00:00.171 --> 00:01.852 [SPEAKER_11]: Hey guys, Paul here.
00:02.172 --> 00:03.313 [SPEAKER_11]: Come along and see us.
00:03.633 --> 00:04.193 [SPEAKER_04]: Let's go!
00:04.313 --> 00:06.635 [SPEAKER_04]: Michael Mera, Radio Entertainment.
00:08.055 --> 00:11.917 [SPEAKER_04]: You can listen to the Michael Mera Show at MichaelMeraShow.com.
00:12.037 --> 00:13.818 [SPEAKER_04]: Wow, what a happy year.
00:13.858 --> 00:14.939 [SPEAKER_09]: It's a podcast.
00:15.299 --> 00:16.460 [SPEAKER_09]: I want excitement.
00:16.520 --> 00:17.460 [SPEAKER_09]: We have today.
00:17.681 --> 00:22.783 [SPEAKER_04]: It's the Michael Mera Show with Michael Mera and Rob Spiewack.
00:23.284 --> 00:25.225 [SPEAKER_04]: Now here's Mike.
00:26.145 --> 00:27.847 [SPEAKER_02]: Greetings, citizenry.
00:28.047 --> 00:33.955 [SPEAKER_02]: Great to be with you on a Wednesday show of the Michael Merra Broadcast slash podcast.
00:34.015 --> 00:42.665 [SPEAKER_02]: We're happy to have you along today and it is very refreshing to have everything finished in the home studio with all the
00:43.446 --> 01:05.814 [SPEAKER_02]: glitches that I've suffered from haven't gotten a perfect yet uh... we have nothing it's not finished well we did that final quick i don't think that was a very successful experiment right before the show is rob likes to call it experiment but i didn't experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment experiment
01:06.674 --> 01:11.575 [SPEAKER_02]: We are very very happy to be joined by an author right at the front of the show today.
01:12.356 --> 01:22.718 [SPEAKER_02]: This gentleman's name is Joel Zuckerman, and he is written a book called Gratitude Tiger, creating joy through the art of impactful letters.
01:23.378 --> 01:25.279 [SPEAKER_02]: It's all about gratitude.
01:25.599 --> 01:33.440 [SPEAKER_02]: And before we start talking to Joel, I'm just going to share a story that just the other day, I'm on the golf course, and there's one of the older guys that plays with us.
01:34.241 --> 01:35.721 [SPEAKER_02]: And he's kind of a curmudgeon.
01:36.602 --> 01:50.853 [SPEAKER_02]: and I you know when I had that little hole in one they gave me a big pro shop credit so that's why I roll in and I remember the golf balls he plays and I bring him a dozen golf balls and he's sitting down there and I do kind of a Marilyn Monroe happy birthday
01:51.433 --> 01:53.294 [SPEAKER_02]: and put the golf balls down.
01:53.354 --> 01:54.355 [SPEAKER_02]: And I got the nicest.
01:54.435 --> 01:55.575 [SPEAKER_12]: Is it his birthday?
01:55.935 --> 01:58.076 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, was his birthday a few days ago.
01:58.316 --> 01:59.337 [SPEAKER_12]: I did not realize that.
01:59.377 --> 02:01.338 [SPEAKER_12]: I thought I got the nicest, no, it was stick.
02:01.858 --> 02:15.725 [SPEAKER_02]: And it made me, you know what a perfect timing that we're having this author on that's all about gratitude and it's a hell of an interesting concept and I kind of understand it.
02:16.005 --> 02:21.147 [SPEAKER_02]: which, you know, for a dummy like me is very, very rare to understand anything.
02:21.387 --> 02:24.129 [SPEAKER_02]: But let's welcome Joel to the show.
02:24.449 --> 02:25.149 [SPEAKER_02]: Joel Zuckerman.
02:25.169 --> 02:26.810 [SPEAKER_02]: Thanks for coming on the Michael Marisho.
02:26.850 --> 02:27.250 [SPEAKER_02]: How are you?
02:27.890 --> 02:28.391 [SPEAKER_06]: I'm Grace.
02:28.611 --> 02:29.531 [SPEAKER_06]: Thanks for having us.
02:29.711 --> 02:31.092 [SPEAKER_06]: I'm so grateful to be here.
02:31.557 --> 02:48.942 [SPEAKER_02]: I'm grateful to have you and I was grateful to you know read your bio and find out that you covered the golf for a very, very long time and you know we were talking about Scotty Sheffler yesterday and the fact that he's talked about how
02:49.882 --> 03:14.652 [SPEAKER_02]: the family comes first and he did so in a remarkably eloquent way and you know it sounds like he's really grateful for his wife and his family but not necessarily you know he said if if golf ever gets in the way of his life he will he sounds like he's got his priorities straight and this to me is something that I've been probably aware of
03:15.432 --> 03:19.437 [SPEAKER_02]: for a very long time because of my mom, but where did you go from?
03:19.457 --> 03:23.061 [SPEAKER_02]: It wasn't like you were a beat reporter.
03:23.101 --> 03:24.483 [SPEAKER_02]: You wrote books about golf.
03:24.523 --> 03:26.065 [SPEAKER_02]: You wrote articles about golf.
03:27.386 --> 03:31.611 [SPEAKER_02]: And when did you make the pivot and start thinking about this?
03:31.691 --> 03:34.775 [SPEAKER_02]: Was it writing gratitude letters in your private life?
03:34.855 --> 03:35.716 [SPEAKER_02]: Is that how it started?
03:36.435 --> 03:39.716 [SPEAKER_06]: Scott is grateful he's made about a hundred mill and five years, too.
03:40.176 --> 03:41.536 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, absolutely.
03:41.696 --> 03:42.956 [SPEAKER_06]: Yeah, very grateful.
03:43.357 --> 03:45.837 [SPEAKER_02]: So, how did you start?
03:45.857 --> 03:49.238 [SPEAKER_02]: Have you always been aware of this concept or where did this are?
03:49.418 --> 03:53.439 [SPEAKER_02]: Because it's a very unusual subject to write about.
03:53.459 --> 03:57.020 [SPEAKER_06]: You have a copy of gratitude, Tiger, if you do, Reethy.
03:57.100 --> 04:00.320 [SPEAKER_02]: I wouldn't have been grateful if your publicist got that to make.
04:00.520 --> 04:03.201 [SPEAKER_06]: The first chapter in the book is called The Metamorphosis.
04:04.021 --> 04:10.791 [SPEAKER_06]: And the first sentence of the book beyond the forward is, I used to be a very busy golf in travel writer.
04:11.332 --> 04:14.556 [SPEAKER_06]: I was also something of an ingrate, but more on that in a little bit.
04:15.057 --> 04:19.603 [SPEAKER_06]: And it's all the story about how I looked into this life as a traveling
04:20.264 --> 04:20.705 [SPEAKER_06]: You're right.
04:20.965 --> 04:21.786 [SPEAKER_06]: You're right.
04:22.006 --> 04:23.708 [SPEAKER_06]: Like I was not a beat reporter.
04:23.748 --> 04:29.975 [SPEAKER_06]: I did not write about Tigers cutting a six iron into twelve feet to make birdie on the seven.
04:30.335 --> 04:39.244 [SPEAKER_06]: I wrote about resort spas, history, player profiles for a wide range of magazines and I wrote a lot of books as you mentioned.
04:40.245 --> 04:54.520 [SPEAKER_06]: and in twenty thirteen i picked up one of the most famous self-help books that we've all heard of don't sweat the small stuff and it's all small stuff and one of the chapters said right a heartfelt letter
04:55.393 --> 05:08.837 [SPEAKER_06]: So I was a busy writer in twenty thirteen doing auto biographer auto biographer fee stuff and memoirs and travel logs and books and I said I can write a heartfelt letter.
05:09.497 --> 05:12.498 [SPEAKER_06]: So I sat down and wrote a letter to a colleague in the golf industry.
05:13.399 --> 05:15.139 [SPEAKER_06]: As I wrote the letter, it never occurred to me.
05:15.179 --> 05:16.259 [SPEAKER_06]: I would write a second letter.
05:16.399 --> 05:18.000 [SPEAKER_06]: I was just an intellectual exercise.
05:18.817 --> 05:22.598 [SPEAKER_06]: But when I put it in the mail, I got his address, I texted him for his address.
05:22.918 --> 05:31.081 [SPEAKER_06]: And I put it in the mail, I was overcome with a feeling of warmth and connectivity that I wasn't expecting.
05:31.601 --> 05:33.622 [SPEAKER_06]: I felt like I'm really connecting with this person.
05:33.942 --> 05:40.644 [SPEAKER_06]: He's going to be so thrilled to realize that I have deep feelings for him that I'm grateful to him for what he's done for my career.
05:41.225 --> 05:43.505 [SPEAKER_06]: I found that feeling to be intoxicating.
05:43.986 --> 05:47.907 [SPEAKER_06]: And now, twelve years later, I've written more than two hundred and eighty-five letters.
05:48.779 --> 05:57.760 [SPEAKER_02]: and they all uh... i would imagine have varying degrees of uh... what you talk about that adrenaline rush when you do this but i mean who doesn't
05:58.782 --> 06:02.103 [SPEAKER_02]: feel wonderful when they reach out to somebody.
06:02.163 --> 06:07.864 [SPEAKER_02]: It's not always easy to do to tell them how much, you know, in a way, you can call it gratitude.
06:07.984 --> 06:12.825 [SPEAKER_02]: I call it telling somebody how much they or what they've done means to you.
06:13.485 --> 06:18.206 [SPEAKER_02]: It's not easy to do and I've experienced it and I completely agree with it.
06:18.366 --> 06:21.746 [SPEAKER_02]: It is an enormously satisfying experience to do that.
06:21.766 --> 06:22.627 [SPEAKER_06]: Why isn't it easy?
06:22.687 --> 06:24.047 [SPEAKER_06]: Tell me why doesn't it easy to do?
06:25.059 --> 06:36.704 [SPEAKER_02]: I think sometimes I guard against doing something like that and I can separate it into my personal life and my professional life.
06:37.224 --> 06:44.327 [SPEAKER_02]: In my professional life and this might, I welcome your thoughts on this because I'm being completely honest when I say, I would worry
06:45.467 --> 06:52.213 [SPEAKER_02]: that by reaching out to somebody as somebody who has his philosophy on hats that we sell and called don't get happy.
06:52.853 --> 07:08.106 [SPEAKER_02]: I would worry that if I I have always had this fear this is the gods honest truth that if I write that reach out to a coworker and say something like well done you're really doing a fantastic job you mean a lot to me that the next day
07:08.887 --> 07:23.147 [SPEAKER_02]: they are going to part my expressions the bed and all hell is gonna break loose and they're eventually going to bail on me and to be fair Mike first you would have to work with someone that you're impressed with
07:24.248 --> 07:25.509 [SPEAKER_02]: Rob, I've written you.
07:25.529 --> 07:26.690 [SPEAKER_02]: I know you have.
07:26.750 --> 07:27.911 [SPEAKER_02]: I'm getting your hard time.
07:28.011 --> 07:29.853 [SPEAKER_02]: I have been yours early as last week.
07:29.973 --> 07:30.393 [SPEAKER_02]: I did.
07:30.493 --> 07:32.915 [SPEAKER_02]: But that's the, that's when I say it's tough to do.
07:33.055 --> 07:34.076 [SPEAKER_02]: I have that in my head.
07:34.096 --> 07:38.479 [SPEAKER_02]: And then it's years of analysis.
07:38.619 --> 07:46.325 [SPEAKER_02]: It's years of psychotherapy that, you know, putting yourself, I feel like you're putting yourself out there, Joel, in a way that maybe you can get hurt.
07:46.765 --> 07:47.927 [SPEAKER_06]: Man, one thing.
07:48.327 --> 07:48.868 [SPEAKER_06]: Let him answer.
07:48.928 --> 07:50.029 [SPEAKER_02]: Let him answer.
07:50.369 --> 07:53.053 [SPEAKER_06]: But I do want to hear your opinion also, Rob.
07:54.294 --> 07:55.255 [SPEAKER_06]: I don't have heard that.
07:56.136 --> 07:57.798 [SPEAKER_06]: Well, I've never met either of you.
07:57.898 --> 08:02.363 [SPEAKER_02]: So we just have fun like that on the day yesterday.
08:02.424 --> 08:04.366 [SPEAKER_02]: Yesterday he wished I had a heart attack.
08:07.865 --> 08:09.165 [SPEAKER_02]: Welcome to our world, John.
08:09.185 --> 08:10.786 [SPEAKER_11]: But I'm grateful I did not.
08:11.226 --> 08:13.386 [SPEAKER_11]: Please be proud of two discussions.
08:13.446 --> 08:17.987 [SPEAKER_11]: It's supposed to be very serious guys.
08:18.527 --> 08:19.087 [SPEAKER_06]: Not here.
08:19.107 --> 08:20.648 [SPEAKER_02]: Not here.
08:20.968 --> 08:21.708 [SPEAKER_02]: All right.
08:21.728 --> 08:23.088 [SPEAKER_06]: Let me make, let me make this point.
08:23.508 --> 08:23.968 [SPEAKER_02]: Please do.
08:24.248 --> 08:27.809 [SPEAKER_06]: That is a fear of some people.
08:27.909 --> 08:31.450 [SPEAKER_06]: Many people you included, the vulnerability.
08:32.523 --> 08:34.784 [SPEAKER_06]: putting your heart on your sleeve.
08:35.284 --> 08:37.465 [SPEAKER_06]: So my message, right?
08:37.565 --> 08:45.768 [SPEAKER_06]: I'm a very unique character because first of all, as you learn, as we speak, I never will run out of anything to say.
08:46.368 --> 08:47.788 [SPEAKER_06]: I'm very gregarious.
08:48.328 --> 08:49.509 [SPEAKER_06]: I'm very effusive.
08:49.989 --> 08:54.791 [SPEAKER_06]: I'm a professional writer, and I've never, I don't want to jinx myself, suffered from writer's block.
08:55.431 --> 09:01.553 [SPEAKER_06]: And most importantly, most germane for this part of our conversation, I'm not afraid to show my feelings.
09:02.288 --> 09:02.668 [SPEAKER_06]: Okay?
09:03.249 --> 09:12.396 [SPEAKER_06]: If I think highly of you, if I love you, if I like you, if I adore you, if you've shown me a service, a kindness, done something for me.
09:12.857 --> 09:16.279 [SPEAKER_06]: I'm happy to share my thoughts with you.
09:16.960 --> 09:25.127 [SPEAKER_06]: And the number one reason why I wrote the book, why I speak professionally, there's, it all distills down to a single sentence.
09:25.767 --> 09:31.292 [SPEAKER_06]: Writing letters of gratitude makes you the writer feel good.
09:32.459 --> 09:34.360 [SPEAKER_06]: You're your joy.
09:34.860 --> 09:47.987 [SPEAKER_06]: So when you wrote to your colleague, a note or an email, he might have been flattered and humbled and delighted to hear from you, but didn't you feel a sense of elation when you shared your good feelings with him?
09:48.107 --> 09:48.868 [SPEAKER_02]: One hundred percent.
09:49.288 --> 09:51.669 [SPEAKER_02]: Absolutely true.
09:51.969 --> 10:00.214 [SPEAKER_06]: So there's a chapter in the new book and my keynote is called the Seven Pillars of Expressive gratitude and pillar number one.
10:01.398 --> 10:02.799 [SPEAKER_06]: is number one for a reason.
10:03.339 --> 10:08.542 [SPEAKER_06]: Writing letters of gratitude makes you the letter writer feel good.
10:08.963 --> 10:11.084 [SPEAKER_06]: Pillar number two is painfully obvious.
10:11.444 --> 10:13.065 [SPEAKER_06]: It makes the recipient feel good.
10:13.325 --> 10:15.186 [SPEAKER_06]: But that's why it's pillar number two.
10:16.367 --> 10:17.588 [SPEAKER_06]: I'm not mother Teresa.
10:17.968 --> 10:19.569 [SPEAKER_06]: I'm not Nelson Mandela.
10:20.450 --> 10:24.992 [SPEAKER_06]: I write these letters hundreds because it makes me feel good.
10:25.312 --> 10:30.896 [SPEAKER_06]: And that's the gist of everything I write and everything I speak about on a professional stage.
10:31.712 --> 10:40.117 [SPEAKER_02]: One of the reasons we're speaking with Joel Zuckerman and the book is gratitude, Tiger, creating joy through the art of impactful letters.
10:40.377 --> 10:59.448 [SPEAKER_02]: And one of the reasons when Josh told me about possibly having you on the show was in this time that we're living in right now, I think it's more important than ever to return to some sense of human interaction that's not
11:00.048 --> 11:03.789 [SPEAKER_02]: yelling at each other or insulting each other or attacking one another.
11:04.209 --> 11:15.033 [SPEAKER_02]: I think the timing of this book in twenty twenty five is magnificent to do that in your absolutely right it makes you feel so much better when when you do that.
11:15.713 --> 11:22.238 [SPEAKER_02]: And I, the, has anyone said to you, but you said yes, Texer, okay.
11:22.518 --> 11:25.600 [SPEAKER_02]: Because when you think of letter writing, I think of old school.
11:25.620 --> 11:29.562 [SPEAKER_02]: I think of my grandfather and my father, where it was all letters.
11:30.123 --> 11:34.786 [SPEAKER_02]: And, and you would, you know, because that was a, a kinder, gentle little time.
11:34.826 --> 11:36.567 [SPEAKER_02]: It really was in a certain way.
11:37.248 --> 11:43.612 [SPEAKER_02]: But, you know, when you say impactful letters, do people get hung up on that concept when they're talking to you?
11:44.058 --> 11:44.538 [SPEAKER_06]: a little bit.
11:44.558 --> 11:48.560 [SPEAKER_06]: I've got plenty to say about that, but your colleague wanted to chime in with a question.
11:48.600 --> 11:51.061 [SPEAKER_06]: I don't want to shut him up.
11:51.441 --> 11:56.424 [SPEAKER_02]: It's funny that my friend, we're talking with Joel Zuckerman, producer of the Michael Marish show.
11:57.364 --> 11:59.265 [SPEAKER_02]: But now go ahead, Rob, here.
11:59.345 --> 12:00.886 [SPEAKER_02]: Joel wants to hear from you.
12:00.906 --> 12:01.986 [SPEAKER_12]: This is bad.
12:02.226 --> 12:02.966 [SPEAKER_12]: No, you mustn't.
12:03.087 --> 12:03.587 [SPEAKER_12]: You mustn't.
12:04.027 --> 12:06.048 [SPEAKER_12]: This is actually a question.
12:06.148 --> 12:09.149 [SPEAKER_12]: It actually goes well with Mike's thing in his question.
12:09.589 --> 12:10.250 [SPEAKER_12]: I'm curious.
12:10.950 --> 12:19.052 [SPEAKER_12]: You know, if you think about the impactful letters and the note of the idea of even just a thank you note arriving in the mail, that's being the only way to do it.
12:19.412 --> 12:37.235 [SPEAKER_12]: Do you think that email and more importantly texting has diminished the sincerity of reaching out because you can dash off a text in ten seconds and it doesn't involve a stamp and it doesn't involve writing, doesn't involve going to the post office, has that changed the game a little bit.
12:38.099 --> 12:43.867 [SPEAKER_06]: It has changed the game tremendously, and what I will say to that I'll be succinct, which is not a word that most people associate with me.
12:44.608 --> 12:45.990 [SPEAKER_06]: Make it quick and easy.
12:46.912 --> 12:49.155 [SPEAKER_06]: Receiving a letter of gratitude in the mail.
12:49.789 --> 12:51.671 [SPEAKER_06]: is almost ceremonial.
12:53.092 --> 13:10.345 [SPEAKER_06]: I don't want to say formality because many of my letters are freewheeling, streams of consciousness, very snarky, funny, high spirited, but it shows a degree of effort that you really want to tell someone you're grateful to them.
13:10.785 --> 13:15.766 [SPEAKER_06]: that is way beyond a text and emoji a gift and email a TikTok.
13:16.126 --> 13:20.907 [SPEAKER_06]: And yes, does it take more effort to find someone's address and go to the mailbox?
13:21.348 --> 13:22.228 [SPEAKER_06]: Of course it does.
13:22.808 --> 13:25.088 [SPEAKER_06]: That's why it's more impactful.
13:25.488 --> 13:35.911 [SPEAKER_06]: That's why my two hundred and eighty-five efforts thus far are letters of gratitude, not gifts of gratitude, not emojis of gratitude.
13:36.431 --> 13:40.152 [SPEAKER_06]: And call me old school, I think my message
13:41.232 --> 13:49.115 [SPEAKER_06]: It doesn't resonate with thirty somethings unless they were raised a certain way, right?
13:49.155 --> 13:54.876 [SPEAKER_06]: If you were raised by parents who insisted you write a thank you note, like you guys might have been.
13:55.196 --> 13:56.917 [SPEAKER_06]: Yeah, I certainly was.
13:58.678 --> 14:10.202 [SPEAKER_02]: So you're not trying to change the world here, but it's certainly an exercise that I think even the, you know, Gen X millennials, everybody like that would probably do well in doing.
14:10.262 --> 14:14.344 [SPEAKER_02]: I mean, I come from an era where letters were kind of a thing in my family.
14:14.424 --> 14:18.205 [SPEAKER_02]: And I still think, thank you notes are part of my family.
14:19.566 --> 14:22.647 [SPEAKER_02]: Not from me necessarily, but
14:23.327 --> 14:26.528 [SPEAKER_12]: Don't you get a lot of them because they're thankful that you're in the family?
14:26.748 --> 14:27.989 [SPEAKER_02]: I get them constantly, right?
14:28.009 --> 14:28.669 [SPEAKER_02]: Of course you do.
14:28.729 --> 14:34.512 [SPEAKER_02]: Does people sharing how grateful they are with me, with all of that?
14:35.532 --> 14:50.178 [SPEAKER_02]: Do you think that, I mean, I think if you allow the text so, and even that, if it's an email that's well composed, I think that that is not exactly a lack of effort,
14:51.258 --> 14:53.479 [SPEAKER_02]: That's still the thought the counts, right?
14:53.559 --> 14:54.779 [SPEAKER_06]: And you're right.
14:54.799 --> 14:59.861 [SPEAKER_06]: And you know, I mentioned the first chapter in the book is called, the book is called Gratitude Tiger.
15:00.961 --> 15:08.924 [SPEAKER_06]: The first chapter is called The Metamorphosis, and it explains how I went from this prolific golf writing to what I now do.
15:09.364 --> 15:15.406 [SPEAKER_06]: And the last chapter of the book, Mike, is called Finishing this text with a word about texts.
15:16.246 --> 15:21.949 [SPEAKER_06]: And in that chapter, I detailed the fact that my father taught me as a young age.
15:21.969 --> 15:24.571 [SPEAKER_06]: My father was fifty-four when I was born.
15:25.171 --> 15:31.994 [SPEAKER_06]: So by the time I was ready to listen to any coherent advice, he was getting old, he was pushed in seventy.
15:32.014 --> 15:40.179 [SPEAKER_06]: And I remember him telling me, if someone asks you a favor and you can do it without tremendous effort,
15:41.052 --> 15:45.937 [SPEAKER_06]: You should always do someone a favor and that's how I consider texting.
15:46.697 --> 15:48.919 [SPEAKER_06]: You can always reach out to someone.
15:49.940 --> 15:54.645 [SPEAKER_06]: As Rob said, it only takes ten seconds and it has a dual effect.
15:55.365 --> 15:57.928 [SPEAKER_06]: One, they are now forced to think of you.
15:59.518 --> 16:04.561 [SPEAKER_06]: They're busy at work or they're watching soap operas or whatever they're doing and a text comes in.
16:04.982 --> 16:09.024 [SPEAKER_06]: Now you have crossed their mind whether they wanted you to or not.
16:09.564 --> 16:09.925 [SPEAKER_02]: That is.
16:10.545 --> 16:12.466 [SPEAKER_06]: And you're offering bill.
16:12.506 --> 16:13.226 [SPEAKER_06]: What's happening?
16:13.246 --> 16:14.167 [SPEAKER_06]: It's been a long time.
16:14.227 --> 16:15.968 [SPEAKER_06]: I hope you and Jane are doing okay.
16:16.388 --> 16:16.709 [SPEAKER_06]: Boom.
16:17.049 --> 16:17.949 [SPEAKER_06]: End of the end of it.
16:18.349 --> 16:18.610 [SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
16:18.650 --> 16:20.111 [SPEAKER_06]: Just a way of staying in touch.
16:20.131 --> 16:24.793 [SPEAKER_06]: So there's a tremendous efficacy in texting.
16:25.153 --> 16:25.774 [SPEAKER_06]: It's great.
16:26.274 --> 16:33.540 [SPEAKER_06]: But letters of gratitude are the gold standard for feeling good about yourself.
16:34.041 --> 16:35.362 [SPEAKER_02]: I have to touch on something.
16:35.382 --> 16:43.829 [SPEAKER_02]: I have to touch on something quickly because you mentioned your dad was a fifty four when you were born and I'm an older father and I think
16:44.169 --> 16:45.390 [SPEAKER_02]: I think we match up with that.
16:45.510 --> 16:46.711 [SPEAKER_02]: I think I'm almost spot on.
16:46.771 --> 16:48.413 [SPEAKER_02]: I'm sixty six my son is twelve.
16:48.573 --> 16:48.853 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
16:49.213 --> 16:52.897 [SPEAKER_02]: And I just thank you very much Rob.
16:53.217 --> 16:54.018 [SPEAKER_02]: What was that Josh?
16:54.098 --> 16:55.219 [SPEAKER_02]: I'm not sure.
16:55.619 --> 16:58.521 [SPEAKER_02]: Joel, I have to ask you this question.
16:59.182 --> 17:00.103 [SPEAKER_02]: How does it feel?
17:00.423 --> 17:01.204 [SPEAKER_02]: What are your thoughts?
17:01.504 --> 17:04.386 [SPEAKER_02]: I just have to get that from you besides talking about the book.
17:04.727 --> 17:08.150 [SPEAKER_02]: What are your thoughts about being raised by an older dad?
17:08.170 --> 17:09.731 [SPEAKER_02]: Because I'm fascinated by that.
17:10.331 --> 17:10.512 [SPEAKER_06]: No.
17:11.592 --> 17:14.793 [SPEAKER_06]: I don't think I should tell you, why don't you mute your thing and I'll tell the other.
17:14.933 --> 17:15.534 [SPEAKER_06]: Okay.
17:15.674 --> 17:15.954 [SPEAKER_12]: All right.
17:15.994 --> 17:16.414 [SPEAKER_06]: Go away.
17:16.454 --> 17:17.514 [SPEAKER_12]: He's got elephant scan.
17:17.554 --> 17:18.195 [SPEAKER_12]: He can do this.
17:18.335 --> 17:19.975 [SPEAKER_12]: I can handle anything.
17:20.175 --> 17:21.076 [SPEAKER_06]: Let me put it this way.
17:21.216 --> 17:25.217 [SPEAKER_06]: In another book, one of my books earlier, I could just see the phrase that I wrote.
17:26.038 --> 17:28.999 [SPEAKER_06]: I was glad that we had our kids young.
17:29.819 --> 17:30.140 [SPEAKER_06]: Okay.
17:30.160 --> 17:33.103 [SPEAKER_06]: I think I was twenty-eight and thirty-one or give a take.
17:33.584 --> 17:33.824 [SPEAKER_02]: Right.
17:34.745 --> 17:37.488 [SPEAKER_06]: Because my dad, he did the best he could.
17:37.528 --> 17:38.649 [SPEAKER_06]: He was Eastern European.
17:39.110 --> 17:39.330 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay.
17:39.350 --> 17:40.672 [SPEAKER_06]: He never wore a baseball glove.
17:41.533 --> 17:50.003 [SPEAKER_06]: When we would play baseball on the backyard, he would stop the baseball on a short hop with the soul of his hard business show.
17:52.847 --> 18:01.572 [SPEAKER_02]: I can't that's having a baseball player my little guy I can relate to that It was not exactly field of dreams
18:03.925 --> 18:08.986 [SPEAKER_06]: If you had walked into my back, you would walk into my backyard in nineteen seventy two.
18:09.006 --> 18:13.148 [SPEAKER_06]: You would have said, what what is happening here?
18:13.648 --> 18:15.728 [SPEAKER_06]: It's too funny.
18:16.328 --> 18:16.628 [SPEAKER_03]: Okay.
18:16.709 --> 18:18.929 [SPEAKER_06]: Anyway, my father was a wonderful man.
18:19.009 --> 18:19.989 [SPEAKER_06]: He was wise.
18:20.129 --> 18:28.132 [SPEAKER_06]: He was mellowed by the difficulties of his childhood in pre world war one rush hour.
18:28.312 --> 18:28.792 [SPEAKER_06]: And he was
18:29.892 --> 18:38.458 [SPEAKER_06]: impactful and imparted a lot of wisdom, but the problem was he started to deteriorate when I was getting into high school.
18:39.119 --> 18:48.505 [SPEAKER_06]: Because he's suffering, you know, that health effects that many men of our age or close to our age, and certainly, thirty, forty years ago, started to suffer.
18:48.725 --> 18:49.786 [SPEAKER_06]: Yeah, absolutely great.
18:49.866 --> 18:50.887 [SPEAKER_06]: Great dad.
18:51.108 --> 18:53.029 [SPEAKER_06]: He was great to me and I love him.
18:53.070 --> 18:54.611 [SPEAKER_06]: He's been gone a long time.
18:55.112 --> 19:00.077 [SPEAKER_06]: He died when I was thirty, but I'm sure you seem like a great guy.
19:00.097 --> 19:04.982 [SPEAKER_06]: I'm sure your son will have tremendous memories with you and hopefully for many, many years to come.
19:05.552 --> 19:06.052 [SPEAKER_02]: I hope so.
19:06.712 --> 19:15.034 [SPEAKER_02]: You know, the golf writing did you it seems to me that in the world of golf as it relates to gratitude and your book.
19:15.675 --> 19:25.277 [SPEAKER_02]: I think what I see just observing and you've covered the game but you've also covered resorts and stuff you've been around I would imagine your share of entitlement with people.
19:25.977 --> 19:31.260 [SPEAKER_02]: people that, you know, feel as though the world, it should be deferential to them.
19:31.280 --> 19:36.444 [SPEAKER_02]: I see a lot of lack of gratitude in that world.
19:36.524 --> 19:44.028 [SPEAKER_02]: Did that have anything to do with moving in this direction in your life and in your writing?
19:44.929 --> 19:45.889 [SPEAKER_02]: It's a good question.
19:45.909 --> 19:48.311 [SPEAKER_06]: I would say, Tan, gently, it's related.
19:49.191 --> 19:51.293 [SPEAKER_06]: I felt, in the opening, the opening
19:52.153 --> 20:02.190 [SPEAKER_06]: chapter of my new book, I talk about how I fell into this fairy tale life of flying around the world on other people's dimes, golf writers are fond of saying
20:02.705 --> 20:04.666 [SPEAKER_06]: we only reach to our pocket for keys.
20:06.868 --> 20:13.412 [SPEAKER_06]: So I would fly, wherever they would send me, and if the flight was too early, I'd be ticked off.
20:13.812 --> 20:19.656 [SPEAKER_06]: If I had to push my rolling coffin of a travel bag through two miles of an airport terminal, it was annoying.
20:20.537 --> 20:22.939 [SPEAKER_06]: We had this entitlement of
20:23.659 --> 20:27.341 [SPEAKER_06]: We go into resorts if it was a press trip with six or ten writers.
20:27.721 --> 20:29.762 [SPEAKER_06]: You'd walk into the place like rock stars.
20:30.182 --> 20:33.384 [SPEAKER_06]: You didn't have the talent, the fame, the money, or the groupies.
20:34.124 --> 20:37.245 [SPEAKER_06]: Just the sense that what can you do for me?
20:37.986 --> 20:39.506 [SPEAKER_06]: And I look back at that now.
20:39.907 --> 20:44.069 [SPEAKER_06]: It's five to ten years in my past and it started at the turn of the century.
20:44.429 --> 20:49.131 [SPEAKER_06]: So I started getting invited out on this magical mystery tour about twenty-five years ago.
20:49.531 --> 20:51.072 [SPEAKER_06]: And it lasted for twenty-plus years.
20:51.492 --> 20:56.780 [SPEAKER_06]: And I got to the point in my career, Mike, where I didn't even need to be invited, I could just call or resort.
20:57.801 --> 20:59.403 [SPEAKER_06]: And ask them to Google me.
20:59.924 --> 21:01.266 [SPEAKER_06]: And that's a coffee bag.
21:01.326 --> 21:02.708 [SPEAKER_06]: Oh, please, would you come?
21:02.748 --> 21:04.150 [SPEAKER_06]: Could you come for the weekend?
21:04.190 --> 21:05.151 [SPEAKER_06]: Can I bring my family?
21:05.532 --> 21:06.112 [SPEAKER_06]: Of course.
21:06.733 --> 21:08.315 [SPEAKER_02]: Wow, wow, good gig.
21:08.636 --> 21:10.218 [SPEAKER_06]: It was, you know, that's what we used to say.
21:10.398 --> 21:11.900 [SPEAKER_06]: Good work if you can get it.
21:12.301 --> 21:12.681 [SPEAKER_02]: Sure.
21:13.182 --> 21:14.243 [SPEAKER_06]: Absolutely.
21:14.283 --> 21:16.146 [SPEAKER_06]: You asked a very profound question.
21:16.807 --> 21:20.011 [SPEAKER_06]: Was my entitled life for all those years?
21:20.031 --> 21:23.455 [SPEAKER_06]: Is what I do now a reverberating effect?
21:24.236 --> 21:27.318 [SPEAKER_06]: on what I was like in two thousand and five and two thousand and ten.
21:27.678 --> 21:29.039 [SPEAKER_06]: I've never thought of it that way.
21:29.059 --> 21:30.560 [SPEAKER_06]: I don't think so.
21:31.080 --> 21:44.029 [SPEAKER_06]: I just find such pleasure in writing letters of gratitude and all I'm trying to do when I speak in my new book is to tell people right a letter to someone who you have gratitude to.
21:44.589 --> 21:46.370 [SPEAKER_06]: You will feel tremendous.
21:46.730 --> 21:48.912 [SPEAKER_06]: What they feel is collateral joy.
21:50.128 --> 21:56.038 [SPEAKER_06]: You write it for yourself and the collateral joy that the subject experiences, that's just gravy.
21:56.715 --> 21:57.075 [SPEAKER_02]: I love it.
21:57.275 --> 21:58.096 [SPEAKER_02]: I think that's great.
21:58.836 --> 22:01.657 [SPEAKER_02]: Joel, we appreciate you taking a time to join us today.
22:02.637 --> 22:08.419 [SPEAKER_02]: I think this is the kind of thing that will motivate people to get out there and do it.
22:08.479 --> 22:13.361 [SPEAKER_02]: And there's so many people that we all have in our lives that we probably should pay attention to.
22:13.661 --> 22:18.343 [SPEAKER_02]: And that, as you said, it's a selfish exercise in a way because you feel so good when you do it.
22:18.523 --> 22:18.983 [SPEAKER_06]: Absolutely.
22:19.003 --> 22:20.964 [SPEAKER_06]: And let me share one quick thought with you.
22:20.984 --> 22:21.224 [SPEAKER_02]: Sure.
22:21.324 --> 22:21.844 [SPEAKER_06]: If I may.
22:23.065 --> 22:35.794 [SPEAKER_06]: When I speak about five minutes, seven minutes into a presentation, I ask the audience, think of two people to whom you're grateful to, one that's with you, and one sadly, no longer with you.
22:36.714 --> 22:41.998 [SPEAKER_06]: And then I'll tell them, after it's a reflex of response, everyone immediately thinks of two people.
22:42.575 --> 22:46.998 [SPEAKER_06]: And then I'll say it is too late to reach the person no longer with you.
22:47.639 --> 23:03.191 [SPEAKER_06]: So don't hesitate right that letter of gratitude today or tomorrow to the person who's still with you because as Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, you can never do a kindness to soon because you never know how soon it will be too late.
23:03.993 --> 23:05.034 [SPEAKER_02]: Man, I love it.
23:05.214 --> 23:06.856 [SPEAKER_02]: That is wonderful.
23:07.216 --> 23:11.680 [SPEAKER_02]: You know, not only can you put pen on paper, but you're really a great guy to talk to.
23:11.920 --> 23:13.562 [SPEAKER_02]: And I'd love to have you on again.
23:13.582 --> 23:16.765 [SPEAKER_02]: It was really a joy and really good luck with this book.
23:16.845 --> 23:18.927 [SPEAKER_02]: I think it's a wonderful concept.
23:19.387 --> 23:20.528 [SPEAKER_02]: God, do we need it today?
23:20.708 --> 23:22.249 [SPEAKER_02]: More than we've ever been here.
23:22.570 --> 23:25.633 [SPEAKER_06]: I'll reach out to Josh and see if you guys can have me back around.
23:26.053 --> 23:26.954 [SPEAKER_06]: Thanks, giving time.
23:27.414 --> 23:28.734 [SPEAKER_02]: There we go.
23:28.894 --> 23:42.338 [SPEAKER_02]: I got gratitude gratitude Tiger creating joy through the art of impactful a letters by a Joel Zuckerman and You know, look for Joel when he's speaking at a convention or somewhere near you because he does a lot of that as well.
23:42.719 --> 23:43.839 [SPEAKER_02]: Obviously he's good at it.
23:44.159 --> 23:44.819 [SPEAKER_02]: Thank you Joel.
23:44.839 --> 23:47.360 [SPEAKER_10]: I'm a son with a oh, that's right over that.
23:47.420 --> 23:47.820 [SPEAKER_10]: I'm a son.
23:48.220 --> 23:51.241 [SPEAKER_02]: Oh, that tree get it and go grab a copy of it
23:51.321 --> 23:53.061 [SPEAKER_06]: We're ever, we're, we're fine books are sold.
23:53.461 --> 23:54.162 [SPEAKER_06]: Thank you, Joel.
23:54.222 --> 23:55.222 [SPEAKER_02]: We appreciate you all.
23:55.242 --> 23:56.922 [SPEAKER_02]: Thank you very much for coming on the show.
23:56.962 --> 23:57.742 [SPEAKER_02]: We appreciate it.
23:57.902 --> 23:58.683 [SPEAKER_02]: We grateful.
23:59.303 --> 23:59.723 [SPEAKER_06]: That's great.
23:59.743 --> 24:00.723 [SPEAKER_06]: We'll talk to you later.
24:00.743 --> 24:00.923 [SPEAKER_06]: Bye.
24:00.963 --> 24:01.603 [SPEAKER_02]: There you go.
24:01.663 --> 24:03.364 [SPEAKER_02]: That's Joel Zuckerman, everybody.
24:03.864 --> 24:08.485 [SPEAKER_02]: I mean, as he's talking, I'm thinking about who I can fire off a letter to.
24:08.705 --> 24:12.886 [SPEAKER_12]: You know, ever, ever, a letter, whatever a letter, writer, Mike.
24:13.734 --> 24:15.055 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, go back in the day.
24:15.335 --> 24:33.026 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I mean back in the day I was I would you know do it do it occasionally and you know it's and I know he's he's saying the real exercises to write a letter, but I also you know something as simple as first thing this morning just having my sister
24:33.666 --> 24:53.459 [SPEAKER_02]: reach out to me and saying she was thinking about us and that you know for three years it's been since I've been up to that that part of the world to see my family and so I immediately responded and that's texting but it's still communicating and I think texting in a way when you're doing that kind of communicating
24:54.159 --> 24:59.242 [SPEAKER_02]: can be more impactful than just trying to arrange a business meeting.
24:59.282 --> 25:05.605 [SPEAKER_02]: Like when we're going back and forth, five hundred times, we're about show business with, and I don't mean show business.
25:05.645 --> 25:07.926 [SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, you're complaining about the Kardashians.
25:09.126 --> 25:14.149 [SPEAKER_02]: When we go back and forth about the details on this broadcast, it gets tedious for me.
25:14.189 --> 25:15.870 [SPEAKER_02]: And I'd rather talk to people doing that.
25:16.210 --> 25:18.371 [SPEAKER_02]: But to say, thank you, blah, blah, blah.
25:18.871 --> 25:20.112 [SPEAKER_02]: You know, that makes me feel better.
25:20.332 --> 25:28.597 [SPEAKER_12]: And also I love his notion that if nothing else a text lets them know that you're thinking of them and it forces them to think about you.
25:29.778 --> 25:33.380 [SPEAKER_12]: You don't even think about it at that granular level, but it's very true.
25:33.620 --> 25:35.141 [SPEAKER_12]: So it's a nice that he does that.
25:35.161 --> 25:48.870 [SPEAKER_02]: I think gratitude is, you know, because I do exist out in that kind of country club world and that that golfer's world, I have a little thing that I notice
25:49.610 --> 26:05.621 [SPEAKER_02]: that I've noticed for my whole life, and I had nobody told me about it, nobody told me to do this, but it will be somebody who's in a restaurant, somebody who's in a club, somebody's behind the counter that will drop off like a plate of food or a beer or something like that.
26:06.722 --> 26:08.722 [SPEAKER_02]: There are people that don't ever even say thank you.
26:08.802 --> 26:13.083 [SPEAKER_02]: The don't even acknowledge the person like it's, you know, and it all drives me nuts.
26:13.303 --> 26:14.064 [SPEAKER_02]: It's drives me nuts.
26:14.084 --> 26:15.064 [SPEAKER_02]: It's in my crawl.
26:16.384 --> 26:21.105 [SPEAKER_02]: And you know, and then I've been around other people that took a little further and will always get a name of somebody.
26:21.185 --> 26:33.128 [SPEAKER_02]: And I think some people that are in the service business consider that a little disingenuous, but it's better than if they have a name tag, I always try to call them by their name.
26:33.648 --> 26:35.629 [SPEAKER_12]: because it just makes it more human interaction.
26:35.769 --> 26:36.569 [SPEAKER_02]: John, you're funny.
26:36.609 --> 26:41.070 [SPEAKER_02]: When they see your little brain working and you're just like going back and forth, you have something to say.
26:41.130 --> 26:41.470 [SPEAKER_02]: Go ahead.
26:41.510 --> 26:43.851 [SPEAKER_10]: Well, as you were saying, that's didn't disingenuous.
26:44.251 --> 26:46.872 [SPEAKER_10]: I knew Rob was going to jump in because Rob is one of those people.
26:47.132 --> 26:50.313 [SPEAKER_10]: Rob will call you by your name if you're wearing a name tag every time.
26:50.573 --> 26:51.815 [SPEAKER_10]: Well, what does that mean though?
26:52.135 --> 26:54.337 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, I mean, is that bad thing?
26:54.638 --> 26:55.539 [SPEAKER_10]: Check in the seat belt.
26:55.619 --> 26:58.522 [SPEAKER_10]: Hold luck to see what your name is and say, thank you, Mike.
26:58.843 --> 26:59.103 [SPEAKER_10]: I do.
26:59.484 --> 26:59.764 [SPEAKER_12]: I do.
27:00.064 --> 27:00.745 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, you know why?
27:00.825 --> 27:02.187 [SPEAKER_10]: Because I used to be.
27:02.407 --> 27:04.529 [SPEAKER_10]: I used to be in front of me.
27:04.549 --> 27:09.075 [SPEAKER_12]: I used to be a checker at Safeway and if someone called me by my name, I liked it.
27:09.495 --> 27:09.776 [SPEAKER_02]: I did.
27:09.796 --> 27:13.239 [SPEAKER_02]: You know, uh, just to pull back the curtain during that little exchange.
27:13.259 --> 27:14.400 [SPEAKER_12]: Are you going to do this story?
27:14.480 --> 27:19.205 [SPEAKER_02]: You're talking about the text Josh, uh, you didn't know this, but I texted raw.
27:20.066 --> 27:20.627 [SPEAKER_02]: Blow me.
27:21.187 --> 27:22.869 [SPEAKER_02]: And then, uh, Rob texted me back.
27:22.989 --> 27:25.372 [SPEAKER_02]: I will if you're grateful about it.
27:25.692 --> 27:26.793 [SPEAKER_02]: And we kept it together.
27:26.893 --> 27:27.774 [SPEAKER_02]: All that was going on.
27:27.794 --> 27:31.919 [SPEAKER_12]: We did, but I was, you know what, that was a top ten text right there and it made you think of me.
27:32.459 --> 27:34.521 [SPEAKER_02]: No, I will go back to the boat.
27:34.701 --> 27:45.549 [SPEAKER_02]: I will say here's Michael's got this friend, Donnie, and by the way, it's funny because when you start thinking about it, it jogs the brain to come up with stuff.
27:46.510 --> 27:48.312 [SPEAKER_02]: I gotta share this with you right here.
27:48.372 --> 27:51.554 [SPEAKER_02]: Let me make sure that I've got it, but let me see.
27:51.574 --> 27:52.455 [SPEAKER_02]: Hey, Mike.
27:52.855 --> 27:58.363 [SPEAKER_02]: I watched your show yesterday and really appreciate the kind words and of course the plug.
27:58.784 --> 28:01.548 [SPEAKER_02]: Hope to fish with y'all again some day in the future.
28:01.888 --> 28:02.790 [SPEAKER_02]: Thank you very much.
28:03.090 --> 28:04.853 [SPEAKER_02]: Your new fan Captain Mike.
28:05.334 --> 28:05.914 [SPEAKER_02]: That's so good.
28:07.877 --> 28:10.278 [SPEAKER_02]: That means something that he took the time I told him to.
28:10.338 --> 28:11.858 [SPEAKER_02]: I told him I was going to talk about it.
28:12.198 --> 28:18.039 [SPEAKER_02]: And the one kid, there was one kid at the very end of the fishing trip, one of his buddies that said, thank you.
28:18.079 --> 28:23.500 [SPEAKER_02]: Now my son is very good about expressing gratitude to us as parents.
28:23.780 --> 28:27.661 [SPEAKER_02]: But you know, that one little guy that said that, it's cool.
28:27.901 --> 28:28.881 [SPEAKER_02]: I think it always works.
28:29.321 --> 28:30.802 [SPEAKER_02]: I mean, you get it from you.
28:31.002 --> 28:32.842 [SPEAKER_02]: What's the first thing we teach our kids?
28:33.282 --> 28:34.242 [SPEAKER_02]: Please, and thank you.
28:34.562 --> 28:35.082 [SPEAKER_02]: That's the first.
28:35.102 --> 28:35.943 [SPEAKER_02]: Not in my house.
28:36.203 --> 28:36.923 [SPEAKER_02]: It was shut up.
28:39.325 --> 28:41.928 [SPEAKER_02]: that he's drinking.
28:42.248 --> 28:46.112 [SPEAKER_12]: Go get one of the green bottles out of the refrigerator.
28:46.192 --> 28:47.214 [SPEAKER_12]: Does this look green?
28:47.414 --> 28:47.794 [SPEAKER_12]: Idiot.
28:48.235 --> 28:48.835 [SPEAKER_02]: I really do.
28:49.536 --> 28:51.498 [SPEAKER_12]: I want to give you a curious.
28:52.259 --> 28:57.785 [SPEAKER_12]: His exercise he did about if you could write a letter right now to someone living in someone past.
28:58.951 --> 29:01.173 [SPEAKER_12]: And I immediately came up with choices.
29:01.213 --> 29:01.974 [SPEAKER_12]: Did you have any?
29:03.415 --> 29:13.305 [SPEAKER_02]: Because I've done Carla has a collection of probably letters that I've written to her throughout our relationship that I will just do it.
29:13.725 --> 29:19.550 [SPEAKER_02]: Sometimes I will just do it when she's gone to sleep and I'm up and I just we've had a particularly good day.
29:21.432 --> 29:33.294 [SPEAKER_02]: When Kathy reached out, I'm very conscious of keeping the relationship with her family good because it's been too much time.
29:33.534 --> 29:39.436 [SPEAKER_02]: They came down and visited us this past year, but it's not the kind of frequency that we've had in the past.
29:39.716 --> 29:50.558 [SPEAKER_02]: So I was thinking about her as to how she handled my mom at the end of her life, when my mom went to assisted living in the job that she did.
29:51.778 --> 29:53.399 [SPEAKER_02]: really picking all that up.
29:53.639 --> 29:56.419 [SPEAKER_02]: I was because of the proximity up in New England.
29:56.519 --> 30:06.982 [SPEAKER_02]: She did a lot more lifting than I did in that and I've always been very grateful and I would write to write her about that as far as, you know, people that are not here.
30:07.002 --> 30:17.825 [SPEAKER_02]: I would probably, I always talk about my mom and I was very good about sharing gratitude with my mom, but I probably would write a letter to my father.
30:18.165 --> 30:27.395 [SPEAKER_02]: And just say, you know, thank you for doing your best to give us the, you know, the life you had under pretty difficult circumstances.
30:27.455 --> 30:29.157 [SPEAKER_02]: We didn't have a lot of money growing up.
30:29.398 --> 30:32.941 [SPEAKER_02]: And it was, you know, we never knew that as kids.
30:33.142 --> 30:34.944 [SPEAKER_02]: And I hear a lot of kids talk about that.
30:35.304 --> 30:37.706 [SPEAKER_02]: when their children of the greatest generation.
30:38.226 --> 30:42.689 [SPEAKER_02]: And I really don't think we were made aware of how difficult it was.
30:42.829 --> 30:50.555 [SPEAKER_02]: You know, back in the day, going to a baseball game, going to see a Boston Red Sox game, people might think that, yeah, let's go.
30:50.655 --> 30:51.035 [SPEAKER_02]: Why not?
30:51.415 --> 30:51.535 [SPEAKER_02]: Right.
30:51.555 --> 30:53.957 [SPEAKER_02]: It was a big, big deal for my family.
30:54.277 --> 30:59.061 [SPEAKER_02]: A really big deal for my family and they made that happen for me.
30:59.281 --> 31:00.502 [SPEAKER_02]: So, you know, that was cool.
31:00.522 --> 31:02.743 [SPEAKER_02]: A lot of sports and a lot of stuff like that growing up.
31:02.803 --> 31:03.984 [SPEAKER_02]: So that's how about you?
31:04.044 --> 31:14.192 [SPEAKER_02]: Who is around now that you would write a letter to and who is somebody that is not around because you've lost a lot of people in the last couple of years that you would write a letter to.
31:14.432 --> 31:17.734 [SPEAKER_12]: I would probably write to Zendaya and William Howard Taft.
31:19.435 --> 31:21.136 [SPEAKER_12]: That's a great.
31:21.736 --> 31:23.797 [SPEAKER_02]: That's a great.
31:23.877 --> 31:25.498 [SPEAKER_02]: He was thinking about that one for a while.
31:25.518 --> 31:32.181 [SPEAKER_12]: And all honesty, the first letter I write would be to twitch because I didn't get to talk to him enough, Markardell.
31:33.062 --> 31:38.124 [SPEAKER_12]: I talked to him a lot when he was on his bed there, but I didn't get to say enough.
31:38.704 --> 31:38.864 [SPEAKER_12]: Right.
31:38.884 --> 31:41.966 [SPEAKER_12]: And I think for a living person, I would write to my mom
31:42.706 --> 31:52.730 [SPEAKER_12]: Because as I get older, I realize more and more sincerely the sacrifices she made to make sure that I got to where I was going.
31:53.791 --> 31:55.571 [SPEAKER_12]: She worked like a Trojan.
31:55.671 --> 31:58.953 [SPEAKER_12]: She was just always at work.
31:59.293 --> 32:00.773 [SPEAKER_12]: But I never missed out on anything.
32:00.813 --> 32:03.134 [SPEAKER_12]: And again, we didn't have a lot of money, but I didn't know it.
32:03.735 --> 32:04.615 [SPEAKER_12]: So yeah, I think that.
32:04.875 --> 32:06.936 [SPEAKER_12]: But that would be a good letter to write also to my dad.
32:07.196 --> 32:07.456 [SPEAKER_12]: I don't know.
32:07.476 --> 32:14.802 [SPEAKER_02]: And you know Josh, we can't leave you out, because I know the person that's living that you would write a thank you letter to would have the initial DJT.
32:20.766 --> 32:22.908 [SPEAKER_12]: And of course, and the dead one Earl Weaver.
32:24.097 --> 32:24.598 [SPEAKER_02]: Right.
32:24.798 --> 32:28.461 [SPEAKER_02]: Do you have you thought about who you, uh, you know, you're a younger guy.
32:28.482 --> 32:30.023 [SPEAKER_02]: You don't have that many people did.
32:30.223 --> 32:31.685 [SPEAKER_10]: Yeah, I don't have that many people did.
32:31.705 --> 32:32.125 [SPEAKER_10]: Mm-hmm.
32:32.325 --> 32:38.532 [SPEAKER_10]: As far as living, there's a, uh, pastor friend who's been a huge influence over my life that I have written letters to in the past.
32:38.792 --> 32:40.353 [SPEAKER_10]: So that's the first thing that comes to mind.
32:40.734 --> 32:41.014 [SPEAKER_10]: Cool.
32:41.455 --> 32:43.236 [SPEAKER_10]: Anybody dead that you could think of?
32:43.336 --> 32:43.817 [SPEAKER_10]: Yeah.
32:44.197 --> 32:44.277 [SPEAKER_10]: Um,
32:45.219 --> 32:47.922 [SPEAKER_10]: I friend that caught himself many years ago.
32:49.644 --> 32:50.646 [SPEAKER_10]: That's tough.
32:50.806 --> 32:54.270 [SPEAKER_02]: That's, you know, I mean that's difficult to do.
32:54.591 --> 32:55.632 [SPEAKER_12]: Do you save any letters?
32:56.634 --> 32:56.714 [SPEAKER_02]: Me?
32:57.095 --> 32:59.617 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
32:59.757 --> 33:02.219 [SPEAKER_02]: You know, I, I, I'm not a saver Rob.
33:02.339 --> 33:02.639 [SPEAKER_02]: I know.
33:02.659 --> 33:03.440 [SPEAKER_02]: I've been a saver.
33:03.520 --> 33:13.527 [SPEAKER_02]: I've got a, I've got a bunch of stuff from early in my career that's up in the in storage up in Maine, but I don't think that I'd be able to negotiate or to tell you what it is.
33:13.647 --> 33:15.889 [SPEAKER_02]: It's like the crap I have is all.
33:16.409 --> 33:20.052 [SPEAKER_12]: We need to hire a guy to coordinate it and call it.
33:20.612 --> 33:22.693 [SPEAKER_10]: Yeah, get the museum open, you know.
33:22.813 --> 33:23.554 [SPEAKER_10]: I mean, I do.
33:23.594 --> 33:23.794 [SPEAKER_10]: Yeah.
33:24.134 --> 33:25.055 [SPEAKER_10]: I throw everything out.
33:25.575 --> 33:30.138 [SPEAKER_10]: But if it's something like that, I'll take a picture of it first because that's not a good technology.
33:30.158 --> 33:31.299 [SPEAKER_02]: That's not a good technology.
33:31.339 --> 33:31.579 [SPEAKER_02]: Right.
33:32.820 --> 33:39.224 [SPEAKER_02]: Actually, what Josh does now, he takes a picture of the letter and then has a, I turn it into a cartoon.
33:40.725 --> 33:42.586 [SPEAKER_10]: Yeah, and that's right by response.
33:44.627 --> 33:45.968 [SPEAKER_02]: Hey, thanks to Joel.
33:46.428 --> 33:52.631 [SPEAKER_02]: Joel Zuckerman, the book is gratitude tiger, creating joy through the art of letter writing.
33:52.751 --> 33:54.192 [SPEAKER_02]: Impactful letters.
33:54.372 --> 33:57.914 [SPEAKER_12]: I didn't have him pay because a guy that would say a bad word and yet he did.
33:58.714 --> 33:59.335 [SPEAKER_02]: Oh, that's right.
33:59.355 --> 34:02.497 [SPEAKER_02]: He did and it was when he was talking about he liked you.
34:03.018 --> 34:04.639 [SPEAKER_02]: He really what's not like.
34:05.740 --> 34:09.122 [SPEAKER_02]: I think I just got a letter from what's not the light.
34:09.683 --> 34:11.764 [SPEAKER_02]: That's the way that goes.
34:12.645 --> 34:15.007 [SPEAKER_02]: We got more show, but first I want to tell you about naked wines.
34:15.347 --> 34:17.849 [SPEAKER_02]: How would you like to be the voice that I was going to open the bottle?
34:18.390 --> 34:19.511 [SPEAKER_02]: I didn't I'm a dammit.
34:22.890 --> 34:25.491 [SPEAKER_02]: That's all.
34:25.731 --> 34:26.712 [SPEAKER_02]: I'll just break the bottle.
34:26.772 --> 34:27.752 [SPEAKER_02]: Yes, damn it.
34:27.772 --> 34:28.752 [SPEAKER_02]: I'm not grateful for that.
34:28.992 --> 34:32.634 [SPEAKER_02]: Would you like to be the most interesting person at the next big party you go to?
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35:29.949 --> 35:33.489 [SPEAKER_02]: Now, fill my chalice to the top, please.
35:33.690 --> 35:34.950 [SPEAKER_02]: Do the tap, please.
35:36.204 --> 35:38.065 [SPEAKER_02]: I thought you'd get that.
35:38.145 --> 35:39.466 [SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, that was hard.
35:40.306 --> 35:42.007 [SPEAKER_02]: Right before we did the show yesterday.
35:42.267 --> 35:46.969 [SPEAKER_02]: We found out that a legendary performer had passed Aussie Osborne last week.
35:47.169 --> 35:53.432 [SPEAKER_02]: Kelly Osborne denied rumors that her father was dying and then yesterday Aussie did indeed pass away.
35:53.492 --> 35:54.473 [SPEAKER_02]: He was seventy-six.
35:54.873 --> 35:58.835 [SPEAKER_02]: There is no word on the cause of death, but here's the official statement.
35:59.215 --> 36:05.841 [SPEAKER_02]: It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Aussie Osborne has passed away.
36:05.861 --> 36:09.285 [SPEAKER_02]: They said this yesterday that was earlier in the morning.
36:09.625 --> 36:12.007 [SPEAKER_02]: He was with his family surrounded by love.
36:12.047 --> 36:14.770 [SPEAKER_02]: We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time.
36:15.330 --> 36:17.892 [SPEAKER_02]: Ozzy's biography is pretty well known by now.
36:17.972 --> 36:19.493 [SPEAKER_02]: He got his start in black Sabbath.
36:19.814 --> 36:25.218 [SPEAKER_02]: Got fired in nineteen seventy nine and launched a massively successful solo career.
36:25.558 --> 36:31.443 [SPEAKER_02]: Then in the early two thousands, he reinvented himself and made his family just as famous with the Osborns.
36:31.703 --> 36:34.245 [SPEAKER_02]: The MTV reality show along the way.
36:34.565 --> 36:36.146 [SPEAKER_02]: He bit the head off a bat.
36:36.186 --> 36:39.128 [SPEAKER_02]: That to me was the first thing I ever heard about Ozzy Osborn.
36:39.188 --> 36:40.730 [SPEAKER_02]: And that's the thing that everybody talked about.
36:40.830 --> 36:42.651 [SPEAKER_12]: And I'm not so sure it ever happened.
36:42.691 --> 36:43.632 [SPEAKER_12]: But it's great story.
36:43.992 --> 36:46.613 [SPEAKER_02]: says here, bit ahead off a bat and a pigeon.
36:47.313 --> 36:48.974 [SPEAKER_12]: Oh, you see, I thought it was just a pigeon.
36:49.294 --> 36:51.235 [SPEAKER_02]: I don't know, snorted a line of ants.
36:52.395 --> 36:57.537 [SPEAKER_02]: Got arrested for peeing on the alamo while wearing his wife's dress.
36:57.718 --> 36:58.618 [SPEAKER_02]: I do remember that.
36:58.958 --> 36:59.318 [SPEAKER_02]: You do?
36:59.538 --> 36:59.718 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
36:59.738 --> 37:00.339 [SPEAKER_02]: Remember that one.
37:00.359 --> 37:01.079 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
37:01.359 --> 37:02.459 [SPEAKER_02]: He also consumed.
37:02.639 --> 37:02.940 [SPEAKER_02]: Hello.
37:03.640 --> 37:04.020 [SPEAKER_02]: Hello.
37:04.100 --> 37:05.481 [SPEAKER_02]: We, Michael Marishow.
37:05.561 --> 37:05.801 [SPEAKER_02]: Hello.
37:06.401 --> 37:08.542 [SPEAKER_02]: I'm a zeal, and I'm the Prince of Dog.
37:09.880 --> 37:10.321 [SPEAKER_02]: Thank you.
37:10.801 --> 37:19.272 [SPEAKER_02]: He also consumed massive amounts of fine altering substances and calling from heaven apparently.
37:19.352 --> 37:25.480 [SPEAKER_02]: So he sold one million record one hundred million records and he's in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice.
37:25.960 --> 37:42.114 [SPEAKER_02]: He was inducted for Sabbath in two thousand six, and as a solo artist last year, Ozzie's health took a turn for the worst, no three, following an ATV accident in which he broke his collarbone, eight ribs, and a neck further break.
37:42.654 --> 37:52.387 [SPEAKER_02]: He re-injured his neck in a fall in twenty nineteen and of course he was battling Parkinson's disease which was diagnosed after the fall in a twenty twenty three interview.
37:52.807 --> 37:58.275 [SPEAKER_02]: He said his life had been quote five years of absolute hell while he was going through those medical issues.
37:58.795 --> 38:08.738 [SPEAKER_02]: And yet just two and a half weeks ago, he was able to perform one last time at the back to the beginning show in Birmingham, which raised one hundred ninety million dollars for charity.
38:09.238 --> 38:12.919 [SPEAKER_02]: As he is survived by his wife Sharon, his daughter Kelly and his son, Jack.
38:13.239 --> 38:24.922 [SPEAKER_02]: There are also some offspring you don't know, a son named Louis John and adopted son named Elliott Kingsley and a daughter named Jessica Starshine all from his first marriage.
38:24.982 --> 38:25.822 [SPEAKER_02]: I did not know that.
38:25.842 --> 38:27.803 [SPEAKER_12]: No mention of his brother, the comedian.
38:29.094 --> 38:32.216 [SPEAKER_02]: Fuzzy Osborne?
38:32.456 --> 38:32.877 [SPEAKER_02]: Yes.
38:33.737 --> 38:34.898 [SPEAKER_10]: That's just random.
38:35.379 --> 38:35.879 [SPEAKER_10]: That's all.
38:35.899 --> 38:36.119 [SPEAKER_10]: That's all.
38:36.159 --> 38:37.600 [SPEAKER_10]: Fuzzy the bear reference point.
38:37.660 --> 38:39.542 [SPEAKER_12]: Yes, because he was a comedian on the Muppets.
38:40.042 --> 38:40.943 [SPEAKER_02]: Fuzzy Osborne.
38:42.744 --> 38:44.886 [SPEAKER_12]: There was Amy.
38:45.246 --> 38:46.066 [SPEAKER_02]: There was Amy.
38:46.227 --> 38:47.467 [SPEAKER_02]: A-I-M-E-E.
38:47.928 --> 38:52.391 [SPEAKER_02]: A daughter of Ozzy and Sharon, who opted not to be on the family.
38:52.451 --> 38:53.472 [SPEAKER_02]: Smartality show.
38:53.752 --> 38:55.013 [SPEAKER_10]: Very smart to not do that.
38:55.033 --> 39:05.478 [SPEAKER_10]: And his autobiography, he confirmed that in nineteen eighty two in Iowa, he picked the bat up off the stage and bit it head off because he thought it was a stuffed bat.
39:06.959 --> 39:07.359 [SPEAKER_10]: Okay.
39:07.479 --> 39:11.401 [SPEAKER_10]: Then he realized it was a real bat and had to go get the rabies vaccine after the show.
39:11.701 --> 39:13.002 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, that's good that he did that.
39:13.022 --> 39:15.803 [SPEAKER_12]: You know the Steve Bridges is the guy that threw the bat.
39:15.823 --> 39:16.843 [SPEAKER_12]: No.
39:17.884 --> 39:20.765 [SPEAKER_02]: And of course from the crowd, you could hear him say suck on.
39:22.486 --> 39:45.453 [SPEAKER_02]: Sabbath guitar is Tony Lomi is it Lomi Lomi Lomi Lomi Lomi I don't know said he was heartbroken as there won't be another one like him so there's that well Stevie Wonder is seventy five years old and he has no intention of hanging it up he says quote good for as long oh yeah you and saw that show and did a great you on that concert
39:45.873 --> 39:53.016 [SPEAKER_02]: So far as long as you breathe, says Stevie, as long as your heart beats, there's more for you to do.
39:53.136 --> 39:55.497 [SPEAKER_02]: He adds, quote, I love playing music.
39:55.537 --> 39:56.857 [SPEAKER_02]: That's like my mantra.
39:57.278 --> 39:59.839 [SPEAKER_02]: I think I can do all the stuff I want to do.
40:00.239 --> 40:03.880 [SPEAKER_02]: I'm not going to stop the gift that keeps pouring through my body.
40:04.240 --> 40:08.242 [SPEAKER_02]: As long as you can imagine is as long as you are going to be creative.
40:08.542 --> 40:12.243 [SPEAKER_02]: And as long as you let your mind work, you don't have to retire.
40:12.524 --> 40:13.044 [SPEAKER_02]: I disagree.
40:14.384 --> 40:15.845 [SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, but you don't love what you do.
40:18.386 --> 40:19.526 [SPEAKER_02]: That is not right.
40:19.626 --> 40:19.926 [SPEAKER_02]: I know.
40:20.267 --> 40:21.307 [SPEAKER_02]: That is really nice.
40:21.347 --> 40:27.469 [SPEAKER_12]: That's like you set like me saying the heart attack thing to you know it's a it's a little not it's not quite at that level.
40:27.529 --> 40:32.551 [SPEAKER_02]: That really feeds into that narrative from all those negative Nellies out there you stop it.
40:32.812 --> 40:41.015 [SPEAKER_12]: I will consider it done but I think Stevie will outlive us all because when I saw him on stage it was now eight or nine years ago.
40:41.795 --> 40:45.977 [SPEAKER_12]: He sounded and looked like he could have been Stevie in the sixties.
40:46.237 --> 40:47.497 [SPEAKER_12]: His voice hasn't changed.
40:47.798 --> 40:49.518 [SPEAKER_12]: His presentation hasn't changed.
40:49.938 --> 40:53.580 [SPEAKER_12]: If you are ever within a hundred miles of a Stevie wonder concert, go to it.
40:53.860 --> 40:55.521 [SPEAKER_02]: Go Stevie, absolutely.
40:56.261 --> 40:58.622 [SPEAKER_12]: It's unlucky to be on the earth at the same time as him.
40:58.922 --> 41:08.106 [SPEAKER_02]: A group of tech nerds in Amsterdam came up with a new gadget, Josh Pay attention to this is called a dream recorder.
41:09.261 --> 41:09.761 [SPEAKER_02]: Wow.
41:10.101 --> 41:14.403 [SPEAKER_02]: And it turns your dreams into videos, but it doesn't actually scan your brain waves.
41:14.443 --> 41:17.785 [SPEAKER_02]: You have to remember your dream, describe what it was.
41:17.825 --> 41:19.025 [SPEAKER_02]: Well, that's like any.
41:19.045 --> 41:20.986 [SPEAKER_02]: That's all I can come up with.
41:21.006 --> 41:21.926 [SPEAKER_02]: Come on in.
41:21.966 --> 41:24.487 [SPEAKER_02]: Set it turns your description into a video.
41:24.527 --> 41:26.768 [SPEAKER_02]: Well, couldn't you turn anything into a video?
41:27.148 --> 41:29.129 [SPEAKER_02]: I see all those creepy crawlers on the line.
41:29.169 --> 41:31.730 [SPEAKER_12]: You know, in elementary school, I had a dream recorder.
41:31.770 --> 41:32.231 [SPEAKER_12]: I played it.
41:32.531 --> 41:35.492 [SPEAKER_12]: It was a small dream recorder and I could play it in the band.
41:38.054 --> 41:41.297 [SPEAKER_02]: You have a recorder in your studio right now.
41:41.317 --> 41:42.418 [SPEAKER_12]: Let me check myself.
41:42.718 --> 41:42.918 [SPEAKER_02]: All right.
41:42.938 --> 41:43.579 [SPEAKER_02]: Check yourself.
41:43.599 --> 41:44.360 [SPEAKER_02]: See if you have a recorder.
41:44.960 --> 41:52.767 [SPEAKER_02]: Apparently this device is slightly bigger than an alarm clock with a screen on the front that shows he does.
41:52.827 --> 41:54.749 [SPEAKER_12]: I don't have a recorder, but he better I will soon.
41:55.069 --> 41:57.791 [SPEAKER_02]: It shows colorful, low-deaf clips of your dream.
41:58.331 --> 42:02.714 [SPEAKER_02]: All the examples they shared look more like an acid-tripped in real life.
42:03.114 --> 42:03.995 [SPEAKER_02]: So there's that.
42:05.055 --> 42:07.797 [SPEAKER_02]: It stores, oh God, this sounds like such a scam.
42:08.177 --> 42:09.938 [SPEAKER_02]: It starts at least for some dreams.
42:10.559 --> 42:16.362 [SPEAKER_02]: They say it's meant for reflecting on the meanings of your dreams as they echo into waking life.
42:17.403 --> 42:23.647 [SPEAKER_12]: This is such total BS because first of all, it'll never look exactly right because it's not your brain.
42:24.207 --> 42:30.170 [SPEAKER_12]: And think of the things that you remember in a dream they are so detailed more detailed than you could ever.
42:30.531 --> 42:34.613 [SPEAKER_02]: And that's why all my dreams, the only videos I could share could be on Pornhub.
42:36.316 --> 42:39.779 [SPEAKER_02]: The good news is it's a more affordable.
42:40.439 --> 42:43.561 [SPEAKER_02]: The bad news is that is, oh, look at the dreams.
42:44.182 --> 42:46.203 [SPEAKER_12]: That looks like a good dream.
42:46.283 --> 42:47.724 [SPEAKER_02]: The bad news is you can't buy one.
42:47.744 --> 42:48.485 [SPEAKER_02]: You have to build it.
42:48.905 --> 42:50.286 [SPEAKER_02]: They claim it's not that hard.
42:51.107 --> 42:56.551 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, you go to that GPT and the enter and they posted a shopping list with instructions.
42:56.991 --> 43:00.093 [SPEAKER_02]: Well, that's why they're not selling it because exactly.
43:01.093 --> 43:06.276 [SPEAKER_02]: They say the total cost is around three hundred thirty dollars plus fifteen cents per dream.
43:06.737 --> 43:07.357 [SPEAKER_02]: I don't get it.
43:07.597 --> 43:09.258 [SPEAKER_02]: I now I don't believe it now.
43:09.378 --> 43:11.419 [SPEAKER_02]: Now I think it's all just a bunch of business.
43:11.659 --> 43:12.400 [SPEAKER_12]: It is true.
43:12.520 --> 43:13.240 [SPEAKER_12]: Just think about it.
43:13.280 --> 43:24.507 [SPEAKER_12]: You're telling a simple AI program to generate an image or a small scene that you've created all you're doing is making things harder for you and seeing
43:28.024 --> 43:31.665 [SPEAKER_02]: Margo Robbie has already been Barbie.
43:32.245 --> 43:38.206 [SPEAKER_02]: Now she's reported the lining up to play another female cultural icon from the nineteen fifties.
43:38.646 --> 43:39.826 [SPEAKER_02]: When you were a boy, Rob.
43:40.066 --> 43:41.907 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, the era you wanted to live in.
43:42.227 --> 43:50.089 [SPEAKER_02]: Rumor has it that she might star in Tim Burton's remake of the nineteen fiftie eight cinematic classic.
43:50.909 --> 43:51.789 [SPEAKER_02]: Tell me the title.
43:52.089 --> 43:53.269 [SPEAKER_12]: Is it the girl can't help it?
43:53.869 --> 43:54.089 [SPEAKER_02]: No.
43:54.549 --> 43:57.050 [SPEAKER_02]: Think think think horror.
43:58.278 --> 44:01.226 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, it's not Psycho because that's a nineteen sixty.
44:01.286 --> 44:01.527 [SPEAKER_02]: Nope.
44:01.667 --> 44:02.369 [SPEAKER_02]: Think more.
44:02.710 --> 44:03.552 [SPEAKER_02]: Jive horror.
44:04.034 --> 44:04.756 [SPEAKER_12]: Jive horror.
44:04.876 --> 44:05.397 [SPEAKER_12]: I give up.
44:05.578 --> 44:06.260 [SPEAKER_12]: I died fifty.
44:08.282 --> 44:10.404 [SPEAKER_12]: John, well, now I'm thinking of the movie giant.
44:10.724 --> 44:12.005 [SPEAKER_02]: No, that's with James Dean.
44:12.365 --> 44:14.007 [SPEAKER_12]: Oh, the attack of the fifty foot woman.
44:14.087 --> 44:14.988 [SPEAKER_12]: There he goes.
44:15.148 --> 44:16.149 [SPEAKER_02]: Yes, I'm here.
44:16.169 --> 44:16.749 [SPEAKER_02]: Good job.
44:16.789 --> 44:17.710 [SPEAKER_12]: You got it.
44:17.730 --> 44:17.850 [SPEAKER_02]: Wow.
44:17.870 --> 44:19.031 [SPEAKER_02]: The fifty foot woman.
44:19.131 --> 44:20.512 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, she must watch it.
44:20.552 --> 44:21.353 [SPEAKER_12]: It's a great film.
44:21.393 --> 44:22.674 [SPEAKER_12]: Watch it after roller coaster.
44:22.734 --> 44:23.555 [SPEAKER_12]: I'll wait for the remake.
44:23.915 --> 44:32.762 [SPEAKER_02]: And the script will supposedly be written by not a list, uh, Gillian or Gillian Flynn, who wrote Gone Girl, Sharp Objects and Widows.
44:33.143 --> 44:35.444 [SPEAKER_12]: They turned down the script from Joel Zuckerberg.
44:36.365 --> 44:54.918 [SPEAKER_02]: The original told the sets of story of Nancy Archie, a wealthy but unstable eras who grows in size after an encounter with a giant alien, and she seeks revenge on her fallandering husband.
44:55.538 --> 44:56.899 [SPEAKER_02]: What's she going to try to crush it?
44:56.939 --> 44:58.979 [SPEAKER_12]: Have you seen the attack of the fifty foot woman?
44:59.219 --> 45:04.561 [SPEAKER_12]: Been a long time, but yeah, she does go after him and she doesn't kill him in a way that's anything exciting.
45:04.621 --> 45:06.102 [SPEAKER_12]: She just sort of smooches in my think.
45:06.482 --> 45:08.683 [SPEAKER_02]: I heard it's good movie because she's got big.
45:09.083 --> 45:13.625 [SPEAKER_12]: Yes, very big, very big, but unfortunately big all over if you catch my meaning.
45:14.732 --> 45:15.152 [SPEAKER_02]: Thank you.
45:15.973 --> 45:29.682 [SPEAKER_02]: Finally, today's heat related alerts had been issued for eighteen states as of Monday when the National Weather Service urging residents to take steps to reduce the risk of heat illnesses.
45:30.282 --> 45:39.248 [SPEAKER_02]: Advice included limiting outdoor activities, wearing light clothing, staying hydrated, and avoiding alcohol.
45:40.769 --> 45:44.051 [SPEAKER_02]: In response to the advisory, the state of Florida said
45:44.431 --> 45:45.812 [SPEAKER_02]: You're kidding me, right?
45:46.892 --> 45:47.893 [SPEAKER_02]: Anyway, that's it.
45:47.933 --> 45:49.534 [SPEAKER_02]: We have to move on more shows.
45:49.574 --> 45:50.554 [SPEAKER_02]: That's a lot.
45:51.254 --> 45:56.217 [SPEAKER_02]: No, I'm not really limited outdoor activities and new alcohol.
45:57.037 --> 45:58.438 [SPEAKER_02]: Come on now.
45:58.978 --> 46:00.419 [SPEAKER_02]: There you can eat.
46:00.479 --> 46:04.981 [SPEAKER_02]: Hey caffeine junkies, just because we don't mention it every day.
46:05.061 --> 46:08.963 [SPEAKER_02]: Don't think that Charlie's choice coffee is a thing of the past.
46:09.224 --> 46:09.644 [SPEAKER_02]: It's not.
46:09.664 --> 46:11.505 [SPEAKER_02]: It makes me laugh so much.
46:12.445 --> 46:13.246 [SPEAKER_02]: Wait, the slow.
46:13.266 --> 46:14.546 [SPEAKER_10]: That was the slow.
46:14.586 --> 46:15.387 [SPEAKER_02]: That was the slow.
46:15.427 --> 46:17.348 [SPEAKER_10]: Can you do that again so everybody can see that?
46:17.808 --> 46:20.249 [SPEAKER_10]: It was the trying to figure out the focus of the camera.
46:20.730 --> 46:21.450 [SPEAKER_02]: I like the slow.
46:21.690 --> 46:22.050 [SPEAKER_02]: There it is.
46:22.451 --> 46:23.311 [SPEAKER_02]: Charlie's choice.
46:24.332 --> 46:24.852 [SPEAKER_02]: It's great.
46:25.152 --> 46:26.133 [SPEAKER_02]: It's not a thing of the past.
46:26.173 --> 46:26.833 [SPEAKER_02]: It's still awesome.
46:26.853 --> 46:31.575 [SPEAKER_02]: I mean, you get the order or subscribe for some more right now.
46:32.176 --> 46:33.296 [SPEAKER_02]: Yes, do it right now.
46:33.637 --> 46:35.237 [SPEAKER_02]: Don't just drink coffee, experience it.
46:35.278 --> 46:37.379 [SPEAKER_02]: We all know that you got to have coffee.
46:37.699 --> 46:39.060 [SPEAKER_02]: Coffee, coffee, coffee.
46:39.980 --> 46:46.249 [SPEAKER_02]: What movie came in movie coffee coffee coffee coffee coffee coffee the attack of the fifty foot woman.
46:46.349 --> 46:46.890 [SPEAKER_02]: I don't know that.
46:47.091 --> 46:49.033 [SPEAKER_02]: Robin Williams in Moscow in the Hudson.
46:49.354 --> 46:51.757 [SPEAKER_02]: He gets over a long time.
46:51.777 --> 46:54.602 [SPEAKER_02]: He gets overwhelmed by the groceries in an American grocery store.
46:55.182 --> 47:01.345 [SPEAKER_02]: So we want you to have the best Charlie's choice available in whole bean or fresh ground.
47:01.405 --> 47:08.888 [SPEAKER_02]: Get a one time order or save money with a subscription like I do and get your exclusive Charlie's choice blend delivered right to your door.
47:09.209 --> 47:11.850 [SPEAKER_02]: It's the best and freshest coffee you can find.
47:11.890 --> 47:17.592 [SPEAKER_02]: It's crafted in small batches and roasted to order in beautiful Saint Augustine, Florida.
47:17.893 --> 47:21.154 [SPEAKER_02]: So support small business and enjoy a cup of Charlie today.
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47:26.580 --> 47:33.169 [SPEAKER_02]: Start your day right with Charlie's choice because Charlie... It's good to the last sip!
47:33.189 --> 47:34.731 [SPEAKER_02]: Comey!
47:35.031 --> 47:36.293 [SPEAKER_02]: Hot steaming Charlie.
47:36.313 --> 47:38.456 [SPEAKER_02]: Because when Charlie says duh...
47:40.058 --> 47:41.278 [SPEAKER_02]: It's got to be good.
47:41.658 --> 47:42.219 [SPEAKER_12]: Exactly.
47:42.299 --> 47:46.400 [SPEAKER_02]: Just like our broker sets is in the right to our late.
47:46.460 --> 47:47.280 [SPEAKER_02]: Charlie.
47:47.540 --> 47:53.821 [SPEAKER_02]: Alright, Rob, I want to hear about the stupid travel trend because my wife is traveling the end of the week.
47:53.841 --> 47:59.023 [SPEAKER_02]: We're going to be traveling a couple of times during the fall and I, I'm very curious.
47:59.263 --> 48:05.224 [SPEAKER_12]: This to me sounds horrible, but Josh, this might have been just enough to cure your European joint.
48:05.684 --> 48:08.345 [SPEAKER_12]: Have you ever heard of an extreme day trip?
48:11.444 --> 48:13.765 [SPEAKER_10]: No, no, I know there's a guy on YouTube that does this.
48:14.326 --> 48:18.048 [SPEAKER_10]: When he will fly from New York to London, have dinner and fly back.
48:18.308 --> 48:23.790 [SPEAKER_12]: Yep, it involves an early flight out and a late flight home one day in another country.
48:24.011 --> 48:25.211 [SPEAKER_12]: Let's do expensive.
48:25.411 --> 48:26.212 [SPEAKER_12]: Tell me about it.
48:27.132 --> 48:35.296 [SPEAKER_12]: And also the destiny I like getting to a place and being able to at least settle for a half hour before I do something.
48:35.676 --> 48:41.559 [SPEAKER_02]: But this there's no hotel sounds like it's something for the Glitterati, not the common man to get a plane.
48:41.699 --> 48:42.239 [SPEAKER_02]: Come on now.
48:42.379 --> 48:43.380 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, shop it around.
48:43.420 --> 48:47.682 [SPEAKER_12]: I mean, you know, one of the most popular destinations are Dublin, Belfast, and Cork.
48:48.262 --> 48:50.184 [SPEAKER_12]: People love doing day trips to Cork.
48:50.484 --> 48:53.986 [SPEAKER_02]: You know, I mean, if I like a place or I'm having a good time, I don't want to leave.
48:54.306 --> 48:55.667 [SPEAKER_02]: I don't want to get off a plane.
48:55.707 --> 48:56.467 [SPEAKER_02]: Go through it.
48:56.527 --> 49:00.549 [SPEAKER_02]: That to me, I mean, so this is the hassle of airports and then dealing with that.
49:00.790 --> 49:02.751 [SPEAKER_10]: No way.
49:03.191 --> 49:08.194 [SPEAKER_10]: I've looked into it for a day trip just in America to fly to a town catch a baseball game and fly back.
49:08.822 --> 49:11.444 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, that's a little more reasonable than flying to like Iceland.
49:11.805 --> 49:12.645 [SPEAKER_10]: Well, that's what I'm saying.
49:12.765 --> 49:17.710 [SPEAKER_10]: But it's still ridiculous and impossible because of the air travel going through the airport.
49:17.770 --> 49:19.892 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, because the air travel is just BS.
49:19.972 --> 49:20.632 [SPEAKER_02]: It's horrible.
49:20.933 --> 49:22.094 [SPEAKER_02]: I hate being in airports.
49:22.154 --> 49:24.856 [SPEAKER_02]: It's one of my least favorite places to be in the world.
49:24.876 --> 49:26.217 [SPEAKER_02]: It wasn't always right.
49:26.237 --> 49:30.081 [SPEAKER_02]: But it is now can't stand being in that stupid trend.
49:30.301 --> 49:34.965 [SPEAKER_12]: I have some suggested extreme day trips that make change your mind, Mike.
49:35.365 --> 49:35.605 [SPEAKER_12]: Okay.
49:36.065 --> 49:36.225 [SPEAKER_12]: Right.
49:36.325 --> 49:39.587 [SPEAKER_12]: Would you fly to Iceland and do the blue lagoon or the sky lagoon?
49:39.987 --> 49:42.088 [SPEAKER_12]: I mean, before the lava hit it and ruined it.
49:42.208 --> 49:44.389 [SPEAKER_12]: But to this, is that gone now?
49:45.029 --> 49:47.010 [SPEAKER_12]: No, I think it just needs to be cleaned up.
49:47.230 --> 49:48.770 [SPEAKER_02]: I just need a blue lagoon.
49:48.870 --> 49:56.874 [SPEAKER_02]: We need a blue lagoon update because if you go to Iceland, you get in there little salt baths or whatever they're super thermal baths that they have.
49:56.894 --> 50:02.356 [SPEAKER_02]: And there's all this like mud sandy consistency stuff that you can put on your
50:03.597 --> 50:05.578 [SPEAKER_02]: And that's very good.
50:05.598 --> 50:07.260 [SPEAKER_02]: I think it was really a cool thing to do.
50:07.520 --> 50:08.500 [SPEAKER_02]: And it really was special.
50:08.561 --> 50:10.242 [SPEAKER_02]: And I hope it wasn't wrecked for good.
50:10.262 --> 50:11.283 [SPEAKER_02]: That would be terrible.
50:11.643 --> 50:22.812 [SPEAKER_12]: Mike, you could fly to Paris like Josh did, but only stay for long enough to go tandem skydiving over the French countryside, then go to a Parisian cafe, and then look at iconic landmarks, and then go home.
50:26.999 --> 50:28.341 [SPEAKER_12]: That's why I hate this.
50:28.561 --> 50:31.085 [SPEAKER_12]: I don't like the notion that even if I had the money, I wouldn't do it.
50:31.486 --> 50:34.210 [SPEAKER_10]: And you have to have a private jet in order to hit the times right.
50:34.771 --> 50:34.912 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
50:35.543 --> 50:37.044 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, you have to definitely plan ahead.
50:37.264 --> 50:43.366 [SPEAKER_02]: And when you said stupid travel trend, I thought it was going to be something dumb that, you know, is available for the every man.
50:43.626 --> 50:44.126 [SPEAKER_02]: You don't know.
50:44.186 --> 50:45.227 [SPEAKER_02]: You're going to few months ago.
50:45.967 --> 50:50.409 [SPEAKER_02]: I think if you have money, you have disposable income, it could be an exercise.
50:50.529 --> 50:53.190 [SPEAKER_02]: And you've got all the time in the world because you're rich, you rich.
50:53.530 --> 50:55.771 [SPEAKER_02]: It's probably I still think it's dumb.
50:55.871 --> 50:56.971 [SPEAKER_02]: So I'll give you that.
50:57.071 --> 51:00.072 [SPEAKER_02]: But it's, you know, it's something you'd be more inclined to do.
51:00.333 --> 51:03.694 [SPEAKER_02]: Like, for example, people that fly private air.
51:04.054 --> 51:09.783 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, a lot of times we'll get on a plane, take a forty minute, forty five minute flight for lunch somewhere.
51:10.123 --> 51:11.385 [SPEAKER_02]: Go like for a down in Florida.
51:11.645 --> 51:17.534 [SPEAKER_02]: People get in a private plane, fly to the Bahamas for lunch, come back and land in the afternoon.
51:17.874 --> 51:18.235 [SPEAKER_02]: They do that.
51:19.076 --> 51:22.099 [SPEAKER_12]: Wow, I'm going to Egypt this weekend, but just for Saturday.
51:22.119 --> 51:23.320 [SPEAKER_02]: No, it's for rich people.
51:23.420 --> 51:24.320 [SPEAKER_02]: No, on Saturday.
51:24.340 --> 51:25.481 [SPEAKER_12]: I'm going to go to Sharmel.
51:25.521 --> 51:28.924 [SPEAKER_12]: She, I'm going to have a half day of scuba diving, seeing the coral reefs.
51:28.944 --> 51:30.145 [SPEAKER_12]: Because that's why you go to Egypt.
51:30.425 --> 51:32.387 [SPEAKER_12]: And then, we're going to look at the pyramids.
51:32.527 --> 51:33.308 [SPEAKER_12]: None of them come home.
51:33.668 --> 51:36.490 [SPEAKER_10]: Is this a trend that people in America are doing this?
51:36.870 --> 51:37.251 [SPEAKER_10]: Yes.
51:37.291 --> 51:39.873 [SPEAKER_10]: And Europe, the flights are going to be a lot shorter, so maybe.
51:40.674 --> 51:43.316 [SPEAKER_12]: No, you know, the extreme day triper is from America.
51:43.336 --> 51:44.757 [SPEAKER_12]: I think it's an American thing.
51:45.297 --> 51:46.437 [SPEAKER_02]: But I'm so jealous.
51:46.457 --> 51:55.899 [SPEAKER_02]: Oh, my, you know, I got a lot of buddies that are traveling right now and you know, and I'm just staying home sitting in my big fart chair and ordering Chinese golf shoes for my kid.
51:56.179 --> 51:58.700 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, I thought you were going to say Chinese food.
51:59.140 --> 52:07.882 [SPEAKER_02]: No, Michael was on the golf course the other day and I said, you know, he said these shoes are tight because he's twelve and he's growing the weed and I said,
52:09.302 --> 52:11.123 [SPEAKER_02]: Do I have this solution for you?
52:11.403 --> 52:12.804 [SPEAKER_02]: Oh Josh, I'm here to tell you.
52:13.104 --> 52:19.987 [SPEAKER_02]: Step right is his last gift arrived and it was a beautiful city jersey from the Red Sox.
52:21.148 --> 52:23.068 [SPEAKER_02]: The orange.
52:23.148 --> 52:24.069 [SPEAKER_02]: The yellow and blue one.
52:24.289 --> 52:24.649 [SPEAKER_02]: That one.
52:24.869 --> 52:25.590 [SPEAKER_02]: That's yours.
52:25.970 --> 52:26.550 [SPEAKER_02]: I got that.
52:26.610 --> 52:27.150 [SPEAKER_02]: I got that one.
52:27.470 --> 52:27.891 [SPEAKER_12]: What shoe?
52:27.971 --> 52:29.431 [SPEAKER_12]: What golf shoes are you replacing?
52:29.591 --> 52:30.352 [SPEAKER_12]: He said knowingly.
52:31.112 --> 52:33.713 [SPEAKER_02]: Adidas is my mom used to call him Adidas.
52:40.444 --> 52:43.566 [SPEAKER_12]: I took a day trip to France to see Run DMC.
52:45.127 --> 52:54.952 [SPEAKER_02]: Look, if money was no object, the short little hop to go have dinner or lunch somewhere, but the long transit landing flight to stay for one.
52:55.272 --> 52:58.454 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, that's, to me, however, I want to hold on.
52:58.634 --> 53:03.917 [SPEAKER_02]: If it is private air and you've got the disposable, the flight itself can be a party.
53:04.537 --> 53:04.757 [SPEAKER_02]: Right.
53:04.777 --> 53:05.217 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
53:05.237 --> 53:06.637 [SPEAKER_02]: The flight over can be a thing.
53:07.038 --> 53:10.618 [SPEAKER_12]: But who are you going to put on your private jet mic when you fly overseas?
53:11.398 --> 53:12.159 [SPEAKER_02]: Uh, Zendaya.
53:12.519 --> 53:14.219 [SPEAKER_02]: Uh, the aforementioned Zendaya.
53:14.439 --> 53:14.979 [SPEAKER_02]: Good choice.
53:15.599 --> 53:16.580 [SPEAKER_02]: And who's she dating?
53:16.660 --> 53:17.500 [SPEAKER_02]: Who's that guy?
53:18.020 --> 53:21.841 [SPEAKER_02]: Uh, it's not Shalame that she's she dating Timothy Shalame.
53:22.101 --> 53:22.961 [SPEAKER_02]: He's very thin.
53:23.021 --> 53:25.521 [SPEAKER_12]: Now you could you wouldn't even have to do a carry on for him.
53:25.721 --> 53:26.502 [SPEAKER_02]: Tom Holland.
53:26.742 --> 53:27.462 [SPEAKER_02]: Thomas Holland.
53:27.502 --> 53:28.282 [SPEAKER_02]: Same thing, isn't it?
53:28.822 --> 53:30.444 [SPEAKER_02]: Well, what I would do here's what I do.
53:30.784 --> 53:30.984 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
53:31.405 --> 53:32.125 [SPEAKER_02]: I'm like Zandaeo.
53:32.146 --> 53:33.227 [SPEAKER_02]: We're going to fly over to London.
53:33.967 --> 53:35.669 [SPEAKER_02]: Have a quick bite to eat and come right back.
53:35.749 --> 53:36.830 [SPEAKER_02]: We think it'll be a really nice.
53:36.890 --> 53:40.874 [SPEAKER_02]: It's just this brand new restaurant opening and then Zandaeo gets on the flight.
53:41.595 --> 53:46.179 [SPEAKER_02]: It go the way we're going to walk up on the stairs to the private jet.
53:46.459 --> 53:47.781 [SPEAKER_02]: It's going to be Zandaeo first.
53:48.041 --> 53:48.782 [SPEAKER_02]: Follow by me.
53:49.222 --> 54:01.428 [SPEAKER_02]: and then Tom Holland will be behind me and I will just do a little faster walk up the stairs and then the vacuum sealed door that I'll shut out his face.
54:03.309 --> 54:06.851 [SPEAKER_02]: We're better yet I'll hit the little switch to the stairs up.
54:08.913 --> 54:09.713 [SPEAKER_12]: He's still on it.
54:10.093 --> 54:11.213 [SPEAKER_02]: He's still on it.
54:11.253 --> 54:12.054 [SPEAKER_12]: But you know what?
54:12.094 --> 54:15.734 [SPEAKER_12]: Just give a tip to the guy that's driving the stair truck.
54:16.234 --> 54:17.114 [SPEAKER_12]: That's getting an end.
54:17.355 --> 54:18.135 [SPEAKER_02]: Have a meal out.
54:18.175 --> 54:20.215 [SPEAKER_02]: The stair truck for a private jet.
54:20.555 --> 54:21.355 [SPEAKER_02]: It can be.
54:21.615 --> 54:22.355 [SPEAKER_02]: It's the automate.
54:22.435 --> 54:24.736 [SPEAKER_02]: Well, yeah, if you're just looking to Brunei.
54:25.176 --> 54:25.696 [SPEAKER_02]: Well, yeah.
54:26.136 --> 54:30.977 [SPEAKER_02]: If you're like that jet that they sold to the United States government, that's the Air Force one.
54:31.217 --> 54:32.237 [SPEAKER_02]: That's a great jet.
54:32.477 --> 54:34.758 [SPEAKER_02]: That's great.
54:35.258 --> 54:35.978 [SPEAKER_02]: Great jet.
54:36.758 --> 54:41.880 [SPEAKER_12]: If I had to rank them all anyway people don't do this stay home and spend money locally Very good.
54:41.900 --> 54:43.501 [SPEAKER_02]: I think the show continues before so I want to tell you about the liquid.
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55:05.414 --> 55:06.755 [SPEAKER_02]: Is that your thing?
55:06.775 --> 55:09.658 [SPEAKER_12]: I have written them and said, please give Mike.
55:09.858 --> 55:11.760 [SPEAKER_12]: Well, there's a scheduled delivery.
55:12.341 --> 55:15.103 [SPEAKER_02]: They can send me all they want.
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56:25.010 --> 56:28.292 [SPEAKER_02]: All right, Josh Soroka is upset.
56:28.872 --> 56:30.073 [SPEAKER_02]: He is frustrated.
56:30.093 --> 56:30.774 [SPEAKER_02]: You know what Mike?
56:30.794 --> 56:32.015 [SPEAKER_02]: He's spitting nails.
56:32.095 --> 56:32.995 [SPEAKER_02]: That's how mad he is.
56:33.356 --> 56:36.078 [SPEAKER_02]: He's mad at big sports TV.
56:36.378 --> 56:37.519 [SPEAKER_02]: That's what he's mad at.
56:37.539 --> 56:39.741 [SPEAKER_02]: And then I want to talk about what I'm mad at.
56:39.941 --> 56:40.321 [SPEAKER_10]: Okay.
56:40.441 --> 56:54.472 [SPEAKER_10]: All a TV, but the latest news is ESPN is spending two billion dollars to purchase the NFL network and the red zone in time for football season this year so that they can roll out a twenty nine ninety nine a month plan.
56:55.313 --> 56:57.895 [SPEAKER_10]: for you to watch the NFL network and the red zone.
56:58.195 --> 57:00.736 [SPEAKER_02]: So when you used to get, when you go ahead.
57:01.297 --> 57:04.679 [SPEAKER_02]: So when you used to get the Sunday ticket,
57:05.827 --> 57:12.432 [SPEAKER_02]: It would include the red zone, so that will not be available now because ESPN has got their little D-beaters on it.
57:13.472 --> 57:17.355 [SPEAKER_02]: And they're going to charge you for watching that.
57:17.555 --> 57:23.399 [SPEAKER_02]: And I know that especially sports gamblers, this is taking advantage of what they have manufactured.
57:23.780 --> 57:26.782 [SPEAKER_02]: Yes, you know, retable business of sports gambling, right?
57:26.822 --> 57:27.562 [SPEAKER_02]: Fantasy football.
57:27.903 --> 57:28.063 [SPEAKER_02]: Yes.
57:28.503 --> 57:29.364 [SPEAKER_02]: That's what it's all about.
57:29.644 --> 57:32.286 [SPEAKER_12]: And that's what Las Vegas is all about, Mike gambling.
57:32.746 --> 57:34.147 [SPEAKER_02]: Las Vegas gambling.
57:34.307 --> 57:35.968 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, but I mean, I like real gambling.
57:36.269 --> 57:36.529 [SPEAKER_02]: All right.
57:36.809 --> 57:39.331 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I've never been a big, but you want to touch the chips.
57:39.711 --> 57:40.011 [SPEAKER_02]: I do.
57:40.212 --> 57:41.572 [SPEAKER_02]: I want to put my hands on the chips.
57:41.593 --> 57:42.533 [SPEAKER_02]: I want to press the buttons.
57:42.853 --> 57:44.034 [SPEAKER_02]: I want the bells and whistles.
57:44.094 --> 57:45.555 [SPEAKER_02]: I want to see a card flipped over.
57:46.076 --> 57:47.497 [SPEAKER_02]: That's what I want with my gambling.
57:47.877 --> 57:48.337 [SPEAKER_10]: I really do.
57:48.758 --> 57:52.160 [SPEAKER_10]: But at this point, I want my cable bill back.
57:52.660 --> 57:55.763 [SPEAKER_10]: Or I spent a hundred and fifty two hundred dollars and I have all these channels.
57:56.323 --> 58:03.705 [SPEAKER_02]: because as we all cut the cord and we all have these subscriptions starting to be a little insane.
58:04.265 --> 58:08.106 [SPEAKER_02]: And you know, I talked to Josh about that little secret place.
58:08.526 --> 58:09.286 [SPEAKER_02]: It's sketchy.
58:09.466 --> 58:09.666 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
58:09.726 --> 58:10.166 [SPEAKER_02]: It's sketchy.
58:10.226 --> 58:12.227 [SPEAKER_02]: You know, and sometimes it just goes out.
58:12.847 --> 58:13.047 [SPEAKER_12]: Yeah.
58:13.307 --> 58:13.987 [SPEAKER_02]: We're sketchy.
58:14.087 --> 58:14.307 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
58:14.547 --> 58:14.847 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
58:14.927 --> 58:17.728 [SPEAKER_12]: How many streamers do you have right now that you pay for?
58:18.648 --> 58:21.732 [SPEAKER_12]: I know you have two TV and that counts for a lot of them.
58:21.752 --> 58:25.477 [SPEAKER_02]: Okay, for YouTube TV for most of my live television, but I don't use it a lot.
58:25.818 --> 58:25.958 [SPEAKER_02]: Right.
58:25.998 --> 58:27.660 [SPEAKER_02]: And watch a lot of that.
58:27.921 --> 58:33.969 [SPEAKER_02]: I have Netflix, which really pretty much still the gold standard for streaming services.
58:34.049 --> 58:35.170 [SPEAKER_12]: Easy as to navigate.
58:35.411 --> 58:36.092 [SPEAKER_12]: Best content.
58:37.414 --> 58:47.347 [SPEAKER_02]: Apple TV I am you could you could actually just point at me and I would cancel that subscription cuz I'm not gonna point at you because there's a new episode of stick right now.
58:47.388 --> 58:48.469 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, watch stick first.
58:48.709 --> 58:49.350 [SPEAKER_02]: Well, I love stick.
58:51.313 --> 58:54.597 [SPEAKER_02]: And I love the girl that plays the love interest to the young golfer.
58:54.677 --> 58:56.219 [SPEAKER_02]: I think she's really fancy.
58:56.839 --> 59:00.884 [SPEAKER_02]: And Mark Marin is spectacular as the cat.
59:01.104 --> 59:01.785 [SPEAKER_02]: That's a great show.
59:02.105 --> 59:05.289 [SPEAKER_02]: But Apple TV goes months and months and months and months.
59:05.309 --> 59:05.629 [SPEAKER_02]: You're right.
59:05.669 --> 59:06.731 [SPEAKER_02]: How long are you going to see stick?
59:06.991 --> 59:08.533 [SPEAKER_02]: You're going to see stick for three years.
59:08.853 --> 59:11.597 [SPEAKER_02]: You're going to see old episodes of Stick for three years.
59:11.617 --> 59:14.160 [SPEAKER_02]: I still get no new programming after the season's over.
59:14.360 --> 59:20.729 [SPEAKER_12]: I still get you may like and it's Ted Lasso and I watched all of Ted Lasso four years ago or whatever.
59:20.869 --> 59:24.133 [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, and that's followed closely by Amazon Prime.
59:24.714 --> 59:26.074 [SPEAKER_02]: Amazon Prime is not great.
59:26.334 --> 59:27.095 [SPEAKER_02]: It's not great.
59:27.255 --> 59:29.235 [SPEAKER_02]: And then in the movies say, you know what?
59:29.455 --> 59:42.378 [SPEAKER_02]: I love these streaming services Netflix does it Amazon Prime does it where they come on and they talk about the fact that here are the top ten movies in America this week and it is BS.
59:42.598 --> 59:52.701 [SPEAKER_02]: I know there is no algorithm or measurement or data to tell me those that that disorderly is the top ten movies.
59:53.621 --> 59:58.206 [SPEAKER_12]: I can't believe the fact that the top ten TV shows usually includes general hospital.
59:58.286 --> 59:59.086 [SPEAKER_10]: It's ridiculous.
59:59.227 --> 01:00:02.189 [SPEAKER_10]: And I use prime today for the first time in forever.
[SPEAKER_10]: And I didn't realize there's now commercials in all your prime content.
[SPEAKER_10]: If you say extra, you guess you can do without, I think, extra.
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, the one that I put on the most improved list and one that is, I think, making a name for itself is Paramount TV.
[SPEAKER_02]: I love their amount.
[SPEAKER_02]: I think Paramount puts up great new content on a regular basis.
[SPEAKER_02]: So that's it.
[SPEAKER_02]: Paramount, you don't have Lulu?
[SPEAKER_02]: I've got rid of Lulu.
[SPEAKER_02]: No interest in Lulu.
[SPEAKER_02]: You have Lulu still?
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_02]: I do too.
[SPEAKER_02]: I came bundled with something.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, there's the plus also.
[SPEAKER_02]: Why do you have Lulu?
[SPEAKER_02]: Because what?
[SPEAKER_02]: That's a deputy dog.
[SPEAKER_12]: No, no.
[SPEAKER_12]: It came bundled with Disney.
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, yeah.
[SPEAKER_12]: Who needs Disney?
[SPEAKER_12]: You do if you want to watch that Beatles documentary.
[UNKNOWN]: Oh God.
[SPEAKER_10]: That's one thing that I'll use the Disney app.
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm not giving any I'm not giving any I'm not skipping any besides who looks or anything out there to be you don't do you have to be it to be free why not have to be
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, then I can get to be, so I think I've got it to then.
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_12]: And isn't there a football or something like that?
[SPEAKER_02]: There's football.
[SPEAKER_12]: There's like a YouTube type of a placement.
[SPEAKER_02]: It's like a to be rip off.
[SPEAKER_02]: Football to be.
[SPEAKER_02]: It's cool.
[SPEAKER_02]: You know what I mean?
[SPEAKER_02]: It's a team of folks.
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, HBO Max.
[SPEAKER_12]: That's right.
[SPEAKER_12]: And show time.
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, so time is under another heading.
[SPEAKER_12]: Show time is under paramount.
[SPEAKER_10]: Yeah, but you got to pay extra for it.
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, okay.
[SPEAKER_10]: I didn't realize it was my mom who I found that last week.
[SPEAKER_10]: Subscribe to Pure Flicks.
[SPEAKER_10]: What is the Christian Netflix really?
[SPEAKER_10]: Yeah, apparently it's like a bunch of hallmark movies.
[SPEAKER_10]: So if you're really in the hallmark movies.
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, we are, but we don't want them Christian.
[SPEAKER_12]: There's no sense in making them Christian.
[SPEAKER_10]: Is there a Christian streaming service?
[SPEAKER_10]: Yes.
[SPEAKER_10]: Pureflix.
[SPEAKER_10]: I haven't checked it out, but my mom was telling me about it.
[SPEAKER_02]: Do they have like what videos from Christian bands or something or evangelists or something like that?
[SPEAKER_10]: Pure flicks.
[SPEAKER_10]: Great American pure flicks.
[SPEAKER_10]: Discover a movie now top ten movies.
[SPEAKER_10]: Wild like me indivisible.
[SPEAKER_10]: My brother's keeper and God's country songs.
[SPEAKER_12]: They all sound great at this stuff.
[SPEAKER_12]: I've seen them all Mike and they're really fine.
[SPEAKER_02]: Some of them really, really five.
[SPEAKER_02]: It is four out of a million.
[SPEAKER_02]: Real quick, before we move on here, I do want to mention that when you're too old for doctors to care, I've heard about this.
[SPEAKER_02]: I've heard about this with the medical issues that older people get where it's just not worth it to try to fix something.
[SPEAKER_12]: This is like what we were talking about appliances yesterday.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, it's just not worth it.
[SPEAKER_02]: You can't get you can't fix them.
[SPEAKER_02]: Put them on fix you got to put a new one in it.
[SPEAKER_02]: But in this case, it's you can't fix you just deal with it.
[SPEAKER_02]: So I go you remember when I was talking very, very, very graphically about my issue.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_02]: My issue was that we have the fireworks, but the fireworks aren't as plentiful as they used to be.
[SPEAKER_12]: That's right.
[SPEAKER_02]: And is it something that is necessary?
[SPEAKER_02]: No.
[SPEAKER_02]: Is it something that is a result of a health problem?
[SPEAKER_02]: No.
[SPEAKER_02]: Is it something?
[SPEAKER_02]: Is it?
[SPEAKER_02]: No.
[SPEAKER_02]: I've had it checked out.
[SPEAKER_02]: Is it something that?
[SPEAKER_02]: Everything I get from this doctor is that that doesn't represent any underlying.
[SPEAKER_12]: Has it made a difference in the number of subscribers you have to your private bay?
[SPEAKER_12]: Because they want to see action.
[SPEAKER_12]: And it's just like you're not giving me so you don't like that.
[SPEAKER_02]: The MS is I like to call it is not what it used to be.
[SPEAKER_02]: First word money.
[SPEAKER_02]: Um, no, I, I just, he goes.
[SPEAKER_02]: He goes.
[SPEAKER_02]: You do you should write a letter to your penis today.
[SPEAKER_02]: You do are one two funds today.
[SPEAKER_02]: That's for sure.
[SPEAKER_02]: What happens is he's going to this doesn't you know that doesn't that really that wouldn't be anything to worry about man.
[SPEAKER_02]: This wouldn't be anything to worry about.
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm not there because I'm worried about an underlying medical condition.
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm there and I didn't say that at the time and I regret that I didn't because if I if I had had a doctor who could look past the fact that everything for older people is whether they're going to die or not right they want to have you know better steaming relations
[SPEAKER_12]: to improve a little action over it only fans needed exactly my fans demand it now that i put it but he goes through this info marshal said it on tb instead that i i tried i've tried i've tried i have tried and it's not i don't want to do that i don't want to do that i know it's a bad it's very bad it's a bad garbage in garbage on board did he ever mentioned that it's normal for a man of a certain age to have diminished
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_12]: Output?
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yep.
[SPEAKER_02]: That always gets said.
[SPEAKER_10]: And then it's just like you're supposed to just give up by now.
[SPEAKER_02]: He essentially said that without saying it.
[SPEAKER_02]: And it's a little bit, you know, it's a drag.
[SPEAKER_02]: It's kind of a drag.
[SPEAKER_02]: He said, he does this once you give up love.
[SPEAKER_02]: He said it could be narrowing.
[SPEAKER_02]: It could be, you know, slightly.
[SPEAKER_02]: And then are you hydrated?
[SPEAKER_02]: And then like twice in six months he did the test.
[SPEAKER_02]: Right, which I don't need.
[SPEAKER_02]: And I didn't want.
[SPEAKER_02]: I really wouldn't want it this time.
[SPEAKER_02]: What if you know, Carla with you?
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, that might be something.
[SPEAKER_02]: That might be, if she comes in.
[SPEAKER_02]: No, what it will be, if I do, first of all, um, I'm eighty percent done with a twenty percent maybe that I person, if I pursued it, I would go to a place that is specifically designed for like a wiggond that
[SPEAKER_02]: you as I'm going for
[SPEAKER_02]: to do it, to see if I can improve that part of my life.
[SPEAKER_12]: I just hope it's not the narrowing.
[SPEAKER_02]: It sounds like it's age related.
[SPEAKER_02]: I think.
[SPEAKER_02]: But I don't have the big question now.
[SPEAKER_02]: It's just tired.
[SPEAKER_02]: It's just too long.
[SPEAKER_02]: It's just a drag.
[SPEAKER_02]: It's what it is.
[SPEAKER_02]: It's a drag.
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm not looking.
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't want to get graphic.
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't want to get graphic.
[SPEAKER_02]: No.
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm not looking for the greatest fireworks display in the world, right?
[SPEAKER_02]: Right.
[SPEAKER_02]: I'll settle for some real nice ones that are low to the ground.
[SPEAKER_02]: Just real nice ones that are low to the ground.
[SPEAKER_02]: And then you can't leave that kind of an appointment without the doctor without feeling as though.
[SPEAKER_02]: What ever.
[SPEAKER_02]: Whatever.
[SPEAKER_02]: Bet in the world.
[SPEAKER_02]: All right, turn that off.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, it's too much.
[SPEAKER_02]: What am I doing, Josh?
[SPEAKER_02]: I bet in the world of medicine.
[UNKNOWN]: Yes.
[SPEAKER_02]: That that happens for not necessarily, you know, you're plumbing, but a lot of other issues where they go, well, you know, that looks like it's something that could be a problem down the road, but it's not something you need to worry about right now.
[SPEAKER_02]: And what they're saying to you is you're going to be dead.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_02]: Before before you need to worry about, I had a group.
[SPEAKER_12]: I had a liver doctor that I didn't wear it.
[SPEAKER_10]: What did he say?
[SPEAKER_10]: Hold on.
[SPEAKER_10]: What did you say support for the poor group?
[SPEAKER_10]: You're not the only guy going through it.
[SPEAKER_02]: I suppose you're right.
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, bring it up at his church on Tuesday.
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't want to go to I don't I'm not going in there and tell them.
[SPEAKER_02]: Fourteen hundred guys that I know that problem.
[SPEAKER_12]: But I had I had a liver doctor that I no longer go to didn't care for him because he said I asked him a very pointed question.
[SPEAKER_12]: He says let's just kick that down the road until we talk again.
[SPEAKER_12]: And I'm like, I'd rather not kick it down the road because I have a question right now.
[SPEAKER_12]: And you know, they owe you that.
[SPEAKER_12]: Don't tell him, don't have him tell you not to worry.
[SPEAKER_12]: If you weren't.
[SPEAKER_02]: Did you find another liver guy?
[SPEAKER_12]: Yes.
[SPEAKER_12]: I go to a great one now at Georgetown Hospital where I was born.
[SPEAKER_12]: And how just since you brought it up, how are you?
[SPEAKER_12]: I'm great.
[SPEAKER_12]: Okay.
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_12]: I had a doctor's check-up two months ago, month ago.
[SPEAKER_12]: That's when I got put on Prozac.
[SPEAKER_12]: I'm not sure about this Prozac.
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, that's your nagging.
[SPEAKER_02]: How about your blood work and your... Oh, that's good.
[SPEAKER_02]: And your organs and everything and your... It all checks out.
[SPEAKER_02]: Why are you getting?
[SPEAKER_02]: Why are you clamming up now?
[SPEAKER_02]: No.
[SPEAKER_02]: Why are you clamming up now with two word answers?
[SPEAKER_12]: Well Mike here's what I'll tell you.
[SPEAKER_02]: For not sure.
[SPEAKER_02]: Got it.
[SPEAKER_02]: We'll do settled down.
[SPEAKER_02]: All right.
[SPEAKER_02]: That was just who I want our listeners would like to know.
[SPEAKER_12]: All right, all of my organs are functioning as they should.
[SPEAKER_12]: My lever has bounced back to a point where it's better than it has been in years.
[SPEAKER_02]: That's one different fantastic.
[SPEAKER_02]: Thank you for that.
[SPEAKER_12]: I'm no longer taking like certain pills that are taxing my liver, like, etc., and is very bad for your liver.
[SPEAKER_12]: I didn't know that going into this.
[SPEAKER_12]: But so now for pain relievers, it's simply a couple Tylenol as needed, but you know what?
[SPEAKER_12]: Now that I'm not drinking, I don't get as many headaches, so I don't need as much Tylenol.
[SPEAKER_12]: I sleep through the night.
[SPEAKER_12]: I'm down.
[SPEAKER_12]: Did you take a lot of Tylenol and you were drinking?
[SPEAKER_12]: Not Tylenol, etc., etc.
[SPEAKER_12]: All the time.
[SPEAKER_12]: Really?
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_12]: I bet that's part of the problem.
[SPEAKER_02]: So you'd like load up on those the morning after.
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_02]: Every day?
[SPEAKER_12]: Almost every day.
[SPEAKER_02]: Was that because drinking or work?
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, that was actually the main thing about Accedron was if I had a slight headache, this is backward and stupid thinking.
[SPEAKER_12]: It also had caffeine.
[SPEAKER_12]: So if I had a caffeine headache, it would bounce me back from that.
[SPEAKER_12]: But it's not the thing you want to, I am currently off caffeine and Mike, you'll appreciate this.
[SPEAKER_12]: I have not had a soda since July fifth.
[SPEAKER_02]: Rob, oh my god.
[SPEAKER_02]: I, I, you would be, truly blown away at how many times I think about that.
[SPEAKER_02]: I thought about it today.
[SPEAKER_02]: I was getting the diet stuff, which is almost as bad by the way.
[SPEAKER_00]: Right.
[SPEAKER_02]: Right.
[SPEAKER_02]: But I was thinking about that and saying,
[SPEAKER_02]: You know, how much is coming to this house because it seems to go quicker than it's good.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_02]: And I was like, I was thinking of you.
[SPEAKER_02]: And I, oh, my God.
[SPEAKER_02]: And the doctor, it's hard to tell you to tell that.
[SPEAKER_12]: He said in the couple months ago, you got to watch your sugars.
[SPEAKER_12]: Just watch your sugars.
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, you're going to probably get that right.
[SPEAKER_02]: A huge difference.
[SPEAKER_12]: I hate it.
[SPEAKER_12]: What?
[SPEAKER_12]: Every day I wake up and I want one every day during the day I want a soda.
[SPEAKER_12]: This is harder to give up soda than it is to give up drinking for me.
[SPEAKER_10]: And this was the week Costco switched to.
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, you're killing me.
[SPEAKER_12]: The food court.
[SPEAKER_02]: The food court is ready.
[SPEAKER_12]: Mike, that's not to say I'll never have another soda.
[SPEAKER_02]: No, I like that.
[SPEAKER_02]: No, that is that is.
[SPEAKER_02]: Clip and great.
[SPEAKER_02]: I'd use the effort, but I don't want it.
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't want it happening.
[SPEAKER_02]: I'd be a letter of gratitude.
[SPEAKER_02]: That I am grateful that you have done that.
[SPEAKER_02]: That's a pro-long your life.
[SPEAKER_02]: I hope so.
[SPEAKER_02]: That is such good news.
[SPEAKER_02]: That is really good news.
[SPEAKER_02]: Stick with it.
[SPEAKER_02]: Really.
[SPEAKER_12]: I love every time I get to pull something from my life that I like.
[SPEAKER_02]: But the thing is, acclimate your palate so you can have a diet one once in a while.
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, I'm not gonna know.
[SPEAKER_12]: That's poison.
[SPEAKER_12]: I'm not gonna put those chemicals in my body.
[SPEAKER_02]: Hey, well, I do.
[SPEAKER_02]: I might have had three today.
[SPEAKER_02]: Hey, isn't it time for you to join the TMO as bonus show family people?
[SPEAKER_02]: Rob's off soda.
[SPEAKER_02]: This is a good excuse right now.
[SPEAKER_02]: Good heavens.
[SPEAKER_02]: The answer is a resounding yes.
[SPEAKER_02]: Every day we are maximizing the bonus show experience because better access means more fun.
[SPEAKER_02]: We're giving you more because you deserve more.
[SPEAKER_02]: like our state of the RTMOS extras.
[SPEAKER_02]: These episodes are so much fun and they are only available to bonus show subscribers.
[SPEAKER_02]: Great extra content that you will love, or sign up for the commercial free TMOS, which also includes the bonus show every week.
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[SPEAKER_02]: One that we are working on right now that you're gonna love.
[SPEAKER_02]: By the way, exciting is brewing people.
[SPEAKER_12]: Ask me about that when we kill the Mike's Josh had a great idea for it.
[SPEAKER_10]: That's right.
[SPEAKER_02]: That's good news.
[SPEAKER_02]: Instant access to the exclusive TMOS supporters Facebook page.
[SPEAKER_02]: Just visit Michael Maris Show.com.
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[SPEAKER_02]: Be a hero, be a helper for additional details.
[SPEAKER_02]: Visit the bonus show tab at Michaelmarishow.com.
[SPEAKER_02]: Don't bother to phone us.
[SPEAKER_02]: Just buy the bonus.
[SPEAKER_02]: He wrote it.
[SPEAKER_02]: I deleted it.
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, let's do this.
[SPEAKER_02]: Absolutely.
[SPEAKER_07]: Hey, I like that.
[SPEAKER_07]: Some beautiful video.
[SPEAKER_07]: Harry Potter kiss.
[SPEAKER_12]: hard to beat that for a jingle.
[SPEAKER_12]: So, as we do beautiful video today, Mike, this one, I feel there's sort of stealing from you, but I still appreciated it.
[SPEAKER_12]: This is two guys.
[SPEAKER_12]: They appear to be in a band, and they are doing an impression of the way airport announcements sound.
[SPEAKER_12]: And I think it's great, and you mention that you don't like airports.
[SPEAKER_12]: I think this is fine because they use a zylophone, but also a snare drum.
[SPEAKER_03]: What the hell?
[SPEAKER_02]: That's kind of a very ocean on a bit.
[SPEAKER_02]: A wonderful radio personality used to do.
[SPEAKER_02]: That's right.
[SPEAKER_02]: That is a complete rip off of the ordinary very subway, right?
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, you never needed.
[SPEAKER_12]: You never needed a snare drum to do it.
[SPEAKER_02]: No, absolutely.
[SPEAKER_12]: There's a guy named Spain.
[SPEAKER_12]: I don't know his first name because I've forgotten it, but I remember his last name is Spain.
[SPEAKER_12]: And would you like to guess what state he lives in?
[SPEAKER_02]: Spain.
[SPEAKER_02]: I'll give you a hand.
[SPEAKER_12]: It's American.
[SPEAKER_12]: I'll give you a hand.
[SPEAKER_12]: It's a drunk driving guy and the way he got pegged for drunk driving, not usual.
[SPEAKER_12]: So what state do you think he lives in?
[SPEAKER_02]: Uh, Delaware.
[SPEAKER_12]: Look around Mike, look around you.
[SPEAKER_12]: Uh, Georgia.
[SPEAKER_12]: It is very close to Georgia.
[SPEAKER_02]: It is Georgia.
[SPEAKER_02]: I got it.
[SPEAKER_02]: I got it.
[SPEAKER_02]: Georgia adjacent Alabama.
[SPEAKER_12]: No, this is Florida and he got a DUI because he was making erratic turns on his lawnmower.
[SPEAKER_12]: Now, is this fair?
[SPEAKER_12]: Should you get a DUI for the lawnmower?
[SPEAKER_12]: We went to a noted Florida attorney to find out.
[SPEAKER_07]: So can you get a DUI on a bicycle, a horse, a lawnmower?
[SPEAKER_07]: The answer is yes.
[SPEAKER_07]: So the way it works in Florida is any vehicle that's on public highway.
[SPEAKER_07]: You can get a DUI and horses, bikes,
[SPEAKER_07]: Uh, lawnmowers, anything that you're riding is considered a vehicle in the state of Florida.
[SPEAKER_07]: And there's big cases with people in the back of a whole life.
[SPEAKER_07]: Get a DUI, riding a lawnmower, you know, riding a bicycle.
[SPEAKER_07]: So it is not just cars, keep in mind to arrive with Tesla and the self-driving cars.
[SPEAKER_07]: Even though you're behind the wheel and the car is driving itself, you're still operating it.
[SPEAKER_07]: You're still responsible.
[SPEAKER_07]: And you can still get a DUI, even if it's a self-driving car.
[SPEAKER_12]: No.
[SPEAKER_12]: I thought I heard dad.
[SPEAKER_12]: My bad.
[SPEAKER_02]: Um, yeah, if you, maybe I did not hear a dad.
[SPEAKER_12]: Okay.
[SPEAKER_12]: All right.
[SPEAKER_02]: What happened there?
[SPEAKER_12]: Mike, this not only has the best anchor man we've seen in a while, you're going to really like this guy, but also I have to ask as far as baseball goes.
[SPEAKER_12]: I've got two guys with me here.
[SPEAKER_12]: Are you in fans of the Nats?
[SPEAKER_02]: Uh, no.
[SPEAKER_12]: Okay.
[SPEAKER_12]: Then you don't want to go to Kentucky because they've gotten ads everywhere now.
[SPEAKER_02]: It's like the bugs.
[SPEAKER_12]: Yes.
[SPEAKER_01]: Now, Q. The guy in northern Logan County, say, and my infestation is making my unbearable and they blame a local aluminum plant.
[SPEAKER_08]: WBKL investigates reporter, Brennan Crane, spoke with residents.
[SPEAKER_08]: Take the same side of their homes for our customers.
[SPEAKER_08]: All right, this is not the start of the against.
[SPEAKER_02]: There's low energy and then there is just I'm not even a lie.
[SPEAKER_02]: He is close to retirement.
[SPEAKER_02]: He really does look like he's in a box.
[SPEAKER_02]: Hey, I resent as somebody closer retirement than you.
[SPEAKER_02]: I resent that.
[SPEAKER_02]: I've never phoned it in like this guy.
[SPEAKER_02]: Look at this guy.
[SPEAKER_02]: Make an effort for Christ's sake.
[SPEAKER_12]: It almost makes me want to watch this news channel.
[SPEAKER_01]: And you're in Logan County, and that is best station.
[SPEAKER_01]: He's amazing.
[SPEAKER_08]: And they blame a local aluminum plant.
[SPEAKER_08]: WBKL investigates reporter Brennan Crane, spoke with residents.
[SPEAKER_09]: Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
[SPEAKER_09]: Thomas is one of dozens of residents near Logan aluminum's recycling facility in Louisburg, who say a persistent net infestation.
[SPEAKER_09]: Oh, look at those.
[SPEAKER_09]: Life unbearable.
[SPEAKER_09]: They are now part of a lawsuit against the company claiming the plant is to blame.
[SPEAKER_00]: I just have a lot of nets and you can cook.
[SPEAKER_00]: You can hardly eat for them.
[SPEAKER_09]: Walk inside Thomas's spotless home and you'll see hundreds.
[SPEAKER_09]: Maybe thousands of nets caught on traps hanging from light fixtures.
[SPEAKER_00]: every day or every other day, you have to change them all or they just fly some day.
[SPEAKER_02]: You know what?
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, I heard that she spends so much on exterminators trying to get rid of the gnats that now she's not going to be able to get her neck lift.
[SPEAKER_11]: Her spotless home, Mike.
[SPEAKER_02]: What happened to my camera on this show today?
[SPEAKER_02]: Do I look like I'm in a smoky room or something like that?
[SPEAKER_12]: You might be overlit.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I think I'm going to turn it down.
[SPEAKER_12]: I think that happened during the show because we all looked great when it began.
[SPEAKER_02]: I look great at the beginning of this show.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_02]: And then it's that no expense paid camera.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, that's right.
[SPEAKER_02]: That's bad.
[SPEAKER_10]: I'll tell you.
[SPEAKER_10]: No expense was spared.
[SPEAKER_10]: That's what your anger has been at WBKO since, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States, in the States
[SPEAKER_12]: going on four years Mike you know what let's just bear with your camera because I only have one more tape.
[SPEAKER_02]: I do think fix it then stay a lot.
[SPEAKER_12]: I think that one of the most lovely songs ever written as far as Beatles songs go is called Here comes the Sun and I think this is a beautiful rendition of it and we will close with it today.
[SPEAKER_12]: You can find great stuff on the internet.
[SPEAKER_12]: This guitar work is beautiful.
[SPEAKER_12]: It's all right.
[SPEAKER_12]: Is that pretty?
[SPEAKER_12]: Like when things are pretty, that's beautiful.
[SPEAKER_02]: That's a great way to end the show.
[SPEAKER_02]: Hey, I really fixed it there, didn't I?
[SPEAKER_02]: It's good.
[SPEAKER_02]: I see that.
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, that's everywhere.
[SPEAKER_02]: We got to get out of here.
[SPEAKER_02]: We're back in brand new show tomorrow.
[SPEAKER_02]: Thank you so much for your support.
[SPEAKER_02]: Alright, thanks to Joel Zuckerberg.
[SPEAKER_02]: Are you sure?
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, Zuckerberg.
[SPEAKER_10]: I thought it was Zuckerman.
[SPEAKER_10]: Is Zuckerman?
[SPEAKER_10]: That's right.
[SPEAKER_02]: Hold on, I'll tell you later.
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't want to screw this up.
[SPEAKER_02]: No, no, no, second.
[SPEAKER_02]: Let me just, uh, minimize.
[SPEAKER_02]: I do have, you know what?
[SPEAKER_12]: It is Zuckerman.
[SPEAKER_12]: I have it written down.
[SPEAKER_02]: Zuckerman, not Zuckerberg.
[SPEAKER_12]: Right.
[SPEAKER_12]: Uh, I was just a slip of the lip.
[SPEAKER_12]: Slip of the toddler.
[SPEAKER_12]: No expense was spared.
[SPEAKER_02]: The book that Joel brought to us today was gratitude Tiger creating joy through the art of impactful letters.
[SPEAKER_02]: And he's a good guy.
[SPEAKER_02]: It was fun talking to him.
[SPEAKER_02]: We appreciate him coming on on the show.
[SPEAKER_02]: We'll be back with a brand new episode tomorrow for Rob Spuack and Joshua Roca.
[SPEAKER_02]: Michael Maris saying so long every about a management regrets the error.
[SPEAKER_06]: Want more?
[SPEAKER_06]: Make sure you check out the Michael Maribona show.
[SPEAKER_06]: Get it at Michael Maris Show.com.
[SPEAKER_04]: Michael Mera, Radio Entertainment.
[SPEAKER_04]: You lost again!
[SPEAKER_04]: Sabrina, don't just stare at it, eat it.
[SPEAKER_01]: Cutin' their mouth tissue.
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