<v Speaker 1>Jerry, Katie and Josh six one hundred. Pretty big day
<v Speaker 1>for me, you guys. Yeah, some pretty big changes going
<v Speaker 1>on with me. I have officially switched from oatmeal to
<v Speaker 1>cream of wheat.
<v Speaker 2>Oh my god, the big switch has occurred, and I'm
<v Speaker 2>really enjoying the hell out of it.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, it's a little grainy, But did you add anything
<v Speaker 1>to it? Or is it straight? The t just tears
<v Speaker 1>of a bald eagle. That's it. What attle bit for you?
<v Speaker 1>That sounds salty steak strips?
<v Speaker 2>Oh, there you go, It's gonna be tasty hums in
<v Speaker 2>my world. I'm also heading out after the show today
<v Speaker 2>and I got a swing by Target because I picked
<v Speaker 2>up some skinny jeans from Target and are they tight?
<v Speaker 1>They don't fit?
<v Speaker 2>Oh, I guess chairs there's not into skinny jeans anymore.
<v Speaker 2>My size and everything thirty four inch waist and I
<v Speaker 2>couldn't even get them buttons. So I'm trying to decide
<v Speaker 2>what to do if I if I need to bump
<v Speaker 2>up to the thirty six, or if I should just
<v Speaker 2>let this go now at.
<v Speaker 1>This point and maybe think about different pants styles. Well,
<v Speaker 1>just by the straight fit, we're not buying skinny slim
<v Speaker 1>fit anymore. Yeah, I like the way they feel against
<v Speaker 1>my thighs. Is that what it is?
<v Speaker 2>I really like the secure feeling that they give me.
<v Speaker 2>And I mean targets carrying them. They can't be that bad.
<v Speaker 2>I mean, I'm gonna tell you right now, that's it's
<v Speaker 2>an untapped resource.
<v Speaker 1>No, for clothing is targeting.
<v Speaker 3>Target's a great place targets. I love their clearance aile
<v Speaker 3>like it's so worth it. But the thing is is
<v Speaker 3>that it's always generation. The younger kids say that they
<v Speaker 3>can tell if people are old if they wear skinny
<v Speaker 3>jeans or no.
<v Speaker 2>I just happen to have this article in front of me.
<v Speaker 2>Nearly half of gen Z consumers are revamping the wide
<v Speaker 2>leg ges.
<v Speaker 1>Yes, yeah, I'll surpassed. Skinny jeans is the preferred denim style. Yeah,
<v Speaker 1>I'm against it.
<v Speaker 3>No, you shouldn't be. You know why I don't like.
<v Speaker 2>The ladies in the in the the wide leg almost
<v Speaker 2>said the fat leg, white legs, white leg.
<v Speaker 3>I think that it depends on the type of body
<v Speaker 3>shape you have. But I think for guys, you guys
<v Speaker 3>should be all about this because your cargo pants are back.
<v Speaker 3>You remember the kind that have the hammer holder right there.
<v Speaker 1>Oh, I'm not getting the hammer holder. Not a chance
<v Speaker 1>in hell. Those were like old Navy back in the day.
<v Speaker 1>I will not do that.
<v Speaker 2>No, I'll keep rocking the skinny jeans. I'll probably get
<v Speaker 2>some straight legs just because they're a little easier to
<v Speaker 2>wear with my cowboy boots.
<v Speaker 1>I was like, get boot cut, dude, don't you have boots?
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, fall is the boot cut jean. But you know,
<v Speaker 2>I couldn't pass them up. They were twenty eight bucks.
<v Speaker 2>They had a whole stack of them there, and I
<v Speaker 2>was like, I like these jeans, and I like this color.
<v Speaker 2>I want to Target's an untapped resource for dad clothes.
<v Speaker 1>So are you not the type to try them on
<v Speaker 1>before you get them?
<v Speaker 3>Though?
<v Speaker 1>No, I ain't got time for that.
<v Speaker 2>I don't said I have time to return to the
<v Speaker 2>store and try to exchange or return.
<v Speaker 3>No, but you want to go back to Target. That's
<v Speaker 3>the way I tell myself. I'm like Target, I have
<v Speaker 3>to come back to Target. Like this. It's not a
<v Speaker 3>knock on that, you know, like.
<v Speaker 2>I like that you always make fun of you know,
<v Speaker 2>like your wife or something, or like you, Katie. You
<v Speaker 2>go to Target for two things and you wind up
<v Speaker 2>leaving two hundred dollars later. I I do that at
<v Speaker 2>targeting Costco. If my wife sends me alone, I'm coming
<v Speaker 2>home with a bunch of crap.
<v Speaker 1>I do not need.
<v Speaker 3>You know, they make it so much fun they do.
<v Speaker 3>That's hard.
<v Speaker 1>Target so good, right to the best car.
<v Speaker 3>The cart like the machine that brings your cart down
<v Speaker 3>to the bottom level. I put up a video recently
<v Speaker 3>about me doing that, because that alone is worth the
<v Speaker 3>trip to Target for me.
<v Speaker 1>Well, you also go check out the toy aisle.
<v Speaker 2>Because yeah, at Target, I was like, I always go
<v Speaker 2>check out the Legos. They got he Man and skinny
<v Speaker 2>jeans and Target. So anyway, I gotta wandering. I've got
<v Speaker 2>to decide what to do today. If I should go
<v Speaker 2>ahead and exchange them.
<v Speaker 1>That's a tough exchange when you got to work up
<v Speaker 1>to size thirty six. Because I'm not getting that bad.
<v Speaker 3>I don't know you're on.
<v Speaker 1>That's what it is.
<v Speaker 3>Quit lifting women. Watch Yeah, my booty's popping.
<v Speaker 1>I think it's the wist that's the problem. Little too
<v Speaker 1>much cream a week.
<v Speaker 3>Do you know what I think? I want to see
<v Speaker 3>you come in tomorrow in a pair of bell bottoms.
<v Speaker 1>No, you do it?
<v Speaker 2>Hey, speaking of going to hell, you were telling us
<v Speaker 2>about the church in your hometown.
<v Speaker 3>Oh, I know, that's a nice transition right now. So
<v Speaker 3>here's the thing is, I was on Facebook yesterday and
<v Speaker 3>my aunt started posting pictures of the old church that
<v Speaker 3>I went to as a kid, and they're demolishing it, like,
<v Speaker 3>and the thing is, this is a really old brick
<v Speaker 3>building that's been in this town for gosh, I can't
<v Speaker 3>even tell you how long. I mean, for as long
<v Speaker 3>as I can remember. My mom went to this church.
<v Speaker 3>Her mom went to this church, like it's been there
<v Speaker 3>for forever. And actually when I was a kid, they
<v Speaker 3>transitioned like this was our church for a little bit,
<v Speaker 3>but then they moved it south of town. So I
<v Speaker 3>only went to this church for probably the first ten
<v Speaker 3>years of my life.
<v Speaker 1>But it's still yeah, it stood there.
<v Speaker 3>And not only that, but it was right down the
<v Speaker 3>street from my grandma's house. So I have so many
<v Speaker 3>memories of getting out of church and and we as
<v Speaker 3>a family would go to my grandma's house and have lunch.
<v Speaker 3>And that was every Sunday, you know. So it's just
<v Speaker 3>like these memories that are ingrained into your brain. I
<v Speaker 3>remember the little white house next door to the church,
<v Speaker 3>there was a little older couple who lived there, and
<v Speaker 3>they always gave us a hard time when we were
<v Speaker 3>coming out of church. You're having way too much fun
<v Speaker 3>over there.
<v Speaker 2>You know that you're gonna go to hell anyway.
<v Speaker 1>You're going to hell.
<v Speaker 3>You were that sweet old couple who was like, you know,
<v Speaker 3>tried to make everybody smile laugh. You needed to go
<v Speaker 3>to church today, didn't you.
<v Speaker 1>I saw what you did.
<v Speaker 3>Last week from the five and Times, just like all
<v Speaker 3>these memories tied to it, and seeing it and just
<v Speaker 3>shambles in a pile of made me sad. The church,
<v Speaker 3>I don't even know what they're gonna do with that space.
<v Speaker 1>I know that's a different kind of church.
<v Speaker 2>Sonic Burger, You're like, oh, Jesus, I know.
<v Speaker 3>I will probably still praise the Lord at.
<v Speaker 1>Sonic you're loaded tots. You're like, take me now, God.
<v Speaker 3>That Di'll kickle drink the Jesus.
<v Speaker 1>It's going to be a sonic.
<v Speaker 3>It did make me sad, and it just made me
<v Speaker 3>realize that I think that's something everybody goes through in
<v Speaker 3>life as you get older and your childhood things get
<v Speaker 3>torn down.
<v Speaker 1>My high school's gone.
<v Speaker 2>They leveled Bear creek that I went to and built
<v Speaker 2>a brand new one, and so you know, you look
<v Speaker 2>back and reminisce on that. And then the elementary school
<v Speaker 2>I went to they shut it down in the latest
<v Speaker 2>round of you know, jeff Co shutdowns happened a year
<v Speaker 2>or two ago. And I went in there right before
<v Speaker 2>they shut it down, and I wandered around, and I
<v Speaker 2>took pictures, and I you know, smelt the carpet and
<v Speaker 2>just kind of.
<v Speaker 1>You know, relived my childhood.
<v Speaker 2>I really got in there, and so I know, I'm
<v Speaker 2>a sentimental schmuck, so I know what you're going through.
<v Speaker 2>And when Toys are Russ closed down by me, I
<v Speaker 2>went into Toys r Us and wandered around and took
<v Speaker 2>selfie and pictures and smelled the carpet.
<v Speaker 1>Giraffe.
<v Speaker 3>Yea, I couldn't look at a giraffe for a year, Josh, Like,
<v Speaker 3>I'm telling you, it made me so sad. But you're right,
<v Speaker 3>like I left this town the minute I could. Like
<v Speaker 3>It's funny, as you you know, I became eighteen, all
<v Speaker 3>I wanted to do was get out of the small
<v Speaker 3>town I grew up in. And now I'm at a
<v Speaker 3>stage in my life where I'm just like, but don't
<v Speaker 3>get rid of that? But why you got to get
<v Speaker 3>rid of that? Like that made that town great? You know,
<v Speaker 3>like I have some kind of saying it Now you
<v Speaker 3>have no left.
<v Speaker 1>You have no idea why they are leveling it.
<v Speaker 3>No, I don't. Again, it's been standing there for gosh
<v Speaker 3>over a decade now with nothing in it, so it's
<v Speaker 3>just been like an abandoned building. I'm sure you know,
<v Speaker 3>yeah exactly, I'm sure squatter or something like that has
<v Speaker 3>popped up. But nonetheless, it is definitely a hard pill
<v Speaker 3>to swallow because the pictures are just so shocking, Like
<v Speaker 3>cause again I just remember sliding down the rail of
<v Speaker 3>those stairs, just like so excited to go to my
<v Speaker 3>grandma's to see what she made for lunch, you know,
<v Speaker 3>And now like those memories are gone, and you're right,
<v Speaker 3>I don't know what they're gonna put up in its place.
<v Speaker 3>And if it's a sonic, I mean, as much as
<v Speaker 3>I love Tots, I'm it's gonna take me a minute.
<v Speaker 3>It's gonna take me.
<v Speaker 1>You went back to church since, have you? Oh?
<v Speaker 3>Come on, I still I've been to church quite a
<v Speaker 3>few times, but.
<v Speaker 2>Exactly twice a year, times a year. Well, I'm sorry
<v Speaker 2>to hear about your church.
<v Speaker 1>It is okay, sad for you. A lot of good
<v Speaker 1>mems there. Though you have the memories.
<v Speaker 3>I have the memories. They can never take those away.
<v Speaker 1>Recyct the books of the Bible.
<v Speaker 3>Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges, Ruth, first and second,
<v Speaker 3>Samuel's first and second, Second, Kings, first and second, Chronicles, Jose, Joe, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Mike,
<v Speaker 3>Nahama back. I can go all day, but yeah, that's impressive. Yeah.
<v Speaker 3>I went to Bible camp, Camp Focha. They this church
<v Speaker 3>had a Bible camp called Camp Focha, and I went
<v Speaker 3>to it every year and they taught me the books
<v Speaker 3>of the Bible. So yeah, all these memories.
<v Speaker 1>Boys at that camp. Yeah, they always say church camp
<v Speaker 1>is a hot We've still a canoe out on the rear.
<v Speaker 3>I felt like Cocahontas.
<v Speaker 1>That's church. Lay here, that is church living right there.
<v Speaker 2>Oh God, and hold room, you guys. It's time for
<v Speaker 2>a job code. All right, here is your first job
<v Speaker 2>code of the day. Text it back into the radio station.
<v Speaker 2>You throw a little twenty five bucks into your virtual paycheck.
<v Speaker 2>I'll be listening. At the end of the week, we'll
<v Speaker 2>draw a name and a phone number. The more you
<v Speaker 2>text in, the more money you have in your potential paycheck.
<v Speaker 2>So here is the first one far today. Oh there's
<v Speaker 2>so many words on this sheet. Here shop shop, shop,
<v Speaker 2>like shop, class shop. Text it back to the radio
<v Speaker 2>station right now. Add that twenty five bucks to your
<v Speaker 2>virtual paycheck. Three oh three six nine one mix three
<v Speaker 2>oh three six nine, sinet one sixteen forty nine.
<v Speaker 1>Your first job code is shop. We'll do it again at.
<v Speaker 2>Seven, ten, eight, ten, nine, ten, ten, ten, eleven, ten, twelve, ten, one, ten.
<v Speaker 1>Two, ten, three, ten, fourteen, five, ten and sixteen. Today
<v Speaker 1>here at Denvers makes one hundred. That's exciting stuff.
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