<v Speaker 1>Jar you, Katie and Josh one hundred, what's up your
<v Speaker 1>belly button Sniffers's here?
<v Speaker 2>We are here, we are boom oh.
<v Speaker 1>I should mention we'll give you some information on free
<v Speaker 1>ticket Friday later on the show too, where you can
<v Speaker 1>possibly meet Josh from the show and score some free
<v Speaker 1>Goo Goo Dolls tickets.
<v Speaker 2>Was sending him to prison. He's ready to go to prison.
<v Speaker 2>They would love him.
<v Speaker 1>I have a show recommendation late in bed last night
<v Speaker 1>with my son, who was actually like, let's watch something.
<v Speaker 1>So I was like, all right, let's find something where you.
<v Speaker 2>Can actually learn something.
<v Speaker 1>And we flipped on the Netflix series train Wreck and
<v Speaker 1>we watched the balloon Boy one, the balloon Boy hoax
<v Speaker 1>from two thousand and nine where that family, it was
<v Speaker 1>the Heany family, the dad made that homemade helium filled
<v Speaker 1>ass balloon to resemble a flying saucer, let it go
<v Speaker 1>in their backyard, and then everybody freaked out because they
<v Speaker 1>thought their son, Falcon was trapped inside. And you know,
<v Speaker 1>just the saga about tracking that balloon and you know
<v Speaker 1>how it all went down, and then the backstory and
<v Speaker 1>then where they ended up finding Falcon and how they
<v Speaker 1>thought they were just doing this for a reality TV show,
<v Speaker 1>And uh, it was a good It was a good
<v Speaker 1>program to watch last night. I really liked it. Reid
<v Speaker 1>didn't know anything about this. He had really never heard
<v Speaker 1>about it. Yeah, so he was totally enthralled. But uh,
<v Speaker 1>it was great to see some of the old nine
<v Speaker 1>news footage and stuff in the show as well about
<v Speaker 1>them tracking it and then how it took off nationally
<v Speaker 1>and all the national news stations were breaking in, you
<v Speaker 1>know for live coverage and they watched this stupid balloon
<v Speaker 1>for a couple hours.
<v Speaker 2>And then.
<v Speaker 3>The kid blowing the cover on live TV.
<v Speaker 1>I completely forgot about that where they asked him and
<v Speaker 1>he stumbled and then just.
<v Speaker 2>Was like your dad apart a show? Yeah, and how
<v Speaker 2>it just took off.
<v Speaker 1>And it's crazy because they've got the three boys now
<v Speaker 1>currently with their current age on the show, so they're
<v Speaker 1>you know, like grown adults now talking about the events
<v Speaker 1>of the day and really interesting, kind of a fun show.
<v Speaker 1>So if you're looking to, you know, sit on the
<v Speaker 1>couch this weekend and watch something. It's called train Wreck
<v Speaker 1>and it's the balloon boy hoax. Did the parents go
<v Speaker 1>to find it on Netflix?
<v Speaker 2>Dad? Did he took it? He took the fall.
<v Speaker 1>He did about ninety days I think in jail, just
<v Speaker 1>to save his wife from being deported.
<v Speaker 2>There's a whole other backstory to it.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, but they're pretty adamant that this was not not staged,
<v Speaker 1>it wasn't fake. They're still standing by it. So I
<v Speaker 1>don't know, you be the judge, watched the show and
<v Speaker 1>enjoy it. The other big thing going on in my
<v Speaker 1>life over the past week and a half or so.
<v Speaker 2>My sister's been dealing with some dog issues.
<v Speaker 1>They've got this pug and you know she's, uh god,
<v Speaker 1>how old is she six or seven?
<v Speaker 2>And I showed you guys the pictures of the little pug.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, she was having some issues where she completely lost
<v Speaker 1>all movement and essentially was just laying like a big
<v Speaker 1>blob on the floor, so sad, not reacting to anything.
<v Speaker 1>You touch her nose, you touch her eyes, just like
<v Speaker 1>a limp doll, is how.
<v Speaker 2>My sister described it. Now.
<v Speaker 1>She had previously had some issues a couple months ago
<v Speaker 1>where they had to go in because she was having
<v Speaker 1>ear issues and they found out that the bone in
<v Speaker 1>between her ear and her brain had essentially deteriorated. Oh
<v Speaker 1>my god, and they were worried that if she got
<v Speaker 1>an ear infection in that ear that it would go
<v Speaker 1>into her brain and kill her. So they dropped thousands
<v Speaker 1>of dollars on this dog to go in and seal
<v Speaker 1>up the ear and seal up the cavity and prevent that. Well,
<v Speaker 1>they went up camping and the dog started acting really funny,
<v Speaker 1>kind of wobbly, you know, kind of falling down.
<v Speaker 2>Not stable, took her in.
<v Speaker 1>She had an ear infection in the other ear that
<v Speaker 1>they thought might be an issue on that side now,
<v Speaker 1>and that the brain did get an infection.
<v Speaker 2>So now she's laying on the floor, you know basically
<v Speaker 2>just limp. Can't do anything.
<v Speaker 1>I can't eat barely any you know, movement with her eyes,
<v Speaker 1>can't go to the bathroom. So they were saying, this
<v Speaker 1>is the end, you know, just get ready. You would
<v Speaker 1>pick that dog up and try to hold her in
<v Speaker 1>the grass in the backyard so she could go to
<v Speaker 1>the bathroom, and her paws would just kind of just
<v Speaker 1>roll over. I mean, there was no strength, nothing to
<v Speaker 1>this dog. And the entire family is like kind of
<v Speaker 1>heartbroken over this. We're preparing for this dog to be
<v Speaker 1>dead soon. Well, fast forward a couple of days a
<v Speaker 1>couple hits of antibiotics. This dog starts coming out of it,
<v Speaker 1>and she's sitting up, and she's starting to walk, and.
<v Speaker 2>She's just eating a little bit of food here and there.
<v Speaker 1>And it's something called old dog vestibular vestibular vestibular vestibular
<v Speaker 1>thank you, also known as idiopathic vestibular syndrome, a condition
<v Speaker 1>that affects the balance system and older dogs, causing sudden
<v Speaker 1>onset of symptoms like head tilt, loss of balance, weird
<v Speaker 1>eye movements. They say it can be alarming, it's often
<v Speaker 1>a not a life threatening emergency, and most dogs recover
<v Speaker 1>within a few weeks with care. We had never heard
<v Speaker 1>about this movie, Phil, Have you ever heard of them
<v Speaker 1>where you just have an older dog and out of nowhere,
<v Speaker 1>they just go limp like a rest dog.
<v Speaker 3>And I know that inner ear stuff can affect your balance,
<v Speaker 3>but beyond that, I don't know that there was a
<v Speaker 3>specific condition for older dogs.
<v Speaker 2>How sad. I know it's sad, but I feel like
<v Speaker 2>we should.
<v Speaker 1>I was like, I better go on the air and
<v Speaker 1>talk about this, because if people have older dogs and
<v Speaker 1>they're experiencing this, like, don't get ready to take them
<v Speaker 1>in to be put. I was going to imagine if
<v Speaker 1>you put this dog and they were like, well, it
<v Speaker 1>was just a little dizzying problem, this disease.
<v Speaker 3>You think quality of life, like, how great can their
<v Speaker 3>life be if they're laying on the ground like a
<v Speaker 3>little potato and.
<v Speaker 2>Not able to move right use the restroom?
<v Speaker 3>On the terms in which you start to consider that. So,
<v Speaker 3>I think you're doing a great service right now getting
<v Speaker 3>the word out on this because just antibiotics is what
<v Speaker 3>took it to clear it up.
<v Speaker 2>Then huh, yep, some antibiotics.
<v Speaker 1>They put her on an ivy drip with some antibiotics,
<v Speaker 1>and as of last night, she was still sending.
<v Speaker 2>Some pictures that you know.
<v Speaker 1>They they went and got some fast food last night
<v Speaker 1>and they were trying to give her, you know, a
<v Speaker 1>few little French fries and stuff, and she was reacting
<v Speaker 1>to that and starting to eat those. And I talk
<v Speaker 1>about just a touch and go scary situation where if
<v Speaker 1>this dog had been like this for another day or so,
<v Speaker 1>you'd probably be talking to your vet about your options.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, that's so heartbreaking.
<v Speaker 3>It is also a good story that we know the
<v Speaker 3>outcome there, and yes, spread the word on that.
<v Speaker 1>Gosh, oh, through the pictures she was sending in the
<v Speaker 1>videos were so sad. I mean truly, like you you
<v Speaker 1>took a stuffed animal and threw it on the ground
<v Speaker 1>and you could do anything to it, and it wouldn't
<v Speaker 1>react and wouldn't move, and you're like, oh crap, this
<v Speaker 1>is it.
<v Speaker 2>And then on the heels of spending thousands.
<v Speaker 1>Of dollars on surgery, if you went FRRE, you're like,
<v Speaker 1>well that was all for nothing.
<v Speaker 3>Anyway, thankfully they're okay.
<v Speaker 2>Though, yeah, yeah, poor little Puppyana. So anyway, do your research,
<v Speaker 2>talk to your vet.
<v Speaker 1>It's very important, very important to put it down.
<v Speaker 2>Learn all about everything.
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