<v Speaker 1>Jerry, Katie and Josh Mix one hundred. I do like
<v Speaker 1>this story this morning about live music. Katie. Did you
<v Speaker 1>end up getting your hands on Sublime tickets?
<v Speaker 2>I did it?
<v Speaker 1>You did it so sad.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah.
<v Speaker 4>The pre sale was at ten yesterday and I logged
<v Speaker 4>on and I tried to get the two day pass
<v Speaker 4>and they were already sold out.
<v Speaker 2>And then I tried to get just singular tickets.
<v Speaker 4>I'm like, well, I'm gonna buy a pass to Friday
<v Speaker 4>and then Saturday, and those were also all sold out.
<v Speaker 4>The only thing that is available is the accessible seating,
<v Speaker 4>which I don't think I can get. That's for the
<v Speaker 4>wheelchair folks who need that seating and.
<v Speaker 1>Don't take Yeah, I can't stairs.
<v Speaker 2>That's the only seat available.
<v Speaker 1>Though you're angry she needs to get.
<v Speaker 4>There, but they So that's the thing is, that was
<v Speaker 4>the pre sale I signed up for, you know, the
<v Speaker 4>text for it and everything, and I didn't get tickets.
<v Speaker 4>But Friday the tickets go on sale again for the
<v Speaker 4>regular on sale.
<v Speaker 3>I have to, well, what's you agree with this story?
<v Speaker 3>It's coming out from Live Nation. They surveyed forty thousand
<v Speaker 3>people across fifteen countries, and they revealed that live music
<v Speaker 3>has become the world's most preferred entertainment form. Nearly four
<v Speaker 3>and ten people globally will choose live music over any
<v Speaker 3>other form of entertainment if limited to one option in life.
<v Speaker 3>So they're not going to the theater, they're not going
<v Speaker 3>to sporting events. They're choosing live music.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, I think I would do that too. I think
<v Speaker 1>that's what I would pick. Now.
<v Speaker 3>This stat is funny. They say they threw it up
<v Speaker 3>against sexy time. Would you rather go to some sort
<v Speaker 3>of live music with your favorite band or get your
<v Speaker 3>freak on? Seventy percent of people.
<v Speaker 1>Said favorite band. I'm gonna go see my band over
<v Speaker 1>getting freaky day.
<v Speaker 5>I'd probably choose that too, Yeah, because it's like a
<v Speaker 5>once thing or once in a lifetime thing, depending on
<v Speaker 5>who you want to see.
<v Speaker 3>Well, Katie, that's like maybe once every twenty one months,
<v Speaker 3>twenty three months.
<v Speaker 1>It was less of.
<v Speaker 2>Its years since clime.
<v Speaker 4>I mean I haven't seen him with the new lead
<v Speaker 4>singer there with Jacob.
<v Speaker 2>Front So yeah.
<v Speaker 3>Eighty fans say music defines their identity and believes it
<v Speaker 3>gives you most life fulfillment enjoying your favorite music.
<v Speaker 2>So well, not only that, but I some of that.
<v Speaker 4>I liken the feeling of live music, especially I'll never
<v Speaker 4>forget when we got to see Usher at Ball Arena,
<v Speaker 4>and yeah, I'm such a huge fan of him that
<v Speaker 4>when he was singing, especially everything from that Confessions album.
<v Speaker 2>Like I could feel the moment, I could.
<v Speaker 4>Feel the energy come into the suite and then I
<v Speaker 4>gave him back that energy and it was like a
<v Speaker 4>full circular moment of me giving energy to Usher.
<v Speaker 1>And him giving it back to me. And like that.
<v Speaker 1>What was the last concert I went to?
<v Speaker 3>I came back and I said, it was like a
<v Speaker 3>spiritual experience with you guys.
<v Speaker 1>What was that? I remember, but I've been to a
<v Speaker 1>couple like that was.
<v Speaker 2>Like that was like that Alicia Keys like blew me away.
<v Speaker 1>I wasn't one hour of first Are you sure? Are you?
<v Speaker 1>I don't know.
<v Speaker 2>Deck the halls. I was all the way decked, all
<v Speaker 2>the way decked.
<v Speaker 1>All the halls, all of them trans Iberine orchestra.
<v Speaker 5>I was gonna say. I saw Hans Zimmer, That for
<v Speaker 5>me was like unbelievable. Dude him, I know, having.
<v Speaker 3>Fun of Hans Zimmer Green Day Pearl Jam Hans Green.
<v Speaker 3>I went to Hons and Zimma and it was spectacular.
<v Speaker 1>I tiptoed in and listened.
<v Speaker 3>To a pearl Jam flannel shirt relived the nineties grunge.
<v Speaker 2>Hair of Bronzo Tie.
<v Speaker 1>He played some music from India on the Jonge. John
<v Speaker 1>Williams nober Mine. That's Batman. Okay, he plays Batman.
<v Speaker 3>The top night.
<v Speaker 2>Sure Man, you're coming for Hans.
<v Speaker 5>Seems like one of the most famous composers.
<v Speaker 2>That I could console twice.
<v Speaker 3>Alright, let's diven a p Am I this morning A positive,
<v Speaker 3>a minus, and something interesting.
<v Speaker 1>Katie, you had the P.
<v Speaker 5>I have the P getting mentally destroyed.
<v Speaker 1>Go to p.
<v Speaker 5>This is gonna ease a lot of people's minds because
<v Speaker 5>a study coming out of Cornell University actually tracked that
<v Speaker 5>eighty five percent of people's worries in this world never
<v Speaker 5>come to fruition.
<v Speaker 1>They never actually happened.
<v Speaker 5>So the things that take up your mind space, it's
<v Speaker 5>proactive versus passive UH worries, and it prevents a lot
<v Speaker 5>of people from doing things in life when really the
<v Speaker 5>proof is that.
<v Speaker 1>It never actually happened.
<v Speaker 5>Out head And I really like that because there's so
<v Speaker 5>many things that people worry about daily, like I have
<v Speaker 5>constant worries I've dealt with anxiety in my life, and
<v Speaker 5>the fact that there's now scientific proof that almost ninety
<v Speaker 5>percent of the things that you even worry about every
<v Speaker 5>single day, it never even comes to fruition. And I
<v Speaker 5>really like that. And the fact that the fifteen percent
<v Speaker 5>that does end up happening of that eighty percent of
<v Speaker 5>people handle it better than.
<v Speaker 1>They ever thought they would. Yeah, like that is so
<v Speaker 1>encouraging to me.
<v Speaker 5>You can go out into this world and not have
<v Speaker 5>to worry about the majority of things that enter your mind,
<v Speaker 5>and that makes.
<v Speaker 1>Me easier said than done, though, right it is.
<v Speaker 4>Well, because there's a lot of ways that the what
<v Speaker 4>ifs creep into our lives. I just saw this thing
<v Speaker 4>about how like when you hang on to close when
<v Speaker 4>you're like, well, what if I need a pink bell
<v Speaker 4>bottom outfit for a you know, a celebratory.
<v Speaker 2>Exactly like all of those things.
<v Speaker 4>Why would you hanging on to something for the what
<v Speaker 4>ifs of it? Like that?
<v Speaker 2>But for real, Like.
<v Speaker 4>That's something and that they say it can bring you
<v Speaker 4>anxiety that you're not even thinking of, like that, it
<v Speaker 4>can just bring this anxiety into your life, and and.
<v Speaker 3>The whole thing when you're in your head thinking that
<v Speaker 3>everybody out there is thinking about you, and yeah, that hate. Newsflash,
<v Speaker 3>they're not thinking about you at all. Nobody cares about you.
<v Speaker 4>I will never forget that lesson from my mom where
<v Speaker 4>she was just like, do you really think people care
<v Speaker 4>about and I know, and I was just like, well
<v Speaker 4>maybe they do a.
<v Speaker 1>Little, Mom, trust me, they're not at home thinking about you.
<v Speaker 1>They're not, which is good.
<v Speaker 5>I know you can think that, oh that's you know, sad.
<v Speaker 5>I want them to think about No, it's good that
<v Speaker 5>they don't because then they're not hyper fund.
<v Speaker 1>We leave the studio, I don't even think about anything,
<v Speaker 1>Jeremy we.
<v Speaker 4>Well, yeah, that's not a secret.
<v Speaker 1>Just yesterday. I think about you guys a lot, actually
<v Speaker 1>throughout my day, you every day. I want you to
<v Speaker 1>know what's the minus?
<v Speaker 4>Okay, Well we had this minus last week, I believe
<v Speaker 4>when Rob der Dick came out and said, that's ridiculousness
<v Speaker 4>after fourteen years calling it quit. So that's definitely the minus.
<v Speaker 4>But now a little positive to the story because he's
<v Speaker 4>talked about why he's entering a new era and he says,
<v Speaker 4>don't feel bad for him. He was totally outgrowing that
<v Speaker 4>ball cap anyway, that's literally what he said. He was like,
<v Speaker 4>I am getting too old to walk out on that
<v Speaker 4>stage with that hat and try and act like I'm
<v Speaker 4>interested in all this stuff. He says that his next
<v Speaker 4>thing in life, he's going to really focus on a
<v Speaker 4>true calling he calls it, where he's going to show
<v Speaker 4>people how to optimize their time. So he's kind of
<v Speaker 4>going into his next phase of things, which is a
<v Speaker 4>lot more grown up than ridiculousness and Fantasy Factor and
<v Speaker 4>all the thing.
<v Speaker 5>Yeah, Katie hen for thirty three million dollars a season, he.
<v Speaker 4>Made a lot of money, and it's funny. That was
<v Speaker 4>one of my favorite. Well again, the minus is that
<v Speaker 4>they're canceling. Did you not hear that? The other trying
<v Speaker 4>to make it a positive?
<v Speaker 1>Better, He's moving on, He's going he made that positive.
<v Speaker 2>That was me trying to just Paci spinning. I don't
<v Speaker 2>want to leave you with the minus.
<v Speaker 1>That's not me, that's but that's part of the M though.
<v Speaker 1>With p M, I I know it's got to be
<v Speaker 1>straight minus.
<v Speaker 2>Don't have to be straight minus. That's not the rules.
<v Speaker 1>The rules over here.
<v Speaker 2>Now I'm gonna give you more positive.
<v Speaker 1>Wait, so we can do positive, but spin it into
<v Speaker 1>a minus.
<v Speaker 2>Positive. Yeah, why not. I'd like to leave people how
<v Speaker 2>this works, to rain on your day. I like to
<v Speaker 2>make you a little happy.
<v Speaker 1>The rules of pm I.
<v Speaker 4>We've been doing it a year, big deal, like we
<v Speaker 4>always have some kind of positive something like I don't
<v Speaker 4>want to just.
<v Speaker 5>It does You're right? And this is my grandpa who
<v Speaker 5>passed away his wish. So I don't know if you just.
<v Speaker 3>Came from Josh's grandpa positive, A minus, something interesting.
<v Speaker 1>You threw it all off today?
<v Speaker 2>Yeah he didn't, actually, but go ahead.
<v Speaker 1>Situation right here is the minus. It's early in the show.
<v Speaker 1>I know, what are you doing?
<v Speaker 2>There's such a jerk again? Another positive steel lo bred.
<v Speaker 3>All right, well, we'll continue on with PPI today A positive,
<v Speaker 3>A positive, and something interesting. The interesting story this morning
<v Speaker 3>comes from BuzzFeed. There's an online list now regarding hobbies
<v Speaker 3>that seem to attract deeply pretentious people.
<v Speaker 1>And there's some relatable ones on here. I think.
<v Speaker 3>So when you think of the most pretentious person in
<v Speaker 3>your life, think about what the hobbies, what the hobbies
<v Speaker 3>they participate in, and see if they match up. Josh
<v Speaker 3>and I can probably think of one guy that's extremely
<v Speaker 3>pretentious cycling yes, like.
<v Speaker 2>Soul cycle type stuff like that.
<v Speaker 3>Actual people out in their spandextep right yellow shirts. Oh,
<v Speaker 3>I'm always cycling. They got the bike on the back
<v Speaker 3>of their Super U all the time. Pickleball people. I
<v Speaker 3>don't think pickleball people are that pretentious.
<v Speaker 1>But it made the list yet. But it's a rich
<v Speaker 1>sport already. But when you meet somebody, that's all they
<v Speaker 1>talk about if they do it. Pick a ball today, Yeah,
<v Speaker 1>I just got done with pickleball. We'll pick a ball
<v Speaker 1>this week, you know.
<v Speaker 2>But I really like pickleball.
<v Speaker 3>Pickle wine tasting, Yeah, I have a wine expert. Look
<v Speaker 3>at me, I'm pretentious, Josh. This might be you watch collecting,
<v Speaker 3>that's you. I love what I'm just talking to Josh yesterday. Though,
<v Speaker 3>Like I'm in the market for a decent watch, so it's.
<v Speaker 1>Nice if you can.
<v Speaker 5>I need one, because if you get like a six
<v Speaker 5>hundred dollars watch, like you just feel it's not good.
<v Speaker 1>Well, that's like that's a cheap, very cheap.
<v Speaker 3>Really Yeah, gosh, can I get that at Coles and
<v Speaker 3>score some coals cash?
<v Speaker 1>Can I buy one with Coal's cash six dollars? Yeah,
<v Speaker 1>if you have six If you never know my Coal's
<v Speaker 1>wallet is pretty stacked. It's stacked and racked. Buddy, thick,
<v Speaker 1>it's thick.
<v Speaker 3>Well, I'll come rolling in with that Cole's cat. Give
<v Speaker 3>me your finest fossil watch might be to buy.
<v Speaker 1>Oh it's pretty good.
<v Speaker 3>Okay, I'll give you two more equestrians or people that
<v Speaker 3>have a horse. I have clean complained about horse people
<v Speaker 3>on the air for many years.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, I have a horse, to buy a horse trailer.
<v Speaker 1>We gotta go feed the horse this weekend. We have
<v Speaker 1>a horse, a horse. And then the final one, the
<v Speaker 1>charcuterie board.
<v Speaker 3>Officionados people charcouterie board, that's all they talk about.
<v Speaker 4>One step further, the people who have those charcuterie board
<v Speaker 4>businesses now, like I will make your charcuterie board for five.
<v Speaker 1>Not gonna knock that.
<v Speaker 3>Because I was at an event last month where at
<v Speaker 3>the house they had it was like out.
<v Speaker 1>In Island's Rancher's a woman that does it out there.
<v Speaker 3>Just she brought very potentially yes, okay, but the boards
<v Speaker 3>that she brought.
<v Speaker 1>Were some of the best I've ever seen in art.
<v Speaker 2>You better bring that board if you're charge strong five.
<v Speaker 1>Dollars like strong board, strong board. I don't know how
<v Speaker 1>much she charged, but it was really good.
<v Speaker 4>We any of us could throw food on a cutting
<v Speaker 4>board and call it a SHARCOO.
<v Speaker 2>It's not brilliant talent, you know what I mean.
<v Speaker 1>You got to cut the radishes so they look like flowers.
<v Speaker 1>You gotta fold the salami.
<v Speaker 5>The pair boards with wines too, and they actually pair
<v Speaker 5>it really well.
<v Speaker 1>So that's that's pretential. You can fold the salami, then
<v Speaker 1>you know what you're doing.
<v Speaker 2>That is a talent.
<v Speaker 1>This woman, she knew how to fold the salami. I'll
<v Speaker 1>tell you this right squares all day long. Some of
<v Speaker 1>the best folded salami I've ever When you.
<v Speaker 2>Can break the salami, come to your salami.
<v Speaker 5>Game was solid, solid, Stop saying like that.
<v Speaker 3>Don't break business. I think I'd name it folded Salami.
<v Speaker 3>Find me a folded salami dot com.
<v Speaker 1>Don't google that. No, you go to Google that, you
<v Speaker 1>might get things you don't want to see.
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