The Reel Rejects - WE FINALLY WATCHED THE GOONIES (1985)!! MOVIE REVIEW!!
Episode Date: November 25, 2025JUST IN TIME BEFORE STRANGER THINGS 5!! The Goonies Full Movie Reaction Watch Along: / thereelrejects Support The Channel By Getting Some REEL REJECTS Apparel! https://www.rejectnation...shop.com/ Greg & Tara RETURN for the swashbuckling, coming-of-age adventure in The Goonies Reaction, Recap, Commentary, Analysis, & Spoiler Review! Greg Alba & Tara Erickson react to The Goonies (1985), the beloved coming-of-age adventure classic directed by Richard Donner (Superman, Lethal Weapon) and produced by Steven Spielberg (E.T., Jurassic Park). Packed with heart, humor, and pirate-movie thrills, The Goonies is one of the most iconic ’80s films ever made — a nonstop treasure hunt that defined childhood for generations. The story follows a group of misfit kids from Astoria, Oregon who call themselves “The Goonies.” When they discover an old pirate map, they set out to find the legendary treasure of One-Eyed Willy in hopes of saving their homes — only to stumble into booby-trapped caverns, underground tunnels, and a run-in with the criminal Fratelli family. Follow Tara Erickson: Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@TaraErickson Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/taraerickson/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/thetaraerickson Intense Suspense by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/... Support The Channel By Getting Some REEL REJECTS Apparel! https://www.rejectnationshop.com/ Follow Us On Socials: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reelrejects/ Tik-Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@reelrejects?lang=en Twitter: https://x.com/reelrejects Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheReelRejects/ Music Used In Ad: Hat the Jazz by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Happy Alley by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/... POWERED BY @GFUEL Visit https://gfuel.ly/3wD5Ygo and use code REJECTNATION for 20% off select tubs!! Head Editor: https://www.instagram.com/praperhq/?hl=en Co-Editor: Greg Alba Co-Editor: John Humphrey Music In Video: Airport Lounge - Disco Ultralounge by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Ask Us A QUESTION On CAMEO: https://www.cameo.com/thereelrejects Follow TheReelRejects On FACEBOOK, TWITTER, & INSTAGRAM: FB: https://www.facebook.com/TheReelRejects/ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/reelrejects/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/thereelrejects Follow GREG ON INSTAGRAM & TWITTER: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/thegregalba/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/thegregalba Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, Tara, you're ready to do this?
Let's do it.
Three, two, one.
All right, guys, I looked it up while Tara was gone, and I just informed her that the person she was thinking of was indeed Jared Harris,
because she thinks that Jared Harris just looks like that crazy design.
No, his eyes, like, bye, but he thought.
Not the actual actor who died in 1989, a few years after this name.
Jason Matusak?
John.
Oh, I don't know.
Fat.
John Matus.
He can't read.
Just happened.
Yeah, I don't know.
You can't read.
Who was a football player who they hired for this.
And that's really sad.
He got it a very, very.
Yeah, heart failure at 38.
Super sad.
Ironically, another appearance he made beforehand was a movie called the Ice Pirates.
Love that.
before. Well, we got a good amount of questions from our royal regics because if you're a royal,
you get to participate in all of you. And I purviewed them. And I can guarantee you a lot of us
being asked would go down in what we'd probably want to discuss anyhow. But before we do that,
we should give our general thoughts and thank Prepper for editing down these highlights. It's a messy-ass,
chaotic ride that they had to edit down. And I'm sure you guys nailed it. I'm sure you guys
helped us get incredible watch time
and made Tara seem smart.
Tara, I'll go to you first.
So this movie came out when you were 35
and now you're finally caught up to it.
What did you think? What's your
honest feelings?
Go, take it away.
I get why it's a classic
and people are like, wow, you haven't watched
the Goonies. I think that
it's set up to be a lot of fun.
There's a lot, the pacing, I think,
is perfect. There's a lot of funny parts
that the characters are like fun,
loving, like you said, whimsical, like that they call themselves the goonies.
They're fighting.
The point of view is that we're fighting for something.
But my most favorite thing is that this has heart.
Even from the start, it's not just at the end with the parents of your my favorite invention.
It's like even at the beginning, when we go out and it's Sean Asson, he's looking over
the boondocks and his, he, they just had the foreclosure letter or whatever.
and his brother comes out and they hug.
It's such a moment with the music
and we're sort of like feeding into it.
I really like, there's multiple moments like that
in this movie, but they don't feel weird
and or as though they're placed in there
to go like, we need to like get the audience
like feel this way.
It's like, no, it's just done perfectly right.
So I'm like, good job, Chris Columbus,
wrote a great script and the direction was awesome.
I don't know if he's right.
If Stephen was extra involved,
probably great freaking film.
I think he's asked that really quick.
That is a curious thought.
Did Steven Spielberg direct any?
Because that happens with some of these movies.
Yeah, they can do BB stuff.
Yeah.
Direct any of the Goonies.
Heavily involved as the EP and the storywriter.
And he also served as an uncredited second unit director.
There we go.
Uncredited.
I like that.
he was he friends with um the actors said ronner uh yeah definitely the actors have said that he was
like a co-director on the movie there we have it there that's why yeah okay i really got the vibe of
that um yeah because didn't feel like rich or daughter really direct yeah but yeah what are you
that's great uh yeah i mean it was kind of interesting watching this movie back not back but
watching it for the first time because you know stranger things it's such a popular thing that and
and for years I've heard
this movie brought up
because of Stranger Things
and of course
just because it's one
of the most popular movies
of all time
and people really,
really love it
and I can see why
it's got a very
chaotic
adventure fantasy vibe to it
that zeroes in
on that childlike curiosity
and the idea of
like, you know,
when you grow up
all these adventures
kind of get shut down
and you conform to adulthood
but when you're a kid, you know, I love that part where Mikey's saying like up there,
that's their lives, responsibility, real estate.
They got to move, you know, but out here as a kid, we got to have our adventure.
It's like letting an imagination come to life.
So having that is really fun.
The ensemble, they feel very real.
Everyone feels very connected.
And the banter between them all seems so genuine.
Yeah.
Like the actors had all great chemistry.
the found family aspect to it you know like even though a couple of them are actually brothers they felt like family
yeah they did entire time so the character dynamics back with the kind of whimsical adventure like this movie
is setting out to just be like kind of fun you know and the sets too were all great like everything felt
very tangible tangible tangible tangible that's right right yeah tangible I was like is it tangical or
tangible no no tangible and like yeah
Yeah, very real.
Yeah.
And like the sets kind of got more impressive as it went to.
I agree with that.
And I really, I think my favorite parts were actually like outside of the scenes with Chunk.
Like Chunks had like my favorite moments.
But the, I think like the last half hour was actually my favorite part.
It was after they decided to not go up the well where I really feel like it was like kind of later in the movie where I really feel like a lot of the, you know, the adventure that I was kind of hoping we'd get to earlier where it becomes very physical and fast.
And, you know, you're going through, like, kind of different levels.
That was some of my favorite part.
And all the, all the, all the energies seem to coalesce at that moment in time with everyone and the relationships amongst everyone.
And no one was wasted, too.
Everyone was a, even the random girls who get thrown into the plot, they won't waste it either.
I agree.
There are some things where I do wonder, though, of, you know, I wasn't, like, in love with the movie, you know?
Like, sometimes the chaotic nature of it was a little.
rough for me at first
even though I was always appreciative of it
like it was a very
loud film
it's very like noisy
and loud film where
he sounds 75 years old right now
it's a loud film it is it is a lot
of yelling it is I know
it's a lot of yelling and shouting and everyone
just so make out of manic and
totally and
that's kind of like the overall tone
of it throughout
and I do kind of
wonder about the nostalgia gap that I'm like I was I didn't grow up with 80s films a lot
it was kind of got it that happened for me more when I was like in my midteens when I started
watching more 80s films outside of like the Terminator and back to the future I didn't watch
too many of them where I started to understand what 80s movies were more like and I do wonder if there's a bit
of a nostalgia gap for myself and the I guess like the main thing that was kind of a hindrance on
the experience for me is that the it never really felt like
actually dangerous
I'm not looking for a suspenseful thriller
but it never did really reach those heights of feeling
even though it's fantastic it's a family film and it is fun
uh I did kind of wish that it was an actual sense of real peril
and I never really latched on to that so
those are my critical like my general thoughts of the criticism for it but I also
there's still a lot to admire and there's a lot that I like and overall I like the
film I just wasn't like over the moon about it as perhaps some people might want
me to be, just got to be
honest. But yeah, I did like it. And I'm glad
I finally watched it, and I think I watched it with the right
person. Yeah, because I
am the person who's like, no,
I like that. I'm on the side
of like, oh, you know when he flies off
the edge, you're like, he
would most definitely be dead off
his bike in the very beginning. But you're like, oh, he's not
going to be dead. And then when they have the gun
when they're like trying to shoot
the kids, you know it's just going to go like,
boing. But there was still a little
bit of tension there I think was sloth when before we saw him because I was like what in the actual
F like that just that part seemed weird to me and the bad I like that the bad guys were still there
because you like never know what they're actually going to do like how are they actually going to get
involved with these kids and then it's like oh they throw them over the water okay great we're still
safe because the water did was pretty shallow it was like a kid's pool but I still was like
I wasn't even really thinking that, which is odd for me,
that I wasn't thinking, oh, I want this part to be more believable.
I think I was just like there for the ride because the bad guys were such a B story to me
because they're not very threatening that I was more like,
wait, what's going on with these kids though, you know, and sloth?
Because, yeah.
Well, even beyond the bad guys, I never really felt like the, even the dangerous situation.
You're right.
didn't they weren't i never got the sense that it was really dangerous yeah you're right
you're totally right except for the one part where i thought um i thought i thought i thought
shot as it was gonna his hand cut off for some reason yeah like that's a one part yeah but yeah
it was it was still a fun inventive movie and i see why people love it and i won't only chalk it up
to oh you only love it if you grow up with it i i can see how you can be a new person or watch it
later in life and still really love it yeah yeah you know and who knows maybe like who i am in a
different day in a different time in my life yeah you might love it like like you watch it again yeah i feel
like because this is my first time viewing and i'm like oh i get i actually get it and i'm like
on the side of the film i'm like cool yeah yeah let's read some questions from our uh royals
and we'll dive a little deeper into it let's do it thomas dority which guinea was your favorite
Chunk.
Easily chunk.
Duh.
He was unbelievably funny.
So good.
He was easily the best part.
And I think they cast so well, because he was the most distinct in personality.
Yes, he was.
You know, a lot of these characters nowadays, I don't know if they were stereotypes back then.
Right.
A lot of these characters are very much stereotypes now.
Totally.
But back then, perhaps they were perceived more unique.
And he is, yeah, he's got a lot of the cliches with him.
you're the you're essentially the fat game yeah but he really brought a lot to it and his delivery
was unbelievably great and like when he's recounting stories and his timing on reacting this stuff was so
funny and i believed his endearing how he has related even though there's a lot of development off-screen
i believed his connection with sloth because of the kind of portrayal that he brought so yeah he was my
favorite i agree who would be your second favorite if you had nailed down to one other kid
Oh, the little kid from indie, I do love him.
What's his name?
I forget his name, but he was great.
I butcher his name every time, but he, Hugh, I could spell it, but I can't say it.
His character's Data.
Oh, yeah, Data.
I loved Data.
Yeah, he was fun.
He's great.
He's just a fun one.
And I can see how this made Sean Ashton, a star or two.
A star, obviously, because it's like, oh, am I really going to choose him?
He's like, obviously, you know, an obvious choice.
Him and Corey Feldman are great.
Like, Corey Feldman in the beginning really reeled me in where I was like,
I thought he was going to be more of the lead.
Yeah.
And then it's Sean Astin, right?
And that was kind of, that was fun.
I liked that.
Yeah, that was really fun.
Yeah, so that's mean, no one was wasted.
It was kind of, it was a good job on making sure everyone got to stand out in some way.
Yeah.
All right.
Next one.
Rita Tara.
Lauren, Cardinal.
I know you love this movie.
It's one of my faves.
What did you think?
of the story plot of the movie and do you now get the magic this movie had on everyone to make
it so popular at the time why it resonates with so many people in pop culture today thank you for
your time have a good day why do you think it resonates with so many people in pop culture like
why do you what do you think that is because we talked a good amount about the other stuff here
yeah yeah we did you know what I think it it represents and I and I deal
time when kids could actually be kids and make stuff and you're not on your phone.
You're like, oh, yeah, you go to somebody's yard and you have to come back inside when the lights
come on, right?
Yeah.
Like, it's that type of a vibe.
It's old school.
It's vintage.
It has that vibe.
And I think for pop culture now, vintage is obviously very popular.
And I think that I, that time, the time that they're setting up, I think is very, it's kind of
surreal now because we don't you're not going to get that now in 2025 i don't think ever again you might
hit the nail on the head because there's the only adults you really get to know are the bad guys
correct whereas a lot of the other movies that are very kid focused even take like stephen silver's
et there's still a good amount of adult focus yeah and this is that rare movie where you're just
with kids for a vast majority of the like the runtime and the only time you're really with adult
outside of like checking into a cop or the bad guys yeah it's it's it's only the children who are
who are going on this adventure and the danger and here to save they're really here to like save
the day and yeah and it is about them you know when you watch like it the on the child part
it's like penny wise you're thinking about when you watch ET as great as billy as the other
kids are you're thinking about ET right here it's it is about the children yeah yeah
Like, there's no additional thing that comes in that steals the show or steals the focus from the kids or a villain that does.
So, yeah, you might have hit the nail on the head for, like, yeah.
And I also think that you're that nowadays in movies, they don't really follow the tropes of like, oh, we're going to have data, be named data by how, like, in correlation with how he looks and the chubby kid to also be the comedic relief, we're not going to, they're not going to view it that way.
Like, you can't write that.
You're not going to have a kid put up a shirt and do the chubby pants.
Cowards.
Unless it's like an R-rated horror movie.
Yeah, they can't.
Like, we're just, we're not going to get that.
You can't do it just for jokes.
Yeah.
So that's why I think in Pulp Culture today, they're like, oh, you can't get that anymore.
Yeah.
How dare you people age with the times of sensitivity.
Awful.
Let's do the next one.
Kev B, we would read this one, but it's very similar to Lawrence.
But we'll just say, hey, Kv B, thanks for asking us.
question so we're going to move on to jaden roads this is such a childhood movie for me i even
think the movie holds up as an adult and i watch it yearly wow it's one of my favorite 80s
movies i'm curious if you all agree or do you all have any other favorites uh i wouldn't call this
would you would you make this one of your uh favorite 80s movies i mean for me the cake would
have to go terminator two is my all-time favorite movie the terminator is one of them that's 90s
Terminator 1 is 80s
but I would say my favorite 80s
is like probably the most
one of the most cliche answers back to the future
Yeah that's a great one
That's like that's a perfect film
It's a good one
You know I think I'd probably
Say that or ET first
Here's the thing
I think you guys have a point
When you grew up with it
It holds a special place in your heart
Like for me I'm like
I haven't rewatched ET
It's been 20 years
do I have three E.T. shirts that I wear often? Yes, I do. So I don't have that pull with this movie,
but I do understand how it could tick up there depending upon the rest of the 80s films.
Yeah, I'm even looking at the list right now. There's a lot of, like, amazing movies.
Oh, God, like Top Gun. Give me a break. That's up there on my list. Ghostbusters. Blade Runner is great.
Yeah. Die hard. There's like a night.
Aliens. The thing. There's amazing movies.
Amazing. Yeah. Even as I scour this entire list.
like Raiders of the lost arc
that the first Indiana Jones movie came in on the 80s
still looking at this going
no it's back to the future
yeah back to the future just like
and it's right there at the top
and it's a perfect capsule in time
and I love that movie so much
I still I feel like when I get older
it's like this never feels like I had to grow up with it
it's just like it just gets better
yeah it really is
the next one Tara
Residency I love this movie
I know I've mentioned this before
but it was amazing to see
The Asian actor, especially when I was a kid, especially since K. Hugh Kwan played such a cool character.
Question, what was your favorite invention in the movie?
Mine is probably the boxing glove, mostly because it both worked and against data.
Ooh.
I don't want to just say the boxing glove.
My favorite bit was the flashlight bit.
As brief as it is, and as much as it doesn't work, it was such a great visual gag when he, like, has the flashlights.
it looks cool and then they do the POV from the flashlights and it's I love how it's not helping
them out like get it out of it like they just can't see where they're going and it's working
against the whole purpose of having the flashlight totally it was such a funny moment to be
that was great I would chalk it up to that just because of how I've never seen that joke and
how funny that that was yeah I mean I really I did like the beginning with the bowling ball and how
you're going through all this stuff when he could literally probably jump the fence I thought
that was very creative, but I think what's very
funny is the old school
magic mouth that actually
grasps onto things
and kept him from dying
and clip bad guy in the nuts.
Yeah, very true. Good times.
Chase Lee, hey you guys.
This was obviously Stranger Things before
Stranger Things. Yeah, out of any
the things that I've seen, you know, I watch
a lot of stuff that were I'm like,
oh, Stranger Things is definitely barring from aliens here.
They're definitely barring from Polter Guys here.
I haven't seen every reference they've made,
but this was the one where I'm like,
I see so much of, like, it's as if they put,
what if we had stranger things,
but in a science fiction?
What if they had the goonies,
but in a science fiction world, you know?
And so, yeah, it definitely was.
What is a worse idea?
Chunk, wow, bringing Sloth home to,
is this character just named Chunk?
Like, he doesn't have an actual name?
No, his name is Chunk.
Yeah.
Okay, hey, man.
Who is that guy?
I want to shout at his actual actor, Dave.
He's so great.
Damn, look at him.
He's a.
handsome as a dog.
Jeff Cohen.
Holy shit.
Wait, what is he?
He's a legal representative.
Wait, look how fucking, like.
He's a, wait, what does he do?
Wait.
Jeff Cohen, um, he's born in 1974.
Legal representative and an actor.
Okay, what, uh, what is he doing stuff now?
Uh, no.
No.
Previous.
So the last thing he ever worked on was a 1991 TV movie.
Okay.
And, and he was on family ties for only two episodes.
He did a lot of TV, but.
crazy this guy was like i'm not the fat kid anymore oh my god he's super cute yeah he still got
that he's 51 he still got that charming smile but dude the dude is like fit yeah oh my god there's
a shirtless photo of him he is this dude became an athlete go to his wedding because i think he's
there with uh kehu kwan yeah is that his wedding attended the i attended the oscars that's cool
that's cute maybe he's maybe he's uh kehoe kuan's lawyer
yeah that's freaking crazy good for him
he really he's like the guy in it chapter two
i'm not the fat kid in it for i'm like i'm fit
i'm the fit guy i'm a fit successful guy now
what's the worst idea
to live with him or dustin
yeah in season two when he secretly brings dart home
uh one might eat a cat the other is a grown ass dude
at least ask your parents first
Oh, I would easily go with, I would, I mean, in context of the, of the stories, I would say Dustin, Dustin made this much stupid a choice.
Obviously.
You guys start, I'll grow up and kill you.
Yeah, you see like a crazy alien creature.
You know that that must come from the evil's places.
Yeah, and Sloth actually loves chunk.
Yeah.
He's probably going to help out.
Yeah, he made a decision off of getting to no sloth first and understanding that sloth is a good person and can be a protector.
and has a great heart where he brings him home an evil,
like a potentially evil alien threat.
Yeah.
Dustin was way stupider.
Totally.
We just like took so long with that question,
but the actual answer was like, no, it's like pretty straightforward.
Two more.
I'm calling the day.
You know, Pop gibberish.
My question is, if you were to change the genre
to straight up thriller, horror, or any other genre,
how would you do it?
Without mentioning stranger things,
is it don't count that as horror.
I do love it, though.
change the genre
to straight up thriller horror
or any other genre
how would you do it
I see what
Oh how would you do it
Oh my God
That's a thinker of a question right there
I would make
The villains
I think one of the things that
It's maybe it's the writer brain in me
It kind of did bother me
How the opening of the film
Really set up the villains
Like they are clever,
like he breaks out of a jail and it's all thought out and they literally out out run the police yeah you know and so it sets them up as really smart and capable and then they just become progressively stupider as the film goes to the point where like these guys aren't a threat at all yeah and i know that's part of the charm for a lot of people but if i was going to continue to thrill a horror route i would do that i would probably try to elude more if it might be supernatural i might even risk one of the kids getting maybe not kill but really
hurt you know um push the boundaries a more yeah yeah probably uh stretch out some of the tension
more when it comes to the relationship with um it was uh sloth where you question whether or not
whether or not he's good or bad like where he could actually hurt him because they became
friends real quick yeah he slapped a kiss on him like two minutes in yeah it's like moments where
they have basically there's a lot of moments in here where there's a tension set up and they
immediately just go into comedy with it and i would be like i would just kind of split the difference
a little bit kind of ride the adventure horror comedy route a little bit more of like a tone of pirates
of the caribbean where pirates has that pirates is like an action adventure comedy but it also knows
how to be spooky and a little bit scary when it when it needs to be so a little gorber bidskiisms i would
say yeah it's it's i agree yeah thanks eric horseman man with a tattoo read it's here do you have
childhood movies actors that you felt a kinship to that actually made a difference in your life and
made you feel happy like maybe everything was going to be okay actors that i felt a kinship to
make a difference in your life and made you feel happy i don't have any movies like that i mean
for me i've said it a billion times it was in terms of real life personality conan o'brien
who still provides that for me yeah like a lot of times when i just need to get out of my own state of head
like my own negative space sometimes at lunch when i'm eating after working out i'll just put on the
podcast at conan and like him getting me to laugh just makes reminds me that i don't have to take a life so
serious sometimes and then uh chandler from friends was easily the one i adopted the most as a child
so yeah but there's no movies where that really did that for me or or actors yeah i'm really
trying to think here if i really had like uh a kinship like as a kid to a movie or an actor i don't
believe i did i'm really like trying to think about like what movies did i watch that i really was
like oh wow this person um i'd have to think on it more for you eric because i don't that kind of
question it should come to me immediately right like i shouldn't have to think about it and right now
i'm like uh i don't know yeah yeah you know what i i appreciate the question i speed read some of
these trivias, and
we, even though I know we should wrap up, I think we'll
enjoy these. Okay, let's go. I think we'll enjoy
these. Jay Rush and the Gouni, almost, like I said,
during the reaction was
a, uh, was, was, uh, chunky, yeah.
Yeah. Uh, all right. So, all right, Allie. Did you notice
for proper to put in? Did you notice at the end when they
survived that they mentioned an octopus? This is actually because
there was a whole deleted scene where they fight an octopus and that
line survived the final cut. I thought he was totally making that shit up.
I was like because it was weird it was weird it said the octopus and then everything after it was like no everything after it was happened in the movie but why you say the octopus yeah oh my god that's funny that's awesome
thomas dardy um oh this is great richard donner denied the children from seeing the ship until they shot the scene of the ship you get a real sense of wonder that's great he wanted their genuine reactions but josh brown was so shocked he blurted out fuck during the take and they had to read
do the take. I love it. Oh, we're backfired. That would have been perfect. That's so great.
Last, they really built that ship. Yeah. I was wondering. I was wondering if the outside was
some of those were miniatures, but I guess not. It's a warehouse. Yeah. Um, boop, and then let's
go to Kev B's. Uh, Sean Astin improvised the one-eyed Willie speech after the director told
him the story right before film and asked him to retail naturally. That is nuts. That right there.
is the best piece of trivia.
Like, I love that because I was wondering,
I was like, he's looking up and he's like looking up with wonder.
And he's just like, doesn't take a lot of breath.
He's just shooting it out.
It's very believable.
It's good.
And I was like, wait, do they have these lines written out?
Like, maybe he couldn't memorize it.
Because if he needed to be word perfect, that was a long.
And I thought maybe they're writing it up there.
But I didn't see his eyes darting at all.
And he did check in with a kid next one.
Yeah, yeah, the check-in was so real.
The check-in is what told me he's not doing that.
It's really listening.
And I love that piece of trivia.
Thank you for that.
Really seemed like he was imagining and seeing it.
Absolutely.
I think we did comment on, like, how earnest it was there.
It was like a really good speech.
And to know that he improvised that is crazy creativity on such a young man.
Totally.
I love it.
All right.
Last thing.
Look, how old was Sean Aston in the Goonies?
14 years old.
Very, very impressive.
Good job, kiddo.
All right, guys.
Well, what are your thoughts on the Goonies?
Thank you for the questions.
Thank you.
Sorry to answer everyone.
Read every trivia piece.
But thank you guys to those who did submit.
Always submit.
You never know.
It's a good gamble.
And we generally read a majority of them anyway.
But thank you.
And thank you to all who shop at rejagnation shop.com.
Thanks to Prepper.
Happy holidays, people.
Andrew and Tara will be covering Stranger Things 5.
And John and I will be covering Stranger Things 5 as well.
It won't be a combined piece because John and I were willing to work the holidays, and she bitched at me saying, F you can rot in hell, I'll chop your thing off.
But the real, I'm the real one here.
What I really said is that I'm going to be the one who's here.
Yeah.
It's Andrew.
Andrew's the problem.
I ever feel too guilty asking you to COVID on Thanksgiving.
I don't mind me, John.
I'll see you guys.
Thank you.
