Mousekekast with Mandy
This is a podcast about the All New Mickey Mouse Club that ran from 1989-1996. I will be doing a deep dive on the cast members, episodes and side projects that were done after the show ended.
Mousekekast with Mandy
Episode 17- Season 2, Episodes 31-35
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This week’s MMC rewatch hits peak 1989 chaos: cheerleaders weaponize snacks, Kid Kopple reports on animal stereotypes, and the Lost Creek gang goes Bigfoot hunting. There’s a heartfelt segment with Marlee Matlin, a dog-hosted consumer show, and a neon‑tinted Donna Summer roller‑skating video. Nostalgia, weirdness, and pure late‑’80s magic—served with popcorn to the face.
Happy hi everybody. My name is Mandy, and welcome to Mouse the Cast with Mandy, a deep dive into the amazing show that was the all-new Mickey Mouse Club or the MMC from the 1990s. We will be breaking down all of the episodes, learning more about the individual cast members, and exploring their subsequent projects. So grab your Letterman's jacket and join me in the diner.
SPEAKER_02Happy hi, everybody. I hope you are all doing well. I apologize again, as has been my norm lately for the delay in another episode. I've been going through at the beginning of this year, but you know what? I'm getting my footing back, and all is gonna be well from this point on, I promise. To start off this episode, I want to apologize for the last episode, episode 16, and for the sound of it. I was not made aware that it sounded so poorly until several days later. And I'm currently, as of March the 11th, working with my hosting platform to fix that to where it will be enjoyable for everybody to listen to and not blow out some eardrums. You can always follow along and get extra content on Instagram at MouseCaCast and Facebook at MouseCaCast with Mandy. And just this past week, under the tutelage of some of my much younger friends, I have started posting on TikTok as well, and that is at MouseCaCast. So with that being said, welcome back everybody. Today we're diving into another week of MMC episodes, season two, episodes 31 through 35, originally airing November 13th through the 17th of 1989. We are getting close to the end of this season where we will lose one beloved cast member, but we will also gain five on the other end. This week has a lot. Cheerleaders Weaponizing Snacks, Bigfoot Investigations, a fake news segment about animal stereotypes, and music videos featuring roller skates and violence, which is about as late 80s as it gets. So let's jump right in. Episode 31, we're going to call Cheerleaders, Hiccups, and Turtle TV. This episode kicks off with Kevin, Jennifer, and Damon, and we immediately get a sketch called Date Night with a Cheerleader. Albert is on a date with Bobby Sue, played by Tiffany, who is, how do I put it, extremely committed to cheerleading lifestyle? And Josh is jealous and watching the whole thing unfold. Albert starts off by cool walking down the aisle to where Bobby Sue is sitting and tries to charm her by offering her snacks, but she responds with a full-on cheer, like a sideline routine.
SPEAKER_00Give me a coke! Give me a popboard!
SPEAKER_02Which results in Albert literally shoving a box of MMs into her mouth. This is the kind of date where if someone asks, how's it going? the answer would be there's a whistle involved, and that's not good. She then gives another rousing cheer about how great movies are, essentially dumps popcorn directly into Albert's face in her excitement. Albert tries to play it cool and says she has a lot of energy, which she interprets as a criticism. He asks if she has trouble with math, which prompts another cheer. At this point, Albert decides they must have a lot in common, which is a bold conclusion based on absolutely nothing other than liking movies and being bad at math. When he asks about her favorite actor, she then launches into a spelling cheer, spelling out Hanks. The joke lands with Albert saying, It's a good thing she doesn't like Schwarzenegger, or we'd be here all night. The movie starts and she tries to cheer again, but Albert shuts her down very quickly. Then he attempts to make a move and asks for a kiss, turning it into another gimme cheer. Gimme a K, gimme an I, gimme an S, gimme an S, gimme a kiss, and she responds, get lost. She then blows a whistle, and suddenly three other cheerleaders, played by Dee Dee, Brandy, and Rocky, appear behind them like they were hiding in the theater seats, waiting for this very signal. They chant, go, go, throw him out, which they then do. And Josh gets the final line of the sketch by standing on the back wall of the theater saying, Some guys have all the luck. Next, there's a quick punchline segment with classic kid joke energy. And we get such hilarious jokes such as, why did the girl take a bale of hay to bed so she could feed her nightmare? And another one, what did the picture say to the wall? First they frame me, then they hang me. Somewhere a fourth grade classroom just broke out into applause. Then we get a promo for the turtle channel, which is apparently expanding its programming lineup. This includes new episodes of shows such as Shell Trek, The Turtle Bunch, Bat Turtle, and 21 Snapper Street with the ever-popular actors Tara Penn and Peter Sheloise. There's also the Tommy Turtle Club and a Miss Turtle Contest. Now we jump back into this week's episodes of The Secret of Lost Creek, and this one is titled Stoneface. Last time we saw the group, they were heading out on a hike and a camping trip, which Jeannie was not too pleased about having to sleep on the ground for. So they head out on their hiking and camping trip. Jeannie is struggling outright, and Cammy politely suggests that everyone would understand if she wanted to turn back. While climbing, Jeannie, quote, slips, unquote, and falls backwards and immediately assumes something is broken. But when Travis starts rubbing on her ankle, she admits that actually feels kind of nice. And the second she hears that they've reached their destination, she hops right up. Miracle, miraculous recovery. Their destination is a mountain face called Stoneface. Though Charlie notes that's just what the white settlers called it. According to the Indians, his words, not mine, the original name was Sasquatch, which they then tie to the next rhyme. Cammy is very skeptical of the whole gold treasure storyline. Meanwhile, Jeannie is trying to assemble her tent and insists she can practically smell Homer's gold. Cammy fires back with really, it smells like cheap perfume to me. Another sick burn from Daisy May. And Jeannie reminds her that she was not invited to begin with. They see Charlie hoisting their food into a tree, and when Travis tells Jeannie that it is just to keep the bears away, she's terrified at the idea. Even I, who is not a big camping person, knew why he was putting the food in the trees. They head off searching for something called the talking waters, which turn out to be rapids, if you want to call them that. Suddenly Cammy becomes a lot more interested in the treasure idea. They look for the tallest tree near the water as the rhyme suggested, and when they head off in that direction, they discover a couple of dudes are already digging. So apparently they're not the only treasure hunter in these woods. Damon is dealing with the hiccups, and someone suggests a cure that sounds less like medical advice and more like a military training exercise. The instructions involve applying pressure to your midsection, elevating your legs, then doing some more pressure, then lifting farm animals and riding a bicycle. It just devolves from there. Damon actually tries a lot of it. The hiccup stopped, but now he's wrapped up in bandages from head to toe. The upside, he can finally ask Rocky to go dancing. The downside, they can't do it until June. The music day performance is from the group Expose again. This time they are performing When I Look at Him. The crowd is trying their best to sway along, but the rhythm situation is questionable, just not working for them. Also, the lead singer is wearing some extremely aggressive late 80s jorts. Brandy interviews them about the sudden rise in the popularity of girl groups, and they say it must be a sign of the times, which is probably the most diplomatic answer possible. They do a quick quiz to see how well they know each other. The result? They mostly know one member. Team chemistry remains under investigation. The ending has the members of Expose giving the C and Tiffany giving the Y. She's still dressed like a cheerleader, but I'm a little disappointed that she doesn't deliver it with the cheerleader yell. Next is episode 32, the Tuesday episode. And this one is called Kid Koppel Goes Live and Rollerskating with Violins. This starts off with Brandy, Dee Dee, and Fred, and then we go into a news segment called Mouse Line with Kid Koppel, played by Kevin. Kevin plays the hard-hitting journalist reporting on animal stereotypes in the media. Apparently, animals are tired of how they're portrayed. They cite examples of The Turtle Bunch, which was presented in the Monday segment of this particular episode from the Turtle Channel, as well as the Miss Bulldog pageant and segments of Pig Racing from, I believe it was season one. Could have been earlier this season. They satellite in Bucky the Beaver by Chase, Slim the Pig, Rocky, and Flash the Turtle, Jennifer. Bucky claims he doesn't understand why people think beavers are so funny while casually ripping the armrest off of his chair and eating it. Slim the Pig says that pigs are misunderstood and unfairly called dirty, while visibly covered in something that is anything but clean. Flash the Turtle is asked whether turtles are slow and stupid. She begins answering very slowly. And Kid Copel cuts her off before she finishes. Ruthless journalism, Kevin. They also bring in comedian Vic Slick, reminder that's Damon, whose career apparently revolves around animal jokes. When asked if he exploits animals for profit, he says he actually loves animals for dinner. As this interview continues with Vic, Slim Storms offset. And then that is the end of the skit. Pig gets angry, the turtle's clueless, and I don't even remember what the beaver was doing. Next is more celebrity auditions, but this time it is for big babies with Jeremy Miller, Danny Pintaro, Chris Hewitt, and Bryce Beckham. And it's exactly what you think it is. It's these sitcom actors acting like big babies. There's also a game of Yeah Right, where the audience guesses whether weird facts are true. Albert's claim involves fat cells generating electricity during exercise. He says that once a 250-pound scientist once conducted enough energy to light a lamp during a blackout. Fred says a teenager has memorized every episode of the Brady Bunch because she's watched them so many times. And Lindsay says there is a farmer in Iowa who hiccupped for more than 60 years despite trying every cure known to man. I guess he never tried the cure from the previous episode and involved farm animals and Damon wrapped in bandages. The real one, a man in Iowa who hiccupped for 66 years. That resulted in over 400 million hiccups. Damon's farm animal workout routine seems reasonable. Then we get a genuinely heartfelt segment of Guest Day, where a deaf teenager named Jennifer Watson gets to spend the day with actress Marley Matlin. Jennifer aspires to be an actress just like Marley. They talk through an interpreter for the camera about acting, representation of their disability, and what it means to be a role model. The whole segment is intercut with scenes from Marley's Academy Award-winning performance in Children of a Lesser God. They visit the Santa Monica Pier and discuss how people perceive deaf performers versus the characters they play. It's actually a really thoughtful segment, and Jennifer ends it with a message about embracing what makes people different, a rare, quiet, meaningful moment in the middle of a week of otherwise filled with pigs and fake news anchors. Moeva hosts a game of guess what with brandy, and Albert acts out the puzzles, as usual. We've seen this before. Next we get Big Fat Stupid Pigs, which is a stock footage segment of pigs waxing poetic about what they want to do with their day and commenting on how stupid they are. And this draws Slim the Pig out in protest of the absurdity of the ad. And she introduces the video of the week, which leads to Dee Dee introducing the porky polka, and that just doesn't work for Slim. So she introduces the actual video, coincidentally, stars Rocky, and the episode wraps with the video of Love is About to Change My Heart by Donna Summer. Again, this is Rocky along with Jennifer, Josh, and Kevin. It starts off in a very dramatic manner where they're roller skating, slow music, playing violins behind Rocky. And there's also a classroom scene where Rocky is the only one in color. She's wearing hot pink, and this is against a black and white background. I'm thinking that the classroom segment of this video was filmed at Dr. Phillips. Nothing says artistic symbolism like neon pink in a grayscale classroom. The closing has Rocky with the C, and the Y has Kevin as kid couple. And once again, Jennifer is stuck in an oversized costume for the closing, but Chase gets to take off his beaver hood mid-credits, and even Rocky got to clean up. Poor, poor Jennifer once again. Okay, I'm gonna sound a little bit different from here on because it's been a couple of days and I'm no longer congested. The Wednesday episode we will call One Voice and Dust Balls. This episode opens with Damon, Tiffany, and Josh, and they give us the rundown of this very 80s-fueled anything can happen day, and they toss us over to a Star Hunt audition. This is a talent show, which, as the name might suggest, is basically Star Search. But this is the Mickey Mouse Club answer to it. Now, I will say there were several members of the Mickey Mouse Club who appeared on Star Search prior to their appearance on the show. And the show actually filmed, I think across the hall next door, one or the other, from the Mickey Mouse Club. We start off with the host basically dismissing every performer on the stage with a don't call us, we'll call you message. But then he asks to hear the little girl, Lindsay, sing by herself. At first, she tries to make a joke about it, saying, Oh, tough luck, guys, but then she says she can't do it without her group. And her group is Jennifer, Chase, Rocky, and Didi, because together they are one voice. But they encourage her to give it a try. So we head into Lindsay performing One Voice, which was actually her audition song. She begins to sing it solo and then has to stop and says it doesn't feel right without her friends. And then they add in the background. The vibe is extremely finale scene of a musical where everybody runs back on stage, kind of like pitch perfect at the end, where Becca tries to sing Freedom by herself, but slowly brings in her other a cappella members. And then we go into an album by a man named Popo. This skit was mentioned previously in when I was covering season one because this is what they ran on reruns of the show when they were advertising Chase's Be a Sibling for a Day contest because they didn't want people entering in for a contest that was over. Anywho, there are a couple songs in particular from this album that Smithers and I just had a laugh about. And this album features songs such as It's Raining Pork Rinds.
SPEAKER_00In my shoes and in my head. In a bedroom of a little boy who lived in a land called Columbus Oh High.
SPEAKER_02And who could forget the hello song?
SPEAKER_00Hello, hello, hello, hello, hello, hello.
SPEAKER_02So, yes, that was Popo. And yes, in case you were wondering, Smithers and I particularly loved Pluff, the Magic Dust Ball. Children apparently love the album as well, though the footage also shows children screaming, so interpret that however you want to. Meanwhile, in The Secret of Lost Creek, we have an episode called Bigfoot. The group watches the rival treasure hunters dig and come up empty. They didn't find anything. Not even a wood nickel. Charlie later scares them with some cheesy noise. One of the opposing team members says, These woods is haunted. Charlie's scaring the others off inspires Russy, who has also been hiding nearby, to try and scare the main group. With an additionally cheesy, fake growl. Russie had been watching the clueless diggers all day. Jeannie just keeps referring to Russie as that weird little boy, even though he's older than her brother. Jeannie asks why old Homer would go through so much trouble if the treasure wasn't real. And Cammy gives a very non-Disney response. Maybe he was a crackpot. I mean, I approve. I just I didn't think Disney would necessarily approve of that. Apparently, it's also a perfect night for Bigfoot to appear. Rusty claims he's seen Bigfoot several times. Naturally, Robert decides he's gonna meet up with Rusty and they're gonna go squatch hunting in the middle of the night because that always ends up well. Jeannie wakes up and realizes that several people, including Charlie, are missing from the campsite. In the chaos, Jeannie slips into the creek and the boys nearly get hit by a truck. At this point, the scenes are so dark and include no lighting. So the storyline is officially entered, things are happening in the dark, and nobody understands them territory. Next, we get named that job with Candy and the usual panel of Maureen, Greg, and Boopsy. But this time the job we are guessing is Bofo a clown, played by Lindsay, who does not speak because you know clowns are meant to be seen and not heard. They are they realize that Bofo is not a model, does not work in a coal mine, which Greg guesses because she looks awfully pale, doesn't work for the government, is not a doctor, and then we get this lovely little line.
SPEAKER_00Bafa, are you a doctor of some sort? Doctor? What kind of black would dress like that? Black? Are you duck? No.
SPEAKER_02So Bafo is not a duck either. Not planning on building a secret death ray, not a tightrope worker or a lion tamer or a security guard. And per usual, Candy gets super annoyed and ends the game, to which she says they need to get rid of all these clowns, and that prompts Bofo to actually speak. And Lindsay stands up all indignant and says, I resemble that remark, and then sprays Candy in the face with one of those like spritzer seltzer water thingies that clowns used to use. Anything can happen, day is next. And this gentleman that we have today is Franz Harreri, and he is an illusionist. He makes the note that the difference between an illusionist and a magician is that an illusionist uses the body and not the mind. And my brain immediately went to this. He launches into his tricks, and I'm not exactly sure what I'm looking at during the segment. There is super big 80s hair, sequins, and leather everywhere, complete with corny, exaggerated movements, like they're in a circus and trying to get the attention of the person in the back row. Then they do, you know, typical magician type tricks. An assistant gets into the box, and then Franz puts sheets of metal into the box. And we also get Fred with the voiceover of I probably don't need to mention this, but don't try this at home, kids. No, you don't need to mention that, dude. No one's that stupid. Well, I don't know. I I take that back. Kids these days might be. Anyway, yeah, so give the audience more credit than that, Fred. I sh sure as heck was not trying it at home. But basically, he's trying to pull the assistant apart. And then they dance their way into the next act, which is it's really, really bad dancing. Yeah. In the next act, dude, being friends, gets into a box. And then they spin his head one way and his body the other, and it's not terribly difficult. To figure out how they achieved this, because obviously it was just a disconnected box that wasn't actually touching the man's body at all. I mean, I know what I'm trying to say, it's just not coming out right at the moment. Anywho, the closing has the C by Franz and the Y by Lindsay. Episode 34, we're gonna call Bark Back and the Cookie Queen. We start off with a skit called Bark Back, and this is a consumer advocacy show for dogs. Rusty the dog, which is Chase, hosts it, and his advice that he gives to his dog audience at home includes replacing your owner's salad croutons with dog snacks because he really does not like dog snacks, and stealing cupcakes as a diversion after you've put dog snacks on said salad. To beg for forgiveness and make sure you have your angelic music and halo ready, which causes the owner to apologize to you. And if you're not getting enough attention, wear a cute poochie mask and whine until they apologize. Honestly, some dogs are probably already doing this. I know my friend she is. He's just too adorable. Next, we have singing in the streets, and they're singing kind of what I would consider an unlikely song, because I don't feel like enough people these days know it. But the song is called I Like It by Dino.
SPEAKER_01That's the way it has to be because that's the way I like it.
SPEAKER_02Later, we meet Debbie Fields, yes, Mrs. Fields of the Cookies, who talks to a young aspiring baker about starting a business. This is obviously the What I Wanna Be segment. And she started baking with her grandma. Debbie, started baking with her grandma, and she fell in love with it. She kind of looks to me like a porn star, I don't know, something about the way she's dressed and made up. She explains that she used to walk around up and down the street saying, Come on, taste my cookie. Hmm. In today's world, might get some raised questions, but the takeaway is solid. Believe in yourself, work hard, success isn't measured in money, but in the people around you. Also noted, she goes through about 10 million pounds of chocolate in a year and 8 million pounds of butter. Oh, and her kids, her daughters, which is like four or five of them, are her taste testers. So optimism and butter apparently go hand in hand in this case. Fred talks to the audience about the difference between moms and kids. Moms have a screw in the back of their head that essentially makes them annoying. And they start speaking in their own phrases and do weird things like collecting Christmas bows. My mom does that too. And when mom is stressed, she will call you everyone else's name, including the dog, before she gets to your name. When the middle name is used, you know you're in real trouble. And my son definitely knows that because my southern comes out. I will say Jack Michael and said, you know, so Michael, M-A-C-H-A-E-L. When you ask why, the answer is always because I said so. Mom Logic, don't look at me in that tone of voice. She has an amazing mind that you will never figure out, so you shouldn't even try. Warren Exting comes on to introduce the three rarest dog breeds at the time. And Rusty Chase from the Barkback segment earlier in this episode introduces this whole segment. The first dog that Warren introduces us to is the Phila Braziolario. I hope I'm saying that right. Who is known for his loose skin and he is a hunter. The second is a puffin dog, which is a bird hunter that has double joints, a very bendy neck for getting into tight spots. He can essentially bend his head all the way back to where it's laying essentially flat on his spine and back out of tight spaces. And then, of course, there's the Chinese crested, bald and ugly and requires sunscreen. And it brings to mind, I think her name was Dolores from the Deadpool versus Wolverine movie. Yeah. Deadpool dog, or I don't even remember what they called her. Party Day is a pen pal party. Rocky is introducing this, and she's coincidentally still wearing the odd little plaid outfit she was wearing in the One Voice segment from Wednesday. Fred and Rocky talk to the audience about pen pal etiquette with Miss Priss, played by Jennifer. She keeps smacking herself in the head, and she provides an address to get matched up with a pen pal that was legitimate at the time. And I know that MMC did this whole pen pal thing back in the day. And shockingly, I did not participate. Why? I can't really even give a good answer to that. I don't know why I didn't participate. But if you did, please let me know. I know my friend Anisa did, or I say my friend, we met online. She did, and she also took part in that whole thing when masketeers were giving out their phone numbers and she talked to Justin Timberlake on the phone. Yes, but it still served her very well because she's still has she's still in touch with Justin to this day. If you're a part of it, let me know. I'd love to hear your experience and everything that goes with it. Then we have a nice little moment where they choose two real pen pals to meet up on the show. We meet Vanessa from New Mexico, and she has a pen pal she's never met. Her pen pal is Jennifer from Vermont, and they hook them up to meet and they exchange nice little gifts. They were matched through school's program and they just talk about everyday life and just getting to know somebody in a completely different part of the world or country than you. I've always been intrigued by the idea, but just never did anything with it. But can can we like, can we collectively, those of you guys listening, can we just reignite this whole pen pal thing? Though I know now it's just more like a direct message pal, but that would be fun. Just let's like reignite this where we can share our like-minded ideas with each other. I think that would be great. Actually, today, March 16th, happens to be what I would call my pen pal's birthday. And she and I have a lot in common, but she lives in California. I live in Georgia, so happy birthday, Ruby. I already told you happy birthday on Instagram. I'm saying it again. Don't know that you're listening, but anyway, she's a JC lover, she's a horror movie lover, and we're just all into the same stuff. So, you know, I guess in a roundabout sort of way, social media has kind of helped us create pen pals. But anyway, I digress. Simpler times, it would have been lovely to have been part of it at that moment. The song for this party day is Please Mr. Postman. And this is Brandy, Tiffany, and Dee Dee with Damon as the postman. And they're essentially pestering him to give them mail from their boyfriend. They're almost ripping him apart, but he is dancing his little tail off, and it's very effective. They get what they want at the end of it. The closing has the C by Vanessa and Jennifer, the pen pals, and why by Chase, still as rusty. I noticed that there were some pretty strong, impressive mullets in this particular crowd. For Friday, episode 35, we're gonna call the episode Love Poems and Sasquatch. This starts off with Chase giving us a performance of what I like about you. He is trying to write a love poem for the girl in his math class named Mandy Haw, but he keeps quoting Shakespeare instead of speaking from his heart. So the guys tell him to start singing from his heart, or start writing from his heart, and he starts to sing his response as if she were standing in front of him at that very moment. At one point, he starts climbing a ladder while he's singing, which is giving cool writer from Greece too for reasons that are never fully explained. But honestly, ladder choreography is never the wrong choice, especially if you're named Stephanie Zanoni. Back to the secret of Lost Creek with an episode called Blackbeard. Miraculously, Jeannie wakes up by her tent. So what was with all that falling into the creek nonsense? She asks if it was a dream because Robert is also there, but apparently it was not. I guess they just didn't have it in the budget to factor in a rescue scene. Robert believes that he photographed Bigfoot. Jeannie thinks she saw a light in Stoneface's eye. Forgot Stoneface is what they called Sasquatch. It's a face in the side of a mountain. Back at the paper, Creepy Amish dude is taking out an ad for$2.25 for 10 words. Robert rushes in and begs grandpa to have Charlie go ahead and develop his film. Grandpa says it's probably just a close-up of a bear. It's not Bigfoot. Creepy Amish dude overhears all this. Jeannie and Robert run into Hardy, who wants a picture taken of he and Jeannie. He's asking about the film that Robert has taken to the paper to get developed. Jeannie is deep in thought and has a talk with Grandpa, and he starts to make hints about the final clue. The answer is in the last verse, although I do not recall what the last clue was. And the whole episode ends with someone breaking into the paper office to look for the picture. No doubt it's stupid ass Hardy, that's my guess. Which means the treasure mystery and the Bigfoot mystery are both heating up. Finally, we are close to the end of the season. Wacky Weekends with Winnie and Winky have Chase and Brandy back again. For some reason, Winnie is wearing a blonde Marge Simpson wig, and her wig is full of items, which basically are backpack what has sufficed for this. They are discussing travel hats, which start off with a camera hat. I call that a GoPro in this day and age. And then Winky tells Winnie to say cheese and she replines with Lindberger. I thought that was cute. The I'm not a tourist hat is to blend in with the locals in whatever setting you are in. The homesick hat has a scratch and sniff brim that smells like mom's home cooking. Hall of Fame is LaShonda Daniels, who is the winner of an essay contest, which was about what to do with the homeless in Boston. She had previously lived in a shelter and she was inspired to write this essay from her English teacher. She was able to revisit the shelter that she had lived in with her family, but they have since moved into a four-bedroom apartment. The second recipient or recipients is Amy Edwards, a 10-year-old unicyclist. Her outfit is giving 90s dance recital, um, more than the loot the illusionist from Wednesday. She learned how to ride the unicycle in her gym class. That is not something we ever did in any of my gym classes. Her older sisters, Becky and Katie, also ride and give a little example of some various stunts to what can only be described as like revenge of the nerds music. You know, the uh talent portion at the end of the movie. Sounds a lot like that. And these girls are just brimming with charisma. Like, yeah, they're very excitable. The closing has the C with the Edward Sisters and the Y by Fred. And that wraps up the week. We have Cheerleader Ambushes, Investigative Journalism conducted by a child named Kid Koppel, a heartfelt meeting with Marley Matlin, a dog-hosted consumer show, and at least one alleged Bigfoot siding, which honestly feels like the perfectly normal week for 1989 television. Next time we'll see whether the Lost Creek gang actually finds gold or if they just keep chasing Sasquatch around the woods. So now it's time to say goodbye. Thank you for joining me on another episode of Mouse Gecast with Mandy as we venture through the second to last week of season two of the show. Next week we will be back for Rocky's final week of episodes, which is very sad. I hate to lose that amazing talent that she is, but never fear, we're not completely without her in this day and age. Sorry, there's a car driving by. As always, I am available at MouseCaCast with Mandy on Facebook and at MouseKecast on both Instagram and TikTok. So follow along if you'd like to see what's going on over there. I basically share the same content. I share a little bit more on Instagram than I do on TikTok just because of the stories, but I'm I'm venturing out that way. So give me some time. And I hope you guys have an amazing weekend. It's first weekend of spring. Hopefully it's gonna be nice and warm where you are. It's probably gonna be in the 80s in Atlanta, which is not right, but we just deal with what we're given. So as always, I will say Miska, Mouska, Mousketeer, Mouska Mandy's out of here. See you real soon.
SPEAKER_01Hey everybody, this is Smithers. I do exist. Thanks for listening to Mouska Cast with Mandy.