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There's only one movie that could have pulled Tony out of paternity leave and it's this one.This week on Bruh Vision, Ceej and Tony break down the 2026 Michael Jackson biopic, Michael!What starts as a movie review quickly becomes a conversation about Michael Jackson’s artistry, isolation, perfectionism, family dynamics, and lasting impact on music and pop culture. The guys dive into why the film connected so strongly with audiences despite mixed reviews, how Jafar Jackson somehow manages to pull off the impossible, and why Michael remains one of the most fascinating and misunderstood celebrities of all time.This is just a quick break from paternity leave, but we’ll be back with more regular episodes soon. Until then… hee hee.

While Tony’s on paternity leave, we’re going back in the archives—and this week, it’s Good Burger.This is a re-release from our Movie Makeover days, where we revisited movies we loved (or thought we loved) and tried to figure out what actually holds up.This episode gets into:Why Good Burger feels iconic… but also kind of a messThe Kenan & Kel dynamic and why it mattered so much growing upThe fast food era of the ‘90s vs. now (and how wild it really was)And whether this movie was secretly about corporate takeovers all alongNew episodes coming soon—but for now, enjoy the throwback.

Tony’s still on paternity leave, so we’re diving into the archives—and this week, it’s Deep Blue Sea.This is a re-release from our Movie Makeover era, where we revisited movies we loved and broke down what works, what doesn’t, and what we’d remake.This episode has everything:Iconic (and traumatic) movie momentsA speech that did NOT go the way you thought it wouldA reminder that maybe sharks aren’t even the scariest thing in the oceanAnd a deep dive into why creature features just workAlso:Why do we feel like orcas are plotting something? And how did we end up pitching a Hungry Hungry Hippos horror movie?New episodes coming soon—but for now, enjoy the throwback.

Tony’s on paternity leave, so we’re digging into the archives, and this week, we’re back in Bedrock!This is a re-release from our Movie Makeover days, where we revisited The Flintstones and tried to make sense of one of the most ambitious (and confusing) cartoon adaptations ever made.We talk:Why this movie looks incredible… but feels chaoticHow committed the cast was (seriously, stacked lineup)Why ‘90s movies went all-in on practical sets and world-buildingAnd how this somehow turned into a story about corporate manipulationAlso:Why don’t movies come with merch like this anymore?? We used to be a proper country.New episodes coming soon—but for now, enjoy the throwback.

BruhVision is hitting pause for a bit (Tony’s on paternity leave 👶🏾) but we didn’t want to leave you hanging.So while we’re out, we’re digging into the vault and re-releasing episodes from our Movie Makeover era—where we broke down movies we love and reimagined what we’d do differently.This week: Twister.Originally recorded back in 2019, this episode dives into everything that made Twister unforgettable—from flying cows 🐄 to storm-chasing chaos—and why it still holds a place in the disaster movie conversation.Listening back now (especially after Twisters), it hits a little different. Did we accidentally predict the sequel… or prove why it feels so familiar?We’ll be back soon with new episodes. Until then—enjoy the throwback.

This week on BruhVision, we revisit the 1991 classic New Jack City ! The movie that gave us Nino Brown, peak New Jack Swing fashion, and about a thousand lines people still quote like they were scripture. But once you get past the fur coats and the Carter apartments, this movie is doing a lot more than telling a flashy crime story.We break down how New Jack City captures the rise of the crack era, the systems that allowed it to explode, and why the fall of Nino Brown feels less like the end of a villain and more like a snapshot of a broken system. From Reagan-era economics and the drug trade to the way Black communities found ways to survive and rebuild, we unpack why this movie still feels like a cultural time capsule.Along the way we talk New Jack Swing, the strange optimism of the early ’90s, male friendships that collapse under power and ego, and why New Jack City might secretly be one of the most honest social commentaries hidden inside a gangster movie.If you grew up quoting this film, vibing to the soundtrack, or wondering how a movie this stylish could also be this heavy, then this one’s for you!BruhVision is a pop culture review show that dives deep into the movies, music, and TV shaping today’s culture — brought to you by Bruh Meets World hosts T.C. and Ceej. Blending sharp analysis with humor and heart, each episode explores the stories behind the stories — and why they matter.

This week on BruhVision, we unfortunately revisit Tyler Perry’s catalog with Why Did I Get Married? — the relationship drama that had us watching in disbelief.We break down the so-called couples retreat at the center of the story and how it turns into a pressure cooker of infidelity, communication failures, and emotional manipulation. From chaotic dinner table confrontations to friendships held together by blind loyalty and denial, we unpack how the film portrays Black marriage, accountability among friends, and the complicated dynamics between men and women. Along the way, we also wrestle with Tyler Perry’s storytelling choices — and question how narratives like this helped build the empire he has today.If you’ve ever watched this movie and wondered who was actually right, who was definitely wrong, and why nobody seems to believe in therapy — yeah… this episode is for you.BruhVision is a pop culture review show that dives deep into the movies, music, and TV shaping today’s culture — brought to you by Bruh Meets World hosts T.C. and Ceej. Blending sharp analysis with humor and heart, each episode explores the stories behind the stories — and why they matter.

This week on BruhVision, we dive into the 2026 adaptation of Wuthering Heights — the Emerald Fennell-directed fever dream starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi that had us asking one very simple question: …wait, this is supposed to be romantic?What starts as a conversation about a classic love story quickly turns into us unpacking class privilege, obsession, entitlement, and the uncomfortable power dynamics hiding underneath “epic romance.” And for once, the Bruhs are not on the same page — Ceej was fully locked into Fennell’s bold, maximalist vision, while Tony… absolutely was not buying what the movie was selling.Tap into this week’s episode and let us know — did it work for you?BruhVision is a pop culture review show that dives deep into the movies, music, and TV shaping today’s culture — brought to you by Bruh Meets World hosts T.C. and Ceej. Blending sharp analysis with humor and heart, each episode explores the stories behind the stories — and why they matter.

After revisiting Look Who’s Talking and Juno, apparently we’re in our baby movie era — so with Tony prepping for his first child, it only felt right to complete the unofficial trilogy with the ’80s classic Three Men and a Baby. The movie that was somehow the #1 film the year it came out… which we are still trying to understand.We ask the real questions this film raises: Why do these grown men live in what looks like a Pee-wee’s Playhouse? Who hides drugs in a baby’s diaper and thinks, “Yeah, this’ll be fine”? And why can't women stop throwing themselves at these clearly gay men? This comedy runs on pure chaos. But underneath the mustaches and drug deals gone wrong, the movie is quietly exploring parenting, gender roles, and what actually makes a family.If you grew up loving this movie, if you’ve ever seen Full House, or if you’ve played F-Marry-Kill with Tom Selleck, Ted Danson, and Steve “The Guttz” Guttenberg… this one’s for you.BruhVision is a pop culture review show that dives deep into the movies, music, and TV shaping today’s culture — brought to you by Bruh Meets World hosts T.C. and Ceej. Blending sharp analysis with humor and heart, each episode explores the stories behind the stories — and why they matter.

This week on BruhVision, we rewind to Look Who’s Talking — the late-’80s rom-com that lowkey taught an entire generation how babies are made way before our parents were ready for that conversation.We break down why this movie hits completely different as adults, how giving a baby a full inner monologue quietly changed children’s entertainment forever, and why Look Who’s Talking is actually less a rom-com and more a found-family story wrapped in nonstop parenting panic.If this movie made you laugh as a kid, educated you a little too early, and now has you unexpectedly emotional as an adult — congratulations, you’re exactly who this episode is for.BruhVision is a pop culture review show that dives deep into the movies, music, and TV shaping today’s culture — brought to you by Bruh Meets World hosts T.C. and Ceej. Blending sharp analysis with humor and heart, each episode explores the stories behind the stories — and why they matter.