 Hey, Dan. Hey, Bijan. How are you? I'm good. I'm excited. Happy quarantine. Oh, yes. Day I don't even remember what day it is. Nope. I think it's Thursday, right? It's Thursday, I believe. Want to welcome everybody. We've got a small but game group today to talk about airplane. Just want to mention Bijan and I are going to tell you some some fun facts about the film. If anybody would like to chime in using the Q&A or chat feature, which is on the bottom of your screen if you're in a Zoom meeting on a computer. If you're on your iPad, it's in the upper right, I believe. I'm on a laptop, so I see it on the bottom. Please feel free. Bijan, I think we should just mention that we have Captain Over has logged in as an attendee. Roger. Roger. Kudos to whoever, yes. Roger. Roger. Kudos to whoever is using that alias. So the thing you always like to talk about, and please feel free to chime in on the Q&A, if you can post your answers, is we always like to talk about when was the first time you've seen these films? So you want to go first, Bijan? When was the first time you saw airplane? This is another one I think I saw on TV first. I think when I was a lot younger, that's how I got really exposed to a lot of the movies that I had really no idea about, and I think seeing parts of airplane on TV and just finding it absolutely hilarious, and then being like, oh, I need to see this whole thing, and then seeing the kind of on TV version, which was a lot more hilarious and funny, and that was my first experience with it, and how I got acclimated to it. I actually had to think about it a bit, but I remember very clearly when I asked my sister if she remembers the same thing, but I saw it at our local drive-in when I was 10. That's awesome. Yes, and she and I were camped out on the roof of the car in our sleeping bags, and we had this really cool old-school drive-in theater, not too far from where I lived, and that's where I distinctly remember seeing it there, and she confirmed that because I thought I might have been imagining it. Is it still operating? No, God, no, I wish it was. I mean, they went, but it was the old style where you put the speakers in your car, you remember that, and then they switched over to FM radio for a little bit, and then they shut down years ago because they built a huge multiplex down the street, and people stopped going to the drive-in. That's okay, maybe making money right now. It would be. That's probably the one place you can go to watch a movie in public. I think a little bit of background, I think everybody obviously has seen the film, and again, if you want to chime in with your thoughts, we'll read them out loud about the first time you saw the film. This is obviously a parody of the classic 1970s disaster movies like Beside an Adventure and Towering Inferno and the airport series, but it's actually based on a movie called Zero Hour, which was released in 1957, believe it or not, and it is available on Amazon Prime, and if you have like nothing to do, like we're all looking for stuff to do while we're sitting at home, killing time, waiting to be able to leave our house, if you watch Zero Hour, like if you're insane enough like I am to watch Zero Hour, back-to-back with airplane, you're going to pick up all the, they literally take lines word for word from Zero Hour and use them in airplanes, so the main character's name is Ted Stryker, and they actually have the line, we need to find someone who can fly this plane, well not only can fly this plane, but didn't have fish for dinner, and it's the direct let they weren't playing it for laughs obviously, but you know you can do a little Mystery Science Theater 3000 type thing and watch it. It's so similar, I actually found out, Bijan, that the producers had to get permission to do a remake of Zero Hour, they had to call this one a remake because it's like literally the same script, and the same story, and everything is so, you know, it is on, I looked, it is on Amazon Prime, if you're so inclined. I think it Zero Hour was supposed to be a serious piece, not a crime. Yes, well that's what they, I guess that's what they thought, I guess now looking at it through the lens of airplane, maybe not so much anymore, but you know, that is the way of the world, you know, it was a Canadian film, I do remember that, I don't remember there's, I think there's nobody real famous in it, but it's scary how exact it is, I mean you could, you could follow the plot like all the way through, all the characters are virtually the same, it's really, really funny to do that. And so, you know, the, we should talk a little bit about the production team, this is a Zucker-Abraham-Zucker production, they had done Kentucky Fried Movie, which is a great, great funny movie if you've never seen that, and this was sort of like their first non-sketch film that a plot from beginning to end, and it has, I think, Bijana, tell me if you, I think you would agree, and everybody who's who's listening in I'm sure would agree if you've watched it recently, there's so many jokes buried in this, you have to watch it multiple times just to get everything, so you want to talk about the first, one of the first ones, you want to talk about the PA announcers? Yes, well I think I really like your point about how kind of back to back, and you don't really, what I think was really different with modern day comedies is the jokes I feel seem very sparse in modern films, and I think what I love most about airplane is how it's like every single line in that movie has a got a funny little punch line, or you can get some humor out of it, and you're right you miss a whole bunch of it, and you almost have to watch it multiple times to catch everything, but yeah one of the great parts is in the, very early in the the movie with the announcers announcing the the zones for where you can move and where you can't move, and they actually hired the real-life announcers who did the announcements for the airport in LAX, right? Yeah, to do the vamps about the zones, which is really great, and they're married, they were married in real life, which is surprising, you wouldn't think see that coming, but we actually, I actually did a little edit, so you're going to see after we do some more fun facts about the film, I did a quick little highlight reel of some of the better parts of the movie, even though there's a lot of great parts, and it was impossible to pick everything, but so you'll see that scene and a couple others, what we have coming up. Well the great part about the announcing too was that if you're not, if you're just listening like peripherally, I was watching it again last night in preparation for this, and my wife was sitting there just reading a book she'd seen a million times, and all of a sudden she picked her head up and said, wait a minute, like what's going on in the background with the announcing, because you don't realize what's happening right away until it keeps going for like, and it goes for two or three minutes at least, and then it gets into real like ridiculousness, so it was funny watching her reaction to do that, and you want to talk about the part of the glass windows? Yes, you know this one I actually was, thought really, found really interesting because my uncle is a pilot, so I'm gonna have to ask him how true this is, but apparently in the scene where the airplane comes crashing into the windows in the terminal, apparently a lot of pilots have said that that is actually not too far from plausible, because they've said that they can get, sometimes they say they've even touched the nose of the plane to the window, so I'm gonna have to call my uncle George and find out if he's ever gotten that close. Makes me feel so much better. Yeah, right, it makes you think twice now about getting off those planes. Seriously, we have a comment from our friend Captain Over who is chiming in, he says, if you're not prepared for the level of consistent comedy, the PA announcing sets you up for what's ahead, and he's absolutely right, you're absolutely right. I mean every, they're firing even more than like a Mel Brooks movie, they fire buckshot after buckshot of jokes, and you can't breathe without something more ridiculous happening after the next. But I think we know what was great, when a lot of people don't really remember is that Leslie Nielsen, because he's so associated with this movie and like the naked gun movies and everything that happened after that, he was not a comedy actor prior to this movie, he was a real serious dramatic actor, and that was one of the reasons why they hired him because they figured he could deliver that deadpan, and he and Robert Stack and Lloyd Bridges were not comedy guys at all, and you know it makes it even funnier that they're so straight-faced and deadpan throughout the entire film, but you know I guess he was getting these like older grandfather parts at that point, and so now they originally wanted, do you remember who they originally wanted, Bijan for the Leslie Nielsen role? Oh my gosh, I can't remember. I put him on the spot, do you have it to remember? Uh, no, I don't remember reading it, I don't remember who it was. Don DeLuis, yes remember him? But the directors, I guess they fought the studio on that when they got Leslie Nielsen, and he had a whole second career, I mean his whole, that's truly what you remember him for, right? I mean every now and then you see him pop up doing guest shots on like some old TV shows, he was on MASH, he was on a bunch of other shows, and he plays a very, almost like, not even a good guy a lot of times, he plays the bad guy, and it's hard to imagine that that's Leslie Nielsen, because you're so used to him climbing around in these movies. That was very fascinating for me because I really don't even recognize him as a serious actor, because all I really know him from is comedic roles, so I was like, wait, he was a serious actor before this. Right, and Julie Haggerty, this was Julie Haggerty's first movie, and she was a model, and then she went, but right after this came out, she became really in demand, and she was in, she did the Woody Allen movie, which was called the Midsummer Night Sex Comedy, and she did a great movie with Albert Brooks called Lost in America, which is a really, really, really great film. She did What About Bob, and she was just last year, she was in Marriage Story. She plays Scarlett Johansson's mother, so she's still working. People always say whatever happened to Julie Haggerty, they're not paying attention close enough. And you remember, of course, my favorite part is the lady who speaks jive, which is played by- Yes, I added that in just for you. That's right. Well, you have to. I mean, that was, you know, everybody, I'm sure people watch, listening will remember, that was Barbara Billingsley, who was the mom on Leave It to Beaver, and the only reason she got the part was because they wanted Harriet Nelson from The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, and she didn't want to do it because there was so much foul language in the movie, so Barbara Billingsley did it, and probably today Barbara Billingsley's more famous for that than for Leave It to Beaver, because I mean, I don't know how many people still watch Leave It to Beaver, and we have a comment, and actually this is very true. I want to just, there's another comment from Rebecca who says, I don't think that joke would fly today. I think she's talking about the jive. There's a lot of jokes that would not fly today. There's a lot of jokes that wouldn't fly today. I think the part when the, you know, the lady in hysterics, when they're lining up the slapper, that's probably not going to go over very well, although apparently she, the actress who was the one having the hysterics is the one who suggested it, said, no, just line them all up and let them hit me, and I have to go on in the crowbar. What's funny is too, I think also what's so timeless about bits like that are that the internet has kind of picked it up where they'll, you know, everything gets memeified nowadays for those of you who don't know what a meme is. It's basically a picture or a video segment with words over it, but there's definitely been a couple of scenes from my airplane that have been memeified, and to me that's like the pinnacle of making it in internet history nowadays. So that one and the scene where he's running through the lobby and has to like avoid everyone and punches everyone, I've seen that a lot nowadays where people say like me going to the grocery store. That's very funny. That's true. And there were so many, I mean, you know, obviously, I guess you really, if you were of that age and of a certain age and that when the movie came out, which was 1980, there's a lot of inside jokes that you probably a modern audience really wouldn't know. And certain things that nobody would know unless you have the wonders of the internet to tell you this. But remember the lady who's trying to put makeup on and it keeps going all over her face? That was the Zucker brother's mom. That was their actual mom who was playing that part. And the other one, the big inside joke, which I could never quite put my finger on until I was reading it yesterday, is remember the nun who has the guitar? Yep, you remember she plays that. So that's Maureen McGovern. And Maureen McGovern sings the theme song to she's remember she did the morning after from the Beside Adventure, and she did the theme song from the Towering Inferno. So she had a connection to those disaster movies. And she also at the time that the movie was made, there was a sitcom, which I'm sure nobody but someone like me who was raised by the zenith in their living room remembers. There was a there was a comedy, a sitcom called Angie, which Donna Pescat, who was in Saturday Night Fever with John Travolta. And Robert Hayes plays her husband on the show. And she sang the theme song for that too. So there's the connection with Robert Hayes and the show. And I had no idea until I was watching the credits again. It's been a long time since I've seen the movie all the way through. I was catching on TV at various spots. And that it was Maureen McGovern. And she did and she had that connection to the to the disaster films, which I thought was hysterical. And you know, there's a there was something about do you remember there was a thing about how much the budget was and how quickly they spent it? Yeah, crazy story about that. They spent it very quickly. But what I think is very interesting, especially from, you know, kind of a theater manager point of view, because we're always looking at numbers and how well a movie performs. But the movie actually in the first two days of opening in theaters, grows the entire production budget. So it was a big success. And that's that's very interesting, especially for a comedy to do so well right off the bat. Yeah. Rebecca actually just asked another question saying just trying to figure out if the beach scene was a reference to Greece or to blue lagoon. It's actually a reference to from here to eternity. There's a very famous scene in that movie with Bert Lancaster and Deborah Carr on the beach, and the waves come splashing up not quite with all the seaweed and sand that happens in the movie. But that's that's the I believe that's the reference they were going for. Because Greece had just come out the year before this, or two years before this and blue lagoon came out the same year. So it is similar, but it probably wasn't the wasn't the same thing. And there's a lot of if you ever it's a really, really famous scene. It's almost always the one that you see the clip that you see when people talk about from here to eternity. And there's a really famous Sid Caesar parody of it where they get they have people throwing water on them. And in this case, they got the seaweed all tangled up in their faces, which was really, really great. Yeah. And, you know, I guess they must have done something right because, you know, in 2010, this the film was selected for preservation by the Library of Congress. So it's been for being culturally, I have to say right, culturally, historically and aesthetically significant. So what does that tell you? That's what they ever thought that would happen when they were making a film, right? I mean, if you had to take films to go into the yeah, I guess, who would think the airplane, but I think it's well deserved. I think it belongs there. And they did, you know, you remember that after this one, they had a say did some really great stuff. I mean, we talked about the naked gun movies with Leslie Nielsen, but they did top secret, which is one of my favorite movies with that was that was Val Kilmer, right? Top secret was like Val Kilmer's first movie right before Top Gun, which was really funny. And I didn't even remember this. They also did, they didn't write the script, but they directed it. There's a really, really funny movie from like the late 80s called Ruthless People, which we should actually do on one of these one point because it is hysterically funny. And like one of the great like complicated comedy scripts where Danny DeVito and Bette Midler and like really, really hysterical movie. And I had, I totally had forgotten that they did that one too, because it's not really the same type of movie is airplane and top secret where like everything, every other line is a joke. It's like it's just one of those great ones. And Captain Over would like us to mention the control tower scenes, which is great. You know, I picked the wrong week to quit with sniffing glue. Yeah, drinking, sniffing glue, smoking. Right. Do you remember the sequel? Did you ever watch the UFC airplane too? I saw part of it. I remember I didn't really like it as much. The only thing it really has going for it is it has William Shatner. Shatner, because remember it's like a space, it's like a space shuttle thing. Yeah, yeah. And Shatner is the guy in the tower on the moon. And he has like the typical, you know, Shatnerisms, which I was thinking he's not on the plane because there could have been something on the wing. That's right. You're right. You would think they would have gotten them for that, right? Yeah. Right. That episode of time was great. And I guess we should also mention Captain Over is giving himself a shout out. The questions that he asks the kid in the cockpit. Yeah. I mean, some of those, you know, I've like, have you ever been in a prison camp? You know, like some of those have you ever seen a grown man naked? But there are a couple that are like, whoa, can't do that anymore. Right. I think the DVD extras actually talk about the ones they cut, which were way worse than what happened. Yeah, I gotta check that out. Some of them were like really, really, really risque. Well, some of those favorite scenes, we're gonna cut now to some highlight reel, some of my favorite scenes, some of Dan's favorite scenes that we pulled to show you. It's not very long. It's only about six minutes, but enjoy, have a chuckle, and we'll be right back with some fun trivia and some upcoming stuff. All right, guys. That's right. Better roll. Roger, Roger. What's our vector, Victor? I was in the Air Force stationed in Drambui off the barry coast. I used to hang out at the Magumpal Bar. It was a rough place. The sedious dive on the wharf populated with every reject and cutthroat from Bombay to Calcutta is worse than Detroit. Can I get you something? Chimofo butter layin' into the bone. Tighten me up. Tighten me. I'm sorry. I don't understand. Cut he say can't hang. Oh, it's Durtis. I speak Jive. Oh, good. He said that he's in great pain and he wants to know if you can help him. All right. Would you tell him to just relax and I'll be back as soon as I can with some medicine? Just hang loose, blood. She's gonna catch up on the rebound on the men's side. What it is, big mama, mama, mama raise no dummies. I duck a rat. Come and some slack, Jack. Jump to one half. Jump to get the help. Say can't hang. Say seven up. Jive ass, dude. Don't got no brains in here. Crane? No, thank you. I'll take it back. Like my man. Get better, telecaptain. We've got to land as soon as we can. This woman has to be gotten to a hospital. A hospital? What is it? It's a big building with patients, but that's not important right now. Telecaptain, I must speak to him. Certainly. How soon can you land? I can't tell. You can tell me I'm a doctor. No, I mean I'm just not sure. Or can't you take a guess? Well, not for another two hours. You can't take a guess for another two hours? This is Captain Over speaking. Been a little bumpy up here, but we'll be past it in a few minutes. A couple points of interest. We're now flying over Hoover Dam, and a little later on we'll pass to the south of the Grand Canyon. Meanwhile, relax and enjoy your flight. Now we know what we're up against. Every passenger on this plane will have fish for dinner. We'll become violently ill in the next half hour. Just how serious is it, Doctor? Extremely serious. It starts with a slight fever, dryness of the throat, as the virus penetrates red blood cells and victim becomes dizzy. Because we experience an itchy crash, from there the poison goes to work on the central nervous system causing severe muscles spasms, followed by the inevitable grueling. At this point the entire digestive system collapses, accompanied by uncomfortable flat units, until finally the poor bastard is reduced to a perving waste of peace of jelly. We've got fog right down to the deck, every place east of the Rockies. There's no pocket place I can land, so I'll have to come through to Chicago. Looks like I picked the wrong week. We're smoking. Don't panic. On the belt line of the automatic flight, there's a hollow tube. Now that is the manual of inflation, Doctor. Pull it out. This is due to periodic air pockets we encountered. There's no reason to become alarmed, and we hope you enjoy the rest of your flight. By the way, is there anyone on board who knows how to fly a plane? Both pilots. Can you fly this plane and land it? Surely you can't be serious. I am serious, and don't call me surely. Doctor, I've checked everyone. Mr. Stryker's the only one. What flying experience have you had? Oh, I flew single-engine fighters in the Air Force, but this plane has four engines. It's an entirely different kind of flying, all together. It's an entirely different kind of flying. Can't stand it anymore. I've got to get out of here. I've got to get out of here. Down, get a hold of yourself. Stryker, please let me handle this. I'll get- Get back to your seat. I'll take care of this, Doctor. The nation's the reverend moon. Read about Jehovah's Witness. Please, kids. Johnny, what do you think I got of this? This? Oh, I can make a cap. What a broach. A pterodactyl, please. How you doing, honey? Jack, I'm so hot, I'm burning up. I'll turn on some air. Take a little milder, of course. That's impossible. They're all instruments. Be a real sweat. Condors, let me know when you get anything. Got a cigarette, Nelson? I can take much more of this. Looks like I picked the wrong week. Quit on filiming, sir. Would you like a little whiskey, man? Certainly not. How are the passengers doing? I want to see you, Mr. Stryker. We're running out of time. Surely, that must be something you can do. I'm doing everything I can. Just stop calling me Shirley. I know about you, but I love Barbara Billings me more and more every time I see her. Yeah, it's so funny. Because she's got such a distinct voice, too. It's so recognizable, and you think? Right. And you know what? We forgot to mention, you know, it's funny with everybody else we talked about before. Like Peter Graves, who, you know, everybody knew from Mission Impossible, was another guy who had never really done comedy. And he didn't want to do this. And he turned it down, I think, like three or four times until, I guess, I think the story is this. Kids read the script because it was sent to him and convinced him that he had to do it. And, you know, the ability to play everything so straight-laced is what makes it hysterical. Yes. And he was great. I totally forgot to mention him when I mentioned the other guys before. Very funny, very funny. So we have a couple of trivia questions for everybody, and we'll give everyone a chance to answer if you want to play along. Bijan, why don't you go ahead and ask the first one? Okay, the first one, I think, is very good. It is, which company was the only airline to buy the film for their in-flight entertainment? So which, which, which flight could you go, which flight company could you see airplane on an airplane? We know what, we should give them a little bit of a hint because it's a little difficult. It's not, it's not an American airline. We've got, we've got one, one answer. Unfortunately, it's wrong. It's TWA, Captain Over, but it's not TWA. It's, it's a tricky one. I'll give you that. That was a good one. Anybody else want to read, anybody else want to guess? It's not an American airline. Well, I think Sarah's got her hand raised. Sarah, you want to, you want to type your answer in the chat or in the Q&A? Anybody else who wants to take a guess? They actually, they make fun of this too in the, in the, remember this part towards the end when they're watching the movie and it's another disaster movie. It's the film within the, the in-flight film is a plane crash. Oh, Rebecca guessed LL, nope. And Claire guessed LL, nope. Nope, the good guesses. The good guesses. I don't know, Sarah guessed Air France, nope. Good guess, but no. Anybody else going once, going twice? Dejan, what's the answer? It's Aeromexico, sí, muy bueno. Those flights down to Mexico City or Cozumel, I guess you could have watched Airplane, Airplane. Yep, you could have watched Airplane on an airplane. I think that would have been one of the ticket in itself just to say you watched Airplane on an airplane. Well, at least it wasn't that one. You remember the one about the, the soccer team in the Andes? I mean, thank God they- Oh, yes, alive. Yeah, that's, that one is definitely not happening. I actually saw that movie on an airplane. I couldn't believe they were showing it. And I was young, it scared the bejesus out of me. Yeah, somebody wasn't thinking, thinking straight on that. I couldn't believe it. What's the next question? All right, the next one is, which Keeping Up with the Kardashians member auditioned for a role in the film? So who on Keeping Up with the Kardashians? I don't know if any of you guys are familiar with that little show, but who- It's just like, it's like just the modern day version of Leave it to Beaver. Yes, right. Who do you think would be, who would want to be- Think about, think about that's up. Sarah got it. Oh, yes, we have a winner. We have a winner. Actually, Rebecca guessed the two sort of guys. It's a two time winner. Yeah, Bruce or now Caitlin Jenner. Caitlin Jenner. Yes, either answer will take. But yes, they, he auditioned for the lead, I believe. So. Yeah, he did. He did. I think I have a good time to remember that I was Bruce Jenner for Halloween one year. Okay. We have one more trivia question. One more trivia question. This will be multiple choice. So make it a little easier for you guys for the last one. The airline used in the movie was repainted, a repainted plane from what airline? So the airplane that they use was a repainted airplane from which airline? So your guesses are, was it TWA, American or Delta? Looks like everybody's mentioning TWA. Captain Overs says Delta. No, it's not Delta. And it's not American. If you said TWA, you are small. Daniel and Rebecca both said TWA. And I should, I can't let this go. Sarah also mentioned she added another piece of trivia. You know, the Karima Abdul-Jabbar part was supposed to be Pete Rose. Oh, wow. Yes, but baseball season was in full swing. So I guess, I guess he couldn't get away. It's a good basketball season. That's right. That's right. And it's funny because when I was a kid, I mean, I totally knew I had no idea I knew who Karima Abdul-Jabbar was, but I just thought it was a guy who looked like I'm like the kid in the movie who thinks it really is him. I was the exact opposite. I was like, nah, I can't really be him. Why would he be in a movie? He's playing basketball. You did another one of my favorite movies, which was which is the Bruce Lee movie. It was not Enter the Dragon, but he was in the unfinished Bruce Lee one where... Oh, yeah. Oh, shoot. Anybody on remember the name of that one? Yeah, I can't remember what it is now. It's the one where you find the power. Yeah, it was Bruce Lee. It was the last Bruce Lee movie because he was he was Karim's instructor. Yes. He got me in the movie. He was like one of the big boss guys. Oh my God. I can't believe I'm blanking on it. It's been a long day. And I have to also point out just because my daughter caught this. There is one cameo, which I thought was the greatest, which was Ethel Merman. And it was her last film appearance before she passed away. Ethel Merman, she was in Broadway. She was in a mad, mad, mad, mad world. And she's in for one joke. She's there for one line. I wonder how much she got in the per diem. I was Game of Death. That was the Bruce Lee movie. Game of Death, right? Sorry. Oh my God. Totally vapor locked on that. All right. Well, I want to... I think we should thank everybody for coming. This was great. We hope you enjoyed it. We have a couple of things coming up. We want to make sure you're all aware of. And you can always find this information on our website, which is virtual playhouse. So starting tomorrow, we have for streaming a great documentary called Slay the Dragon, which is about political gerrymandering. We have the booksellers. Talk a little bit about the booksellers. That's about the strand. Yeah, it's about basically the New York City book, like the storefront bookstores, and basically like book collecting. And I thought it looked really fascinating because it's all kind of about how the bookstores have changed and adapted through the kind of Amazon craze because at certain points in New York City would get judged for kind of going into a bookstore. And if you didn't ask for the right thing or the people were there just reading and didn't want to be bothered reading. And unfortunately, a lot of them went out of business but there are still a few that are still operating and how kind of the younger generation now is not reading things on an iPad or Kindle, but now prefer books. So the storefront bookstores are kind of beginning to come back. And it's really, it looks like it's very well shot and very interesting. So if you have a chance, definitely, I was just checking it out. I know I'm going to rent it and watch it. Yeah, if you're a book lover, it's definitely worth it. And we've got Fantastic Fungi coming back. Yes, yeah. This movie is unbelievable. Really, really well. And if you haven't heard about it or checked it out, give it a, it's all about mushrooms and how like their ability to kind of help the planet and all the amazing, fantastical things that they do also shot really beautifully. Because, you know, some of those mushrooms are just really pretty looking. They do a great job filming it. So if you have... It's a really, really amazing film. And then on Tuesday, this coming Tuesday, we have our classic Tuesday series. We're doing a film called Tunes of Glory. It's the 60th anniversary. It's probably not as well known as some of the others, but it's a really great film, British film with Alec Guinness and John Mills. You definitely want to check that out with John Thar. It does a really great talk and gives you a lot of information about the film, the making of and the history of it, and takes questions. That's Tuesday night. We have an author coming up. We have the book codename. I'm going to mispronounce it, but it's codenamed Helene. Yes. Is it Helene or Helene? Yeah, Helene. Helene. Helene, which is a really, really... Again, some great buzz. We have the author coming virtually to do a talk on that. And then two weeks from today, Bijan and I are going to be back and we're going to be talking about Clue. If you remember Clue with Madeline Kahn and Martin Mull, really great cast, Christopher Lloyd. That's a lot of fun. It was in theaters in the late 80s. One of my all-time favorites. You can watch it any time, day or night. I've come across it on TV. I stop and watch. Oh, and we should also... We can't forget the cat video fest. Yes. Which is exactly what it sounds like. So if you... All of this is on our website under Virtual Playhouse. So if you can check it out, if you people are looking for stuff to do while we're all making our way through this new world order that we're in waiting for things to get back to normal. There's a lot of great content on there that we're happy to bring to you. And we hope you'll check it out and we hope we'll see you back here in a couple of weeks. Any last words? No, just come check us out. And if you've got any suggestions or any movies you want to see, you can either send us an email at info at Bedford Playhouse and go on our website. Again, please, please, please, the theater shut down so any donations you can make, we really, really appreciate it and really goes to helping us and are continuing our mission of bringing arts and entertainment to the community. So tell your friends, thanks so much for coming. We really appreciate it. We love you all. And I think we've got to go land a plane, right, Dan? That's right, yeah. They're calling from the top. I hope you can have a good night. I hope you can have a good night. Have a good night, everybody. Bye, guys.