Hello.:-D
In Practical English Usage (Third Edition), on page 404, Michael Swan writes:
We often use object forms in double subjects in informal speech.
John and me are going skiing this weekend.
Me and the kids spent Sunday at the swimming pool.
Us is sometimes used as a subject together with a noun.
Us women understand these things better than you men.
And I is often used informally in double objects.
Between you and I, I think his marriage is in trouble.
That's a matter for Peter and I.
I often think of the old days and how you helped Bertie and I. (letter from Queen Elizabeth, wife of the future King George Ⅵ, to King Edward Ⅷ)
These structures are often condemned as 'incorrect', but they have been common in educated speech for centuries. (There are examples of me in double subjects in Jane Austen's novels, written around 1800.)
They are, however, restricted to a very informal style. They are not correct in formal speech or writing.
(I (=tzfujimino) underlined the last two sentences for emphasis.)
(Edit) Cross-posted with Roman.