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00:00I met you at the Halloween.
00:01Yes, I remember.
00:02You're marketing people.
00:05Snag this woman.
00:06I'm breathing a lot because I was running.
00:09I know, sorry.
00:10Take a deep breath.
00:11You're breathing a lot, but it's a great question.
00:13The Monday we start shooting.
00:15I watched the original.
00:16I hadn't seen it in a while, and I watched it like on Saturday night.
00:19And I forgot that it's about the loss of Anna's father.
00:26Nice to meet you, Lindsay.
00:27Nice to see you again, Jamie.
00:29I met you at the Halloween.
00:30Yes, I remember.
00:31You're marketing people.
00:34Snag this woman.
00:36Thank you.
00:36Snag her because, you know, you seriously, believe me, I've listened to a lot of people.
00:42You have a very clever way of encapsulating the themes of the movie in two sentences.
00:49That's called marketing.
00:51Well, I got to say that I love this movie.
00:53I watched it yesterday with my mom, and we were like crying a lot.
00:56Oh, wow.
00:57I mean, it's a pity I have a few minutes, but I want to start asking you.
01:01I love body swap movies, but what makes Freaky Friday so special is that body swap isn't just like a fun gimmick, you know?
01:11It's a way to truly see each other as women in all our expressions.
01:16I mean, mothers, daughters, teenagers, working professionals, single, divorced, you know, widowhood.
01:24And so I want to ask you, do you think Freaky Friday still resonates today because womanhood is constantly evolving, and there's always something new to discover in how we live, grow, and relate to each other?
01:40Yeah, I think it definitely resonates still today.
01:42I'm breathing a lot because I was running.
01:43I know, I'm sorry.
01:45Take a deep breath.
01:46You're breathing a lot, but it's a great question.
01:49Yes.
01:49Thank you.
01:50It's a deep question.
01:50Yeah, I still think it resonates today.
01:52For sure.
01:53Because as you said, women were always evolving and becoming, were allowed to be more expressive in different ways, I think, over time.
02:01It's changing every day.
02:02Well, and like you brought up, I'm very proud of the movie that when Lindsay's character, Anna, decides to become a single mom, that her mom says,
02:15babe, I've got you, I will be there with you, I will help support you, which is what women, many women have done, very much, very many women in America, in Mexico, Latin America, around the world, women have supported other women.
02:30So I think it resonates.
02:32And, you know, it's funny, we don't ever talk, we don't talk about it.
02:37And I know this sounds crazy.
02:39I watched the original movie, like the weekend before we started, the Monday we started shooting, I watched the original, I hadn't seen it in a while, and I watched it like on Saturday night.
02:49And I forgot that it's about the loss of Anna's father.
02:56Like, I forgot that because we, the body swap is, we, it's so much fun that I forgot that the whole movie centers and your speech at the wedding banquet.
03:07Wow.
03:07So, it's like really powerful.
03:10I remember just sitting there with tears rolling down my face and thinking, oh, right.
03:16And Disney movies use the loss of a parent, which is a very relatable thing all around the world,
03:36as a tool to access your feelings.
03:39And so in this movie, there's also the loss of a parent.
03:43Lily's lost her mom.
03:44The possibility that Lily's father is going to marry, you know, Anna is going to bring out feelings.
03:52So, yes, I think it's easily relatable.
03:57And you look at these two movies and they are, they are similar but different, but they hit on the same notes that are important in movies today.
04:05And Lindsay, do you agree that this movie, the core of this movie is motherhood?
04:10Well, there are a lot of things surrounding Freaky Friday, but when I watched the movie, I was a kid and now I'm in my 30s and I want to be a mom.
04:22And I was more related with your character than with the teenager's character.
04:28And it's amazing, you know, how you connect with your mom when you watch it.
04:32Yeah, I think it's about motherhood.
04:34I think it's also about teenagers, too, in a lot of ways and how we evolve over time and we've changed and how teens now today are changing.
04:45And when my son's a teenager, even, it's going to be really different.
04:48But I think the core of this movie is relationships, I would say.
04:52I think that's where I see it falling.
04:54Relationships and how we learn to understand each other and appreciate each other.
04:57And, well, I think that most people only get the chance to be a teenager once.
05:03But, Jamie, I have to tell you that you've been a teenager three times.
05:07Yeah.
05:07Well, and my husband would tell you I'm still a teenager, but that's a whole other therapy session.
05:14And I want to ask you, which stage do you find the most complicated to understood?
05:19Maybe your own teenage era or when you became like a millennial teenager 22 years ago or now that you became a Gen Z teenager?
05:33I think I related to when I had teenagers in my own personal life because I was actually a very good girl.
05:41I did not rebel.
05:43And pretending to be a rebel in the movies is different than actually living with people who have, who are in the act of rebelling.
05:54That probably taught me more than anything was being a parent.
05:59Well, girls, thank you so much for your time.
06:01Thank you.
06:01I'm sorry you felt you had to race too fast.
06:04No, no, no.
06:04The traffic was nutty McNutty.
06:06Mexico City.
06:07Yes.
06:08Nice to have you here.
06:09Nice to see you.
06:10Bye.
06:11Bye.
06:11Bye.
06:11Bye.
06:11Bye.
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