FLICK'N'BEANS

EP 76: EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE | Hot Dog Fingers, Butt Plugs and Super Swole Pinkies

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Good Morning!!!

This week we took a ride through the Multiverse with Everything Everywhere All At Once. Omg it was one hell of a journey and so so so very wonderfully weird. Just be glad that in THIS universe we don't all have floppy hot dog fingers.

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Bridget:

Good morning.

Wendy:

Good morning.

Bridget:

I'm Bridget.

Wendy:

And I'm Wendy.

Bridget:

And this is Flickin Beads. Okay, so you made us Folgers. And I brought everything. Bagels.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

And there's a reason.

Wendy:

Because we watched everything everywhere all at once.

Bridget:

We both craved everything.

Wendy:

Bagels after.

Bridget:

With good reason.

Wendy:

Yes.

Bridget:

This movie was incredible.

Wendy:

It was wild.

Bridget:

It was so wild.

Wendy:

It was so funny and so clever.

Bridget:

Yeah. Metaphysical and multiverse. But then they called each one a verse.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

Yeah. That was weird. When they were making the movie to keep it a secret of the plot and everything. Before the trailer was released, IMDb synopsis said it's about a 55 year old Chinese woman trying to finish her taxes. And in essence, it is.

Wendy:

It is that. Yeah.

Bridget:

It's just so much more.

Wendy:

Doesn't it feel like the. This is an extreme version of like the plot of being a human and being pulled in so many different directions at once.

Bridget:

Oh, for real.

Wendy:

You can just identify so much with all of the characters and all of their different quirks, regrets, and like, wondering of which path they could have taken.

Bridget:

Right. It reminds me of Lost to they do diverge into a life that didn't include the plane crash.

Wendy:

Okay.

Bridget:

The movie actually has different titles in Chinese speaking places. Okay. One of them is in an instant, the entire universe. Okay. Mystical Woman Warrior Saves the Universe's Mystical Woman Warrior F**** up the universe. And in Taiwan, it's either mom's multiple universes or so f****** many universes.

Wendy:

I mean, I like so f****** many universes.

Bridget:

I do too.

Wendy:

Because that is what it is. It's a wild ride. The ones that they chose to focus in on were hilarious. Like the hot dog hands. Of course. You texted me that and I was.

Bridget:

Like, oh my God. Yeah, we'll get there.

Wendy:

Yeah, it's crazy.

Bridget:

Well, the movie starts out, she's okay, so you get a sense of her stress. Her husband, who seems kind of silly and wimpy, he's going around putting googly eyes on everything.

Wendy:

Yeah, I loved that.

Bridget:

But I get it that his name was Waymond.

Wendy:

I know. Doesn't that sound almost like a not PC nickname for a Chinese person?

Bridget:

It sure does. And you're like Waymond and her name is Evelyn. This googly, I think comes back around later, which is pretty awesome. She's got a contentious relationship. Relationship with her daughter Joy comes home with her girlfriend, but Evelyn's embarrassed or shamed to tell her elderly father.

Wendy:

A big part of it is she is a little bit ashamed. It's a different generation, of course, but it's also, like, I just don't want to deal with the fallout. So many other things are going on. Can we just keep the peace until it gets to the party? So you're like, I don't want to have this big discussion about how your granddaughter's gay right now. Can we just move past that? And so I get. And then it obviously, like, hurts her daughter's feelings when she introduces her as her friend, which I totally get. I don't think the mom was trying to be a jerk about it. Maybe a little.

Bridget:

Okay, tell me this. When Joy storms out, I guess leaving her girlfriend behind. Right.

Wendy:

That was weird.

Bridget:

And Evelyn comes out and says, I have something to say to you. And she said, I think you're getting fat.

Wendy:

Oh, my God. Yeah, that part was bad. What was that? I know they made a joke of it towards the end again, but. Yeah, because she had made a joke to her girl, to her girlfriend, that if her mom says something like, you look like you're fat, that means she cares. And then she goes and says that to her and she's just like, mom, come on.

Bridget:

You just don't say those words.

Wendy:

No. And it's your daughter. And. Yeah, she wasn't even fat.

Bridget:

No, not at all.

Wendy:

Not that. Not that that matters. I mean, it does, I guess, a little. Because he's not even fat. Then you're not really worried about her health.

Bridget:

Can we talk about Jamie Lee Curtis's character?

Wendy:

Yes, that.

Bridget:

I was blindsided when she came on. Her character, Deidra, is based on a stock photo of an IRS worker and it show an IRS worker with an identical hairstyle. Yellow turtleneck, light yellow knit vest, glasses and necklaces. She was unbelievable. Maybe the hair added to it.

Wendy:

You know, if you forget that she's Jamie Lee Curtis, you know, because she's such a famous person, she. That helped kind of take you out of it. Yeah. Wow. She did do a good job also. Have we all gone to see that government employee before? I've never been to the audited by the irs. When you file for unemployment or something like that, you have to go into these dreary government buildings and the lighting is always really bad.

Bridget:

Do you remember Beetlejuice where everyone who. Yeah, suicide, becomes a civil service worker? That's kind of what it was. She was clearly not a happy person.

Wendy:

She went back and forth between, like, hating her job and then, like, being way too serious because she, like, calls the cops on them when they don't show up one day with their paperwork and stuff.

Bridget:

Did she call the cop? I Thought it was after they punched her. That's why they called security. Because Evelyn punched her in the face.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

Cuz she was like, she's coming after us. And she did look so scary. She looked very scary when she was.

Wendy:

In alternate universe mode when she was kung fu.

Bridget:

Yeah.

Wendy:

Yeah. That was all the fight scenes.

Bridget:

Oh my God. They were intentionally sped up. And I wondered if they were sped up because they did them rather slowly. Jamie Lee Curtis as an action star.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

Looking all slumpy, you know. Oh my God.

Wendy:

During this thing you discover that Joy has split the universes. And they've got this group of people that have figured out how to jump universes and they call it verse jumping. In order to do the verse jumping, you have to wear these Bluetooth things in your ear and you have to do some kind of weird physical thing.

Bridget:

Which is so weird.

Wendy:

Yeah. And one time he had to paper cut his fingers. That was so bad and so cringey. That and like fingernail things.

Bridget:

Oh, yeah.

Wendy:

I just cannot. That was terrible. And he had to do it in the little skin part between your fingers, which is the worst part to get a paper cut. And then the. That IRS award, they show it when you first meet Jamie Lake Harris character.

Bridget:

Oh, yes.

Wendy:

She has these IRS auditor of the year awards or whatever. And it's just a big b*** plug.

Bridget:

Yeah.

Wendy:

And then later you're like, oh, that's kind of funny. And then later they bring it into the movie because it turns into something you have to do to be able to verse jump. So everybody's trying to stick this thing in their b***.

Bridget:

The guy that flies, he flies over the office wall and lands on it.

Wendy:

Yes. He's in a button up shirt and a tie, but no bottoms.

Bridget:

Why doesn't he have pants on?

Wendy:

Because he needs that thing to go up his.

Bridget:

A lot of pre planning there. I mean, and he just nailed it. How do you do that?

Wendy:

You wouldn't.

Bridget:

There were those Saturday Night Live characters where they would put things up their b*** and it was, I want to say Christopher Guest and Billy Crystal.

Wendy:

Okay. I haven't seen that.

Bridget:

Oh, it's. It's older.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

They would have this recurring character, I couldn't believe it, where they would say, ah, I got this Statue of Liberty from New York and I stuck it up my b*** just to see how far in I could get it to go.

Wendy:

Wow.

Bridget:

That was like the tagline and everything went up the b***.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

I can't believe they aired that.

Wendy:

Yeah. That's wild. Another guy had a generic trophy up his B***, too.

Bridget:

I thought there was two b*** plugs.

Wendy:

There was.

Bridget:

So maybe she got that award to you.

Wendy:

She had multiple wards, but there was also a third guy that was fighting them that had, like, one of those plastic trophies that you get for, like, playing soccer or.

Bridget:

Is that what she grabbed out of his b***?

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

So she was. I mean, she was in, like, kung fu mode.

Wendy:

Oh, yeah, yeah.

Bridget:

It's her husband, but not her husband that brings her into this.

Wendy:

Yes.

Bridget:

And the reason is because, like you said, it's her daughter from another Alpha verse that fractures. Like, her mind is fractured. And so obviously Evelyn, as her mom, they. They're like, but we need you early on. You see her husband. Not husband. Ninja ing through the laundromat. But they're not looking at the cct.

Wendy:

Yeah. It's on the security.

Bridget:

And I was like, what's going on there? Are they getting robbed? Because he was moving so fast. Deidre, she has that pro wrestler and supposedly was like their center of the universe with these branches coming off of it. And they just kind of went everywhere. And he said, the farther out you're pulling from, the more differences you'll be. And so it comes down to she's jumping to all her other lives. Every one of those things helps her fight Jobujoy. Jobu is pretty evil. And they describe her as just raining terror, but for no good reason. And that's a teenager.

Wendy:

Yeah. Yeah. It was very fitting that she was a teenager.

Bridget:

Yeah. Well, I think that the dynamic between those two is normal mother daughter stuff.

Wendy:

Absolutely.

Bridget:

And maybe just one more thing that she can't handle on her plate right now.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

That headset was pretty good headset because it's never fell off.

Wendy:

I know. During all those fight scenes, all the flips, all the kicks, all the jumping down flights of stairs.

Bridget:

During that fight scene in the IRS office behind a file cabinet, there's some bagels up there. So that's the first time bagels come in. They need to keep up their energy, so they have to eat or do something. I think at one point she chugs a 2 liter bottle of orange soda.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

And then he goes, oh, my God, cream cheese. All the cattle were killed off in the Alphaverse. Didn't it happen next that she does confront Joy slash Jobu in that hallway? She's wearing an Elvis costume.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

And she's always got most amazing look.

Wendy:

Yeah, yeah.

Bridget:

Her, she looks completely different. She's got sparkles on her face. And yeah. She goes, joy, why do you look so stupid? And I'm just Like, my God, Mom. It was a weird scene because Joy could basically shift into anything that she wanted. At one point, she's dancing with the guard and he's in Carmen Miranda outfit and he's the one that gets shot. So it's just like the most weird killing I've ever seen because it kind of did look like he was dancing around.

Wendy:

Yeah. It's funny, the storyline that this has gives you so much freedom to do whatever you want. So they made it real weird in a lot of spots and they're switching between them a lot, so it gets kind of confusing. But you're like, well, anything can happen.

Bridget:

Yeah. Like coming up with two giant d*****.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

D*** slapping the h*** out of them. I was just like, is that what I think it is? Yes. Yeah.

Wendy:

Can we talk about the f**** pack?

Bridget:

Oh, God, yes.

Wendy:

Yeah. So the husband, Waymond. Sorry, that feels racist. I don't want to say it. When they're first figuring. She's first figuring out that, like, it's not the husband from the universe that she knows. He goes and picks up all these fighting skills and he takes off his f**** pack and starts beating people with it. And I'm like, that is so smart, actually, and cool. And he uses it like nunchucks, kind of.

Bridget:

It's so. It's very creative. Yeah, he uses it. It reminded me a lot of a Jackie Chan.

Wendy:

And then he makes it even better by reaching into the fish tank and putting rocks in his f**** pack. And you're like, o, now it's deadly. This should be in a self defense class, you know, teach people how to use their purses and f**** packs. Maybe they do. I've never taken one.

Bridget:

Let's talk hot dog fingers.

Wendy:

All right. It was so weird. And then it just kept getting weirder.

Bridget:

Yeah. Because they were lovers in that universe.

Wendy:

Deidre and Evelyn, the tax lady and Evelyn are lovers in that universe. Which is weird because you end up tying a lot of stuff back. But in the beginning, when she's finding Deidre, like in the hallway, she escapes by telling her I love you. I just thought that was a weird thing, but I thought it's just something they had to do to jump to another verse. Then you find out later that no, they actually do have love for each other. And in other universes, they were a couple. And you're like, what the heck? Especially the one where they're lesbians and then have hot dog fingers. What is going on?

Bridget:

Well, do you think when you're immediately attracted to someone that it's like, that you might have been in another life.

Wendy:

Yeah. I think that's totally possible. And I'm too stupid to understand it. But from what I understand about quantum physics and things like that. Like that really is kind of how molecules work, for one. Everything is happening all at once in the same time. Which is hard to wrap your head around. But also, every little tiny decision that you make. Has an equal and opposite reaction.

Bridget:

It's the butterfly effect.

Wendy:

Yeah. Literally, that is probably happening. You just don't know whatever your awareness is. So it's kind of crazy to think about the fact that that's kind of real. But I don't know.

Bridget:

Joy says you can see how everything is just a random rearrangement of particles. In a vibrating superposition.

Wendy:

That is just. Yeah. Our brains are too stupid to understand it. Well, some people must understand it because they tell us that.

Bridget:

But when you said, from what I understand about quantum physics, I was like, you understand stuff about quantum physics?

Wendy:

Not really.

Bridget:

So these hot dog fingers were so creepy because they were long and floppy?

Wendy:

Yes.

Bridget:

Useless.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

But they learned how to do things with their feet.

Wendy:

Like playing the piano. All right. Was it one of stroke? One of the scenes they kept showing where the young couple. Was it Joy and another person. But they were sticking the hot dog fingers in each other's mouth and then biting it. And then ketchup and mustard was coming out of it. That also became a thing as it went on. More and more people would have ketchup and mustard on their hot dog fingers.

Bridget:

That was so weird. I mean, good job. I never would have ever thought of that.

Wendy:

No.

Bridget:

In a million years. I mean, hot dog toes might be better. Coffee break. Let's talk about our beans.

Wendy:

Hey, bean flickers. Have you followed us yet? We are on Instagram and Facebook at flicking beans pod. Make sure you like and subscribe and leave us a review. I'd rather have hot dog toast and still have my hands to play piano and eat with.

Bridget:

It's like on Bob's Burgers when they're shanghaied on the ship. And Anna Louise gets fake fingernails on her feet.

Wendy:

Oh, yeah.

Bridget:

Click, clacking around.

Wendy:

Do you watch Rick and Morty at all?

Bridget:

No, but there are comparisons to this.

Wendy:

There's a lot of comparisons.

Bridget:

Yeah.

Wendy:

And I read that because they have a. What do they call it? A portal gun in that so they can jump universes. And one of the episodes that they have. Well, they're always running into other versions of themselves. But one of the episodes that they have in particular, they find this device. It's like a VR device that will show you any alternate universe of yourself. Like. Like it's a movie. So then they all get, like, obsessed with looking at these other versions of themselves. One. And, like, one of them is like, if they didn't have this kid, which they got pregnant when they were, like, teenagers and had the kid and got married. And so they're wondering, like, what would have happened. And, like, if they didn't together, like, he would have been a famous actor and she would have been, like, this brain surgeon. But instead, they had a kid, and then they end up fighting about it and stuff. It's like, well, yeah, I would have, could have, should have, but you did it, so. But yeah, that's a dangerous prospect to be able to see what might have been. Because you never can see that.

Bridget:

Can you imagine watching this movie of your other lives and just, like, yelling at it, you know, like a scary movie where you're like, don't open that door. Look behind you.

Wendy:

And they. They tell Evelyn that she's the version. She's the worst version of any possible outcome. She's living that out. And I was like, well, you know, that's the worst one. That's not so bad. All our other ones must have been great.

Bridget:

But they said this. Evelyn is definitely one of the more interesting ones.

Wendy:

True.

Bridget:

You're capable of anything because you're bad at everything.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

Wow. She's supposedly the worst version of herself, but she's just a normal, everyday person. It's unfair to say, oh, in all these other lives, you were a famous singer. You were. But I think the worst life was when she was a pizza sign flipper.

Wendy:

Oh, yeah.

Bridget:

But that all of those other lives gave her the knowledge and the wherewithal to use all of those skills as weapons. So even the pizza flipper comes into play when she has this. I don't know, like a big metal door or something. Yeah. That to fight flips it all around.

Wendy:

Oh, she's great in the beginning when they're doing their taxes and she's kind of, like, not listening that well. Deidre is saying, like, you can't write off a karaoke machine. You can't write off all these things. And they talk about all these things that she thought she might be, like, a singer or.

Bridget:

Oh, you're right.

Wendy:

Whatever. She ends up tapping into that throughout the movie. If you have that interest, that's a possibility that you could have done that. Which is cool to think about in real life. That's true, too. If you have something and you pursue it and you have some kind of calling towards it. I feel like you could really. Whatever you want to do, you could make it happen.

Bridget:

Join a kung fu class.

Wendy:

She could voice lessons.

Bridget:

She could still.

Wendy:

I don't know if she'll ever get pinkies.

Bridget:

Oh my God.

Wendy:

Like that version of her.

Bridget:

Yes. She was doing push ups just with her pinkies.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

And then when that comes into the fight.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

They were like, you can have kung fu even in your pinkies. She uses her pinkies to knock the guy out.

Wendy:

Yeah. And they're like super swollen. She flexes. Yeah. It looks like a bicep in her pinky.

Bridget:

We should talk about the raccoon. Ooey.

Wendy:

There's so much to talk about this movie. Yeah. So that was so funny because I thought it was gonna be a one off thing and then it ended up being just like the hot dog fingers.

Bridget:

Yeah.

Wendy:

She gets the ratatouille. The movie wr. She calls it Rakatoony, but it's in a different universe. True. So she must be pulling from that universe. Yeah, that's true. And they're making fun of her like, mom, haha, it's a rat, not a raccoon. But then it is. And it's like in that universe, really controlling a chef.

Bridget:

Yes, it's in real life. And later she whips his hat off and the raccoon is there and he's standing at the table with the diners.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

But also she gets on his shoulders and controls him that way. You're running down the street with her on his shoulders.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

And somebody else later, they switch.

Wendy:

Switch roles and the guy gets on her shoulders. It was so weird for some reason. I don't know. Yeah, yeah. A couple other things that they use as a weapon. Jenny Slate's character, she has a Pomeranian and she just picks it up and starts swinging it around on its leash like it's a cannonballer. Amazing.

Bridget:

Yeah, See, that's another. Besides Jamie Lee Curtis. I was surprised that she was in this movie.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

But you know, she's playing a trope of the Jewish American princess.

Wendy:

Yes.

Bridget:

Coming to get her fluff and fold laundry. She's referred to as Big Nose.

Wendy:

Yes.

Bridget:

But when they did the digital and DVD Blu Ray releases, they changed her name to Debbie the Dog mom.

Wendy:

Okay.

Bridget:

Because Big Nose is pretty offensive.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

When they're in the laundromat, the tax lady comes back to b**** at them for not showing up to their appointment, which is so unlikely. And she goes to fight her and she picks up the bat and the bat has googly eyes on it.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

I was like, that's the best. You know, Waymond is just trying to kind of lighten the mood.

Wendy:

Yes.

Bridget:

And later he says that it's strategic for him to see the good side in things.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

It's how he survives.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

And I'm like, that is brilliant. And the other notion that, you know, nothing really matters.

Wendy:

Right. Is that a comforting notion or a depressing one?

Bridget:

I feel like it's kind of saying, just pick your battles and let most things go. Let it go.

Wendy:

Let it go. At the very end, they have a line that I feel like sort of sums up everything perfectly. It's when Waymond, after he's revealing why he is quote, unquote weak and soft and kind, he goes, be kind. Especially when we don't know what's going on, because they're jumping universe to universe. You don't know what anyone's dealing with in their life. Multitudes of life. It's just exponentially worse. And that's true about every person that you meet. Even the people in your life that you're close to. You don't know everything that's going on in their life or what's going on in their brain. And that's just a really good, like, sum up the whole movie. Be kind. Especially when you don't know what's going on, because you don't know everything as much as everybody likes to think they do. You don't know.

Bridget:

The directors described this as an action film about empathy. So. Yeah, it's just what you were saying. We're all useless alone at one point. One of the universes has Joy and Evelyn as rocks.

Wendy:

Yes.

Bridget:

And there's subtitles, because rocks can't talk, but they could communicate with somehow.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

Like trees.

Wendy:

And eventually the rock has googly eyes too. Yes.

Bridget:

Let's talk about the bagel.

Wendy:

Yes. Back to the bagel.

Bridget:

Back to the bagel. This is a concoction of joys.

Wendy:

And she says, I just got really bored one day. So I put literally everything on a bagel. A great line.

Bridget:

Yeah.

Wendy:

And it creates sort of like this black hole sort of thing.

Bridget:

It will suck everyone into it. She wants to go into it. Evelyn doesn't want to lose her daughter. Yeah. It was scary and swirling and ever present. I hate nothingness.

Wendy:

That's kind of what this everything bagel seems like it is. It's like it's everything. So it's nothing I wrote in my.

Bridget:

Notes, get in my bagel. And.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

They say they talk about we're all small and stupid. And I think we have more, like you said this earlier, more strengths and skills within us than we realize.

Wendy:

Yeah, absolutely. That's another big point of the movie, I think, is they were trying to get to Evelyn to, like, trust herself and love herself, and that's something that she hasn't done. And all of these selves are also yourself. So you have to love, like, all the parts of you, because there's really great ones. And then there's also this version, which is the worst version of you. There's. It really is everything everywhere all at once in this movie.

Bridget:

It is.

Wendy:

I get it. Why Joy wants to end it. I can't imagine what that's like, experiencing every single thing all at once and all the different versions of it. Yeah. It's sort of like when you reach a goal, sometimes you're like, oh, crap, now what? Yeah. I think that's why so many people that make it to be like, very famous, very rich, or whatever end up killing themselves is because they no longer have something to look forward to. They're like, I've done the thing that I wanted to do. I'm 29 years old now. What do I do? I have to live up to that, which is impossible.

Bridget:

Drugs.

Wendy:

Well, drugs. Yeah. You get easy access to drugs. Or thinking that a certain thing is going to make you happy. You can never escape all the bad parts, too.

Bridget:

Yeah. Just like when my mom said about Jim Morrison, you know?

Wendy:

Oh, yeah.

Bridget:

I don't know why he would do drugs.

Wendy:

He's so good looking, right? Yeah. Because good looking people, they. They can't have bad feelings, right? Yeah.

Bridget:

Beauty is in the face.

Wendy:

Yeah. Beauty is in the face.

Bridget:

We are led to believe that Evelyn is setting up to kill those versions of Joy so she can have her just normal daughter back. And then it turns out that they have a confrontation where Joy was just like, I was looking for you.

Wendy:

Because she said that she didn't want to go into the void alone.

Bridget:

Okay. Because I guess to explain that and why Joy's seeing absolutely everything everywhere all at once and now Evelyn is too, is because the more they jumped, the more they developed cracks and their brains both fractured. So that would be terrifying.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

And so confusing. Yeah. So I get that. That she wanted to do that, but she just lets her go in the end. Metaphorically. It is just letting your kid grow up and letting them have their own.

Wendy:

There's a desire as a parent to want to protect your child from pain or from making mistakes, but you can't for one thing, you just can't. And secondly, like, those mistakes that they make are gonna be how they learn. And if you protect them from it, then they're never gonna learn those lessons.

Bridget:

Right.

Wendy:

So that you have to let them go. And in this case, Joy went like full evil, but got infested by a demon or something. I don't know that part exactly.

Bridget:

She's a teenager.

Wendy:

Yeah. Yeah.

Bridget:

Hormones. I mean, I could see this movie ending with her waking from a dream, but it was amazing. I would watch and rewatch this movie.

Wendy:

Yeah. There's so much going on. It's very fast paced. So I bet there's things that you miss, especially like you'll probably, you know, go back and go, oh, yeah. That they talk about that later. Stuff that you didn't catch that was flashback because there's so many little things.

Bridget:

That's the. The way that they literally connected everything to all the universe is like you said, all those Easter eggs, if you will.

Wendy:

Yeah.

Bridget:

I loved it.

Wendy:

Yeah. The really good movie and did it when Movie of the Year. It won an Oscar. I meant to look that up.

Bridget:

I'm sure she did. I mean, if she didn't, she should have Michelle Yeoh. You remember moonlight when they read the wrong.

Wendy:

Oh, yeah. La La Land instead of Moonlight.

Bridget:

Right. That was a Jeopardy. Question.

Wendy:

Oh, yeah, yeah. Yes. It won best original screenplay. It was nominated for music. Oh, no. Actually won best Motion picture of the year in 20. And best director. Yeah. She won Michelle Yeoh, best performance by an actress in a leading role. Jamie Lee Curtis won best supporting Actress.

Bridget:

Oh, my God.

Wendy:

The actor K. Ho Kwon, who played Waymond, he also won best actor. There's more, but I won't go through all of them. But. Yeah, that's interesting. I didn't realize that. I thought that it had one picture of the year.

Bridget:

Yeah. So at the end, we both decided that we really wanted an everything bagel.

Wendy:

It's true.

Bridget:

Yeah. Then we do it. It.

Wendy:

Yeah, I think we did it. Reflect some beans. Okay. Love you. Bye.

Bridget:

Bye. Party all night long.