The Ringer-Verse - ‘Stranger Things’ Season 4, Episode 8 Deep Dive | House of R
Episode Date: July 2, 2022Mal and Joanna return to the Upside Down to give you their latest deep dive into Episode 8 of the fourth season of 'Stranger Things' (05:20). They break down each story line and what it means for the ...gang, starting with the adventure in Russia (21:52). Later, they break down what is happening with Eleven (56:33) and conclude with team Hawkins (68:50). Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Mallory Rubin Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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What's up, guys, Rachel Lindsay here, and I am teaming up with your favorite Ringer podcasters
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to by Paramount Plus. Beth and Ripp are back in a new series, Dutton Ranch. Kelly Riley and Cole
returned and this time they're taking on Texas. As Beth and Rip build a future together,
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Dutton Ranch starring Colehouser, Kelly Riley, Annette Benning and Ed Harris, now streaming
on Paramount Plus. He's not scared of us. And for good reason. We were wrong about Vecna.
Henry, one. Sorry, what are we calling him now?
One.
We're Vecna. One.
Henry. Right. We've learned something new about Vecna slash Henry slash one.
He's a number like 11, only a sick, evil male, child murdering version of her with really bad skin.
But my point is, he's super powerful.
He could turn us inside out with a snap of his fingers.
It's not a fair fight.
So then why fight fair?
Into the Ringervverse, your Nexus podcast feed.
For all things fandom, I'm Joanna Robinson, and is that an Eldrich?
Throne, I hear it is my house of our host, Mallory Rubin. Hi, Mallory. Joanna, I'll tell you what it is.
It's a wet writhing. It's a guttural gurgling. Are the tentacles chittering? They sure are.
Just a real thrill to be back in the upside down with you after our month apart. Wow. Here we are, except in real, in the real world, we were podcasting just yesterday.
about Miss Marvel.
But here we are again,
less than 24 hours later
to talk about
Stranger Things.
This is,
just to be clear,
forget into all our usual business,
Stranger Things,
season four,
volume two,
episode eight, period.
We're not talking about the finale.
There's a full two and a half hours
left of this season
that we are not talking about.
We'll be talking about that on Sunday.
So that, like, if you think you're here for finale chat, you're not.
We will not be spoiling finale.
So if you're only up through eight, decide to take a walk around the block and listen to us, talk about the show before finishing it up.
This is the podcast for you.
Okay.
So let's do some programming reminders as we like to do on this podcast.
As you mentioned, we talked about Miss Marvel yesterday.
Great, effing podcast.
If I do say so myself, thanks in large part to my friend and neighbor, Mallory Rubin, for, you know,
opening her heart up as she does beautifully.
Getting to talk about that show is a real joy.
And we'll be there.
We'll be here to talk about the rest of the season of Miss Marble on this feed.
You'll hear from us, as I mentioned, back again on Monday, July 4th.
Ever heard of it?
To talk about the Stranger Things finale?
So we'll be back for that.
And if you have some questions and comments or concerns about what all played out in Hawkins,
we'll have a mailbag prompt up on Twitter.
So if you follow the ringerverse on Twitter, you can drop a question for us and we'll answer that on the finale podcast.
Now, where else can people get in touch with us if not Twitter?
Oh, boy.
You can find us in any realm or dimension on all of the social media platforms because the ringerverse is everywhere, including, of course, on podcast players.
You can follow the pod on Spotify or wherever you get your podcast.
But you should do it on Spotify, especially.
especially for this, because then you can also plug in to the upside down playlist, which we're
going to talk about later.
Great stuff.
Synergy.
They call that corporate synergy.
A few more program reminders of the Midnight Boys, Poo!
Back on the 6th of July, that's a Wednesday, their usual day, to talk about both the
boys, episode seven, and Miss Marvel, episode five, their instant reaction.
We'll be back, as I said, to talk about Miss Marvel.
And then we are in Thorloven Thunder territory.
Also, the boy season finale territory.
There's just a lot going on.
So, as Mallory mentioned, just check us out on all those social feeds.
Subscribe.
That makes it really easy if you just subscribe.
That's one-stop shopping.
I already mentioned our spoiler warning.
Obviously, we're just talking about everything in Stranger Things leading up to
episode 8, Papa, written and directed by the Deaferbred.
brothers, right? So that is what we're talking about today.
I don't have a ton of, like, external interview stuff that I want to talk about, because
we're probably going to save that for the finale discussion. But if members of the cast or
the creators have said something in an interview before these new episode drops, I consider
that fair game, but I really don't have much on my mind from those interviews that I want to use.
So just saying, I think that's fair. That's not a spoiler.
is already out there in the world.
Okay, I want to talk about a few big picture things
before we get into this episode.
We know that we are leading up to the final season is season five.
That's the final chapter is what they said that they're doing here.
Again, we'll talk about that more when we get to the finale,
but I think it's interesting to think about this idea of this being
not something that's leading into a series finale,
but something where they have the end game in mind
as they are putting the pieces together.
And it's one of my favorite places to be in a TV show
where they're not done yet,
but they can see the finish line.
And so they start sort of putting pieces on track
for a big, big, big ending.
Did you feel any of that in this episode here?
Would you rather reserve that for a finale talk?
I think that that'll be easier to parse in full
in the finale pop, but I will say broadly
that that was on my mind as well,
because this felt in the final two installments,
in part, because of what you just said,
this is the lead up to the final season, right?
But also in part
because these two episodes are just separate
from the other seven episodes,
which, you know, accounted for nine-ish hours of TV,
the equivalent of a full season,
really felt like even though we're only a month away
from when we just watched Volume 1,
it felt like this kind of standalone event
in a way that I think heightened the sensation of there's a lot on the line. There's a lot to resolve
and set up in tandem and that balance is a delicate one to maintain. One of the things that we talked
about a lot in our volume one pods, three of them available for you right now on Spotify or wherever
you get your podcast. Listen to them if you haven't yet. I don't know why I said that that way or
looked at you that way across our Zoom cameras. Self-promotion, desiccating witheringly.
Love a plug.
Love a gutter roll.
Roiling one.
One of the things that we talked about a lot in those pods is what has always been an interesting balance to assess inside of stranger things of character and plot, right?
And how there's actually quite a lot of big picture.
Do we totally understand Thing X about this mythology conversation heading into season four as a whole?
And so I think coming out of season four, when we come back to talk about the finale and as we look ahead to season five, I'm interested in discussing that because in super-sized episodes, which these certainly are, would you call them jumbo?
Jumbo?
Yeah, they're, uh, what's like a, what's a big thing that we've seen in stranger things?
They're, it's like the Starcourt mall sized, you know?
the um the the the there's no excuse for sacrificing any of the character arcs or that time that we really cherish with these pairings and these groupings
in order to allow for the advancement of the mythology you have to be able to do both there's just despite how long the episodes are not that much time left yeah it's true um there's also because of that split that you mentioned there's also this unique position that stranger things is in for the first time
It's very popular run, which is this like month of feverish theorizing,
something that the Stranger Things fandom has never really had that, like,
there have been some examples of this, like, is 11 actually dead?
Is Hopper actually dead at the end of a season?
Those are like questions that the fandom has been wondering about.
But not this like, let's press pause for a month.
And then we all get to like pour over screenshots from trailers or whatever the case may be.
clues in the text to figure out
what's going to happen and the question of what's going to happen in a
world like stranger things boils down to,
and we would often find this at the end Game of Thrones as well,
who's going to die?
Which I don't think is always,
I really don't think is always the most interesting question to ask,
but it is the question that like you and I are susceptible to.
Like we, you know, we leading right up until this,
these two episodes dropped,
We were exchanging texts about who might die theories, you know?
So that can cut both ways.
First of all, I think Stranger Things might, like Netflix and the Duffer Brothers might reflect on the way in which this break has kept the show in the conversation in a much more present way than we're used to with the binge drop of Stranger Things.
But then it can cut other ways because it sets up expectations.
People invent expectations in their mind.
They parse interviews.
They look through screenshots and then they have an idea of what they think is going to happen
or how high the death toll may be or whatever it is.
And if the show doesn't match your expectation, does that flavor how you consume it
versus just nom, nom, nom, nam, inhaling it in a binge and not even stopping to, like, think about it.
What do you think?
It's a great point.
I would make the most impassioned pitch possible.
Not that anyone gives a shit what I think.
And I'm certainly not a programming director at a massive streamer.
The strongest plea to release season five weekly.
Because while I think that the risk or the downside that you identify
as certainly a very real thing in 2022 on the internet in the streaming era of TV,
that's like been a very present part of fandom and discussion and the,
the community and the discussion around these shows
is part of what we cherish about it.
We love the theorizing.
We love the speculating.
We love the parsing of the text.
Often we see that rise of the roller coaster, right?
And then that just plummet
when the thing that you've been talking about
for five weeks on a six-week Disney Plus run
or whatever the case may be just doesn't happen.
Or it does happen.
And then you're disappointed that the thing you were able to anticipate
was just the thing that happened.
I just think that that's like
inextricable
from consuming pop culture
and so I would not let that be
a deterrent. I think that the
you know there was a lot of like
will Stranger Things be as popular
in season four as it was previously
we ran a big piece on the ringer
did Stranger Things fumble the bag this was heading
into volume one because nerd culture has become
mainstream culture and this show that like
it was this big smash hit in the genre
was just gone and out of our lives for so long
and all these other hits and streamers
and polls on our attention came in
to fill that space.
Well, that was not an issue for Stranger Things.
Season 4 has been an absolute sensation
and a smash hit, right?
Just this morning, there were stories
about the Nielsen Shattering Records,
which I initially thought,
oh, this is like somehow already
about the servers crashing last night,
but it was actually about volume one.
It was about the May into June window.
The ability to take what we just saw
over one month,
and enjoy that and experience that together for two months.
I mean, I don't know how long season five will be.
Maybe it will be like 50 hours.
But I'm assuming it's like nine to ten episodes.
Exactly.
Ten hour episodes.
Let us talk about it.
Like, let us injuriate in Hawkins,
especially as we're preparing to say goodbye to these characters
who we're so attached to in love.
I just want to say really quickly on the nature of runtime and episodes length.
So like the reason you would see
a super and this happened to the end of Thrones too.
The reason why you would see a supersized episode,
but a slower episode count
is because it means they have to pay the actors
and everyone else less.
You know, you get paid per episode,
not per runtime of episode, right?
And so you get paid for nine episodes,
but like watching these episodes,
these like the end of,
well,
all of volume two, let's say.
There were some clear,
like, clear episode breaks
where I'm like,
This could have been four, four reasonably chunked episodes and a lay.
I want to talk about a couple other things really quickly.
One, we've already, like, mentioned.
We talked about this a lot in Volume 1, the wildly entertaining closed caption on Stranger
Things.
Our favorite from Volume 1 was Flesh Descending Wetly.
But everyone has sort of jumped on this.
And I just want to shout out that Vulture, my pal, Catherine over at Vulture, did this great ranking of the, like, closed captioning things by, like, delightfulness.
She did, she dropped the bag, though, because she did not have flesh distending wetly on there, which I think is the king of them all.
But there were, you know, the fact that this one opens, this episode opens with Eldridge humming, wet, writhing, and tentacles chittering.
Oh, my God.
Joe, if you had said to me heading into season four of Stranger Things,
hey, if we got a wet writhing subtitle caption, what do you think we'd be about?
I'd say, did Joyce and Hopper read?
Alas, no, it was Nancy in the tattoo chair with the Vecna tentacles.
And then the other advantage of this long break between has been, I think, the Kate Bush
phenomenon. It might have
happened in quite this huge way anyway,
but we didn't talk about this in Volume
1 because it hadn't really hit
the Gen Pop when we recorded those episodes,
but the explosion
of running up that hill
there was
reportedly
K. Bush has earned $2.3
million from like the
sheer tonnage of streams of
this beautiful song from the 80s
that is getting a revival because of
stranger things. I
just, you know, I just thought we should mention it and have, do you any Kate Bush thoughts or
feelings? Um, I think that the use of needle drops and music in these shows and, and, and movies is always a
fun thing to talk about. I think the way that, you know, I mentioned the, the Spotify playlist,
the upside down playlist earlier, like the way that the music streaming era kind of allows you to
find and access the things that the characters in your story are listening to. Like, I think I've
mentioned on on ringer verse and and and binge alike before that the last couple of years on
my Spotify wrapped the the top songs were songs from shows I had been watching or movies I'd
been watching for work like father and son was number one the year of binge one Marvel because I just
listened to it so many times had some cast Elliott up there when I did a loss rewatch really in
like so I really love this stuff we ran Nate we had a great piece from Nate Rogers um on
the ringer right on the heels of the volume one surge earlier in June about this this phenomenon
and the impact on music charts that's definitely worth a read. But what's on your what's on your upside
down playlist? I'm curious. I mean, it's long. We can't share it all. But what are you like,
scroll through it and give me some highlights? Well, in case folks don't know. If you go to Spotify right now,
Spotify did not pay us to say this. It will generate an upside down playlist for you,
which is really just if you look at it, you're recently played and like most plays.
played songs. I haven't looked yet. Let's see. Okay. Because like I've been recently obsessed with
this like very obscure off-Broadway musical and listening to it a lot and it's on my upside down
playlist. Not all of it, but like some of it. And I was like, okay. Well, that's just what I've been
listening to lately for sure. Oh yeah. This is class. I just opened mine. Uh-huh.
Number first song, literally example I just gave, make your own kind of music. Great.
Yeah. Selle. Love it. More than a feeling. Brandy. Don't stop believing.
Ivan running up that hill is on here. Baby, I love you. Got the Ramones on here. Nice.
Let's see. Girls just want to have fun. Believe that was the song we discussed that my husband said he would use to save me from Vecna. Glad to see that here. Yeah. Heaven is a place on Earth. I love that. I love that. I love that. I've got Modern Love, David Bowie. Love that for me. Some crying aerosmith. Great. I don't know the last time was that. I believe a thing called Love by the
darkness. I think that could be really a really fun pull me back from the, and there's some
Harry styles on here. And I'm like, no, I don't think Harry would bring me back from the, from the upside
down. But the clash might. So, you know, check out, check out your playlist. It's an interesting little
mixed bag. I've got some CCR on here, which is fitting, because CCR was one of the needle drops.
I've got who will stop the rain on here? Like a prayer. I got a Madonna mentioned in this episode.
I think what they also did is they seeded in just some Stranger Things songs.
Because they've got the journey song from this episode is on my playlist, separate ways,
but I've never listened to that song.
And should I say or should I go, The Clash is here, which I have listened to,
but it's like the version from the Stranger Things official.
Yeah, from the soundtrack, from C's one.
Yeah, exactly.
So anyway, fun times over on Spotify.
What a company.
What a way to go.
So the last thing I'm saying, and then I promise we're going to talk about this episode of television, is something that's kind of interesting right before Volume 2 dropped.
A bunch of people notice that the end of Volume 1, where we see Henry slash Fechna slash 1 go into the upside down, the color grading on that was updated on the volume one finale from a red wash to.
a yellow sort of sepia wash.
I don't know why,
but that's something they decided to change
like 24 hours before volume two dropped.
And then what's also true is that I sit up,
I have not slept.
I sit up all night to watch this.
So I watched this like fresh out of the oven.
Yeah.
But according to Frosty Ever Collider,
they changed some of the VFX
and uploaded a new version,
new VFX, like this morning.
So unless you were a night owl
and watching Stranger Things,
you will have gotten this updated version.
So most people got the updated version.
But those of us who...
What did they change?
Do we know?
I don't know.
I think they'd just like refine and improved some BFX.
But I was just sort of like...
I didn't notice anything that looked off or janky,
so I couldn't be able to identify that for you.
But I enjoyed a couple days ago when the stories were floating around
about them popping back in and editing old episodes.
And our beloved colleague, Ben Lindbergh,
dropped an article in Slack about it.
And this comment was, me when I asked the copy desk to fix a two-year-old typo.
It's great stuff.
It's really good.
Classic Lindberg.
Wait, Steve, are you pulling up your Spotify upside-down list?
I'm just curious what's on your list.
Yeah, what's on your list?
I can pull that up in the second.
Let me see.
I saw your little cursor in the document go over the list, so I didn't know if you were pulling it up right now.
It's just pulling it.
So this is just for me?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's just for you.
Steve are read out.
Just for you and Vecna.
Okay.
We got wasted years by Iron Maiden.
I would not have paid.
You could be mine from Guns and Roses.
Okay, this is good.
Is this you, Steve?
Let me make sure.
I need to refresh.
Is someone else sharing your algorithm?
Is someone a little more hardcore on your Spotify?
I could be hardcore.
You don't know me.
You don't know me.
A little bit of credit.
Okay, no, this is better.
No, this is more accurate.
Let me see.
Queen, tie your mother down,
bulls on parade, raged against the machine.
And then paramour.
It sounds more correct.
This is a bit more correct.
But I could have had guns in.
You don't know me.
I could have iron-made it on my list.
I could have had it.
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may help reduce the frequency of minor digestive discomfort, which includes gas, bloating, rumbling,
and abdominal discomfort. All right, we're going to break down as we have been this episode
into its four sort of distinct storylines. They've been running kind of four. And as we find out
this episode, four is a significant number for season four. This all seems intentionally structured
to be broken out this way.
Some high highs in this episode
and then some like sort of confounding
what are we still doing here moments for me.
I have to say
Russia in general
still not
hitting the high notes for me.
You're not enjoying your time with the peanut butter smuggler.
I
yeah.
What did you think about Katinka? No? Not into Katinka?
The gang. I was really into
Winona writers for
pronunciation of Katinka.
That was fantastic.
Quietly, one of the
one of the
best moments of the episode was
Joyce's facial
expression, the look of pure
revulsion on her face
when Yuri was saying that
this Katinka, the helicopter, was
unspoiled,
unlike the other katinka,
which was appalling, and Joyce's face
reflected that. I feel like that
she like hit him. She like,
Like, yeah, anyway, great, great stuff from Joyce.
Speaking of Joyce, we have to talk about this moment that you and I both had like a little record scratch moment about, which is Joyce is bandaging up Hopper, a Stranger Things classic moment.
Someone is getting bandaged up by someone else.
There's wistful longing and sexual tension as we have exposed.
You're talking about ourselves.
My viewing experience.
Yes, yes.
Your wish.
Yes.
As I watch hopper in any scene?
Yeah.
That's correct.
Classique.
And then Hopper asks after his daughter, 11, whom he loves.
And he asks her how 11 is.
And she says good.
She's good.
She misses her dad.
And now and I both have some questions about, you know, adopted mom, Joyce Byers.
This is wild to me because.
Joyce's character in the first two seasons was so, like, was, she was not believed because
she was such a hovering helicopter parent, and they were like, she's too involved, invested in her
children.
Wouldn't believe her son was dead when they had a body in the morgue.
That level of attentive and devoted and unwilling to turn her attention anywhere else
even for a second.
But when Joan and Brian Britannica call,
who can only focus on so many other things.
This was really wild.
Like I, this was actually like a kind of,
I cackled a little bit at this.
This was just so bizarre.
Not only because of what you just said and how, like,
I really, I do enjoy Joyce and Murray together.
And obviously I was deeply invested.
and seeing Joyce and Hopper together again,
I think like the Yuri and general Russia of it all has, yes,
like, again, as much as I adore being with Hopper,
typically when we're in those scenes,
I'm like very eager to get back to the other characters.
Some of it is just the, it is still like baffling to me
that Joyce did not tell 11 and tell the kids
where she was going and what she was trying to do
and give them that hope that Hopper might be alive.
But even beyond that, and like, look,
there's a lot going on. It's a tough time for everyone. I'll try to be generous and charitable. I love Joyce. She's my gal. However.
How is. Eleven was not a good time before any of this. That's what I'm saying. Yeah. The whole opening stretch in California is about how miserable she is and how she can't find her her sense of belonging or people who understand and accept her outside of that home. And then when you realize that some of the people inside of that home don't really recognize that some of the people inside of that home don't really recognize.
or know that, it's like pretty heartbreaking.
I guess that could be, that's also really true to life, right?
Everybody has their own shit.
And sometimes you don't see that someone who you do deeply care about really needs you.
But it was, it was, it was a tough one.
Tough one.
I am.
I'll reference it again later, but Daniel Zario over at Variety wrote my favorite review of
this season.
It's spoilery though, if like you'll want to watch everything before you read it.
But he had this good moment where he was just,
of like, this struck a weird note for me,
but I guess you could say that this is growing up.
And it's like, Joyce is no longer the mom of little kids.
She's mom of like teens.
And you know less and less about your kids as they grow old
or they hide more and more from you.
So you could explain it that way,
but I still would like to think that Joyce would have noticed.
And she didn't have to go all the way into it
as they're trying to escape a Russian prison,
but she could have been like, it's been tough for her.
She misses you.
Yeah.
She's good.
She's good.
as Darcy saying to Thor, how space? No, that is a good, that is a good point. And it is, I do feel that. And I think especially after these characters have been through all of the things that they've been through and have had to uproot their lives and move across the country, it would be very easy to never be able to move forward, like for Joyce or the kids, right, to never be able to do anything in your own life other than hover over each other and persevereate about what might go wrong.
I think there is actually, again, if you want to try to find the charitable lens, like,
I think there is something actually kind of affirming about the fact that she would have gotten
to a place where she trusted the kids to go live their own lives, where she didn't have to watch
and end up her. But, you know, you think back to that diorama, more like diarrhea, Mr. Fibley
sequence. And it's like, Joyce, where are you? It's tough. It's tough.
11 is like one bad day away from assaulting a girl with a roller skate.
Yeah, I mean, that's the thing that actually happened.
Yeah, that was good.
Jonathan, hi all the time, stoned out of his mind, asking for, you know, confusing olive oil and wine at the table while he's scarfing down the risotto.
Will also not great, obviously.
I love Will. I can't wait to talk about Will.
In that bandage sequence, though, I just want to say, like the, the exchange.
that immediately preceded the She's Good L moment was the,
I thought you were dead, I thought I lost you, I did lose you exchange.
And even though it was a sweet moment overall,
Joyce telling Hopper that he's the hero of Hawkins,
it was heartbreaking to me when she told him that they had a funeral
and he said, anybody's show?
Like, that is really, really heart-wrenching that his reflexive,
response was to assume that nobody would care that he died. And again, like, it's Hopper. So it builds into a
moment of levity where he says, you know, yeah, I always thought it'd be easier to, I'd be easier to like when I was
dead, which is very amusing. But that's part of what I just really do love about his character.
There's this like bravado and this wit and this sarcasm and obviously the sexiness. But there's this
really tender heart and a lot of pain and a lot of feeling like he's never been enough for other
people. So just to get that little injection of that. That's like one of the things I really
want more of out of his storyline again, moving forward. And obviously the sex.
All right. Speaking of sexiness. No, that's a bad transition. We have no idea what you're
going to see what we find this like you don't think a demadog suspended in like gas, amber, I don't know,
liquid in a tank is.
Speaking of sexiness because it made you think of Palpatine, you've always loved Sheave, you know?
Suddenly, somehow the Demagogues returned.
In these days, we don't know what the Russians are doing with them, but they're there.
You know, Russians are making all kinds of mistakes with these monsters, right?
So you've got the Dem Dogs.
If you saw the season trailer, you would have seen this scene.
But more importantly, perhaps of the future, is there's this big.
case of swirling, angry dust
that if you've ever watched an episode of Lost
will remind you of the smoke monster on Lost,
good old Smokey, except it's a little more brown
than the Black City Smoke on Lost.
No clicking. Yeah, no clicking yet. No, no...
Can't wait for the caption on any clicking. That would be amazing.
Chitters dustily.
Did you know that like one of the
sounds on that make up the smoke monster, you know, audio palette unlost is the sound of a
receipt, a taxi receipt printing.
Yeah.
It's great stuff.
Great data.
Anyway, it's one of those things that you actually, once you know that, you kind of can't
hear the sound effect the same way.
Yeah.
Much like now when I watch Stranger Things, I can't watch Vecna without hearing my husband's
impression of Vecna, which Steve hasn't heard, but Joanna or Juna haven't.
And it's fucking terrifying.
Yeah.
You think you've lived and then one day you get a voice memo for Mallory Rubin on your phone.
That's her wonderful, lovely husband going, Joanna, Arjuna.
I might make him come on the pot on Sunday.
Do some wide voice work.
We'll see.
Awful.
All right.
So the smoke monster's here.
Do we want to talk about this now?
Do you want to talk about this later?
How do you feel?
Let's
Should put a pin and all smoking here?
Mostly put a pin and come back to it
I will say a couple things here
In general, this whole sequence
Like going into the lab
And seeing the demadog
Cut open on the table.
I had, I'm curious if you think this sounds
Strange or if you had the same response.
I felt like a lot of pity
and felt really bad for that poor creature.
I thought Hopper did too.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's like,
made me think of my guide dart
from season two.
Darling dart is three musketeers.
And that was really just heartbreaking.
And then we see all of the cases
with that like kind of amber fluid,
which I already mentioned palpi,
but it really did like strongly make me think of Star Wars
and the Palpatine,
Snoke tanks,
and all of the different lab vessels
that we've seen for cloning over the years.
So I just wanted to mention that because, or even just like the Fortress Inquisitorious hallway that we just saw.
Now, we don't learn inside of this episode what exactly is happening, but just based on what we see in this scene, the cut open demadog, the lab casing, the scientists imploring them not to go in there, it's clearer up to something.
So what are these experiments for specifically?
Like they have a demigorgon in the prison to train as a weapon. That's why they want the live prey, right?
that was a big part of the end of season four volume one.
But what else are the Russians working on and how might that bear out in the story moving forward just in general?
And then of course the, and like we get Murray kind of drawing our attention.
The hell are they doing?
It's like, hey, what are they doing?
Obviously, that's something we're meant to be thinking about.
And, you know, all of the characters like linger in front of the smoke.
And then as we leave that scene, the camera pulls us back through it, like really, really.
drawing our attention to it.
And my first thought, and here's what I'm going to say.
I'm going to do a little caveat here.
Very few things that give me more anxiety in the world than the instant reaction podcast
form.
I have nothing but the utmost admiration and respect for our midnight boys pals.
I don't know how they do it.
I hate being wrong on podcast.
It gives me stomach ulcers.
So it's possible that by Sunday, when we're back to record our Monday pod, and we've gotten
the opportunity to watch this more and particularly.
participated more of the conversation around it. I'll have a completely different read. But just after the
initial viewing, my assumption was that that was the same kind of particulate smoke creature that made up
the massive looming spider mind flyer from season two, the one that we saw port itself into Will and
possess him and the one that was basically exercised from Will in the cabin with the extreme heat at the end of
season two. It just looked it looked the same to me. So is that a actual piece of that exact
moment in the plot and moment in the time? We know some of that got left behind, right? That was part
of the season three plot. Is it something else entirely? I don't know. But it powerfully
recalled that and we get a shot where there are a lot of like flashes as Eleven and Papa are talking
elsewhere in the episode of other things that have happened in the prior episodes leading up to this
point and that smoke creature penetrating will and possessing him is one of the things we see.
So I was just assuming it's the same thing.
But again, might be wrong.
What did you think?
I mean, if it is the same thing, I have questions similar to the nuns in the sound of music,
which is like, how do you catch a wave upon a sand?
How do you solve a problem like Maria?
And how do you capture sentient dust in a tank?
Like, how do you capture that?
I'm not saying you're wrong.
I'm just curious about, like, is it a Ghostbusters, like, proton trap?
Like, how did we contain this?
I'm not, that's not an argument.
That's not an argument.
I'm just curious.
I don't know.
It's like if they had had a glass case right next to Will's bed,
and Jonathan had focused his energies on the funneling the smoke into that instead of
hugging Nancy very sweetly, maybe our Arpals could have done it.
I mean, who knows?
I think that there's this interesting through line of stranger things
where there are a lot of moments where our characters make plans
that don't pan out and make a lot of mistakes in a way that I enjoy
because they're not Ghostbusters as much as they'd love to be their children
in a Midwestern town just going about their day,
constantly confronting the extraordinary.
The idea that Russian scientists in the military
and we had seen in season three under Starcourt
what they had achieved and what they had achieved
in what they were able to mechanize and harness,
I believe that they could have found a way to capture that.
But I think it's a fair point.
No, no, no, no.
That wasn't me making a point.
I wasn't saying how could they?
I'm just curious what the process.
I want to see it.
Yeah, I want to see it.
I'm not, I'm not, no, I'm not arguing.
Space eaters?
And then fans.
Yes.
What do you think?
Uh-huh.
Combo.
One, two, combo.
Like, do you think a swamp cooler was also involved?
I have questions about it.
But anyway, it also just looks very.
visually, like a lot like an obscureal, an obscureist from the Harry universe.
My favorite film franchise, the Fantastic Beast franchise?
Yeah.
Just reminds me of that visually, especially what was like swirling.
But it was like furious.
Yeah.
And it seems sentient, right?
Like, whatever it is, it felt like it had a personality.
All right.
So we got, I mean, like, they break out of the prison and how are they going to get out of
this Supermax prison?
I mean, they like crawl out a long tunnel.
The good old Sean Shang.
approach with Dimitri being like, what is this?
A grate that will get us out of here?
Cool.
Like, they get out.
Then they just plow through a gate in a truck.
Sure.
Sure.
Genuinely sure.
There's panic at the prison.
Panic at the disco, panic at the prison.
Monsters are loose.
They plow through the gate.
I'm not rain clouding and I'm just saying that that is the literal escape plan here.
Do you ever think about, and I'd say this in a truly
neutral way, how many really central plot elements in stranger things
directly hinge on somebody crawling through a drain or a tunnel or event?
Like, this reminds me a little bit of Ben Lindbergh's, like, everything important in
Star Wars connects back to a hyperdrive failure.
It's like, everyone goes through a vent or a tunnel at some point.
Oh, yeah, like Erica and StarCart.
Yeah. There's the Malsoff and 11 got out of the lab in the first place by crawling through that drain pipe, like just the lights. You know, I love it. Drain pipes and vents. Yeah. Very interesting thing story. Um, we get, as you say, we get all the business of the helicopter. And then I just do, before we leave this, I just want to shout out. I want to shout out Dmitri.
You've started calling him by his actual character name. I'm still going with Enzo.
Okay. Enzo, Demetri, Bechno.
one, whatever we decided we want to call him.
Exactly.
I would call him by his actor's name, but I'm afraid of his Polish last name and then I'm
going to butcher it.
So, Dmitri gets on the phone, and I just want to point out, is very charming.
Like, smooth as silk on the phone with whomesoever it is he's talking to.
We got the full jock and hagar voice here.
Yeah, we really did.
Absolutely.
In Russian.
Like, have you ever wanted to hear the full Jack and Hagar charm in Russian?
Yes, I did.
and I got in this episode, thank you very much,
Deffer Brothers.
I appreciate you.
I loved it.
So Team California is on the road, right?
Bro chachos.
I almost called you pro chacho in my intro.
I honestly really love the California representation in Argyle.
But highs and lows of the California crew,
as we outlined, you know,
some of the California stuff,
some of the Russia stuff feels like,
can we just get back to Hawkins or what's going on with LLL.
and stuff like that. However, there is, I think, one of the best moments ever in Stranger Things
in the Surfer Boy Pizza van on the way to rescue 11. Will has a conversation with Mikey.
He shows him the painting that we've been aware of since the premiere volume one, and we knew that he
was working on it because he had 11 intimated that he had a crush on someone and he was painting,
and then he brought it to the airport,
then he brought it on the road trip,
and we're like, oh, my God, Will.
And you're painting, and he shows the painting to Mike.
And then he talks to Mike about how, quote, unquote, 11 feels,
but obviously it's about how Will feels about Mike.
And Mike, not two brain cells to rub together between his earballs,
has no idea, I guess, what's going on.
At first I thought maybe charitably he decided he's like sort of willfully being ignorant
about what's going on here.
but like it really seems like Mike has no clue
what's being downloaded to him.
However, and what really makes the scene for me
because Noah Schnapp is really good in the scene.
It gets a little ham-fisted when he basically bites his finger
and looks out the window.
I was like, it was really working for me.
And then it just went like one step beyond
where I needed to get the message.
But what killed me absolutely
and what is the beauty, beauty of that scene
is Jonathan in the mirror watching Will.
It is just, I cried.
It was just really beautiful.
Jonathan clocking his brother in a way that Mike is completely not.
And Jonathan, understanding, clearly understanding what is going on with his brother in this scene.
And it's really, it's affecting for a number of reasons.
But what I really loved about it is in contrast to what we get with Joyce, sort of acting against her established character in season one and two.
this feels like a return to the Jonathan Will dynamic that was very strong in season one and pretty strong in season two.
And then like Jonathan's whole storyline became about Nancy.
And it feels like that brother dynamic just completely dissolved.
And so to remember that they were extremely close, like bonded by the fact that their, you know, their dad abandoned them.
And they were like, you know, despite their age differences, like very tight.
I loved seeing that return to it.
And I just felt like it was beautifully, subtly done in a way that stranger things sometimes, you know, goes a step beyond subtle.
I thought that stuff was really, really beautiful.
What did you think, Mallory?
I loved it.
This was probably my favorite scene and sequence of this episode.
And, you know, it won't surprise you to hear that I loved and was deeply moved by the look out of the window at the end.
I was, like, in tears at that point.
But I also, I had the same response to you, the same response as you about Jonathan because I had missed that connection between them. And even though like Jonathan and Argyle are very amusing and, like, charming in the beginning of season four, it felt like a lot of the substance of Jonathan's arc had disappeared. And I think we feel that most palpably because of that bond with Will and how absent that connection between them felt.
and to see just that recognition, like that, that kind of, and it's literally, it is just a look.
We see that Jonathan is paying attention.
And that feels very much like a throughline of this show, right?
Like, who is the person in your life who sees you clearly?
And I just thought that was really so subtle in a show.
And actually, in a scene to its credit, that kind of acknowledged and leaned into the fact that
sometimes it's hard to be subtle.
Like when Will is talking about the painting and says, you know, that the heart on the
crest, sure, like maybe it's a little on the nose.
And I kind of appreciated and enjoyed that, right?
Like, leaning into the fact that sometimes the subtlety is actually not present, is not there.
And that's part of growing up, too, is just like saying the thing out loud.
And the John at the moment was so subtle.
And, like, to your point about all of the things that bonded them, one of the most impactful
and most consistently affecting aspects of their relationship was Jonathan always being there to tell Will,
it's okay to be different. And it is okay to be who you are. And you will find the people in your
life eventually who love you not despite that but because of it. Right. And so we bring all of that
with us to that to that look in the mirror with Jonathan.
And I just thought that was really, really lovely.
And I thought Noah was really good in that scene.
And, you know, that whole, the whole quote about, you know, she's so different from other
people and the way that he's talking about 11 when you're different.
Sometimes you feel like a mistake was just heart-wrenching.
And I thought that that scene was even before that moment.
That's what we build toward really rich.
Like it gets back.
We've mentioned this a couple times before.
I've brought this quote up a handful.
the time because it's one of my favorites that season three fight between Will and Mike,
you know? But you know, I just love, I mean, did you think, what'd you think really, that
we were never going to get girlfriends, that we were just going to sit in my basement all day and
play games for the rest of our lives? Yeah, I guess I did. I really did. Like, it was pulled
right back to that when this whole conversation opens by Will asking, like, how far are we
going to be from Vegas? You know, we can go and we can get rich and we'll never have to work and
we could just play D&D and Nintendo for the rest of our lives. And it's just a, a, a, a,
a second before Mike actually really does open up to him,
but there's still that like push-pull tension there
where they just are not on the same page
and don't quite know how to get there.
And then to see Will, even though he is speaking,
you know, nominally about 11 in that moment
and really about himself,
to see him be able to say some of these things out loud to Mike
was just like really rewarding.
And Mike, I agree with you.
Like he, it seemed to me like he missed a lot of it.
It seemed like he was touched
and took the lesson the way that it applied to his life
but didn't see what it meant for,
will. I thought that Mike also, though, did have a really cool little moment where he's talking about how he just got lucky.
Like he has the whole, you know, one day she's going to realize that I'm just some random nerd that got lucky that Superman landed on his doorstep.
But he has the line before that about she just needed someone. It's not fate. It's not destiny. It's just simple dumb luck. And he's saying it like it's
it's a diminishment in some way of his role or their relationship.
And of course, like that actually ultimately,
and this will be one of the things that Mike needs to embrace,
makes it more powerful because it isn't fate.
It isn't destiny.
No other force, no, you know, to use a devsism, like tram track brought them together.
They chose to build that together.
Did you just watch devs?
This is the second time I've heard you bring up devs on a podcast.
No.
I watched the one of first aired, but I just love the whole, you know, choice destiny.
dynamics.
I'm so funny.
I found that show.
The outcome of it, I was like, oh, boy, I don't know how this aligns to my personal
philosophy, but I thought it was a rich intellectual and philosophical text.
Sorry, it's just funny.
I was just listening to The Big Pick where you brought up Deves.
And I was like, did not I just watch Debs?
It's such a funny reference.
Okay.
I'm really down on Mike this season, I will say.
Yes, yes.
Part of it is probably watching his arc in at the same time as I,
watching Huey's arc on The Boys.
I was just going to ask you about this.
Yeah.
The Boys is doing this really interesting exploration of, like, toxic masculinity in its
various different flavors.
And this toxic masculinity, as it applies to, like, nice guy insecurity and Huey, I feel
it echoing through Mike so strong.
And so, like, when he was saying all that, I just didn't have a lot of space for it.
And maybe that's not fair.
Maybe it's, like, unfair to be applying the lesson from another show.
over to this show, but I was just sort of like, and he's just not seeing Will at all,
and I find that unbearable. I find it unbearable for Will to say, you are the heart of this
team. And like, the painting, you know, to talk about Will's perpetual adolescence,
because Will, nois-knopf has said, like, when asked about Will's sexuality or whatever,
everyone seems to be kind of, like, demureing and not really wanting to put too fine a point on it.
But, like, what Nooshanab has said is, like, you know, Will is locked in this perpetual
adolescence because he was, you know, in the upside down and sort of just to step out of time
with his friends and just sort of like miss the boat and is locked. And so like for him to like make
this painting of their D&D campaign and show it, you know, it's a, it's a lovely like painting,
but this is a very juvenile gesture, right? It's very sweet, but it's very juvenile at the same time.
And I don't, I don't really mean that in a negative way. It's just like that's where Will is.
This is how he knows how to express himself. And of course, it's the,
80s and it's impossible, it feels impossible for him to express how he's truly feeling in an open
and honest way. But I just think it's interesting that that 11 isn't in that painting. And we talked
about this in volume one that like as much as 11, you know, 11 and Will share like a beautiful
little hug later in this episode. But like, I still think Will feels like it was all better
when before 11 got there and they were just four boys playing D&D together. And there's also
that idea that left out of, and again, Daniel DeZario talked about this in his variety
review, and as a queer man, he can speak to this much better than I can, but like this idea
of being like a queer teen and, you know, and not out and watching all of your friends,
your straight friends couple up and you feeling left out of an important right of passage,
an important part of growing up because you cannot connect to that the way that they are.
And that's all profoundly affecting.
But Mike, like, but to that end, however the show is supposed to feel about Mike,
this is how I feel about Mike.
And I'm not stressed about it because, like, who among us has not pinned their hopes on
someone who is completely unworthy and not paying attention to us at all?
I'm not even convinced that Mike is paying attention to 11.
Like, I really think Mike is just paying attention to himself and his own, like, hurt feelings,
honestly.
Oh, man.
I have so many.
follow-up thoughts. So I think that the, hearing you talk about that state of, of adolescence,
it makes me think of one of the things we learned in volume one when Nancy was exploring the wheeler
home and the upside down and like learning that it was literally frozen in time down there and how
that idea more, more symbolically could apply to Will and the way that something about his life
is really just anchored and how could it not be to this like foundation.
fulcrum moment in his existence.
Like what a traumatic thing
to be taken into the upside down
by the mind fire.
And I think that like,
so I thought the painting,
one of the things that was really interesting about it,
you know,
and you just referenced a few minutes ago
that one of the things we learned in volume one
is when Elle is writing her letter to Mike
and recounts that idea of the crush.
Well, one of the things we hear here
is Will say that L was the one
who asked him to paint this and like commissioned it.
That feels like a lot, a lot to me, right?
Yeah, it's like, oh, I don't know.
I mean, it was, it was, it was, there was something about the way he delivered it
where it was, yeah, like, I think we're meant to wonder, right, at least if that's
exactly the truth.
And the fact that she's not in it definitely feels notable.
I thought that the, again, I think I'm just so, one of the reasons that I am just so
invested in will and partial toward him and feel so tenderly toward him.
is like this idea, just more broadly, of not quite being ready to let go of this thing that was
like sacred and precious to you and seeing everybody else move on from it.
It just feels like one of the most relatable aspects of the story and of growing up, right?
And Stranger Things is a lot of different things, but it is a coming of age story most of all.
And like, there are so many things in my life that I'm like, man, I like this thing more now.
that I'm 35 than I did when I was 15.
Like, when I interrogate that,
the thing I always come back to is because it's something that I now share
with the people I care about more than I did when I was young, right?
Or it allows me to think about the moments when I got to do that when I was young.
And so I just think that's just like such a lovely part of Will's arc.
And I agree with you that the moment is where it feels like Mike either doesn't see that
or are kind of actively resisted it,
just like deeply painful.
And again,
also feels very true to life
and to the way that you try to hold on to something
as it's like slipping away from you.
The fate, destiny, dumb luck thing,
I definitely like latched onto that last part of that quote
much more than the she doesn't need me opening.
And I did have the same Huey thought as you.
And I wanted to ask you about that.
So I'm just glad you brought it up.
I guess I'll,
I'll
I'm finding Mike
certainly less compelling
than many of the other characters
this season
in that particular moment
again the more charitable read
that I guess I can offer
is or a distinction
between Mike and Huey at least
is I didn't get the sense
from Mike that he was saying
I need to be able to be the one
who fixes this
or who saves 11
like I took that to be
needing him
just like as a person
a person
in her life who she cares about.
Not like needs me to save her,
needs me to help.
But I do think,
I do think that Mike would immediately take TEPV
if it meant that he could like show up
and be a superhero alongside.
Yeah, 11.
Absolutely.
100%.
For sure.
Watch the boys.
What a great show.
Also, I have more to say about this,
but we'll talk about it
in our next podcast about the show.
I have a lot more to say about this.
But I do think that quote where Will is speaking,
he's covering his crush by putting it in Mike's actual girlfriend's voice, right?
She feels this way.
And maybe if she did this, it was because she was afraid of this, blah, blah,
and this idea being different.
But drawing that line between his queerness and her otherness, you know,
just makes you think about, like, 11 has always been like such a clear,
X-Men comp, right?
A mutant comp, right?
And so just thinking about, like,
um,
the long history of the X-Men as sort of analog for marginalized people,
and then very specifically the 2000s movies and how they made that,
like a direct queer sort of comparison.
Um,
it just,
it's an interesting moment to lock the two of those stories together in this scene,
you know?
Um,
And then I'm just going to just shout out my Brotacho Argyle before we leave the California
crew and say I still am fully enjoying him and I'm a big fan.
That's all.
He's a delight.
Are we sure Nina is a small woman?
That's just wonderful.
It was a reasonable question to ask and frankly someone should have raised it sooner.
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So let's do 11, right?
We open with where we left with a massacre and like, what did you do?
Sort of like thing.
And then 11 passes out.
Spoiler alerts for the Obi-1 Kenobi show.
Very similar to the way Luke Skywalker bumps his noggin and like just kind of forgets
everything, right?
This thought.
And then one of our listeners tweeted at me like in the wee small hours of the morning about
this, but I genuinely had this thought.
But speaking of the boys, Paul Reiser fans are eating very well right now, right?
Because Paul Reiser in this show, Paul Reiser crushing it over on the boys.
So good.
I've been a Paul Reiser fan my whole life.
He obviously was drafted on to Stranger Things because of his role in aliens.
And his initial plot line is much more similar to his aliens role.
But what he's doing now here is very akin to this little-known sitcom that he was a part of
that I was a big fan.
I was a kid called My Two Dads, where it's about a girl who has two dads.
One of them is biologically related to her, but they don't know which, and so they both
race her.
And Paul Reiser's like this square uptight one.
Then there's like the cool fun dad.
So watching Brenner and Owens, like My Two Dad their way through this whole 11 plot line
absolutely sent me to the moon.
I thought it was really funny.
They're both like rockin vests and just like really living their best dad lives in this lab as
they argue over what's best for 11.
How did you feel about the various papas that we get in this episode?
You know, I'm a big fan of Dr. Sam Owens.
I loved it in terms of that two dads dynamic.
The, you know, well, that went very well, I thought,
mocking, the mockery of the way that Papa just has absolutely no,
like quite literally in this stretch bedside manner, just does not.
And it's a fascinating part of his character because, as we see
in many high-tension moments in this episode,
he is so often trying to sweet talk
and silver-tonged-tonged-way to his desired outcome.
But his greed and lust for power
is so ever-present and is capable
that it's impossible to believe him for a minute,
even in his most fervent gaslighting
and manipulation attempts, right?
So I've had a lot of, like,
why would Sam Owens align with this guy
even for a second question?
even though it is, you know, actually explained over the course of this season.
And we know that he's trying to save the world and thinks 11's the one who can do it.
And recognizes on some level that he's made a little bit of a bargain with the devil to try to achieve this.
It's he's a, he's a delight.
There's a lot of like Papa 11 dialogue that was really interesting and like connects to a lot of the themes that we've discussed throughout the course of our Stranger Things.
I, you know, the episode ends with his death, we should say.
And I don't want to zip ahead through all of the exchanges because I think they're worth
discussing. But I'm just curious, like, as a big picture tone setter for the Papa 11 portion
of this, what vibe did you think we were meant to get? Like, what emotional beat did you think the
end of the episode was pushing on us.
Oh, okay, well, let me say.
The full arc is a little bizarre to me because I almost thought that 11 had already gone
through this journey, but it feels like she, who among us hasn't, sort of regresses into
this, like, being manipulated by Papa.
Then she's like, no, she has this moment.
It's a very Empire Strikes Back, Luke in Daegobah moment where she's like, I have to go
save my friends.
And he's like, no, you have more training to do.
and if Yoda were a shitty gaslighter,
he would have locked Luke in his mud hut and drugged him
and then put a collar on him.
But like what she had to learn,
it feels like for herself and this is that, you know,
his true intentions, his true needs
that maybe are even not even apparent to himself
because I felt like in this moment
when she's like, were you looking for Henry in the dark?
And he's like, no, we were doing Soviet stuff.
And I believe that he kind of believes that.
Yeah, but like, she knows better than he does
that he was like looking for his,
his big first mistake.
Like he can't admit his true motives to himself.
And he wants to believe that he's,
as he kept saying in this episode that he's doing the right thing
and making the right choice and trying to protect.
He is so insistent throughout that he loves her and cares for her.
And obviously, you know, we talked about this a lot last time,
and I think it's central to this episode.
episode eight here,
you know,
we, this episode
more so than even
some of the others
does not allow you
to forget for a second
all of the horrific things
that he's done,
you know,
to 11 and to others.
It's literally cut in
and splice
visually between
a lot of these
like grand proclamations
of good intent, right?
And, you know,
one of the,
it's interesting
because he does have a lot
of lines that just felt
like actually
important to take note of
in terms of
the end game of the show.
Like, there's that moment
where he says,
he's talking about
Henry Vecna 1.
And he says,
you must understand
when one kills,
he doesn't simply kill,
he consumes,
he takes everything from his victims,
everything they are
and everything they ever will be,
their memories,
their abilities.
And we do not know
where he's been these lost years,
but if he has survived this long,
we can only assume he's grown in strength.
To underestimate him to act rashly
would be very dangerous.
And that's like a classic stranger thing.
So just TV kind of moment, right?
where it's building up toward him making the pitch for the thing he wants.
But there's a lot there, even though broadly we disagree with his motive as a character.
That feels true and right and actually essential for what our characters need to understand about the foe that they're going to face.
Like, we don't know where Henry was all those years.
And who else he might have absorbed or absorbed?
Yeah.
We've talked about that absorption before.
Like, in volume one, we were talking about this idea that like, if that's the case, if he's absorbed,
being like, you know, people as you go and stuff like that.
I mean, he killed all of her brothers and sisters in the lab.
Does that mean he now has, like, the whole Charles Xavier School of Gifted Children,
like all of their powers, all of their different powers are in his power set now?
I think so.
You know?
Yeah.
He's like just like rogue, but he gets to hold on to the powers.
Like, that's, that's scary.
Yeah.
I mean, to your point about these things that Brenner
says that you're like, I should file this away for future.
He says, you will need to fly.
And I don't know.
This is what I was just going to bring up to you.
Well, did this make you think of brand?
It's just like, I thought of brand right away.
I try not to think about brand.
Well, this was this.
This made me think of book brand.
And one of my, one of the chapters that I reread the most often from all of a song of ice
and fire is this brand chapter from a game.
of Thrones after his fall,
the chapter ends with him
waking up and naming summer.
Great stuff chills
every time.
But he is falling,
falling, falling.
And he's having this exchange
with the three-eyed crow.
And just the language,
you'll need to do more than run.
You will need to fly
and you're not ready.
This Brenner language.
It felt like, I don't know.
We talk about this a lot.
Like, I just feel like the stranger things,
guys, the duffers.
we're watching programs.
I've said this before.
We're watching programs now
that are created by the people
who grew up reading
and watching the same stories
that we did, right?
Like there's so much
Harry Voldemort,
Horrocks connection stuff
with Will and the Mind Flyer
in season two,
et cetera,
et cetera,
on the list goes.
And this felt,
I don't know,
I was just like
they want us to be thinking
of this throne's chapter.
Maybe not,
but the language choice
just felt so deliberate.
Like, not cry, fly.
I can't fly,
I can't,
I can't.
How do you know?
Have you ever tried?
And then one of my favorite passages in that chapter is, I can't fly.
You're flying right now.
I'm falling.
Every flight begins with a fall, the crow said, look down.
And the reason I raised that is not because it is a perfect comp,
because it is actually quite different in the sense that, like, who is the three-eyed crow for 11?
Not Brenner, right?
Definitely not Brenner in terms of the intention that's driving this.
And one of the things that feels really key
for her arc and ongoing development,
as we've discussed,
is how she can move beyond this, like, very strict and rigid.
I'm either or.
I'm this superhero or this monster.
And we hear a lot about the monster idea, right again.
And who can you trust?
And, like, so the end, when Papa is reaching out
for that last little drop of love and forgiveness and absolution,
It's not like it's easy for her to watch him die.
She seems very emotional and conflicted, but she doesn't give him what he's seeking.
And I was so glad.
Yeah.
I love that she wasn't cold, that she's obviously feeling something.
But I was also just really glad, like, after all the gaslighting and all, you know,
like all the traumatic shit he does in this episode alone, grabbing her, drugging her, putting that fucking collar on her.
You know, like she's a fucking demo dog and a, you know, like, she's a fucking demo dog and a,
case of Amber, you know, like...
And we had seen him do that to two and, like,
and torture him in volume one.
Exactly. And, and, and neuter
Henry in his own way. You know what I mean?
And so it's just sort of like he's, you're not special and you're not different.
Like, you might think you're the exceptional. You might think, oh, I'm, I'm Papa's
favorite. I'm the daughter. No, he's going to treat you the way that he's treated everyone
else. And so for her to not give him that because he doesn't deserve that at the end of it
all. I really loved that for her. That being said, I thought some of the helicopter stuff
was like unnecessarily showing off their budget, showing off the length of the episode. And
there's just no tension. You're like, okay, Brenner might die here or not, but I don't much care.
Yeah. Exactly. And so a character we thought was dead for a long time, first of all, and came back.
And also like someone we would, not to sound like a bloodthirsty maniac, would like want to see fall in
the course of events of this show.
You kind of know.
You know that 11's just going to, like, bring that helicopter down out of the sky.
Like, you know that that's going to happen.
And she's going to be fine.
And so it was just sort of like it felt it lacked all tension for me.
And so then it just felt like budgetary flexing for budgetary flexing sake.
And that's the moment in these super long episodes where I'm like, you're just flexing right now.
And like, you know, no harm, no shame in the game, I suppose.
But like, if I were to cut something out, it would be this long sequence of.
a helicopter that doesn't matter. That being said, you only have eyes for one helicopter and it's
Katinka. She's, she's unsullied. Um, Argyle shrieking, is that blood man? It's like a real high point
for me. Oh, my God. Love him. Um, anything else. We want to say about 11 and Papa and all
of that before we roll along. Uh, I don't think so. Okay.
rest in pieces,
a piece of shit.
I'll just say,
I guess last thing.
It seems like Sullivan
took a really long time
to get back outside.
Also, I guess,
I mean,
we don't know what's going on
with Owens,
but as far as you know,
he's still alive.
So good for Paul Reiser.
Please keep collecting
those stranger things paychecks.
All right.
Here we are to the real meat of the matter
as far as I'm concerned,
which is Team Hawkins,
my favorite, my best friends.
Love them.
And they go shopping for,
guns. And not my favorite activity, but hey, I've never had to face down Vakna in a mine palace
before. So there we go. This starts with Nancy sort of picking up right where we left off, but
Nancy's in, I really liked the way that this started, right? We're like in the memory, in the 11,
we think we're in the 11 part of the story, but we're still in the Nancy part of the story.
And so when Brenner, when Matthew Modine with like those cloudy contact lenses turns around and is like, Nancy, you're like, holy shit.
I thought it was really, really good.
And then, of course, it's cut with the height of comedy, which is Robin yelling at Eddie about his music taste and asking where the Debbie Gibson is and him clutching an iron maiden cassette and streaking, this is.
It was bliss.
Real Steve Allman energy.
I need to see Eddie's upside down playlist.
That's what I need.
It's all metal all the time.
My God.
Yeah.
Great stuff.
I loved it.
So then Vecna does this thing where he shows Nancy his plans for Hawkins, which she
later relates to us.
That Hawkins, like basically, we see flashes of images.
Hawkins falling.
That's what Brenner says to you.
Hawkins will fall, right?
And, you know, she says there.
There's giant creature, gaping mouth, so many monsters in army coming to our neighborhood
our home.
She mentions her mom.
She mentions her kid's sister that we barely ever remember exists.
She mentions her mom, Holly, and Mike, but not Ted.
The toughest.
There's only one fan of Ted Wheeler and is Mallor Rubin.
Mallor Rubin is Ted Wheeler's number one fan.
Oh, my God.
I just, I got such a kick out of Ted.
He's the worst.
What did you think about the fact that what Nancy said did not align with what we saw?
I thought that was fascinating.
Well, I liked it because I've talked about this before elsewhere, but like if you show us the dress rehearsal for something, I know we're never going to see the final performance of something.
So I like that we've got these flashes of one thing and then Nancy telling us another thing.
And so we're not really sure those of us who watch too much television.
vision, like, what we're going to get. Are we going to get what Nancy said? Are we going to get
the flashes of what we saw? Like, are we going to get none of it? Like, what's going to happen?
I like those things together. What did you think? I mean, I want us to like circle back to after we
finish the season to break down the exact language and the like frame by frame of the clip.
I think honestly, there's like, there's the story analyzing and then there's the what you said
earlier about the updating the episodes. There was some part of me that was just like,
Well, I guess I'm glad we didn't get the, like, you can go frame by frame and figure out that they're going to blow up the sept, you know, if you see the wildfire.
And then, like, no, as a Stranger Things fan that they don't have the effects finish for this episode yet, let alone, like, know what they're going to do for season five, episode eight, you know?
So don't show us something that you're going to need to change 500 more times.
I thought that was fine.
But I just thought it was interesting because they could have shown us nothing.
But we do see these, like, the maws of the spreading games.
and a lot of like fire imagery,
but we don't see her mom or Holly or the monster
or any of those specific things.
So it was just, it was interesting.
Yeah, yeah, I like that idea that, like,
remember that shot in Thrones?
I love that we're talking about Thrones
and I can't wait to talk to you about it full time.
Remember that, like, the very first vision shot,
which is the shadow of the dragon over Kings Landing.
And when you look at it now, like,
compared to what it actually looked like
when the dragons come to Kings Landing,
it just looks like so quaint in season one budgetary.
And like,
They would still splice it in and later like montages, but you're like, eh.
That's a season one vision.
Okay.
I love it.
I love it.
But the thing she says that we did see is he showed me gates, four gates spreading across Hawkins.
And then we get the whole four times.
Four kills.
Four gates.
End of the world.
Four chimes.
Max saying he's been telling us his plan this whole time.
Does he?
I don't know.
Max like four times of the clock.
Of course.
Four gates.
Four kills.
He's been telling us this plan this whole time.
Thinking back, they did.
Am I correct?
Is this wrong?
Arjuna or Steve.
Someone tell me if I'm wrong.
They numbered the teaser trailers, right?
And there were four?
And they like specifically numbered them?
Probably.
Have you seen the poster?
Have you looked at the season four poster since?
It's cut up into these four sections.
It's season four, of course.
We've been following four storylines.
Like every time I do a notes breakdown for one of these episodes,
it's in four chunks for four storylines.
So, yeah, they've been.
They've been telling us their pen.
for Hopper over the course of the show.
Oh, my God.
All right, four different love interests for Steve Harrington.
It all fits.
It all comes together.
All right.
Dustin,
Ever the General Wright,
says they can use what they know
about Levin's weaknesses to attack Bechda.
I thought that was really smart.
And then we get this moment,
you know,
where Max offers herself up as bait.
And she calls herself cursed.
What did you think of this moment?
I thought that this,
was quite sad.
She says that she can still feel him,
which, again, made me think of, like,
a lot of what we've heard over the seasons,
season two in particular, from Will,
you know, touching the back of his neck even later.
Back of the neck, grab.
The way that this connection,
and, you know, so often the idea of a hive mind comes up,
and the way, I think it's important
when the show reinforces that it's very difficult
to detach once you have been a part of this in any way.
but it was heart-wrenching to hear Max say,
I've still marked, still cursed,
because,
and we, you know,
we chatted about this a lot in the Dear Billy episode,
reading her letter at his grave.
Like, Max has been through a lot,
as so many of the characters have,
and I just love her and care deeply about her.
And it's heartbreaking to hear her talk about herself this way
and think about herself this way.
And even though she's acting with like a lot of confidence and conviction, right, I'll be okay.
I did this once.
I can do it again.
And there's this like, you know, exchange about the light, you know, that she's trying to calm Lucas and says it's like he only sees the darkness in us.
And that's so that's what's painful about it is like when Max is setting on Marked on curse.
It's like a moment where she's almost talking about herself the way that Vecna
is thinking about them, but then it's important to see her break through that, right?
So she says, I'll just run in the opposite direction, run to the light.
We talked a lot in volume one about like the patroness corollaries with the pull of the song
and the pull of the powerful happy memories.
I think, you know, in part because we're just coming off of our Obi-1 Canobi run,
this description here really made me think of one of the three lines of that show in our discussions
about that show, like the light and the dark, right?
And the, the Laia Obi-Wan exchange about the force and like,
what does it feel like?
And Obi-1 saying,
have you ever been afraid of the dark?
How does it feel when you turn on the light?
I feel safe.
And like the idea that their friendship could be like the power of the force for them.
You know, lovely.
I love that.
I love that.
I'm, of course, never going to miss an opportunity to quote Rose and Last Jedi talking about
we're going to win this war, not by fighting what we hate, but saving what we love.
We kind of talked about that concept when 11, when we talked about the end of volume one,
with 11 choosing to access this love memory of her mother,
rather than taking Henry Vecna 1's advice of, you know,
focusing on the pain and anger as a source of your power.
I just want to say, I think Sadie Sink has been so good this season,
incredibly good.
She's always been good, but she's incredibly good this season.
I think Caleb McLaughlin also, like in this scene with her
in the back of the Winnebago that they steal,
is such relatable content to me
when he was like, am I in that memory?
That's amazing.
I loved that.
Anyone would either ask it
or if they didn't have the courage to ask it,
they'd be thinking it.
Anyone.
Oh, my God.
I was just like thinking of,
like, when I've been dating someone
and they make a new Spotify playlist.
Again, Spotify did not pay me to say that,
but a Spotify playlist, right?
Let's say.
And I'll be like, oh, is that song choice about me?
Is that song choice about me?
And like, sometimes yes, sometimes no.
When it's no, you're like crushing.
When it's yesterday, you're like, oh, I thought so.
Let me just pour over all these lyrics so I can find a meeting and it, you know.
But like Lucas saying, you got a memory of mine.
So I thought that was really, really sweet.
obviously the stealing of the Winnebago really fun Eddie Munson and ongoing delight
Eddie who we predicted was going to die right away at the start of this episode
saving Nancy from the upside down did not happen end of episode eight Eddie with us the
whole way a delight a joy every action shot every line read I'm a huge Eddie Munson fan
love the Winnebago theft it's it's great I mean terrible to steal somebody's as they
even say car and home terrible is it worse to steal someone's car and home as robin points out or as han
solo does in the film solo steal lina calrhusian's car and girlfriend which are one and the same and home
car home girlfriend all at once um yeah anyway well she belonged with him you know that's what he would
tell you about the falcon so i thought of han when the when when we crawl down into our escape tunnel
because there's like a never tell me the odds moment,
you know, a call back to their one in a hundred thing.
Eddie Steve, Robin, Dusset, all of them together.
Just wonderful.
It is the best.
I'd say like 87% of our texts during Stranger Things Season 4
have been about how much more time we want to spend
with that specific group of characters.
I said this to you already via text.
I'm going to pitch it here.
I love the television program hacks,
and I won't spoil hacks.
I'll just say I know there are no.
longer in the drive-in and the tour bus stage of things.
Don't care.
Let's bring it back.
Bring the tour bus back for season three.
This is the group that takes you around from show to show.
Follow-up suggestion.
And I think we also talked about this via text.
A prequel to season four series where we spend time with Robin and Steve in the video
store.
This is something actually that we frankly deserve.
And let's just retcon in that maybe Eddie Munson is like they're never one customer.
So Eddie's always in the shop.
And then
Stephen Robin are also there
talking about movies.
It's the show we absolutely deserve.
Speaking of Steve Harrington.
I'm talking about the nuggets?
What do you make of Steve Harrington,
Winnebago Dad?
I mean, listen,
I, every now and then,
you know, I try to be measured.
I try to be sensible
and well-reasoned every now and then.
It's occasionally some hyperbole
seep in. This is one of my favorite moments in the history of television. Television ever.
Storytelling ever. I'm talking like a full... Your entire life.
Harrington's like five, six kids, six little nuggets. It was so sweet to see him talk about how
this dream that he had of every summer, his family piling into the Winnebago and just seeing
the country and sharing this exploration and this adventure together. And when Nancy said,
That sounds nice and he turned her and he was like, yeah, with just such yearning.
It was so, so, so sweet.
I just love Steve so much.
Also, we have mentioned many times how much we love a good needle drop.
Fire and Rain playing during this exchange?
That's one of my favorite songs.
I love James Taylor and that's one of the best James Taylor songs there is.
This was a joy.
The Winnebago High starts with CCR.
I also fucking love CCR.
I also love CCR.
The thing I love knowing about you, Mallory,
and we can talk more about our love of the oldies if you want to,
but is your absolute commitment to Dad Rock.
Like, that's who you are down to your...
100% to my core.
Are you like a...
Are you Steely Dan as well?
Like, do you fuck with Steely Dan?
I enjoy Steely Dan.
I mean, Dylan is my absolute favorite as we've discussed before.
I'd say that...
God, I'd have to really think about my overall power.
He's CCR is top three, though.
Like, CCR is a real...
Oh, my God.
A real top of the list for me.
CCR tour,
karaoke tour as well.
I love this for us.
I want to say the thing about Steve,
so like beyond the Steve Nancy
Jonathan Love Triangle business,
which continues to slightly confound me.
What I love about this is Steve is like,
this is my dream.
And then he sort of faints to it
when he says like,
if only I had some practice.
But like,
you have that Steve.
You are already the Winobago dad.
Like you have your found family hair.
And like I love that for him.
It's really wonderful.
You're actually living your dream.
Sure, there are monsters here, too.
But, you know.
Yeah, and like he was, he's, I mean, that right away,
that magic of him and Dustin being together in season two
was just one of the real, like, they've unlocked some discovery,
sacred alchemy and stuff.
But even as his arc has progressed in this way,
and he has moved so far and evolved so far beyond the character we met
at the very beginning of season one,
there's still these like,
why am I always stuck with you
little like regressions
and very normal, natural things.
Yeah.
And to see a moment of pure recognition
that like the thing that he wants
is just to be surrounded by people he loves
and who love him, which is so wonderful.
Another, and it also like, you know,
there are a lot of great moments between Steve and Robin
where they're talking about Robbins' sexuality
and her love life and what she wants.
And she had a great moment in this episode
where she said,
in the face of the world ending,
stakes of my love life feel spectacularly low. And the thing that I really adored about that is that
that's not true, right? And in a couple different ways. It's not true in the sense that like these
characters holding on to that connection to each other again, as Will like literally says that
allowed in this episode that heart is what allows them to move forward and allows them to so often
win. But I just like, I also just genuinely, this is not just like a classic ring reverse contains
adult content like sex joke bit, I actually really like the fact that the characters
and stranger things are always, always, always thinking about sex or who they're going to date.
Like in the face of really catastrophic stakes and scenarios, they just want to know who they're
going to dance with at the snowball. And again, that just feels like the most human and relatable thing.
Like think of the moments in your life where something was weighing on you where you had to figure
you had a way to do something or achieve something or push your way forward and you're like
just thinking about like the person you want to hook up with right that's just like the most
relatable content i love it it also feels just very like a like goonies right like there's this
that's a constant that's like a threat of goonies that's a threat of like a lot of the stuff it's like
a very 80s kids adventure thing is that like obviously we're also thinking about like our crushes
and our boyfriends and our exes and all of that sort of stuff.
And I just, I love...
The escape from Hoth is not complete without Han and Leia discussing their sexual tension in the hallway, right?
It's just not.
If we're on the Empire comp.
But like the, Robin's seeing her crash, Vicky, who we had already met in volume one,
but it never looked more like Molly Ringwald in her life, if we're talking about 80s legends,
than she does in this gun and ammo shop that she is on a job.
that she is on a date with her boyfriend visiting from school.
Everyone in Hawkins is at the war zone at the same time.
Disturbing.
And that makes sense because it's like off the back of Volume 1 where Jason sort of, you know,
stirs up the town, stirs up the mob and is like, you know, very guest on, kill the beasts about it,
you know, so like you got to get your pitchfork somewhere.
And I guess the war zone is where you're going to go for your, your, your, your, what do they have like,
ammunition, black powder, like, whatever.
Whatever you could possibly want that disturbs me.
The thing that I love that is a theme through all of this war zone, the name of this terrifying store, is Erica.
And I love putting this in this like this young black woman who is just sort of like, I'm sorry, you want me to go among the angry Hicks of Hawkins where there are guns everywhere?
I don't think so.
I don't think so at all.
And I love that she's the voice of that.
And, of course, they encounter the jocks here.
Nancy has this interaction with Jason at the ammo counter.
Like, awful, terrifying.
And then we get an arming ourselves montage.
Everyone's broken up into little pairings.
Truly, like, really, the sweetest out of all of them, there's a lot of sweetness.
You already mentioned Robin and Steve, that stuff is great over some Molotov cocktails.
For me, it was Lucas and Erica, because that relationship, we don't always get to, like,
time with other than like
annoying little sister,
but to sort of have them
bond as siblings
to take a moment for that,
I really loved.
Even though you're a bench riding loser,
you're still my brother,
just the facts.
That was really,
really special and wonderful.
All of,
I agree,
all those pairings were delightful.
And again,
the Hawkins,
this grouping and this plot is just
so consistently wonderful
minute to minute
that it's hard to be away
from these characters.
I also love,
loved the Eddie Dustin moment
when they're kind of like rough housing
and you know Eddie gets his like
Eddie the baddish there will be no more retreating
big moment, a big speech.
And then he just has this really earnest,
really pure, never change.
Dustin Henderson promised me moment.
And Dustin says I wasn't planning on it.
And it's just so lovely.
Like their bond and the whole dynamic
with Dustin and Eddie and Dustin and Steve
in the way that a little initial
jealousy and like how could you, hey, I like you, so how could you like that guy?
Yeah, yeah.
Ended up bearing out.
And Steve and Eddie having this really lovely bond and that idea we talked about in the cafeteria
sequence in the beginning of like this divide between the nerds and the jocks and all these
different factions.
It's like, well, these people can't actually get along if they take the time to get to
know each other.
And I thought that that was present too.
And the other part of that Rob and Steve sequence is after they move on from the, the
of lives, Robin's saying, like, not everything has a happy ending, right? And she just says,
like, this is such a key elemental fantasy story idea. We have to try. Like, we have to try.
That's Frodo standing up and saying that he'll take the ring, you know? It's, it's Harry thinking
about Dumbledore saying fight and fight again. Like, it's against just Obi-on top of mind. Like,
it's the, the Tala lesson to Ben and Leah. Like, that is just present.
so many of the stories that we care about.
The odds might be extraordinary.
But if you're a hero who we're going to root for,
you have to be willing to try.
So that whole stretch was great.
I'm going to need some intel
on whether or not that Robin is a theater kid
because she has a line here and I already texted you about this
where she says, I think we're mad fools the lot of us.
And no one other than a theater kid has ever said something like that in their lives.
I hear that in a...
I told you already.
I thought it was very, like, Middle-Earthy,
and I hear that in Sam,
Sam-Wise Gamji's voice.
I just...
Can't you hear Sam saying that?
No.
No, he's not even said,
like an elf would say that.
Not even a Hobbit would say that.
That's, like, an elf thing to say.
Oh, my God.
We're going to wrap up here, and I'm going to say this.
Are you going to sing me Journey?
We got Journey.
I'm not going to sing you Journey,
but I'm going to say this.
I started this off by saying,
in the long pause between volume one,
Volume 2.
I sometimes get, like, protective of TV writers and, like, of their fandoms trying, like,
kind of getting unruly about or with their expectations.
But then sometimes I will say TV writers ask for it.
And here's a moment where they're asking for it.
When Will says, Elle, who's going to die?
And then we cut to the Winnebago crew starting with...
And slowly pan on it.
Starting with Steve and going from there.
And you're like, okay.
All right.
They are inviting this, obviously.
And then the journey kicks in.
And it ends with Max and the Sinclair's walking up to the murder house, which I thought was a great place to end it.
The journey needle drop was phenomenal and a great way to get, like, hyped up for the finale.
Anything else you want to say before we go?
I don't think so.
Agree, perfect needle drop.
Here we stand worlds apart.
My heart will be broken in more than two, if anything ever happens to Steve, certainly.
But fun episode, interesting episode.
I'm excited to be back with you in a couple days to talk about the extraordinarily long movie link finale.
We're not going to do a ton of Easter eggs because I actually don't have a ton for this episode, and we've already hit on most of them.
I will say the Michael Myers mask coming back from season two is like a fun little Easter egg, but like really the most unnecessary dawning of a mask because he just wears it to like scuttle across the trailer park very briefly.
and then takes it off.
So that just felt like,
uh,
remember this or season two moment?
Which is fine.
That's fine.
Wanted murderer on the run.
But yeah,
he did take it off very quickly.
I mean,
yes,
but like there was no one about
in the trailer park.
He's like scuttling around.
There's no one there.
And anyway.
Well,
the family who's home he stole.
Speaking of which,
speaking of which is time
for Secret School Watch.
And I would say that there are scrolls
in this episode are definitely
Ma and Pa,
Winnebago, right?
Oh, I love this.
A hundred percent.
Yeah.
Do you have anyone?
No, I'm going to, I'm, uh, ooh.
I'll go with the soldier who comes in to find Owens.
And we have that brief moment.
We just want to talk.
We were like, wow, Solomon got there quickly.
And then we realized Papa has turned that guy.
Yeah.
I might nominate Sullivan as well.
I'm not sure.
He's on my list.
Okay.
that's it for us
but we will be back so soon
you're going to get a one two three
house of our episodes in a row
it's Miss Marvel
Stranger Things Volume 1
Part 1, Part 2,
whatever you want to designate the finale
we're wrapping it all up
this season of Stranger Things
on Monday so we'll be back for that
Wednesday of course
the Midnight Boys be Pugh
we'll be back talk about the boys
and Miss Marvel
and then Miss Marvel
Thor
all of that we will be here in your
feed a very special thanks as always on this lovely friday afternoon before a holiday weekend to our
junta rumpal for his production work he he along with us sort of marathon all these episodes so that
we could bring this to you day of release so thank you to our juna and of course to the incredible
we understand what his upside down playlist would be steve olman for his
production work on this episode.
Anything, am I forgetting anything in the sign-out?
Steve Hellfire Allman, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
All right, I think we did it.
We're back for the finale.
Protect all Steve at all cost.
We got a phone number,
set aloud on this television program in this sequence.
Do you think we should call it?
Who do you think is on the other line?
Do you want to call it right now?
I wrote it down. Should we call?
Okay. Go ahead.
Well, how to doubt is technology work?
Extreme Ovidias.
Stain voice technology.
What if I call?
Will anyone be able to hear?
How does it work?
Call use speakerphone right next to your microphone.
Okay.
All right.
But we'll go through my headphones?
That's my worry.
Is your phones connected to your headphones?
Yeah.
It's all.
What if you turn the Bluetooth off?
Let's do that.
Okay.
Who needs producers?
I work on the Internet.
When we have ourselves.
This is just, this is, this is tough.
Okay, let's see.
Hopefully this wasn't one of the things they went in and fixed after,
and this is the wrong number.
And I'm calling into a like fishing scheme or something.
Your call can now be completed as dialed.
Aw.
Sad.
All right, Steve, can you cut all that?
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