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FMC 143 Ed Wood Directed by Tim Burton

October 5, 2022
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Welcome to “FMC 143 Ed Wood Directed by Tim Burton,” where we delve into the intriguing world of filmmaking, dissecting how this cult classic defied commercial expectations to earn critical acclaim and two coveted Academy Awards. Join Reginald Titus Jr. and Casey G. Smith as they explore the film’s distinctive black and white aesthetic, the nuanced performances of Johnny Depp and Oscar-winner Martin Landau, and the unique vision of director Tim Burton. Beyond Ed Wood, this episode expands into wider cinematic discussions, from exciting Marvel Easter eggs and insightful sports documentaries to the enduring appeal and challenges of black and white filmmaking. This is a deep dive into unconventional storytelling, industry insights, and what makes a film truly unforgettable. For more in-depth film commentary and analysis, join us on Filmmaker Commentary each week.

What We Cover

  • A candid look at Ed Wood’s unexpected box office performance against its relatively high budget, and its subsequent critical reception, including two Academy Award wins for Martin Landau and Best Makeup.
  • The lasting appeal and challenges of black and white filmmaking, with insights into how it’s used today by directors like David Fincher.
  • A detailed breakdown of She-Hulk Episode 2, featuring exciting MCU Easter eggs like Wolverine and Eternals nods, plus meta-commentary on Bruce Banner’s past and a potential World War Hulk storyline.
  • Behind-the-scenes discussions of documentaries like Untold: AN1 and Untold: Caitlyn Jenner, exploring sports figures, career shifts, and personal journeys within the public eye.
  • Analysis of Tim Burton’s unique directorial style in Ed Wood and how it shaped the film’s peculiar tone and visual identity.
  • Reginald and Casey G. Smith share their recent watches, including Trainwreck: Woodstock 99, Beavis and Butt-Head, Inside the Mind of Cats, and The Samaritan, offering diverse perspectives on current media.

Key Moments

  • 0:52 – The hosts react to the startling disparity between Ed Wood’s estimated $18 million budget and its $5.9 million worldwide box office gross.
  • 2:13 – Celebration of Ed Wood’s two Academy Award wins: Best Supporting Actor for Martin Landau’s portrayal of Bela Lugosi, and Best Makeup.
  • 16:26 – A close look at She-Hulk’s subtle background newspaper headlines, teasing Wolverine and The Eternals’ possible MCU future.
  • 17:12 – Bruce Banner’s meta-reference to his past actor and the significant tease of a potential World War Hulk storyline in She-Hulk.

Gear & Films Mentioned

  • Films: Ed Wood, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1939), The Artist, Under the Cherry Moon, The Wizard of Oz, Sin City, Top Gun: Maverick, DC League of Super-Pets, Nope, Jurassic World Dominion, Minions: The Rise of Gru, Elvis, Easter Sunday, Orphan: First Kill, The Black Phone, Paws of Fury: The Legend of Hank, She-Hulk, The Incredible Hulk, Shang-Chi, Trolls, Trainwreck: Woodstock 99, Samaritan, Beavis and Butt-Head.
  • Documentaries: Untold: AN1, Untold: Caitlyn Jenner, Inside the Mind of Cats.
  • Directors: Tim Burton, David Fincher, Spike Lee, Kevin Smith, Darren Aronofsky, Quentin Tarantino, Mike Judge.
  • Actors: Johnny Depp, Martin Landau, Bela Lugosi, Tim Roth, Mark Ruffalo, Sylvester Stallone.
  • Basketball Players: Allen Iverson, Stephon Marbury, Kobe Bryant, Vince Carter, Steve Nash.
  • Other Notables: Wolverine, Eternals, Abomination, Bruce Jenner, Carrol Baskin.

Listener Questions

  • How did Tim Burton’s Ed Wood manage to earn Academy Awards despite its poor box office performance, and what makes its black and white cinematography so impactful?
  • What hidden details and upcoming plot points in the Marvel Cinematic Universe are She-Hulk and other recent shows subtly hinting at?
  • Beyond the screen, what can filmmakers learn about perseverance, financial strategies, and staying true to their vision from the real-life stories of sports figures and cultural icons?

Full Transcript

Read the full transcript

Full Episode Transcript
This episode of Filmmaker Commentary Tim Burton's 1994 biographical film "Ed Wood," analyzing its box office performance, critical reception, unique visual style, and the standout performances from its cast.

Opening Discussion
[Intro music and podcast ident]
Reginald Titus Jr.: Filmmaker Commentary, episode 143.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Welcome to Filmmaker Commentary, where we cover movies with commentaries from directors who take the time to record them on Blu-ray and DVDs. We also give our detailed insights, so look out for spoilers. We discuss the latest in showbiz news along with movies and TV shows that we've been watching. So join Reginald Titus Jr. That's me. And K.C.G. Smith. That's me. Every week here on Filmmaker Commentary.
[Intro music fades]
Reginald Titus Jr.: Welcome to Filmmaker Commentary. I'm Reginald Titus Jr. I'm joined with...
Casey G. Smith: K.C.G. Smith.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Welcome back, sir.
Casey G. Smith: Good to be back, sir.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And today we're talking about Ed Wood, directed by Tim Burton. It was released in 1994. And what was the box office and the budget on this film, Ed Wood?
Casey G. Smith: So, on Ed Wood, we have an estimated box office of $18 million.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Okay.
Casey G. Smith: And a worldwide gross of $5.9 million.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. Let's run that back. What happened?
Casey G. Smith: An estimated budget of $18 million and a worldwide box office of 5.9.
Reginald Titus Jr.: That's a disaster.
Casey G. Smith: Terrible. Terrible, terrible results at the box office for Mr. Burton.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Oh my god. I mean, you got Tim Burton, you got Johnny Depp, for crying out loud. Bill Murray, Sarah Jessica Parker.
Casey G. Smith: Yikes.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Vincent D'Onofrio, quick cameo.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah, that's a... that's a hell of an L right there. That is... oof. Like I mean you... yeah, that's a... that's a tough landing.
Reginald Titus Jr.: That is a tough landing. That's a tough landing. I mean, like to show your face around Hollywood because basically Hollywood's like... it's like high school on steroids in a way, you know, and everybody knows in town what's up, what's hot, what's not.
Casey G. Smith: But as we talk about awards, there is a bit of a saving grace.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Let's get to it.

Awards and Critical Acclaim
Casey G. Smith: All right, so, uh, Ed Wood would go on to receive a 2020 award. This is all the way back. Let's forget that. I'm not going to mention that. Let's talk about what really matters.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Tim like, thanks.
Casey G. Smith: So, at the Academy Awards, the 1995 Academy Awards, it won an Oscar for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Martin Landau, portraying one Bela Lugosi. It also won an Oscar for Best Makeup by Ve Neill, Yolanda Toussieng, and of course the famous Rick Baker for the, again, for the makeup that they did. Also won a couple of Saturn Awards for Best Music, Best Actor, Martin Landau once again, and also Best Makeup, again, Rick Baker and crew. Uh, won American Comedy Award for Best American Comedy, Funniest Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture, by Martin Landau.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Stole the show.
Casey G. Smith: Chicago Film Critics, once again Martin Landau, Best Supporting Actor. The Dallas-Fort Worth Critics Association Awards.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Shout out.
Casey G. Smith: Best Actor, Martin Landau.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Let's go!
Casey G. Smith: Uh, Golden Globe, Best Performance in an Actor in a Supporting Role. Guess who? Martin Landau.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Martin Landau!
Casey G. Smith: Martin Landau. The National Society of Film Critics Awards, uh for Best Cinematography and Best Supporting Actor. Screen Guild Actors Award. The Screen Actors Guild Awards, excuse me. Best Supporting Role, or Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role, Martin Landau. Uh, and there's some other ones but uh, yeah. So, the saving grace that, uh, Martin Landau.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Academy Awards.
Reginald Titus Jr.: So you could just say, shout out. Basically, yeah, he's like, hey, you know, you know, we won two Academy Awards.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah, the Academy Award-winning Ed Wood. Which I I'm positive we could go back and we could find some probably many Academy Award-winning films that didn't make a whole lot of money.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, it seems like they kind of know that going into it. You know, sometimes, you know, especially when it comes to some of these bio, like going back and like old-school Hollywood and kind of going back it seems.
Casey G. Smith: And it being in black and white.
Reginald Titus Jr.: It's an awards thing.
Casey G. Smith: And and about a director that was not known for doing movies. I remember seeing the trailers for this and I was like, huh?
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah.
Casey G. Smith: Like, what is... I I had no desire to see this movie at all.
Reginald Titus Jr.: At all.
Casey G. Smith: That was a kid. I was like, nah, sorry, Tim. I'm not I'm not I'm not going to be on this ride.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Because like now that we're in the, you know, we've produced our own films, starred in some, have some success with it. It, um, now these these stories intrigue me.
Casey G. Smith: You could appreciate the struggle.
Reginald Titus Jr.: For sure. Like I respect, I see you respect.
Casey G. Smith: Trying to get it done. It's even, even in like the failing attempts because now he's got a bit of a cult cult following. Even for this to be to be made is is evidence of that.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah.
Casey G. Smith: Um, but yeah.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, it's uh, yeah, so you can appreciate this more. This one. I think, uh, David Fincher just recently came out with a black and white film, kind of going back over, you know, old Hollywood. Uh, I do want to check it out. I can't even remember the title, you know, we talked about it on one of the our recent podcasts over the last 15, 20 episodes. I just can't remember what episode, but uh, we had talked about it, but definitely not something that's, hey, we should watch this.

Black & White Filmmaking and Personal Preferences
Casey G. Smith: Again, I I don't I don't mind now, in my more mature, yes. I don't mind a film being in in black and white. It's not necessarily a deterrent for me, but for some people it is. Some people are like, like instantly checked out if they don't see color.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, like what are we doing here?
Casey G. Smith: It's monochrome. Come on. Jump on board the monochrome train.
Reginald Titus Jr.: What's your favorite black and white film?
Casey G. Smith: Favorite black that well, up to date?
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah. I'm I'm going to 2022.
Casey G. Smith: Okay. So, within that that span of time of film history. All of film history. It, of what I've seen, it's going to be Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde from 19, I want to say 39, starring Fredric March. Which won Best Academy Best Male Actor at the Academy Awards. It's actually a dual award, but that so far, thinking right now, is my favorite black and white film.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Thought it would have been The Artist.
Casey G. Smith: The Artist was good, but I it's cool.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I don't know, I just haven't watched it. I just knew it was in black and white.
Casey G. Smith: I've seen it. It is it is a good film. But that movie it it's got something because I I knew about it as a child and would see images of it and then to finally see it decades later and I can appreciate like the movie magic of what they did then to pull off some of the effects, which is it's there were some that were pretty cool, especially when you hear how they did it. I'm like, huh? Very fascinating. But yeah, that one stands out for me.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I think for me, it's uh, Under the Cherry Moon, Prince.
Casey G. Smith: Man, see that one crossed my mind but I couldn't think of the name of it. I was like, huh, Prince.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Cause it's like one that we would watch. It it was in a collection, that's part of the reason why we watched it was like, ah, it's on the VHS shelf, let's check it out. And there's just certain scenes in there that's hilarious. And the black and white part, um, didn't seem to bother me at the time.
Casey G. Smith: Sure. I'd say up there it would probably be The Wizard of Oz, which is a hybrid. Because the first part is in black and white and then Technicolor.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah. I think the yellow brick road and all that stuff kind of takes over. You kind of forget that it's in black and white.
Casey G. Smith: True.
Reginald Titus Jr.: It's like, oh yeah, that's right. All the boring parts are in black and white.
Casey G. Smith: But it starts in. But it starts in. The tornadoes in black and white. Yeah. It's that's drama. The tornado hitting your farm, that's action.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah. I mean, I think that was great technique though, you know, to blend both of those.
Casey G. Smith: Pretty smart. Pretty, pretty smart. Cause if that whole thing was black and white, I mean, you lose so much. You lose so much.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, there's there's a there's a magical aspect of all of a sudden, oh, color coming in. What? And somewhere over the rainbow, that's sung, it's still in black and white.
Casey G. Smith: Hmm. Yeah. Interesting.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah. Sin City.
Casey G. Smith: Oh. Hey! Hey there, guy.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Hey. That's a good pick.
Casey G. Smith: Good, good pick. And there, I'm sure there are many films.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I said your favorite, you know, yeah, this is just like what pops in mind. Black and white, I think black and white films don't pop up into the brain like that. It's not colorful.
Casey G. Smith: That's very accurate. That's why I'm like I'm like I'm like. Black and white films, not colorful, but uh, give it give it a shot. What's the worst thing you ever seen? My next film will be in color.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Oh man. It seemed like um, like with black and white films, it seemed like the thing to do especially for filmmakers because black and white was cheaper to produce your film. This is high quality. So that was just like a choice, but for filmmakers, early filmmakers doing their first film in black and white was because it was cheaper. So, when you see like a Spike Lee, she's got to have it or Kevin Smith's Clerks or Darren Aronofsky's Pi, all done on film, all done black and white, 16 mm. It that it's for budgetary reasons. And so like the audience kind of like lets that kind of slide.
Casey G. Smith: I think there's also a fascinating thing in the 90s. Say early, say early 90s. A lot of music videos in black and white. A lot of Janet Jackson stuff. I don't I don't say a lot, but um, I miss you much. Parts of Rhythm Nation, you know, were in in black and white. They were getting a number of a number of stuff like black and white had this kind of resurgence in a lot of music videos.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Um, I know for me, I've probably done like 50 music videos. But I've got my I got my few. Got like three that are black and white, you gotta get that one off your chest. You gotta get the black and white off your chest. And my recent most recent music video that was black and white was the splash of colors. So, like kind of like on the Ed Wood Blu-ray cover, you see Ed Wood and Sarah you see Johnny Depp and Sarah Jessica Parker, he's given she's given him the, what are they called?
Casey G. Smith: All the the the special sweater or the I forget the name of the material.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, it's in a pink color. So I kind of isolated colors like that in my most recent music video.
Casey G. Smith: Selective coloring?
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, which was a thing in the 90s too. You got the blue jeans that were blue, but everything else was black and white or the red popping, so it was fun to do that.
Casey G. Smith: Yes, sir.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But any hoot, before we talk further about Ed Wood, let's talk about TV news and movies watched.
[Segment transition music]

Showbiz News and What We've Been Watching
Casey G. Smith: So, in the news, according to IndieWire, there are within this the the week of this recording quite a few movies that are have been coming to video on demand. Premium video on demand titles that are consistently able to rent at $19, or $19.99, let's say. That includes the the groundbreaking record-setting Top Gun Maverick, as well as DC League of Super-Pets, which that's a really fast turn around to uh to on demand. Didn't perform too well. Nope.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Oh, it didn't perform well?
Casey G. Smith: DC, no, it didn't. From the time that it came out to now being that's a really short window. Top Gun was in theaters for a while, but DC Super-Pets, I mean, that was we're talking maybe maybe a month and a half ago?
Reginald Titus Jr.: I don't even remember the box office. I know we covered it one week, the box office of Super-Pets. It was it was doing good that weekend, but...
Casey G. Smith: Yeah, it didn't didn't uh, didn't hang in there because it's a real, I mean, a really fast turn on that one. Uh, again, so these are the top ones, like based on based on revenue that they've generated on on Vudu. So, number one Top Gun Maverick, number two DC Super-Pets, number three Nope, number four Jurassic World Dominion, number five Minions: The Rise of Gru, number six Elvis, number seven Easter Sunday, number eight Orphan: First Kill, number nine The Black Phone, and number 10 Paws of Fury: The Legend of Hank.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I wish they would give us the number, the revenue number. That would be great.
Casey G. Smith: That would be nice. Would be nice. If you're listening out there, Hollywood, give us the numbers on home market sales. Video on demand, Blu-rays, DVDs, we'd love to be able to see these numbers, see how things are going.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Because you got a mixture on there. You got films that's been out almost a whole year like Mav, but then you got the the Black Phone. I don't know how that's been performing box office-wise, but that's been in theaters for a little while. And then you got the Super-Pets. I don't know in comparison to Black Phone. I would assume Super-Pets made more money box office-wise in comparison to the rated R Black Phone movie. Or are they just trying to kind of capitalize on the transactional while they can? Um, kind of like early pandemic with uh Trolls. Was that Trolls that came out during the pandemic and they?
Casey G. Smith: It was like a sequel to Trolls.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Okay. And they I mean, they just hit it out the park, revenue-wise.
Casey G. Smith: Mm-hm.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, well, that's interesting though.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah, so something uh that I found, again, this is all according to IndieWire. Mm-hm.
Casey G. Smith: So, what have you been watching, Reginald?
Reginald Titus Jr.: I watched the second episode of She-Hulk.
Casey G. Smith: Haha, attorney at law. Oh, attorney for hire.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah. Right, for sure. Uh, to me, it feels still entertaining, watched it with the family. But it it's starting to feel like kind of how we watch like The Flash and some of the other, you know, TV shows in that regard. But I was we were waiting on the action this episode and it didn't happen.
Casey G. Smith: Ah. I I think I can appreciate that, the fact that this can go a a different a different route and just be funny, just be a comedy, which really what the second episode... spoiler alert for the second episode of She-Hulk, by the way.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Thank you.
Casey G. Smith: They they could just go in and just have some have some fun. I think they're also kind of, you know, working that CGI budget as best they can.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Oh yeah, for sure. Like, you can only Hulk out once.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah, but she was I mean, in yeah, her time in the in the office, uh, you know, doing her doing her thing. Well, she also was at the at the bar. Actually, there was a couple scenes where she was She-Hulk. And it's only going to now that she's at a job where she has to be She-Hulk on the job, there's going to be be more of that. But uh, great to see Tim Roth.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Right?
Casey G. Smith: Roth, Tim Roth. Sorry, there's a real real like guy named Tim Ross in the in in the area we live in, he's a famous preacher and and pastor. Um, but Tim Roth, to see him make his return and you seeing him not as an abomination but as as Tim Roth and him talking about his his haikus that he's written. It's that was actually pretty good.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Oh god.
Casey G. Smith: But even when he talked about his the point that he made, uh as far as like being hired by the military to stop this this threat of the Hulk, thought he was going to be seen as a hero. And she's like, but you went on a murderous rampage. He's like, I know, I know, but you know, but I was under orders and and the other Super Soldier Serum that game, you know, I was like, he's kind of got a bit of a point because I remember in the in the Incredible Hulk.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah.
Casey G. Smith: Have you seen that one?
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yep, of course.
Casey G. Smith: Okay. So, when that one drops, initially he he does take a a shot of the Super Soldier Serum and it amps him up.
Reginald Titus Jr.: That was like a comic scene. Him like running fast through through the park.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah, he was doing it. And he gets at the Hulk and and it's like moving around and shooting at him. And the Hulk like just hits him. And this dude flies into a tree and his torso like twists around where he's like broken. Like this guy's spine is snapped. And he's laying on a bed and whatever in traction and they end up giving him like an experimental injection.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Dang.
Casey G. Smith: And then of course, that's when the abomination comes out to play. Yeah, but uh, yeah, , I I I enjoyed the episode once again and seeing her her resistance to superheroing. But then just that quick scene, she's going to have to embrace it. But the two highlights.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Mm-hm.
Casey G. Smith: Two very interesting highlights of things to come.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Okay.
Casey G. Smith: Number one, when she's before she gets hired for the new job, when she's looking for work and she's on that website.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Mm-hm.
Casey G. Smith: In the far right-hand corner, there are two small little blurbs of information. One says, man wins bar fight, bar fight with metal claws.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Oh, shout out Wolverine.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. If you if you if you know, you know that is, you know, who's going to be in a bar with metal claws if not Logan, aka Wolverine. So, nice little Easter egg there.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Snip, bub.
Casey G. Smith: And then that's right, bub. Snicked. And then there's another blurb that says, why is there a robotic hand sticking out of the ocean?
Reginald Titus Jr.: Oh.
Casey G. Smith: Nice little nod to The Eternals. Spoiler alert for Eternals. Trying to bring it all in together. Yeah. So, I'm like, okay, we see some some connective links. But then the other thing that was that was that was interesting and funny was when when she's talking with Bruce and she's telling him, you know, she's kind of making like she's asking him if it's okay if she represents the abomination.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah.
Casey G. Smith: He's like, I kind of feel like you're just calling me to tell me you're going to do this. And she's like, yeah, yeah, you're totally right, I am. And he goes, well, you know, he he sent me a haiku and and he says, and he says, I was a totally different person then.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Which is a great nod because if you've seen that first Incredible Hulk, you know that originally Edward Norton
Casey G. Smith: Totally.
Reginald Titus Jr.: was playing Bruce Banner. Different person.
Casey G. Smith: And so, of course now it's Mark Ruffalo, who's who is he is Banner. He is Yeah, that was a that was a great gag, a great nod. But then we think that Bruce is just sitting in his lab. But when he says he's not going to be around for a little while, he's got to take care of something and the camera pans out, he is now on one of those same ships, one of those Grandmaster ships that we saw in the very first episode, flying away into space.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Ooh. Thor Ragnarok memories.
Casey G. Smith: Now, we often would link it to that, but him going The Hulk going back to Sakaar. That is a that is a foreshadow potentially of war of of of a World War Hulk potentially happening. So,
Reginald Titus Jr.: Okay.
Casey G. Smith: you know, that's what fans have been asking for for for over a decade now.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Okay.
Casey G. Smith: That that's such a seminal Incredible Hulk story. So, we shall see what what goes down. But uh, yeah, She-Hulk episode two, uh, not action-packed, but still funny and and moving the plot forward because now She-Hulk is literally heading up the division, the superhuman law division of a law firm. So, now we can expect kind of like cameos galore. There's in addition to abomination, yeah, she's going to be having to defense of people and we get at the end of the episode, you know, as she's as she accepts the job, he's like, oh great, have you have you turned on the TV? Cause he said, oh no, she says she's ready to defend she's going to take and defend abomination. He says, oh, have you turned on the TV? And she watches the TV. Abomination has escaped from prison and we then see shots of him and he's apparently in some underground fights, which of course links directly to what happened in Shang-Chi. Which gives a little bit of a hint maybe of where this where this uh story falls timeline-wise in the MCU. But again, another She's like, oh, great, you know, She's like, this sucks. Well, that's that's kind of her thing. This sucks. Cause she says that when she's at the law office, she has to change. But we're seeing some nice connective tissue that She-Hulk is providing within the this phase of the MCU. So, that's kind of nice to see.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Very great. Like good writing.
Casey G. Smith: How about that?
Reginald Titus Jr.: It feels like they care about the universe they're writing for and so that's always good. It's like you're in good hands. So, and we find ourselves watching the full credits at the end and we're waiting for that end scene.
Casey G. Smith: Yes, sir. And there's going to be one in every episode of this show because there it was with other show with other MCU shows, Disney Plus shows. It's been hit or miss. You never know if you're going to get one, but this one I've heard every episode is going to have one. So,
Reginald Titus Jr.: We're we're in we're in we're in. We here. Let's go!
Casey G. Smith: Uh, what else have you been watching, Reginald?
Reginald Titus Jr.: Um, we watched, uh, on Netflix, that, um, these real stories from a business perspective, um, called An One. Untold.
Casey G. Smith: I just watched that today. Yeah.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Ah, yeah.
Reginald Titus Jr.: What do you think? How we enjoyed it, it?
Casey G. Smith: Yeah, absolutely. I, you know, growing up, growing up, I was already well, no, technically when when An One started, I was I was in high school, cuz it was early 90s. I just forget that it had, you know, take like taken like it had started that early. Cause I wasn't really a pack. I was I'm an I've been an Adidas guy most of my life.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Adidas.
Casey G. Smith: But definitely in in yeah, I was all about Adidas. I thought you would have been more of a Nike guy because of MJ.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Love MJ.
Casey G. Smith: But MJ wasn't an Adidas guy first as well. He won he originally actually wanted them to offer him a deal, but Nike did their thing, locked him up. But but now I've been an Adidas guy. When Kobe had his his own Adidas shoes I was like, I wanted those shoes so bad back in the day, but I've been an Adidas guy. So, I didn't pay much attention. And when those mixtapes started coming out and all that kind of stuff, see that and very cool. But um, cause they just had apparel at first. It was just it just the shirts. I remember seeing those shirts.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. I never owned any of them.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Likewise.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Um, yeah. But you kind of forget about I didn't ever think of them like as a like a serious company in that way because you know, I came up in a generation with the Allen Iversons, when I was playing basketball and taking it serious, the Allen Iversons, the Starbury, the Kobe Bryant, like that Vince Carter, Steve Nash, like that whole class considered probably like the most decorated class in NBA history. Um, if you go back and look through that class, this is wild.
Casey G. Smith: It's pretty stack. Just those names alone, it's pretty stack. There's a lot of a lot of Hall of Famers. K.G. K.G. wasn't in that class. I think he came a little bit before. He was already playing, but yeah, pretty stacked class. But what I didn't realize in watching that documentary series is that when Vince was in the Slam Dunk competition that he was wearing An Ones. They know like by then this was like their second attempt in the shoe market. I didn't know that Marbury originally like first game playing as a Timberwolf. He's in the very first An One shoes and literally sprains his ankle.
Reginald Titus Jr.: It's I think did he break it or did he sprain it? He he jacked his ankle up enough he was out and he was in there the debut of their shoes that they were about to hit the store.
Casey G. Smith: And so Marbury, aka Starbury, was in that class with everybody, next like, who, you pick whoever you want in that draft and you got a star. Uh, I mean, he got statues in China, you know, Marbury. Um, but they were trying to emulate the Nike model. Like they're finding their Michael Jordan, the Michael, you know, they found Marbury, which was great. Like that had Marbury not heard his ankle, like An One would is a household name, it kind of is kind of. But I mean, it maybe not.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Stratus.
Casey G. Smith: It was. It had its time. Again, this But they're still in Walmart. Like to this day, like there's an An One shoes, but like they're The company still exists, but it was the, I mean, it was a it's a fall. It's the rise and and fall of of An One.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, it's a fall. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, multi-million dollar company to this day. Um, it's kind of like how K-Swiss and some of these other brands have gone, where they're where they're where they're part of like they still make money but they're just part of a a financial portfolio. So, that's that's kind of the the fate for An One. Kind of like Fubu, all these other ones. They kind of end up in somebody's portfolio.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. I mean, it's but it's it's a it's a very nice series. You get to see some of the the the the ballers from the streets, you know, who used to play street ball. And again, if you've seen any any of the mixtapes, you know, these guys are with hot sauce, you know, the professor skip to my Lou, who is
Reginald Titus Jr.: The professor!
Casey G. Smith: So, yeah, uh the main event. And then you you get to hear from all these guys. I I thought it was very well done, very interesting. And I I could see from the beginning when these guys first I'm like, uh-oh. These guys are going to be disgruntled later on because they're not getting in the revenue share from the stuff that's being made. And I mean, yeah, it's it's it's one of those things where if you have talent nowadays, if you're going to get in on something, make sure that you're getting a piece of the pie. Even if even if your upfront money isn't as much, if you could be invested like in some of the long-term stuff at that ground level, that's that's a better way to go. Cause some of these guys, they were making some money, but it was kind of fleeting because it was just like just just contract. And then when the company went belly up, these guys were like cut off, even though they were on the front line and people then like, well, wait, what what happened? Where where are you at now? But it's a it's a very, very well done documentary.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, it's it's um, when I was saying when we kids, me and my cousins, when we we were watching the mixtape. So, we didn't really think An One is like a company in that way. We were watching the mixtapes, getting hyped up to go play basketball on the weekend. Tryna emulate the moves.
Casey G. Smith: Oh god, it was bad.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Especially like some of the professor stuff cause he was like in our age group. So, like we were like, oh man, did you see what they did? Those handles.
Casey G. Smith: Dude. Like to this day, he's still on YouTube like doing like taking on people at the park. I was like, this I I say I saw him talking talking the other day. Like he was I think he was either dressed as an old man or something like that. Just kind of like
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like Drew.
Casey G. Smith: Like scamming people. Like yeah. Yeah, yeah, like the Uncle Drew stuff. Um, but so after I watched that, then I was like, then it was one on Caitlyn Jenner.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, I saw that one.
Casey G. Smith: I watched that one too. I was like,
Reginald Titus Jr.: I thought you had already watched that one.
Casey G. Smith: I had not. Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: That's good that you watched that because that goes hand-in-hand with our film today.
Casey G. Smith: Exactly. I was like, when I saw it, I was like, this will this will pair. This will pair well with with with Ed Wood's story. Um, but I never really watched all of Bruce Jenner's and and and before anybody ats me,
Reginald Titus Jr.: Add KC's.
Casey G. Smith: before anybody ats me, Caitlyn Jenner herself says she's all the accolades she did as Bruce Jenner, she accredits those to Bruce Jenner. So, me saying Bruce Jenner, this is what's covered in the documentary. She's okay with that. So, I'm not, uh, I forget what the term is, uh, dead, dead something. Nonetheless. But I so that this is this is not a case of that. But what she did as Bruce Jenner,
Reginald Titus Jr.: I gotta know what you're talking about now.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah, there's a term like when someone has made a transition from one gender to the other to to bring up their previous name of who they were previously, especially if they changed their name, it's it's called dead something. Like like you're bringing back their their past.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Oh. Sorry.
Casey G. Smith: Anyway, so it's but it's it's a it's a it's a it's a It's a It's a So, did he go through the whole process of the sex change? I thought he was just wearing women's clothing.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Well, no, he's he's so, so you have you have you watched? So, if you watched I did, I just can't remember. I was been a while. I watched it when it first came out.
Casey G. Smith: He he went through a couple of initially he started doing like the injections. Yeah, but that was like earlier on. Like it was like we're talking maybe like in the 80s or so. But then like you know, had his Adam's apple done, to get rid of his beard. Um, he started taking injections, I guess estrogen. But then stopped the process, met Caitlyn Jenner. Obviously, they had kids. And then he got to a point where he was ready to to go through with more of the change. So, yeah, got his Adam's apple removed, which that kind of started the media buzz. Um, and then I'm pretty you know, I'm pretty sure you have, you know, you have I don't know if he has implants, but breasts and all all that stuff. But I don't I don't know I don't know if he's removed his genitalia. Change I don't know if he's changed his genitalia or not. So, they don't really touch on that directly. But yeah, whatever, whatever. But anyway, it was very fascinating seeing the the the athletic part as Bruce Jenner. Like seeing that cause I always knew that he had done the Decathlon, but I never watched any footage of it or anything like that. I never seen any of that. But to see his his the work that he put in,
Reginald Titus Jr.: Hard work, please talent.
Casey G. Smith: That's impressive. And and the Russian guy he was competing against. Spoiler alert for Untold: Caitlyn Jenner. But to see that, it was impressive and to see him go through all those events and and to see him win. I was like, yo, it's it's it's very enthralling and it's very fascinating. And uh, it's a it's a heck of heck of a journey and you know, to see where where where Caitlyn is now and to give homage to who she was as Bruce Jenner. But even with all that success that that wasn't she she feels that wasn't who she was. Because you know, she talked about these these issues being there the whole time. And even with like the hype of that of something that could be considered so masculine still not not satiated, something not being aligned. But uh, it's very
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, it's uh, interesting tale. I'm glad it actually I'm glad that it's out there to kind of cause some people only know her as Caitlyn. Yeah, and don't realize the journey. There was a whole another life. Whole another whole another life as a man. Yeah. So, that's that's that's very fascinating and to to hear her bring up and famous on both parts. Very true. And to hear her bring up like her faith. Like how like she she talked to her to her to had her pastor or a priest come over and talk to him. She get like a clear answer like, well, what's, you know, just can really get a clear answer, but it's uh, it's it's very fascinating. So, but yeah, but uh Caitlyn Jenner, Untold: Caitlyn Jenner on Netflix, very interesting. I want to see the one with the refs that's I'm sure it's going to come out thing next.
Casey G. Smith: You know what's interesting? Because I I I'd have to look up original images of Vampira. The same. They're the same. It it seems so but I mean, yeah, based on the movie, I would say, oh, you're you're infringing on this lady's gig. But when it comes to when it comes to parody laws, you can kind of do that. That's why you have a whole what's his name? Weird Al, who can like create a whole career just based on parody.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. But I mean, that's that's interesting because I I'd have to look up original images of Vampira. The same. They're the same. It it seems so but I mean, yeah, based on the movie, I would say, oh, you're you're infringing on this lady's gig. But when it comes to when it comes to parody laws, you can kind of do that. That's why you have a whole what's his name? Weird Al, who can like create a whole career just based on parody.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah. but I mean, that's that's interesting because I I'd have to look up original images of Vampira. The same. They're the same. It it seems so but I mean, yeah, based on the movie, I would say, oh, you're you're infringing on this lady's gig. But when it comes to when it comes to parody laws, you can kind of do that. That's why you have a whole what's his name? Weird Al, who can like create a whole career just based on parody.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. but I mean, that's that's interesting because I I'd have to look up original images of Vampira. The same. They're the same. It it seems so but I mean, yeah, based on the movie, I would say, oh, you're you're infringing on this lady's gig. But when it comes to when it comes to parody laws, you can kind of do that. That's why you have a whole what's his name? Weird Al, who can like create a whole career just based on parody.
Reginald Titus Jr.: That's going to be hilarious.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. but I mean, that's that's interesting because I I'd have to look up original images of Vampira. The same. They're the same. It it seems so but I mean, yeah, based on the movie, I would say, oh, you're you're infringing on this lady's gig. But when it comes to when it comes to parody laws, you can kind of do that. That's why you have a whole what's his name? Weird Al, who can like create a whole career just based on parody.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like one of the most hated referees.
Casey G. Smith: Ref. Rightfully so. Um, then I watch anything else? Um, I I um, subscribed to Paramount Plus. Are you subscribed?
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, I have access.
Casey G. Smith: It depends.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I did a free trial and I don't think I'm going to hang around, but I'm going to, you know, I'm going to keep the trial going and then I'm going to duce out. Um, but
Casey G. Smith: What did you watch on there?
Reginald Titus Jr.: The um Beavis and Butt-Head.
Casey G. Smith: You're a grown man now. I watched a few episodes as well. You can put it in my notes. I was like, this is a guilty pleasure. I feel the same, you know, I just It's like I'm a grown man now. Yet there's something Yeah. I I don't approve of these antics, but Right. So, I was I knew that a movie had dropped because Mike Judge had recently gotten on the Joe Rogan show and so I was like, oh, okay. So, they're dropping the movie, but the movie's only available on Paramount. So, I was like, okay. So, I'm in the process of watching the movie, so I'm about, you know, an hour and 10 minutes in.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah. I could not be good friends. You know, they're just so high. They can't follow through. Right. Um, and so what she does, husband comes and breaks the door down, punches her in the face. She runs into the kitchen, grabs that cast iron skilllet. And she is just he's walking away and she just smacks him on the back of his head. And then after that first hit, we just see smack, smack. But we don't see the graphic close-up, but we just just hear the crunching noises of what's happening. And then she runs, wide shot, she runs out of there and runs down the street. Um, but I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything. And made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah. Uh, that movie was troubling. Like I couldn't I never watched the official movie. Sure. It it's like an alien made this movie. It's like this has nothing to do with films at all. Like how did this happen? Yeah, I never watched it. But the film has uh, dang it. Y'all know what the film is out there. We could Google it. But um, um, Franco plays that character. Dang it. What is it called? But then I I don't I don't know. I can't. But the film itself has his cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, man, you must eat fruit.
Reginald Titus Jr.: But I I think it was what? Uh, I can't remember the name of the director. But he was like, was it Thomas Anderson?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's a whole different person.
Reginald Titus Jr.: I know, I know. I can't. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.
Casey G. Smith: Dude.
Reginald Titus Jr.: And stuff started getting broken. And then the chili pepper at the end. Like literally Flea is on stage buck naked.
Casey G. Smith: I mean that's Flea.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Like I mean, stuff dangling and just like just letting it be free.
Casey G. Smith: Yeah. Like it's
Reginald Titus Jr.: When I hear Flea, I think, unfortunately, of Beavis and Butt-Head when a Red Hot Chili Pepper music video would show up and then Beavis is like, Flea! He's just seeing saying it over and over again. Yeah, that's bad. Yeah, but it it was, man, that thing was so wild. Like it got to a point where they they tested the water. Cause they had these these fountains, people get water like in in fill them up, whatever. And so they tested the water and they found that the water was like contaminated. And people have been drinking this. And one one one woman said that she went she left, she had all these cold sores in her mouth cause she had gotten some kind of thing from the water. It's like, dude, man, it was just it was it was so bad. Like there was yeah, yeah, yeah. If you if you wish to dive in and see the tragedy of of Woodstock, literal trainwreck of Woodstock '99, it is on Netflix and I I had no idea it was that bad. But it it pretty much destroyed I don't know if there'll be another another Woodstock because this one was so bad. Yeah, they're the movie. Oh my god, no, I'm sorry. But the film itself has its cult audience, you know, it's it's so terrible, it's good. And apparently the guy who directed it so like kind of like oblivious to like how terrible he is. He thinks he's doing a good job. Um, because it has all these fans and everything and made this and turned into a a studio film based on that film. Is something right?
Casey G. Smith: Oh, that's what I said. Oh, man. Oh, man. Oh, man. No, no, no, no, no, no. I got you.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Uh, what about else I've been watching? So, I I watched, uh, the the rest of Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. I watched the third episode of that.
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Good Lord, that was an absolute trainwreck. Nothing encompassing the the spirit of the original Woodstock. And this just the difference in the kind of bands. Like when Limp Bizkit came out,
Casey G. Smith: Uh-huh.
Reginald Titus Jr.: They riled that crowd up.
Casey G. Smith: I haven't heard that name in a while.
Reginald Titus Jr.: Yeah, they were riot. Yeah, they riled that crowd up and literally talking about breaking stuff.

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