from.
I don't know what I said, but I did something of the sort of like the Southern
Bell kind of thing and you were like, oh, that's all right then.
That's quite good.
Do it again.
Was that there?
Okay, give me a sentence to say and I'll say something.
I'm joking.
That was good.
That was good.
I'm just teasing you.
Say I'm going to the diner to get some brisket.
Good one.
Well, okay.
In your Texas Bell accent.
Texas Bell.
Southern Bell.
I'm going to go to the diner to get some brisket.
That's really good.
That's way better than I thought.
It was more Alabama than Texas.
Okay.
Okay.
All right.
I'll go to work on Texas accent.
We're going to do a song and I'm going to go work on my accent.
What are we going to go for?
I'm going to go for a bit of a bit of blondie.
You should go for regularly now.
But let's do blondeie.
Oh, we should have done that.
Yeah, after break.
After the break.
All right.
We'll end the show on that.
Make it high.
Back row and chill with Noel Clark and Johanna James on Foobar Radio.
There we go.
Welcome back.
We're back.
We are back in black.
Right, we're Facebook Live.
We face it live now?
We are.
On where?
On Facebook live?
On all the cameras.
Here?
Yeah.
Hello.
What's happening?
Let me get on this.
I'm going to share this from me.
We are live on Johanna James Facebook page.
We are.
Well, that's where we are.
going to go on my fucking Facebook page. How about that?
How about we hijacked? How about
we hijacked this shit and go on Clarkie's
Facebook at the same motherfucking time?
A double live? Let's do it.
Triple. Well, okay.
What's the white? Lifeception.
Right, let's do something about it. So I've got a bag of props.
Okay. Yeah, let's do this prop game.
I thought we could play with it.
No, you can play director. This is you've got
your directors, you know, you're used to this.
Cut! Cut! So show them what you got.
Yeah. And then I think we should
pull out a prop. Okay. Probeach.
And, um...
And go for it and go for it.
Okay.
Okay.
So I'm directing, I'm on?
Yeah, okay.
Prop box here.
I'm on.
Yep, okay, here we go.
On the screen.
On the screen.
No, that is a good chair.
This is a good chair.
Okay, I'm going to for a couple of props.
Oh, I think I'm one.
Am I more than one?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
I think I've earned more than guests after all these fucking months, don't you?
Like, come on.
Anyway, what are we doing?
So what's the game job?
So you're the director.
I'm the director.
And me and Alex, we can be auditioning for your next movie.
But we've got some props to play with.
Okay.
So just give us the scene and we'll go for it.
Oh, this is my eye.
Okay.
I'm currently wearing a wheel.
I'm also going to hijack this Facebook Live and go on to my Facebook Live at the same time
because that's how I roll.
I'm just ignorant like that.
But the scene, ladies gentlemen, today for the film show is that you are a disgruntled yet romantic wolf.
Right.
Okay.
Who is trying to woo your.
your damsel.
Alright.
So you've been in love with for many years.
There's something not quite right about your damsel, but you can't figure out what it is.
And you are the damsel in distress.
Yes, darling, I am.
But you have a deep, dark secret, but only you know what it is and you are going to reveal it.
Right, guys, we are ready.
Turn over.
Right, uh, scene one, take four and action and hold on, mark it.
Second sticks.
Action.
Action!
Hey! Hot stuff!
I've been watching you for some time now.
Excuse me, are you talking to me?
Yeah, Ruby had lips.
Um, don't approach me like that.
But I've... I love you, man. Girl, man.
You don't even know my name?
Isn't it Ruby Mae?
Nope.
Oh shit. Maybe it was your twin that I liked.
But, uh, how do you like a piece of manly hair?
Um...
Would you like me to take you slowly?
Not really
Not really
Fasten
You don't know my secret
That's the problem
Oh
What's your secret
You're not gonna get it out of me
Just by asking
You've got at least buy me a drink
Okay
There you go
It's a glass of vodka
That'll lube you up
Baby Belvedere
There is no roofy in that
I promise
What is this sorry
I've got a very character
What is this accent
I don't know
I said southern bel
It's a southern bel
Keep rolling.
The wolf is a southern bell.
Keep rolling.
Can I just take a moment?
Because I'm just not really feeling this right now.
I just, I need a new character.
You need a new character.
Yeah, I mean, I don't even know what my secret is.
Oh, oh, oh, oh.
Oh, something wrong with your chair, is there?
Right.
I think there's a twin sister that needs to come.
There's a twin sister.
So Wolfie has gone to the bathroom.
Yeah.
And your twin sister has appeared wondering why you are on the date
that she was supposed to be gone.
On action.
We're live on Facebook.
Ruby
Where are you, twin sister, Ruby?
Oh, there you are, darling.
Yes.
I'm here.
How is your pee?
You went to the bathroom?
No, the wolf is in the bathroom.
Oh, be careful of that wolf, darling.
He is such a rapist.
We're actually supposed to be having an argument right now
about the date that I'm on that you're supposed to be on.
Fuck you're on a date, you fucking whore?
Yeah, I am.
With my boyfriend.
And he brought me a cigar, so.
No, it looks like a spliff.
Give me some.
It doesn't look like a spliff.
We're supposed to be sisters.
Share your shit.
Well, are we going to share this wolf or what?
Because he's pretty damn hot and his accent's awesome as well.
Okay, but you're, well, which way we share it?
Shotgun top.
Shotgun on top.
Okay, shotgun for the knot on top.
I don't really know what that entails for you.
Well, probably the tail.
Yeah, I like that. That's strong.
That's strong. No, you're not doing a very good job at directing this, to be honest.
We need some more input.
He's more interested on his Facebook live.
No, I'm not at all. No, I'm not. I've only got like one person.
What's the person?
I think so, because I think it's on my personal.
Oh, okay.
Well, do we have the, do we have the role, sweetie?
I would have thought you would have talked, Noel a bit about...
Directing.
I'm going to cut this off, guys, because this should be on my fan page and it's not.
Oh, he went live on his personal page.
That's why you had no friends.
All that effort we just put into this amazing production.
You guys seen this.
terrible. Let's just be honest. You guys' scene is terrible. I feel like we should just end the scene
right here and you guys are now going to act like the scene's just being ended and the director
has told you that it's rubbish and show your anger to blame each other. Action. So I'm not being
funny right, Noel, but this, she comes on, changes character midway through. First of her
accent is average at best. Oh, fuck off. At least I've got real tits, all right? Look at them. Nothing.
He's got pretty good tips.
Yeah, I bench press and stuff, you know, so.
Well, clearly not.
It's not, look, so.
So, all right, I'm a viral superstar.
Okay.
I'm more viral than you.
I'm more viral than you.
If we're going to talk numbers, let's talk numbers.
Okay, fine.
I don't want your number, love, so give it a rest, you know what I mean?
All right, well, so basically.
I just didn't believe there was no truth to your character.
You know, accents you can work on, but pure talent, no.
No, what I'm saying is if you want somebody with skill,
if you want somebody who can do any accent on the planet, if you want somebody.
Oh, really?
Skill, right.
Well, this one's, you know what I mean.
Okay.
Was that a bit of a right?
Okay.
Okay.
Has anyone got a hair time?
I'm about to...
I'm going to throw that out.
I'm going to fuck her up.
Come on.
Take my arms.
It's going to be a girl's fight.
There's going to be a girl.
Take my ring.
Hold me back.
Hold me back, bro.
I would do.
I would know.
But yeah, so basically,
if to all the viewers,
Johanna just messed up a great scene of ours.
Yeah.
Oh.
And now I'm trying to, yeah.
I'm trying to get my crew.
Oh, hell no.
What the, where does that come from?
That felt like it came from.
It came from me.
It came from me.
It came from my inner pain.
Okay.
All right.
Okay.
I don't think, no, I'm not working with him anymore.
I think out.
It's me or him.
It's me or him.
That's all I'm saying.
You were him.
It's me or him.
It's me or him.
It's being great, man.
It's, oh.
It's been great.
No.
Oh, man.
Okay, fine.
All right.
Later's.
Okay, right.
Let's go for.
Alex, you've been amazing.
Thank you very much.
I don't know what that was, guys.
I don't know what that was.
Yeah, apologies for that last 10 minutes.
It's the fucking.
Just the fucking weekend.
Thanks everyone who's watching.
Like and share it
because we've gone mad in the studio.
Don't like it.
Don't like it. Don't share it.
Right, well, we're on pop to some music
and then we've got some more guests
and Lucy Patterson in the studio.
Thank you for having me.
It's been a pleasure.
It's been brilliant.
Always welcome, brother.
Thanks, bro.
Right, okay, we've got a bit of,
this is a sad dream by Sky.
Ferreira.
Back row and chill with Noel Clark
and Johanna James on Feebar Radio.
Right, right.
We're coming into the last half hour of the show.
Lucy Patterson's back in the studio
Hello again
My film review club time
Film review club time
Why don't we have a thing?
And a bit of TV
Yeah
Where's our thing that we used to do?
We need to
Oh we can get a fanfare
I've got a fanfare
What's our jingle thing that was like
Film Club
And a bit of TV where's our thing?
We've got it on here
Have we?
I didn't do it's like
Film review
Club thing
And a bit of TV
That was very professional
There we go
Done
right so let's crack on to what we've seen
because I saw quite a few bits and bobs this week
yeah me too
so did you see train spotting
so it today
yay oh my gosh
well I loved it
it was just the most one of the most perfect things
I've ever seen it was everything
I wanted it to be
that's bold man it's bold but it was everything I wanted it to be
it was amazing it's my favourite
so far of the very short 2017
it's my favourite it's my favourite
agreed
Agreed. It's amazing.
The timing's unfortunate though
because surely they're going to have to wait
a year now for any sort of
Yeah.
There might be drawn by them as well
Probably
But I thought
Oh my God like
Just but technically like the editing
The use of song
There was nothing I can complain about
Can you think of anything?
It was just nothing
It was like really
Reminiscent of the first film
But they didn't really
You didn't have to see the first one
They didn't shove it down in his throat either
Did then it wasn't done in a cheesy way
they went back to the first film
and referenced the first film in useful ways.
To keep it relevant.
To keep it relevant and also to make sure
that the audience knows what the hell's going on.
You don't have to have seen the first one.
No, you didn't have to.
But I think that's why I loved it so much
because I know the original,
sorry, the first one, inside out, back to front,
upside down, you know,
it's meant a lot to me and my friends
even though it's actually a pretty gross film really.
But, you know, I think that's why
I've literally still got a knot in my stomach about it.
I only saw it a couple of hours ago
and it was just amazing.
It was really nostalgic.
It was,
I think.
Are you guys just being nostalgic?
Is that why you love it so much?
Or was it that good?
The film actually...
And I wish I'd actually got the sound bite down
of that monologue that he does about choosing life.
Yeah, the updated one.
Yeah, but it's like an updated...
Because obviously the stuff that 20 years has passed,
so much has happened in society technology.
Yeah, yeah.
And it is kind of a bit of...
It was that weird thing of like, now it is all Twitter this.
stuff your Instagram thing with this.
Zero hour contracts and things like that
and all the social media and things that
they obviously didn't in the first film because it wasn't there.
And I love as well
because the first film I didn't, some
people can say it's a bit of a glorification
of drug taking and it could be a little bit
like oh you know I'm cool I'm like
even though it's not
done in a positive light it's still done in quite a cool
gritty light. It is but I mean
it's still a cautionary towel isn't it? But yeah but this
one I was so happy because it was like
it was more um they were
really giving a push for recovery.
And you were so there like,
yes, God, yes, God, yes, God.
Their resolutions and it was just, you know,
there might not have been the ideal resolutions,
but it was amazing.
I literally felt like my throat was closing.
I was that choking on nostalgia.
It was just absolutely amazing.
Yeah, and also as well,
I was genuinely scared that,
you know, when you're quite relaxed
in a film that, oh, they're not going to die.
Yeah.
They're not going to die.
Oh my God, yeah, I know what you're talking about.
And I just really thought that this person...
Well, let's not give too much a way.
Yeah, no, I did too.
Guys, we're talking about the amazing, apparently.
Train Sportsing 2.
Probably should have mentioned that a bit more, really.
It came out to Dan.
Hugh McGregor.
Did any of you guys see it today?
Not you guys.
Well, anybody.
Yeah, tweet us in at Fubour Radio.
And do you think it's as perfect as we do?
Or do you?
No, I walked away from it going, I love that.
Yeah.
Love that.
Done.
I was in floods the tears by the end of it.
And apparently Yuma Greger said that when he saw the final cut of it,
he was absolutely in floods of tears.
And one thing that I liked about it,
as well is that they very very cleverly
they got like a look-alike
mini Ewan McGregor. They didn't they?
A look-alike mini actors of everybody
so when they were referencing the first film
they weren't just chopping in bits from the original
film. They were new people playing them
but they did it in such a way from such a faraway angle
or they did the camera on the wonk so you couldn't quite see
the... It was. It was. Whoever
made it detail like brilliant I was like
yeah train's point two. And also the pictures of the kids
and all that. That was amazing. There was
even, because they show you pictures
of them all at school together, don't they? And if you notice
there's actually a little blonde, curly-haired boy.
And obviously that was Tommy, who died
in the first one, you know, just amazing.
Danny Boyle is amazing.
So what else did you see part from train spotting?
I took my nephew to see Sing. That was really good.
Really good. Definitely
a good one for the kids and the adults as well.
Cracking soundtrack, so many familiar
voices as well. Yeah. That was really, really good.
That's in cinema now.
And probably will be for the next few weeks.
This thing is actually a pretty good animation.
Pretty decent.
It isn't it?
Yeah.
It's on my list.
Yeah.
My kids really like that.
I think there's some really funny moments in there.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, there are some moments that you question.
Like, you know, Taran Edgerton plays a gorilla.
Yeah, I know.
And his family are not the nicest, but I mean, but overall, without giving too much away,
overall, it's really, really fun.
My kids really loved it.
Yeah.
You know, the music's good.
Yeah.
And, yeah, yeah.
Solid animation.
You should watch sing.
Take the kids to see Sing.
I checked out the new Netflix thing called Frontier.
Oh, I keep seeing that.
How was it?
It's Jason.
Mamma.
Mo Moa.
Aquaman.
Jason MoMA.
Also known as Carl Dr.
Goh.
Which is the main reason why I, yeah.
My boyfriend was like, you're like this.
Also known as what?
Carl Drogo.
Carl Drogo from Game of Thrones.
From Game of Thrones.
And Aquaman as well, guys.
An Aquaman.
So that was the thing that got me going.
I thought that it's quite low budget
and when you do historical on a budget
you can kind of tell that their set
doesn't go beyond like 20 extras and stuff
so yeah
but then I wanted to like I wanted to really like it
and I gave it like a four episodes in
but I just I wasn't like loving it
so it was kind of
no no not bother then no
I didn't I wasn't gripped
and the same thing
with Taboo, the Tom Hardy.
I haven't even started here.
I started that and I started it twice to give it
it because I thought maybe I was tired
and apparently it's not had very good
view pulled in and
Tom Hardy's lost two million on it.
Yeah, I read that actually.
On what? How has he lost money?
Well apparently he was the one that
because he produced it and he was the one
organised in the finance.
So really it was his like
production company
that put the money together for it.
Apparently it was 10 million to spend
or something. He only got eight back for it.
Yeah.
he's hoping to make it up in the DVDs and whatever.
Which I'm sure he will.
I've heard it's not great.
Yeah, I mean, I love Tom Hardy.
He's naked in it.
I mean, that's going to get an audience as it is.
That's probably four million right there that he's got in.
Well, exactly.
He was actually filming that about five minutes from where I live.
Did you turn up on?
In Tilbury.
I went down there.
I bet you did.
Fully blown went down there.
And all I saw was his bloody stunt double.
And I was like, can I get in his trailer?
I was like sneaking around Tilbury fault because he was naked.
What's done?
What's he's seen?
What's he's he doing?
What's he's in Tilbury in the water?
I don't know how I'm supposed to be about this guy in the Victorian times
he spent 10 years in Africa and he's come back
so it's a kind of mix of like
there's sort of supernatural voodoo stuff going on
but it's a historical and the idea of it
and it looks like a 10 million pound production
it looks amazing I wish Frontier had a bit of that money
that Taboo had had
but even with Tom Hardy and I'm a massive fan
and even with him being naked
I just there wasn't enough to like
nah so
doesn't sound like a good TV week then
no Netflix and TV like you know
See, the problem of the issue is, of course, guys with Netflix,
it almost doesn't matter.
As long as people watch it, it doesn't matter.
Yeah, yeah.
They can spend, you know, because their productions aren't dependent on money coming back, yeah.
Yeah, true.
And just lastly, what did you see?
I also saw another two films, and I'll just talk about Haxor Ridge very quickly.
Oh, yes.
I want to see it.
I don't get it.
Garfield.
I don't get the Oscar nominations.
I don't understand.
You know, it's a good film.
It's a good, solid film.
Mel Gibson can make a film
He can, you know
It might be a complete fucking nutcase
But he can make a good film
And Andrew Garfield did his job beautifully
You know, the action was amazing
Body's limbs explosions everywhere
But it was cheesy, predictable
And you know
The true story can't take away from that
It was amazing
And I researched it
And it was 99.9% true
Which you don't really get
For anyone because I didn't know what hacks
The name of it
I didn't even look what it was
And then my dad says
Oh have you seen that film
The True Story of the guy
Who refused to pick up a weapon
and he goes into war and he saves all these people's lives without picking up a gun.
He went into battle with no weapons or server and that made me go, oh, I watch that.
Exactly.
But the name didn't.
It's an amazing story, but I don't get the hoo-haer about it.
Well, I mean, it's interesting, isn't it?
Because obviously, you know, we've got Andrew Garfield, who is like industry loved.
And now he's got that Oscar nomination, which, you know, that's going to be important for him.
Absolutely.
And he's amazing, you know.
But it's always a question.
And then you got Dev Patel, the guy from Skis.
I know.
How cool is that?
Unbelievable.
It's amazing.
So, you know, I think obviously it would be good to support those.
But, yeah.
I mean, I've seen better performances out of him in his earlier career.
You know, things like Boy A and, you know,
all these little productions that nobody's really seen.
Oh, the one where he is set in the future and he has to, their clones.
Oh, I didn't like that.
I did not like that with Carrie Mulligan and Carole Knightley.
But his performance was...
Right, no, I didn't watch that.
Boy A is the one where he plays someone along, he was a child murderer and he, you know,
he covers.
It's actually on Netflix, I think.
Yes, good boy, yeah, he's great.
And then what was the other one you saw?
Just quickly,
just quickly split.
The one with James McAvoy are playing
the nutcases of all the different personalities.
I can never say his name.
M-L-L-Lam.
Shal-Lam.
Shal-Lam.
Is he back?
Is it great?
Oh, it's amazing.
Oh, is it?
So good.
And there's, I won't tell you why,
because obviously it's a spoiler,
but there's a massive surprise at the end.
Of course there is.
It's an M-Hang-M-Lam-Lam film.
I mean, even after the big Twitter,
that comes along. There's a massive surprise
and me and my friend Natalie last night were literally
squealing. You can tell me off here. You can tell me off here.
Really? You want me to spoil it? It doesn't spoil it for me. I'm not
that kind of person. Never let me go was the Andrew Gry Gryfield.
Never let me go. Right. Oh my gosh, we're coming into the close. We've got one more
guests coming on the show. But thank you so much Lucy.
We're going to go away as ever and keep
doing our research for you guys and telling you what's shit and what's not.
Right, we're going to pop to
another song and then we've got Anto Sharp in the studio.
Really?
Woo, woo, whoa, right, this is a bit of
Lust for Life from Iggy Pop from
Transformers. Transformers. Train spotting.
with Joanna James
and Noel Clark on Fubar
Radio.
We're back, it's the last section of the show.
Is that you that does that in that thing?
It's not me, I don't know who it is.
Natalie, isn't you?
Producer Natalie,
climaxing on our show every week.
It's beautiful.
Is that?
She's laughing, right?
I reckon it is a...
Sorry.
Hey, man!
Hey!
We've got Anto Shop in the studio.
What's going on?
Final guest.
Wow.
So, thank you so much for coming on.
Thanks for having me.
And so people listening don't know what...
Who Anto is?
If they don't know.
He's an internet.
How do you like to describe yourself?
Internet.
He's an internet person.
Making videos on the internet.
Awesome by day.
Well, you started off on...
You kind of across a lot of mediums now.
Yes.
But you started off on...
Vine? Yeah, started on Vine
probably about two
and a half years ago now, which sounds weird
to say. It doesn't seem like two and
half years, but yeah, started doing comedy videos
on Vine,
which it was amazing.
Obviously, rest in peace,
that's gone. But yeah, started on
Vine and then came over to Facebook.
We grew a following over there.
And yeah, just been having
fun ever since, really, and
making some good videos and stuff.
One of the original Vine Daddies, because
there's a lot of Americans went huge on Vine
and then I think we are always a little,
we're always second in the game
but with social media to America.
I just got to say, man,
I respect you guys that did the Vine and thing
because, you know, it was six seconds.
Six seconds to be funny.
I don't know why anyone, you might know,
I don't know why they chose six seconds.
It seems like the most random fucking time.
It's like they did it to make it hard.
Yeah.
Yeah, come on a platform and be funny.
I don't know.
When they started Vine,
what were they actually thinking?
Do you think that was their thing?
people are going to make funny things
or do you think they actually thought
or do people, do they think people were just going to do
short tweets and like...
Well, it's a bit like Snapchat.
You get 10 seconds to be...
I fucking hate Snapchat.
You get 10 seconds, which is...
I love Snapchat as a medium because you can make...
It pre-edits it for you, so you've got this story that you can make.
But you only get 10 seconds
or you're trying to talk and it cuts you off.
So I get to...
I'll redo that one.
I never got the six-second thing, but...
I mean, and Vine kind of was like...
It was like live fast, die young.
wasn't it? It was like a blaze of glories, two years
and then it was gone. Yeah, I mean
I think, well, it was probably about
I don't know, what's the hell? Was it at for? Four years
or something like that? I'm not sure. It started off smaller
but, well, do you know why it died?
No, I don't. Because I heard from some
people, you know, in the people, people
who know people, saying that it
was, so it was the top
American viner, there's like 12 of them
who live in like Vine Street in L.A. and
like they all vined together and stuff.
And then
apparently they were in talks with vines.
saying like, look, we get millions and millions of hits
and we want to have a little bit more creative control
in this app, so can you give us, we want to
have sort of back access
to something and we want to have this, this and this.
And Vine said, like, no, it's our app, like, piss off.
And so they boycotted it and said, okay, well, we're all going to jump off Vine.
So apparently they stopped Vining and they went to Instagram,
and that's why Instagram's blown up with the videos.
And Vine died because of the influences.
Oh, my God.
So apparently it was like Influents Revolt, which I loved.
It was like Inside Information.
Power to the influencer.
Interesting.
I remember when someone said that to me,
yeah, yeah, all the big viner's live down Vine Street.
Yeah, you're joking, right?
They actually do.
They all live together down Vine Street.
Just a made-up word.
They live in, and I went past it when I went out of Vine Street.
They live in an apartment block,
sort of Amanda Sernie and Paul Logan and stuff.
And that's why they just hop into each other's videos all the time
because they literally live on top of each other.
Interesting.
And earn millions.
And earn millions and millions pounds.
Which, you know, I think that...
But then they got the business theory just so right.
Well, I don't know if that story's true, firstly,
because this is a multi...
Because owned by Twitter is a multi-billion dollar company,
and I don't know if that.
But I'm not saying it's not.
I just don't know if it is.
Well, for some reason or not,
all of the main viner stopped vining.
I think it was gradually dying anyway.
And maybe that was like the straw that broke the camel's back.
Maybe.
Is that the same?
Well, the thing with six seconds is that there is a...
I think that it's such a talent to be fine.
funny, but there is a limited amount of,
and it's the same with them, I think
we're finding it a little, well, I'm finding it a little bit on Facebook.
There is a limited amount of what you can do
with one minute 30 seconds, and you've got to.
But that's self-imposed. You guys
don't have to do one minute 30 seconds. That's the
recommended time. No, no, no, you do.
Facebook things can last longer than that.
They don't, though. They don't.
They can. They can.
But they do.
Yeah, you guys choose to do it.
But I get what you mean. I get what you're saying.
But again, it's like, that's what's being said to you guys is like,
Oh, don't go longer than one minute 30 seconds.
I feel like doing one and be one.
I'm one minute, 40 motherfuckers!
Yeah, you know what I've tried?
I've tried to do log of form and it just doesn't seem to suck off.
And that's it because people drop off.
That's why they say, so 100% get it.
It's like basically it's like a sugared up toddler that you're trying to entertain.
And if you...
It's just like, look at me!
That's spot on.
So what's happening recently, man?
Actor-director-Enter-Enter-entertainer.
Yeah, I've sort of put the title on there, you know,
just sort of polished me up a little bit.
But no, I've got into an acting school.
Which one?
Isa, International School of Screen Acting.
Fantastic.
So I'm over the moon with that.
Started in mid-October.
You do have a movie style look about you.
Thank you, Noel.
Thank you very much.
You do?
But yeah, I mean, I've been there for two and a half months now.
It is very intensive, but I'm enjoying every minute and learning so much.
And I did not know how much went into acting.
That's what I can say.
It's hard work, isn't it?
very hard work it's um i mean
my career before i'm a carpenter so i was like very
hands on hands on and that was like physically
demanding and it makes you tired that way where this is
it's mentally yeah you can go home with headaches
yeah it's crazy and i've never really experienced that before
um but yeah after doing this it's uh it definitely shows how you know
i'm glad you have because i think a lot of people don't know about
you know they think oh you walk on it and you just do stuff they don't really know what
goes into actually doing the job and why it can be so tiring.
Question for you, do you know another actor that was a carpenter
that then became a massive actor?
Is Indiana Giants guy?
Harrison Ford.
That's the one, yeah.
Mate, you wouldn't mind that career, eh?
I was thinking, I was like your life's paralleling Jesus.
He was a carpenter.
Then he got world famous.
He's turning into Jesus.
He's been many movies that I know of.
Was he an actor though?
Well, that's the up to the debate, wasn't it?
Was he an actor?
I don't think your mum's going to like that talk.
Oh shit.
I don't think he might not like that.
Mrs. White, I hold no responsibility about this at all.
Yeah, I'm out as well.
See that.
Yeah, like, beep.
Right.
I'd be great, though, to have that career,
if you kind of have a parallel Harrison Ford.
Well, yeah, obviously, but yeah.
Slash Jesus.
So you're going, basically, you're equipping yourself
with more tools in your belt.
Yeah, definitely.
Yeah, more tools in the shed, definitely.
And how long will you be, how long will you be at the acting school?
It's a one-year intensive course.
So I break up in mid-year.
June, but I don't think that the training should ever really end with acting, which I've
already learned.
So when I do break up, it's going to be finding and sourcing workshops, extended training,
extra curriculum and all that sort of stuff.
Just to keep it fresh and keep it forward.
I hope you guys are listening to this.
So he's joined the acting school, but even when he finishes, there's going to be like finding
more stuff.
And that's what I always say to you guys, you know, always, if you want to get into it, don't
tweet me.
I want to be an actor, brother, help me.
Fuck you.
I'm not helping you.
I will help you when you actually do something about.
about it. You become an actor and then you work hard and you finish your acting training and you're
still working, still training. I help you all day long but don't just tweet me like, I want to
be an actor, help me. That's what you did with me no, you were like, you're like, you want to
be an actor, okay, go train. Exactly. And I went and I trained, I did a year, a year intensive.
And then I went, a year intensive. And then I went, I went to train. Where did you
train? Where did you train? I trained at the London School of Dramatic Art in Kensington. And it was
a year intensive. And they try and do the three year degree, but in three, uh, three terms.
so they do the whole breaking you down and getting you to neutral but really quickly
and then they throw you through all the techniques and then you kind of just take what you like
and then it's a perfect example like that is literally what I said to her 2011 I think it was
and she's since being like you know we've got a radio show together she's been like two or three
two of the movies two of the movies nearly nearly three like it's like if people work hard
and put the graft in then you know they'll they'll succeed and and I like what you're doing
And so you listeners, make sure you do that as well.
What kind of role would you want to...
Because you fall so easily, you absolutely smash sort of like the flamboyant comedy guy.
But would you want to play like a sort of villain or what's your dream?
Yeah, I mean, well, it might be surprising to some, but I don't really want to get into comedy.
Comedy is a very hard, I think, a very hard genre to move into.
For me, it would definitely be something more dark.
You know, comedy's good, but I think the real exciting roles are them dark roles
that you can sink your teeth into and really, you know, do some hard work and research on these characters.
Yeah, yeah, it excites me thinking about it.
Maybe he could be a flamboyant villain.
Yeah, you could be in the middle of a really dark scene and then do your line.
Yeah, yeah.
Do your basket thing.
Because I, when I first, I remember you, so who was it?
someone popped up and they were like, oh my gosh, this guy is like hilarious.
You've got to follow this guy.
So about a year and a half ago and the whole in your basket thing.
And so I started to follow you and I was like, but I had no idea that was a character.
And then I sort of saw you saw you outside of it and was like, oh, bloody hell, he's putting it all on.
He's really straight.
How you doing?
Yeah, what's going on?
Yeah, I was like, he's like, proper geese.
Like, what?
So that was amazing because, yeah, I followed you for a while thinking that you were this flamboyant gay shopper.
It's funny you say that, but it's not obvious to me that people thought that.
But I've met people in the street and they're like,
hey you're the guy on Facebook that doesn't need you
the video oh yeah do it do it do it and I'm like
what's that
my dreams are broken
and I was like what you don't actually speak like that
no and then I was like oh my god I'm ruining people's lives
you're actually doing a character that's good
I mean like I said you do have a good leader man look so
you know just keep training a man and see what happens
you know thank you appreciate it
no and do you get yeah my other question was do you get absolutely
harassed over that like catch line is it
are you pissed off it now I mean it's died down now because
I've sort of moved away from
the character and the sort of the line and stuff.
But at the time it was crazy, especially around my area
because I think it spread like wildfire on Facebook.
So, you know, how it goes from friends to friends to friends.
It obviously comes from one point,
which would be me putting out the videos
and then my friends sharing it to their friends.
So around my area, it was like, you know,
I didn't really know.
I was like, oh yeah, I got a video on Ladwable and Unilad
and I've just got like loads of million views.
And I was like, this is awesome.
And I just went out of a night out of a few friends.
and it was crazy
like this guy come up to me
like no way you're the guy
I was like hey you're right
and this other guy was like no way
I was like what
then all these people
I was like what the hell's going on
this is so weird
but yeah no it was fun
it was real fun
you know obviously
played along to it and stuff
but yeah no
it's quite nice that it's died down
a little bit
because I can concentrate
another stuff
and not be like
keep everything to do
the same sort of character
and stuff
but no basically
you've managed to
move outside of that character
and still have a following
and because it would be annoying if people are just like
just put it in the basket
yeah I mean this was obviously
if something does go big
that's the worry of actually
of sticking and getting stuck in this sort of little
rut of being in one character or like a catchphrase or whatever
so we made sure that we had other things going on
and we could move into different areas and stuff
that would continue the following like you say yeah
and now you're moving into YouTube
are you tubing it or are you just keeping everything open
we were going to try YouTube out
I think we still are this year.
But, I mean, at the minute, I am obviously concentrating on the acting, so it's very hard
to do videos at the same time.
And that's going to take all your life and energy.
Yeah, I mean, as you know, there's modules.
So we get a little bit of time off.
So that's the plan is the time off that I have from the college is going to be concentrate
on getting some videos out there, keeping everyone happy and stuff.
But then I've still got to do, you know, homework, research, all this sort of stuff.
So it's going to be tough, but it was a massive choice.
get going into this school
so it's just something that we took on so
boom oh we're coming into land
we're coming into land but if anyone you want to shout your social
just so if anyone wants like what are we talking about
they can find you what you say
what's the best yeah well I mean Facebook
it's just anto-sharp
A-N-T-O-S-H-A-R-P because everybody
spells it wrong pretty much any platform
it's the same so yeah check us out
Anto Sharp boom okay just to remind you
we're going to be giving away the prize
winner we're going to announce it next week
so follow at Foobar Radio and retweet
be in chance of winning.
This has been...
All you guys that did it this week,
you will be...
And now the winner will be announced next week.
So don't think it's a wasted retweet.
No, we're going to roll on to next week
and we're going to announce that for the DVD
and the sign shit.
Yeah, I'm signing this shit now.
And on that he is.
I'll sign anything.
No, that's your own...
That's my own script for this thing.
That's your own leg, babe.
Okay.
All right.
Okay, we're out.
We're out.
We're going to play.
We're going to go for...
Thanks for listening, guys.
Underworld, again, from Trainspotting.
Have a good weekend.
If you enjoyed this podcast,
please don't forget to rate and review us on iTunes.
