Miami-Lakers’ Contrast, Jimmy Butler's Grittiness and Collateral Review

In this episode, Wellington and Savon are joined by special guest Ivan Budihardjo in the first half, a current college classmate of Wellington's. They discuss the struggles Miami has faced early in the Finals, how Anthony Davis and Lebron are too much of a mismatch in entirety and Andre Iguodola and Tyler Herro's possibility as x-factors, to bolster the Heat's chances. They also discuss how Jimmy Butler embodies the Heat culture, how this Finals appearance is just the beginning for Miami and how much resentment is still possibly held between Pat Riley and Lebron, due to his quick departure back in 2014. In the second half, Wellington and Savon review Collateral, the 2004 American neo-noir action thriller film, directed and produced by Michael Mann, starring Tom Cruise, Jamie Foxx, Jada Pinkett Smith and Mark Ruffalo. They dive into how good are Michael Mann's trademark visuals, Tom Cruising giving a different and overwhelming villainous performance and Jamie Foxx meeting this role's demands so well. Finally, they discuss how two opposites were pitted against each other, physically and thematically and this film just going beyond its genre as being original; in its own right.
In this episode, Wellington and Savon are joined by special guest Ivan Budihardjo in the first half, a current college classmate of Wellington's. They discuss the struggles Miami has faced early in the Finals, how Anthony Davis and Lebron are too much of a mismatch in entirety and Andre Iguodola and Tyler Herro's possibility as x-factors, to bolster the Heat's chances. They also discuss how Jimmy Butler embodies the Heat culture, how this Finals appearance is just the beginning for Miami and how much resentment is still possibly held between Pat Riley and Lebron, due to his quick departure back in 2014.

In the second half, Wellington and Savon review Collateral, the 2004 American neo-noir action thriller film, directed and produced by Michael Mann, starring Tom Cruise, Jamie Foxx, Jada Pinkett Smith and Mark Ruffalo. They dive into how good are Michael Mann's trademark visuals, Tom Cruising giving a different and overwhelming villainous performance and Jamie Foxx meeting this role's demands so well. Finally, they discuss how two opposites were pitted against each other, physically and thematically and this film just going beyond its genre as being original; in its own right.

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