1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:04,600 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:05,040 --> 00:00:07,760 Speaker 2: Man, welcome back to Coast to Coast. George nor with you, 3 00:00:07,800 --> 00:00:10,360 Speaker 2: Ben Jacob with us in Monique Ramirez as we talk 4 00:00:10,400 --> 00:00:13,160 Speaker 2: about their podcast Who's Dead from your Favorite movie? 5 00:00:13,840 --> 00:00:14,040 Speaker 1: Ben. 6 00:00:14,160 --> 00:00:17,360 Speaker 2: Let me ask you this because you do comedian work too. 7 00:00:18,320 --> 00:00:22,079 Speaker 2: Is it difficult the way being a comedian and talking 8 00:00:22,120 --> 00:00:23,720 Speaker 2: about death? How do you handle that? 9 00:00:24,360 --> 00:00:26,639 Speaker 3: That's the only way I know how to handle it, George. 10 00:00:28,360 --> 00:00:33,519 Speaker 4: It's just because there's someone passes doesn't mean the comedy 11 00:00:33,560 --> 00:00:37,239 Speaker 4: stops actually becomes less precious. I kind of I like 12 00:00:37,280 --> 00:00:41,560 Speaker 4: in what we do naturally, how I've united with Monique, 13 00:00:41,800 --> 00:00:44,599 Speaker 4: Like we're in the back row of the funeral, and 14 00:00:44,680 --> 00:00:46,920 Speaker 4: you know, it's very sad, But funerals and weddings are 15 00:00:46,960 --> 00:00:49,440 Speaker 4: always about the the guests who are there, and it's 16 00:00:49,479 --> 00:00:52,120 Speaker 4: never about the person who's supposed to be at the 17 00:00:52,159 --> 00:00:54,720 Speaker 4: center of attention. So you can't help but to you know, 18 00:00:55,440 --> 00:00:58,920 Speaker 4: have highlighted experiences about what you're observing around you, because 19 00:00:59,360 --> 00:01:01,880 Speaker 4: when you have a high light it a heightened emotion 20 00:01:02,240 --> 00:01:05,520 Speaker 4: about anything. Things just get a little funnier if you 21 00:01:05,600 --> 00:01:09,240 Speaker 4: let them, and it's okay to laugh We're very respectful. 22 00:01:09,680 --> 00:01:14,320 Speaker 4: We absolutely honor legacies. And then we go to a 23 00:01:14,400 --> 00:01:17,600 Speaker 4: cemetery to you know, find it. You find some cool 24 00:01:17,920 --> 00:01:21,320 Speaker 4: you know, uh, actor or celebrity who's passed and read 25 00:01:21,360 --> 00:01:24,520 Speaker 4: their tombstone. And then Monique trips on some cord. 26 00:01:24,280 --> 00:01:29,880 Speaker 3: And I'm gonna laugh at her. I'm not gonna. 27 00:01:30,360 --> 00:01:31,800 Speaker 2: What do you think of that, Monique? 28 00:01:32,880 --> 00:01:32,959 Speaker 5: Uh? 29 00:01:33,040 --> 00:01:38,520 Speaker 6: Well, that that is accurate. I What I like to 30 00:01:38,640 --> 00:01:42,920 Speaker 6: add is that we want to make it okay that 31 00:01:43,520 --> 00:01:47,280 Speaker 6: the human experience is a whole range of emotions and 32 00:01:47,640 --> 00:01:51,480 Speaker 6: like for me personally, when I deal with death and grief, 33 00:01:51,800 --> 00:01:55,560 Speaker 6: I laugh, I use humor and I know. And that's 34 00:01:55,640 --> 00:01:58,120 Speaker 6: when I met Ben and we decided to create the podcast. 35 00:01:58,160 --> 00:02:03,120 Speaker 6: We're like our tribe exists in this way. I'll tell 36 00:02:03,160 --> 00:02:08,200 Speaker 6: you personally, my maternal grandmother, who I'm extremely close with, 37 00:02:08,520 --> 00:02:11,160 Speaker 6: passed away in twenty twenty and I was in the 38 00:02:11,240 --> 00:02:14,720 Speaker 6: room where she had passed away, where she was, and 39 00:02:14,760 --> 00:02:17,400 Speaker 6: I was with the family member, and we were telling 40 00:02:17,520 --> 00:02:22,119 Speaker 6: jokes about her, laughing because that's the way we were 41 00:02:22,120 --> 00:02:24,640 Speaker 6: dealing with it. My mother was livid because that's not 42 00:02:24,680 --> 00:02:27,720 Speaker 6: how she deals with it, but it's it. It may 43 00:02:27,880 --> 00:02:30,200 Speaker 6: I knew that there's other people who deal with it 44 00:02:30,240 --> 00:02:33,239 Speaker 6: in this way, and it's okay to feel all those 45 00:02:33,280 --> 00:02:36,400 Speaker 6: emotions because all of that comes from the depth of 46 00:02:36,400 --> 00:02:40,280 Speaker 6: the human experience. And because we're working with and we're 47 00:02:40,320 --> 00:02:45,800 Speaker 6: talking about actors, their livelihood, their passion was being a performer, 48 00:02:46,440 --> 00:02:48,800 Speaker 6: and a lot of them actually that we cover, many 49 00:02:48,919 --> 00:02:51,880 Speaker 6: worked in comedy. So we think that they would. 50 00:02:51,680 --> 00:02:55,080 Speaker 4: Actually be because some of the some of the best comedians. 51 00:02:55,080 --> 00:02:57,040 Speaker 4: Their tombstones are to die for. 52 00:02:57,720 --> 00:03:01,000 Speaker 6: If you will get this, George So one of my 53 00:03:01,240 --> 00:03:04,720 Speaker 6: favorite tombstones. I know that's an interesting phrase, having a 54 00:03:04,760 --> 00:03:11,480 Speaker 6: favorite tombstone, but it's Billy Wilder. You know what his is. 55 00:03:13,520 --> 00:03:18,760 Speaker 6: It's I'm a writer, but nobody's perfect. I mean, okay, 56 00:03:19,200 --> 00:03:24,160 Speaker 6: Rodney Dangerfield, there goes the neighborhood that's on. 57 00:03:24,000 --> 00:03:28,239 Speaker 2: His tombs I get no respect or something like that. 58 00:03:29,600 --> 00:03:31,600 Speaker 6: That would have That would have been the second one. 59 00:03:31,720 --> 00:03:31,880 Speaker 3: Oh. 60 00:03:31,960 --> 00:03:35,560 Speaker 6: Merv Griffin is another one. Oh his is fantastic. What 61 00:03:35,560 --> 00:03:40,320 Speaker 6: what is his NERVs is? Remember, oh, I'm looking at 62 00:03:40,360 --> 00:03:46,240 Speaker 6: I think it's I will not be back after these messages. Yeah, 63 00:03:46,480 --> 00:03:50,480 Speaker 6: like if they are giving us that gift and that's 64 00:03:50,520 --> 00:03:53,760 Speaker 6: on their tombstone, and I actually have been and visited them. 65 00:03:53,880 --> 00:03:58,360 Speaker 6: And before we started, right well before we started the podcast, 66 00:03:58,440 --> 00:04:01,320 Speaker 6: I saw that and I I found myself laughing, and 67 00:04:01,360 --> 00:04:04,040 Speaker 6: I thought, well, wait a second. If that's what they're 68 00:04:04,080 --> 00:04:07,360 Speaker 6: giving us, this gift as their last moment, in their 69 00:04:08,280 --> 00:04:10,640 Speaker 6: last moments on earth, I think they want us to 70 00:04:10,680 --> 00:04:11,360 Speaker 6: continue that. 71 00:04:11,720 --> 00:04:14,040 Speaker 4: And mine's going to be sequel coming soon. 72 00:04:15,360 --> 00:04:18,920 Speaker 2: What about those actors and actresses who have died tragically, 73 00:04:19,080 --> 00:04:21,600 Speaker 2: like Rob Reiner's situation and things like that. 74 00:04:22,360 --> 00:04:25,080 Speaker 6: Well, yeah, well you bring up a good point. 75 00:04:25,200 --> 00:04:26,680 Speaker 3: I mean, it sucks, you know. 76 00:04:27,720 --> 00:04:29,680 Speaker 6: You mean, and how we discuss it and how we 77 00:04:29,720 --> 00:04:30,480 Speaker 6: approach that. 78 00:04:30,360 --> 00:04:31,280 Speaker 2: How do you handle it? 79 00:04:31,360 --> 00:04:37,320 Speaker 6: Yeah, still the same that's an interesting one. We still 80 00:04:37,480 --> 00:04:41,000 Speaker 6: approach with the same reverence. But Rob Reiner's interesting, right 81 00:04:41,120 --> 00:04:43,040 Speaker 6: because he worked a lot in comedy. 82 00:04:43,240 --> 00:04:45,159 Speaker 4: Well, the best thing is, you know, we're talking about movies, 83 00:04:45,240 --> 00:04:48,480 Speaker 4: so we get to reflect on their body of work, right, 84 00:04:48,920 --> 00:04:51,800 Speaker 4: But you know, I don't think somebody's defined by that 85 00:04:52,240 --> 00:04:57,200 Speaker 4: final curtain call, if you will. And there's also you know, 86 00:04:57,520 --> 00:05:01,480 Speaker 4: there's the intuition that I get get really get really 87 00:05:01,480 --> 00:05:03,719 Speaker 4: excited when I go to a cemetery because I'm like 88 00:05:03,880 --> 00:05:05,640 Speaker 4: a lot of people are talking to me right now, 89 00:05:06,160 --> 00:05:08,680 Speaker 4: I've trained a little bit in mediumship, and I. 90 00:05:10,480 --> 00:05:11,320 Speaker 3: Am able to. 91 00:05:12,800 --> 00:05:16,839 Speaker 4: Find comfort and relief in certain impressions that I get 92 00:05:17,120 --> 00:05:19,680 Speaker 4: energetically of that person, if you will, if I'm just 93 00:05:19,760 --> 00:05:22,320 Speaker 4: getting an impression of them, or doing a reading or 94 00:05:22,360 --> 00:05:25,400 Speaker 4: a remote doing, if you will. And usually it's well, 95 00:05:25,400 --> 00:05:27,920 Speaker 4: that suck, But look at all these other things. I did, 96 00:05:27,960 --> 00:05:29,640 Speaker 4: you know, that's what I would want maybe for rob. 97 00:05:29,839 --> 00:05:32,000 Speaker 4: So that's kind of how we deal with it with 98 00:05:32,080 --> 00:05:32,960 Speaker 4: our platform. 99 00:05:33,160 --> 00:05:34,800 Speaker 7: And I know you're gonna want some after hearing this. 100 00:05:34,800 --> 00:05:35,839 Speaker 7: This is an amazing story. 101 00:05:35,920 --> 00:05:40,440 Speaker 5: We've got Steven and Malachi Gregory in Nelson, New Zealand. 102 00:05:40,520 --> 00:05:43,159 Speaker 7: Now I understand that Malachi, who is eight almost nine 103 00:05:43,240 --> 00:05:46,680 Speaker 7: years old now, was suffering with not just one or 104 00:05:46,680 --> 00:05:49,440 Speaker 7: two warts, but I mean as significant outbreak of warts 105 00:05:49,440 --> 00:05:52,160 Speaker 7: all over his body, so significant it impacted his ability 106 00:05:52,200 --> 00:05:53,479 Speaker 7: to really function. 107 00:05:53,960 --> 00:05:54,279 Speaker 3: Yeah. 108 00:05:54,360 --> 00:05:57,040 Speaker 5: Yeah, he was having trouble even holding a pencil. A right. 109 00:05:57,400 --> 00:06:00,159 Speaker 5: That was TI's book. Actually, they got me thinking about 110 00:06:00,240 --> 00:06:03,800 Speaker 5: I'm not surprised. It is an amazing immunal modulator, and 111 00:06:03,880 --> 00:06:05,320 Speaker 5: so I can see that it would work. 112 00:06:06,000 --> 00:06:08,560 Speaker 7: And so at what point did you see that there 113 00:06:08,600 --> 00:06:11,120 Speaker 7: was actually improvement? It's really going to work. 114 00:06:11,040 --> 00:06:13,640 Speaker 5: Well, look, we really started to notice it around twelve weeks. 115 00:06:14,320 --> 00:06:17,960 Speaker 5: You can see these things actually getting smaller and smaller 116 00:06:18,000 --> 00:06:20,920 Speaker 5: and then going down to the with just little red marks. 117 00:06:21,000 --> 00:06:23,200 Speaker 5: The whole things are gone and we're talking about what's 118 00:06:23,279 --> 00:06:25,600 Speaker 5: you know one that size the warner? I thought, no way, 119 00:06:25,680 --> 00:06:29,120 Speaker 5: that's gonna Wow. That's just been miraculous to see them 120 00:06:29,120 --> 00:06:30,280 Speaker 5: get into a pair of shoes. 121 00:06:30,560 --> 00:06:32,480 Speaker 7: Yes, how wonderful. 122 00:06:32,640 --> 00:06:34,640 Speaker 5: It's great to see. I'm so happy and yees. 123 00:06:34,560 --> 00:06:36,360 Speaker 7: Competent, absolutely wonderful. 124 00:06:36,640 --> 00:06:38,559 Speaker 1: Friends that have seen it, that is blown away. 125 00:06:38,800 --> 00:06:39,839 Speaker 7: TI, this is awesome. 126 00:06:39,960 --> 00:06:40,800 Speaker 3: Yeah, this is awesome. 127 00:06:40,960 --> 00:06:44,840 Speaker 8: Another amazing story. Why we're talking about Carnivora. Call them 128 00:06:44,880 --> 00:06:47,920 Speaker 8: to awaken your immune system and protect yourself now called 129 00:06:47,960 --> 00:06:51,200 Speaker 8: one eight sixty six eight three six eighty seven thirty five. 130 00:06:51,560 --> 00:06:54,480 Speaker 8: That's one eight six six eight three six eighty seven 131 00:06:54,560 --> 00:06:58,200 Speaker 8: thirty five. Or visit Carnivora dot com c A r 132 00:06:58,520 --> 00:07:02,680 Speaker 8: niv O r A carnivora dot com. 133 00:07:02,760 --> 00:07:05,960 Speaker 2: How do you handle Hollywood in terms of what they 134 00:07:06,000 --> 00:07:09,640 Speaker 2: come up with in movies? Are they dealing with the 135 00:07:09,680 --> 00:07:11,360 Speaker 2: paranormal much these days? 136 00:07:13,080 --> 00:07:15,800 Speaker 3: Oh gosh, dealing with women? 137 00:07:16,440 --> 00:07:19,600 Speaker 6: Yes, I would say yes. Let's look at just what 138 00:07:19,800 --> 00:07:23,200 Speaker 6: was nominated for Best Picture at the Golden Globes and 139 00:07:23,280 --> 00:07:26,920 Speaker 6: at the Oscars. We've got Frankenstein. 140 00:07:26,440 --> 00:07:28,600 Speaker 3: A little movie called Frankenstein. 141 00:07:28,280 --> 00:07:31,240 Speaker 6: Classic, and we keep seeing that story over and over 142 00:07:31,280 --> 00:07:33,320 Speaker 6: and over again throughout, you know, the decades. 143 00:07:33,520 --> 00:07:34,840 Speaker 2: America never gets old. 144 00:07:35,480 --> 00:07:36,000 Speaker 6: It doesn't. 145 00:07:36,120 --> 00:07:38,520 Speaker 3: This was a good one, too beautiful. 146 00:07:38,840 --> 00:07:42,440 Speaker 6: It doesn't because we're we always want to see we 147 00:07:42,480 --> 00:07:46,360 Speaker 6: can relate to these supernatural characters. We relate to them 148 00:07:46,720 --> 00:07:50,000 Speaker 6: because we can suspend to spend belief. I feel like 149 00:07:50,040 --> 00:07:53,880 Speaker 6: we can connect our shadow sells him. 150 00:07:55,880 --> 00:07:57,560 Speaker 4: You know, I thought it was gonna go one direction 151 00:07:57,800 --> 00:08:00,680 Speaker 4: without you know, spoiler alert at all to give anything way. 152 00:08:00,720 --> 00:08:03,360 Speaker 4: But I think it's gonna go one way, something about 153 00:08:03,360 --> 00:08:05,200 Speaker 4: witchcraft and Lady in the Woods. And then all of 154 00:08:05,240 --> 00:08:07,320 Speaker 4: a sudden, it's like, oh, it's actually very rooted, but 155 00:08:07,400 --> 00:08:12,000 Speaker 4: it has It is absolutely abundant with paranormal throughout it. 156 00:08:12,040 --> 00:08:13,840 Speaker 3: But you got to kind of look through the line. 157 00:08:13,880 --> 00:08:15,280 Speaker 3: Spread between the lines. 158 00:08:15,920 --> 00:08:18,640 Speaker 2: Are some of the movies cursed where something happens to 159 00:08:18,760 --> 00:08:20,920 Speaker 2: the crew and the actor and actresses. 160 00:08:24,120 --> 00:08:27,320 Speaker 4: I just think that Ellen Burston's poor back that she 161 00:08:27,520 --> 00:08:30,760 Speaker 4: broke on the set of Exorcists, and they kept that shot, 162 00:08:31,760 --> 00:08:35,240 Speaker 4: that shot where she gets thrown against the wall her back. Yes, yes, 163 00:08:35,320 --> 00:08:39,320 Speaker 4: that movie Extorsiest and several other ones. Poltergeist, there's a 164 00:08:39,320 --> 00:08:40,960 Speaker 4: bunch of them, I would you know. I would say 165 00:08:40,960 --> 00:08:44,520 Speaker 4: the Crow as well, especially with on set depths that 166 00:08:44,559 --> 00:08:48,280 Speaker 4: they keep in the movie, are cursed movies because there's 167 00:08:48,320 --> 00:08:53,880 Speaker 4: a pattern or a synchronicity of events that could be 168 00:08:53,960 --> 00:08:56,880 Speaker 4: deemed negative towards stuff. 169 00:08:57,280 --> 00:09:01,160 Speaker 6: Well, the Poultergeist movies are. I think there's a lot 170 00:09:01,200 --> 00:09:05,440 Speaker 6: of theories out there that it's interesting that people put 171 00:09:05,440 --> 00:09:09,920 Speaker 6: out there that with each sequel someone has died during 172 00:09:09,960 --> 00:09:12,320 Speaker 6: the filming or before the next film comes out in 173 00:09:12,559 --> 00:09:18,640 Speaker 6: very tragic ways. So there is a many theories attached 174 00:09:18,679 --> 00:09:21,840 Speaker 6: to that series of films. By the way, that home 175 00:09:22,400 --> 00:09:25,520 Speaker 6: where the Poulter Guys, oh, we called the Realtor. It's 176 00:09:25,600 --> 00:09:28,840 Speaker 6: in Seem Valley where I grew up. So I grew 177 00:09:28,920 --> 00:09:33,960 Speaker 6: up like being scared, like trying to run past the house. Right. 178 00:09:34,240 --> 00:09:37,000 Speaker 6: Everyone would say, you feel the vibe. I don't know. 179 00:09:37,960 --> 00:09:38,600 Speaker 3: Well, i'd say, you know. 180 00:09:38,600 --> 00:09:41,360 Speaker 4: In Poltic Guys, we had Dominique Dunn. She died November fourth, 181 00:09:41,440 --> 00:09:43,560 Speaker 4: nineteen eighty two, at twenty two years old. It was 182 00:09:43,679 --> 00:09:46,800 Speaker 4: right after the filming of the second one, and her 183 00:09:46,840 --> 00:09:51,680 Speaker 4: boyfriend strangled her or assaulted her and she died like 184 00:09:51,720 --> 00:09:54,880 Speaker 4: five days later, and it was five months after the release, 185 00:09:54,960 --> 00:09:56,880 Speaker 4: but she'd been in a couple movies and then. 186 00:09:57,280 --> 00:09:59,280 Speaker 3: Of course, how could we forget Heather of work? 187 00:10:00,040 --> 00:10:02,960 Speaker 4: And she made it through up until the two thirds 188 00:10:02,960 --> 00:10:06,120 Speaker 4: of the way filming the end of Poltergeist three, and 189 00:10:06,160 --> 00:10:10,200 Speaker 4: that was that that was a tortured child just in 190 00:10:10,240 --> 00:10:14,280 Speaker 4: her eyes. But she had a pre existing condition congenital 191 00:10:14,320 --> 00:10:19,360 Speaker 4: intestine intestinal stenosis, and she went into septic shop. And 192 00:10:19,440 --> 00:10:24,160 Speaker 4: so there's some scenes in the end where it lines 193 00:10:24,320 --> 00:10:26,080 Speaker 4: right up with the story and so that's really where 194 00:10:26,080 --> 00:10:29,400 Speaker 4: the curse, like the theories come in about that. You know, 195 00:10:29,679 --> 00:10:32,800 Speaker 4: there's there's scenes where she's, you know, hugging her dad 196 00:10:32,800 --> 00:10:34,000 Speaker 4: and you just see the back of her head and. 197 00:10:33,960 --> 00:10:35,160 Speaker 3: A blonde hair and it's not her. 198 00:10:35,840 --> 00:10:38,800 Speaker 6: And then after the first, the second one was Julian Beck. 199 00:10:38,920 --> 00:10:41,800 Speaker 6: He played Reverend Kane. He passed away. And what was 200 00:10:41,880 --> 00:10:47,640 Speaker 6: interesting about that that is he had gaunt appearance is 201 00:10:47,720 --> 00:10:50,560 Speaker 6: because he had cancer. That was not makeup. Yeah, and 202 00:10:50,600 --> 00:10:54,720 Speaker 6: I think that that's very curious that they played into 203 00:10:54,800 --> 00:10:59,240 Speaker 6: that like that crossed the line of filmmaking. With real life. 204 00:10:59,360 --> 00:11:03,480 Speaker 6: So that's why Poltergeist has this this kind of cursed 205 00:11:03,559 --> 00:11:06,480 Speaker 6: film set vibe about it, and why are we so 206 00:11:06,600 --> 00:11:07,480 Speaker 6: fascinated with it? 207 00:11:07,920 --> 00:11:10,880 Speaker 2: Didn't three people die in the Twilight Zone movie with 208 00:11:10,960 --> 00:11:12,160 Speaker 2: a helicopter crash? 209 00:11:12,920 --> 00:11:15,920 Speaker 6: Ooh, that's a big one, that one's you know, I 210 00:11:16,080 --> 00:11:16,560 Speaker 6: hear it? Did? 211 00:11:16,640 --> 00:11:19,080 Speaker 4: I am the kind that has to stop and I 212 00:11:19,320 --> 00:11:22,040 Speaker 4: hold up traffic because there's an event on the highway. 213 00:11:22,320 --> 00:11:26,080 Speaker 4: So as I was looking into the Twilight we literally 214 00:11:26,120 --> 00:11:28,840 Speaker 4: were watching that right before this started. I had to 215 00:11:28,880 --> 00:11:34,079 Speaker 4: watch that crash about twenty times because it is fascinating 216 00:11:34,880 --> 00:11:37,560 Speaker 4: how it happened, how in a blanket and I they're 217 00:11:37,720 --> 00:11:40,920 Speaker 4: there and they're gone, and it just makes you think 218 00:11:40,960 --> 00:11:45,920 Speaker 4: about your humanity. But in that movie in the Twilight Zone, 219 00:11:46,040 --> 00:11:47,440 Speaker 4: it was in nineteen eighty two. 220 00:11:47,480 --> 00:11:49,520 Speaker 3: It was Vic Morrow. 221 00:11:50,800 --> 00:11:53,439 Speaker 4: And his daughters Jennifer, Jason Lee, I think, and to 222 00:11:54,200 --> 00:11:59,400 Speaker 4: Vietnamese children Mika din Lee and I forget the name. 223 00:11:59,320 --> 00:12:01,520 Speaker 6: Of the other guy, the little girl or her names. 224 00:12:02,000 --> 00:12:04,679 Speaker 4: I'm sorry, the girl shiny Chen. And so they were 225 00:12:04,720 --> 00:12:10,360 Speaker 4: actually very meta escaping a war torn zone in Vietnam, 226 00:12:10,520 --> 00:12:14,120 Speaker 4: and they were shooting at night, and they had real 227 00:12:14,200 --> 00:12:16,760 Speaker 4: explosions and there were a lot of protocols that were 228 00:12:16,760 --> 00:12:17,720 Speaker 4: not followed, and. 229 00:12:17,679 --> 00:12:18,680 Speaker 3: The helicopter wroter. 230 00:12:19,320 --> 00:12:22,520 Speaker 4: Basically an explosion happened too close to the helicopter and 231 00:12:22,760 --> 00:12:24,040 Speaker 4: it landed on top of them. 232 00:12:24,160 --> 00:12:29,800 Speaker 6: It was a wild like art imitating life, life imitating 233 00:12:29,920 --> 00:12:32,040 Speaker 6: art because that's what they were filming, and then it 234 00:12:32,080 --> 00:12:34,960 Speaker 6: happened to real life. And it's written and directed by 235 00:12:35,320 --> 00:12:41,000 Speaker 6: John Landis and produced by Spielberg and Landis, so the 236 00:12:41,440 --> 00:12:43,719 Speaker 6: big guys were overseeing this, so that was. 237 00:12:43,760 --> 00:12:47,200 Speaker 4: Kind of so it was just a total tragedy and 238 00:12:47,559 --> 00:12:50,000 Speaker 4: they captured it from about twenty different angles. 239 00:12:50,160 --> 00:12:51,040 Speaker 3: It is wild. 240 00:12:51,200 --> 00:12:53,240 Speaker 2: What do you think of the Oscars that during the 241 00:12:53,280 --> 00:12:59,040 Speaker 2: Oscars they always have basically a eulogy of the acting 242 00:13:00,080 --> 00:13:02,120 Speaker 2: staffed people who died during the year. 243 00:13:02,640 --> 00:13:06,160 Speaker 6: What do you think of that the in memoriam. I'm 244 00:13:06,160 --> 00:13:09,120 Speaker 6: glad you asked that, George, because this year at the 245 00:13:09,160 --> 00:13:12,760 Speaker 6: Oscars they did something different that I have personally never 246 00:13:12,800 --> 00:13:14,800 Speaker 6: seen and I've seen about half of them at this 247 00:13:14,840 --> 00:13:19,200 Speaker 6: point in my life. And they added more in the 248 00:13:19,280 --> 00:13:24,200 Speaker 6: in memoriam. They they added those special tributes like to 249 00:13:24,360 --> 00:13:30,360 Speaker 6: Redford and Diane Keaton, and there was and there was 250 00:13:30,400 --> 00:13:33,240 Speaker 6: performances and it was a little bit longer. 251 00:13:33,320 --> 00:13:35,880 Speaker 4: However, a little longer because of some of the performances 252 00:13:35,880 --> 00:13:36,560 Speaker 4: we didn't ask for. 253 00:13:36,600 --> 00:13:40,520 Speaker 6: It was but it was very significant that they did that. 254 00:13:40,600 --> 00:13:43,640 Speaker 6: But one thing we did notice is many people were 255 00:13:43,679 --> 00:13:48,120 Speaker 6: still left out, which is curious, curious as to why 256 00:13:48,160 --> 00:13:50,840 Speaker 6: are certain people left out? And also why do we 257 00:13:50,960 --> 00:13:56,200 Speaker 6: why did we want this? Were more people that that 258 00:13:56,280 --> 00:13:58,240 Speaker 6: made an impact on us? Did they pass away? Or 259 00:13:58,280 --> 00:14:00,240 Speaker 6: do we are we starting to care more about the 260 00:14:00,240 --> 00:14:01,520 Speaker 6: conversation of death. 261 00:14:01,440 --> 00:14:04,520 Speaker 4: And we shared watching in Memoriam as if we were 262 00:14:04,559 --> 00:14:07,800 Speaker 4: watching it with our personal audience in our podcast, because 263 00:14:07,800 --> 00:14:10,760 Speaker 4: the Imamoriam is our jam, like of the Award Show, 264 00:14:11,120 --> 00:14:14,400 Speaker 4: and we want we observe everybody's reaction around us and 265 00:14:14,440 --> 00:14:19,080 Speaker 4: what people are in many different emotional states, like I 266 00:14:19,160 --> 00:14:22,160 Speaker 4: didn't know they died and somebody said about Diane Keeping 267 00:14:22,160 --> 00:14:23,640 Speaker 4: or somebody I didn't. 268 00:14:23,440 --> 00:14:24,200 Speaker 3: Know she was dead. 269 00:14:24,360 --> 00:14:26,320 Speaker 4: I was supposed to go to Didney Land and have 270 00:14:26,480 --> 00:14:29,960 Speaker 4: chardonnay with her a couple of months ago, and I'm like, well, there's. 271 00:14:29,800 --> 00:14:32,960 Speaker 3: A reason why you didn't. It was wild to see 272 00:14:33,000 --> 00:14:35,880 Speaker 3: everybody's reaction. It was like, ah, there are people here. 273 00:14:36,000 --> 00:14:38,600 Speaker 4: But the in Memoriam is it was very tasteful, but 274 00:14:38,640 --> 00:14:41,440 Speaker 4: it is always controversial because they do leave out a 275 00:14:41,480 --> 00:14:41,920 Speaker 4: lot of people. 276 00:14:42,080 --> 00:14:44,840 Speaker 2: Yeah, what about about the old days where you would 277 00:14:44,880 --> 00:14:47,880 Speaker 2: hear stories of Jack Palance the actor, thinking he was 278 00:14:47,960 --> 00:14:49,960 Speaker 2: dead but he was very much alive when. 279 00:14:49,760 --> 00:14:54,560 Speaker 6: You oh the death hoaxes. Okay, George, the truth is 280 00:14:54,680 --> 00:14:56,640 Speaker 6: we did. We did that a couple times by way, 281 00:14:56,720 --> 00:14:59,440 Speaker 6: I mean, I think you did it. Then where we've 282 00:15:00,080 --> 00:15:02,800 Speaker 6: we have we've had a couple where we've said on 283 00:15:02,800 --> 00:15:05,040 Speaker 6: our podcast, we hear this person's dead, we find out 284 00:15:05,040 --> 00:15:07,120 Speaker 6: they're not. So it still happens. 285 00:15:07,880 --> 00:15:10,080 Speaker 3: But it's great press. 286 00:15:09,920 --> 00:15:10,880 Speaker 1: It was great. 287 00:15:10,960 --> 00:15:11,960 Speaker 6: Yeah, it's great press. 288 00:15:15,080 --> 00:15:16,160 Speaker 3: You don't want to be the source. 289 00:15:17,200 --> 00:15:19,880 Speaker 2: Wasn't there some kind of scandal or rumor about Frank 290 00:15:19,920 --> 00:15:21,520 Speaker 2: Sinatra's tombstone. 291 00:15:22,760 --> 00:15:28,160 Speaker 6: There is his tombstone and Palm Springs right out Yeah, 292 00:15:29,760 --> 00:15:33,120 Speaker 6: right outside of Palm Springs is this tombstone. 293 00:15:32,600 --> 00:15:34,920 Speaker 3: And it's been Cathedral City. 294 00:15:36,440 --> 00:15:38,520 Speaker 6: It's been I want to say manipulated, but it's uh, 295 00:15:39,160 --> 00:15:43,040 Speaker 6: not manipulated. It's like vandalized in a way. Then your 296 00:15:43,080 --> 00:15:48,360 Speaker 6: failing lives out there, you you know, quite a tombstone. 297 00:15:48,680 --> 00:15:51,280 Speaker 3: So they they literally changed it. 298 00:15:51,280 --> 00:15:55,040 Speaker 4: It was basically attributed to if you want to go 299 00:15:55,160 --> 00:15:58,360 Speaker 4: halfway in the conspiracy like a family feud, the kind 300 00:15:58,360 --> 00:16:05,920 Speaker 4: of had it's a children versus mother. But originally, gosh, 301 00:16:05,920 --> 00:16:08,400 Speaker 4: what was that? What did that originally say? The tombstone 302 00:16:08,400 --> 00:16:12,480 Speaker 4: it was it ended up being the word was changed. 303 00:16:12,800 --> 00:16:16,480 Speaker 4: It was changed to sleep warm Papa, And about twenty 304 00:16:16,640 --> 00:16:19,960 Speaker 4: twenty to twenty twenty one they attributed it to vandalism. 305 00:16:20,000 --> 00:16:22,160 Speaker 4: And it had said the best is yet to come, 306 00:16:22,520 --> 00:16:27,880 Speaker 4: beloved husband and father. And there are a lot of 307 00:16:28,680 --> 00:16:32,200 Speaker 4: interesting theories about it. But one of the facts that 308 00:16:33,120 --> 00:16:38,400 Speaker 4: stirs up controversy is the cemetery acknowledging the records and 309 00:16:38,720 --> 00:16:41,720 Speaker 4: that they exist, but refusing to release the details of 310 00:16:41,720 --> 00:16:44,160 Speaker 4: how it happened. And all they said was talk to 311 00:16:44,280 --> 00:16:48,400 Speaker 4: the daughters dot dot dot or the police. 312 00:16:48,720 --> 00:16:51,960 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 313 00:16:52,000 --> 00:16:55,240 Speaker 1: one am Eastern and go to Coast to coastam dot 314 00:16:55,280 --> 00:16:56,080 Speaker 1: com for more