Some Time With... Candace Cameron! (Part 1)

Published Apr 18, 2024, 12:00 AM

The time has come! D.J. herself has arrived - as Candace Cameron Bure joins Jodie & Andrea to talk Full (and Fuller) House memories!! 

Hey there, Fanarrito's welcome back to how Rude Tanertos. We are interviewing someone very special to us today. We literally grew up with her on the set of full House, and we were so lucky to be able to recapture that magic twenty years later. On the set of Fuller House. She created the unforgettable role of DJ as the quintessential teenage older sister. But she is more than just a TV best friend and sibling. She is our real life she Wolf sister. Please welcome to the pod our dear friend, Candace Cameron Burret.

Hello, Hi, Hello, Hi Djhi hees upset, DJ's.

Upset, Hi, belated happy birthday.

I know we texted you on the day, but just want to wish you a happy birthday again.

Did you have a nice day?

I did?

It was like super mellow. I didn't.

I felt I thought of you a lot because I I worked out and then I went back to bed.

I was just I mean, that's kind of that.

I mean that sounds anyway, right. I was just like a little tired and just a little in my feelings on my birthday, so.

Like oh yeah, but then had a but had a lovely mellow day and went to dinner with the boys.

Oh nice, and your son Lev recently got married, so you were the mother of the group.

I know, what was that like? Oh my goodness, I can't believe.

It was amazing. It was so amazing.

It was one of the best weekends of my life. It's like, oh, I think we've talked about this. It's it's at wedding and funerals when all the people that you love the most gather in a room together, and so, Helena, this is a joyous occasion.

Yeah, the wedding was incredible.

It was awesome, and it was everything that Elliot and Love wanted for their day.

So I can't believe it.

Did you Were you involved with the planning at all? Or were you kind of hands off?

More hands off because it's a whole different experience as mother of the groom. So I think I have permission already from Natasha that I get to be Momzillah.

Yeah, mother of the groom. You're a little more like that's nice over there.

I was like, what the hell? Yeah, yeah, I helped, like as much.

Well, you don't want to step on toes or you know, yeah, I just want to enjoy the day.

I am here if you need me, but I would really love to be involved. But if you don't want, it's okay, But I really want to know.

You've given Natasha just a notebook of all of the notes and the ideas that you had planning. You're like, hey, so I have some thoughts about yeah, when you get married.

I said, I'm controlling your wedding, and she was like DJ and her clipboard of fine, here this is what we're doing.

I will turn into.

All if you if you can pull it together in the backyard in like two hours, my hat's off.

You know if.

Hey, you know, bring in a cow, bring in a tent, bring.

Say I feel like that should just be its own reality show. Like if you can actually pull off what the Tanners did to create a triple wedding in their backyard in a matter of several hours, you win a wedding.

That challenge is like I could do it, I could, I.

Could do it? You totally?

Could you totally?

Cand Well, We've been having so much fun going back and watching these early early episodes of Full House with our just we were so prepubescent.

Oh my god, no, I haven't seen them in eight so I don't know what we're talking about today. What episode are we on.

We're not, We're we're just interviewing. We're not doing any Yeah. No, well, we have guests on.

We try not to stress them out with having to recap stuff because it's hard enough for us to remember that we.

Have to do that.

So yeah, no, we're just talking in the middle.

Of fun stuff.

Yeah, we're we're in the middle of season two. But yeah, this isn't a specific a specific chat about that.

But we did just we did.

Just record the episode earlier today where we recapped the episode that you help Harry learn how to subtract with oranges. Harry my best friend. Apparently you're like oranges whatever, and then suddenly he's in love with you, and Steph is pissed because you stole her boyfriend, and you're like, I don't even he is a first grader. I don't even like him, and Steph's just like, I move out into Michelle's room, I move Michelle into my room.

Yeah, it's very I didn't until we watched it today either.

Again, like going back and starting at the beginning has been because did you watch the show, did you like, were you a person watched it.

Yes, like when we did it, I watched it was so fun. My mom would get the VHS tapes. I don't know if you guys did too. We had all tapesh watch it when it well, not always because we taped on Friday nights too, sometimes when it was scary. I don't know, but I watched every episode when we were doing the show live, and then I think I had another round where I watched a lot of episodes.

Not all of them, but when Natasha, Levi and Max.

Were young, they weren't like super big Full House fans, but they enjoyed it occasionally.

So if it was like on.

Nickelodeon, I was like, great, watch mom, watch Mommy. So I watched a handful. But I don't think I've seen any Full House episodes in probably at least ten years, maybe fifteen years.

I don't know.

It is a trip. It is so wild to see.

Us as these like especially first season was I mean obviously because it was the you know, so long ago, but it's we.

Were like these tiny little pipsqueak people. And the hair, so much.

Hair, Oh, the evolution of DJ's hair alone, that could be a whole whole episode on it.

Yeah.

So you start out with like the loose ringlets in season one, and then by season two it was like the.

Scratch um yeah, the user that was a big as much as possible.

Yeah, and then my hair by season two looked like like a dandelion, like someone had just dried my head and if you blue on it, it was all gonna just shatter off my head and fly away.

That's what it looked like. It was so overpermed and sad.

It was really very overpri.

I looked at it and I went, oh, that's where my hair went. It never came back.

Yeah, And my hair looked like a wig. I got bad wig even though it was real like it was not a wig. You is like anchor woman. Okay, at the age of eleven.

Candice, do you remember when when when Tate was born, that baby picture of him where he's got all that hair that was Andrea in the in these episodes.

All this hair just just thick all over the place.

And I told you that day, I said, now I know where Tate got his hair. I always wondered, And now I see you had a wig.

It looked like it looked like a wig. It was not a wig. But it could have been a great wig.

So I'm sure that people would love to know canis like what your you know. One of the things that we've asked everybody from the original cast was like, what was it like for you when you first started doing the show as a ten year old? Like what was that experience? Like what was your audition process like for Full House? Like what was all of that?

How you know, how did that all unfold for you at ten?

So I told this story a lot like the audition process was like every other audition process for me in that got the call, went in saw a casting director and I auditioned, but she was like, yeah, you're okay, it's fine, I'll bring you back for producers. But the fact that she was like at least that's how I took it, I was. I was so sad after. So I walked out of that room and I was crying to my mom and she's like, what's the matter. And I said, I had a really bad audition, but she's bringing me back.

And my mom was like, well, it's not that bad thing. And I was like, but I feel like I did a good job, so you want to go back in and do it again?

And I said yes, So she like asked the casting director can she go in and can you give her a few notes and then tell her that she could do better and can she do it again for you? So I did and the casting director was like, okay, that was great, still bringing you.

Back that being changed, right, And then I went and saw the audition.

Was with Jeff and Tom and Bob, and I remember that first It felt like very scary as a ten year old because I don't remember where it was. I feel like it was on a lot somewhere, or maybe it was Warner Brothers or something, and I feel like we were in like a small theater and pus, this.

Is my dream.

I don't know, but I remember walking down what felt like a longer entrance where they were, where they were sitting in their seats, and I auditioned for them.

It might have been at Lormar, which was MGM, but they were all, yeah, like all kinds of little like studio spaces and like theaters and things.

I felt like it's more of a screening round, but I again be wrong, this is a long time ago.

It just felt intimidating.

It was a big room and I did the audition and I left, and I didn't really think much about it after that, because that was our audition process.

My mom would say, as soon as you.

Audition, let it go, and if you feel good about it, that you did a good job, don't think about it ever again. And if we get the call that you get it, great, but don't sit on it, you know, and be wondering every day.

So I kind of forgot about it.

But then very soon, within a few days, I think I got the call that I got the part. So that was really cool and in a weird way, I was like, cool, I'm nexted line. This is what's supposed to happen because my brother's on a television show and now it's my.

Turn to be on a television show. I thought that's how it happened in all fairs.

You were like, great, this is just right.

If your family goes into show business, everyone eventually gets a show, right, A hit cheft too.

I was super excited. I was really familiar with the sets. I was familiar with soundstages and the studio because I've been going to Growing Pains for two years watching my brother. I'd already been acting for about five years at this point. I'd been on Growing Pains, so all of it felt familiar. So I was just very excited about it as a ten year old, and then excited to meet you guys. And now I remember meeting Bob specifically, just because I know you talked about it a billion times, because we shot the Pilo with John Posey and then came back with Bob.

So I specifically remember meeting Bob.

I remember being intimidated, like in a good way by John, just because I knew he was, like he was Blackie from General's Hospital, and my sisters were freaking out over that. So I remember I had that little scene in the garage where I was like negotiating with him to move back upstairs. Oh yes, And my little ten year old self.

Was like, oh, he's a big actor, like he's a big star, so oh, mess this up.

And I think Dave was just fun and funny, you know, but such great, such great memories, and the initial like entrance into the show felt so comfortable and so family like, and and.

So I loved it.

How did the Camerons as a whole get into the business, Because I know Kirk was on Growing Pains and your mom was a talent manager. Right, so how did how did you go from like normal family to oh, we have multiple children and on multiple hit TV shows.

So kind of fluky.

I actually don't even know if it's how you guys started either, but like we're all born and raised in La so I feel like that is just it's a different opportunity in that you can try being on commercials, just like you can go sign up for the soccer team or tap in ballet. Yeah, when you live somewhere else, that's not an entertainment.

And you have to move your entire family here you got a kid.

Like, that's a real definite decision. But this was like we kind of lived here and my mom had a friend was like, your kids are really cute. Let me give their picture to my age And my mom was like, okay. So we auditioned for the agent. My mom was like, do you guys want to try this? We all said sure. So she took my brother, she took me and my sister Melissa. She didn't take my sister Bridget, and that's hard. My sister's got a really beautiful story about that too.

She actually just like she wrote her back, no she did. It's really beautiful and it's I'm going to read that.

My sister Melissa decided she didn't like it after auditioning for a little bit.

My brother and I liked it, so we just kept working.

And because we were in La, it was like after school, my mom would pick me up, you know, from the elementary school, and today we'd have an audition, and maybe the day we wouldn't have an audition, and so it just kind of flowed from there. But I always enjoyed it. So that's why my mom was like, as long as you like it, we'll keep doing this, and you don't just tell me, just like my sister was like I don't want to do it anymore, and she's like, great, let's stop.

Very low pressure. I mean, your sisters were always there. Melissa and bridget were always around on.

Set, and Bridgett was like our stand in and my stand in, but for so many years.

On Full she was part of the full house.

Absolutely, yeah, just like all of our families were.

Was we always talk about like how the moms were so connected and like really wonderfully present on set for all of us, and and really they really bonded together too, and like what what a rarity. It was for a cast as far as adults and kids and the kid's parents, and to like be as close as we were, and as you know, family barbecues and you know, all of these things.

Like it was everybody really knew each other.

And I really think John was such really spearheaded that so much have those barbecues at his house at the end of a season, at this start of a season, and it was like the entire show. He would invite everybody, everyone from the apartment and like, who does that, right, So John hadn't done that. I mean, he just set the tone right away for like we're a family, we're doing that show together.

Awesome.

Yeah, it really.

It made such a huge difference I think in the whole experience of the show.

And we didn't even know growing up that that's not common, Like right, we were like this. I just thought, Oh, this acting thing is great, this must be how every show works.

Was like, yeah, it's fun.

Everyone loved it and and your best interest in mind.

Yeah yeah, yeah for a.

Lot of people. But like that's how I felt too going in.

And it also wasn't true at the time.

We had a really exceptional experience and we had really involved families, and we had you know, all of the things that make for a great experience kind of all came together and we were I think, very very very lucky in that.

Which is why we're all still in it today.

It's true exactly because we Yeah, I.

Mean, I know, you took a break or you know, you quit Andrea for a while, but it came back.

But even doing this, like there's we all had really good experience or relatively good experiences that were all still in entertainment today.

Yeah.

Yeah, yeah.

It was definitely not something we were like never again, although we have found out that a lot of guest stars on Full House it was the last thing they ever did never again.

We had several people who.

Done the whole guest appearances on something like they were there for like two or three episodes and then it was like and that was their last credit and they never did anything ever again.

So we launched careers and killed them. So there was no in between. No one just sort of like I'm gonna become a characteric.

No, we either never saw you again or they're like hugely successful.

So yeah, I don't.

Know what that says about us, but good.

So we all went to school together on the set, like the first season, we all shared a school room and Adria our school teacher, which was amazing. I can't remember how many seasons we shared her before, Like you know, you and I were in middle school and eventually high school, and Jody was so much younger, so eventually we kind of branched off into different teachers in different school rooms. But do you remember those like our field trip to San Diego Zoo.

Yes, that was so fun Diego Zoo.

And I remember solving.

And Hers Castle?

Yeah, Hurst Castle.

Yeah, I still have that book report because like Adria made us right, that's right, we did a little collage in a book.

Yeah, I think I still have it.

Oh that's right. I forgot we had to do a book report on it. Like I knew it was a field trip, but that's right.

Adria was like, okay, and then we're gonna like get a book on Hurst Castle and write a little thing like it was definitely an educational uh experience.

Yeah, they were so great. I feel like we did we do Lebry tarpits together too?

We did? We did, we did guitar pits. We Yeah, we did Alvarado Streets or no excuse me.

Street practice Spanish, right.

Went at least made us go and we had to order everything in Spanish and you yeah you were, you were in Spanish.

Only talk in Spanish to each other. Yeah, that was it.

I think.

Yeah, you guys talked for me because I Spanish.

Yeah, that was that. I remember doing that. But yeah, so many like really wonderful experiences that were not.

Those, Yeah, those were those were really great.

It was fun in those younger years when we were all together and doing field trips and all of that.

I loved it.

I'll never forget your mom slapping mud on my hand at Hurst Castle because I got stung by bee.

We told that story that.

Yeah, your mom was like, get some mud and we were like, what like in the parking lot, just like get some like you know, water and some dirt from the little island in the parking lotge like slap it on there, and.

Yeah, remedy just suck that stinger out.

Yep, yep, yeah it works.

And I'll never forget your mom telling the story of how she swallowed a bee once and.

I that like that. It terrified me for life. I know, I didn't even know that it was possible.

Stung her in the throat out, I.

Know, but also the most random things that you remember as a kid, right, You're like, I don't remember very significant portions of things, but I do remember that Candae's mom got stung in the throat by a bee as a It's like, that's useful, very useful.

Do you remember the Full House Cookbook?

Which I am trying to remember if we put that together in the classroom or if it was some other project, but the Full House Cookbook with the red cover, Yeah, I.

That too, I do. Yeah, And then it was fine.

But I think this is maybe when we when we kind of split off. But maybe you can correct me if I'm wrong. We also had like the full House Gazette, or we called it something else, but I have copies of that too. That was when I was with Glenn.

Yeah, we had lip a little full House newsletter newspaper.

Oh my gosh, do you still have those?

That would be a couple copies of them.

Oh, I want to see those.

Those I forgot about that.

That's right, Yeah, yeah, that's right.

Oh yeah, I feel like I like, I feel like you guys were contributors.

This is like an right, we were like guest columnists.

Yeah, we would there. We do like little interviews.

I was like the editor and then you guys were contributors. You did interview, someone did like a puzzle or a game on the back, Yeah, recipe, I don't know, something random, but.

Oh my god, I forget.

Yeah, we did do fun stuff.

This is like art imitates life because didn't DJ run the school paper and Kimmy and DJ.

Where they got the idea.

They were like, look, these kids are running a newspaper anyway, we might as well throw it in the show.

So we haven't gotten to any episodes yet where we experienced like major milestones like the first kiss or the first ZiT or whatever.

My gosh, that was horrible.

Wasn't okay, there's a ZiT episode?

You hated the ZiT?

I thought you were gonna say the first kiss. Yeah, DJ's first sits.

That was horrible and embarrassing. The kiss was also embarrassing, but you know, I don't know. I didn't have as much anxiety about that one. But having like interest to have a ZiT on the end of my nose for an entire episode in the pool at thirteen or fourteen was so it was like humiliating.

So it's embarrassing.

Yeah, yeah, Like you're already so self conscious at that age, but then you put something embarrassing on your face in front of how many millions of people who are watching the show.

Yeah, anytime I had to.

Like purposely look as unattractive as possible for my most hated.

Shows, And you know, I'm like, okay, that says something about me.

Also, what thirteen? What kid was at thirteen? It's like, you know, what I want to do on television is look stupid. I want to I want to look so stupid that everyone the next week time that they see me at school is gonna be like, I remember how stupid you looked.

And I'm going to make fun of you for it, because they'll make fun of you for nothing.

It's true, So thank you for sake.

Yeah, But like there's a difference between if you're acting goofy, doing something goofy on purpose that is I'm trying to think of an example, but there's.

A difference between funny, funny, silly, and and embarrassing actual life moment that you're replicating.

Yes, exactly, thank you for saying that. Well, right, that's exactly it. So like that ZI episode was so embarrassing. There was another one where it was in the later years because Scott was on and we were boyfriend girlfriend and Becky was like trying to teach the guys a lesson about beauty or makeup, and so we come down like we're going to dinner and we had like, yeah, make so much, so much lipstick, so much blush, and we looked but in these really nice, beautiful dresses and we were like, oh, don't you think we look great?

It was something like that.

We were I think I sort of remember that, yeah.

Like it was reality.

And then they were like, uh, we don't know if we should be honest, but that make ups horrible.

But that was so embarrassing, like.

To have found makeup on Like I hated that episode.

I was like, why why do you make And meanwhile Andrew's just like mm hmm, yeah, that.

Was weekly for me, like put me in the weirdest outfit possible.

What must that be like to dress in an embarrassing outfit?

Now?

But that was a like that was my character again, I'm playing a funny character. That was her whole purpose. Seems to be quirky like that, So and we all like.

Just you know, it was anything At that age, just existing is embarrassing, you know what I mean, Like just just being just existing, having a name and a face is like horrifying, you know what I mean. You're like, I can't something's going to be made fun of and so you know it's true, and I do remember it like it being something that really as a kid, like at that age when I was like thirteen fourteen when the show ended for me, being something where I realized how much more self conscious I had become from the start of Full House until the end. And then you know that was where you guys were like right in the middle.

So that's exactly it.

Yeah, Now that we were moms and we have kids that are in those teen years.

Now or have gone through them.

Yeah, like you realize how difficult it can be in real life, but then you exacerbate that by millions of people like rational tellentsion. Yeah, if I didn't have the right T shirt on one day or I just felt fat in it, it was like my life is over.

Right, Yeah, I mean everything feels very dramatic.

Everything is very dramatic at that age.

It is all terrible.

And painful and it is a lot, and we all, yeah, we had to do it in front of everybody, so.

Yes, but we definitely had I mean, I definitely had way more great times and good times and ships I loved over the years than the few that stand out.

And it's a it's a good thing that when we came back to Fuller we didn't do anything embarrassing, because that that would have been Yeah, now that's my kids. I'll start dancing in the mall and like doing stuff and they're like, Mom, you're so embarrassing.

I'm like, you see what I do for a job.

Why would you think that this would be the most embarrassing thing that I would do is dance in the middle of the grocery store.

Like yeah, it's so.

Yeah.

There was something so liberating about Fuller House though, because then yeah, because you're old enough.

Because as an adult, you're like, oh god, it's nice to not care.

It's so nice to not care. That was the best. I'm like, the goofier, the better.

Yeah, I really I found it when we did Fuller that I think like the three of us really leaned into like, oh, we'll just be.

As ridiculous as as we can.

And I that was so much fun because it was kind of like getting to come.

Back and be like, oh, yeah, like this is great fun.

I get the joke right, Like, I don't care, Like I'm not so self conscious that people are going to think this is me, which is you know, as a teenager, you're like, oh my god, they're gonna think I actually am this person.

Yeah, you just don't take yourself as seriously when you're older.

Hopefully true, you're in a good true.

Yeah, I've had some people that do, and I'm like, you need to give myself right yeah, yeah, and it's not no, no, we were. I mean, I don't know why I keep picturing right now, those ridiculous bridesmaid's costumes.

That's all I'm picturing from Fuller right.

Now, riding on the back of the of my bridesmaid's train and why I had a train to don't know. And I'm wearing a bird a bird you some sort of bird cage on my head. That was I can't even.

Remember how they rigged that up, like because I didn't actually pull you guys, I think it wasn't like a moving walkway type thing.

No, they attached to it was attached to a thing, but I think.

Attached to me.

I don't know, I don't remember.

I don't remember.

All I remember is laying on top of some peach colored uh ruffles tool. Yeah, definitely, it was a lot.

Oh yes, oh hey, we finally got to do our own stunts in Fuller like this was.

It was great. You got to do Mexican wrestling. I got to do aerials like it was.

Do we remember. I will never forget the day that we were.

Doing the stunt in the living room that had that sliding thing and when I.

Almost died, died, I forget.

Yeah, that's not even an exaggeration. Let's that like I have I used to.

Let's share with that with the audience what that was. We were doing a stunt and.

The stunt was like, what was it? American Ninja Warrior. Yeah, the DJ wanted to do this warrior.

As one does, Yes, right exactly, So I zip I did, went through the course and at the end, I zip line diagonally like the length towards towards the Maria and then I land on a platform. But during rehearsal, the rig was not set up correctly and there was no safety.

Stop on the end of it.

So when I landed off the zip line and stopped the whole mechanism, which is this giant metal thing that's like yeavy and very very heavy. Slid right off the track and came right next to my head with an in.

Yes, and like dented the floor, like there was a big gash in the stage floor.

It broke the stairs.

It was like, yeah, I felt the I mean, I go right by me, but I think Thott was up on the top of the stairs.

Yes, Scott watched the whole thing, and.

Scott like watched in real time happening and like couldn't even get a word out, like it's it's falling because it happened within one second. And if I just even shifted right wait the tiniest bit, yeah, it would have probably broken my neck, like landed right on top of my head.

It was god, it it was pretty stopped.

Yeah.

We were like Chris Jansen was like, all right, we're going to take a break and then and then then I'm sure someone got ripped anew.

Yeah, well Cinder Cinder was Mark Sandrowski was directing that week, and I remember the look on his face serious and he's like, we're going to take a five maybe a ten. Yeah, and like the stunt guy was fired, Like they read and Mark stunt, we're not doing this, We're not doing this stunt. Like redo the whole set because we're not doing that stunt anymore.

We're doing something. I think they ended up doing monkey bars something like that of a zip line because Mark's like, we're not even gonna We're not if you're not even going to try that again. Yeah, that was It was scary.

It's traumatic.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, we've been thinking about all kinds of while.

When the horse got loose on set. Do you remember that.

DJ is very first DJ's very first horse.

And the horse went running down the camera aisle.

I didn't remember this, Oh.

Yeah, first season.

When the horse came to like got out of the little k like the little set that it was in down there, and came.

A little stable.

Yeah, I'd probably do that too.

I'd be like, what's going on here? What are you guys doing? Yeah?

Well, and you rode that horse in that episode. You were very, very good at the whole montage in the park.

You were very I was happy to ride the worst.

Yeah, got a love of motage.

How many animals between both shows, I mean have you guys done a count yet on the podcast of how many animals we've worked with?

No, but I should.

I do know that I love that amphibian and it's uh, so far.

We're not even to comment, like Commet's not even here yet. We have turtles, turtles, bags and the ferret. But that's right, Monkey Champion couldn't look at the eye that everyone was terrified. I've we had a little pouchin Monkey.

The Donkey with donkey milk. I think it got worse on Fuller once they added an alligator.

It was like, come on, I was a veterinarian, so I just that was.

Because I was in a giant that of holding a baby, holding babies in a tube top and hotpants and covered in disgusting goo with seven puppies.

Okay, that was peak, But what is happening?

It's funny, it.

Was, it was hilarious.

I was just that I was going to drop a baby in a vat of goo on my lap was like slippery and wiggling around.

Yeah, it was. It was. It was an experience.

But no, that was your low that was your low point? What was what was your yeah? What was our high point of Fuller? Or full whatever.

It all blends together, like your favorite stunt, your favorite scene, your favorite moment.

I don't know, was it your Yeah, the Mexican wrestling where you got to dois awesome.

Honestly, I love that.

That was all that.

Yeah, they hired the stunt double and didn't even need her.

I didn't do all of this. That was I did that little scissor kick up and around.

And I feel like that probably before the other incident, because then or was it after.

That, they would have been like before. But I also did.

Like when we did the episode in Japan, right, you jumped off the jump off.

Of a cliff.

Oh yeah, yeah.

Then after the studio we did the green screen of jumping off the cliffs. So they had us up probably like maybe two to two stories or you know, two to three big stories, depending on like what kind of building you're thinking of, And it was all green screen and had the harness and had to just jump off of it.

And that was That was fun, but kind of scary.

It was like a little bit harder than it felt like because of the landing, like the dropping and the landing. But we did crazy stunts on on Fuller on both those I mean you just riding the curtains.

I mean.

The curtains. I've been an astronaut and flown around the room.

I've several things that I don't think you can do with children anymore on set, Yeah anymore, But you know what, I had fun.

So it was great.

My little moonshoes just haanging around, tanging around.

Well.

I have to say there's something really special about Kimmy and Steph being able to interview DJ, and we loved catching up with Cannus and reminiscing on the wonderful memories from our childhood. So stay tuned for part two of our interview with Cannis Camon Beret, airing this Friday, and in the meantime, if you want to follow us on Instagram, you can follow us at how Rude Podcast. You can also send us emails at Howard podcast at gmail dot com and make sure that you're liking and subscribing to the podcast wherever you're listening so that you can make sure and get all the newest episodes right when they come out so you're.

Not missing anything. Thanks for tuning in to.

Another really fun episode today with Djkimmy and Steph the Fabulous trio and we'll be back with part two.

But remember the world is small, the house is full.

You got it, now, Cake, you've got nothing.

Nailed it. Totally screwed up. Next time, m hm.

How Rude, Tanneritos!

How Rude, Tanneritos! A Full House Rewatch Podcast is here!! Stephanie Tanner and Kimmy Gibbler are 
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