2 Generations 1 Mic

International Holiday Magic

ANDREINA & MARK LANDIS Season 1 Episode 6

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Ever been swept away by the holiday magic of New York City? Picture Rockefeller Center aglow and join us as we travel through festive streets, sharing heartwarming stories and comparing Christmas traditions from around the globe. We explore cultural contrasts in holiday celebrations, focusing on the unique customs of Mexico and Spain, and celebrate how Texas has made tamales a holiday staple, reflecting the rich tapestry of cultural influences that define this joyful time of year.

Remember those nights watching "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" on TV? We take a nostalgic trip through the world of classic and modern Christmas movies, reflecting on how the way we watch them has changed—from renting at Blockbuster to streaming online. Listen as we uncover the emotional connections to timeless films, discover new favorites like "Last Christmas" with Emilia Clarke and Michelle Yeoh, and discuss Lindsay Lohan's stunning return to holiday cinema. Our conversation is filled with warmth, laughter, and a few debates, particularly about what makes "Christmas Vacation" a hit or miss.

Craving holiday treats? Our festive feast includes everything from rompope to spiced fruit punch, and we don’t shy away from the controversial fruitcake debate. Tune in to hear our take on apple salad, gingerbread houses, and the delightful European Christmas markets of Germany and Austria. We also reflect on traditions like eating 12 grapes at midnight in Spain and Mexico. As we celebrate the post-Christmas season, we invite you to share your own holiday favorites, whether it’s a classic film, a cherished tune, or a beloved family tradition. Let’s wrap up the holiday spirit together with stories of joy, love, and the timeless magic of this festive season.

Speaker 1:

it's christmas time in the city. Well, it's almost christmas time. It is december 24th. This is our christmas show, or christmas eve show, so welcome, and it'll play all this week. Enjoy your holidays, whether it's christmas, hanukkah, whatever holiday you celebrate, or none of the holidays, yule, how you say it?

Speaker 2:

yule y Yule, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

All those holidays. Wrap them up. This is our version of a holiday, because we like Christmas.

Speaker 2:

So we are two generations, one mic, and today we're going to talk about Easter no, just kidding Christmas. So I love Christmas. I think it's one of my favorite times when we used to live in New York City. It's just amazing how the city transforms during Christmas time. It's just magical. Even the peace smell and everything else that is there is just in masks with all the lights, and it's just amazing. So I just I always thought Christmas was really really good time for me, and growing up besides of the presents, of course, but living in different countries, it's been a whole different experience. Like I grew up in Mexico City, so Christmas in Mexico City it's a thing that is very different. When I moved into the US and I wanted to open my presents on Christmas Eve, mark said no, like some kind of Nazi present guard. I was like what do you mean? I cannot open my presents. He's like no, you only get to open one present.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there's rules. You have one present you open on Christmas Eve, then you open the rest on the Christmas morning.

Speaker 2:

Who makes these rules?

Speaker 1:

That's what we do here. Yes, that's what we do.

Speaker 2:

Well, I wanted to open all my presents all the time.

Speaker 1:

No, you have to open up in a certain way. In Spain, you don't get to open them up until what? Four days later or something. They don't give presents on Christmas.

Speaker 2:

No in Spain, now that we live in Spain, people really don't give Christmas gifts, because in Spain, the day you give presents is January 6th, which is Dia de Reyes. Or, like the Three Wise Men, you know, like how they brought presents to Jesus, they bring you presents instead of Santa Claus and I think, domino's pizza they brought.

Speaker 1:

I'm not sure One of those three.

Speaker 2:

But they, yeah. So in Mexico we get presents both days, like on Christmas, santa Claus brings the presents, and on Reyes, the three wise men bring you presents, so it's double presents. So that's why I wanted all the presents all the time, but you're like, no, you can only open one.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because that's the traditions that we grew up here with in America and I like that Back to your point you were making about New York. I always tell people that when people say, oh, I want to go to New York, when should I go, and everything else, I tell them, okay, well, you can go. And you know, the fall is nice weather, early summer is nice weather, but if you've never been to New York City at Christmas time, it is magical, it truly is magical. The snow and the lights everywhere and you go to Rockefeller Center and you see the Christmas tree and you see everybody ice skating and you see the's, the, the famous uh store that plays all the music and stuff. Is it sex? I think, yeah, you stand outside, everybody watches millions of dollars on that and it's just, it's such a wonderful thing and it's literally like it's stuff you see in the movies yeah so you're like in a live version of everything you're up with watching in the movies and to see that once in your life you absolutely should go to New York City.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, absolutely Like from Home Alone to Elf, every single thing you see in New York City, like how cold it is and then the lights everywhere.

Speaker 1:

And the snow. If you're lucky, you get a nice snow or something.

Speaker 2:

We never got snow on Christmas in.

Speaker 1:

New York Afterwards, afterwards, yeah.

Speaker 2:

And yeah. So if you ever want to go to New York, go in Christmas time, yeah, because I mean it's cold, yes, but it's a whole other thing, like you can smell Christmas.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so you're talking about like so mexico has different traditions than spain, two different countries. Everybody thinks they're the same, but uh, so many people like, oh, they have mexican food in spain. No, they do not.

Speaker 2:

It's two different cultures, but so there's also different cultures, uh, with the holiday traditions yeah, so in mexico, I know here in the us, or at least here in te Texas, you guys eat tamales right?

Speaker 1:

Well, you eat tamales. A lot of times you'll eat tamales. Over the last probably 20 years they became a thing like you don't eat them for your Christmas meal, but you generally eat them, like in the holidays leading up to the Christmas meal, like if you have a lot of people will have free. There are a lot of parties at Christmas time in America. So you have your office parties, people have friends parties and maybe you have a party at your house where people all come over or whatever friends, family, and it's leading up to the actual Christmas dinner. Maybe that week A lot of people, a lot of people take off, if they can. They take off the weeks of Christmas or leading up to so they may have pre-parties and one of those pre-party things would be like oh, it's kind of a potluck thing.

Speaker 2:

We call that posadas.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so you would have tamales. A lot of people eat chili, things like that, so you kind of mix and match stuff. But that's when they and people always in Texas especially they order the tamales. A lot of places are famous for making them, them and things like that, so they get their tamale order, usually if it's a lady out of the back of her car. It's going to be pretty good, I know right, like the Mexican ladies.

Speaker 2:

That's the best way you want to get it. So that's funny because in Mexico at least in Mexico City when I grew up so we always have our dinner on Christmas Eve.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 2:

So it will be tonight and it's the dinner is like a Thanksgiving dinner, like turkey and stuffing and ham and like the whole whole thing, and then on the 25th what you will eat is just like the leftovers and we call that like recalentado, which is like reheating everything, and that's our tradition there. I know in Spain the traditions are very different too. I mean, you have Christmas dinner, some restaurants have Christmas menus, but it's different. A lot of people go to mass. You know like it's a very Catholic country, so they do the Christmas mass. And also in Mexico, a lot of places like Catholic homes. The tradition is they have a baby Jesus and they like at midnight they carry him and then sing for him and dress him up and it's a thing. So it's like in your Christmas party you're like passing around baby Jesus and just it's a thing. I don't know those things I remember growing up and in Spain. I don't know if they do that in Spain, but it's way different than here in the US.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I think in the US it's not really a hard set rule. A lot of families do it differently. So like, while in the Thanksgiving holiday everybody eats turkey and their big meal on Thanksgiving. Now it could be some people eat it early, some people eat it later, but in Christmas it's kind of split. You know, some people eat their Christmas dinner on Christmas Eve, some people eat it on Christmas Day. Some people have two dinners. It's just really different. We always had it christmas day and then christmas eve would be some sort of thing where we're preparing all the food and then you're kind of nibbling and making little things to eat.

Speaker 2:

It's more about just family getting together and apparently not opening presents, only one, you have to pick the one presence you want to, never the best one.

Speaker 1:

Save that for the next next morning. And that's the thing Everybody wants to, especially kids. You want to wake up early and get downstairs.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, because Santa Claus comes Duh.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

There's I mean.

Speaker 1:

So there's more presents to pick from.

Speaker 2:

Exactly.

Speaker 1:

So you can't open up everything then. So when Santa Claus coming, when you're in the kitchen eating, he snuck in the living room, put all the stuff in there. How are you opening all your presents? That's what I don't get.

Speaker 2:

No, you don't open all your presents. You open all the presents from your family. Then Santa Claus comes, and then in the morning you open all the presents from Santa Claus.

Speaker 1:

So you're getting a lot of presents apparently.

Speaker 2:

That is a lot of damn presents you're getting no you get the presents from your parents, the presents from your family, then you get Santa Claus presents and then you get your three Weissman presents.

Speaker 1:

That's on a different day.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's on January 6th.

Speaker 1:

A lot of presents going on.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, exactly. So that's why I'm always wanting to open presents on the 24th Gotcha. But so, speaking of Christmas and Christmas traditions, I was reading this thing. I think it's in Italy. People correct me if I'm wrong, but in Italy, santa Claus doesn't bring you presents. It's an old witch that brings you presents. I think it's like it's. It's like a Christmas witch. Yeah, I was reading that In some places in Italy, like who brings your presents, but I don't know if it's exactly on this day. There's this like old witch that brings your presents.

Speaker 1:

Never heard of that. I've heard of Krampus, but I think that's he kills you or something.

Speaker 2:

No, not the same thing, killer clown thing.

Speaker 1:

No, you're not the same.

Speaker 2:

No, no, I'm talking about like she brings you presents. So because I mean you know, Santa Claus, it's an American thing, A hundred percent.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

It's an American thing, so You're welcome, so the thing with that is oh, thank you, babe, you gave me freedom on Santa Claus. Yes, I did.

Speaker 1:

And so the freedom to open up all your presents on Christmas Day.

Speaker 2:

I know Not that much freedom apparently.

Speaker 1:

But you know, we have our traditions and part of that is watching cartoons and things like that. We've been watching cartoons since I, you know. I realized that like the year before I was born I only know this because I saw this pop up on like a meme or TikTok or something born. I only know this because I saw this pop up on like a meme or TikTok or something. But the year before I was born was when Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer debuted on CBS.

Speaker 2:

Which is such a messed up show.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, when you watch it now, versus watching it as a kid growing up. You watch it and you're like man.

Speaker 2:

Those reindeers were assholes.

Speaker 1:

Oh, they were.

Speaker 2:

Like why it's not so wrong, this poor Rudolph. He was just this beautiful reindeer with a red nose and they were all assholes and they only liked him when Santa said oh yeah, rudolph, you're my favorite now.

Speaker 1:

And then not, that's when they like him. Yeah, because he wasn't a cool kid. That's a messed up message. Exactly, that's a very messed up message. So what does that send the message to the kids If you have a deformity, you're not welcome. That's so messed up. Unless the boss says you're okay and you're cool. Now you can be part of the club.

Speaker 2:

I don't think I've ever watched Rudolph until you showed it to me a couple of years ago.

Speaker 1:

And I think the first time you did, you started crying. You're like they're so mean to this poor thing I was with rudolph.

Speaker 2:

I was like rudolph also like, uh, frosty the snowman. I also cried because, oh, spoiler, spoiler alert, he melts. I was like no, frosty, why is christmas so sad in america, in these old movies, especially the old movies, or charlie brown's christmas?

Speaker 1:

yeah, it's but that was a tradition. You have to do that, you have to like. Still, to this day, I like watching those old cartoons which, now, you know, used to. Up until not even that long ago, you could only see them like okay, who's going to have them on? Is it ABC affiliate? Cbs going to carry them? Nbc, who's carrying the shows? Now they're on everything you know, hulu, max. You can watch them anytime you want.

Speaker 2:

Well when I was a kid, we would go to Blockbuster.

Speaker 1:

To video to watch the videos. Oh my gosh.

Speaker 2:

And you would have to rent them early because you would run out right, because in Mexico it's TV. They will show them, but dubbed, and they're not good. So we liked our Christmas traditional movies. Traditional movies well, I don't know, when I was growing up, home alone came right. It kind of switched.

Speaker 1:

So when I was a kid, it was all cartoons and everybody had to watch. Uh, you know, you had to watch rudolph red-nosed reindeer. You had to watch santa claus is coming to town. You had to watch uh what, uh, frosty. And there's one more which is like the santa claus coming to town. The same. I forgot what that was, but it was like there was like four or five of those that you absolutely had to watch every year, I think, and charlie brown was one of them.

Speaker 2:

Charlie brown, christmas well, it was later, but that I call it the 24-hour christmas movie, because, oh my god, the christmas story.

Speaker 1:

That was the funniest thing ever. So they started, it went on. A who airs that every year? Tbs or somebody airs it like 24 7 it runs literally like 24 hours and she had never seen this movie and she was tolerating it for a while, but she kept coming back and I just had the tv on for hours and she kept coming back and she goes how long is this damn movie gonna go on?

Speaker 2:

because it was just like different scenes, but but I just saw the same people. I'm like dang, this movie has been playing for like 12 hours. I just didn't see and I just kept thinking this kid keeps recalling things right, because it moves in different pacing. So I gosh, so I call it a 24-hour movie.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you have that. And then you have the old TV shows that were also famous. You know, with the Jimmy Stewart the classic thing he saw an angel, or angel gets his wings, or whatever. There's a bunch of old, old Christmas movies, miracle on 34th Street, all these things. And then they started.

Speaker 2:

I don't think I've ever watched that.

Speaker 1:

The Miracle on 34th Street. Yeah, that Santa Claus has to actually prove in court that he's Santa Claus. I've never watched.

Speaker 2:

So American, see, I'm telling you.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Like if Santa Claus goes to court, it's so American.

Speaker 1:

Well then they had the new generation of movies that come out, all the current ones that become classics from your generation, with the Home Alones, home Alones, and now Elf is a huge classic.

Speaker 2:

Elf is a classic.

Speaker 1:

You're not a fan, but I love it. It A huge classic. It's a classic. You're not a fan, but I love it. It's Christmas Vacation Always.

Speaker 2:

Watch that Honestly they're so Sorry, they're so stupid. I like that one, I just feel like my IQ lowers when I watch that. I just I guess I didn't grow up with that and like those jokes they make. And it's so Corny, they're so corny but so wrong, like that cussing or something. It's so cringe, no thank you.

Speaker 1:

You're not a fan of that. Not a fan, yeah. But then we found kind of a hidden jewel that you turned me on to and I love it. If you haven't watched it, you really should watch it. It's Emily Clark from Game of Thrones and Michelle love it and it's. If you haven't watched it, you really should watch it, it's emily clark from game of thrones, uh and uh michelle, uh, michelle, yo, you know from uh various movies and stuff yeah, but it's wicked now yeah and wicked but um, it's a really underrated movie.

Speaker 1:

It's called last christmas, um, which is the george michael song and it's it's such a heartwarming movie and it makes you cry, makes you laugh and it's a really underrated Christmas movie. So if you've not watched that, you should watch Last Christmas.

Speaker 2:

Yes, watch it. And I think also the new Lindsay Lohan movie was really good. The new Lindsay Lohan movie was so cute you fell asleep, but it was so cute and I mean, I know what I want for Christmas. I want to have whatever Lindsay Lohan had in her face, because she looks amazing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she's definitely a person that has you know, you see, all these like actors and actresses that have, like, aged really horribly over time, but something there was like a magic switch she turned on Whatever she had.

Speaker 2:

Santa, Maybe you're listening. Whatever she had, I want that.

Speaker 1:

Maybe it was all stopping the doing, all the drugs and alcohol.

Speaker 2:

Well, that's true, she got sober, she got sober got healthy Besides that, I want that Santa.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she looks fantastic.

Speaker 2:

Or Reyes Magos, if you're listening too, I want that, but it's amazing Like that new movie she had it's called Our Little Secret is really good. Another thing that I always see people debating here on Christmas and I don't think it is Die Hard.

Speaker 1:

Oh, if Die Hard's a Christmas movie, that's a big. Yeah, it's totally not a.

Speaker 2:

Christmas movie. People, it's not a Christmas movie. It happens during a Christmas party. That doesn't make it a Christmas movie, right?

Speaker 1:

It's totally not a Christmas movie, people. It's not a Christmas movie.

Speaker 2:

It happens during a Christmas party. That doesn't make it a Christmas movie. It's a great action movie. You've got to watch it.

Speaker 1:

No, no, it's amazing. I think I just watched it not too long ago. Yeah, well, I finally showed it to you for the first time. It's good, yeah, it's a great movie?

Speaker 2:

I don't know is not. It's not. I mean it. Home alone is right.

Speaker 1:

It happens during christmas and that all that yeah, well, home alone too, is actually in new york city which I love, but diehard, I don't think it will be a christmas movie, yeah, but so, so let me ask you this so americans like their eggnog and their hot cocoa or hot chocolate with things like that and traditional things. Is there things like that?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so we had like not necessarily eggnog. We have something similar called rompope, but you have that all year round, not really like just on Christmas time. We have a thing called panche or like fruit punch, and it's delicious, like you make you simmer a bunch of fruits and then I guess I didn't do that because I was a kid, but I guess people spike it with liquor, like maybe brandy, because you drink it really, really hot.

Speaker 1:

It's like a fruit side With brandy, yeah, so it'd be like a equivalent of drinking eggnog with liquor in it.

Speaker 2:

Right, and we also have probably like atole, which is our, our, like what you make with the corn, like corn, oh corn, oh my God, the thing that thickens up things. Corn Masa, no, baby, corn, the yellow packet Cornbread. No, Jesus Christ. No, Sorry people Again. If you try to think in two different languages, it gets complicated.

Speaker 1:

Masa Corn, no Cornstarch.

Speaker 2:

Cornstarch. Oh, there we go, cornstarch. Yeah. So you make with corn starch and different fruits, and sometimes with also like corn meal kind of thing, and then you make this delicious beverage that you drink, do you?

Speaker 1:

have any special like desserts or anything like that we have probably fruitcake.

Speaker 2:

That's a thing People do fruitcake, it's awful.

Speaker 1:

They do it here too. I think it's banned in many states at this point I do like it. It's like eat a brick that tastes like nothing. That's the only gift that you get. You keep giving away to other people. It might go around to seven people before somebody actually eats that thing.

Speaker 2:

I like fruitcake. Most disgusting thing on the planet. I like fruitcake, I like it. I think you don't like the clove in it, that's it.

Speaker 1:

I don't like the texture. I don't like anything about it. There's nothing about that that I like.

Speaker 2:

We also have. What other dessert do we have?

Speaker 1:

They do gingerbread houses and things like that?

Speaker 2:

No, we don't. That's not a thing.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

Maybe some Christmas cookies and maybe apple salad.

Speaker 1:

Okay, Apple salad.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like you make apple with marshmallows and pineapple.

Speaker 1:

They have a thing called frugia or whatever it's called something like that. They do something like that here. It's a fruit.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like fruit salad, but this is just apple marshmallows and kind of like whipped cream and maybe pineapple.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there's something very similar with that here yeah. In Spain. Do you know any traditions that they do that are different?

Speaker 2:

Don't they do a grape thing or something. That's a new year, that's a new year's thing in years, and the tradition is to, with each uh bell ring, you eat a grape. So that's a thing. But that's for new year's eve, both in mexico and spain right.

Speaker 1:

So for new, when new year's rings in yeah, when new year's so new. When the clock strikes 12, we have to eat 2,025 grapes.

Speaker 2:

No, only 12. Okay, could you imagine? No, it's like ding grape, ding grape.

Speaker 1:

You need to chew fast because otherwise but they do, have you got to admit. So we found a grape there. I'm 61 years old. I have never in my life had a grape like this. It was the best grape I've ever had in my life and I've only found them in Spain and they only have them at Christmas time. They're little bitty, they're black, they're little tiny ones. There's no seeds, they're sweet. And when we first had those I was like where's this been? All my life I've never had this grape, and I kept, we kept trying to find it. After, remember, everyone was like do you have these grapes? Oh no, they're only available at Christmas. And that was it. It was like, oh my gosh, they're good, but what a wonderful fruit. If you get a chance to try that, it's one of the best grapes I've ever had in my life.

Speaker 2:

Honestly, I don't know what desserts they will have. I think they have like Yule.

Speaker 1:

How do you say that?

Speaker 2:

word Log. It's like a little.

Speaker 1:

Other than a joke in Christmas Vacation. I don't know what a Yule log actually is.

Speaker 2:

It's like a little chocolate cake bread that looks like a log, and then it has Christmas decor on top.

Speaker 1:

Is it a cookie or cake?

Speaker 2:

It's a cake, it's like a little cake. Ah, it's a cake Like a Yule log. Yeah, jesus Christ, but yeah, no, the traditions are definitely different. Like we have our little, like Santa Claus is here.

Speaker 1:

We were in Sweden one time during this time In the Nordic countries Sweden, finland, norway, scandinavia they have these little nudes they're called.

Speaker 2:

They're like these little beautiful, kind of like Santa Claus, but it's not. It's like these Christmas elves which have, like the little hat, all the way down. They don't have eyes.

Speaker 1:

They remind me of the little what's the cartoon? The little blue guys, smurfs, smurfs. They remind me of Smurfs, a little bit Like Christmas Smurfs. They're like Christmas Smurfs.

Speaker 2:

Maybe, yeah Well, the Smurfs came from there, aren't they? Aren't they from that region, I guess? And yeah, no, they're fun. Like in every other place, they have, like, their different traditions.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, those are neat. When we were up there we'd buy some to take back for Christmas. Yeah, they also have some great like in Europe. If you can get to Europe for Christmas, oh my gosh, and you can go to some of those like German towns, austrian towns, prague. They have the most beautiful outdoor festivals for Christmas and you get to try some amazing desserts out there that are so good.

Speaker 2:

But you know it's like a winter, it's not like Christmas. Christmas because all these places they have like all the lights and everything, but it's not like Christmas thing.

Speaker 1:

It's more of a winter fest.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's more like a winter fest. I just realized that because you don't see a lot of Santa Claus everywhere. You just see a lot of, like, the Christmas colors.

Speaker 1:

And the lights, and the lights and the spirit music.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the pines, the snow, the music, but each country has its different kind of of like christmas spirits, let's say, and traditions, and really like you have the snowmen and you have the little penguins and but really not, not like a santa claus thing we discovered that dessert in prague.

Speaker 1:

Oh my god, it's called trillings or whatever it's called. It is the most amazing thing where they take these like pastries it's kind of rolled and then they slow roast them on a fire like a fire pit and you taste that and you're like, oh my God, that's good. And then they put a little cinnamon, sugar or something on there. But then last time we had that before. Then we go back and oh, they have different ones now they You'll go back and say, oh, they have different ones now They've added new elements. You could get it with ice cream, you could get it with like whipped cream, there's all kinds of things like oh my gosh, that is so good.

Speaker 2:

I think the original one is the best.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but you get it. There's so many great foods you can get just in the little winter markets, yes, and that's a great place to go. It's a great time to go to, and also for americans, if you have a chance to go on vacation over there during uh, at that time of year, it's one of the cheapest times to fly, because it's so cold. A lot of people don't go on vacation over there, but if so, if you can get away, take a quick trip over there in december around that time and go. Go to austria, germany and scandinavia and prague. See some of those places that have these truly amazing Christmas cheer type things.

Speaker 2:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

So, last thing, music. Do you like the traditional music, the old music?

Speaker 2:

Because you know that's a big thing for me. I like my traditional music.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because when I go every morning I wake up Alexa or Apple Music play Holiday Fair.

Speaker 2:

And you're skipping a million of them. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

I don't like. I like my standard old thing. I want to hear Andy Williams sing. I want to hear Frank Sinatra sing, Dean Martin sing All the ones that I saw on my Christmas movies growing up as a little kid.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I like those. That's the thing. As far as new songs, I guess Mariah Carey is a new song.

Speaker 1:

Well, I think you have to listen to that, because she makes $3 million a year off that one song.

Speaker 2:

Good for you, Good for you, girl Go girl.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but I don't Other than like Michael Buble because I just love his voice too. He reminds me of the old style singing. There's not a lot of current artists, I go oh, I want to listen to that current Christmas album. A few songs are Pentonics.

Speaker 2:

They make a beautiful song, a few songs, pentonics. They make a beautiful song, but they're still singing old school stuff.

Speaker 1:

But that's the thing for me. I'm interested to know what you think. Do you like the old, traditional things? Do you like stuff that reminds you of being a kid, or do you like oh, I want to hear some new stuff.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, let us know what movies should we watch tonight. I'm going to try to open a present, if this guy lets me, more than one. Let us know what songs are like your new favorites for the holidays.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and since this actually will run the whole week after Christmas, what traditions do you have after Christmas? What do you eat? Leftovers you just take off. That week you do nothing. What do you do after Christmas? You rush into the stores to return stuff you don't like. What do you like doingmas? You rush into the stores and to return stuff you don't like. What do you like doing like? Subscribe, uh, interact with us, ask some questions, please, follow us. We're on every platform that you can download this besides youtube, every platform for podcasts that's available. We're on that, and if you have questions or you want to argue with us about stuff or tell us that, uh, whatever we think sucks, feel free to do that too.

Speaker 2:

Don't, I'll come after you. She doesn't like that at all. So from our family to yours Merry Christmas, happy Hanukkah.

Speaker 1:

Happy Holidays, have a great time with your family, friends and family. That's what's all. We wish you a Merry Christmas. We wish you a Merry Christmas.

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