Episode Transcript
Hey there, Fanaritos, and welcome to part two of our interview with Juan Pablo de Pache who played my on screen husband in Fuller House, Fernando.
If you fell in love with Fernando on Fuller House like Kimmy did, you're sure to be head over heels after this interview because JP is truly the best.
Speaker 2So let's get into it.
Speaker 1I didn't realize how personal it was, Like I just thought this was you know, you were enthusiastic about making your own film, But then we get there.
Speaker 3It was your own film, it was your story.
Speaker 1Yeah, and I didn't I didn't make that connection until until, you know, a few scenes into the film.
But what an emotional experience.
When did you start creating this writing it?
I mean, I think I know what inspired it, your own life.
But tell tell me how this all came about.
How long had you been working on it?
Speaker 4Well?
Thank you first of all for all the beautiful wave of love that I just received.
You're so amazing and sweet, and for me, it was really important to have you there because, like you say, you know we are family, and and I know that I've been banging on this.
Ah, this movie, this movie, this movie, for years.
I mean we're talking twenty twenty.
Really we had we had it finished shooting in November nineteen, then the.
Speaker 5World you know, and then and then twenty twenty game right, and all our very big plans went.
Speaker 4To exactly and we can so well can's we finished the show and so and so then it was one of that year of it.
But yeah, it was around that time that I mean, I'd always, like I said, I'd always always always wanted to be to direct, and since those days as a five year old watching the Oscars, you know, with my grandma.
But but it's kind of became a need.
It became like I have to do this.
I don't know, sometimes in life you have those moments of us if I don't do this now, like like it's now or never kind of thing.
And so yeah, yeah, it was it was out of a couple of things, like but mostly I wanted to make my first film so that I continue to do doing my second and third and fourth.
Uh And And it wasn't that I like, I didn't want to take my own life.
I didn't want to kind of say, oh I want to do a movie about me, But it was really I wanted to have every detail of what I was going to tell.
I wanted to know, right, I want to know every character, every situation, the places, the feelings, the the moment mins them.
So so yeah, I think it was a mixture of talking to a friend and her asking me about what my first love was, how that happened, and also going to my parents' home while we were all quarantining, and just as you do, watching albums and going through and finding this tape the VHS tape in their VCR and anyway, without spoiling anything, this tape was very well.
It was very important because it was a time when I was in that school that I told you about the United World College, and something had just happened that broke a lot of this heart.
One of the kids had to leave the school and you could see it in this tape.
It was very You could see the pain of these teenagers, but also are all we are all trying to make him feel better.
And I just thought there's something here, and so this idea of teenage longing and and also how you feel everything so much more when you were that age.
Speaker 5Because it's all the first time, like I've never had a broken heart before.
This is I think it's going to kill me.
Yeah, like all those feelings are.
Speaker 4Oh yeah, it's all amplified, and you don't like you say, you know, you haven't been there and you're not a child anymore, but you're not an adult yet.
So it's the transitional moment, which which is why we have so many coming of age stories because it's an incredibly interesting time.
Yeah, and in my case, I thought, okay, how can I make it so that it's actually the adult looking back?
Add that memory of falling in love, and so the idea of a film director making a movie about his first love and being obsessed and frustrated with this movie that can't quite he can't quite finish.
So then yeah, I created this meta meta movie which is a man making a movie about a memory and is sort of like a Russian doll.
Straight.
Speaker 1Oh yeah, that's a great description, a Russian doll.
Yeah, it's it's just stunning.
So explain for our listeners, just a very brief synopsis.
You play the older version of Matthias, but most of the film is it revolves around young Matthias, who is you as a young boy going to this international college in Italy.
Speaker 4Yeah.
Yeah, so it's basically this film director who's struggling to finish a movie about his memory of his first love, of this kid, best friend he met when he was at a boarding school twenty five years earlier.
And of course we go back into the past and we actually understand or at least get the crumbs of what happened.
And what happened is that it was a very tumultuous, unsaid, unrequited thing, but at the same time very enigmatic because this boy, Alexander was incredibly loving and interesting and crazy and talented and so young.
Matias was probably the opposite, you know, super shy, and so Alexander, this ball of energy, was obviously the you know, the one person that he felt seen by.
And so so yeah, something happens in the school and Alexander has to leave and that kind of jump start really these feelings getting amplified, and and yeah, so so so really it's an exploration of the relationship between the adult and the teenager and and how sometimes when you can't quite give an ending to something love and and that relationship which just can't happen or or it doesn't or hasn't happened fully, now you can actually mess you up in the present.
So it's it's like it's like dealing with the trauma you could see where this one thing can actually inform the rest of your life.
So yeah, very psychological, very psychological, but it's true.
Speaker 5It's you know, we sort of get hung up on like one thing and that becomes somehow it influences all of the rest of our choices about ourselves and the world that we create.
Speaker 4You know.
Speaker 1But it's such a visceral film, like you really feel all of these emotions that the characters are going through.
It's just very powerful, like you just the audience was you could feel it, you know.
And there's one particular scene I would love to talk about, the scene in the car with the parents, which I think is just the heart of the film.
Speaker 3And it was your actual mom.
Speaker 5No, not that she's playing well the older mom, you I know, playing the old Yeah, he's the older but like she does play a part in it, and like that was so incredible.
She's not in this scene, but I just yeah, anyway.
Speaker 2Sorry, no, no, that's okay, Yeah, yeah, you're you're actual.
We'll get to those easterings, we.
Speaker 3Get to those just so incredible because she's like in her art studio, creating in your health.
Speaker 2It was just very cool, so cool.
Speaker 1But the car scene, I don't want to I don't want to give it away, but it is such a power powerful scene.
Speaker 2Rheumatias breaks down in tears and the.
Speaker 1The mom essentially says we love you exactly the way you are.
What was it like for you to film that scene and to watch the actors perform that scene?
Speaker 4It was It was hard.
It's kind of painful because I got there's some scenes in the movie that I would say are almost exactly as they happened in my memory anyway, and that one is one of them.
Like, and it didn't work.
I don't think the movie would work.
So so it to be like, I put so much weight on this scene because yeah, you're right, it's in the middle of the film and it's the heart of film, pivotal, pivotal, and the world changes after this scene.
Yeah so, and we don't see it coming either, no, like out of nowhere.
Really, So I love playing with these shifts of direction when it comes to storytelling, that you think something's going this way and then oh no, you know, And I think the movie does that like three four times but this particular one, it was it was a scene that explains a lot of things that you've been sensing, don't know, and then this kind of just opens everything up.
So yeah, I mean shooting it was uncomfortable.
I was in the back of the car.
It was a it was a so the dop director of photography, Devin Douleval, my co director andres Pepiestrada.
Obviously the actors were all bunched up in this tiny rental nineteen ninety one Volvo, and because it's a it's a period piece, and it's it's cold outside, it's hot inside, and so we were just kind of it wasn't really working.
And I don't know what I said to the actors or whatever happened that it was one word, I think.
And all of a sudden, you know, Alasseli, who plays the mom, this this one beautiful take, beautiful take, and I broke down watching her, and I'm like putting my hand in because I'm like sobbing and I don't want to mess up the audio.
And I'm like shaking from watching, you know.
And and then of course when I when when and this boy Santio mar Lusn, who is amazing.
This is a very wonderful job.
His first job, no way, first audition, Yes.
Speaker 6What's incredible.
Speaker 3He was amazing.
Speaker 4Wow again, you know he was just how he responded to the scene in the moment, it was heartbreaking and beyond the dad as well, who didn't do anything and yet you feel everything that you know.
I was very lucky to find these people.
And I'm a firm believer in like finding finding the actors first, because I think we are in a moment where there's a little bit of criticism to the moment we're in right now, but we're in a moment where when the name sometimes is more important than the part towards the.
Speaker 5Story, yeah, or how many followers you have is more important than them.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 4And in this one, mostly because I didn't have the money to pay the big names, we actually went to the actors that felt the most right.
And some of the people this is their first movie or whatever, and I would never have known that it was anyone's first movie at all, like it did.
Speaker 5They're not at all blown away that like yeah.
Speaker 4Yeah, I mean, I can't really say anything other than when I when I when I when I open the files and started editing When you edit, you spend a lot of time with scenes.
Sometimes this one scene has like twenty different versions.
Okay, so it's not you know, it's very time consuming and you're spending time in this world, right, And I'm not exaggerating.
Every time I used to open this scene up to work on it, I was just like right, bloodgates and so I remember the moment that I cried the most.
I think it's ready.
Speaker 3Yeah, it's done.
Speaker 6Got Yeah, don.
Speaker 4Test yourself how you It's a weird process.
You sort of use your own emotionality to be the audience member watching something that you are working, right, see how it's hitting you.
So it's this conversation that youse a maker have with the material.
It's a weird phenomenon.
It's very strange.
Yeah, it's like a part of you is an audience member and a part of you is the editor, and after you go between the two.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm so happy about that that's on screen because sometimes for people who don't are not on set and they don't understand perhaps about filming, is that filming in itself, just like we didn't fall our house.
In everything, there's a moment of electricity and there's a moment when almost the air gets thick, you know, when they shot the action, like everything kind of just you know, slows down and then you're like anchored into this weird parallel universe.
And the moment they say cut you tell it's just you know, it's like this energy just kind of open like this.
And so there's moments on film.
We've all had them when something something will inspire something for you to do something in a certain way, for for what the response to be X, and it's caught on film, and those are the moments of magic.
Now you can't really explain it.
I mean, you could write something till the Cows Come Home, but until the moment happens in the filming process, right, this actor has this I don't know, magical reaction.
It's not really there out of this whole experience.
I think that's what I've absolutely loved the most making a film is that you get to witness before the world something magical that you know the rest of the world will see at some point and it's like it's it gives you goosebumps.
Speaker 1What was your mom's reaction?
Were you with her when she watched the film?
For the first time in the scene in particular, and what was her reaction.
Speaker 4She wasn't there when we shot it because my mom was actually doing in art direction and costume design of the film, so she was very involved.
So she was probably like, so was shooting Uh No, she she she's always been just so proud.
And I know it's but it's true.
And and we are My mom and I almost have a work relationship where we are kind of equals because she's the artist and and and I'm also an artist in a different way, and we exchange ideas and and there's one scene where my actual mother and I are talking about her work.
Speaker 6And my work, and that's how we.
Speaker 4Are with each other.
And so so, yeah, this whole process was was about, okay, making something that comes from us, m H.
Now that it's it's it's its own thing, it's its own story outside of us.
And yeah, you have to learn to see it critically.
And she is amazing at seeing things, like she's so critical.
Speaker 3But my mother, she's so critical.
It's great.
Speaker 5Yeah, yeah, most people all, but you're like, no, it's actually really she is.
Speaker 4And I think some of us, some of my siblings have have said this before it's like you're too critical with you and and she's like, yeah, I can't help it.
She's in aries.
Speaker 5Ah, yes, yes, I have one of those.
Yeah, Zoa's an aries.
Yeah I yeah, yeah, just cherry fiery.
It's going to be their way, it's going to happen and no way.
And they're not shy about telling you what they think about your not at all.
Speaker 3Yeah, yeah, not at all, not at all.
Speaker 5In fact, they're doing you a favor really actually, Yeah, you're like you should be thinking me.
Speaker 3You're like, I don't know if I should.
Speaker 2Oh, I love your mom so much, it's so amazing.
Speaker 6Yeah, it's o cute.
Speaker 5Did she But did she give like notes and stuff as you guys were going along?
Speaker 3Did she ever watch any of the dailies with you or anything?
Speaker 4Or was it more like, you know what I really love about my mom, as stubborn as she can be about stuff and critical, maybe because she was a teacher, a school teacher for a long time art teacher, there's this respect that I always got where she would literally just stand back see what I was doing, and literally bite the head of anyone who would come close to me to criticize anything.
So I now see it with distance and I go, wow, that was so.
I mean, yeah, it's like Mama Bear, like, yeah, I had an idea.
For example, I say, I think this should be lit in this way and I want the camera to start here and I want this to happen.
And someone you know from art will go, well, we can't do that because you know the thing is not ready or this or that or the light it's near.
And my mom, which would would basically just make them do what I wanted.
So it wasn't that she was critical about what I was doing.
She was actually respecting to the letter.
Yeah, one of the things that.
Speaker 6Your artistic were choices.
Speaker 4Yeah, And and no, she's never really she's never really said oh, you should cut it this way or you should change this.
She always trusted in whatever I wanted to do.
Speaker 5Which it sounds like you guys have like an artist to artist relationship, like you were talking about, sort of that working relationship.
Speaker 3There's times you can talk about it.
Speaker 4And there's a thing about artists.
We are so vulnerable and so it hangs by a thread, like our purity hangs by like this.
Right.
So, so when you know, when you're convinced of something, you want to do and you want to do it this way and whatever.
You also have to arm yourself with the strength to defend it constant and it can be exhausting.
And so when you have a parent and who is kind of like your colleague who's gone, well, he wants this right, everybody don't change it right, It's it's kind of amazing.
I love her for it.
I love her because sometimes you don't get that at all in this industry, Like you get people pushing, pushing of.
Speaker 3Course, yeah, everyone's trying to elbow each other out of the way.
Speaker 5Yeah.
I actually I love working on like small films, independent films, because you are you're all in there, all doing everyone's doing it all, you know what I mean.
Speaker 3Like you're all just.
Speaker 5Kind of in the muck together, creating and doing and like it's it's you know again, as an artist, you're just like, this is what I love.
Is like the you know, the playing in the mud and the dirt and making something out of you know, whatever, if people knew what was going on outside of the shot of the camera, you know what I mean, it's like the magic that we get to create is really fun.
Amongst the chaos.
Speaker 4What's what's been your favorite kind of indie moment.
Speaker 5Aren't something I mean, you know, honestly, most of the like small independent stuff I work on has been for Hallmark or for Lifetime.
But still like you have, you know, twenty days to shoot a ninety seven page movie like there, you know, even if you're like, okay, I'm not, it's you know, there's not there's no scenes like there are in Before We Forget, But it's still like you're having to kind of be in the grind and do whatever, and you know, and everyone's making it work and no one's getting over time and you know, here at hour twelve, and but yeah, I'm actually there's a couple scripts that I'm working on right now, like producing stuff that are again very different, very like things that we're kind of having to like really fight for creative choices.
So we'll see, we'll see the goes anywhere.
I mean, we're just still in the kind of the writing and creating process.
Speaker 4I look forward to seeing that because I do remember, I mean, you you were always both actually Andrea writing the one of the episodes and you're directing.
I'm pretty curious to see also that vein that you actually you both have Andrew I'm still waiting on that show that we're going to do together.
Speaker 1I am.
Speaker 3Well, look, if you need a director, I'm just saying, I.
Speaker 2Mean, let's make it happen.
Yea on somebody, Warner Brothers, anybody, I mean, and.
Speaker 3I will say it on the podcast, anybody that's looking for it.
Speaker 5Not.
Speaker 2We have a great script.
We're ready to go.
Speaker 5It actually is ready to go.
Yeah, yeah, ready to go.
Just hand us some money, that's it.
Hand us the money.
We're gonna go do the thing.
It's gonna be great.
We'll take care of all of it.
Don't eve worry about it.
JP's got it.
JP and his mom are going to handle everything.
Speaker 4Yeah, JP mom costumes are done.
Speaker 3Done, they're already sown.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 6Yeah.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 3And don't don't tell her that you don't like him, because she is going to.
Speaker 2Be she'll have opinions.
Speaker 3Yeah, that's it.
That's what you're getting now.
Speaker 1So your mom was in the film.
Your dad made a cameo.
He played was he the grandfather?
He played Grandpa?
Speaker 5I have.
Speaker 4My grandpa was in a wheelchair.
I don't even know if you see the wheelchair in the movie, but we had a wheelchair for him.
He's in this sweet scene in Winnesida, is with the family.
I needed.
I wanted him, wanted him there, and he's so sweet, my dad.
But actually that wasn't really his day job and the shoot.
He was actually the transport manager, a transport that's it captain, So he would take the actress from me to be and every single day, well pick them up at the airport and come back.
Yeah, and that way, I'm very lucky.
I mean, we are, the three of us are very lucky that our parents are very supportive.
Yeah, we've done.
Speaker 3We got to meet your parents, which was so lovely.
Speaker 6They came.
I love they came.
Speaker 5They came over, and we got to have some of your mom's amazing paea, which was a Yeah, your birthday.
Speaker 1Was the biggest bowl of paa I have ever seen in my life.
Speaker 6It was.
Speaker 5It was, I mean, it was a giant piet Like that's what you you know, You're like, we're cooking for everybody.
Speaker 2Yeah, it was sounds of a dining room dangle.
Speaker 6It was so good.
Speaker 5It was so good, and we were all like just kind of standing over there and smelling it and like yeah.
Speaker 6Go go, go go go, Yes, it's true.
Speaker 1One thing I want to ask, Okay, so I didn't know this until I talked to you after the screening, but the real life Alexander, your real life teenage crush, also made a cameo in the film at the end.
Speaker 2What tell me, Okay, tell me what was that?
Speaker 1Like?
What was what was his reaction when you told him you were making this film about this experience between you two.
Speaker 2And have you guys kept in touch?
Was this awkward?
Was it fulfilling?
Was it cathartic?
Speaker 6Like what all of the things that.
Speaker 4All of that there wasn't like one feeling.
I mean, when you are doing something that's so close to an event and so close to people, you want to ask can I do this?
And so yeah, we had a big conversation beforehand where I said, hey, I'm I'm I'm thinking about doing this movie and really, you know, I can need your blessing.
And so he was amazing, amazing me.
Just he just said to me, just promise me that you will that you won't leave any stones unturned, Like it wasn't don't do this right And it was so lovely.
So so yeah, he was present in the shoot.
He was present in four or five festivals that went two together.
There's an easter egg in the film.
I'm going to say where where you actually see him He's he isn't there, right, And it's not what you said, it's something else.
Yeah, but no, he's he's he's been incredibly present and it's so him and his sister.
Speaker 1Oh are they and are they really Swedish because in the oh he's not Swedish.
Speaker 4Mm hmm.
Speaker 2Are you willing to say what nationality or not?
Speaker 4Yeah, they're they're Danish Danish.
Speaker 2I love the Danes, Jason jac that sweet adjacent close yeah yeah, the dance yeah.
Speaker 5Yeah, yeah right right, the Upper Nordic.
Speaker 6Yeah.
Speaker 4Yeah, they're the most amazing people, like that whole family and the two of them, their parents, I mean, always been inspired by them as people and and the love they gave me without knowing, without knowing me at at seventy years old, and they embraced me, and and yeah, I was worried.
I was worried to to talk about real people because you want to pay homage to them, you don't.
You want to be very careful and so yeah, there was there was a lot of talking and discussing things.
But yeah, yeah, we're we're best of friends.
We talk all the time.
He's always very involved in like what's happening is okay?
So which in festival, which cinema is going?
And if he can, he he comes.
Speaker 2I love that.
It's very full circle.
That makes a movie even better, more beautiful.
Speaker 1And I know you shot the film at these actual locations too, at the actual college and actually at the actual home.
Speaker 2Right there, their holiday home.
Speaker 4No, that that was we we we rented that one.
This is a villa beautiful Venetian.
Yeah that's weel thirty minutes from the college.
But yeah, the college itself.
That was the whole reason why this movie was made, really is because when I wrote it and then called the school and then said I would like to not go inside, not just would you let me do some establishing shots of the place, and but I won't bother you, And so the director studies like, no, no, no, no, no, you can't do that.
You you but you can come to the school and shoot it here, shoot the whole film here.
So the fact that they they led me, they opened the doors to a camera crew, I mean fair enough.
It was like spring break kind of moments.
So weep that the kids weren't in school.
But basically they said, you can do this if you use the students.
So we'll give you the chance if you involve them behind the camera, whatever you want.
So we had sixty students, real students, be you know, the extras, the production managers, the costume assistants, and the best friends, which were like a group of which I had to kind of teach her.
Yeah.
Speaker 6Yeah, I mean.
Speaker 4They didn't really didn't have to do anything because they all have such charism.
I loved working with with with them because I don't know, it's like I got my faith back in in in as an older person, you can get a little bit like how my time he used to.
Speaker 5Be m never.
Speaker 6Old lady.
Speaker 4Yeah yeah, yeah, these amazing, remarkable humans that just kind of made me go, oh, we're good, We're good, the the world good.
Speaker 3Yeah, right right there, So there's some hope out there.
Speaker 4Yeah, I mean all thanks to the school really, because because once once you have the approval the stamp place like that, you have the locations, then I'm not going to say it's easy to raise the cash.
Yeah, but it's kind of like, okay, it's good, No, the train is moving.
So this hopelly was made that way where great, we got there, let's keep going, look and and things would just happen.
It just happened organically or magically or or but but yeah, yeah, the locations were all real where thing happened.
Speaker 6Yeah, they were gorgeous.
Speaker 5Do you think I could go finish two years of high school even though I finished and have a college degree in Italy?
Would would they take me?
I really just want to go have that experience?
It sounds amazing.
Speaker 4No, you could do?
Speaker 6What can I do?
What I'm up to?
Speaker 4Tell me?
You could offer a like you know, seminar, like a class.
Yeah, but like for a week or three days or two day or whatever.
Speaker 6I mean, don't say JP.
Speaker 3Look at you coming up with ideas.
Speaker 4No, that's actually really fun and you're there for like this beautiful.
Speaker 3I fell in love with Italy when we went.
It was just absolutely stunning and gorgeous.
Speaker 4So yeah, I do that sometimes I go.
I go there and I and I like, last year I choreographed their gala and this year I'm doing it again in October, so I'm involved.
I just love that.
It's like having a holiday from the world because you go to the season.
They don't feel like they're belonging to any country.
It's this very international thing.
And and and also kids are so bright, yeah, so pure, so flexible in their minds, how they think, are exposed to all these cultures.
Speaker 5Well, and I think too, like send, like you said, sending kids kind of off on the red like here you go, Like it changes them and it makes it.
It creates this sense of self assuredness, I think, and capability and courage to try something new or do something different, you know, And I think so important.
Speaker 4So I mean the world's already that way anyway.
Kids because of social media, they're they're sharing things or they're looking at things that they would have never read were in our old baby Yeah, but so now the world is more connected for sure.
But I do say that it's important to any any teenager really to at least have a holiday abroad or a summer.
Speaker 5Yeah, now excited kind of travel, even if it's not abroad, Like just go go travel somewhere away from your parents in high school for like a week where you're with other people and you have to kind of figure out it changes you.
Yeah, having to struggle, as you know, like struggle is what makes you kind of come out the other side and.
Speaker 6Go, ah, all right, I survive that.
Speaker 5Well, well, you're your movie was such a beautiful example of like you just working so hard and creating something so beautiful and just such a wonderful group of such talented actors and just everybody in it.
I hope that everybody gets a chance to go see where can where can people see it?
Actually, well, we're.
Speaker 4Ending now our our theatrical run, which went to I think ten cities.
Okay, wow, and so we're now we're entering the next the next moment, so you can check on before we forget movie Instagram or forgetmovie dot com, where the movie will be streaming soon.
Oh good, great, we're in that process now.
So well, I'm gonna watch it.
Speaker 5We'll keep shouting it from the rooftops before we forget movie dot com.
Speaker 1Everybody go check it out, because you it's a movie that stays with you, Like it's been two or three weeks and it's still I still yell it.
Speaker 2Yes really, And we are so proud of you JP.
Speaker 5You are just we're so glad you're in the fam.
Yeah you really, Yeah, You've been a great addition to.
Speaker 3Our little fuller, full house.
Speaker 6Uh weird group of people.
Speaker 2And I can't wait to see what you do next too.
Speaker 1I mean, this is just the beginning a very long and illustrious filmmaking career and I just can't wait.
Speaker 5Up.
Speaker 4Well, we're making shows together.
Speaker 3Yeah that's yeah, you guys, A yeah, we're maybe it show.
Yeah, I'll put some dates in the calendar.
Speaker 5Trans I'll work on getting a sound stage to Kim Moffett.
She probably has some ideas of things.
Yeah, yeah, No, we're gonna be fine.
Speaker 6Guys.
Speaker 5It's gonna two weeks from now we are going to be on a roll.
We might be shooting Jody's garage.
But yeah, it's fine, that's fine, it's big.
I can clear some stuff out.
Uh No, JP, we love you.
Thank you so much for being on the show today.
It was such a wonderful conversation.
And you're just such a talented human.
Where can people find you on Instagram or other socials.
Speaker 4It's my very long names, just Juan Bablo, the bad Chick.
Speaker 6Until we go.
Speaker 5At one, Pablo Depache and that's d I p a Ce for those of you Yeah who might yeah not it looks like right yeah yeah, yeah.
The American, it's not yeah, Americans, Yeah, it's not.
It's not Juwan Pablo die Pace.
Speaker 3Yeah it's not.
No, no, no.
Speaker 5Maybe somewhere they pronounced it that way, but not here.
Uh No.
We love you, JP, thank you so much for joining us, and it was fabulous.
Speaker 6We'll talk soon.
Speaker 4Love you so so, so so much.
Sending the kisses from from this house to those houses.
Speaker 6Oh yeah, this was.
Speaker 4I love you, I love your show.
I love everything that you're doing, or like just bringing joy, which is which is the most important thing right now, making people happy.
Speaker 5Yeah, yeah, yeah, bring a little bit of joy to the world, all right, Jan you so much.
Speaker 4We love you.
Speaker 2So many kisses, so many bassos, and yes, yes, I call it for the listeners, I call.
Speaker 1Him Mea More like we legitimately text each other that Hello Mia More, Hello Mea Moore.
Speaker 3Yeah, all right, definitely, it's that funny.
Speaker 5Oh remember I found I took that picture of Stephanie's flowers and I said it.
I was somewhere like around my house and there was a Stephanie flowers and I was like, I said picture.
Speaker 6I was like, it's real.
Speaker 2Yeah, you know, I know we're trying to wrap up, but you know.
Speaker 5I know the Irish goodbye of podcasts, right, we're like, I mean, so and so I still have.
Speaker 1The voice note that you made for me, where you say yay.
Speaker 4Why did I make a voice note.
Speaker 1So much I wanted to wanted to play anytime I'm sad or whatever, I just play it, yay.
Speaker 4It could be like like a like a text message, right.
Speaker 3Like a little yeah.
Yeah, it's just a voice note that you can send.
Speaker 2Yeah, yes, I love it.
Okay, Well goodbye for real.
Actually we'll let you go.
Speaker 6No, thank you.
Speaker 3I love you on the show.
Speaker 1Bye.
Speaker 6I love him.
Speaker 5I think I fell in love with JP even more.
Yes, and I didn't think I could.
He's a pretty amazing human.
Speaker 1He is just he's the best and so talented and I'm so happy that he gets to share this talent with the world and his film and his life story and it's just everything.
Speaker 6What a cheat?
Speaker 5Yeah, seriously, what what an incredible like I'm just really.
Speaker 2You know, it's really happy for me too, me too.
Speaker 5You see.
Well, folks, thank you for joining us for uh this incredible.
Speaker 3Interview with JP.
Speaker 5We're so proud of him and hope you guys go check out the movie before we forget movie dot com.
Uh it's a really special movie.
So yeah, So anyway, we will see you.
Speaker 6Guys next time.
Speaker 5If you want to find us on Instagram, you can follow us at how Rude podcast, or you can send us an email at how Rude Tanner Ritos at gmail dot com.
Speaker 3Uh, make sure you're liking and subscribing to the podcast.
Speaker 5You know, we always love to hear what you guys are thinking, So rate us review, send us emails, whatevs, and let's see what else?
Speaker 6What else?
Speaker 3Oh our merch store how rudemerch dot com.
Make sure you check that out.
And uh, I think that's it.
Speaker 2I think you covered.
Speaker 3I think we're good.
Yep, all right, you guys.
Well, remember the world is small, but the house is full.
Speaker 5Hernandez get it, Hernandez get it, hern Nandez, Gereto, Gernando get it.
Speaker 2It took me five years to master that.
Speaker 6Yeah, I apologize.
Speaker 3To anyone who speaks Spanish.
Speaker 6I actually could.
Speaker 5It would sound better than that, but I tripped that anyway.
Yeah, yeah, it's just full.
Guerrero Finane Fernandez is everywhere.
Just keep repeating the same things over and just steps repeating yep, yep, it's just coming out everywhere.