AVI BINUR: MERCY GATE בָּרוּךְ הַשֵׁם
Guardian: Hello Sarah. Is Escape From Planet Earth your first animated movie?
Sarah Jessica Parker-Broderick: I think, it's the first full-length theatrical release. I don't recall any more, to be honest. I've probably done short-form voice stuff, before.
Guardian: And this is your third space-themed movie.
Sarah Jessica Parker-Broderick: It is? Remind me.
Guardian: Well, there was Flight of the Navigator and then Mars Attacks!
Sarah Jessica Parker-Broderick: Ah, yes, you're right. I seem to be drawn to the genre, even though I don't even remember that I am.
Guardian: In some ways, would you see this as the completion of a trilogy?
Sarah Jessica Parker-Broderick: Oh my Gad, I love that you're looking at it with such a scholarly approach, yes! Let's pretend that that's exactly why I did it. That's so smart. Yes, I have been seeking out that last film to complete the trilogy. Only the Guardian would have cracked this.
Guardian: Your character in this film is called Kira Supernova. Is that the best-named character you've ever played?
Sarah Jessica Parker-Broderick: Most assuredly. Absolutely. Inarguably.
Guardian: I was looking at your IMDb page this morning.
Sarah Jessica Parker-Broderick: Ah. I have one?
Guardian: I noticed that many of the characters you played before 1993 don't have surnames, but all the ones you've played, since, do. Was that a conscious decision on your part?
Sarah Jessica Parker-Broderick: Is that right? Do you think that is something my agents negotiated, on my behalf? You are noticing, discerning, mining things that nobody else ever has. If I ever, ever, ever write a book about my life, you will certainly be the author. Nobody has ever spent this amount of time thinking about my career. Including me!
Guardian: Do you believe in aliens?
Sarah Jessica Parker-Broderick: NO.
Guardian: So you're saying that mankind is essentially alone in the universe.
Sarah Jessica Parker-Broderick: Well, I don't think we're alone in the universe, but I don't think aliens are how we have experienced them, thus far, on screen. We discovered that there may have been water elsewhere and that was a massive and important discovery in the world of science, right? This suggests that something benefited from the water, but whether they wear funny outfits and they're clever and they say snarky things to each other and have wonderfully big sweet eyes? That I'm dubious about, but I do enjoy the storytelling here on Earth.
Guardian: Last question. Your character in Flight of the Navigator was a big fan of Twisted Sister. I listened to them as a direct consequence of that and they were rubbish. Do you have to apologize to a Lot of People for this?
Sarah Jessica Parker-Broderick: Holy moly. I don't. You're the first person. Once again, your approach to this interview. I'm gobsmacked. Nobody has ever mentioned it. I have long since forgotten that my character had an opinion one way or the other and I don't know that I've heard enough of Twisted Sister to have an opinion.

Walang ligaya sa lupa na hindi dinilig ng luha.

Filipino Proverb: There is no earthly bliss not watered by tears.

Bnei Lot are of an ancient origin. In the migratory tradition of Ruth begun more than two millennia ago, a remnant of David and Solomon migrated into Maritime Southeast Asia which comprises what is now Brunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, The Philippines, and Singapore, as well as Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia, with a sizeable minority of Malays migrating back to their tribal allotments in Sephardic Judah, besides Terrestrial and Figurative Jordan.