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Mina Kimes

2episodes
2podcasts

We have 2 summarized appearances for Mina Kimes so far. Browse all podcasts to discover more episodes.

Featured On 2 Podcasts

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2 episodes

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Bill Simmons, Van Lathan, and Mina Kimes break down the 2011 romantic comedy *Crazy, Stupid, Love*, analyzing Steve Carell's comedic identity, Ryan Gosling's career-defining dual performances in Drive and this film, Emma Stone's trajectory toward Meryl Streep-level status, and why this ensemble script succeeds where most holiday rom-coms fail. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Steve Carell's comedic formula:** Carell's most effective performances share one structural trait — his character begins emotionally off-balance, and the comedy emerges from that destabilization. Films like *40-Year-Old Virgin*, *Little Miss Sunshine*, and this one all use this pattern. His failures as a lead came when studios tried casting him as a large-scale comedy anchor in the Jim Carrey mold. Properly cast in emotionally grounded roles, he becomes one of the most uniquely entertaining performers working. - **Ryan Gosling's 2011 career pivot:** Gosling released both *Drive* and *Crazy, Stupid, Love* in the same year, and that combination cemented his status as a leading man. The two films demonstrated opposite skill sets — total silence commanding a screen in one, rapid-fire charm in the other. Simmons argues Gosling's best films are actually *Barbie* and this one, both cases where he plays a supporting role and steals the entire movie from the credited lead. - **Emma Stone's early-career volume strategy:** Between 2007 and 2010, Stone appeared in roughly eight films across wildly different genres — *Superbad*, *Zombieland*, *The House Bunny*, *Ghost of Girlfriends Past* — before *Easy A* in 2010 established her as a bankable lead. That volume built audience familiarity before her coronation. The panel compares this to Mike Tyson fighting six to nine times per year early in his career, building recognition before the title fights arrived. - **Oscar metrics for tracking actor longevity:** Simmons developed a point system for measuring actor career achievement: seven points for a Best Actor/Actress win, three for a nomination, three for a Best Supporting win, one for a supporting nomination. Meryl Streep currently leads at 65 points. Emma Stone, not yet 40, already sits at 19 points — ahead of Robert Duvall (17), Kate Winslet (17), and Glenn Close (16) — suggesting a realistic path toward the all-time top tier. - **Ensemble script construction:** The film's writers plant one early misdirection — characters referring to Emma Stone's character as "Nana" — which disguises the central plot twist across multiple viewings. The panel identifies this as the structural key to why the film's convergence scene works when most ensemble holiday films fail. Effective multi-plot films hide their connections in plain sight rather than withholding information arbitrarily, making rewatches more rewarding rather than less. - **The Gosling-Stone chemistry benchmark:** The ten-to-twelve minute sequence where Stone's character returns to Gosling's apartment builds a more convincing romantic connection than most full-length films achieve. The scene works because both characters surprise each other — he encounters genuine wit and vulnerability, she encounters unexpected depth beneath the pickup-artist surface. The panel argues this sequence outperforms the romantic content in *La La Land*, despite that film receiving more awards recognition for the same pairing. - **TV stardom versus film career crossover:** Carell navigated one of the rarest transitions in entertainment — a performer so identified with a single television character (Michael Scott, *The Office*) who successfully built a parallel film career without being typecast. The panel contrasts this with Ted Danson, who remained trapped by *Cheers* for years until *Curb Your Enthusiasm* reset his identity. The key distinction is Carell's innate likability, which transferred across formats rather than reading as a limitation. → NOTABLE MOMENT Mina Kimes advances the argument that the romantic scene between Gosling and Stone in this film surpasses anything the same two actors produced in *La La Land* — a film that earned Stone an Academy Award. The panel largely agrees, noting the scene builds genuine emotional connection in under twelve minutes that the more celebrated film never quite achieves across its full runtime. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "Tremfya", "url": "https://tremfyaradio.com"}, {"name": "LinkedIn Ads", "url": "https://linkedin.com/rewatch"}, {"name": "TaxAct", "url": "https://taxact.com"}, {"name": "Vuori", "url": "https://vuori.com/arch"}, {"name": "Redfin", "url": "https://redfin.com"}] 🏷️ Romantic Comedy, Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, Steve Carell, Film Analysis, Oscar History, Rewatchables

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Bill Simmons and Mina Kimes analyze NFL Week 2 storylines including quarterback performance tiers, the historic rise of 12 personnel formations, kickoff rule impacts, and divisional races, followed by Brian Koppelman discussing Robert Redford's multifaceted career legacy. → KEY INSIGHTS - **12 Personnel Revolution:** NFL offenses now use two tight end sets 25% of the time, the highest rate ever recorded, as teams exploit lighter defensive packages with blocking tight ends like Tucker Craft while maintaining play-action passing threats against nickel and dime formations. - **Quarterback Hierarchy Shift:** Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson currently rank as the two best regular season quarterbacks based on 2025 performance, with Patrick Mahomes dropping from the top tier due to limited weapons and offensive infrastructure challenges despite his playoff pedigree and coaching stability. - **Kickoff Rule Economics:** The new kickoff format creates significant strategic inefficiency where kicking into the end zone results in the 35-yard line, making touchbacks nearly equivalent to kicking out of bounds at the 40, fundamentally changing special teams decision-making and increasing return rates dramatically. - **Playoff-Caliber Quarterback Count:** Only nine current NFL quarterbacks can conceivably win a 2025 playoff game based on team situation and past performance: Mahomes, Allen, Lamar, Hurts, Love, Stafford, Goff, Mayfield, and Purdy, with Herbert and Dak as debatable additions. - **Redford Career Blueprint:** Robert Redford established the modern actor-producer-director model by winning Best Director for his first film Ordinary People in 1980, founding Sundance, and consistently selecting projects with memorable endings like Butch Cassidy, All the President's Men, and The Natural. → NOTABLE MOMENT Mina Kimes reveals Jayden Daniels disclosed he is one-eighth Japanese heritage by placing a Japanese flag on his helmet, sparking discussion about Asian representation in the NFL and the surprisingly strong current roster of Asian players, particularly at the safety position with Kyle Hamilton leading. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "Michelob Ultra", "url": "michelobultra.com/courtside"}, {"name": "FanDuel Sportsbook", "url": "fanduel.com/bs"}, {"name": "NFL Sunday Ticket", "url": "youtube.com/bs"}, {"name": "State Farm", "url": null}, {"name": "Uber Eats", "url": null}, {"name": "Chime", "url": "chime.com"}, {"name": "Workday", "url": "workday.com"}] 🏷️ NFL Quarterbacks, 12 Personnel Formations, Kickoff Rules, Robert Redford Legacy, NFC West Division, Asian NFL Players

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