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Chapter 1: What is the podcast's purpose and how can listeners support it?
Chatters, hello. If you are a regular listener of this podcast, we would so appreciate it if you would consider subscribing to us to help us meet the costs of production and social media and all the other things that go into putting it together.
If you go to our website, chat10looks3.com, you will find all sorts of different ways that you could help us out, starting from $2 a month going through, I think it's about 10 is the maximum, but I don't know. Anyway, go have a look at our website. We would really appreciate it.
That's why we call her the details lady. This podcast, Chat 10 Looks 3, is recorded on the lands of the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation. We acknowledge them and their leaders, along with the traditional owners of whichever land you're on listening to it right now. Hi, I don't have anything on from the waist now. Oh, God.
Mate, I know you've been in television a long time, but I can still throw you beds.
A whole lot of chatters probably just went, oh, God, am I listening to the right podcast? I thought I was on chat.
Yeah. This is actually for your only fans. All right. How are you? I'm very well. I have a question for you. Do you think when you were growing up, were you the dominant sibling or were you the overlooked sibling?
That's a good question. Yeah. My immediate vibe was the dominant sibling because I'm the eldest but my sibling is my brother and so he was physically stronger than me so he could derail things really easily by just jumping on and, you know, giving me a punch or just, you know, tackling me or whatever. So I would have said me. I would have said I was the ringleader.
I don't want to insult you but in a kind of like who is smarter out of you and your brother, I reckon it's... Like it's different, but it's close. Like he is like really, really smart.
He's got different smarts to me. Yeah, he's funnier than me, I think.
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Chapter 2: How do childhood dynamics influence personality traits?
Yeah, that's good. That's a good idea.
it is it's a nice simple idea well executed it's super watchable the cast is great you get to see her being sort of like hit on by a series of very handsome confused men like and sort of and kind of go her own way it's just like and so Darcy and Lizzie just kind of in the in the periphery yeah yeah you kind of like you see their house every now and again um
You saying Mary in the Middle reminds me of Malcolm in the Middle, which has just, they've brought out a contemporary, you know, the kids are all grown up from Malcolm in the Middle. Now, Murph told me that it's absolutely hilarious.
I don't think I ever watched Malcolm in the Middle. Did you?
Did I watch it? No, I didn't. No, neither did I. But I thought, okay, do you know what? This would be a good thing to watch with the kids. I bet you they'll be into Malcolm in the Middle. It strikes me as the kind of thing they'd like. So we started watching it. We always have one thing that we're watching together as a family. So we started watching it.
the old Malcolm, the original Malcolm in the Middle. And so I was thoroughly enjoying it. And then I made an absolutely catastrophic mistake, which is when we were halfway through an episode, I said, because they used to absolutely love Young Sheldon, I said, what do you guys like better? What do you prefer, Malcolm in the Middle or Young Sheldon? Because I felt like they're kind of similar.
And they both simultaneously went, oh... Young Sheldon, yeah, look, let's just go back. Let's go season one, episode one of Young Sheldon and start again. I have literally in the past two years have watched maybe 19 seasons of Young, I don't know how much Young Sheldon I've watched and now we've gone back to season one, episode one of Young Sheldon.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
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Chapter 3: What makes 'The Other Bennett Sister' a unique adaptation of Pride and Prejudice?
It's Vagabond by Tim Curry. Now, I, again, I know I've gone on about this before, so I'll try to not labour it too much. I think... Tim Curry's entrance in the Rocky Horror Show is the greatest single entrance in film history. It is... Massive call. It is so spectacular.
I feel like when you ā I reckon I've probably watched it a hundred times and every single time the first hint of him is his foot in an elevator tapping to the song. And I start giggling from the second that he appears and then the whole song, he's singing the song Sweet Transvestite, it's so studded with ā Amazing little Easter eggs.
There's got to be dozens of moments of just an eyebrow raise or a hair toss or a particular leg cross or facial expression to the camera. There's so many of them. Like you just are guffawing when you're watching it, but also you're like plastered back in your seat at this person's outrageous charisma and energy.
And the film, I mean, I like all of the songs in Rocky Horror, but I really do think the film falls off a cliff after he exits having sung that song because he comes into the lift, sings the song and then does, I'll remove the cause, but not the symptoms, and then disappears again immediately. Yeah.
It's kind of like it falls off a cliff because nothing ā it's so electrifying that nothing can kind of compare. Anyway, so I ā and I've liked him in other things I've seen him in as well, you know. He's ā somebody uses the word ā I was watching an interview with him once and someone used the word seductive to describe him.
Oh, 100%, yeah.
And I think that is absolutely what he's like and that he plays a seductive villain and he says in the memoir he enjoys ā
playing his villains with a hint of mischief and i think that also is a hugely appealing and seductive way to play a villain bit like alan rickman in die hard as well right absolutely it's a great great quality for a victim for a villain so um tim curry had a stroke i think 12 to 15 years ago quite a while ago and so a bit like when i was talking about the michael j fox memoir he's
Vocal delivery is compromised compared to what it used to be, right? He speaks slowly. He's an old man. So you have to just let that settle when you start listening. But you do, as with Michael J. Fox, you just adapt to it. And actually the pace at which he reads forces you to kind of slow down and just listen. And I think, you know, He's an old guy.
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Chapter 4: What are the comedic elements in 'The Other Bennett Sister'?
It stands for British Regimental Accompanying Traveller. No way. Yeah. It was for people who were on a posting with the service person, so mostly referring to spouses and children. Yeah.
Could make a great drama series, wouldn't it? Brats, just like the children of service people. That would be an amazing, you should write that. It's your next real task, lovey.
Now, I know you've just watched Beef Season 2. I only watched Beef Season 1.
Okay, so I stopped watching Beef Season 1 because there's this kind of weird suicide scene that really tipped me over and I just sometimes, you know, I'm not super triggerable on that stuff, but I watched it and I just went, burst into tears and went, I can't, I'm not going to watch that anymore. And so I was, and everybody says that Beef 1's great and I'm kind of sure that it is.
I just couldn't get any further with it. But... When Jeremy said, oh, well, should we try a beef too? And I was still a bit like, ugh, stupidly. But it's a completely new storyline. So I jumped into it and really loved it. It's anxious television because it's people in situations that you just know are going to go wrong. So it's this set in this kind of country club that's run by a couple.
So totally different cast too.
Yeah.
Totally different cast. Yeah. So, and it's in the US, this resort kind of country club thing is run by a man and a wife. The wife is played by Carey Mulligan. Always love to see Carey Mulligan on screen. She's fantastic. And they've got, they're kind of the hostess with the mostess of this country club, but actually they're in bitter dispute behind the scenes. And
Two of their staff, after a big event, they've gone back to their house to fight and they are fighting physically and loudly and in a very confronting way. And this young couple who are, you know, workers, staffers in the resort, have like driven up to their house to deliver his wallet or something that he's left behind.
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