<v Speaker 1>Jared, Katie and Josh one hundred.
<v Speaker 2>We're going to dive into PMI here in just a second,
<v Speaker 2>but I do want to let you guys know it's
<v Speaker 2>the end of an era. AOL has announced that their
<v Speaker 2>dial up Internet service.
<v Speaker 3>Is shutting down.
<v Speaker 2>Can you believe it is still an option here in
<v Speaker 2>twenty twenty five that you could get dial up internet?
<v Speaker 3>I did not know that. Actually, gosh.
<v Speaker 1>It totally brought back memories of getting those little CDs
<v Speaker 1>in the mail though, right.
<v Speaker 2>The first one hundred hours were free, and then you
<v Speaker 2>had to pay, and.
<v Speaker 4>Then you don't pick up the phone while I'm.
<v Speaker 3>On the internet. You would jack everything up. Oh yeah, yeah.
<v Speaker 2>According to some data online census data, about one hundred
<v Speaker 2>and sixty thousand Americans are still using dial up?
<v Speaker 3>Are you how much? So it's like zero.
<v Speaker 4>Point one percent of all Internet connections in the US.
<v Speaker 3>And it's all grandma's it's like rural people.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, because it is harder to get the you know what,
<v Speaker 1>I guess broadband internet and you get us into those mountains.
<v Speaker 4>Satellite now you can get starlink and everything.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, that brings me back to like leisure suit Larry
<v Speaker 1>Days videos ever play.
<v Speaker 3>That game I did. Yeah, a lot of leisure suit.
<v Speaker 4>Larry suit Larry was naughty.
<v Speaker 5>I just say you can always tell when you were
<v Speaker 5>gonna get a call because it would go like.
<v Speaker 3>And then the call would come in and you were like, whoa,
<v Speaker 3>there it is.
<v Speaker 2>If you still want dial up, you can get it
<v Speaker 2>for about ten bucks a month and you can get
<v Speaker 2>it through Microsoft and net zero.
<v Speaker 4>I guess there's a funny little stat where to go.
<v Speaker 2>Dial Up is fifty six kilobits per second, so it's
<v Speaker 2>going to take you about twelve minutes to download a song,
<v Speaker 2>and if you want to get a high def movie,
<v Speaker 2>one hundred and seventy hours, or just over a week
<v Speaker 2>if you want to download die Hard with a Vengeance
<v Speaker 2>or something. So anyway, rest in peace, America.
<v Speaker 4>Rip.
<v Speaker 3>Oh, it's truly sad.
<v Speaker 5>I know we all had it point right, Yeah we did?
<v Speaker 4>All right, guys, let's dive into PMI.
<v Speaker 2>It's your positive A minus and something a little bit.
<v Speaker 4>Interesting for you this morning.
<v Speaker 3>Who got to pee? I got to pee today? And
<v Speaker 3>this is a really cool story.
<v Speaker 5>It's actually coming out of China, but they are breaking
<v Speaker 5>new barriers with trains. We're kind of going backwards now,
<v Speaker 5>they're not giving up on air travel, but they think
<v Speaker 5>there's a bunch of safer ways that you can do
<v Speaker 5>very very quick travel down there. And they have created
<v Speaker 5>a new train that sits on high speed magnets, so
<v Speaker 5>it floats and it goes through a vacuum tunnel, so
<v Speaker 5>there is almost zero wind resistance against this thing too.
<v Speaker 5>It travels up to six hundred and twenty one miles
<v Speaker 5>an hour, which.
<v Speaker 3>There you go, that's perfect, Yes it is, Yeah, I
<v Speaker 3>can do that, but yeah, it is faster than most
<v Speaker 3>plane travel.
<v Speaker 5>Most commercial airlines go around five hundred miles an hour.
<v Speaker 5>This is now traveling at six hundred and twenty one
<v Speaker 5>miles an hour, is what it hit.
<v Speaker 4>There're zippy, man, all of my god, I do know,
<v Speaker 4>I do.
<v Speaker 1>I just had to be on a plane a bunch
<v Speaker 1>last couple of weeks.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, not fun, well, not even that.
<v Speaker 5>But the story is coming out of d I A
<v Speaker 5>right now where they have shut down the south uh
<v Speaker 5>t s A area.
<v Speaker 3>The lines are insane. It's horrible.
<v Speaker 5>The air you have to get on a plane sometimes
<v Speaker 5>that gets delayed. There's no delays, no weather delays.
<v Speaker 1>Like literally when we were leaving to go to our place,
<v Speaker 1>it was a three hour delay, and then when we
<v Speaker 1>got to the airport we were going to the rental
<v Speaker 1>car place was closed.
<v Speaker 4>We had to sleep at.
<v Speaker 1>The Albany airport for three hours on benches waiting for
<v Speaker 1>the rental car place to open.
<v Speaker 3>I have but still bees are hard.
<v Speaker 1>I know there will probably be delays with this train
<v Speaker 1>system and everything too, but I am just so overflying
<v Speaker 1>anything that has another option.
<v Speaker 3>I'm like, yeah.
<v Speaker 5>About this is it operates completely silent because it's just
<v Speaker 5>on magnet, so it's like a massive tesla.
<v Speaker 3>There's zero CO two emission, which is what planes you know.
<v Speaker 3>That's the thing. It's much greener, and it cuts everything.
<v Speaker 5>If you're going from let's say Denver to New York,
<v Speaker 5>you know those what four or five hour flights right there,
<v Speaker 5>it cuts that down to like an.
<v Speaker 3>Hour and a half, which is how fast I are.
<v Speaker 2>Until you see somebody standing like on the train tracks
<v Speaker 2>and then goes zipping by.
<v Speaker 3>An hour. Yeah, that'll blow you away. Yeah, those says
<v Speaker 3>that's crazy.
<v Speaker 5>It's all being tested in China right now, but if
<v Speaker 5>this goes well, they're going to put it into operation,
<v Speaker 5>and then on top of that, it will go worldwide.
<v Speaker 3>And I love it.
<v Speaker 5>I've traveled by train before, the slow ones, and I
<v Speaker 5>think it's really cool.
<v Speaker 4>So so boring, I mean talking about boring.
<v Speaker 5>It is, but if you could do that, if you
<v Speaker 5>could go from here to New York in an hour
<v Speaker 5>and a half.
<v Speaker 4>We went to California, We went to Anaheim as a
<v Speaker 4>kid on a train. I think it took us.
<v Speaker 3>Like three days, stop stop, so many stops. It was
<v Speaker 3>not good. A lot of that stuff they're talking about,
<v Speaker 3>actually they would do. It's funny.
<v Speaker 5>Not NonStop flights, but non stop train. It's to you
<v Speaker 5>where you can need to go. So hopefully, because I
<v Speaker 5>think that'd be a really cool breakthrough.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah. Really.
<v Speaker 2>Thing I remember about the train ride to Anaheim is
<v Speaker 2>we were young kids and the people directly across from
<v Speaker 2>us in the aisle were trying to get their freak on,
<v Speaker 2>and my parents were trying to shield our young virgin
<v Speaker 2>eyes from what was happening.
<v Speaker 3>It's a different time, you know.
<v Speaker 2>That was probably late eighties when that was going on,
<v Speaker 2>and they just let them do their thing.
<v Speaker 4>Is hurting her, Mommy? Why why there's so many coats
<v Speaker 4>on top of it?
<v Speaker 3>Oh my gosh, I still remember it. What? What is?
<v Speaker 3>What exactly is going on? What's the minus?
<v Speaker 1>Katie ket Okay, yes, the minus has to do with
<v Speaker 1>dating and oh my gosh, well we've heard about the
<v Speaker 1>ghosting trend, right, like when you're dating somebody and they
<v Speaker 1>completely cut off communication with you, no explanation whatsoever, and
<v Speaker 1>a lot of folks don't like that. But now there's
<v Speaker 1>a new term, and it's called speed dumping, and it's
<v Speaker 1>like the exact opposite of ghosting.
<v Speaker 4>It's too much, there's bad, quick strip to the bathroom.
<v Speaker 1>No, it says, actually that speed dumping is when you
<v Speaker 1>ask you break up with somebody, what you did a little?
<v Speaker 1>You break up with somebody too quickly, so it's like
<v Speaker 1>even after the first date is really so Yeah, it
<v Speaker 1>typically occurs with short term relationship, next after a couple
<v Speaker 1>of dates, or even after the first meeting. So they
<v Speaker 1>say it's like quick and direct break up over social
<v Speaker 1>media or text.
<v Speaker 3>Me familiar with.
<v Speaker 2>Josh one of those Do they still have those things
<v Speaker 2>in the deli where you pull the ticket?
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, you take your number.
<v Speaker 1>Line ladies, Yeah, no, beat him off with the stick.
<v Speaker 1>We have to with Josh, like people just love him.
<v Speaker 1>But anyway, Yeah, so they're saying this new phenomenon is
<v Speaker 1>about just being completely direct and all of the communication.
<v Speaker 3>But people don't like it as well.
<v Speaker 1>Like somebody said that they went on one date with
<v Speaker 1>a fella and then he texted her and right away
<v Speaker 1>it was like, you know, this is where I'm at
<v Speaker 1>in my life, and this is where I feel you're at.
<v Speaker 1>And she's like, I don't like you that much to
<v Speaker 1>where you feel like you need to send me a paragraph.
<v Speaker 1>But if somebody is just upfront and honest about it
<v Speaker 1>and says, hey, you know, I appreciate your time, but
<v Speaker 1>I don't think we're really matching up in terms of compatibility,
<v Speaker 1>that is appreciated, and I'm with this. Like ghosting, it
<v Speaker 1>just brings up so much anxiety because you think, what
<v Speaker 1>did I do?
<v Speaker 3>What?
<v Speaker 1>You know, like what could I have just cure Yeah,
<v Speaker 1>And then it's like the entire like week after you're
<v Speaker 1>just thinking about that. Whereas with this, I mean one message,
<v Speaker 1>it may hurt in the moment, but you're gonna.
<v Speaker 3>Be able to recover from that a lot. Totally. I
<v Speaker 3>love this.
<v Speaker 1>I do maybe not like a paragraph about why you
<v Speaker 1>don't need to be with that person and on top
<v Speaker 1>of everything, your face yes, exactly, but people are saying
<v Speaker 1>this is called being an adult. This is called if
<v Speaker 1>you don't like somebody after one date, you.
<v Speaker 4>Can be courteous. Thank you. I don't see a future they're.
<v Speaker 3>Going to be godspeed. I like this new trend. It
<v Speaker 3>better than ghost Yeah. Ghosting is so immature. That's so
<v Speaker 3>last year, Curties. Let's do more speed dumping, guys.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, speed dumping.
<v Speaker 3>I like it. I like my version better.
<v Speaker 2>All right, let's wrap things up with the interesting. Let's
<v Speaker 2>talk about weddings. A lot of you are probably getting
<v Speaker 2>getting married this upcoming fall season because it's beautiful with
<v Speaker 2>all the colors.
<v Speaker 3>Get this.
<v Speaker 2>The average wedding now costs about thirty three thousand dollars.
<v Speaker 2>If you break that down, people about two hundred and
<v Speaker 2>eighty four bucks per guest. And there's a lot of
<v Speaker 2>hacks out there on how you can save money and
<v Speaker 2>make your wedding cheaper. But it's mostly like twenty bucks here,
<v Speaker 2>twenty bucks there. Cut down on your centerpieces, yeah, use
<v Speaker 2>plastics overwear whatever. Here's a way to sell to make
<v Speaker 2>a ton of money for your wedding is to sell tickets. Now,
<v Speaker 2>it's not that you're selling it to your loved ones
<v Speaker 2>that are coming to your wedding. You're actually using an
<v Speaker 2>app to post your wedding and you're inviting strangers to
<v Speaker 2>come and hang out and enjoy your magical day. You're
<v Speaker 2>selling tickets to strangers.
<v Speaker 3>Let's see how.
<v Speaker 4>Much are they?
<v Speaker 2>People are ranging anywhere from one hundred to two hundred
<v Speaker 2>dollars per tickets.
<v Speaker 4>What couples have to approve.
<v Speaker 2>The sales after seeing profiles of perspective guests. So you
<v Speaker 2>have to actually go on there, create a little profile
<v Speaker 2>of yourself, tell people who you are, and say I'd
<v Speaker 2>like to come to your wedding. Then you can actually
<v Speaker 2>upsell these people that come with add ons like selling photos.
<v Speaker 2>Have a professional photographer there and then it takes some
<v Speaker 2>professional photos of these people. You can charge them then
<v Speaker 2>for their meals, all sorts of stuff like there's a
<v Speaker 2>whole list on how you can charge people that are
<v Speaker 2>coming to your wedding.
<v Speaker 4>First of all, who are these creepers that just show
<v Speaker 4>up to random weddings and want to do that?
<v Speaker 1>Well, they're pay wedding crashers, but they don't.
<v Speaker 2>They are, but they're not paying. We had wedding crashers
<v Speaker 2>at our wedding.
<v Speaker 4>They showed up.
<v Speaker 2>We looked over and there was like three people in
<v Speaker 2>line at our buffet that we had no idea.
<v Speaker 3>Who they were.
<v Speaker 4>They were like, hey, hey, hey.
<v Speaker 3>They just wandered in from the hotel.
<v Speaker 2>So we were having the reception at and they just
<v Speaker 2>started eating our food and drinking our beer.
<v Speaker 4>Anyway, they say, this isn't you know that crazy?
<v Speaker 2>Even idea, it's not awkward for your guests because you've
<v Speaker 2>essentially have mingling circles anyway.
<v Speaker 4>From both different you know, both families.
<v Speaker 3>Everybody's mingling.
<v Speaker 2>Nobody really knows everybody, so why not throw some strangers
<v Speaker 2>in the mix.
<v Speaker 4>You might meet some really cool people.
<v Speaker 3>But who's going to be paying ticket for a random wedding?
<v Speaker 4>People that are hard up for friends?
<v Speaker 3>Katie I know have lots of friends. I don't know.
<v Speaker 3>I can see Katie showing up.
<v Speaker 1>I would not pay two hundred dollars to a random
<v Speaker 1>person's wedding, though, Like that seems a little ridiculous.
<v Speaker 4>If somebody paid me two hundred dollars to go to that,
<v Speaker 4>I wouldn't go.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, I wouldn't know weddings anyway.
<v Speaker 4>I know I'm trying to. But there's these weirdos out
<v Speaker 4>there that love love.
<v Speaker 2>They love these goofy events and they'll probably go get
<v Speaker 2>some drinks, enjoy a band, and maybe, you know, try
<v Speaker 2>to hook up with the bridesmaids.
<v Speaker 3>Hey there's that movie about that. Hey, J what's the
<v Speaker 3>name of this app?
<v Speaker 2>It's called Inviting I N V I T I N
<v Speaker 2>Inviting and it's a small little startup.
<v Speaker 4>And uh yeah, if you're a total dork I want
<v Speaker 4>to go to weddings, that one's for you.
<v Speaker 3>It's very funny, kind of weird.
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