Transcribe your podcast
[00:00:00]

Now, the Oscar for Achievement in Sound. You know, for years, movies didn't have sound, and then they figured it out. Some people say that the silent era was the golden era of film. These people are difficult and insane. Without sound, we wouldn't have been able to hear such classic lines as, You're going to need a bigger boat. I'll have what she's having. And he was in the Amazon with my mother when she was researching spiders just before she died. Or what about that moment in Field of Dreams when we hear, If you build it, he will come. And then Costner does it. He builds a baseball field. I guess he doesn't build it. He mows down corn, and then there is a field, and then he's like, I'm going to watch Ghost play baseball. And the bank is like, You want to pay your mortgage? And he's like, No, I'm going to watch Ghost play baseball. And then he finds James Earle Jones, who wrote The Boat Rocker, which I thought was a real book deep into my 20s. And he's like, People will come, Ray. He's the only one with a financial plan. But what's weird is, Timothy Busfield pushes little Gabby Hoffman off the and she falls down and she's unconscious.

[00:01:02]

Then Bert Lancaster is Moonlight Graham, and he comes up and he pats her on the back a couple of times, and he's like, Hot dog stuck in the throat. And then he can't go back in the game because I guess there's a rule in Ghost Baseball that if you leave the field at any point to become an elderly ghost and do the Heimlich maneuver, you can't return to the field. I love Field of Dreams. That should win best picture, though they'll probably go with one of this year's. The nominees for Achievement and Sound.