Unashamed with the Robertson Family - Ep 980 | Dallas Jenkins Fends Off the Devil While Making His New Movie
Episode Date: October 24, 2024Jase, Missy, and Zach get a behind-the-scenes peek into “The Chosen" director Dallas Jenkins’ upcoming Christmas movie. Dallas opens up about what it’s like to tell a Jesus-centered story to a m...ostly secular audience. Missy's own experiences lead her to ask Dallas and his wife, Amanda, if it felt like Satan tried to interfere in this project, and Jase felt nostalgic to the point of tears watching the story of a church embracing a poor, rambunctious family. Get your early-access tickets to see the movie and an exclusive sneak peek at “The Chosen” season 5 on November 2 at https://bestchristmaspageantever.movie! -- Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I am unashamed. What about you?
I'm a little bit intimidated, Jason.
We walked into this room. This is a much more feminine touch than we're used to.
I mean, this is...
Well, yeah.
I mean, this is beautiful.
I think that's you, your inner cell saying we could do better at our studio.
I think we can do better.
I've been to your studio?
I couldn't believe your studio. I couldn't believe that was a studio.
I'm like, this is the garage.
This is the garage. When do we go in and see it?
Because you guys are walking in.
Yeah.
Is this an upgrade?
Yeah.
Oh, for sure.
No, I've been, because I've been to the studio and it's like, I know you guys have resources.
Just like, I know Phil wants to keep the same house he's lived in for 60 years.
But the studio, it's a podcast.
It is.
It's a popular podcast.
You know, you can have like, you know, what do you call it?
Insulation in the building, all that kind of stuff.
So we're at Annie Downs' as that sounds fun podcast offices.
So thanks for letting us.
And you're listening and you're like, who are these other people in the room?
If you're watching, you know.
But if you're not watching, you're listening to Dallas and Amanda Jenkins in, thank you guys for coming on from The Chosen, which that's also intimidating, because you've already started directing in here before we even started, which is great.
Yeah, before we started rolling, I'm like, all right, you want to scoot in, the lighting, can you adjust the camera a little bit?
Directing is the nice story. He's bossing.
That's great. That's awesome.
Yeah, that's what you can start to think of when we're parenting at home.
He's just directing.
Yeah. I'm doing what God made me to do.
And we're in Nashville.
Yes.
It's crazy.
So this is unashamed on the road.
Unashamed on the road.
Jason and Zach are here.
Obviously, Phil did not make the trip.
I'm not Phil, by the way.
I'm not Phil.
Or Al.
Al's gone as well.
But we're glad to be here.
So Jason, tell the audience, what are we doing in Nashville with the Jenkins family?
Yeah, I think sometimes in life there's like, how did this happen?
And the details are kind of cool.
And so, and it worked out perfectly.
because my dad Phil had a procedure yesterday down on his back.
So that's why our listeners and viewers haven't seen him for a while.
But all stories have said that that went well.
So we'll see.
We're in Nashville so I haven't been able to visit.
But I think he's doing good.
But what happened was I believe Missy you somehow got a hold of the movie that is coming out.
I'm going to let you say the name so I don't screw it.
Oh, well, Kingdom Story Company.
who is the marketing company for this movie, correct?
Yeah, the one of production companies.
Okay, so they reached out to me to ask me if they could send me a link to watch it
and then help partner in marketing it.
And when, of course, I mean, it's Dallas's stuff.
So I'm like, yes, absolutely.
Because we've known each other for now a couple years.
That's true, but I want to just say in full transparency,
because we're friends, when Missy said that in her discussion,
she said, oh, and Jace is in too.
And I said, hang on.
I did that.
I volunteered.
I said, I'm going to need to watch this movie.
I rolled my eyes like, it's Dallas.
And I said, true, but it's hard to hit a home run every time.
I was like, I need to watch.
It is, actually.
Yes.
I agree with you.
I would be more like you.
I'm super like, I love that last thing.
Prove yourself again.
I'm a little more.
That's what I did.
And look, I'm going to have to admit, well, we started watching
the movie and for my personality and what I do I'm an outdoors person and I was thinking well this is a
kind of a kid's movie in the first 10 minutes I was really like I'm not sure where this is going
because I obviously hadn't read the book I hadn't heard of the book and so I was like Dallas made a
kid's movie this is this is kind of weird yeah it's called the best christmas page never I don't know if we've
yeah so it's a book that's been out for about 50 years and but yeah the movie's called the best
Christmas pageant ever.
And so yeah,
go ahead.
So if you've been living
in under a bridge
or in the wilderness
and you hadn't heard
of that.
So I was kind of
questioning at first,
but as I
journeyed through the movie
and as it was ending,
which I was kind of wiping
a few tears from my eyes.
Can we get to the ending?
Can I tell you how it started
with us?
Okay.
So I know I'm leaning into this
microphone.
Is that what we're doing?
I think yeah,
just laying out.
Okay.
By the way,
we have four mics,
five people
and we can make this work.
Jason and I are sharing, so we'll see how that goes.
So we're about 10 minutes here.
We're watching on our laptop is what we're doing.
And so I'm watching it and I'm hearing how it's going.
It's done a little differently, you know, to me.
Yeah, the opening comes in with like a kind of a quick montage and it's narration.
It's a narration.
So it's from a child's perspective, but you hear an adult voice.
And so I'm trying to figure out where is this going.
I don't quite understand what's happening.
and about 10 minutes into it,
I reached over and I pushed pause
and I said, I got it.
A Christmas story.
Yeah.
And Jace, he said, what?
I don't know what you're talking.
I said, a Christmas story.
You know, Ralphie, Pig Bunny, Fuzzy ears.
Yeah, the movie, yeah.
And he said, I don't know what you're talking about.
And I said, leg lamp.
You know, the leg with the lamp and the tongue stuck to the tree.
And he said, I literally have no idea what you're talking about.
I've never seen that.
That needs to be the next thing you do.
You need to get out of the wilderness.
Like there's a lot of good stuff going on inside.
But once I got that, Dallas, I was all in.
I knew exactly what it was.
I loved it from start to finish.
And then now you can talk about how they felt at the end.
Well, I just, I loved it.
I thought it was a clever way to introduce Jesus.
And it's a little deeper movie after you watch it as far as how you think about, you know,
what just happened.
And so I think I immediately picked up my phone and I sent you a text.
Yeah, no, I just saw your movie and you were very positive about it.
But you got a little teary?
I did.
And that's not normal for me, although it's happening a lot more often these days.
So we just did our Mia Mu fundraiser, so it's hard not to have a few tearful moments in that.
But I thought it was fantastic.
And so I was telling you whatever we need to do, which is why we're here today,
because is it the, what are we calling this tonight?
The grand premiere?
No, this is a Nashville screening special,
kind of a lot of local musicians,
kind of a VIP screening that we're doing.
And so we invited you guys.
It's cool that Kingdom reached out to you.
I didn't even know that.
Because like I would have said to you guys,
hey, I'd love for you to watch the movie
and maybe let's talk about it.
But I didn't want to necessarily just ask for a favor.
But then you called and you go, hey, Kingdom sent me the movie.
I can ask for the favor.
I was like, Kingdom. I could have asked them myself. We're friends. So we're, yeah, so you guys came into Nashville. I said, look, we're going to be here. What if we recorded the podcast while we're together? And so it worked out nicely. But the thing that I, I, the reason I knew that you would like it, even though on the surface, it's a Christmas family movie that is funny and whatnot, but it might not be the kind of thing you normally would be drawn to. But it is what this is about is kids, you know, the basic story is the Herdmans are the worst kids in the
world. Everyone in town hates them because they're bullies and they're mean and they're,
they smoke cigars, you know, which scandalizes everybody. And so it's told like you mentioned
from a kid's perspective, but it's an adult telling the story of, it's similar to a Christmas
story where the adult is telling the story, but remembering that their, her life as a kid.
And so you're seeing the herdmans through, through these childlike eyes and everything's exaggerated.
But as a parent, you start to see below the surface that, oh, these are kids.
with absentee parents.
These are kids who haven't heard the Christmas story before.
These six kids go to church because they hear their snacks.
They end up taking over the church's big town Christmas pageant
and take over all the roles.
They're playing Mary and Joseph.
And everyone thinks it's going to be a disaster.
And at first it is.
But because these kids haven't heard the story before,
they're asking all these questions.
And the people who've heard it 100 times who are taking it for granted
are actually learning a little bit more about the story because of this outside.
And through their eyes,
through the eyes of kiddos that are the least of these.
That's what we love about it.
It's actually who Jesus came for.
And I know you guys have such a heart for kids and for kids who are maybe in poverty
or kids who are,
I mean, the kids like how you grew up in some ways, you know.
Well, I was fixed to say, Dallas, we were those kids.
There's only been a few movies that kind of capture that.
I mean, one of them there was a, I think Kevin Costner did a movie called The War.
And my wife and I, you know, went and saw it.
And she was just like, oh, yeah, it was okay.
And I was like over here.
Needing therapy after me.
Yeah, needing therapy.
And she's like, what's wrong?
I was like, that was my childhood.
And she was like, what?
Right.
I was like, that was pretty much it.
Like, where are the parents?
Where are they at?
That's why you weren't watching a Christmas movie.
You guys were watching Friday the 13th.
Well, I was a Halloween.
I'd go to visit.
That's the kind of movie.
I've said this.
Every year for Christmas, here's what my parents did.
Now, this is post-
Jesus. But, you know, it was bumpy the first few years. I remember, I think I was nine or
10, we could look up when this movie came out, but we went to the dollar theater as a family
for Christmas, and we watched Charles Bronson in Death Wish. My goodness. My parents wouldn't even
let me read about those movies. That's your next film right there. Death Wish 7. And it was,
then the reason I remember it so vividly, because every time there was like nudity or something,
my mom would just slap me.
to cover up my eyes.
And like all this profanity, she's like,
don't you ever say that.
Threatening you, hitting you.
She's narrating the movie of what not.
Yeah, but they've been sanctified.
The family's quite a bit since the early days.
Well, it is.
But it's funny, but that's just the truth.
That's what there's like family night Christmas movie.
But my dad, he didn't want to watch a regular Christmas movie.
Right.
So that's why you missed out on some of these classics like a Christmas story.
How did you get?
So had you read the book?
Like how did the whole thing?
How did you get?
Because you've been doing The Chosen, which has been wildly successful.
Yeah.
I mean, I just told you guys out in the hallway.
I mean, you guys broke something when you started that.
That's good.
It needed to be broke.
But how do you go from that to how did you find out about this?
This came first.
So I'll just tell the story because it's very much a God story.
But 20 years ago, Amanda brought the book home from Pottery Barn.
It was just on the-
Pottery Barn kids where I would go and just play with my kids and not ever buy anything
because that's who we were at that time.
But there was like a $3 book at the counter.
I was like, something I can afford.
and I remembered reading it growing up.
Yeah, as a kid.
So I read it in public school.
And then I'd seen there was a TV movie back in the early 80s
with Loretta Swett from MASH.
Yeah.
Was like played the mom who helps run the pageant.
And so I remembered it as a kid,
but I didn't remember a whole lot about it.
So we bring the book home.
We're going to read it to our kids.
So I start reading and it has a similar start to the movie.
You know, it's right away, the first sentence of the book is,
the Herdmans were absolutely the worst kids in the history of the world.
They lied, they stole, they smoked,
cigars, even the girls. So I'm starting to chuckle and I'm laughing in the first couple
chapters. Well, then fairly early on, I get emotional just from these little hints that she would
drop. Like one of the lines in the movie that I thought also, and from the book that I thought
you'd appreciate is at one point, the herdman show up to church for the first time, and they
sit in Sunday school and they're asking all these questions and they're confused. And at one point,
they hear about the pageant. She's like, what's a pageant? She's like, it's a play.
Because what's it about? And Beth says, it's about Jesus. And image.
Gene goes,
uh,
everything here is.
And I thought,
how great for a church to be known for everything here being about Jesus.
So she's saying it from an annoyed perspective.
And I'm getting emotional.
And so then we get to the end of the book,
the last chapter.
I can't read it.
I am crying so hard.
Tears are streaming on my face.
Our little kids were so confused.
Like what's going on?
Some men and goes,
give me the book.
I'll read it because you can do it.
I was like,
I'm going to take it.
She takes it.
She starts weeping.
I take it back from her.
So we're trading.
Are the Christmas truth?
Like sentence by sentence.
Yeah. So you go your time now.
Because the, you know, I won't give spoilers away, but the ending just really ties so much together.
And you see the church learns from the herdmans because of their outsider perspective.
And that's something that I know you've experienced personally is that a lot of times, growing up in poverty or growing up as an outcast brings you closer to the heart of the gospel, the heart of the Christmas story than even those of us in our more suburban.
American visual of it and how much we've taken the story for granted. So the church learns from them,
but of course they give the church something that these kids need, which is Jesus and, of course,
this community. Well, and just on that note, the church had been putting on the pageant every year
for decades, and it was pristine, and everything was cleaned up. And Mary was in, like, all white.
And it was like the halo around baby Jesus. And what the herdmans do is they come in and they
actually show what a real staple would be like. And what,
what they perceived a good gift for Jesus to actually be.
And you're like, they're like, gold frankincense and mur.
What kind of kid wants that?
You know, why don't we give them a better gift?
So it's all those types of questions that were really moving to me.
What would it be like for these kids to have not heard the story before?
And in a minute, because there's a significant connection to the chosen,
my desire to tell stories of Jesus, but from a more authentic perspective,
down the kind of, you know, stained glass window painting statue perspective we've had.
So anyway, so we're weeping at the end of the book.
It's so moving.
And I'm thinking, this story is so unique in that it's genuinely funny, genuinely legitimately well told.
And yet a very much of Jesus story so well told that they're reading this book in public schools.
Like, and yet this is a Jesus story.
This is incredible because it's, I mean, it is on the, I mean, you've seen it.
I mean, it's, we don't shy away from what the gospel is and what the.
Christmas story is, but it just doesn't feel like a churchy, you know, movie that you have to,
that you're doing his homework. So anyway, I close a book and I said, I have to make this movie.
I am the only one who can do this because I love kids. I love troubled kids. The humor of it,
the pathos of it is my style, the Christmas of it all. I mean, I'm a huge, I love Christmas.
My favorite movie of all time is It's a Wonderful Life. So that's a movie with Jimmy Stewart.
Came out.
Come inside.
I'll put that on the list.
Surely you've heard of it's a wonderful life.
I've heard of it.
Oh, my goodness.
You're just killing me.
He's an outlaw, Josie Wells, and he's like, outlaw Josie Wells.
That's his language.
That's his word.
The Robertsons are known as like true Americana, and yet you haven't seen it's a wonderful life.
I think it's been.
Because they're experiencing Americana, their outside experience.
Yeah, we're just observing it.
We're watching them.
I'm saying this, but when we were kids and we, you know, my dad came to Christ, everything became outdoors.
and we just, we hunted, we fish.
Like, TV was boring.
I mean, there's nothing here that's appealing to me.
So that's why I missed.
So I could say the exact same thing you just said,
but just reverse the terms.
Outside was so boring.
Inside, TV is where the action was at.
And that's why you guys are good friends.
You're like opposites.
We're opposite.
And that's why we watched Doug Dynasty
is to watch other people experience the outdoors
while I was in an air-conditioned room
watching it on television.
So anyway,
I said, so I googled to find out who had the rights to this as a movie.
And I tracked down these guys who had been friends with the author.
She's no longer with us.
But they held the rights and I gave them this hard pitch about how I was born to make this movie.
I'm like, well, we've already got it set up at this big studio.
And there's another director attached, a big time director.
And so I was just so upset.
I'm like, so I wrote down in my calendar on my computer and my phone, this phrase,
pray for pageant
and I just said it for once a week
once a week it would pop up
and I would pray that God
you know I tried to do like
the please let your will be done
and I'll be happy with whatever your will is
but please sabotage everything
those special you do this
and may you send your angels to prevent
anyone else from directing this movie
but I will be done and I'll rejoice
regardless of whether I have
all that other
all that other Christian answer
so yeah so
and I would tell a man
to sometimes, you know, let's pray for a Christmas pageant.
And every year we'd read it and get more and more intent on the fact that I need to do this,
right?
So I would check in every year and I would sometimes just Google, you know,
is there any news on the movie?
And nothing would happen with it for a while.
So a very long story short, a couple times we got really close.
Like the rights would elapse with the studio and the original rights holders would say,
oh yeah, now they're free and available.
And I'm like, okay, please.
Like, I have to make this.
Yeah.
And they would, finally, about five years ago, I had this big opportunity because they're like,
all right, now we're really, we've been frustrated with the studio system.
They had a meeting with me.
And then a couple weeks later, I get on the phone and they say, we're going to go with
the big studio and this different director.
And when I told Amanda, and I said, it's over.
I said, they said, no.
And I said, this new studio is apparently very excited about it.
So I go back to my office and I sit down and literally pops up on the screen, pray for page.
Wow.
And I said, I can't do it anymore.
and I went to delete it.
And I literally, I can remember it as clear as day.
I might even get emotional remembering this because I just remember, like, my,
I literally moved the mouse to click the delete.
And I felt, God, just go, not yet.
Don't do that.
And it's just one of those handful of times in my life where I really felt, it felt clear,
you know?
Like, this isn't me.
I was like, okay.
And so I went, all right, I'll pray for pageants.
And I did the prayer again.
This time I'm really frustrated.
I'm like, don't get my hopes up anymore.
then Amanda comes into my office and goes,
I was just kind of praying and frustrated and talking to God,
and I felt God just put really straight clear on my heart.
It's not over.
I'm like, oh, crap, don't tell me that.
Again, I'm going to keep getting my hopes up.
And I don't want to keep getting disappointed.
So a couple years late go by, and this is just a few years ago now,
I check in again.
I go out to Dallas, time for my annual check-in.
You know, what's the rights situation?
He goes, funny, you should check in.
A week ago, the studio forgot to.
renew the rights and now they're back with us.
Oh, wow.
And they really want to renew them, but we've been frustrated that's been taken so long.
And he goes, just a couple days ago, my mom called me out of the blue, she's in her 70s,
and she said, have you heard of this show called The Chosen?
And he goes, well, that's funny, you should say that.
The creator of the show is always bugging me about getting the rights to Chris's Padd
and she goes, you better give him the right.
He's the only one who can make this movie.
Are you kidding me?
You got to watch this show.
And so he's like, I gotta listen to my mom.
And so he watched the show and loves.
it and then said let's talk and so this conversation we're having right now that you've
watched the best christmas page never movie that i got a chance to make that we've been working on
into thinking about and praying over and envisioning for 20 years is really a i don't like you used
word use a term dream come true all the time but it's like a calling fulfilled like i i just knew that i knew
that i knew that this story i had to tell now when i started the chosen of course best christ's
of Pagin ever is still in the back of my mind, but to answer your original question was,
that came first.
That was the, whenever people would ask me, what's the one story you really want to tell or the
one movie you want to make?
I'd be like, best Christmas pageant ever.
The Chosen became something that, of course.
Paid away for it.
Yeah.
Right.
Like, now, I think it's accomplished a little bit more than just set up for the Christmas Pagin.
But I'm like, we sometimes think of this, the Chosen is the thing that got us the best
Christmas Pagin ever.
But the through line of both of these projects is telling.
the stories of Jesus, but from unique
perspectives that you haven't considered
before. And so
then you see the story in
this new fresh way.
Seeing it for what it really was,
which is sacrifice
and humility and
poverty and
outcasts. I mean, I think I'm not
going to give the best part of the
movie away, but every movie has a
salvation scene or
whatever the scene is where there's the
success that comes out of. The success that comes out of
it. In that moment, what it was, if I were to put it in one word, it was a sincere experience
with Christ. It's so difficult to do films about Christ because you don't want to come
across as preaching at someone. But I felt like when I watched it that moment, it was the
sincerity that drew the church in. Yeah. It was a sincere silence. There was a silence in that
part of the movie that I thought, where is this going? And it settled in. And I got real emotional.
And I look over at Jace and he's wiping his tears, you know. So it is about Christ. And it's,
it makes it very personal, which is what you want with the Lord. Well, what I was thinking in that
moment, because I didn't share this with you, but when I was watching that, so when my dad came to
Christ and then we eventually followed. We're living in a community where it's hard to describe
these people. People that live around my dad. Some people call them river rats. They're not red.
They're not red. They're not red. It's more than redneck. It's more than redneck. It's deeper into the
woods. And there's an element of danger that follows all that. But what flooded my mind was all
those experiences, because we literally loved our neighbors as followers of Jesus, and I'm pretty sure
everyone down there has heard the story of Jesus at some point. Well, some of these people we would
invite, and they would come to church with us. And it was so amazing just in that moment of the
movie, how all of these little memories flooded, because I remember, you know, we had a guest
family with us. They're hearing people seeing, and you're thinking, I'm wondering what they're thinking.
and leaned over and was a guy who, you know, was about my age.
And he had tears in his eyes, which is probably the first time he's cried without, you know, somebody trying to hurt him.
Right.
And I said, what, what are you, are you all right, you know?
And he had our bulletin.
Back then we had church bulletins.
I'm not sure we still do.
He had a bulletin in his hand, and he pointed to a phrase.
And it said, everyone is invited.
Yes.
And it just, it was like.
some potluck somewhere.
And I was like, why is that moving you so much?
He was like, well, every time we'd ever been to church, I mean, they would be scared
that everyone might come.
And it just showed in his heart how divisive their family had been about how you look,
how much money you have, or what color your skin is.
I was just really moved by that of all the things that I thought would capture someone,
but sometimes in churches, that comes across.
Well, what if the world does show up?
Right.
It's a spirit of, but we're not sure we want to deal with this problem.
And all the messiness that comes with it.
The thing I love about the film and what I love about what you're saying is this idea of they,
the Little Herdman Group didn't get cleaned up before they came in, right?
And no doubt, like, as you're sharing about whatever death movie you're watching right after every death wish.
A pretty good movie, but watch the movie.
It's a good movie.
Just not for six-year-olds.
Not for six-year-olds.
It's not a child.
But what a picture of how patient God is with us.
We come and we don't automatically get everything in order.
And yet it was Christians.
We put that on other people.
We're like, get cleaned up before you walk in or immediately get cleaned up the moment that you come to Jesus.
There's a lot of layers that have that God patiently works through with us and is still working through with us decades later.
So I love that about the movie that you see this little group and that they come in and that they can.
capture the heart of Jesus, but they're not.
It's come as you are.
Yeah, exactly.
Come as you are, just as you are.
That's the gospel.
We sometimes alter.
There's no doubt.
And my parents seem to have a deeper appreciation of that sense of where they came from.
And so we would invite these cast of characters every week into their home.
And there's a famous story of this story.
One of the women that came who had some mental issues, you know, and my parents loved her.
One night after we had the meal, they would call these pigouts.
And so, and my dad said, if you feed them, they'll come.
And then he would share Jesus.
And it actually works.
Which is true.
It happens in a movie, too.
The kids come because they hear their snacks of church.
No doubt.
So these are all the memories that it was flooding.
But one night's a famous story that we've told many times.
But my mom always and my grandma before her, because we had so many pets and that would just roam the,
and people would come down to this area and dump out dogs.
and my parents would take them in.
And so there's just so many animals.
So my mom would have a big skillet
where she would put the scraps and grease and all these things.
And once it got full,
she would let the dogs just tear off into it in the yard.
Well, that woman who was there, no one knew this,
but she fixed her plate from that pot.
And as she's eating it,
which is a week's worth of debris that are left over.
She asked my mom, I'd like to get this recipe from me.
Even the scraps were guys.
You know, and you're like, what a perspective here.
This woman has not been living half the hog here, you know.
Well, there's a moment in the film that I think also you can relate to is when the dad,
this is one of the things I'm proud of with the film too, and this is from the book,
but the mom is kind of the main character.
It's a love letter in many ways to stay-at-home moms and volunteer.
church. But we also don't make the dad kind of the dumb, bumbling guy off to the side.
Thank you so much. At one point, well, at one point he says to the family, he knows the
Herdmans are bad, but he also, because he's on the charitable works committee at the church,
and he's the one who helps deliver things to families in need, he also says, you know what,
family, keep talking about the Herbmans, I think you need to see something. And they join him
to deliver a Christmas ham to the Herdmans. And in that moment, that's the moment that causes the
mom and the daughter to kind of shift perspective when they see how the kids react to a ham.
Yeah.
The kids are so excited and so happy.
Oh my gosh, it's the ham man when he shows up.
And they've never seen the Hurdman's smile or act.
But they're like, oh my gosh, for us, for a single ham, this is how they're reacting.
It's similar to the story you just told.
And she also, he says, where is your mom home?
And she says, oh, not when the son's up.
and they're realizing, okay, this is now, this is opening us up.
There's a why to their behavior, you know.
But that's in all your projects.
That's the reason they turn out good is these subtleties and details that you don't have to over-explain the obvious.
Right.
I think that was really appealing because we all get it.
And even in the kids, which is an embellished kind of version as it starts off, which I had to like, I was like, Missy.
I was like, no.
It's a heightened reality.
It's coming from their perspective.
It's what you call it.
High Darylety kid kind of does that.
When I was talking to the production designer and the costumer and the director of photography
and even the actors, I said this is the kid's version of this story, like a Christmas
story, which again, you haven't seen one of the things that you probably recognize, Missy,
is it's the same thing with that show, The Wonder Years, because it's from a kid's perspective,
things are just a little bit exaggerated, you know, and everything's a little bigger.
And that is a bit of a heightened reality, which I think makes the,
than the real moments, the ones that are less heightened, even more impactful.
I'm getting it.
I was wondering how the sausage was made in that.
And I was wondering how you got these kids?
I mean, how many takes does it take?
Because when I, you know, I'm not a TV guy until we were thrust into TV.
But I remember every time we had little kids or pets, there was a joke among the production people.
Never work with kids or pets, yeah.
Never do this.
So I was just wondering, I mean, that was quite, that had to be.
quite the challenge. Yeah, it was very challenging. And you've also got limited time because of child labor
laws. Yeah. Crazy child labor laws that keep us from abusing these children. Yeah. But you only get
them for a certain amount of time and you can't go into overtime. They use the term pumpkin,
which is matching your shirt. Thank you. But they say the kid pumpkins at X time. And pumpkin is like
a reference to Cinderella. At this point, the kid turns into pumpkin. You cannot go into overtime.
You can't pay more money to work them. They're gone. So we have. We have.
this X amount of time and I've got a bunch of kids working with and all with varying degrees
of ADHD and all the other things.
Yeah, of course.
And there are kids that want to be actors, which means mom was looking for an outlet.
Yeah.
So they were great and the parents were great.
It all went well, but it is a, it is hurting cats.
I mean, the cliche is true.
So I'm a little bit equipped for that.
I'm a parent of four kids and have an adopted son.
We've done a lot of work in special needs ministry,
which really helps you learn how to corral difficult to corral people.
So I was able to do it, but it still doesn't take away from the urgency and the stress of it.
And then they've got to hit their mark.
They've got to say what they're supposed to say.
So yeah, so it was a lot.
And we'd have a couple of scenes that were longer and the kids are sitting there for that whole time.
So it wasn't easy.
But another thing, because I know you like some of these behind the scenes insights,
sometimes the kids are going to be gone before the scenes.
scenes done filming. And so you have to shoot their coverage, which is when the camera's on them,
shoot them first. And then Judy Greer, who plays the mom and Lauren Graham, from Gilmore Girls
in Parenthood, she plays the narrator and she shows up at the end of the movie. Sometimes they'd have
to act with a piece of tape, you know, stuck to the side of the camera. And they're, they're responding
to someone who's reading the kids' lines off screen because you couldn't have the kids there. So
that was a really, that was a challenge as well. But even in those scenes,
where the kids are, some of the kids are crying or there's an emotional scene like those kids,
it was real tears. I mean, some of these kids were really great.
Great actors.
Yeah, well, that's why I asked the question because I was really fascinated. I was like, did they
buy into this story or is it just, you know, God's presence in this? A lot of, yeah, both of
both of both of, and they really loved each other and they really and Dallas is really,
really wonderful with kids. And so that created an environment that was just actually enjoyable.
It wasn't just like he was fun and they were, they understood what they were doing.
He always makes sure his people understand the point of what you're doing and what are we saying here.
And so they just, it was a great experience.
Well, that leads to the chosen too.
That's how we met is because of the chosen.
You guys were going to have me on the podcast to talk about it because your dad is,
that was actually a big fan of it.
Oh, yeah.
And he doesn't normally watch TV.
But we ended up being on the podcast together and then became friends.
and but speaking of the bringing up the chosen because your question is about also what do the actors
think being part of something that is so clearly gospel-centric right and some people have asked
like what is it like the what is they what do they believe and the majority of our cast on the
chosen aren't believers or at least not traditional believers majority of the cast on the
christmas on best christopager ever same thing but when when there's a story that's well
told. And there's clearly also, when it comes to especially these gospel stories, where there's
this almost transcendent hope, transcend. There's something beyond just what we're experiencing
in the flesh that I think really speaks to people, regardless of whether you know exactly who you
are talking about. When the Bible, when the message of the gospels hits or when there's a Bible story
that's accurately told, I think God does something. And so we see all the time, the actors will be stirred
emotionally, even if they don't necessarily, it's not something they typically practice,
but it overwhelms them.
And sometimes they even tell me, I don't know what happened.
I was just here like, I know that.
I'm like, exactly.
I'm like, I know exactly what happened.
I had just to back up a little bit, which was part of the reason I loved making this film,
is that like we said, it's a little bit of a, it's kind of a, I don't want to say Trojan
horse, because it's pretty overt, but it's a way to tell the story of Jesus in a way that
a lot of people will enjoy, not just Christian.
refers to a classic Greek story.
I actually think he...
I saw Troy.
Okay.
Okay, that was that.
But the Trojan horse comes in and it looks like just a big wooden horse,
but there's an army inside of it, right?
Well, when I first saw that movie, I thought, no, this is a cool story.
This is a good one.
I like this one.
That's a good idea for awards.
Yeah, okay, here's the point.
When we were casting this movie with all these little kids and I was watching tape after tape after tape.
I tend to be one of the first layers before it.
She's like a co-casting director.
She really does.
She has a women, I think, especially have really good instincts for kind of the character beneath the surface.
And so she, there's a lot.
That's why I think most casting directors are women.
They just sometimes I'll be like, he's a really good actor.
Kind of get a read on.
And she'll be like, he doesn't quite inhabit that persona.
And I'm like, okay, I wouldn't have really picked up on that as much.
So I was watching so much tape of so many kids.
And the words that I grew up with.
as a Christian, like simple things like frankincense or a name like Herod, where you know those
words were being butchered and mispronounce. And I remember, you know, I'm watching tape
in like a business way, right? Like a detached way where I'm just evaluating talent. And all of a
sudden I realize it's been video after video after video of kids not knowing these words.
And when a kid is reading on a camera, when they're doing it. And when a kid is reading on a camera,
when they're doing an audition on a camera,
they're reading with a parent.
They're reading with an adult who also does not know that word.
And I just realized how many people have not actually heard this Christmas story.
Like we're doing this story because we want people to know the Christmas story.
But these littles get to hear the Christmas story.
Like the first ones to hear it were the ones acting.
And the Chosen is often like that too,
where we get to talk about Bible stories really quite freely with people who've never heard them
because it's the nature of the work.
But it was really sad to me how many people hadn't heard the Christmas story,
or at least enough to know those really common words to us.
We take for granted.
And that's what the movie is.
And these kids in the first rehearsal.
I just started crying.
I had to like take a minute.
I was crying while I was trying to get through tape.
Well, I think the film's going to, I think it's going to be,
you're going to get a lot of people show up just because it's Christmas time,
the name of the band.
They're not going to realize.
Well, that's what she means by Trojan Horse.
Is it Lionsgate, Big Hollywood Studio, releasing this in,
and theaters all over the country.
And it just looks like a classic Christmas theatrical movie.
Yeah.
And it is.
And I didn't make it overly ponderous or anything like that, like maybe a typical church
movie.
But it's funny and it's got all the things that, I mean, people haven't batted an eye.
We've had lots of nonbelievers who've watched it and just love the story.
But yeah, there's something transcendent about the true story.
I love the perspective.
I mean, of course, I kind of related to the mom and the church part of it for sure.
and the light bulb going off of forget what we're trying to do and focus on these children,
which is kind of what we came from this past weekend with our Miamu Fun Day is what it's called,
is forget the schedule, forget what we normally do, and focus on the children and on the families
and what their needs are at the moment.
So we've kind of were focused on trying to focus, if that makes sense.
There's a part in the movie that was unexpected to me in the library, when the older sisters finally,
dealing with some of the younger siblings not wanting to do it and they're they're kind of
complaining and they're not happy about this they're really here just for the snacks.
And she's like, you need to read about their characters you're playing.
She's exploring the story because she wants to understand that.
That moment where she said, you, y'all aren't getting it.
We can become someone else for just a little period of time.
And that just went all over me because I think, I think because of the of the Miamu
kids. I'm going to get choked up about that. We do all the time. I'm with you. I'm right with you
right with you right now. But just, you know, the children in our own lives, Karina and our baby
that we have, AK, you know, I hope one day AK does not have to say that.
Yeah. I just want to play someone else just for a period of time. We pray all the time. His life is
going to be great. It's going to be redeemed. Corina has already lived through that, you know,
being an orphan from Nicaragua. And I think about her.
childhood. Like, did she, how many times did she say that? I wish I could have been someone else for
at least a period of time. So this, this movie is not just for the regular church-going folks who
want to kind of pay attention for a little while to some needy children over the holiday season.
Yeah. This is for people who are living a life that they wish they could become someone else.
And they can through Christ. And that's what this is about.
Not for a little life, not just for just a small part of their life.
That's really well said.
I'm going to steal that.
That's why I said there were deeper things.
And even in Jesus' ministry, what I liked is you subtly made fun of a lot of church functions and just missing the power of who Jesus is.
I mean, you just do the same thing over and over.
Think about what American churches do.
We do the same thing every week.
We do the same thing every Christmas.
and it, but it's almost sometimes turns into a bit of a yawner.
And so there was some subtle, you know, darts being thrown at kind of how this loses its purpose.
And yet, finding your passion in really who Jesus is, the real authentic Jesus.
Well, I have a question I wanted to ask all about that because, you know, the funny parts of the movie.
I mean, I was laughing out loud.
I love, I'm easily entertained in a movie.
I just am, you know.
So I'm laughing.
Jason's not really, but he's not a laugh out loud kind of guy, you know, so I'm laughing a lot.
But when the lady, you know, has the injury and breaks her leg and she can't direct for this year.
And you think, if you're living in that moment and that woman, I'm sure, thought, look what Satan is trying to do.
He's trying to run this Christmas pageant.
Something good is going to happen because Satan is working so hard.
And, you know, we talked about this previously on the podcast where we talked about the Mia Me Fund.
But Satan really, really worked this past weekend in trying to stop what was happening during our weekend.
My question to you is, even in the chosen, even in Christmas pageant and even in your own personal lives with the rise of the fame and all the glory, basically, that people are shoving your way, when have you seen Satan say, oh, yeah, you think you.
all that and a bag of chips, I'm going to stop you.
And then God comes right in and paves the way again.
Have you seen that?
How many times?
Do you have any examples?
With mind-numbing regularity, it has been constant.
And in fact, that was one of the things that we valued about our friendship when we first got to know you,
is that you experienced a similar kind of hyper-fueled, like from zero to 60 in terms of
Take off of the show.
Whether you want to call it success or just being well known or whatever or or and
also impact.
It's hard to even describe what it is.
Spiritual impact.
It's just like a lightning bolt.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're not expecting.
And so then you go, all right, well, the, the, the tough thing about this is how fast it's
growing and we're just kind of, we're, there are our head spinning and, and, and all this.
But the good news is we're now a little bit more successful.
We can, we can relax a little bit.
We can be content with what we've got.
got, this is what we've been seeking for a long time, is to have a, be able to, you know,
make a living off of this career.
And certainly that's going to happen now because of the success of the show.
And then you look back of the last five years ago, these have been the hardest five
years of our life without a close second, more.
And you think even when you have security in your job or even financially, and you go,
that should at least provide a little bit of stability.
Oh, it has been the opposite.
I mean, that last year has been the hardest year of our life.
Yeah.
So you can talk about where Satan has come after us the most.
Well, I mean, we're dealing with chronic illness.
In the last year, that's been the thing with one of our kids.
And I'm not blaming Satan for that.
I don't know the source of that.
Sometimes that comes, you know, either way,
ultimately comes from the hand of God.
So it's something that he's allowing.
But what we're seeing then in that is like just that in your ear all the time
about doubting God's goodness, right?
Doubting his love for your kid,
doubt, feeling like we don't even have margin for this. Like, I am going from specialist to
specialist and I don't even have time. I've got books due. We've got places we're supposed
and yet. I mean, you guys know this as well as anyone with your daughter, where you just go,
this is the, when someone says, how can we pray for you or what? You're like, yeah, just for us,
it's, for us, it's Maya. Pray for our kid. How much time do you have? Well, exactly. When people come
out and they're like, how's Mia? And like, even if you've just been through a surgery or some weird,
diagnosis or we're going in a different direction. But I'm like, how am I going to say this in one
sentence? I know. And it's like, I know, I'm always just a little like, I don't know how to
keep sharing, but hand me the Bible, because this is a Bible podcast. Okay. But keep going. But
so what we see is is really in the inner ears. Also, we had some weird spiritual stuff happening
inside our house with multiple kids where you're just like, I'm not one to call things to
every say, it's a demon, but there were some, there have been some weird things. So overt
attacks and then this quiet like if he can get us to doubt, right? If he can get us to be
just even distracted, that's, I feel like we almost for each other now, I know we've got mostly
adult kids, but now between even our kids and each other, it's like, wait a second, that seems
like that's not a voice you should be listening to.
We had come to Jesus meetings a lot in our living room with everyone, like a check-in.
We had daily check-ins, Jason and I did during that dynasty, but we would check in on our kids
every few days come to Jesus meeting because we felt something was off.
Something's off.
And I think the most common and most common and most affronts, I think the most important, you know,
effective attack would be marriage.
Just getting at each other.
There are times where I've been like, I am uniquely irritated with him.
Right?
And then I'm like, oh.
Uniquely irritated.
That's a new term.
Yeah.
Right.
But it's those times where I'm like, I am being like,
you're being like, poked.
Uniquely irritated.
Rick the Jenkins.
Yeah.
Where you just know you're being poked.
You're being like, like, there are, because I can be annoyed all by myself.
But like, sometimes it's just, it's just this next level of, of stirring things up all
the time stirring things up to
to actually divide that partnership.
Yeah.
Well, Exodus 14 is the story of the parting of the Red Sea.
And about four or five years ago,
we were in a moment in the show
that we've experienced constantly,
to your point of,
we've got nowhere to go.
We've done everything we're supposed to do.
We're in the right spirit.
We're surrendering God on it.
Our ego's not in the way.
But every decision we've made to get us to this point,
has run out now of space and we have nothing left.
Like if we're going to move forward,
the only way we to move forward is if God does something, right?
And in that case, it was a literal we can't shoot.
If this doesn't happen, we can't even shoot the next.
So I said to her, I go, we just were told no.
This is similar to our Christmas pageant story.
We just got told no, it's not going to happen.
And this one always, when God has put something on her heart,
to her credit, nothing's going to get her off that plane.
She knows that she knows.
and so we had been in this in this one story
I'll just very quickly share
we were looking for a location to film season two
and every location was
it was during COVID everything was shutting down
we had the opportunity for this big set in Utah
and God had really laid it on my heart
when I was on the set like you're
some of the things you film here are going to change the world
and we're going to do this is this is a place
this is a special place and I really felt that
and then when they said no you can't
use it. I'm like, I guess I was wrong. I guess I didn't hear properly. I guess God's voice,
I mixed it up with my own. But Amanda had had the same passion and the same impression from the
Lord. And she goes, ah, no. I'm like, they just said no. She goes, yeah, I just think that's God
putting you at the edge of the Red Sea so that when the water's part, you know it's him.
And I'm like, quit saying that because that's going to get, I'm getting my hopes up. Literally two
days later, it's a long story, but like things that never would have normally happen, people
who weren't even in their office felt this impression from God to check in and then certain
them.
So in control of the location.
Two days later, it's like it's a yes and we're filming at this location.
So we start referring to them as Red Sea moments.
And here's what's so interesting about the story of the parting of the Red Sea.
So Exodus 14, then Lord said to Moses, tell the Israelites to turn back and in camp near,
and then he gives all these terms that I don't know how to pronounce a pie-hara.
growth between migdal and the sea. And he says that again, they are to encamp by the sea.
And so he's used the word encamp twice now in two verses. So he's not saying, I want you to go
there and hold on. He's saying, I want you to go there and actually set up tents. You're going to be
there for a bit. And you're going to be there. And all the words that you're not reading, it was,
it was, look, it was geographical location. It was really specific. Like, their names of
geographical locations. And here's why. And it's the worst place to encamp. He says,
Pharaoh will think the Israelites are wandering around the land in confusion hemmed in by a desert.
They are hemmed in by a desert and the sea is the only thing there and there's nowhere else to go.
So you're stuck.
And he told him to hang there, right?
In camp.
You know what camping is like.
I'm not a camper.
And I will harden.
And here's the other thing.
I will harden Pharaoh's heart and he will pursue them.
So again, he's going, I'm going to do this thing that's really bad.
I'm going to make a bad guy even worse, and he's going to pursue you.
And then he says this for the first time, and he says this three times in this chapter,
but I will gain glory for myself through Pharaoh and all his army,
and the Egyptians will know that I am the Lord.
So the story continues, when the king of Egypt was told, the people have fled,
Pharaoh changes mind, gets all these chariots, all these horsemen, all these people are going to go chase them down.
He's like, how could we let them go?
We couldn't have done this.
So now they're pursuing.
As Pharaoh approached, this is verse 10, the Israelites,
looked up and there were the Egyptians marching after them.
They were terrified and cried out to the Lord.
They said to Moses, was it because there were no graves in Egypt that you brought us to the
desert to die?
And there's more, it's a famous story of when they were like, we would have rather been
enslaved than, and we told you this at the time, Moses, and now you're here.
So Moses says, do not be afraid, stand firm and you will see the deliverance.
The Lord will bring you today.
And I love this sentence.
The Egyptians you see today, you will never see again.
It's like such a
PG version
of saying like
they're going to die
because you're seeing them now
you will not see them again
this was a legitimate death wish
Yes yes thank you
Always bring it back to his childhood
This is why you saw that movie
It was for the Lord
The Lord, there's the other thing
The Lord will fight for you
You need only to be still
And another version that I normally read ESV
Is you only need to be silent
I'm not good at that
She's not good at that
we solve problems.
He's like, you just sit there in camp and be silent or be still.
Watching the problems descend upon you.
So then, yeah.
So then God says to Moses, raise your staff, stretch out your hand over the sea, divide the water,
so that the Israelites can go through the sea on dry ground.
I will harden the hearts of the Egyptians.
Again, he's like, I'm going to do this.
Yeah.
I'm not just going to allow it.
I'm actually going to make them make a decision that is very threatening and dangerous.
I will harden the hearts of the Egyptians so they will go in after them.
And I will gain glory.
through Pharaoh and all his army
the Egyptians will know that I am the Lord
and then he says again when I gain glory
just in case Moses missed it the first two times
the Egyptians will know that I'm the Lord
when I gain glory through Pharaoh
his cherries and his horsemen
and that's the other interesting phrase
when he says gain glory
he says through Pharaoh
I'm gonna gain glory through the bad thing
through the hard thing
so then the angel of the Lord
who'd been traveling in front of them
and then you of course know the story
they stretch the hand out of the sea
the water's part they get through
the Egyptians come through
get completely drowned
And it ends with, the chapter ends with, when the Israelites saw the great power, the Lord
displayed against the Egyptians, the people feared the Lord and put their trust in him and in Moses,
his servant.
It's a final little nugget that I gained from that story.
He doesn't call Moses his leader.
Because I'm the guy who's been tasked to tell the story of the chosen.
I was a guy who's tasked to tell the story the best Christmas page ever.
And that's a leadership position.
And this chapter of this book telling about the most famous,
leader in history, Moses, besides other than Jesus, of course, Moses. And he's referred to as a
servant. Servant. Yeah. And so that, this is a very long answer to your question, original question,
but this is a Bible podcast. But we see that over and over and over again to a point where sometimes
we'll know it's a God thing because of how weird it is. Because of how awful it is. Like, why did you,
like, there was this one day, it's another long story that I've told before, but where the weather was supposed
to be bad. We only had one day to shoot. The weather was supposed to be bad. Amanda felt the
oppression from the Lord, we were going to be fine. And we get to the day of filming, and the fog is so
thick we can't see 20 feet in front of our face. And so for eight hours, we couldn't film.
And to the point where we literally got in our cars, and as we were driving out of the parking
lot, and as we had just decided, we had to cancel these scenes, and my writers and I were trying
to figure out how to rewrite them and figure them out in a different location, literally when gust comes,
the fog lifts in less than five minutes.
You're an outdoorsman.
You probably haven't seen that too often.
It takes time to dissipate.
Fog lifts.
And not only do we end up getting to shoot everything that we normally would take 12 hours,
we got it done in four, because as the sun was setting, it was reflecting off of the fog,
which extended the day four so we could get everything we needed.
Now, you can say, why does that even need to happen?
Why didn't God just, like, make it easy from day one?
This is a Jesus project.
It's his project.
He wants it to succeed.
Why put the fog there in the first place?
Or if there's going to be fog there from non-spiritual reasons,
why not just give us a good day?
And I truly believe it's this Red Sea thing.
He tells you to encamp.
He tells you to see.
He could have just not even had the Egyptians pursue the Israelites.
Why not just release them?
Let them go.
And they'll praise God that they're free.
He constantly throughout the book of Exodus,
put these hardened people's hearts,
put resistance in front.
of them, gave them giants to conquer, put walls up that they had to use a miracle,
rely on a miracle to save, to be saved. That happens constantly. For his glory. He will gain glory.
It's so moving to hear, but so hard to live out. You should do a project on Moses.
That's a really good point, Jace.
Okay. So starts here. What a great say.
So what a coincidence. We just announced to the world that we were doing a Moses show. But that's one of the
reasons why I'm so drawn to tell that story after the chosen.
Oh, well, that's just where God's had us.
Because God has had us so many times as, again, underqualified participants,
leaders slash servants of something that's grown so much bigger than you're capable of.
And so when Moses was like, yeah, but I'm not a good speaker.
And God's like, well, I'll do this for you.
So I know how to direct projects.
But there is a limit to how good I am.
And the chosen has far exceeded that limit.
it is much better than I am and it's so clear and it's easy to be humble.
It's a really good material.
Yeah.
Well, I've got good news.
I've got good news that when we go over this far without making a break, that means it's a great podcast.
The bad news is that we are over.
So we're way over.
But we're going to air the whole thing because I think this was such a great conversation.
Oh, good.
So if you're listing, you're getting a bonus five or six minutes here.
But so where can we send people our audience if they want to find out about the film?
Is there a website to go to now?
Well, just, I mean, it's like in any other movie.
You just look at your local theater.
So it comes out officially November 8th.
So that's Friday.
But this Saturday, November 2nd, is the early access opportunity.
So if you want, and there's also the opportunity, I believe you can get, I don't want to, there's a possibility.
I don't want to, because I don't know this 100%, but I'm pretty sure you get.
your kids tickets are free.
Yeah.
I think they told me that too.
So whatever,
I don't have the...
It's like a buy one for yourself.
We'll put it in the show notes.
If you're listening or watching,
look in the show notes,
look in the description,
we'll have the information
of how you can get free tickets for your kids.
But if that's not the case anymore...
I have five kids.
Yeah, no.
It's just,
oh, I think it's buy one,
get one free.
So it's like,
I don't think there's five parents of these kids.
So I think your first two kids are free.
The rest are afterwards.
But come as you are.
Come as you are.
Yeah, yeah.
Everyone is invited.
Everyone's invited.
Everyone's invited.
But at the early access screenings, if you come a week in advance, you get to see actually
a season five chosen scene that you can't see anywhere else.
It's a scene from the Last Supper, actually.
It's only available in front of Best Christmas Pagion ever on November 2nd.
After that, you'll have to wait until season five comes down a long.
And actually, don't put it off until Christmas because we might not make it to Christmas if we don't
have a couple good opening.
weekends. So it's that's the nature of the film world is you have to do well in the theaters to
stay in the theaters. So we actually eventually Thanksgiving comes and Wicked comes out and then
Moana 2 and all these other families. A lot of good stuff. We just, we got to show up there.
Well, I mean, Unashamed Nation is headed to a sea. They're going to head to the sea and be
steel. We might have to buy out one of our local theaters again.
Yeah. Yeah. Honestly, I was going to say this. Like I know like, because we did the blind,
And I was saying, if you want to see more films like this, go watch it.
But the truth is, is this film stands on its own.
Like, it's not a charity.
Yeah, I really, I always say that too.
Like, don't do it out of guilt just because I'm asking you to.
It's so good.
And how many films can you take your kids to these days?
I'm just excited to have a film I can take my entire family to that we can do with.
Well, that's something that's actually unique when you think of, and if you want to call this a faith-based movie, I suppose it is because, you know, I'm a Jesus guy.
But when you think of faith-based films, there's actually, I can't really think of any that are
family films.
Yeah.
Like they're clean.
You can take your kids to them, but they're not,
even the blind,
you know,
it's like,
that's not necessarily one that like an eight-year-old is going to necessarily
appreciate.
And even some of the more successful ones,
but this is one that really like,
this is a family experience movie.
It's a,
it hopefully becomes a Christmas class.
Lots to talk about,
lots of,
lots of conversation around the table afterwards.
Yeah.
It really is a lot to,
to digest,
hopefully.
And that's why I was,
for coming to our new studio.
The best on a shamed,
recording in history ever so we're the most comfortable
break the internet here make sure you share this episode as well for
on all your social media platforms if you're listening so thank you guys
thanks guys so good to see you we gotta get meeting like this
hug hug thanks for listening to the unashamed podcast help us out by rating us on
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