The jock brokers from an earlier part of the movie also had "Bread and butter" wrong. They said "Bread and honey". Might be just be the movie saying that not everyone who looks or acts smart really is smart.
The sound mixer messed up a line here for some reason. Listen to Steve Carell saying ‘Okay’ after Gosling’s ‘financially inside of you’ line. Engineer made it sound like Carell’s in the bathroom with Gosling, adding the bathroom reverb to that line. Then Carell’s other lines at the end sound as they should - more dry (meaning without reverb) from the ambiance in the office. Really weird mistake to make.
Hopefully I can help you out a little bit. So the housing market was an incredibly sound investment because there are very few people who don't pay their mortgage because if they don't pay their mortgage they will be out in the streets. With that in mind if anyone wanted to invest their money with minimal risks they would invest in the housing market.. i.e. mortgage bonds. So when mortgage bonds are created there are multiple rating they get that they talk about in the movie. AAA being the best and most reliable (meaning the mortgages have people who have steady jobs and a very low percent of not paying their mortgage) everybody wants to invest in those. Bankers being the greedy people that they are said well nobodies taking these crappier packages (anything below AAA) over here so I will just stick them in the middle of all these other mortgages and nobody will know. So they were essentially selling people "AAA" mortgages that were not AAA (meaning these people don't have steady incomes and any guaranteed ways of paying there mortgage)and way worse. Another big moving factor is that real estate agents (not their fault really they were just trying to capitalize off their jobs) were pushing mortgages on people who couldn't really afford, like strippers buying mansions as shown in the movie, with a variable rate on their mortgage. There are two types of interest rates. Fixed which is probably a little higher at first but doesn't rise and fluctuate in time due to the market. Variable rates generally start very low for the first year or so and then after that they are subject to sky rocket and you could go from paying $500 a month to $1000. However, people buying houses were unaware of this as real estate agents never fully disclosed what they would be subject to after their rates were able to change. So in 2008 when all these variable mortgage rates were subject to increase they did and people who shouldn't have ever been able to get these mortgages in the first place were unable to pay their rent. This happened to millions of people and that caused the housing market to crash. When the housing market crashed, A LOT of people who invested in mortgage bonds lost money. An unprecedented amount of money disappeared due to this (somewhere in the trillions) which caused millions of hard working american citizens to lose their retirement funds, houses, cars, and in some cases even their lives. All because some bankers were like "how can we make even more money? By lying to people and selling them something under the context that they were safe investments while in reality they were incredibly risky investments".They were able to lie to people because in a mortgage bond there is a ridiculous amount of mortgages in them (like in the thousands) and nobody went through and read every single mortgage in the mortgage bonds which is how they snuck tons of terrible mortgages into fake AAA mortgage bonds. Hopefully this helped a little! I'm sure I missed something as there was a lot of things that played into the collapse so if you have anymore questions let me know.
Ben Barreto Thanks so much for the detailed reply! That definitely helped. Although have you ever seen the movie Margin Call? This big bank went through a fire sale (I guess), selling off some kind of security as quickly as they could before people found out it had no value and the price plummeted. But I'm having trouble relating the subprime mortgage crisis to the stock market. They were selling off the bonds, which were worthless due to the fact that the debt would never be repaid? Maybe can you recommend a basic book on finance that explains things on a total fundamental level? Like bonds, equity, and all those other terms? I want to read The Big Short book but I feel like I don't have the prerequisite financial knowledge to even get through it lol
I'm not sure of any books that would help clarify what you are wanting and I also haven't seen that movie. But if you are worried about not understanding the financial jargon in the big short I would just google all the words you don't know and I'm sure by time you are 30 pages in you'll be caught up with all the meanings of those words. However, if you'd rather read a book to inform yourself of the financial jargon then I'd do some research on basic financial books.. something broad that would cover banks and stock markets activities among each other.
Yes and no. Think of securities as insurance on the mortgage bonds. The banks that were presented with the opportunities to buy these securities jumped at the chance because it seemed like free money (due to the incorrect assumption that the housing market would never fail). Once people stopped paying their mortgages people with CDS (Credit Default Swaps) contracts were eligible to all this money off the securities they had purchased on the bonds. The banks (knowing this would cause them to become bankrupt) quickly began trying to push all these CDS' off on other banks and or investors in order to save themselves from imploding. So they weren't selling off the bonds themselves but the securities or insurance on the bonds.
There is no up or down in space, so your comment is still relevant. Keep fighting the good fight, bub. Just make sure you keep some spare change for food.
@@mahna_mahna I wouldn't just chalk it down to that. If Jared is in a high position like a VP, he can more or less boss around low level analysts like he frequently did with Chris.
I'm 99% sure Ryan Gosling only agreed to do this movie because of this single scene. He had been taking a long hiatus from acting for 3 years before this movie and it's really not his type of role.
Only 6,000 views? I think I watched it 3,000 times myself. I worked at Bear Stearns. Mortgage fucking div took a lot of good people and business down with them. I was most definitely NOT jacked to the tits,LOL
never noticed this but at the beginning of the clip he says “caesar wept for there were no more worlds to conquer” which is a famous fake quote usually attributed to alexander the great but he didn’t even say it either lol
This is the single greatest moment of Ryan Gosling's career
0:38
Pretty much.
bro he's literally me in Drive
2nd place would be him screaming "GOD DAMMIT" in Blade Runner 2049.
what about when he kills that guy in the elevator
"Melvin over at Shitadel is taking on some heavy losses in the short department."
Underrated comment
🦍
🚀🦍🍌
This comment is gold 🦍🚀👌🏼
Genius comment
I love how he briefly gets back on the phone to make sure he heard him say no and didn’t ignore him 🤣💀
"financially inside of you" ended up gettin cut lol
Ikr.... I was watching the movie, then this clip and then the movie again.... And this scene comes up im like dude wtf the best line is missing smh
Swear I thought it was Reynolds not Gossling saying that
Really? Dang. I need to watch it again.
im so sad, its such a good line
I need to watch that again. I think I missed that one.
That line was actually improvised by Gosling
How do you know?
Adam McKay said it in an interview I think
This whole movie's dialogue was improvised actually.
@@wylde678 my whole life is improvised
@@wylde678 untrue.
If Steve Carell's character was an animal it would be a really bitter penguin
LoL I can totally see that !!!
I'd watch that
"no alex... no... sorry" haha
TheFlickinCritic i laughed hard hahaha
”Shane.... SHANE?” I fuckin laughed hahahahaha
Gotta be a swinging D to be able to control the workplace bathroom
I can honestly say that ive watched this scene 50 times, and I just now understood/noticed the "financially inside you" bit🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Same
That was 100% not in the original movie, this is the first time I’ve heard that part
I can confirm. Not in the theatrical release which is very weird
that's because it didn't come out in the actual movie
i love that this movie is getting the second wind it deserves
How I feel every day in a crypto Bullrun 0:39
best part of the film for me. Misses the bit with the guy coming out the cubicle tho which is a shame.
it's a toilet
@@onbored9627 it's a cubicle.
@@notahamster333 I've not heard them called that before. Toilet Stall is usually the wording. I'm from MW US, perhaps it's a regional thing.
im totally fine Its a stall. Sounds like you’re from California.
Cubicles a UK thing.
I love how he gets the quote wrong when he answers the phone. Alexander wept, not Caesar.
The jock brokers from an earlier part of the movie also had "Bread and butter" wrong. They said "Bread and honey".
Might be just be the movie saying that not everyone who looks or acts smart really is smart.
I cant stop myself from shouting this all over the place. Sometimes in very inappropriate places.... my uncles funeral.
get help
😂💀
"I'm financially inside you." - lol, I'm dead.
That financial inside of you line I swear isn't in the movie I have 😂
It's gotta be an outtake. Its right now on Netflix and that line doesn't come out either.
0:38 perfection
Who else is here holding GME and this scene came to mind?
HOLD 💎🙌
Should have sold
Keep holding lol
@@steffen2165 Oh well.....YOLO.
@@steffen2165 no wtf
This scene is pure acting perfection!
The sound mixer messed up a line here for some reason. Listen to Steve Carell saying ‘Okay’ after Gosling’s ‘financially inside of you’ line. Engineer made it sound like Carell’s in the bathroom with Gosling, adding the bathroom reverb to that line. Then Carell’s other lines at the end sound as they should - more dry (meaning without reverb) from the ambiance
in the office. Really weird mistake to make.
The "Benny Kleeger" mentioned was really Howie Hubler who had the second worst loss in Wall Street history.
this is how i feel about GME rn lmao
How’s that going? LOL
Hope your your sake you had paper hands buddy
mmmmmmm yeaaaa about that
@@DMAN590 About what my dude...
@@steffen2165 I come from the future bearing strange news
More movies need to embrace that funny screaming Gosling is best Gosling
This scene never ever ceases to be hilarious
00:38 when the pre workout kicks in
This is me when amc and gme going to the moon
Gosling is amazing.
@0:42 Yes Jared I Feel You! 😂😂😂😂😂 I love This Movie So Much!
Group Of Brilliant Peeps!
*goes to hang up phone* "Do you feel it?" ..."No" *Hangs up phone*
Great movie, I laughed hard at this scene =)
hi Gamestop. I still see u
How is that working out for you? Lol
Keep buying AMC. Any amount is good. If you can't buy any more then simply HOLD.
It wasn’t Caesar who wept, it was Alexander.
Why do you think he said that
@@huntermarkey Why do I think Ryan Gosling said that Caesar wept? It was just an honest mistake.
0:37 Me every time I win a bet
Me when I've got a bunch of shares in GME
0:34-0:36 that's what "he" said
« Shane, …. Shane ?! » 😂😂
I feel sorry for his helper that's always getting told to shut up.
I hold Ryan Gosling in high esteem. Hell I even loved Only god forgives. But this is by far his best role.
Watch GME become the next Esports leader.
Not only, Shane left unwashed, BUT HE ALSO RAN !!!
Me keeping an eye on AMC over the past 2 days
Every monday dude
@@czardinosaur No cell, No sell.
He snuck the line into The Fall Guy. Subtle too. I missed it the first time, caught it the second. 😂
Such a great line from a fantastic character
Shane... *Shane.*
All GME hodlers right now!
This is all I’ve been screaming on our ski trip!
I always come back to this video when there is a potential market crash.
I’m feeling jacked right now
I love how he's physically unable to scream like a man in every movie he's in.
He was great in blade runner 2049
I loved this movie but I still don't fully understand the collapse. Tried reading the book but got like 10 pages in...way too much financial jargon.
Inside job documentary has a couple of very interesting explanations.
Hopefully I can help you out a little bit. So the housing market was an incredibly sound investment because there are very few people who don't pay their mortgage because if they don't pay their mortgage they will be out in the streets. With that in mind if anyone wanted to invest their money with minimal risks they would invest in the housing market.. i.e. mortgage bonds. So when mortgage bonds are created there are multiple rating they get that they talk about in the movie. AAA being the best and most reliable (meaning the mortgages have people who have steady jobs and a very low percent of not paying their mortgage) everybody wants to invest in those. Bankers being the greedy people that they are said well nobodies taking these crappier packages (anything below AAA) over here so I will just stick them in the middle of all these other mortgages and nobody will know. So they were essentially selling people "AAA" mortgages that were not AAA (meaning these people don't have steady incomes and any guaranteed ways of paying there mortgage)and way worse. Another big moving factor is that real estate agents (not their fault really they were just trying to capitalize off their jobs) were pushing mortgages on people who couldn't really afford, like strippers buying mansions as shown in the movie, with a variable rate on their mortgage. There are two types of interest rates. Fixed which is probably a little higher at first but doesn't rise and fluctuate in time due to the market. Variable rates generally start very low for the first year or so and then after that they are subject to sky rocket and you could go from paying $500 a month to $1000. However, people buying houses were unaware of this as real estate agents never fully disclosed what they would be subject to after their rates were able to change. So in 2008 when all these variable mortgage rates were subject to increase they did and people who shouldn't have ever been able to get these mortgages in the first place were unable to pay their rent. This happened to millions of people and that caused the housing market to crash. When the housing market crashed, A LOT of people who invested in mortgage bonds lost money. An unprecedented amount of money disappeared due to this (somewhere in the trillions) which caused millions of hard working american citizens to lose their retirement funds, houses, cars, and in some cases even their lives. All because some bankers were like "how can we make even more money? By lying to people and selling them something under the context that they were safe investments while in reality they were incredibly risky investments".They were able to lie to people because in a mortgage bond there is a ridiculous amount of mortgages in them (like in the thousands) and nobody went through and read every single mortgage in the mortgage bonds which is how they snuck tons of terrible mortgages into fake AAA mortgage bonds. Hopefully this helped a little! I'm sure I missed something as there was a lot of things that played into the collapse so if you have anymore questions let me know.
Ben Barreto Thanks so much for the detailed reply! That definitely helped. Although have you ever seen the movie Margin Call? This big bank went through a fire sale (I guess), selling off some kind of security as quickly as they could before people found out it had no value and the price plummeted. But I'm having trouble relating the subprime mortgage crisis to the stock market. They were selling off the bonds, which were worthless due to the fact that the debt would never be repaid?
Maybe can you recommend a basic book on finance that explains things on a total fundamental level? Like bonds, equity, and all those other terms? I want to read The Big Short book but I feel like I don't have the prerequisite financial knowledge to even get through it lol
I'm not sure of any books that would help clarify what you are wanting and I also haven't seen that movie. But if you are worried about not understanding the financial jargon in the big short I would just google all the words you don't know and I'm sure by time you are 30 pages in you'll be caught up with all the meanings of those words. However, if you'd rather read a book to inform yourself of the financial jargon then I'd do some research on basic financial books.. something broad that would cover banks and stock markets activities among each other.
Yes and no. Think of securities as insurance on the mortgage bonds. The banks that were presented with the opportunities to buy these securities jumped at the chance because it seemed like free money (due to the incorrect assumption that the housing market would never fail). Once people stopped paying their mortgages people with CDS (Credit Default Swaps) contracts were eligible to all this money off the securities they had purchased on the bonds. The banks (knowing this would cause them to become bankrupt) quickly began trying to push all these CDS' off on other banks and or investors in order to save themselves from imploding. So they weren't selling off the bonds themselves but the securities or insurance on the bonds.
love this scene because it shows his character is just another degenerate
Kind regards
@@SoilentGr33n "Soylent Green is people! It's PEOPLE!!"
The fact they were able to get this in a take without the crew laughing is actually impressive
I scream this in order to start my shift at work.... scares people in line to check out but they get it.
He's so financially inside of us
Me right now GME TO THE MOON
There is no up or down in space, so your comment is still relevant. Keep fighting the good fight, bub. Just make sure you keep some spare change for food.
See you guys on the moon! 💎✊
this was an awesome movie.
EVERY SCENE IS GOLD!!!
0:41 “Do you feel it? That tingling in your balls? Big metal butterflies fluttering around your stomach?”
I want this as my ringtone.
was literally just looking for it...cant find it lol
Who's here from when Ryan said this line in The Fall Guy? Lmao
When you bought GME when it was low
how did Jared casually tell ppl to gtfo the washroom?
Searching In Progress he's a alpha. He can do whatever TF he wants
most likely a vp kind of person in the bank
BDE
It's a movie. If they want him to do something they write it in the script.
@@mahna_mahna I wouldn't just chalk it down to that. If Jared is in a high position like a VP, he can more or less boss around low level analysts like he frequently did with Chris.
AMC !!! 💎 🙌
"What did you hear, Tony?"
Literally me
brace yourselves boys its coming
"shane....shane..."
I actually like the edited seen for the official movie better when he says jacked twice
Shane?
SHANE???
AMC TO THE MOOON!!!
When lambo
I'm 99% sure Ryan Gosling only agreed to do this movie because of this single scene. He had been taking a long hiatus from acting for 3 years before this movie and it's really not his type of role.
AMC baby
That "ok" screams a more sophisticated version of Michael Scott
the best moment is missing where this one dude comes out of the stall
0:38 😂
Rewatching this clip as the Evergrande officially declared in default
This is the funniest clip in the movie!🤣
Gosling amazing
ill be back from the moon
greatest line
I’m jacked…
Hello Superstonk
right now im feeling it!
I feel it.
Only 6,000 views? I think I watched it 3,000 times myself. I worked at Bear Stearns. Mortgage fucking div took a lot of good people and business down with them. I was most definitely NOT jacked to the tits,LOL
+KMANWEBER dude how did it feel that day when you knew eeeevvvvverything was essentially gone to shit.
💎 🙌
never noticed this but at the beginning of the clip he says “caesar wept for there were no more worlds to conquer” which is a famous fake quote usually attributed to alexander the great but he didn’t even say it either lol
I'd walk in and when he tries to tell me out I'd just make a confused face and say "Sorry I can't hear you, something with my ears."
Its broken through 500!!!!
Every wallstreetbets trader be like 😅👌
James Mason, Heaven Can Wait, the likelihood of someone being right is directly in proportion to how many people are trying to prove him wrong.
could be a great meme though :p
Adio Fimaha
I am from the future, it is.
This was Reddit stocks like week🚀🚀
Why is the TV behind Steve Carell blurred out?
Me looking at my AMC shares
When my £129 of Etherium becomes £130 of Etherium.
What do you search in gifphy to find this?
Rip Shane and Alex.
Loopring & Gamestop