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TMC: Raw, unfiltered talk from two dudes and a few badass chicks. No filters, just laughs as we dive into the best, worst, and most obscure movies ever made. If you’re ready for brutally honest, laugh-out-loud takes, this is your kind of podcast.

Send a textSome movies age out. Dirty Dancing somehow ages up. It’s part romance, part rebellion, part time capsule of a summer that changed everything. This episode digs into why a scrappy, low-budget 80s movie about dance, class, and chemistry still hits decades later. Whether you came for the soundtrack, the lift, or Patrick Swayze doing Patrick Swayze things, this one still knows exactly what it’s doing. We breaks down Dirty Dancing from every angle that matters. The plot, the characters, the moments that made it iconic, and the stuff that feels surprisingly relevant today. Ratings get thrown around. Hot takes land. The 1960s backdrop, class tension, and Baby and Johnny’s dynamic get real airtime. And yes, the soundtrack gets the respect it deserve 🎥 By the NumbersRelease Year: 1987Director: Emile ArdolinoBudget: ~$6 millionBox Office: ~$214 million worldwideRuntime: 100 minutesRotten Tomatoes: 72% critics | 90% audienceGenre: Romantic Drama🎭 Main CastPatrick Swayze as Johnny CastleJennifer Grey as Frances “Baby” HousemanJerry Orbach as Dr. Jake HousemanCynthia Rhodes as Penny JohnsonKelly Bishop as Marjorie Houseman10 Facts You Need To KnowVal Kilmer was originally offered the role of Johnny Castle but turned it down. Billy Zane was also considered before Patrick Swayze was cast.Sarah Jessica Parker and Sharon Stone both auditioned for the role of Baby Houseman.Several scenes were improvised, including moments where Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey were joking around during rehearsals.Jennifer Grey was 27 years old playing a 17-year-old, while Patrick Swayze was 34 playing a character in his early 20s. (One of us definitely has a crush on her)Cast rehearsals often turned into full-on dance parties, helping build chemistry on set.The film had a tight production schedule with only two weeks of rehearsal and a 44-day shoot.Because filming took place in the fall, production crews spray-painted leaves green to make it look like summer.The lake used for the water dance scene was around 40 degrees, causing actors’ lips to turn blue from the cold.Patrick Swayze turned down $6 million to appear in a sequel because he did not like the concept.“(I’ve Had) The Time of My Life” won the Academy Award for Best Original Song, and the soundtrack bLISTEN TO ALL OF "THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS" Day 1: Christmas Kickoff Movies Day 2: Bad Christmas Movies We Love Day 3: Our Best Santa's Day 4: Funniest Christmas Movies Day 5: Most Romantic Santa Day 6: Best Animated Christmas Movie Day 7: Best Christmas Soundtrack Day 8: Best Non-Christmas, Christmas Movie Day 9: The Christmas Movie We Want to Live In Day 10: The Christmas Family Most Like Our Own? Day 11: Which Christmas Character Would You Grab a Beer With? Day 12: Christmas Movie Trivia

Send a textThis is the final day. Day 12.Trivia. Beer. Wine. Shots.More trivia.Chess and Crack-Whores go Christmas.Note much else to say here. #ListenLISTEN TO ALL OF "THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS" Day 1: Christmas Kickoff Movies Day 2: Bad Christmas Movies We Love Day 3: Our Best Santa's Day 4: Funniest Christmas Movies Day 5: Most Romantic Santa Day 6: Best Animated Christmas Movie Day 7: Best Christmas Soundtrack Day 8: Best Non-Christmas, Christmas Movie Day 9: The Christmas Movie We Want to Live In Day 10: The Christmas Family Most Like Our Own? Day 11: Which Christmas Character Would You Grab a Beer With? Day 12: Christmas Movie Trivia

Send a textBecause some holiday icons feel like old friends and others feel like a bad idea after one drinkThis one’s simple. Christmas movies are full of characters. Some are fun to watch. Some feel like people we’d actually want to sit next to and have a beer with. That’s the whole conversation.We run through Christmas movie characters and call it straight. Who would be a good hang. Who would be exhausting. Who would be fun for one drink and who you’d avoid after that. Yukon Cornelius comes up. Clark Griswold comes up. A few non-traditional picks sneak in and stir things up.It’s less about the movies and more about who we'd get down with.What We CoverFavorite Christmas movie characters worth hanging out withWhy certain personalities age better than othersThe difference between fun on screen and fun in real lifeHow nostalgia shapes character loyaltyWhat these picks say about personal holiday styleKey TakeawaysYukon Cornelius stands out because he feels uncomplicated. Optimistic, curious, and completely comfortable being himself, which makes him an easy pick for a no-pressure beer.Clark Griswold is chaotic but relatable. The kind of person who means well, tries too hard, and probably shouldn’t have more than one drink, but would still be entertaining.Characters like John McClane enter the conversation because Christmas movies don’t always look like Christmas movies. Sometimes it’s the setting and attitude that matter more than the wrapping paper.The debate isn’t about who’s the best character. It’s about who feels tolerable in real life. Someone you could actually sit with and enjoy without needing an escape plan.These choices reveal how humor and nostalgia blend together during the holidays. The characters people choose are often tied to comfort, memory, and personality more than the movie itself.LISTEN TO ALL OF "THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS" Day 1: Christmas Kickoff Movies Day 2: Bad Christmas Movies We Love Day 3: Our Best Santa's Day 4: Funniest Christmas Movies Day 5: Most Romantic Santa Day 6: Best Animated Christmas Movie Day 7: Best Christmas Soundtrack Day 8: Best Non-Christmas, Christmas Movie Day 9: The Christmas Movie We Want to Live In Day 10: The Christmas Family Most Like Our Own? Day 11: Which Christmas Character Would You Grab a Beer With? Day 12: Christmas Movie Trivia

Send a textChristmas movies aren’t about the story. Nobody’s here for tight plots. They’re about the place. The street you swear you’d move to tomorrow if it existed. Houses packed close together, lights borderline obnoxious, and neighbors who know your business whether you like it or not. It feels loud, messy, and alive in a way real life usually isn’t.That’s why people get so attached to these movies. They’re not chasing Santa. They’re chasing the feeling. The idea that everyone’s around. That the chaos means something. That even the annoying neighbors and awkward moments are part of the deal. You can fight, disappear for a year, say dumb things, and still end up in the same place when it counts.What counts as a Christmas movie isn’t about rules. It’s about memory. Where you were when you first watched it. Who was in the room. Whether the house felt full or empty at the time. Those movies lock in a version of the holidays you either miss like hell or are still trying to recreate.What We CoverWhy Christmas movie neighborhoods feel aspirationalThe idea of community as the real holiday fantasyDebates around what qualifies as a Christmas movieHow personal history shapes favorite picksWhy nostalgia and setting drive emotional attachmentKey TakeawaysChristmas movie neighborhoods work because they represent a version of community that feels rare in real life. The appeal is less about perfection and more about shared experience and proximity.The Cranks’ neighborhood stands out as an idealized version of holiday togetherness. It feels festive, intrusive, supportive, and overwhelming all at once, which makes it believable.Debates about what counts as a Christmas movie are really debates about memory and meaning. Personal experiences often matter more than release dates or themes.Some movies feel like Christmas because of how people gather inside them, not because of the plot itself. The environment carries as much weight as the story.Nostalgia amplifies emotional response. Movies tied to decorating, family traditions, or specific moments tend to carry more staying power year after year.LISTEN TO ALL OF "THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS" Day 1: Christmas Kickoff Movies Day 2: Bad Christmas Movies We Love Day 3: Our Best Santa's Day 4: Funniest Christmas Movies Day 5: Most Romantic Santa Day 6: Best Animated Christmas Movie Day 7: Best Christmas Soundtrack Day 8: Best Non-Christmas, Christmas Movie Day 9: The Christmas Movie We Want to Live In Day 10: The Christmas Family Most Like Our Own? Day 11: Which Christmas Character Would You Grab a Beer With? Day 12: Christmas Movie Trivia

Send a textChristmas movies don’t stick because they’re perfect. They stick because they’re familiar. The noise, the tension, the traditions that somehow survived generations, and the moments that are funny now but felt chaotic in real time. These films work because they mirror real family dynamics more than holiday fantasy.In this episode, the conversation centers on why movies like National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, A Christmas Story, and Home Alone still resonate decades later. Each one taps into a different version of family reality. The overcommitted dad. The uncomfortable traditions. The chaos of too many people in one house at the same time.What We CoverWhy the Griswolds feel uncomfortably relatable How nostalgia can be funny and unsettling at the same time The chaos of large family gatherings on screen Why humor carries emotional weight in holiday films How traditions become both sacred and stressfulKey TakeawaysThe Griswolds work because they represent the pressure many families feel to force a perfect holiday, even when everything is clearly unraveling. That tension is what makes the movie funny and familiar at the same time.A Christmas Story hits differently depending on personal experience. What feels nostalgic to some feels claustrophobic or awkward to others, especially when viewed through the lens of childhood discomfort.Home Alone captures family chaos before it turns into a comedy. The early moments of confusion and noise reflect what it feels like to grow up in a packed household during the holidays.Christmas movies often resonate because they reflect lived experiences, not idealized ones. Viewers see their own families in exaggerated moments that are only slightly dialed up.Iconic quotes stick because they’re attached to emotional memory. The lines aren’t just funny. They’re reminders of how those moments felt in real life.Chapters00:00 Day 10 - Which Christmas movie is most like your family? 00:55 Family dynamics in holiday films 02:49 The Griswolds as a reflection of family life 05:32 A Christmas Story and the nostalgia tension 08:23 Home Alone and the chaos of family gatherings 10:17 Exploring other Christmas classicsLISTEN TO ALL OF "THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS" Day 1: Christmas Kickoff Movies Day 2: Bad Christmas Movies We Love Day 3: Our Best Santa's Day 4: Funniest Christmas Movies Day 5: Most Romantic Santa Day 6: Best Animated Christmas Movie Day 7: Best Christmas Soundtrack Day 8: Best Non-Christmas, Christmas Movie Day 9: The Christmas Movie We Want to Live In Day 10: The Christmas Family Most Like Our Own? Day 11: Which Christmas Character Would You Grab a Beer With? Day 12: Christmas Movie Trivia

Send a textDie Hard again, hurt feelings, and one snowman that emotionally wrecked the roomWe sat down and recorded 12 episodes all about Christmas. Our favorite Christmas movies, our favorite Santa, our worst Santa, the soundtracks we love. A little insight into who we are and what we actually care about this time of year.Lethal Weapon gets thrown into the mix with full confidence, backed by arguments about setting, timing, and action-movie credibility. Mean Girls lands purely on the strength of Jingle Bell Rock, which opens the door to personal holiday memories doing more work than logic. Then Jack Frost changes the tone entirely. What starts as an odd pick turns into a genuinely emotional moment that reminds everyone why holiday movies hit harder than expected.What We CoverWhy the definition of a Christmas movie breaks down fastThe Die Hard debate and why it refuses to go away Action movies that take place during Christmas How one song can anchor a movie to the holidays A Jack Frost moment that catches everyone off guardThe MoviesSome movies become Christmas movies because people keep showing up for them every December. That’s it. No rules. No checklist. If it’s on every year and you don’t skip it, congrats, it’s a Christmas movie now.Setting does more work than people want to admit. Put a story during Christmas, add a little emotion, and people will fight to the death that it counts. Explosions, cops, or bad decisions don’t disqualify it.Nostalgia wins every argument. What was on TV in your house matters more than logic ever will. These picks aren’t about being right, they’re about memory and habit.Mean Girls proves how low the bar actually is. One song, one scene, and suddenly a movie with zero holiday intent gets Christmas status for life. You don’t have to like it, but you’re not changing anyone’s mind.Jack Frost flips the room because it stops being funny and starts being real. Loss, family, and time hit harder around the holidays, and this one goes straight there. Not everyone’s favorite, but hard to ignore once it lands.LISTEN TO ALL OF "THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS" Day 1: Christmas Kickoff Movies Day 2: Bad Christmas Movies We Love Day 3: Our Best Santa's Day 4: Funniest Christmas Movies Day 5: Most Romantic Santa Day 6: Best Animated Christmas Movie Day 7: Best Christmas Soundtrack Day 8: Best Non-Christmas, Christmas Movie Day 9: The Christmas Movie We Want to Live In Day 10: The Christmas Family Most Like Our Own? Day 11: Which Christmas Character Would You Grab a Beer With? Day 12: Christmas Movie Trivia

Send a textClaymation showed up again, nostalgia did the heavy lifting, and nobody agrees on anythingWe sat down and recorded 12 episodes all about Christmas. Our favorite Christmas movies, our favorite Santa, our worst Santa, the soundtracks we love. A little insight into who we are and what we actually care about this time of year.Best Christmas soundtrack sounds like an easy category. It wasn’t. This one goes off the rails almost immediately. Someone opens with Claymation. Again (Erica). Dinosaurs are singing. Nobody asked for that. Erica is fully in like she’s got equity in Claymation. The rest of us are just staring at each other wondering how this keeps happening.California Raisins. We had to explain this to Katie.Home Alone. Wins, hands down.Polar Express. Scary - it sucked (accordingly to Ryan) but the Hot Chocolate song live on forever.But then... The Grinch with Tyler the Creator shows up.... and then.... Johns like "Who's this dude" - Bruh - It's Tyler the Creator. Christmas soundtracks are the soundtracks of your childhood. Where you were. How old you were. What your house sounded like in December.LISTEN TO ALL OF "THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS" Day 1: Christmas Kickoff Movies Day 2: Bad Christmas Movies We Love Day 3: Our Best Santa's Day 4: Funniest Christmas Movies Day 5: Most Romantic Santa Day 6: Best Animated Christmas Movie Day 7: Best Christmas Soundtrack Day 8: Best Non-Christmas, Christmas Movie Day 9: The Christmas Movie We Want to Live In Day 10: The Christmas Family Most Like Our Own? Day 11: Which Christmas Character Would You Grab a Beer With? Day 12: Christmas Movie Trivia

Send a textAnimated Christmas movies, creepy eyes, and the moment we learned Ryan has limitsWe sat down and recorded 12 episodes all about Christmas. Our favorite Christmas movies, our favorite Santa, our worst Santa, the soundtracks we love. A little insight into who we are and what we actually care about this time of year.Animated Christmas movies = Christmas's version of Pennywise.Claymation is as accepted as Porcelain dolls in your grandmothers house.We learn pretty quickly that animation and Ryan don’t mix. Not even a little. Polar Express creeps him out. Frosty is a no. Claymation is an absolute hard pass. Animation + Ryan don’t mix like no chicks and two … (Google it).Movies in This Episode The Polar Express The Year Without a Santa Claus Klaus Mickey’s Christmas Carol How the Grinch Stole ChristmasFavorite Clips / Favorite ScenesThe Polar Express This movie lives in a weird space. Everyone agrees it’s creepy. Dead eyes. Strange movement. Unsettling vibes. And yet, it’s still a family tradition. The golden ticket scene works. The hot chocolate scene gets quoted every year. People complain about it while continuing to watch it anyway.The Year Without a Santa Claus Straight childhood. Snowmiser. Heatmiser. Songs that get stuck in your head forever. It looks old. Nobody cares. Santa’s burned out. Mrs. Claus is clearly running the show. This was always on TV growing up whether you asked for it or not.Klaus This one sneaks up on everyone. It starts slow and doesn’t grab you right away. Stick with it and suddenly it hits. The story works. The characters work. It explains Christmas without being cheesy or preachy. By the end, there’s a real argument that this might be one of the best Christmas movies ever made. Animated or not.Mickey’s Christmas Carol The dependable pick. Short. Familiar. Easy to throw on. Kids love it. Adults don’t hate it. It does exactly what it’s supposed to do and gets out.How the Grinch Stole Christmas The animated Grinch still clears. No debate. The other versions start fights. This one doesn’t. The ending still hits. This is why the story stuck in the first place.That’s the episode.LISTEN TO ALL OF "THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS" Day 1: Christmas Kickoff Movies Day 2: Bad Christmas Movies We Love Day 3: Our Best Santa's Day 4: Funniest Christmas Movies Day 5: Most Romantic Santa Day 6: Best Animated Christmas Movie Day 7: Best Christmas Soundtrack Day 8: Best Non-Christmas, Christmas Movie Day 9: The Christmas Movie We Want to Live In Day 10: The Christmas Family Most Like Our Own? Day 11: Which Christmas Character Would You Grab a Beer With? Day 12: Christmas Movie Trivia

Send a textWe sat down and recorded 12 episodes all about Christmas. Our favorite Christmas movies, our favorite Santa, our worst Santa, the soundtracks we love. A little insight into who we are and what we actually care about this time of year.Coming off the funniest movies episode, this one had no chance of staying calm. We thought we were picking the most romantic Santa. What we actually did was expose how wildly different our definitions of romance are. This episode builds straight off yesterday’s chaos and then somehow escalates it. Dictionaries get involved. Feelings get questioned. Nobody backs down.Movies in This Episode Noelle (The absolute most romantic EVER!) Christmas in Handcuffs The Holiday It’s a Wonderful LifeFavorite Clips / Favorite ScenesNoelle This one turns into a fight fast. Not about the movie. About what romance even is. Ryan’s angle is simple. Romance is showing up when someone’s lost and helping them get back on their feet. That’s it. Female Santa throws gasoline on the whole thing. People talk over each other. Definitions get pulled. Oxford gets name dropped. Nobody budges. Ryan definitely doesn’t.Christmas in Handcuffs Everyone hears the setup and immediately says no. Then it keeps playing. It’s uncomfortable. It’s dumb in spots. It shouldn’t be romantic at all. And somehow it works just enough that nobody shuts it off. It’s not butterflies. It’s more “why am I still watching this” energy. Which ends up being the compliment.The Holiday This is where everyone relaxes for a second. This is what most people thought we were doing when we said romantic. Cozy houses. Broken people. Fresh starts. Jude Law doing Jude Law things. Nobody argues this one. It just makes sense.It’s a Wonderful Life John goes classic. Again. It’s not his best take, but we let him have the mic anyway. George Bailey finally saying what he feels without knowing how to say it right. It’s awkward and sincere and actually works. Annoying, but solid. John gets one point and then we move on.LISTEN TO ALL OF "THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS" Day 1: Christmas Kickoff Movies Day 2: Bad Christmas Movies We Love Day 3: Our Best Santa's Day 4: Funniest Christmas Movies Day 5: Most Romantic Santa Day 6: Best Animated Christmas Movie Day 7: Best Christmas Soundtrack Day 8: Best Non-Christmas, Christmas Movie Day 9: The Christmas Movie We Want to Live In Day 10: The Christmas Family Most Like Our Own? Day 11: Which Christmas Character Would You Grab a Beer With? Day 12: Christmas Movie Trivia

Send a textWe sat down and recorded 12 episodes all about Christmas. Our favorite Christmas movies, our favorite Santa, our worst Santa, the soundtracks we love. A little insight into who we are and what we actually care about this time of year.You’d think picking the best Santa would be easy. It’s not. Turns out everyone has wildly different Santa baggage. Some want wholesome. Some want gritty. Some want claymation. And some of us pick Paul Giamatti because we forgot how much we liked Fred Claus until we rewatched it.Movies in This EpisodeFred ClausMiracle on 34th StreetFrosty the SnowmanThe Santa ClauseNoelleFavorite Clips / Favorite ScenesFred Claus – KatieKatie's all about Paul Giamatti’s exhausted, real-world Santa. She loves that he’s stressed, has high blood pressure from eating cookies, and basically acts like every parent the week before Christmas. And the brother dynamic with Vince Vaughn is what sold her. She wants a Santa with a little baggage and this one delivers.Miracle on 34th Street – JohnJohn loves realism. Ryan hates realism. He’s into the idea that Santa could just be this normal guy insisting he’s the real thing. The Dutch scene gets him emotional and the remake with the deaf girl sealed it. And once he learned Edmund Gwynn won an Oscar, that was it. John treats this Santa like a national treasure.Frosty the Snowman – EricaErica grew up on Christmas claymation, so this Santa hit her right in the childhood. She loves the greenhouse moment where Santa saves Frosty and the whole emotional swing of the scene. Finding out the voice actor was the Haunted Mansion guy just made her double down on it. Comfort Santa energy. That’s her lane.The Santa Clause – RyanWho doesn't love a little Tim Allen? The grunts, the moans, the pointing. He looks rough-sh, but he's underneath, he's gentle and caring. Noelle is a close second to Tim but we'll talk about that when they talk Christmas romance.LISTEN TO ALL OF "THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS" Day 1: Christmas Kickoff Movies Day 2: Bad Christmas Movies We Love Day 3: Our Best Santa's Day 4: Funniest Christmas Movies Day 5: Most Romantic Santa Day 6: Best Animated Christmas Movie Day 7: Best Christmas Soundtrack Day 8: Best Non-Christmas, Christmas Movie Day 9: The Christmas Movie We Want to Live In Day 10: The Christmas Family Most Like Our Own? Day 11: Which Christmas Character Would You Grab a Beer With? Day 12: Christmas Movie Trivia