The Watch - The Ringer Guide to Holiday Bingeing | 'The Watch' x 'Prestige TV' Crossover

Episode Date: December 10, 2024

The Ringer TV YouTube channel is here! And to celebrate, we're bringing the 'Watch' and 'Prestige TV' crews together. Chris Ryan, Joanna Robinson, and Rob Mahoney come bearing gifts: a holiday binge g...uide to get you through the season! Subscribe to the Ringer TV YouTube channel here for full episodes of 'The Prestige TV Podcast' and 'The Watch' and a lot more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:08 Hello, how's it going? I'm Chris Ryan. This is Joanna Robinson. This is Rob Mahoney. Collectively, we co-hosts the Watch and the Prestige TV podcast. You're going to start being able to see all that stuff here on this YouTube channel. So thanks so much for watching. And we thought we'd get kicked off on this channel with a little bit of a holiday television stocking stuffer.
Starting point is 00:00:29 Non-denominational. Non-denominational. Joe Rob and I are going to be recommending shows to watch over this holiday break coming up so that if you have two days or 10 days or two weeks, with your family or your loved ones are all on your own. You may be looking for something to watch. You may be looking for things to watch in different situations with different groups of people, different tastes.
Starting point is 00:00:49 We're going to try and help you out. Leave comments if you have questions about oh, what about a situation like stepfather, angry gamer stepbrother, it's 10 p.m. We want to laugh, but we want to fight. If that is something you need help with, we can try
Starting point is 00:01:04 and jump in there. Is it fallout? I think it might be. It might be. All right. So we're going to break this down into categories. We have a few. We're going to start with for the whole family. Yeah. I throw that in air quotes because family can mean anything, Joe. Right. You could be talking about any number of age ranges, but I decided to go like kid friendly, but maybe the adults would enjoy it too. Yes. Interestingly enough, I have a different definition of this. Okay, great. So, and not to go to House of Our Pilled right away. But I am rolling with Skeleton Crew, which is the new Star Wars show on Disney Plus. Most of these that I picked are not currently airing, but this is one that, I've been surprised to hear how many people really are digging this. I thought only kids would like it, but adults really seem to be enjoying it as well. It's, if you don't know what skeleton crew is, it is Jude Law as a space pirate. And then a bunch of kids who are also Star Wars fans, they're like they love a Jedi. And they're lost in space.
Starting point is 00:02:00 So it's like Flight of the Navigator, E.T. They're going hardcore amblin, entertainment vibes. Kids on bikes, but they're space bikes. and Jude Law is a pirate and I think that's really all you need to know to enjoy yourself with the Chilton crew. Do you think it's for the young at heart? Will the adults like it as well, you think?
Starting point is 00:02:16 That's what I'm saying. I'm hearing from a lot of adults that they really, really like it was just going to be, I was like, it's fine that some Star Wars is just for kids. I think that is totally okay, and that's what I thought this was going to be. But a lot of adults and not just my co-host, Maliborubin, are enjoying this.
Starting point is 00:02:30 So I was like, all right, skeleton crew. On a zero to 10 scale of pluck. Yeah. You know, 10 being like, Goonies. young Leah on Obi-Wan. Like, where are we in the rage? This is a great question. Van Lathan, enemy two pluck
Starting point is 00:02:45 loves this show. Okay. Van loves this show. We're not in Leah territory. That's good. Really a relief to hear. But the important element is Jude Law. He brings the whole family together. Jude law is just like counterbalancing the pluck in a really important way. So that's my
Starting point is 00:03:01 pick. Rob, what about you for the whole family? So you two are TV scholars. I went with another contemporary pick, something that came to me this year. And I also took a different definition of family. For me, the concern is not how do I appeal to the kids. It's how do I appeal to the next generations above me?
Starting point is 00:03:18 What is the mom and dad and me show all at once? I went a little off the beaten path with a cooking show. Are you familiar with culinary class wars? Is that a new show from Carl Marks? It's not from Carl Marx. Rob, is this a real show that exists? This is a real show that exists. Okay.
Starting point is 00:03:36 Coming out of Korea, which, look, it's a complicated situation in Korea politically right now, but they have cracked the reality and competition TV code. We should mention that we are shooting this on December 3rd. Just to put it out there. Take your classic cooking competition show format. Here in America, we're like, let's put 15 people in a kitchen, in a house. They're living together. They're competing great. The geniuses in Korea are like, what if we made it 100 competitors?
Starting point is 00:04:02 And more importantly, what if 50 of those competitors are... Celebrity chefs, Michelin chefs, and the other 50 are just up-and-comers who are trying to prove themselves. Okay, so this is like squid game, but with cooking? Less death, but otherwise, yes. I really thought you were going to say, what if half of those people were hovering over a pit of spikes? At any moment, the floor could give away. But it feels that way. And I think ultimately, like, in the first episode, half the pool is eliminated.
Starting point is 00:04:29 Like, these are the stakes that we're dealing with. And ultimately, this is my pitch for this show. There is a cooking challenge. How the pool is eliminated over a pit of spikes or just sort of like sent home? I'm not here to spoil that for you. Okay, great. There is a cooking challenge in the later episodes of the show that is so good and I've never seen anything like it. I don't even want to tell you what it is because the sensation of seeing it for the first time is that exhilarating.
Starting point is 00:04:50 Okay. Can I ask you for a potential political spoiler? I'm scared to say yes, but yes. How are the home chefs doing? How are the home chefs doing? They're crushing it. Okay, great. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:01 So are well represented in the show. Are the Michelin star chef's sore losers? Are they like, I didn't pay this much money to go to some sort of French culinary school and come back and get my last kick? Some exactly so. Oh my God. Some with dignity and grace. Some are sore losers. The Sorbonne hates this show.
Starting point is 00:05:17 They absolutely do. And I think, look, it is the kind of show that if you throw it on, there will be skeptics in the room. What is culinary class wars? What am I get, what in Carl Marx am I getting into? By the end of the first episode, you will be in. Okay. You will be hoped. It is an instant, instant reaction.
Starting point is 00:05:33 Where can I find this? On Netflix. On Netflix. Okay. For my for the whole family pick, I feel like often what happens is that we over indexed for the young. You know? I think this is a fair. I feel like it's often like, well, I don't want anything to be too edgy.
Starting point is 00:05:49 You don't want anything to be too violent. That's fine if they're like younger than eight, right? But when they get to 9, 10, they kind of want to watch Die Hard. Put some Zins in their hands and send them on their way. And the closest thing I can get to die hard is hijack. So for the whole family is a show that I literally have not met anyone who doesn't like hijack. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:11 It is honestly the unifying television show of last year, Idris Elba's Apple show about a plane getting hijack that he is on. Shocker. He is somehow connected to the situation on the ground. There's a kid. There are families in hijack. You know what I mean? Now, is it violent? There's multiple kids on that flight.
Starting point is 00:06:31 Yeah. Yeah. It's a little violent. Yeah. But no more violent than your standard diehard. Yeah. So I just think that this was one of those things where it's like in a fractured, very niche, very sub subgenre world. It's hard to find shows that grandpa, grandma, wife, kids, husband, everybody, the dog are going to be into.
Starting point is 00:06:53 Dogs love Idriselda. And I just feel like this has been one of the shows. It's also a pretty easy watch. It's only like six episodes. Yeah. And it has that kind of 20. for Jack Bauer thrilling cliffhangery play the next episode thing. So you're done with the meal, whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:07:10 It's 7 o'clock, 8 o'clock. You're like, oh, you know what? I don't want to go to bed. The Christmas lights are up. Let's fire up, hijack. There's a lot of other stuff out there, but I thought that this would be a good one for the family. That is a great one.
Starting point is 00:07:21 It's very, like, 90s action film. Yeah, right? Also, to speak for the eight-year-olds, the time in your life where you get to push the boundary of what you're allowed to watch is in this holiday. You don't want to be I just want to be part of the family. You're just trying to get yourself in the room
Starting point is 00:07:36 to watch something that's a little age inappropriate for you, even if it's about airplane safety. I was thinking about recommending Black Doves just because it's got so much Christmas cheer. Did you find another category to put Black Doves into? And Black Doves had too many headshots.
Starting point is 00:07:48 So there's just like... There's a lot of blood spattery in the first episode of Black Doves. Too much blood in Netflix. But it is Chris Ryan's new favorite show. Yeah. Is it on your top 10 list of 2020? It might be. I haven't decided yet.
Starting point is 00:08:00 All right. So, Joe, Next category, your personal escape. I'm very interested in your definition of this and also what your answer is. Well, this is Rob's category. So, Rob, how are you defining personal escape? So my personal definition is, you know, the holidays are a stressful time for a lot of people. You're either hosting a bunch of people, maybe you're not hosting a lot of people and that's a sorts of anguish for you or you're visiting and it's just like kind of a lot all day. It's the end of the day. You finally have some time for yourself. Whatever that means to you and whatever you need in that moment, what's a show you can turn to?
Starting point is 00:08:31 Love this for me. I tried so hard not to have too many UK shows on here because Chris and I have a problem in that regard. But I couldn't resist myself here. Black Books, one of my favorite TV shows of all time, which is about a very crusty bookshop owner and the people who work with him. Dylan Morin, a great Irish comedian in the lead role there. That's on Prime Black Books. And it's like three seasons, short UK seasons. And it's just like just pure, like as someone who used to work in bookstores,
Starting point is 00:09:06 as someone who always wanted to be this crusty about unreasonable customers, as someone who loves, you know, Irish, British humor. I love this show. And it came out around the time of the office and the IT crowd and just never broke as big in the U.S. As some of those did. So in case people missed black books. Again, it's on Amazon Prime. So I really recommend it.
Starting point is 00:09:28 Was Dillimore also working in the bookshop in Notting Hill? Is he, where is he, has he ever like, he's like one of the friend group. Oh, he's in the friend group. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I love this idea. I cannot possibly imagine you being an edgy, uh, retail person. Like I, I feel like, you aspire to be at. Like, it's hard to me imagine going in and be like, man, that lady by the counter just told me to go screw myself.
Starting point is 00:09:53 No, I wouldn't, but that's why, but that was like, that's inside of me. Okay. It would never come out. Okay. There is a moment in Black Books while on the clock that he demands his sort of clerk to bring him his ice lulley. And it's just a bottle of wine that is frozen, that he cracks the glass off of and just like licks the frozen like bottle of wine. And that's what we're dealing with here in Black Books. And it's just, yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:20 But like. It sounds, you know, when you said Bookshop as a comfort recommendation, I'm thinking like straight cozy core. Like, this is a perfect winter recommendation. No, this is like everything you've ever wanted to say to someone who was annoyed you. There's a high fidelity but bookstore. What if your bookstore didn't need to make money? Yeah. Basically.
Starting point is 00:10:38 I think we're finding that out in real time, unfortunately. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. But yeah, the whole like get your petulis stink out of my store moment from high fidelity, that's this entire sort of series. For my personal escape at the end of the night, maybe five milligrams of melatonin later. Yeah, yeah. Maybe a glass of red wine, whatever.
Starting point is 00:10:58 It's an activity, not a show. It's slunking around tubi. Are you pure tubi or are you ever freebie? No, it's tubey. It's specifically just like lying down, laptop open. Yeah. And just sort of seeing what spaghetti westerns they have and seeing what 80s TV I've never heard of. And then all of a sudden you're pretty tired and you haven't watched anything.
Starting point is 00:11:20 Yeah. But it's kind of like channel flipping on your laptop. How much are you bouncing around versus committing to one Western? An obscene amount. Like watching five minutes of something, be like, oh, yeah, I'm going to try something else. Yeah. And so my two watch list on Tubeb is so much longer than my watched list on Tubey. But it's a really fun activity.
Starting point is 00:11:43 And it's kind of like it almost gives you this sensation of like cable in the 90s with like public access and like weird channels that you're like, why do I have this channel? but it hasn't been taken over by Big Pharma. Like, you're really in, like, having this weird, uh, nostalgic feeling of surfing around. Yeah. Without having to choose everything. You know what I mean? Because like, part of the sensation that we have now is everything's curated.
Starting point is 00:12:10 You have your list of things. Right. And you have to watch. But this is like, huh. Is this surfer? Also a sheriff? I mean, like, Laurenza Lomas. What are you up to now?
Starting point is 00:12:21 No, that's amazing. No, but I think that, yeah, this is, this is what we talk about when we, lament like bookstores going away or record shops going. I didn't do it. Don't look at me. I kind of think you did. Or record shots going away or radio stores going away is like the joy of the discovery, not the like sort of planned, curated, playlists is right in front of you. And I know we're like curating playlists for people right now. It's exactly what we're doing. But I love that you are doing an actual.
Starting point is 00:12:44 You also, you're not necessarily recommending that people get inebriated to do this, but I think it does help a little bit of short. It wouldn't hurt. You do this on YouTube though sometimes too, right? Yeah, absolutely. You're a YouTube spunker. All those are dangerous rabbit holes. But I do think there's a weird psychological relief of this isn't on my watch list, as you're saying. I had no plans to watch this.
Starting point is 00:13:03 I didn't even know what it was until five minutes ago. Nobody ever needs my opinion on this. This is why I've started sometimes watching Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman. No one needs my opinion on Dr. Quinn Medicine woman. I disagree. You put it out in the world. Dr. Quinn rewatch podcast coming soon. We're looking for it.
Starting point is 00:13:20 Rob, what's your personal escape? I went with one that kind of caught me by surprise this year. which was I really loved X-Men 97 so much more than I thought I would. And for me, when I go home for the holidays or really anytime I'm in my parents' house, I regress into a younger version of myself, into a little gremlin. And what better way to channel your inner gremlin than going up to your room, slamming the door and watching cartoons? And it's also like the perfect balance of substantial enough that you want to know what happens, but not so heavy that it's ever going to bother you, what does.
Starting point is 00:13:49 Okay. Earlier you were speaking on behalf of eight-year-olds, were you a gremlin child? Like, were you a scamp? We all? Are you, like, Is there a non-Gremlin child? Yeah, I have an older brother. Okay. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:00 Did he, like, terrorize you? And that's why you were like, I want to go upstairs and watch. It's my time of gambit. I would say mild to medium in the range of sibling torment. Okay. But I think there is just something about being in any kind of family space, especially if you have siblings,
Starting point is 00:14:16 where you fall back into those dynamics. Absolutely. Yeah. And so this one for me, like, again, a show that you probably grew up watching if you are of a certain age, that was reintroduced to you this year, and maybe you could show your kids if that's of interest to you,
Starting point is 00:14:27 or maybe it's just for you. Yeah. Rob, can I persuade you now or perhaps in the future to give us a rendition of the X-Men animated theme song? Is that something you can do on command? Only for money.
Starting point is 00:14:39 I mean, anyone, I think, again, of a certain age, is just straight streaming, like, Twitch streaming? I'd love to see the coins going on. Yeah, just the whole thing. I just want the validation of the coins at the bank in order to do the full thing. Well, if you comment enough coins in the comment section of this YouTube channel, then we get the full.
Starting point is 00:14:57 I might write lyrics to it if you really want to. Like, we can do that. So we've kind of started with something that you could do collectively. We went to something that's your own personal escape. Now I think we're going to move into a place where your brain is not really functioning at all, which is your background watch. Right. And this is different from you and e-braided clicking around on TV.
Starting point is 00:15:16 That's active present-tintz viewing. No, that requires a lot of, like, you know, participation. It's true. It's true. Turn this on. leave the room come back in, leave the room, come back in. This is, it's on in the background while you're cooking. It's whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:15:29 So, Joe, what's your background watch? And I do want to acknowledge that Rob called this category the Ullog, which I think is like a great. It is hard for me to do that with anything with the plot because I get sucked in. So when I do this, I go to YouTube and I pick, once again, my love and affection for the UK, I pick a British panel show. So would you lie to me as one that I watch a lot? lot or never mind the buzzcocks or uh taskmaster which is like a little bit more involved in your classic panel show but that one is just like you can't be walking in and out for task
Starting point is 00:16:01 well i watch i rewatch old seasons of taskmaster ones i've seen before so you can just like come back and you're like they're doing what with a potato i know these crazy kids in their watermel taskmaster i think is one of the best things that has ever existed and i think if uh yeah you probably should not watch it the first time in the background but i just sort of like or i'll put on a playlist Speaking of, you're sort of like slunking around a playlist of like the best task master tasks or something like that. Or like Would You Lie to Me Clip Shows? Or
Starting point is 00:16:28 Big Fat Quiz of the Year, which comes out at the end of the year is one of my very favorite sort of things to rewatch. I'll rewatch old seasons of. So yeah. I think this is a great pick. I mean, this is tapping into that same like YouTube algorithm surfing. Like I am constantly fed these panel shows because they are so
Starting point is 00:16:44 clickable and watchable and just so perfect to throw on for a couple of nights. This wasn't on my list, but I would say anytime you find yourself in a Graham Norton rabbit hole where you're just like watching Ryan Gosling appearances and you're just like this guy's really funny you're like what did Olivia Coleman say now my background watch I have two I cheated so for the YouTube to your point Rob I have a channel I like to go to called go four by four which is essentially hours and hours of a guy camping in a really kidded out Jeep in the Australian Outback yep and it's ASMR it's like
Starting point is 00:17:20 him cooking, starting a fire, hanging out with his dog, chopping wood, doing whatever. And he's got like three, four-K cameras that are set up around his campground. And it's just like two hours. And you'll walk in and I'm like,
Starting point is 00:17:32 oh my God, it's raining. And then you walk out and it's like, oh, now it's stopped raining. He's walking with his dog. And it's just like, it's honestly mesmerizing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:40 So that's obviously the YouTube one. For a narrative show. I have questions. Okay. Let's go. First, do you have any desire to do this style of camping yourself. None. You can't even drive stick.
Starting point is 00:17:53 Do you consider yourself handy in any way? Could you start a fire if I gave you the correct implements to do it? If you gave me lighter fluid and a lighter. Flint and steel. Do you feel like you've learned some things from watching this guy do this? No, but it's kind of like I like watching him have a dog. I don't want a dog kind of thing. You're a cat has a little.
Starting point is 00:18:10 Everything about it is very, very calming and pleasing and centering, but I don't want to be doing anything. It is calming and pleasing and centering. It is also like, like macho. Yeah, but I like lots of lady campers. Not even this is a guy
Starting point is 00:18:26 and his dog. No, but it's not like Taylor Sheridan. It's like, it's like a guy who's just camping. It's called the wild. It's not coded in any way. He's not also like watching Lion and his swan.
Starting point is 00:18:37 I don't think so, but like I don't know. Sometimes I, like I watch highly feminized things sometimes as a sort of like, that's nice over there. I don't want to do that. But like that's interesting. Like that level of baking or sorry,
Starting point is 00:18:49 I think people really like watching process-oriented stuff in general. But yeah, that's interesting. I didn't really think of it as like masculine. But another one that I can't really decide how it's coded is I love having Copenhagen cowboy on in the background. This is Nicholas
Starting point is 00:19:05 Wendon-Refins' 2023, 22 Netflix series about a strange woman who is upsetting the Copenhagen underground, the mafia in Copenhagen. And it is the neon fever dream, synth score, everything. I have no idea what really happens in this show.
Starting point is 00:19:29 I don't want to spoil it for anybody. It's still on Netflix. It's one of the last, like, let's just give Nicholas Wenning Ref in a blank check, man. That's cool. He's like the kind of guy who's going to bring eyeballs in. It brought my eyeballs and the three people I made watch it. But as vibes because of the visuals and the music, completely.
Starting point is 00:19:47 Awesome to have one in the background. Also one that if we're talking about drifting in and out of the room, you would walk in and be like, what the fuck did I miss? Yeah, but you would say what the fuck did I miss? Oh, completely watching it the whole time. That's why it's the perfect sensation. I think it's a great pick for exactly that reason. Yeah, the drive score is like one of my all time. Do you want to not feel anything and everything all at once?
Starting point is 00:20:07 Yeah. Yes. Put it on. That's the exact zone. I also pick something about feeling everything and nothing. And you guys said me up perfectly. A lot of buzzwords going around. For one, being located on the proper side of the pond via Joe.
Starting point is 00:20:19 You mentioned the baking. When I think about a Yolog show, I'm thinking about what I want when I'm icing cookies, when I'm baking a cake. So let's just get super literal with it and go the Great British Baking show on Netflix, a classic for a reason. But if you drifted out over time,
Starting point is 00:20:34 I have to say we've really nailed down the host pairing now. Noel Fielding always, like, one of the best parts of the show. Alison Hammond has joined him lately. And we've shaken up some pretty crucial things. Gone our Mexican week, the woeful Mexican week, and the most cursed pronunciation of guacamole
Starting point is 00:20:50 I have ever heard in my entire life. We've replaced it with, you know, the warm spices of autumn week. We've got the kits of 70s week. It really works for me. And I think it's a perfect kind of background show because it doesn't, the process is nice if you want to sit down and watch it.
Starting point is 00:21:05 But it's also a great results only show if you just want to kind of drift in and out, zoom ahead to the end, see what happens. You know what I don't understand is they have, and this is, you know, we've really hit how important British culture is. I think it's okay. They can hear some constructive criticism.
Starting point is 00:21:20 Sure. They come up with different words for all sorts of stuff. Why can't they just come up with something new for guacamole? Because they can't say it. Because they can't say it. So like why not call it like cato spread, you know, or something? Like you use that something wild. Can I ask an earnest question that was raised by this episode?
Starting point is 00:21:35 Have avocados made it over there? I honestly don't. When I've had avocados over there, I'm just like, this is a, this is a, like, honestly a crime against God in nature. This ain't it. They're like avonays. Yeah. Um, uh, Rob, I have a question for you, because I have sort of dropped off on, um, the great British baking show, uh, or bakeoff as they call it across the pond. Um, where are we on the level of taking Paul seriously? Because I feel like we swung perilously too far into the coveted handshake. And I was like, no, the point of the show is to make fun of Paul Hollywood. And I feel like Allison being there would be helpful for that. Completely. Yeah, yeah. One, they've scaled back the handshakes. Great. The, the, the power creep of the, the, the power creep of the,
Starting point is 00:22:17 the handshake was too strong. They proliferated out of. This is like a Mason's thing? What was happening? It was like a, oh, that'll do peg from Paul Hollywood. It was the handshake. Look, who among us is not above a little pat on the head once in a while? Like, I get the appeal.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Yeah. But they've scaled it back and most importantly, literally everyone on the show makes fun of Paul now. So we're in a perfect place. I'm back. I'm back in. The universe is in balance. Okay, great. Okay, so we've gotten background watch.
Starting point is 00:22:43 Let's talk a little bit about counter programming. This is your category. Well, sometimes you want something that's affirming of what you're experiencing or even just the climate you're in or whatever. And sometimes you want to just truly escape. Right. So this would be something that is like set in a different place, different climate, different planet, what have you. It's flexible. But what's your counter programming idea?
Starting point is 00:23:07 It's pretty basic bitch, but I feel like it's an important thing for all generations to watch. And it is the television show lost. Have you done a podcast? this previously. It doesn't matter, but it's set on, it's filmed in Hawaii. So if you want like tropical island vibes, you're watching Lost. If you want there's something spooky, uki, weird going on, you're watching Lost. If you want, spoiler, time travel, you're watching lost. So, uh, I didn't, you know, I thought about doing Doctor Who for this or something like that, but like basically you're saying, I don't want to be here. Yes. I want to be somewhere else.
Starting point is 00:23:36 Yeah. Um, yeah, and get lost. Okay. I love that. I am going to just jump right on the back of that with a show that would not exist for not for Lost. This is called the Wilds. It was on Amazon a few years ago. Did two seasons, got canceled. The first season is excellent. The second season also exists. Yeah, the second season is also exists, but probably deviated from what made the first season great.
Starting point is 00:23:59 The first season is basically about a group of young women who are on a wellness retreat or going to like kind of like a camp for like juvenile delinquents sort of. And they are in a plane crash onto an island and they need to. survive. So it's got a little bit of the Lord of the Fly's Lost thing. There are lots of twists like Lost. But it's beautiful scenery, really fun performances, very twisty plot. And because it's not six seasons, really by the end of the first season, you're like, got it. You know what I mean? Like, I think I understand. And this is one of those lost to the streaming avalanche of 400 shows a year. And it dropped right around the same time as Yellow Jackets. And I feel like Yellow Jackets just ate
Starting point is 00:24:42 It's lunch. It's if you like yellow jackets or if you want yellow jackets but less cannibalism. Yeah. Wild. Just a smidge less cannibalism. Just a smidge. And it's exotic and warm climate and, you know, yeah. So I thought that would be a fun one to highlight.
Starting point is 00:24:59 I'm going to keep it a little exotic, but twist it up, which is Netflix's Ripley. Makes me feel like I'm in a different universe a lot of times. Like you're transported to the Amalfi Coast. Great. Love it. Yeah. We love this for everybody. What if we made it perverse and weird and made you uncomfortable all the time while you're there and shot it in the most gorgeous black and white you're going to see on television?
Starting point is 00:25:19 Like, I just did not know what to expect from Andrew Scott as Tom Ripley. Yeah. You've probably seen The Talton Miss Ripley. You've maybe read the books. I think this interpretation is so different and so alienating and makes me so uncomfortable to watch that it is transport. Maybe not in the way that you always want, but you were going to feel anywhere but here. I definitely always want it. It's my favorite show in 2024 by far.
Starting point is 00:25:41 I love that Chris is like, let's pick an escape-ish show. And we were all like, beautiful Ocean Vistas, but make it terrifying. Make it really uncomfortable. That's our speed. Yeah, there you go. Okay, so one of the phenomenons of the last few years is that we have so many shows that even the idea of binging is kind of hard for people. I think at least especially if you're a very active TV watcher because you're always
Starting point is 00:26:04 starting new stuff. You're always trying to find what's the cool new show I should be watching, what's everybody talking about? and it kind of killed, I think, the behavior of maybe what was like six years ago where it was like, ooh, I found a new show that I like, I'm going to binge it over the weekend or whatever. Now, part of the problem is a lot of shows don't finish or a lot of shows are too many seasons. So it's hard to get them, like, it's hard to throw your arms around them. So we were thinking, what's a doable binge for your holiday break?
Starting point is 00:26:31 Something you can start and finish something that will be either you get caught up to date on something that's still running or completely do. So Joe, what's your doable binge for the holidays? I'm thrilled you asked me. And even though this show is not American and is not British, so let's all celebrate. Norm was lost. This is on Paramount, home of all of your favorite shows, Chris. Can I guess? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:52 Colin from Accounts. It is Colin from Accounts. The second season of which has dropped on Paramount. And Colin from Accounts, if you've never seen, is delightful Australian show. It is about a pair of strangers who are brought together over a dog who, sort of is, gets in an accident and is injured sort of in front of them and though they don't, it's okay, Rob. How injured are we talking?
Starting point is 00:27:16 Neat. But the dog is living a really happy life. Are you sure? How sure? Yes. Yeah. The dog, like, the dog is hampered by what has happened to him, but is now has two loving co-owners essentially.
Starting point is 00:27:31 And they don't know each other. Largely for comic release. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. But, like, it is doted on. So, like, is definitely living a better life than it was when it did not have anyone doting on it. I'll accept this. And it just brings these two, like an older man and a younger woman together romantically, but also just, like, in friendship and their friendship groups and all that sort of stuff.
Starting point is 00:27:50 And it's just like a really fun, funny show. So, yeah. That's awesome. Collin counts. Two seasons, eight episodes each, I think. So it's like, you know, a half hour episodes. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:01 So that's a pretty easy. Yeah, it's a weekend. This would be a long weekend watch, but you could do it. My pick for doable binge is Blue Lights, which is on Britbox and you can get that on Amazon. It's very grim. It's about young police officers in Belfast, a contemporary show. It has such good bones. So it basically does humor, heart, tragedy, but also serialized storytelling, but also episodic storytelling.
Starting point is 00:28:30 And it just, there's just literally, it's like pound for pound, a perfect show for what it's trying to do. And to see these cops sort of like interacting with what is still a very divided city and also like a very different style of policing. But then there's also like there's a military aspect to it. There's an underworld like crime aspect to it. There's these people's love lives and family lives and diets are all part of it. But it's just like six episodes each season, two seasons. So you can probably do that if you really got into it in a week about. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:04 And it's really, really great. Something I love about that show is that's like, that's one of those classic UK shows where it's like all of the actors are actors you recognize from being bit parts and other things. And this is the kind of show that's going to give them a main role to chew on. And it's really good. I have another one that it may strain the definition of what you can start and finish during the break, unless your break is a little longer. Unless you're a gremlin child who's been said who's hiding out in your room. Who's to say? But this is a great one for visiting with family because I guarantee whoever you're going to stay with has Apple TV Plus, as all parents do.
Starting point is 00:29:34 you should catch up on slow horses, which we talked about in prestige this season, and the sheer number of people who reached out to me as we were covering it in my life to say, I was not on this show, we just blurred through the first three seasons to catch up.
Starting point is 00:29:48 It is so easily digestible. Like, I think the combination of the, like the propulsion of the plot, six episode seasons, reasonable runtimes, Gary Oldman through and through, just keeping things light and breezy. It's a perfect binge show.
Starting point is 00:30:00 Yeah, it's the starter pack for people who have not watched UK TV before. Like when someone I know just recently had a kid and was like, we're basically like awake all the time and we need something to watch. I was just like, slow horses is now the first thing I recommend to anyone asking anything. Like it can kind of satisfy so many different people in so many different ways. And because they're so digestible and you can kind of be like, oh my God, I watch three seasons
Starting point is 00:30:28 of a TV show in like two weeks. It's so, it gives you a real sense of accomplishment. Part of it also is you're just sort of. like, I just want to hear the Mc Jagger theme song again. Another. Give me another. And as far as the entryway into British TV goes, like, the regional accents are accessible. It's a gateway into what can be a very elaborate and bewildering, an often subtitled world in my
Starting point is 00:30:49 experience. Joe, what's your New Year's resolution? So this could be taken a bunch of different ways. It could be like, what did you want to improve? What did you miss that you want to make up for? So what's your New Year's resolution for this one? Well, in terms of process and approach, I have nothing to improve. upon I'm perfection. No, I'm just kidding. I have a lot to work on. She has wisdom. She is grace.
Starting point is 00:31:09 I have a lot to work on. She does not watch Landman. There's two things. One, a show that I'm going to make it my mission and try to get everyone to watch. And also a classic show that I have never seen that I would like to commit here and now to watching this year. Rob, what is that show? The Sopranos? Have you heard of it? I will be watching The Sopranos in 2025. Are you like me where you've like seen the Sopranos but not watched it one to the end? I'll tell you this. We're recording this on a day with the New York Times Connections category was Religious Sopranos and I aced it quickly. Like I am aware of the Sopranos. I know what happened. Why don't you? It was the yellow. It was, I'm really aware of it. I have seen at least one episode. I just never did it. I just never did it either. It came on at a time where I think I was like not staying home to watch TV. And then for whatever reason, I just never went one to the end.
Starting point is 00:32:09 I don't think anybody is going to be happy about this. But maybe I'll join you in this resolution. I also have not seen The Supranos. Are you kidding me, Rob? Are we allowed to be on this channel? This is such a safe space right now. I think this is going to cut to like color bars and like we're never going to be back on. Just block this part out.
Starting point is 00:32:24 I feel like that's the thing is that like this is strange because like if you, when people around the office talk about it, I know what they're talking about. And I don't mean like I kind of know. I mean like, oh yeah, I've seen. that episode or that scene or whatever, but it's so strange. I just have never been like I'm doing a top to bottom rewatch. It does feel like an overwhelming kind of undertaking
Starting point is 00:32:44 to just start fresh at, I am old and watched, to start a new show that I know is going to be. You speak for eight-year-olds and your old and wash, Rob? I can't have it all. I am the common man and common boy.
Starting point is 00:32:56 But I think the undertaking of what you're getting into in terms of episode count and how intense and emotional the arcs are going to be, It feels like a lot to just be like, okay, it's Wednesday. I'm going to start the Sopranos. Guys, this is the beauty of live television.
Starting point is 00:33:09 I think we've all resolved to watch the Sopranos in 2025. What else will possibly be going on in 2025 to take our attention? My other part of my resolution is it is my goal to get everyone I care about and people I've never met to watch interview with a vampire because I genuinely think it's one of the best shows currently on. Guess what? That's my New Year's resolution. Is it? Yeah. Look at that.
Starting point is 00:33:28 Because you watched the premiere, right? I did. I was like, that's cool. Yeah. There's my two New Year's resolutions were to watch interview with a vampire and to catch up on Pichenko. Yes. Which I just didn't watch the second season. Great.
Starting point is 00:33:40 And it was because it came out, I think, during like a particularly heavy time. And I was like, I'll just save it for later. So those are my two. I'm along the same lines, which is I spent literal years Googling. When does my brilliant friend season four drop? Yes. And now it is here. Dude, what's wrong with us?
Starting point is 00:33:57 What is wrong with us? I'm like, I can't take it. And so my resolution is, I want to get emotionally ready to the point where I know this season is going to probably rip me apart. And I want to get ready to the point where I can actually sit down and watch it. Okay. If you haven't watched my brilliant friend, I literally can't recommend it highly enough. As far as, like, big personal relationship epics go.
Starting point is 00:34:18 Like, it's one of the best friendships ever put on the page as far as some people will tell you, I wouldn't because I haven't read the books and will not read novels. But on screen. Wait, wait. So you don't read Ferranti, but you're a big. I'm a frante head by association. He doesn't read fiction. Don't read fiction. Really?
Starting point is 00:34:34 Yes. I'm here in the real world, Chris. I'm on the front lines. We have processed this. We have gone through this. Should we even have jobs? I don't read novels or watch as a sopranos. Well, luckily, this isn't a novel recommendation show.
Starting point is 00:34:50 I can recommend to you, my brilliant friend, the TV product on Max. Don't worry. We know our way around YouTube. So that's what really much is in the sandwich. but I don't watch the Sabrina's. Please listen to my TV podcast. Please listen to my TV podcast. It's called The Watch.
Starting point is 00:35:04 It's on Spotify or wherever you get podcasts. You should also listen to Joe and Rob on the Prestige TV podcast. We have a very, very, very busy season coming up, but we're going to try our best to make YouTube-only content for you guys. Some videos. I'm going to try and do one about all the Taylor Sheridan shows and what they mean to me. Are you going to do it from Sean Fennesse's solo? No, it starts right now.
Starting point is 00:35:27 Right. Right. No, we're going to do a lot of different content for the YouTube channel. We're going to live stream all of us watching every single episode of The Sopranos. That's right. Yeah, yeah. That's right. So like, subscribe, share with your friends, and listen to our pods on Spotify or wherever you get your podcast.
Starting point is 00:35:42 I'm Chris. This is Joe. This is Rob. We'll talk to you soon. Happy holidays. Cheers.

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