Episode Transcript
Welcome in is Verdicuous Center Ted Cruse Ben Ferguson with you.
And on this holiday weekend, we decided to replay an awesome episode that we did about a year ago, and that is Centator Ted Cruise's favorite movies a great list.
And if you are like the two of us and you'll love to watch movies over the holiday break with your family, you do not want to miss this list, Cenator.
Speaker 2What's on your list?
What are you going to rewatch during Christmas this year?
Speaker 3Well, listen, let me just say Merry Christmas to everyone.
I hope you're having a wonderful, relaxing Christmas.
And one of the things that I've always done at Christmas from when I was a kid to now is my family we go to the movies.
My dad loves movies, my mom loves movies, and so we go to the movies.
Particularly Christmas time, we'll go see movies.
And so we want to play you a list of thirty of the greatest movies of the twenty first century and and and if you watch them, put a comment down below, let us know if you like the movies, let us know if there are anything you want to add.
But but here is thirty any one of which would be a great way to spend some time with your family over this Christmas break center.
Speaker 1People that don't know you, well, I'm gonna give them a little bit of a clue.
You absolutely love movies, and you put together a list of your favorite movies and also series and shows that you watch.
And if you've ever wondered what Senator Cruz is watching when he's flying all the time, here's a really good list we're gonna be giving you on this Christmas.
Speaker 3Well, and let me just echo that, Merry Christmas.
I hope you're having a wonderful and blessed day.
I hope Sanna came down the chimney and your kids are overjoyed, and you're spending time, maybe with some hot cocoa.
We often do Christmas by the tree, where all be in my bathrobe, We'll all be in our pajamas, the kids will be opening presents.
We all actually have cups of hot cocoa, and it's a beautiful time, and it's a beautiful time to reflect not just on the love your family has for each other, but the love God has us in the salvation He sent for us.
Now I don't know about you, but but over holidays, what my family has always done is we go to movies.
We go to movies over Thanksgiving break, we go to movies over Christmas break.
Speaker 1I love movies.
As a kid, both my parents love movies.
I would go to movies with my mom and dad when I was a little kid.
I still go to movies with them now.
Speaker 2But way, you're a movie theater guy.
Just so people know.
Speaker 1This, I like the real theater, so I like the big screen.
Speaker 3I like popcorn and gummy bears and and you know, the the experience of being there.
And by the way, I'm also rabid about staying until the very end, till the last moment of the credits play.
Speaker 1I will not get up and leave.
There's a sense of completeness.
Speaker 3Of appreciating the entirety of of the the movie.
And so what we decided we do today is put together just a compilation of movies that that that I love, that I that I recommend to you, and and and hopefully as you're taking some time with your family, maybe you'll go watch one of them and laugh or cry, and it'll touch you and you'll enjoy it.
And I think art and storytelling or are beautiful, beautiful things.
Speaker 1So that being said here in the big shows and the big movies on Senator Cruise's list, Merry Christmas.
I get asked all the time from many of you guys that are watching or listening right now, what is Ted Cruz like behind the scenes.
So we thought we'd have a little fun.
I'm gonna ask him some questions, and you're even gonna find out what his favorite movies are.
Speaker 2Senator, We're gonna have a little fun.
Speaker 1I get asked all the time when I'm all over the country in half of this last week in New York, so what is Ted Cruz really like behind the scenes?
And I say, I actually, if people got to see the side of you that I know, you're actually really fun to be around.
You're also a huge movie buff as well, And so I'm gonna ask some fun questions just to kind of let people know behind the curtain who you really are.
So let's start with this.
What is the last thing you watched on a plane?
Speaker 3What is the last thing I watched on a plane was Outer Banks, which is a series.
It's a teeny bopper series and it's phenomenal.
I am in the middle of season three.
And there's a reason I'm watching a teeny bopper series, which is my youngest daughter, Catherine loves Outer Banks.
Speaker 4She's at camp right now, yep.
Speaker 3And when I dropped her off at camp, she said, Dad, I want you to watch out her Banks, and I want you to write to me in letters and tell me what you think is the season's progressing.
Speaker 4And so I've been regularly.
Speaker 3I write to her about every couple of days and I tell her, Okay, here's where I am.
I'm at this point.
I'm at this point.
This character just my favorite character, JB.
Yeah too, no doubt about it.
Speaker 4So she asked me that I'm a little troubled.
Speaker 3Her favorite character is JJ who who is kind of a look I guess if you're a thirteen year old girl, he's you know, he's always doing the dumbest thing imaginable, but he's kind of a I like John B.
Speaker 4John B is a good character.
Speaker 2It's such a fun show.
Speaker 1So when you were growing up, what was it that you were watching high school college?
Speaker 3But by the way, spoiler alert, I apologize if you haven't seen seen I'm gonna give a spoiler alert right now, So just fast forward through this if you don't want a spoiler alert.
But in season two, when when when Ward is blown blown up, I knew Ward was not blown up, and so I wrote her, I said, yeah, Ward just died.
I'm very confident he's alive.
And I remembered they keep scuba gear in the boat.
He got in the scuba gear and then like.
Speaker 1Seven epsom there you got to figure it out, and you're like, they got to keep this, they gotta keep the series.
Speaker 3So I felt pretty good that I was at least a step ahead of the teeny Bopper series.
Speaker 2I like that.
Speaker 1So what were you watching in high school?
Like what were your favorite shows?
What was your favorite movie?
Speaker 4So I love movies.
Speaker 3My parents love movies, like like we would, you know, this is what we do.
So so every holiday, every Thanksgiving, every Christmas, my family would go out and watch.
Speaker 2Movies that Diehard a Christmas movie.
Speaker 3Of course it is okay, good, absolutely, yes, there's only one right answer.
Diehart is absolutely a Christmas movie.
But we would go out and do movies.
When I was a kid, when I was like eight nine years old, my dad would drop me off at the theater.
Speaker 4All Saturday and I'd watch like five movies.
Speaker 3I'd go from one theater to the next to the next and just watch everything there.
Speaker 4It's we all love movies.
Speaker 3So what I've done done today for this show is I put together a list of twenty five movies.
Now this is not exclusive, this is not the only twenty five movies I like, and I don't even know that it's my twenty five favorite.
But it's twenty five awesome movies, which if you haven't watched, I recommend you watch.
You will enjoy them, you will laugh, you will be moved, you will get good things from them.
So let's go through the twenty five.
Speaker 1I gotta ask for one more question for you, twenty five what movie have you watched the most in your life over and over again?
Speaker 4Well, that actually happens to be number one on the list.
Speaker 2I knew it.
I like this.
Speaker 3So my favorite movie of all time is The Princess Bride.
Really, I love The Princess Bride.
I think every character in it is exquisite.
Every line from every character is fantastic.
Speaker 1I'll tell you.
Speaker 3In college, we used to play a game called Drinking Princess Bride.
And so the way you play Drinking Princess Bride.
As you sit down with a bunch of college kids, you put the movie on and you try to say each line immediately before it's said.
If you get it right, you point at somebody.
They have to drink.
If you screw it up even slightly, you drink.
And if two or more people say the same line at the same time, everybody drinks.
Speaker 1So when you get to the as you wish, why.
Speaker 2You were so sober in college?
Now I understand.
Speaker 3Look, when you get to the as you wishes?
Yeah, everyone can get them.
So they're all socials and it is a fun game.
My problem is I know just about every line from the movie, but I'll screw them up slightly, so I end up kind of getting myself because I try an awful lot of them.
But is an exquisite movie.
I probably watched The Princess Bride, I don't know, a couple hundred times.
No way, it is fantastic.
So that's number one on your list, far and away.
Number two on my list is The Godfather Saga.
Speaker 1Couldn't agree with you more.
One of the best series ever made period.
Speaker 3And I'm not gonna break it down between one, two and three been like three, which is a bit of a heretical idea.
I think three stands on its own as its own movie.
The least that three only makes sense in conjunction with one and two.
Speaker 2Which is when you're in the club.
Speaker 1I kind of like that, like you can't fake it and go see number three and and think oh that was incredible.
Speaker 2You have to be in it.
Speaker 3And look, I quote all of them all the time, you know, from three.
Every time I get out, they keep pulling me back in.
I will say it was a little depressing with with with my team where I turned.
You know, senate staffers are all children.
Speaker 4You know, your.
Speaker 3Average to put that on a T shirt, your average senate staffer is like twenty three, twenty four, twenty five.
So so things like Godfather quotes they just don't get.
And so I I said something.
I said, you know, this is the business we have chosen.
And like everyone looked at me confused, and I said, okay, I'd like six staffers there.
I said, all right, do any of you have any idea what I'm saying.
They're all like no, no, no.
Speaker 1I said, okay, this is Godfather too, and and and this is a conversation between him and Roth, who is clearly modeled after Meyer Lanski, him and Roth and and Michael Corleone, and they're down in Miami and Hyman Roth goes Michael.
Speaker 3I had a friend.
I had a friend since childhood, Moe Green was his name.
And one day somebody put a bullet in his eye.
I did not ask who was responsible.
I did not seek retribution.
I said, this is the business we have chosen.
None of them had any idea what I was talking about.
Speaker 2Team building night in the Senate.
You should totally, you should totally bring him in one, two and.
Speaker 1Three nine hours.
Speaker 2Yes, this is what you're gonna do.
That's team building one.
Speaker 1On Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Wednesday.
Are favorite line from any of the Godfather is the best one?
Mine's the Canoli.
Speaker 4Leave, leave the gun and take the Cannolic?
Speaker 2Yeah, no brainer.
Number three on your list Scarface?
Really?
Speaker 3Oh, I love me some Scarface.
Why notice Pacino has two spots in my top three here?
I like Pacina, Okay, I love crime movies and look Scarface.
Stony Montani's Cuban.
I'm Cuban.
It's you know, it is larger than life.
I can quote a lot of lines from it to be honest, I'm not going to because they're pretty off color and I'm going to avoid putting out on the podcast some of the language from it.
Speaker 4But uh, it is so crime genre is your thing, and I like Pacino.
Speaker 2Yeah, he's amazing.
Speaker 3So my favorite TV show is Criminal Minds.
I love Criminal Minds.
Speaker 1I'm actually shocked by that one because if there was only one box that I can take with me my whole life, like if I was stuck on it as a island, it'd be West Wing.
Speaker 3West Wing is fabulous.
I've watched every episode of West Wing.
I've watched every episode of Criminal Minds.
But Criminal Minds is I just find it fascinating.
Heidi hates it, by the way.
When Criminal Minds is on, She's like, turn that garbage off because you know you've got evil, vicious murderers.
I'm like, no, no, they're the bad guys though, it's all about stopping them.
Speaker 1But she just doesn't like that.
In the house all right.
Number four Fletch.
Never seen it.
Speaker 3You've never seen Fletch.
Go home tonight and watch Fletch.
It may be the funniest movie ever made.
Speaker 2Really.
Speaker 3Chevy Chase plays Irwin Fletcher, an undercover investigative reporter.
It is absolutely hysterical.
Speaker 2You know, you love chevy Chase, so that's it's.
Speaker 3Chevy Chase's best movie, much better, much better than Lampoon's Vacation, much better than and He's done a ton.
I love chevy Chase, but Fletch is head and shoulders above them all.
You know Grant who heads up my security detail.
Grant and I quote Fletch lines back and forth at each other every week.
Speaker 1Really is Go and watch the movie.
Never seen it?
It is spectacular, all right, Fletch, I'm on it all right, number five amazing Grace also never A lot of people have not seen it, but it is a very good.
It is the true story of William Wilberforce.
Now William Wilberforce was a Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom who led the effort to abolish the slave trade.
Speaker 2Very cool, is it true?
Speaker 3Store, true, Store Oka and Wilberforce.
So, when he started as a young MP, the slave trade was the United Kingdom's single greatest source of revenue.
It was their business.
And he begins as this young MP arguing we must end the slave trade.
It is wrong, it is immoral, and everyone laughs at him, and it would be like if you were in Texas standing up saying we should ban oil and gas.
Speaker 4I mean, it was that absurd of an idea back then.
Speaker 3And he spends fifty years battling for it, and the movie ends with him successfully championing and passing the legislation abolishing the slave trade and shutting down their most lucrative business because it was.
And by the way, the title amazing grace, you know where it comes from.
What so the person who wrote the hymn amazing Grace was a friar who had been the former captain of a slave ship.
Really, he was the captain of a slave ship.
And think of the words of the song, amazing grace, amazing grace, how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me.
I once was lost, but now and found, was blind, but now I see.
And imagine the person writing that in that context was the captain of a slave ship.
Presumably he had murdered people, he had beaten people, he had whipped people.
He mean, I mean, you think of the evil entailed in being the captain of a slave ship, and then the amazing grace that that that God offered redemption even in the face of the horrific evil.
It puts a whole different character.
The book is by Eric Metaxas, who's a fantastic author.
Christian author does great biographies.
I highly recommend Amazing Grace number six.
Unforgiven, Never seen it?
Oh, Unforgiven?
Speaker 1Is this is why it makes me laugh when we get to do shows like this, because I mean, I will go watch these now.
Speaker 3Okay, so Unforgiven best Western ever made won the Academy Award for Best Picture.
Speaker 4Clint Eastwood is in it.
Speaker 2I could do an age joke.
Here was it in black and white?
Speaker 1No?
Speaker 3No, no, no, it was actually laid Eastwood.
You were actually out of diapers when it came out.
Speaker 2Okay, gotcha.
Speaker 3Morgan Freeman is in it.
Gene Hackman is in it.
Gene Hackman is spectacular.
What's interesting about Unforgiven that is so powerful is it turns all of the stereotypes of the Western on its head.
So, for example, Clint Eastwood plays this, this outlaw who had turned over a good leaf when was good and then was going back gets hired.
What happens is a a woman who is a prostitute is badly cut up by a drunk cowboy and they put out a reward to kill the cowboy who cut her up, and Clint Eastwood, as this retired outlaw, needs the money and so it is coming to collect the reward, and Morgan Freeman, his partner, comes with him.
But there's a point where where Clint east would you know, there's there's a young kid who wants to be a gunslinger and and he's like practicing on shooting fast, and like Clint Eastwood says, well, you know, for me, this is about as fast as I can draw my gun, point it, aim at it, pull the trigger, and hit what I'm aiming at.
And he said, in most firefights, people are scared out of their mind and they're just terrified.
And whoever can kind of calmly engages who wins.
And there are scenes where like everyone's like, oh crap, and they shoot their foot and they drop their gun and they're like freaking out and he kind of and he would just get drunk and just sort of systematically banged and it it really did.
Speaker 1Invert many of the conventional wisdom.
Speaker 2Of being a fast draw on everything else.
Speaker 3And Gene Hackman's character is hysterical.
It is he's the sheriff who initially you think might be the hero, but he very quickly becomes an anti hero.
So excellent movie number eight.
Team America.
Speaker 2I've actually seen it.
Speaker 3Hilarious, okay, and I'm going a little edgy, So Team America, Team America, World Police.
Speaker 4It's a puppet movie.
Speaker 1I remember when it came out, I was in shock, but I was dying laughing.
So Heidi didn't like movies very much.
I took Heidi to see it.
She almost fell to the floor laughing.
Speaker 2So she y'all clicked on that.
Speaker 3It is screamingly funny.
Now it makes fun of both sides.
It makes fun of Republicans, Democrats, everything.
It's the guys who do South Park who did it?
It is puppets.
Speaker 2They're truly opportunity offender.
Speaker 4It is now.
Speaker 3I'm gonna give a warning.
Every third word is a profanity.
If you're offended by profanity, skip this suggestion.
I will say, when we were fairly newlyweds, we went on vacation with with Heidie's parents down at Lake Powell, which is fabulous, and and and we brought it with us and we sort of like Heidi and I remember, this is really, really funny, and I think we didn't quite remember that every third word is a profanity.
And I'm sitting there with Heidie's parents as we're listening to the blinkety blink blink blink, blink blink.
We didn't finish the movie, like ten minutes into it.
Speaker 2We just can't believe you brought this in front of your parents.
Speaker 3Right, yeah, it was, but it's still funny as I'll get it, all right.
Speaker 1Next movie, Patten, yep, amazing, amazing movie.
I've watched Patton probably five six times in my life.
All Right, do you know what I did before every Supreme Court argument I ever did?
Well, I can figure it out now you watch Patten, not the whole thing, just which see the opening speech, okay, yeah, just the opening speed George C.
Speaker 3Scott in front of the gigantic flag, standing up and saying, men, the objective is not to give your life for your country.
The objective is to make that other, poor son of a bitch give his life for his country.
Speaker 4I mean I can dig that.
Speaker 2I can dig that.
Speaker 4It is sound advice.
Speaker 1If you can watch that speech and not be inspired, you're dead.
Speaker 4Yeah, like it is.
Speaker 1See, those are my weakness movies.
I love true stories.
I love good versus evil movies.
I absolutely love sports movies as well, but there's always usually a big speech in those.
Speaker 3By the way, a buddy of mine collects historical military equipment and clothing and uniforms, and he has patents dog tags, no way, And I actually have worn Patten's dog tags.
They have rested on my bare chest and I literally felt like I was ready to pull out a pistol and start shooting in an airplane.
Speaker 1Like it made you.
Speaker 3You think about that that actually rested right above the heart of patent.
Speaker 4That's incredible.
That's a good thing to own, all right.
Speaker 1Next movie, The Sting Classic.
Have you seen this?
Speaker 4You've never seen The Sting.
Speaker 2I don't even know.
It's about Oh.
Speaker 3Oh, Benjamin Benjamin Benjamin the Sting, All time classic.
Robert Redford, Paul Newman, They're they're con men.
Speaker 1It is this is this is what I can really mess with.
Wait, Newman does something outside of like SASA.
Speaker 3It is hysterical, It is beautifully done.
Go and watch and what's it about.
It's about conman, Okay, and it's it's worth watching.
I probably watched it a hundred times.
Such a good movie.
All right, next movie Awakenings.
Speaker 2Yes, I've seen that, so Awake.
It's only one.
Speaker 3So Awakenings is fabulous.
Robert de Niro, you're a de Niro fan.
I like de Niro a lot, not a fan of his politics, but a big fan of his acting.
Is a great actor.
Although as much de Niro got all the acclaim, but I actually thought Robin Williams stole the show.
Speaker 2I love Rob Williams, so this is what this is right at my alley.
Speaker 3Robin Williams is one of my my all time favorite actors ever.
I mean, he's an incredible comedic act.
Speaker 2So you're gonna laugh.
Speaker 1I was asked a question if you could have dinner with, like any five people who would be at your table, living.
Speaker 2Or alive or dead.
Speaker 1I had Robin Williams for years in my list because I think he's just one of the most brilliant actors and genuinely funny human beings.
Speaker 3So when Robin and Williams passed, I genuinely cried and I wrote a long statement about Robin Williams on Facebook that I put up, but it just I hammered it out of my iPad because he he is so funny his stand up If you've ever watched his stand up.
Speaker 2Routine golf, yeah, I've watched it.
Speaker 3The one on golf is again profane language, but as funny as anything that has ever been said, like screamingly funny.
Awakenings, the portrayal he gives.
I actually like Robin Williams even better in dramatic performances than comedy.
And he's one of the funniest human beings ever alive.
So Awakening on the list, Yes, fabulous, all right.
The next two I viewed again, Brave Heart and Gladiator.
Speaker 1Both amazing, no brainers, incredible and mel Gibson Russell Crowe right, yes, back to back.
How can you get that wrong?
Speaker 3And both standing and fighting and fighting against oppression and their epic epic movies.
Again, if you're not inspired by them, you're dead, I will say, Mike Lee, there's an app where you couldn't can put yourself you speaking into an audio clip.
And he and I used to send things back and forth.
And you know, at the end, when mel Gibson is being executed, he screams freedom.
So Mike would send me videos of him screaming to mel Gibson's voice Freedom.
It was pretty powerful, all right.
Next, Beverly Hills Cop.
Speaker 2Hands down one of the funniest movies ever.
Speaker 1Just screamingly funny.
Eddie Murphy, You're gonna laugh.
I consider that a Christmas movie because it's like days off.
I want to watch the classic.
I watch that.
Speaker 4It is every moment of it.
Speaker 3Eddie Murphy remains one of my favorite actors of all times.
Speaker 1I he's got a new one coming out, a sequel coming out on Amazon.
I think it's on Amazon Prime.
Did you see that recently?
I just saw it this last week.
I don't know which one it was, but they were teasing.
Speaker 3Yes, they're doing and Beverly Hills Cop too, Okay, is that what it is or three?
Speaker 2Yeah?
Speaker 3But look, the original Beverly Hills Cop is screamingly funny.
And I actually have three Eddie Murphy movies in a row because I love Eddie Murphy.
Beverly Hills Cop, Trading Places, Yes, and Coming to America.
Speaker 1So Coming America is one of the first movies that was like really edgy that I remember, like in my adolescent sing hilarious.
Speaker 3Again, screamingly funny, and Eddie Murphy and our Sinel Hall and they play multiple characters at all the different you know in the barbershop, when you have Eddie Murphy in ar Sanuel Hall, going back and forth.
Speaker 4I mean, it's.
Speaker 3Amazingly And you know what, they probably wouldn't let you make that movie today because it gets racially edgy in a way that like now you know, the woke world.
Speaker 4No no, you can't laugh about that.
No no, no, no, no you can't.
You can't.
You can't have any of that humor.
By the way.
Speaker 3You want funny humor, go back to young Eddie Murphy on SNL when he was like nineteen years old, brilliant and just edgy, comedic like brilliance.
Speaker 4I love.
Speaker 3He's by far my favorite character ever on SNL was Young Eddie Murphy because it was just so funny.
Speaker 2I like it.
Speaker 1Mine's Farley by the way, Look he was he was great and he put his hole into it.
Yeah, I mean, you know, I also love that man and a little jacket, that man down by the river.
I mean, but I also love like comedy when there's people falling over.
Speaker 2And he could do that.
Speaker 4His physical comedy was incredible.
Speaker 1All right.
Speaker 3Next on the list, Wall Street, Yep, just all time go and Gecko one of the great all time classics.
By the way, a line that I quote frequently.
Gordon Gecko is in the locker room getting cleaned up after playing racquetball and he turns to Charlie Sheen and he goes, I'm on the board of the Bronx Zoo.
Cost me a million bucks.
That's the thing about wasps love animals, hate people.
Speaker 4There's some insight there.
Speaker 2There is some insight there for sure.
Speaker 4Hidden figures.
Yes, wonderful movie.
Speaker 3Incredible movie about the African American female mathematicians who were foundational to America going to the Moon.
And for me, there are two kind of personal reasons why that movie is significant to me.
Speaker 2Well, it's got to be because of Houston.
Speaker 3Well, when we went to see the movie, I took my mother to the movie.
I took Heidi to the movie.
I took both my daughters to the movie.
And it was interesting my girls.
It was the first time they'd seen a movie that had segregated.
Speaker 1Yeah, the bathroom is the one of the most iconic scenes in that whole movie.
Speaker 3And it led to I had a long conversation with both of them and they were like, well, why would people have done that?
And to talk about segregation and civil rights and just sort of walk through the history of it.
It prompted really good conversations with my girls.
But secondly, so my mom.
My mom graduated from Rice in nineteen fifty six and she had a math degree, and she went to work as a computer programmer at Shell.
She subsequently went to work at the Smithsonian.
And remember the movie Hidden Figures begins with Sputnik being launched and sort of the space race being beginning.
One of my mother's first assignments at the Smithsonian was to help compute the orbits of Sputnik.
And so in front of the girls, I asked my mom.
I said, Mom, you were doing this, and in fact, you were doing it ten years earlier.
You were doing it in the fifties.
Hidden Figures is set in the sixties, and I said, how accurate is it?
And my mother, I thought it was very accurate.
That it did a really good job of conveying what it was like to be a woman in space and science and in a technical environment.
And I commented to her, I said, okay, one of the strange things to a more modern ear is that they referred to the women there as computers.
Yeah, and we think of a computer as a piece of metal.
Speaker 1But they were actually called computers because they were actually doing the math.
Speaker 3And my mother started laughing at me and she said her first job title was computer and when she started at Shell, she had a business card that said eleanor.
Speaker 4Dearra computer No Way.
Speaker 1And so.
Speaker 3In response to that, I introduced legislation to rename the street in front of NASA headquarters Hidden Figures Way.
And this is actually a really cool story.
I introduced that legislation before it could pass, and we would have gotten it passed, but a DC City councilman saw that legislation and said, you know what, that's a great idea.
And the DC City councilman introduced it in the DC City council.
Guy's a Democrat, and he got it passed.
So the DC City Council passes.
Speaker 2It's cool.
Speaker 3So I went to the street signed dedication and that that is the street sign there, and I was there, I spoke at the denawary it it is the headquarters of NASA in DC, and so NASA, the address of NASA is one Hidden Figure's Way.
And so I spoke of the dedication the DC City councilman spoke, and he's a Democrat.
Speaker 4I'm a Republican.
Speaker 3And I told the story of my mom, which was really cool to get to tell, and I said, look, at some level, you might say, listen, the street sign's not that big.
Speaker 2A deal, that one is.
Speaker 3But at another level, you know, fifty years from now, one hundred years from now, some little girl some little boy is going to come visit NASA and they're gonna look up and see the street sign and they're gonna say, hey, what does that mean?
And they're going to hear the story of the pioneering African American women who were the mathematicians that got us to the moon.
And so it's where movies and stories are powerful.
Speaker 1Did any of the characters of the movie?
Did any of them get to come to.
Speaker 3That that they had passed by the time we did that?
So no, all right, we just got a few more.
Speaker 1Schindler's List one of the hardest movies to watch.
Speaker 4Yes.
Speaker 1The other one is that I can I've only watched it one time because I just can't ring myself to watch it again.
Speaker 2Is Lone Survivor.
Speaker 1Those two movies to me are must sees, But I just I don't know if it's because I've become a dad and having kids now and watching the kids, I just can't watch them like I used to.
Speaker 3So, as you know, a couple of weeks ago, I was at Normandy for the eightieth anniversary of D Day, and wildly enough I got to meet Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, which was really cool, and I had pretty extended conversations with both of them, and they've done Look, their politics are both left of center, but they've done an amazing job really honoring and telling the stories of the greatest generation, whether saving Private Ryan, whether Band of Brothers, whether the Pacific and so we're talking about that.
And I was talking with Spielberg about about Schindler's List and just you know, talking with the heroes the World War Two heroes who almost all say, well, I could have done more.
I could have done more, and the real heroes are under those crosses behind us.
And I was telling Spielberg, I said, hearing them say that reminds me of the end of Schindler's List, where Oscar Schindler is like, I could have done more, and he looks down at his gold watch and he said, this watch this watch could have saved three more people.
Three more people are dead because I kept my watch.
And you think about the heroism of his rescuing Jews from the Nazis and the incredible courage, But at the same time, the like why didn't I do even more?
And that, to me is the most beautiful moment of that movie is the sort of did I do enough?
Speaker 2Yeah?
Speaker 3Okay, I'm gonna take a detour, a detour to the world of musicals.
Speaker 4So I like musicals.
Speaker 2Do you like Broadway?
Speaker 4I do.
I love Broadway absolutely.
Speaker 1So like you, if you go to New York, you would put it on your list to go see a show.
Speaker 4I love Broadway, and I'm gonna have four musicals on here.
Speaker 2I'm ready.
Speaker 3So number one is is my father's favorite movie of all time, which is My Fair Lady.
Speaker 4Okay, and My Fair Lady is fantastic.
Speaker 2I've seen it because of my mom and my sister multiple times.
Speaker 4English.
Speaker 3I've never watched that he's got of children how to speak, Norwegians learn, Norwegians.
The Greeks are taught their Greek.
Speaker 2See.
Speaker 1This is why I said this show would be entertaining, because I would.
Speaker 2Have never thought you were musical.
Speaker 4It is spec favorite Broadway sh you've ever been to.
I'm gonna get to that, Okay, go ahea, I'm gonna get to that.
So the second one there is Oliver Yep.
Speaker 2Great.
Speaker 3Oliver is spectacular.
So look, I was in high school.
I was president of drama club.
Speaker 2I have way too many one liners, but I'll leave that for another show.
Speaker 1Keep going.
Speaker 3You were captain of the tennis team.
I was president of drama club.
Okay, I get that.
There's a reason why you would have stuck me in the locker.
If you yes, that.
Speaker 2Would have that would have gotten you a SmackDown for sure.
Speaker 4Yeah.
Speaker 3But so look, I I all politicians are frustrated actors.
It's just it's just part of the the It is oh, yes, a lot.
Speaker 2What were you in?
Speaker 4So I did?
Speaker 2Do we have eight tracks of this or what what was it?
Beta camp?
Speaker 4There?
Speaker 1They may be somewhere.
Okay, So let's see.
I've done Sound of Music twice.
Speaker 2What'd you play?
Speaker 1So I played?
The first time, I played Rolf yeah uh.
Speaker 3You know, and I warbled out you are sixteen going on seventeen, no way, And then the second time I played Max Yep.
I also so I did Oliver, and Oliver is a fabulous classic.
So Oliver was my senior year, and the head of the music department told me, hey, we're doing Oliver next year, and he said, you know, I'd love to have you play Fagan if you can sing it.
Speaker 4And and my curse.
Look, I'm a terrible singer.
Speaker 3I cannot carry save in a bucket like like I wish I could I have you were not hearing.
Speaker 4It.
Speaker 3And so I actually went and for like six months I took voice lessons to try to get be able to sing that Fagan is such a thing.
Speaker 2Did you get any better in the six months?
Speaker 1A little bit?
Speaker 4And so what happened?
Speaker 3And the nice thing about Fagan is is Fagan's songs are more spoken than sang.
So, for example, the song reviewing the situation, a man's got a hot isn't he joking apart?
Speaker 1Hasn't he?
Speaker 3And though I'd be the first to admit that I wasn't a saint, I'm finding it hard to be really as bad.
Speaker 2So here I see you Dad, next, I'm gonna say there six months is worth it now right.
Speaker 3I'm viewing the situation Can a fellow be a villain all his life, all the trials to settle down and get myself a wife.
Speaker 2And you remember.
Speaker 3I will cook and sew for you, and come for you, and go for you, and go for you, and nagget you the finger.
Speaker 1She will wag at you.
How many tickets they sell for?
This is what I really want to know.
Speaker 4So I prepared that song was one.
Speaker 3Now it's mostly spoken, it's not release, so I could do it marginally competently after six months practicing.
I did that at the trio and then and then afterwards music director said, hey, Ted, stick around, and he went to the piano and he said sing this, and he went and I went.
Speaker 1And he did it like three times.
He goes, Okay, damn it not happening.
So I was cast as Bill Sykes.
It's the second male lead with no singing.
Yeah, it's a fun role.
You're the villain.
Speaker 3You get to like beat up Oliver, twist and like you're but but I wanted.
Speaker 4I wanted to play that.
Speaker 3Role badly, and I did not get it all right.
Two more musicals.
Hamilton, which is utterly exquisite.
I've seen it multiple times.
It is brilliant, it is beautiful, it is powerful.
My girls know the songs.
There are few things that make me happier than when my daughters are singing songs from Hamilton.
I mean it was there was a period where they were obsessed with it.
Speaker 2You and I were talking about this the other day.
Speaker 1My dad I took him to New York for the first time ever for seventh birthday, and and you said, did you go see a show?
And I was like, do you want to see Hamilton?
He's like, I'd rather go the Yankees game.
And then the next night I was like, we just that I'd rather have a nice meal.
I tried hard.
I tried to give him to Hamilton.
It just wasn't on the list.
And then my favorite music of all time is le Miss really, and I love le Miss I think, do you get choked out?
Be honest, because I'm a sucker for this.
I get I get the lump in the rooked up, all right?
So what song gets you choked up?
Oh?
The one the most famous?
I'm terrible with it.
It's the one that Anne Hathaway does.
It's so good.
Oh and she won won the Academy Awards for every Time it gets me?
Speaker 4So that is beautiful.
Speaker 3I'll tell you that the two that get me choked up are number one, when Jean Valjean is saying let him live, yep, and he's looking down and he says, you know, if I die, that one's InCred me die.
Speaker 4Yeah, let him live.
Speaker 3And it's a prayer to God to let him live every time.
I have tears every time.
Then the other one that gets.
Speaker 1Me is the song empty chairs and empty tables at the end when everyone has died.
And I will confess at the end of the presidential campaign in twenty sixteen, as I walked through the empty campaign office and I saw the empty chairs and empty tables, I heard.
Speaker 4That sphrames of that song.
Speaker 1Uh so le miz is exquisite, all.
Speaker 3Right, by the way, when I was all right, So nineteen ninety three, I was just finished my first year of law school, and I had a job in New York.
I was working a law firm in New York for the summer, and I decided to fly my mom to New York for the weekend.
And so it's nineteen ninety three.
So I actually fedexed a plane ticket.
And this is back when a plane ticket was a piece of cardboard.
Yeah, I fedexed a plane ticket to her with nothing else.
It was literally she opened the FedEx package and just a plane ticket to New York fell out and she called me and she's like, Ted, I assume this is you.
I said, yeah, I had no note, no nothing, just a plane ticket and the FedEx thing.
Speaker 2Get on the plane.
I'll see you soon, mom.
Speaker 3So I fleir in New York and we went out to dinner at Boult, which at the time was the nicest restaurant in New York.
Was fabulous, And then I took her one night to see Camelot, which was really fun yep, and then the next night.
Speaker 4To see Lemiz And did she love it?
Speaker 1She loved it, and it I that's one of those ironed memories for rest of your life.
Speaker 4Yeah, I know.
Speaker 3That's just very cool to go do that.
All right, So we have a total of three more.
I'm gonna say The Magnificent.
Speaker 1Seven, incredible, watch it ten times, the original one?
Yes with my dad all right, all right, that's like in my dad's like I grew up on John Wayne and war movies.
Speaker 3Yeah, like Magnificence seven and that was like I remember watch then Unforgiven, The Magnificent seven is the greatest Western that's actually originally at a Western.
I'mforgiven with sort of a modern remake format, but Magnificent seven exquisite with you know, Yule Brenner and Charles Bronson.
Speaker 2And that was the mos Coburn.
Oh, when mom was out of town, that was one of the movies we watched.
Speaker 4Oh, it was so good.
Speaker 3It's it's a fabulous movie.
And then I'm gonna end with two Quentin Tarantino, is it?
The Inglorious Bastards?
Is that where we're going with this?
So I'm gonna start with pulp Fiction, which is fantastic, and then the last one is in Glorious Bastard.
Speaker 2Yep.
Speaker 3And I feel bad that I left Reservoir Dogs off because Reservoir Dogs is exquisite too.
But maybe if you made me pick two, I go with pulp Fiction and Glorious and Glorius Bastards is.
Speaker 4A spectacular movie.
Speaker 1So that's twenty five movies, which if you've got some downtimes, download them.
Speaker 3Watch them.
You will enjoy them.
You will laugh, you will be moved, you will be.
Speaker 2And send your critiques on Twitter.
We'll take them.
And let me ask you one of the questions.
Speaker 1If you can only take one movie and one TV series to a desert island with you, what would you pick?
Speaker 2Only one movie and only one TV series?
That's all you got to watch.
Speaker 4The Princess Bride and Criminal Minds.
Speaker 2There you go, that's it.
Speaker 4Yeah, I like it.
Speaker 2See now we know a little bit more about you.
Don't forget.
We do the show Monday, Wednesday, Friday.
Speaker 1Every once in a while we get to do something fun like this, So make sure that subscriber auto download button and the Senate and I will see you back here in a couple of days.
