00:00:06:00 - 00:00:30:16 Unknown Hey. Welcome back to talk It Out. How are you guys? I hope you're amazing. Happy June. We're in June. Summertime, baby. Past Memorial day. It is officially summer. I don't want to hear anything about it. Okay. Summertime is now what I am craving. It is spooky season. That's right. I wish it was fall year round. That's not true. 00:00:30:18 - 00:00:57:11 Unknown I wish it was fall. Every other season except summer. We can have summer. I like summer, I like to be warm for sure, but fall time is just statistically, logically better. You know, and you can disagree. And it's okay to be wrong. So that's what I got to say about that. But I'm craving the spooky season. So today we are going to celebrate summer wine. 00:00:57:16 - 00:01:19:52 Unknown Yes. Summer. When the time between act over spooky season and the rest of the year. It's halfway. It's the halfway point. I don't know, whatever. It's like an internet thing. People are celebrating their spookiness early, which is awesome. Oh, before we do that, I would like to introduce you to my friend, Miss Love Boo Boo. Do the little Boo Boo song, though. 00:01:19:57 - 00:01:41:12 Unknown The like. Nah boo. I hate it, hate that thing. I told you we had matching bracelets. So she's got a little necklace. She's my girl. She my og. My ride or die. It's me and Miss Lovely Boo Boo over here. Or is my husband likes to call it the baby a little baby. But when I told you last week about the boo boos. 00:01:41:16 - 00:01:59:51 Unknown This is mine. All mine, all mine. That's how it feels having one of these. I'm serious. This is like I'm worried people are going to steal it type shit, resell this puppy now. You girl got you okay, but otherwise I just want to talk about spooky season. Spooky season, nerdy things. That's going to be the topic for this week. 00:01:59:51 - 00:02:34:32 Unknown So if you're not interested, see you next one. But for all of my fellow nerds, who is kind of excited for the Universal Studios, what are they calling it? Dark universe, Dark Universe, and they have all these classic monsters which universal owns, by the way, did not know that universal. I mean, obviously they do their main whole fucking theme park out of it, but I mean, to the point where, like, they created this and they used to be the horror destination for classic horror and whatever. 00:02:34:37 - 00:02:51:23 Unknown So and that's what I was wondering was like, why are we doing this? Like, is spooky season that just cool? Like, do we is it so many people just love spooky season or and I know you've talked about Dark Universe before, so it's not like, you know, the first time I'm hearing about it, but I was like, why are we doing this? 00:02:51:23 - 00:03:16:57 Unknown But yeah, they own it. And I kind of like to get into each one of the monsters. So the I overview the Dark Universe that universal Epic universes features classic Universal Monsters like the Frankenstein monster, Dracula, the Wolfman, and the Bride of Frankenstein. Additionally, characters like The Mummy and the Creature from the Black Lagoon, which I don't know much about, and Igor are also part of the Dark Universe experience. 00:03:17:02 - 00:03:39:30 Unknown Guests can encounter these monsters through attractions, shops, restaurants, and character meet and greets. You know, meet and greet with the Wolfman. That's funny, but I wanted to go through what is like the lower of all of these, you know what I mean? So the Frankenstein monster, obviously, we know Mary Shelley's Frankenstein when she wrote that, like 1818 is when she wrote it. 00:03:39:37 - 00:04:03:54 Unknown Now, the universal film didn't come out until 1931. That's crazy to think about over a hundred years later, your book becomes a movie. That's cool, that's cool. So the story Victor Frankenstein, a brilliant but arrogant scientist, reanimates dead flesh using electricity. But what he creates is not a man. It's a misunderstood creature born into a world that fears and hates him. 00:04:03:59 - 00:04:38:13 Unknown The monster, unnamed in the novel, is childlike in mind and terrifying in body. Abandoned by his creator and shunned by society, he seeks companionship and understanding, only to become increasingly vengeful when to night, both so yeah. So Frankenstein monster, there's a part and I don't know if it's the original Frankenstein or if it's another adaptation that they made, but there is in the classic, one of the classic Frankenstein movies, Frankenstein encounters a little girl, I believe, at like a riverbed or whatever. 00:04:38:18 - 00:04:59:58 Unknown And is like, picks a flower basically and tries to hand it to her and I think she screams and runs off. Maybe I'm misremembering it, but I'm pretty sure she, like, he hands her a flower. She gets scared and runs away, which obviously deeply hurts Frankenstein. And it looks like so obviously Frankenstein is pissed because he's just trying to be nice and I get it. 00:05:00:00 - 00:05:20:27 Unknown You're just trying to be nice, and people are judging you from how you look and how you, you know, talk and whatever. That's not fair. Now, Mary Shelley's novel was a lot more like it's like a cautionary philosophical, like, you know, what should man be pushed? You should be doing these things. Should science be, you know, pushed in this direction? 00:05:20:27 - 00:05:49:17 Unknown Should man be using science for these very sensitive topics? Very sensitive. I think I have a hair and I'm cursed with like one hair that's always there. Whereas the film was a lot more like it's alive, you know, monster movie. So. So that is Frankenstein. He's a metaphor for man's overreach, scientific hubris with tragic consequences. So now Dracula, obviously the coolest one. 00:05:49:17 - 00:06:12:43 Unknown And I do kind of want to get into vampires today, although I'm not a vampire expert. I did a little bit of research on the history of vampires, blah blah, blah. Count Dracula, Bram Stoker's Dracula, obviously inspired like Nosferatu and other things, and Dracula of 1931. That was Universal's films like date, which is why their version of Dracula is the one that you see at universal. 00:06:12:48 - 00:06:31:48 Unknown Side note anybody see the TikToks where people are calling out Dracula's feet and his toes are like, as long as my fingers like they're. So they're like, put those grippers away. So like, if anybody else has seen those, just let me know. Don't let me know. I don't give a fuck. But like, look at this picture. It's crazy. 00:06:31:58 - 00:06:55:49 Unknown Okay. Count Dracula, a century old vampire from Transylvania, travels to England in search of fresh blood and new victims. Using charm and supernatural powers, he preys on the living feeling by night and sleeping in the coffin by day. Van Helsing and a band of vampire hunters ultimately pursue him, determined to end his reign of terror. But I don't know if they do, obviously, because there are plenty more vampires. 00:06:56:02 - 00:07:22:54 Unknown So get rid of one year. You can get rid of them all. So good luck! We sent a bunch and a whole army on one guy. Maybe he was that bad, I don't know. And who we know is like what we think of as like blah blah Dracula. You know, again, I want to suck your blood. You know, that shit is Bela Lugosi interpretation as an actor playing Dracula, he's the one that brought us the, like, iconic voice and stuff. 00:07:22:58 - 00:07:46:24 Unknown Now, Bram Stoker is who kind of developed the vampire rules to some degree. And that's they like garlic. They're allergic to allergic, whatever. They can't stand garlic stake wooden stake through the heart will kill them. They sleep in the coffin during the day, that kind of stuff. So I think vampires are probably I mean, correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe in ghosts. 00:07:46:24 - 00:08:09:02 Unknown Like. And ghosts, you know, have so much more law than, like a book written than a character created. But and I mean, vampire stuff goes to like, pre medieval times, like, I mean, people are talking about versions of vampires and undead spirits, you know, possessing bodies in order to make them evil. I apologize, my throat kind of hurts today, guys, so I'm a little hoarse. 00:08:09:07 - 00:08:33:41 Unknown It's because I am okay. Not like it's really any different now. The creature from the Black Lagoon. When I looked it up. There's no real origin to this. Like there is no. He was created. I have been let go. Was a tiny fish. And now he's a man. Or, you know, some fish man, you know, got, you know, a chemical radiation, chemical spill, kind of like spider man type shit. 00:08:33:43 - 00:09:04:24 Unknown Like it is very like he was just there and scary. So. And this he first appeared in 1954, deep in the Amazon, an expedition to discovers a prehistoric amphibious humanoid, a half fish half man referred to as the Gill Man. This creature lives in a hidden lagoon and becomes infatuated with the expedition's lone female scientists. The crew tried to capture or kill him, but he proved both elusive and intelligent, leading to a tragic battle between nature and mankind. 00:09:04:35 - 00:09:27:39 Unknown The Gill man was a Cold War era metaphor for the unknown and nature's revenge on human interaction. Maybe we should all review that one, There should be a lot more Lord to that is Satan, Jesse. And deep in the Amazon, hidden. Okay, apparently the creature, like the actor who played him, had to wear this kind of wet suit to look like him and this creature. 00:09:27:39 - 00:10:03:26 Unknown And it was like, groundbreaking for the time. Like nobody had ever seen such special effects. So yeah, it has no literary roots, like the it was just born entirely from Universal's mind, which is kind of crazy that they don't obviously you have like Dracula and the Frankenstein's monster. That's going to be a lot more well-known. So you kind of don't have to work to like, market your product, but you would think that universal, having created their own monster, wants to like, do their own thing, like they want to, like, pump up their own money because it's all entirely from them. 00:10:03:31 - 00:10:31:44 Unknown Maybe people just didn't like half man, half finished being like, okay, whatever. Like sharks are scarier, but maybe not. Maybe people don't know. Maybe people don't know. Tap in if you're afraid of the creature from the Black Lagoon, I don't know, like I don't know The Wolfman. So first appearance in 1941, after returning to his ancestral home in Wales, Larry Talbot is bitten by a werewolf where he, while trying to save a woman cursed to transform into a murderous beast under the full moon. 00:10:31:44 - 00:10:59:42 Unknown Larry wrestles with guilt, grief, and the terror of hurting those he loves. No matter how hard he tries to contain the beast within, the curse consumes and lycanthropy myths. I can pronounce that word, but none of the Norse historical like lore characters like and therapy myths go back to ancient Greece and Norse legends. But this film established the modern werewolf mythos the full moon, the silver, the silver bullets, and the tragic transformation. 00:10:59:47 - 00:11:20:34 Unknown The Wolf Man is often seen as a metaphor for repressed rage, mental illness, and the duality of man. That's very cool. Lon Chaney Jr became synonymous with the role, reprising it in multiple universal monster films. Good for him. That's awesome. I wonder if the because we obviously we talked about Wolf Man a couple months ago and how it was like not very good. 00:11:20:45 - 00:11:50:13 Unknown Does does Rotten Tomatoes do like classic movies too? Let's see. Was that 1941 see 91%? It's kind of hard to live up to kind of hard to live up to. Yeah, 91%. Oh, Wolf man is scary. Yeah, 91%. Popcorn meter 80%. People love this. That's very cool. What about Dracula? So 1931 or something? Hello, 1931. Hello. Not Dracula, Drac, I don't know. 00:11:50:18 - 00:12:12:52 Unknown It's not giving it. How are you going to rate the Wolfman but not Dracula? Okay, okay. I was like, what, 94% and 82% popcorn meter. Okay, so then what is Dracula in 1992? Because they remade it and they called it Bram Stoker's Dracula. Okay. Whoa. You're kidding. That is scary. Has anybody seen this in this? Guys, that's got, like, the butt hair. 00:12:12:57 - 00:12:34:57 Unknown The heart hair looks like a heart. It looks like a butt. 69% Tomatometer, 79% popcorn meter. You know what do you trust more? The popcorn meter. The tomato meter. I kind of trust the popcorn meter. Obviously, because, you know, power to the people. But did Nosferatu oh, 1922 Nosferatu going to 97%. Wow. People like that even more than Dracula. 00:12:34:57 - 00:12:54:05 Unknown It was kind of crazy, right? That is kind of nuts. Okay, so I do want to go back to vampires and the lore there, but let's just continue because there's only a couple more characters, there's only one more character I really want to go over. And that is the Bride of Frankenstein. Oh my gosh. Okay, first appearing in 1935. 00:12:54:05 - 00:13:24:42 Unknown Did you know that The Bride of Frankenstein, one of the only in her own right, female horror characters, classic horror characters is she's on screen a few minutes, but her impact is legendary. If you've not seen the clip of Doctor Frankenstein brings her to life, she basically like. And he is. It's so sad because the Frankenstein monster is so happy. 00:13:24:46 - 00:13:54:00 Unknown It's just like, yes, a bride for me. Someone who loves me and she wakes up from it and sees him and screams and like, rejects him completely. And the ending spoiler that's fucking like almost 100 years old. Spoiler. It's nine. It's actually 90 years old. Exactly. He gets mad that she rejects him and he destroys the lab and they both die in it. 00:13:54:09 - 00:14:16:10 Unknown That obviously we're exploring. Like, can companionship happen when it's forced? Can people, you know, can people who are forced together be in this like, loving, perfect relationship and obviously arranged marriages? There's plenty of happy, amazing arranged marriages. I'm not trying to shit on those or whatever. I'm just saying this film obviously explores that of like, you know what? 00:14:16:15 - 00:14:46:21 Unknown You're forced to choose this person, and that's not real love and that's not real companionship when it's forced. So obviously loneliness, you know, the more creation, you know, debate, whatever. I'm crazy that the Christians didn't like get all into this, but we're all satanic panic over Dungeons and Dragons. Crazy. But honestly, the iconic hairdo was instant, instantly legendary, and instantly legendary. 00:14:46:21 - 00:15:13:49 Unknown That white bolt on the side of your head. I mean, that is you are Bride of Frankenstein. Period period period. Excuse me, I'm going to excuse me. I just, like, keep touching my face. Well there's one, okay? I'm never going to find it. I'm so sorry. First 20 minutes, I'm just grabbing at my face, obviously. So from like the 30s to the 1930s to the 50s, clearly, with the dates I've given you, universal was the horror. 00:15:13:49 - 00:15:39:02 Unknown Or like I said, Mecca of classic horror, of these creation of characters and stuff like that. I mean, they were the the A24 of their day was Universal Studios and I'll Die on that Hill, I will. How are you going to create? I mean, you didn't create all of these characters, but you you did in the sense that, like, you created Bella Lugosi's voice, the bride of Frankenstein hair, the creature of the Black Lagoon wetsuit. 00:15:39:07 - 00:16:17:48 Unknown All of that is so integral to what we picture now as those characters that is so that's crazy iconic. Crazy cool. Obviously Universal Studios has a past for sure. I'm not sure if they were the ones. Are they the ones that did Wizard of Eyes or was that MGM? But you know, certainly if if there were issues in every production things and I'm talking back in the 30s and 50s, I'm not saying that there isn't now, but it's still such a cool, iconic business to have like legacy to live on as this entity that is Universal Studios, you know. 00:16:17:52 - 00:16:43:58 Unknown And so, I mean, they have the theme parks, they have the one, you know, obviously, I'm not saying anything groundbreaking here, but I think it's really cool that they are going back nearly 100 years to the 30s, 1930s to bring back Dark Universe. And I'm very curious to see in like, they're going to do like a Dracula fest, if they're going to do like these iconic birthdays of these films because they are all coming up very soon. 00:16:43:58 - 00:17:04:36 Unknown That's a great way to kind of spend your first 15 ish years, 20 years doing it nonstop. So, oh, no, we talked about monsters for 20 minutes. Amazing. But I really like I really like the monsters. So I want to go back to vampire lore. And let me tell you, I, I wanted to talk about the lore of daddy two. 00:17:04:40 - 00:17:33:09 Unknown I'm still not over roll for sandwich. Won't be ever, I don't think, but I just thought how these characters that I love, you know, and that obviously. I mean, I was a vampire dressed up like Dracula for Halloween when I was like, seven, eight years old. So they really shaped me into a horror lover, lifelong. So. Okay, so like I said, like vampires specifically, they are Primitivo in this way, right? 00:17:33:09 - 00:17:58:21 Unknown And they are like Mesopotamia. You have its little two, little two where Lilith is like the goddess. The dark goddess, I guess, believed to prey on infants, seduce men at night. Ancient Greece, we have the Lima Lamia, a woman cursed of our children and drink blood and the abuser, and a seductive shapeshifting creature reflected in early vampire themes. 00:17:58:26 - 00:18:22:06 Unknown The aging she or the hopping vampire was a reanimated corpse that drained the life essence from the living in China and in India. The tales of vet Luz that tell us ghoulish spirits inhabiting corpses, like I said, circulated for centuries. How did all these people have kind of the same idea of like, they're undead, they're drinking blood, where's that coming from? 00:18:22:13 - 00:18:47:27 Unknown And then drinking blood, especially? I'm like, what? What could that be like a reflection of like obviously pre medieval people are worried about disease and death and blood was so I mean that's one like we were like here's here's 20 leeches to fix your syphilis. Were the ghosts in your blood. You know like weird stuff. But obviously pre scientific things, you know, it's all about lore and mythology and they're trying to explain it. 00:18:47:42 - 00:19:17:21 Unknown So okay, maybe I answered my own question. Okay. Then we're moving on to like the medieval and like early modern Europe vampires. Okay. So vampires that we know now are from like Eastern Europe, like Slavic and Balkan regions. That's kind of like, you know, your Transylvania, your Transylvania, and Transylvanian of sorts. So stupid. Like Romania, Serbia, Bulgaria, all of those involved, all those folk rituals involved around burial and vampire prevention. 00:19:17:25 - 00:19:44:53 Unknown Wow. We're preventing vampires here. Well, I mean, medieval times, I mean, 12th to 18th century. Are we talking about, like, the Black plague? You know, vampires are spreading it. People physically bloated with blood, not pale. What are we talking about? Burial practices often included staking corpses or placing bricks in their mouths. Can you imagine? You're like, oh, well, grandpa died, but we got to make sure he's going to be okay. 00:19:44:58 - 00:20:12:54 Unknown Go ahead and pry his rigor mortis mouth open so we can shove a brick in there so that he'll never become a vampire. What about time to stake your Uncle Larry? Don't want him becoming a vampire now. Like what? Okay. And apparently, I mean, and people were so about, like, preventing these deaths and stuff. Oh. Excuse me? Preventing the dead from becoming vampires. 00:20:12:59 - 00:20:47:13 Unknown That in, like, the 1700s, 1725 to 1755, approximately vampire hysteria swept through the parts of Eastern Europe. Reports of vampire attacks led to mass examinations. Why are we zooming people? Why are we burying the dead? What with villagers and even officials digging up graves to stake or burn suspected vampires? Uncle Larry has been dead for four weeks in a wood coffin. 00:20:47:18 - 00:21:07:26 Unknown Uncle Larry is fucking rotted to shit. I'm so sorry. I'm not trying to be morbid without those corpses. And maybe I'm wrong. Maybe these. We're talking. Okay, you know, we got people that died within three days. You know, we got to do it because of Uncle Larry's been dead for four weeks. He's. He's probably not coming back. But how do you know? 00:21:07:35 - 00:21:35:19 Unknown How do you know how the vampires live? Person in 1732. How do you know? We better exhume them now. Shovel Brook in his mouth. Now what? What? Okay, the most famous cases were Peter Polo. Go. Jove, it's. Yeah, I don't know, 1925 Serbia locals believed he returned from the grave to strangle victims. His body was found unnaturally preserved, leading to a gruesome staging. 00:21:35:24 - 00:21:54:20 Unknown What do you think? Unnaturally preserved. What do you think that was? Do you think he like? How did he stay preserved? Do you think he was like a big drinker? Like he was an alcoholic. And that maybe killed him? Maybe the alcohol kind of fermented his body and he was preserved. I know that's fucked to think about. Let's look. 00:21:54:25 - 00:22:20:35 Unknown Okay, so much for he topics. I'm thinking about changing the whole like slogan of toke it out, to be honest. Okay. And then an Arnold pillowy pollo Louis hello. Like, I don't know, I'm sorry. 1726 A Serbian soldier thought to be a vampire after death. Similar events followed his burial, prompting a military investigation. I think we use time and resources for that. 00:22:20:40 - 00:22:40:54 Unknown He imagine the guy being like, all right, go dig up Arnold. In some ways, like, not me. I'm not going to dig up Arnold. Like, go on, rookie, go dig them up. Stake his heart. The whole time. He's like, because he's hungry. I feel so bad. These stories were picked up by Western European scholars and skeptics. Planting the seed of vampire lore in English and French speaking literature. 00:22:40:58 - 00:23:13:09 Unknown Okay, so that's kind of where they came from. Oh, that's very cool. Okay, so the romantic, the vampire in the 1800s, vampires shifted from peasant horror to gothic anti-hero in the 19th century Western literature. The vampire poetry 19 excuse me, 1819, by John Pillow Dorie introduced an aristocratic, seductive vampire with Lord Ruth. Ruth, then inspired by Lord Byron. 00:23:13:13 - 00:23:32:22 Unknown Okay, I have no idea what that means to be. I'm so sorry. I am also not going to look it up. So you want to know about that? I'm so sorry. We're not looking that one up. Carmilla. Carmilla. Carmilla, 1872 by shirt in La Fanu. This is so crazy. I know he's a hot off again riot. Listen, we did do this. 00:23:32:33 - 00:24:04:10 Unknown Oh, nice. A lesbian vampire predating Dracula. That's right. The gays have always been here. LGBT creates history. Or is the answer. Sorry, but that's cool. But of course, people always take it from LGBT making assistance straight. That's fucking crazy, a bisexual. I don't like it. Oh yeah, a lesbian vampire predating Dracula. Sensual and philosophical. And it's horror. That's very cool. 00:24:04:10 - 00:24:27:11 Unknown I wonder how I wonder if. Wonder if she knew Mary Shelley. I wonder, wasn't Mary Shelley like, famously gay? Wasn't she? Hold on before. Before. I'm like, somebody told me the other day that Vin Diesel was gay and I was like, what? What? He is not. While Mary Shelley's sexuality is not explicitly stated in her writings or official biographies, there are. 00:24:27:16 - 00:24:49:03 Unknown There's evidence that she may have been bisexual, she admitted in a letter, after her husband Percy's death that she found herself attracted to women, saying she was more apt to get totally mousy for women that get it, bitch, she looks like a baby girl. Two And I'm front. I got that long nose to girl film. Additionally, there are accounts of her love affair with Jane Williams. 00:24:49:03 - 00:25:15:15 Unknown Some view this as a key part of her identity. Okay, cool. Again, that was not none of These Things are by Mary Shelley that I'm just wondering if she, you know, the LGBT of it all now. Dracula 1897 by Bram Stoker. That's more of what are Nosferatu vampire rules that's are like the definitive vampire novel. Count Dracula combines folklore, undead, and the Victorian fears of foreignness, sexuality, and disease. 00:25:15:19 - 00:25:45:06 Unknown Dracula pop up Dracula popularized tropes like fangs, transformation into a wolf, or a bat, sleeping in coffins, aversion to sunlight, garlic and holy symbols, and feeding on beautiful women. But it put some garlic up because I know they're coming for me. Okay, so then we move into not modern, but the 20th century vampire classic film era. That's when we're talking about 1922 Nosferatu again, 1931 universal Dracula. 00:25:45:10 - 00:26:11:13 Unknown That was Bela Lugosi and then Count Orlok. Obviously, it's already been remade. You guys probably are sick of talking about Nosferatu for real, but which is crazy that Nosferatu was remade, but not for sure, I guess had Stoker's is redone in 1987. Oh, watch that and I'll report back to you more mid-century to 1980s vampires became campy air and TV and television and film and television, TV and television. 00:26:11:18 - 00:26:41:33 Unknown The same year, Hammer Horror films revitalizing gothic vampires with more like blood and sex. And then we're talking about interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice. Weaponized excuse me. And then we go into interview with the vampire, 1976, by Anne Rice that revolutionized the genre, presenting vampires as emotional, tragic, and immoral outsiders. This series spawned an entire subgenre of romantic emo vampires. 00:26:41:38 - 00:27:03:51 Unknown So. And if you guys don't know about interview with the vampire, obviously Anne Rice, that's a novel. But the movie is because I think that's a long novel. You guys don't know. It's a really like that interview was is thorough, for sure. But in interview with the Vampire, they're two men that are vampires, and one turns the other into a vampire and they kind of team up. 00:27:03:55 - 00:27:27:18 Unknown One of them ends up turning a child into a vampire, and the other one is like, that is so fucked because you have coerced this little girl to be a little girl forever. And he thought he was saving her. She was dying of this disease. And she's he's like, I have to save her because this is my, my, my penance for for having to live this horrible, eternal life. 00:27:27:18 - 00:27:48:25 Unknown And then she, you know, it's like, I'm never like a man who's never going to love me. I'm never going to be able to have children. I'm never. And whatever. Maybe vampire can't have children, but, I mean, she's never going to be able to have this, like, romantic sexual relationship with a man as she gets older and becomes this older woman from this child's body that she's stuck in. 00:27:48:25 - 00:28:13:55 Unknown So it's really fucked up. Don't. If you're a vampire out there, do not be turning children. Not cool, not right. Stick to the adults. All right? Fucking weird. Okay? And then we go into our modern vampire. We go into vampires from, like, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, blade, Twilight, that kind of True Blood, Vampire Diaries, and then even what we do in the shadows are a lot more modern vampires. 00:28:14:00 - 00:28:30:57 Unknown Okay, so where are some of these come from, though? Because I'm really interested in the rules. And obviously what has sparked the whole like thing is seeing sinners. I saw that weeks and weeks ago, and I know I talked about it. If you haven't seen it yet, I'm pissed. I'm pissed off that you haven't seen it yet. You need to go see it. 00:28:30:57 - 00:28:50:42 Unknown It's not a horror movie. Okay? I know you're like, you like Skyrim. Go see it. Go see it. All right. Okay. So drinks blood. Ooh. Or gender variance is universal. A symbol of life and death. Universal. Are we talking about it came from universal or. It's a universal thing that they do. I don't know, it feels like a universal thing. 00:28:50:42 - 00:29:18:15 Unknown They do immortal or undead. That's common across a lot of the cultures. Sunlight weakness was introduced in the 20th century. No reflection is a symbolic of having no soul. I don't know that that's so garlic cross silver. That's European folklore. Invitation only entry. That is Slavic superstition. That's very cool. Turns others via bite. Is literary device variable across works. 00:29:18:19 - 00:29:36:57 Unknown And the bat transformation was obviously that like I talked about the romantic era inventor invention of like, oh, I must get away from you very quick as we turning into an empire. If I if people are like, you know, what does my gun sound like? It's me. What do I sound like trying to do about. I'm not gonna make that noise again too many times. 00:29:37:04 - 00:29:57:18 Unknown I'm so curious to know what is the next evolution of vampire. I mean, are we kind of stuck in this? Like, well, they're kind of all they can be in. They kind of symbolize all they can symbolize. Or are we in a place of like, no, there's going to be space vampires in underwater vampires and blood, you know? 00:29:57:18 - 00:30:14:49 Unknown And or is that just too much? Why are we taking it too far? Do we need to? Do we need to add another rule? Do we need them to, like, be able to live in a cave or like there's like a society of vampires in caves underneath the world? Someone, someone called James Cameron right now. So how long have I been talking about this? 00:30:14:54 - 00:30:40:14 Unknown A long time, yeah, that makes sense. Yeah. Yeah, that makes sense. Okay, guys, so my brain is a snuffle mat that, like, my. Okay, my brain needs a snuffle mat in order to feel better. That's so weird to say, but my brain really does. It needs a, like, some kind of like line. It needs to get really tired before I can finally, like, chill. 00:30:40:19 - 00:30:59:42 Unknown So I don't know why it's at that so weird. Why am I saying that? I wrote it down. I thought it was going to spark something else. It didn't. It didn't spark anything. Okay, well love y'all. Go watch my video from last week. Okay. Now we were just getting back into it. This episode is way better. So if you want to skip last week's, that's fine. 00:30:59:47 - 00:31:22:04 Unknown Go to the week before. It was dope. Is it dope up. So we're we're back on it. Don't worry. I'm here. I'm with it. Oh, wait wait, wait. We thought you were going away. You thought you really not it here. You thought you thought you were getting away, didn't you? You really did. You thought you're going away. My recommendation of the week is to go watch one of these old vampire movies. 00:31:22:04 - 00:31:40:55 Unknown Honestly, I don't care if it's. I don't get old, I don't care. It's blade. Go watch blade. Go watch interview with a vampire if you've never seen it. It's actually. It's a good story. Oh, I'm going to watch man Stoker's Dracula. So I'll report back next week about that. But that's my recommendation of the week. Recommend okay. Most anticipated of the month you guys. 00:31:41:00 - 00:32:06:16 Unknown The most anticipated of the month is going to be that Alani new energy drink. That cotton candy energy drink. I know I'm about five years old and I love cotton candy flavored things. They came out with a cotton candy sparkling water. Now get the land. I know we got a lot of new cotton candy energy drink. And that, my friend, is going to be dope. 00:32:06:30 - 00:32:23:22 Unknown So it's supposed to hit stores any time now. I've been trying to find it for a couple of weeks now. But now that we are into June, I know that we are going to find it. We're going to try it. And before I try it, I will make sure that I film it and try it, because I want to give you guys my full reaction for sure. 00:32:23:27 - 00:32:40:32 Unknown So that's my most anticipated recommendation of the week. Okay. We're going to talk about bring her back next week. I told you guys that last week. If you're keeping up last week this week that last month this month we're in a we're in a groove. I don't agree with me. Good shit. All right, strapping young I will go watch last week's video. 00:32:40:37 - 00:32:59:28 Unknown Go watch the week before the video. That was even better. And I will tell you. Right, uncle about me. Tell him. Tell them about me. Tell him about me for real. Okay. All right, all right. I will see you guys next week. Maybe that's too much. BYEEE, there we go. BYEEE