Two Jeremys Walk Into A Springsteen Movie cover art

Two Jeremys Walk Into A Springsteen Movie

Two Jeremys Walk Into A Springsteen Movie

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The penultimate day of the year can make anyone reach for easy summaries—good year, bad year—but we found the truth in the details: a Springsteen biopic that drowns in mood, a Nuremberg remake that forgets to choose a spine, and a baking show that rescues the night with butter and wit. We went into Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere expecting a guilty pleasure anchored by Jeremy Allen White, Jeremy Strong, and a scene-stealing turn from Marc Maron. What we found was a beautifully sung but relentlessly gloomy meditation on trauma, studio minutiae, and dark rooms that rarely let the music breathe. The vocals are uncanny. The storytelling, not so much. We unpack why the early Asbury Park setup intrigues, why the middle sags, and how a few smart choices could have shown the artist’s ascent without sandblasting the truth of depression.

Then we tackled Nuremberg—a stellar cast on paper, thin gruel in practice. Rami Malek, Russell Crowe, and company circle gripping moments: a tense capture on a ruined road, forbidden letters carried between a cell and a family, a last-minute reveal that should land harder. The facts are there; the point of view is not. We talk about adaptation discipline, how courtroom history needs a thesis, and why performances can’t rescue a script that won’t commit.

Needing a lift, we turned to the most reliable comfort in modern media: holiday baking. Duff’s grin, Nancy’s standards, and a cast that actually surprises—especially Nico, whose star-shaped wreath and marzipan mischief made us howl. And then a box at the door changed everything: Wildgrain frozen loaves and croissants that perfume the house and restore faith in simple ritual. We also detoured into a wild collectible story—the final three U.S. pennies and their mint dies selling for a shockingly low $800,000—Stockholm’s record-dark December, and why Cape Cod calls pot stickers “Peking ravioli.”

Press play for sharp takes, cozy laughs, and a reminder that small joys beat big hype. If you enjoyed the ride, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs a year-end reset, and leave a quick review—it helps more listeners find us. What are you keeping or letting go from 2025?

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