and that is quite the achievement in the podcast world.
Was pleased to see a Dracula inspired one, but quickly disappointed due to Matt’s inability to form even one sentence without saying “like” one to five or more times. Who listens to themselves and thinks “Yep, nailed it?”
These verbatim examples are not outliers.
(1) (ten in ten seconds, no joke) Chris: So, there’s nothing, like, superimposed over...
Matt: No, it was, like, every effect was done by, like, they would, like, shoot the, like, film, like, one way with, like, part of the film, like, not exposed and part of it exposed and they then, like, run it all through again, like, film something else, like, on top of it.
Lulz, wot?
(2) Chris: I feel, like, in, in, like, a Dracula movie, like, they would have gone overboard with, like, him working and stuff, and it could have been really bad.
Matt: And he intentionally, like, wanted it done on, like, sound stages and everything completely because, like, he, ‘cause again, he was trying to honor that, like, film was kind of, like, coming on the scene and becoming sort of mass consumed.
(3) Matt: It’s, like, uhh, like, the scene where the there’s, like, the where Johnathan Harker’s on the train and there’s, like, the miniature of the train and then, like, his diary, like, taking up most of the frame. That was all done in camera they built, like, a giant diary and then had, like, a train, like, running kind of respective lies, like, in the background, like, a model train they all filmed it at the same time ... and, it’s yeah so, like, that makes, like, shots where you know, like, where the green fog creeps along.
You can’t make up this comedy gold.