<v Speaker 1>Jerry Katy and Josh one hundred. Last night was a
<v Speaker 1>fun night again.
<v Speaker 2>Yesterday I was talking about how I've got one going
<v Speaker 2>into high school.
<v Speaker 1>So we were at the high school.
<v Speaker 2>Doing the big high school visit and looking around and
<v Speaker 2>learning about the classes and the teacher and the school
<v Speaker 2>and uh so incredibly excited for my son to move
<v Speaker 2>on to high school. Absolutely adore the principal at this
<v Speaker 2>high school. Okay, shout out to Kim Killer. And last
<v Speaker 2>night was the middle school visit. Now we're already familiar
<v Speaker 2>with the middle school because we got one in there,
<v Speaker 2>but my daughter's leaving elementary going to middle school. So
<v Speaker 2>we walked around and she was able to participate in
<v Speaker 2>a lot of the activities. It was kind of I
<v Speaker 2>don't even know how to describe it. It wasn't like you
<v Speaker 2>go sit in the classroom and you learn about the school.
<v Speaker 2>You sit there listening to lectures and all that. They
<v Speaker 2>had like tables set up all throughout the school. So
<v Speaker 2>the engineering department had their three D printers going and
<v Speaker 2>doing models of stuff. The art department had tables out
<v Speaker 2>and you could participate in art activity.
<v Speaker 1>Foreign languages had things.
<v Speaker 2>Going on in their room, so it's very interactive, very fun,
<v Speaker 2>just kind of to get these kids fired up and excited.
<v Speaker 1>About middle school.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, I could tell by her eyes terrified, absolutely terrified
<v Speaker 2>to go them.
<v Speaker 1>I know she looks so scared. But I think I
<v Speaker 1>was talking to Nick Knack last night.
<v Speaker 2>I was like, you know, it's one of these things
<v Speaker 2>where give it a month, give it thirty days, and
<v Speaker 2>it's gonna be Oh, it'll be no big deal to her.
<v Speaker 2>It'll be business as usual. You know, you're gonna get
<v Speaker 2>in there, you're gonna make new friends and all that.
<v Speaker 2>So I think she's gonna be fine. You know what
<v Speaker 2>I was fascinated about. Middle school was the worst two
<v Speaker 2>years of my life. Oh really, worst two years of
<v Speaker 2>my life. Struggled academically, struggled with friendships, struggled with a
<v Speaker 2>lot of bullying in high school, like so much so
<v Speaker 2>my mom was having to pick me up from bus stops.
<v Speaker 2>Oh no, I had to stop riding the bus. Long story.
<v Speaker 2>I saw that kid that was bullying me years later,
<v Speaker 2>and I could kick his straight up, beat him down
<v Speaker 2>if I wanted to. But he never grew either. So
<v Speaker 2>he's even shorter than Josh. He's like four foot tall.
<v Speaker 2>But Anyway, that's a whole other side story. I was
<v Speaker 2>fascinated by, you know, I again, my son's there, but
<v Speaker 2>I didn't know to the extent of how impactful the
<v Speaker 2>counselors are now in middle school and how accessible they are,
<v Speaker 2>and how many resources the kids have now when it
<v Speaker 2>comes to if you're feeling down, if you just need
<v Speaker 2>to talk, if you need academic help, they encourage you
<v Speaker 2>to go talk to these counselors. And there was you know,
<v Speaker 2>grafts and charts about how many times the kids had
<v Speaker 2>seen him this past year, which was up in like
<v Speaker 2>the four hundreds and stuff. But I was extremely impressed
<v Speaker 2>by that because I don't think Katie, you might agree,
<v Speaker 2>we didn't have that in middle school.
<v Speaker 1>It was like do or die for us, suck it out,
<v Speaker 1>move on.
<v Speaker 2>I don't remember being pushed go talk to anybody if
<v Speaker 2>he had any issue.
<v Speaker 3>We even I wasn't. I'm a little bit younger than
<v Speaker 3>you like it. Even in my middle school era, there
<v Speaker 3>was nothing like that. It was a total kind of
<v Speaker 3>suck it up mentality as well.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, really because you went to middle school like five
<v Speaker 2>years ago.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, that's how much it's changed in five years.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, I wasn't fascinated by that.
<v Speaker 5>I think honestly, COVID really pushed the envelope on that
<v Speaker 5>really shined the light on how important it is to
<v Speaker 5>have that kind of stuff at least looked after. So
<v Speaker 5>I'm I'm all for it too, Like the more we
<v Speaker 5>can have and the more it's accessible to them when
<v Speaker 5>they need it.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
<v Speaker 2>I mean it's a it's a great resource to make
<v Speaker 2>sure all the kids are feeling safe, you know, because
<v Speaker 2>with all this the crap that goes on in schools anymore,
<v Speaker 2>there's a lot of safety aspect where you see something
<v Speaker 2>you need, you need to say something and come talk,
<v Speaker 2>or if you're having a fight with a friend, come
<v Speaker 2>talk it out versus anything else. They're pushing that a lot,
<v Speaker 2>and I'm very impressed by that. Oh goody and man again.
<v Speaker 1>Talking with Nick.
<v Speaker 2>Knak as we left, I was like, I don't think
<v Speaker 2>I would ever want to be a middle school teacher, I.
<v Speaker 4>Know, no crap, absolutely.
<v Speaker 2>Those formative years and the hormones and the issues and
<v Speaker 2>the angst, and you got the one kid who's got
<v Speaker 2>a full beard in sixth grade, and you got all
<v Speaker 2>these teachers having to deal with all these emotions for
<v Speaker 2>two three years.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, I couldn't. I could not do it.
<v Speaker 5>Yeah, in general, but you're right, the middle school teacher,
<v Speaker 5>when you're dealing with all of those.
<v Speaker 2>Things special human and those counselors too, Yeah, special people.
<v Speaker 2>They can sit down and listen to the drama from
<v Speaker 2>all these kids day in and day out, there's a
<v Speaker 2>lot of it, and try to give advice and send
<v Speaker 2>them in the right direction. Yeah, y'all need a big
<v Speaker 2>old fat raise, That's all I'm gonna say.
<v Speaker 6>Or at least a pizza party. We'd be down to
<v Speaker 6>throw you on.
<v Speaker 1>They need another year, I'll tell you that right now.
<v Speaker 1>God bless you all. Right, let's jump into something called
<v Speaker 1>p m I.
<v Speaker 2>We're gonna send you on your way this morning with
<v Speaker 2>a positive, a minus and something interesting on this Friday morning.
<v Speaker 1>Hey, guys, who got pee?
<v Speaker 6>I got the peek p I do?
<v Speaker 5>And this is so neat because three inten adults will
<v Speaker 5>play in friends miss celebrations this year during the holiday season.
<v Speaker 6>Yay.
<v Speaker 5>So that means you're gonna get together with your group
<v Speaker 5>of friends and do the same things that you do
<v Speaker 5>on Christmas with your family. But it's usually a date
<v Speaker 5>not on Christmas. So you're celebrating a completely different day.
<v Speaker 5>But more and more adults are looking at doing this,
<v Speaker 5>and gen Z is kind of leading the cause here.
<v Speaker 5>They consider friends miss equal to Christmas Day.
<v Speaker 1>I like that.
<v Speaker 3>It's like friends giving, it's but now we're just celebrating
<v Speaker 3>presents and Christmas and stuff.
<v Speaker 4>I like that. I would never done that before.
<v Speaker 1>To puzzle that out, buddy, No, I think that's really cool.
<v Speaker 6>Well, and honestly, I love it.
<v Speaker 1>I want to do it.
<v Speaker 5>It's said they say this is double the rate of
<v Speaker 5>the baby boomer generation, So it's good. It's you know,
<v Speaker 5>gonna be a thing. It's definitely clicking with the next generation.
<v Speaker 5>And I can just see this, like with your kids, Jeremy, Yeah,
<v Speaker 5>they're probably gonna have an actual friends miss on the calendar.
<v Speaker 1>I want a friends miss.
<v Speaker 6>I could see that.
<v Speaker 2>Talk about a lower stress holiday when you're hanging out
<v Speaker 2>with people that you love in a door and you
<v Speaker 2>actually want to be around, not like your family.
<v Speaker 5>Yeah, and they say that they're like the most popular
<v Speaker 5>activities when you're doing it are like dining out together
<v Speaker 5>in secret Santa exchanges, and like Christmas themed games. So
<v Speaker 5>it is a lot more lightly Well, No, but that's
<v Speaker 5>way more lighthearted than an actual Christmas, you.
<v Speaker 2>Know, so it's probably a little more merry and jolly.
<v Speaker 2>The drinks might be flowing a little bit more too
<v Speaker 2>than where you're all buttoned up around your grandma and
<v Speaker 2>your you know, I will tell you right now, like
<v Speaker 2>I I would like to have a friends give friends
<v Speaker 2>what do they call it?
<v Speaker 6>Friends?
<v Speaker 1>Friendsmis versus a family Christmas. This year, I feel there's
<v Speaker 1>less pressure of anger in my family.
<v Speaker 6>And your family.
<v Speaker 2>There's just I don't know, it's just Christmas seems frustrating
<v Speaker 2>this year as far as you know, buying gifts and
<v Speaker 2>sitting dates and what we're doing, and we're all incredibly
<v Speaker 2>burnt out. We were at the Gaylord Rockies the last
<v Speaker 2>weekend for ice.
<v Speaker 6>Oh so Christmas one, yeah I heard it was also awesome.
<v Speaker 2>We grabbed lunch at a restaurant there. We fought at
<v Speaker 2>that table about Christmas fily.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah.
<v Speaker 2>I mean like there was raised voices and fighting in
<v Speaker 2>public was awesome.
<v Speaker 1>It way awesome.
<v Speaker 2>We were fighting at the table at lunch and the
<v Speaker 2>best part was is we looked over at the table
<v Speaker 2>next to us and it was four ladies that were.
<v Speaker 1>Chatty chatty chatty. When we got there, we looked over
<v Speaker 1>and they were just.
<v Speaker 2>Not one of them was saying anything, and they're all
<v Speaker 2>just eating their little salads, just kind of looking at us,
<v Speaker 2>like enjoying the drama. And Nicole looked over at him
<v Speaker 2>and mouthed, I'm so sorry.
<v Speaker 1>I'm so sorry. And one of them was like, it's fine,
<v Speaker 1>that's fine, this is great. She's like, we're just eating
<v Speaker 1>this af this is great.
<v Speaker 2>But yeah, like literally, my mom and sister were going
<v Speaker 2>at it across the table, raised voices in a very
<v Speaker 2>nice restaurant, and I was just thinking to myself, Oh,
<v Speaker 2>dear God, I got to move to Iowa.
<v Speaker 4>Your family was the one that was talked about after
<v Speaker 4>you left.
<v Speaker 6>The family ladies look at that. The grinch came to us.
<v Speaker 1>So I think friends giving sounds awesome.
<v Speaker 2>No friends, Christmas, friendsmith.
<v Speaker 1>Sounds awesome to me? What else you got? Who's got
<v Speaker 1>the miners?
<v Speaker 3>I got the minus an other than your family fighting.
<v Speaker 3>This one's pretty bad too. Jim Stalfer he had a
<v Speaker 3>mother who unfortunately passed away from Alzheimer's disease, and he
<v Speaker 3>wanted to donate her body to science to have them
<v Speaker 3>look at her brain and try to see if they
<v Speaker 3>can do more to help prevent that horrible disease. However,
<v Speaker 3>he ended up donating it to a Biological Resource Center
<v Speaker 3>of Arizona. And what they did with her body it
<v Speaker 3>sounds completely fake and insane. This BRC they call it,
<v Speaker 3>took the body of Jim Stofer's mother and instead of
<v Speaker 3>using it for science and doing Alzheimer's research for it,
<v Speaker 3>they sold this body to for profit to the US
<v Speaker 3>Army and they used her body as a simulation to
<v Speaker 3>see how the human body reacts to an ied explosion. Yes,
<v Speaker 3>so the BRC has since been shut down because they
<v Speaker 3>did this with hundreds of thousands of bodies. They said
<v Speaker 3>they will take it for science, and then it sold.
<v Speaker 2>It is for science, not that you hand over your body.
<v Speaker 2>And yes you need to see like how that yes,
<v Speaker 2>that's the human body so you can develop body armor.
<v Speaker 3>You think that your mother is being donated for Alzheimer's disease,
<v Speaker 3>You don't get lied to.
<v Speaker 1>Exactly that that that's the part I don't know. Yes,
<v Speaker 1>they miss that part.
<v Speaker 4>And then he found this out will for all in general.
<v Speaker 2>They'll take your body and chop it up into little
<v Speaker 2>pieces and do all that.
<v Speaker 3>Yes, but she was sold as a whole body and
<v Speaker 3>exploded in an ied explosion.
<v Speaker 4>He was awarded I will say he was awarded fifty.
<v Speaker 3>Eight million dollars in this lawsuit, and the BRC was
<v Speaker 3>shut down because they found out that it was hundreds
<v Speaker 3>of other people that were sold.
<v Speaker 1>Yell, that's not right.
<v Speaker 5>My brain just goes t would anybody offer to have
<v Speaker 5>their loved one blown up for science?
<v Speaker 4>With that?
<v Speaker 6>That's what I mean. If we're looking for.
<v Speaker 1>Well, my mother in law is the updat or will
<v Speaker 1>so yeah for it?
<v Speaker 6>How else would they get people to do that?
<v Speaker 1>You could do that. I've got the wheels are turning.
<v Speaker 4>It's kind of cool.
<v Speaker 1>I kind of want to be blown up in the
<v Speaker 1>little pieces.
<v Speaker 6>How else will they get people to volunteer for that?
<v Speaker 2>Because I only wish I was around to see it happen,
<v Speaker 2>Like I wish I could stand there and watch my
<v Speaker 2>body be blown to smithery.
<v Speaker 4>Have the literal out of body experience.
<v Speaker 2>Can you imagine gathering your friends and family around the
<v Speaker 2>final goodbyes, and then they're on this day, remember nothing
<v Speaker 2>but a miss left in the air.
<v Speaker 3>I got his tooth, I got.
<v Speaker 2>I've been wondering what I should do cremation or burial.
<v Speaker 2>Allow yourself get blown up by the army.
<v Speaker 4>It's not bad, all.
<v Speaker 2>Right, one final thing, here's the interesting and we'll send
<v Speaker 2>you guys on your way. I don't know how much
<v Speaker 2>of this I can talk about now that I'm reading
<v Speaker 2>the story. Oh there has been you know this a
<v Speaker 2>lot of the end of the year recaps and what
<v Speaker 2>people are searching. And they've put out the fetishes the
<v Speaker 2>top requested fetishes of the year. Uh, there is one
<v Speaker 2>that is at the top. Armpit licking or sweaty armpits
<v Speaker 2>was one of the most requested fetishes according to research
<v Speaker 2>here in twenty twenty five. I can't read the other
<v Speaker 2>ones that were searched, but people are really into tickling
<v Speaker 2>and licking and sniffing arm p Is it both men
<v Speaker 2>and women or just like it's everybody what you left.
<v Speaker 5>I was like, we said tickling instead of eh, eh
<v Speaker 5>eh armpits. Yeah, your armpit, girl, love armpits like it's
<v Speaker 5>what like, especially like a guy you're attracted to. That
<v Speaker 5>smell is just intoxicating.
<v Speaker 1>They say. The pheromones coming out of sleep.
<v Speaker 2>Armpits on men are huge attract attract in the ladies.
<v Speaker 5>It gets me going every single time, especially people that
<v Speaker 5>I like love, like my ex boyfriends. That's one thing
<v Speaker 5>with them, Like when we would wake up in the morning,
<v Speaker 5>I would just take their arm and throw it up
<v Speaker 5>and then lay it just.
<v Speaker 2>Did you go as far as to lick. That's a
<v Speaker 2>combination of tickle and lick because a lot of people
<v Speaker 2>say they like the salty.
<v Speaker 1>Taste of an arm pit. It kind of gets you
<v Speaker 1>in the mood.
<v Speaker 2>And I will say, there's a large number of people
<v Speaker 2>in this story that are able to do that to
<v Speaker 2>their partner and.
<v Speaker 1>Arrive.
<v Speaker 2>Let's say I'm arriving, I'm arrived.
<v Speaker 1>You lick the armpits, and then you are able to arrive.
<v Speaker 6>So the person you was licking the liquor, yeah, arrives.
<v Speaker 1>Correct.
<v Speaker 6>I don't the licking part.
<v Speaker 1>I don't really get down.
<v Speaker 6>With the smell.
<v Speaker 4>Just often have you tried licking?
<v Speaker 6>No? Not until you try it, right, Okay.
<v Speaker 4>Go lick an armpit this weekend.
<v Speaker 5>I mean, I got there's just a few steps to
<v Speaker 5>lead up to that. I can't just go look at armpits. Crazy,
<v Speaker 5>No engineer, Jason, Let's
<v Speaker 2>Tell you, guys, am, I a positive, a minus, and
<v Speaker 2>something interesting with j k J
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