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[SPEAKER_11]: Welcome to our show.
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[SPEAKER_11]: Michael Mera, Radio Entertainment.
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[SPEAKER_11]: You can listen to the Michael Mera Show at MichaelMeraShow.com.
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[SPEAKER_11]: Wow!
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[SPEAKER_11]: What have we here?
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[SPEAKER_07]: It's a podcast.
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[SPEAKER_07]: But I want to excitement.
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[SPEAKER_07]: We have today.
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[SPEAKER_11]: It's the Michael Mera Show with Michael Mera and Rob Spuac.
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[SPEAKER_11]: Now, here's my, all right, all right, my instincts spot on.
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[SPEAKER_13]: I'm at that opening music and, you know what, my, yes, I have a new one ready to go, but I cut the wrong button there.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Oh, well, you know what, Josh, that's fine.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That works out fine as far as I'm concerned.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I'm very cool with that because I said I don't occasionally, but we're going to mix them up.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I promised Josh that I would be working with my partner, Al Inverness, to create some new music for the show, and I can take zero cut, look, I don't even care if I write a lyric.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It's not creating.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It's not.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It's not even remotely creating.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I did it sitting in the car line to pick up my kid and then finished it up last evening.
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[SPEAKER_14]: But I have to say the end result, which is what really counts, is something that is pleasant.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Now, what did I send you two or three?
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[SPEAKER_13]: Yes,
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[SPEAKER_13]: Okay, but Rob, how do you feel about a three and a half minute count down?
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[SPEAKER_13]: I love it.
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[SPEAKER_13]: One of these set was really long.
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[SPEAKER_15]: I like the idea of a three and a half because then you can start the count down before we even sit down.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Hold on.
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[SPEAKER_13]: You're saying Mike's sitting there for three and a half minutes.
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[SPEAKER_13]: Wait, I don't think that'll work.
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[SPEAKER_14]: No, no.
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[SPEAKER_14]: But I mean, that's the power of the editing bay.
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[SPEAKER_13]: That's the, you know, that's my entire whole thing.
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[SPEAKER_13]: That's the one that's ready to go.
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[SPEAKER_14]: So one, I know already because you texted me back that you said one of these new open themes was something you were particularly fond of.
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[SPEAKER_13]: Is that right?
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[SPEAKER_13]: Well, yeah, I clicked on it in the car driving home last night and I may have listened to it a few times.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Okay, so you like that.
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[SPEAKER_13]: It's a nice comment.
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[SPEAKER_15]: I know you love to tease Mike.
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[SPEAKER_15]: I know it, but after all of this talk, it's killing me.
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[SPEAKER_15]: So it's got to be killing the listeners.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Can we hear just maybe?
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[SPEAKER_14]: Well, I want to first before we do that.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I want to find out which one he's going to drop on us here.
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[SPEAKER_14]: You're going to go with the country-fied one, or you're going to go with the Billie Eilish kind, or what other, and that's why you laugh.
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[SPEAKER_13]: Let's go with the one that I said was my favorite which was a little creepy a little soft.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Why are you why you laughing at Billy Island?
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[SPEAKER_15]: I'm laughing not at Billy Island, but the fact that the two styles you would choose are country music and Billy Island.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Well, I mean, they're not, they're mutually exclusive.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, but I mean, that's why I'm an inch deep in a mile wide.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And you know, you can't put me in any musical box.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's the, it's the way I roll baby.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's what my father said.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Alright, well, this is the live reaction from Rob and let's see what Rob's about this.
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[SPEAKER_13]: Rob, this one is called Soft Teeth on Starlight.
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[SPEAKER_13]: I don't know what about that.
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[SPEAKER_02]: Hmm, I don't know what it's all about.
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[SPEAKER_02]: Turn it around.
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[SPEAKER_02]: There's nothing to fear Maybe I'd spin your face
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[SPEAKER_13]: It's just soothing.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Students, I like that.
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[SPEAKER_15]: I am from note two in love with it.
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[SPEAKER_15]: I think it sounds like a top 40 record.
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[SPEAKER_15]: However, I don't know if it conveys the energy we want leading up to you.
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[SPEAKER_14]: You sound like a bad program director, God, who gives a shit.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I mean, it doesn't matter.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I mean, come on now.
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[SPEAKER_15]: You asked my opinion.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I know, I know, I know, can I love energy, but that sounds like program director speak.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, I mean, we're shaking it up.
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[SPEAKER_14]: We're shaking it up a little bit.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I would.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It's time for you, footage cutters to slide up to the bar.
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[SPEAKER_10]: The TMOs family knows exactly who you are.
04:43.769 --> 04:49.539
[SPEAKER_10]: And before the words are spoken from those guys, you know what broke and turned it up.
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[SPEAKER_10]: The Michael Maris Show.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I like the hay at the end.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's my favorite part of that.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's crazy.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Great.
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[SPEAKER_15]: And also that the lyrics are more custom to our show.
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[SPEAKER_15]: I think that is a more effective opening track.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Now I forgot the third one.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I remember that one and I remember the the mellow one.
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[SPEAKER_13]: What's the third one?
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[SPEAKER_13]: I believe it's the same lyrics you wrote, but it's different tune.
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[SPEAKER_13]: Let's see.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Okay.
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[SPEAKER_10]: Thank you for using Fudge Cutters.
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[SPEAKER_10]: The TMOS family knows exactly who you are And before the words I spoken I like this one I like this one
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[SPEAKER_14]: D-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d
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[SPEAKER_14]: that is the problem.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And it's been the problem.
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[SPEAKER_14]: By the way, I got my my my my my my my my medical professionals that I've lined up for the next couple of months so we'll see what happens with that you know take it out doc take the bad part out.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's my doctor's.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Take the bad for that.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Do you get essentially the same pre clip videos when you clip on YouTube?
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[SPEAKER_15]: Do you ever get ones that just keep coming back and back and back?
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[SPEAKER_15]: Oh my god, everybody does.
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[SPEAKER_15]: So the one I've been getting is regarding digestion and it has a doctor who looks like he might not be a great doctor, but I think he probably has a degree and he refers to as the poop corner.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Have you seen this guy?
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[SPEAKER_14]: No, no, send him along.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Please send him along.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I'd love to see that.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I get I'm getting now because I've been obsessing on a shoulder correction videos.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And yeah, I am about 70% sure.
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[SPEAKER_14]: that my issue is what's referred to as a bicep tendonitis.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's what it is said.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And it's the front of the shoulder.
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[SPEAKER_14]: But it hurts like hell, like right there, that hurts, that hurts, that hurts, that hurts, that hurts.
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[SPEAKER_14]: But when I reach up like that, no pain.
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[SPEAKER_14]: So that's kind of the test, you know.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Well, you'll do great in school then.
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[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.
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[SPEAKER_13]: You can raise your hand.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, exactly.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Hey, lady.
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[SPEAKER_13]: Hey, how long you have a cast like that?
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[SPEAKER_13]: I just stuck up there for three months.
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[SPEAKER_14]: You know, the old people that I deal with are just so in their bubble and it's very difficult to respond.
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[SPEAKER_14]: They set up the game about a week in advance that I'm going to play and get a email and back say you're in.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's right.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I mean, I literally right back, I'm in.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Okay.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And that's it.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Well, this time I had to go a little further where I said, I mean, in just an FYI dealing with a shoulder issue, I think I'll be able to go.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I will let you know as soon if there's a problem, I'll let you know ASAP.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And then of course, the crickets, where nothing is nothing is done.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Communicating with the people that have been on this planet for a while is a is a little bit difficult.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I'm going to get to that later in the show because I want to talk about
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[SPEAKER_14]: This is so real me.
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[SPEAKER_14]: This is so my real angst when it comes to communicating with family members.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And Rob, I really want you to put your non-aggressive, non-confrontational objective hat on when this comes up.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I'm telling you.
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[SPEAKER_14]: But that's what it'll be.
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[SPEAKER_15]: But I thought so we're looking for advice.
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[SPEAKER_14]: perhaps, and you want to know, I'm looking at, I'm looking at, do you think my negative reaction is
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[SPEAKER_14]: Just me being me or whatever we'll get to that we'll get to it sooner than later, but you know, my kid this morning and yesterday afternoon a bit of a handful As far as attitude anybody that's got a 12 year old Josh knows what I'm talking about where yeah they can be little demons and I wanted to get some advice.
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[SPEAKER_14]: on how to deal with that, Rob was talking about algorithms and videos that popped up.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I thought we would start the show today with some advice when it comes to children, when it comes to raising them, how to treat them, what to do with them.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Let's go to Chelsea Handler, who always has some words of wisdom for each and every one of us.
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[SPEAKER_05]: Cup and it's one o'clock in the afternoon.
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[SPEAKER_05]: I get to sleep to however late I feel like it because I don't have any fucking children.
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[SPEAKER_04]: And because I don't have kids, that means I don't have to go anywhere today.
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[SPEAKER_04]: I don't have to go to Disneyland, Lego land, color me mine, build a bear, yogurt land, the zoo.
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[SPEAKER_04]: I don't have to go to any of those places, not once, not ever.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Kids, they're not that great.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It's very true.
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[SPEAKER_14]: There it is.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's a little reminder that I thought I'd share with everybody today.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Why not?
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[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, so that's Chelsea.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Well, they have their good parts too.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Kids, you can make some take out the trash.
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[SPEAKER_14]: But don't you think, and in my case, it would be walking the dogs would be my taking out the trash.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And don't you think that that is balanced by the pain of making those requests and by the way?
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[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, Josh, I can't stop looking at your team who had phones that you have up in the back there.
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[SPEAKER_14]: You're beautiful.
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[SPEAKER_15]: You're distracting you?
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[SPEAKER_14]: No, no, I think it's just, Are they pink or salmon?
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[SPEAKER_15]: They're with their orange.
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[SPEAKER_14]: They're with their orange.
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[SPEAKER_14]: They're with their orange.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Okay, well, they're not clearly orange because I had to ask what the color.
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[SPEAKER_15]: It's not like an orange.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It might be your monitor.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It might be, you know, when it could be.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Or if you're failing mind, I don't know.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Who knows.
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[SPEAKER_14]: But, uh, yeah.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It, look.
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[SPEAKER_14]: When we, when we get Michael to routinely take out the dogs, which is the number one sure that we battle about, is that a warning, a morning activity, or a net?
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's all day.
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[SPEAKER_14]: You gotta take it all day.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Does he have to do it in the morning though?
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[SPEAKER_15]: Not in the morning.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And usually the drill works like this.
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[SPEAKER_14]: 6 a.m. Alarm, I'm up, jump in the shower, come out, not at my son.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's his favorite thing to do right there.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's what he likes.
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[SPEAKER_14]: He likes to stop me in my tracks and say something that is gross.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Mike, that's like my third favorite thing to do.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I think I'm like better than that.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It is really, really totally left me off the rails here.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I'm trying to think what I was like.
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[SPEAKER_15]: OK, you get up.
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[SPEAKER_15]: You take a shower.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And then go to get him and he can be a varying degrees.
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[SPEAKER_14]: The worst thing I ever did, and he still will wake up like that occasionally,
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[SPEAKER_14]: And as a joke, and I mean, it was such an a-hole move.
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[SPEAKER_14]: This was the last weekend.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And I went, and then I went, Michael, it's a-to-clock.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And it's like, he got up burst into tears.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And it was, I'll never do that again.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It was horrible.
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[SPEAKER_14]: It was really horrible.
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[SPEAKER_15]: It was like, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah,
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[SPEAKER_14]: did they really no okay all right well now that's that's mean but if you want to do Saturday Sunday hey it's Monday oh that's a good one to him and if they're probably got the whole day to recover I like that that's a great way of justifying it I will say this that the last periods of pickup and drop off have been really problematic why well when he gets in the car and he's quiet
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[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
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[SPEAKER_14]: That's not like him.
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[SPEAKER_14]: So I know something's off.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And then there was just this attitude.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And the attitude carried all the way into the house this morning.
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[SPEAKER_14]: I give him like three different reminders.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And I've been taking him to the bus which he hates.
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[SPEAKER_14]: He wants to be chauffeur driven all the way the half hour to his school, which I don't have time to do.
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[SPEAKER_14]: And so he comes out in his little
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[SPEAKER_14]: whatever that uh... those underrew things the kids are wearing nowadays with the uh... you know the the what are they called the uh... boxer briefs that he wears with like parks and on them you know what i'm talking about john okay that the what boxer pre-sour
13:25.070 --> 13:54.385
[SPEAKER_14]: Well, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no
13:54.365 --> 13:58.093
[SPEAKER_14]: And no, no, no, no, no, you don't do that.
13:58.253 --> 14:05.369
[SPEAKER_14]: And then by the time I dropped them off at the bus, things that's stabilized, there was an I love you.
14:05.710 --> 14:12.545
[SPEAKER_14]: And hopped out of the car and everything was right with the world, but it's been a little bit problematic for when it comes to dealing with the kids.
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[SPEAKER_13]: Have you under spring break yet?
14:14.412 --> 14:20.882
[SPEAKER_14]: Uh, no, we have not and by the way, he gets to because of the, uh, Glitterotti that has to go must be nice.
14:21.143 --> 14:21.644
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
14:21.664 --> 14:24.528
[SPEAKER_14]: It's a winter break and a spring break, which is a pretty cool.
14:24.668 --> 14:25.049
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
14:25.069 --> 14:26.631
[SPEAKER_14]: I think it's a spring break.
14:26.672 --> 14:28.995
[SPEAKER_14]: You're the father of the kids in Florida doing that, right?
14:29.015 --> 14:31.139
[SPEAKER_15]: My father died and we only got five days.
14:31.439 --> 14:33.142
[SPEAKER_15]: So I hope he enjoys his time.
14:33.162 --> 14:34.845
[SPEAKER_14]: Would you have, uh, would you have wanted more?
14:34.865 --> 14:36.708
[SPEAKER_14]: No, okay.
14:36.868 --> 14:37.549
[SPEAKER_15]: I'm just checking.
14:37.849 --> 14:39.512
[SPEAKER_15]: I'm just, I think you know what I want, Mike.
14:39.672 --> 14:41.415
[SPEAKER_15]: I don't want more for me.
14:41.699 --> 14:46.067
[SPEAKER_15]: I want less for others that are you saying you I get it.
14:46.087 --> 14:46.929
[SPEAKER_13]: I get it.
14:46.949 --> 14:47.771
[SPEAKER_14]: Okay.
14:47.791 --> 14:49.193
[SPEAKER_14]: I understand that.
14:49.654 --> 14:58.932
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, the spring break is something where even though he just had one when all the other kids were in in school, he says, yeah, I wish I had.
14:58.912 --> 15:00.836
[SPEAKER_14]: you know, it's the age right now.
15:00.996 --> 15:12.981
[SPEAKER_14]: It's the turbo age where they would like to be out in a cabin in the woods fishing, hunting, doing whatever they playing video games and hunting and gathering eating berries.
15:13.903 --> 15:18.372
[SPEAKER_13]: March is also the turn we're now at the focus on summers almost here.
15:18.537 --> 15:21.701
[SPEAKER_14]: Yes, yeah, where they flip it around, they flip the script on this.
15:22.122 --> 15:24.445
[SPEAKER_14]: Uh, yeah, getting them up is just becoming a thing.
15:24.726 --> 15:26.288
[SPEAKER_14]: That's, uh, that's really what it is.
15:26.668 --> 15:29.392
[SPEAKER_15]: And uh, do you think you can nip it, nip it in the bud?
15:29.472 --> 15:42.030
[SPEAKER_14]: No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
15:42.010 --> 15:45.314
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, I look I don't know how to combat it.
15:45.434 --> 15:55.066
[SPEAKER_14]: I'll probably be taking to my little screen and researching the Shite out of it to make sure it's a okay, but like that that look that's my son.
15:55.106 --> 15:55.747
[SPEAKER_14]: All right.
15:55.767 --> 16:02.415
[SPEAKER_14]: I want to talk if I may about my inner government and what's going on in my head because
16:02.699 --> 16:06.957
[SPEAKER_14]: You know, I think we have a jingle about it that we played earlier about being broken.
16:07.017 --> 16:07.580
[SPEAKER_14]: We all are.
16:07.680 --> 16:10.131
[SPEAKER_14]: That's why we do what we do.
16:10.532 --> 16:13.063
[SPEAKER_14]: I was thinking about, um,
16:13.246 --> 16:40.755
[SPEAKER_14]: made an appointment with a shoulder specialist to just take a look and give me a final diagnosis as to what I have and what I need to do and all that stuff and I went to the same place where they installed robotic hips in my body which to me has always been something truly amazing that they can cut you open and put a new joint in your body and it will be and I was
16:41.393 --> 16:58.238
[SPEAKER_14]: what we do compared to what most people do compared to what these guys do and I was talking to Carla about it that this guy not only has a medical degree but he has an engineering degree from MIT that's how a worker and a lawyer.
16:58.218 --> 17:00.560
[SPEAKER_14]: I mean, no, no, my T is an engineering.
17:00.640 --> 17:02.402
[SPEAKER_15]: No, no, that's an old joke about.
17:02.462 --> 17:04.764
[SPEAKER_14]: Right, you know, some of that's an over there.
17:04.845 --> 17:06.566
[SPEAKER_14]: There are plenty of people that have done that, too.
17:06.686 --> 17:10.410
[SPEAKER_14]: And the level of, I said, let me tell you what the biggest difference is.
17:10.770 --> 17:15.595
[SPEAKER_14]: I said, this guy would have two surgical sweets operating at the same time.
17:16.096 --> 17:19.479
[SPEAKER_14]: And his job was not to cut your opener, so you back up.
17:19.939 --> 17:24.664
[SPEAKER_14]: His job was when the time came in for the joint installation.
17:24.644 --> 17:29.270
[SPEAKER_14]: He was the guy with the precision to come in and do that.
17:29.450 --> 17:34.436
[SPEAKER_14]: And I thought about what these guys do, and what it is is perfection.
17:35.417 --> 17:46.230
[SPEAKER_14]: And so many professions, there really isn't a need for that in the medical field, when you really cut right down to it, I guess, the need for
17:46.210 --> 17:47.373
[SPEAKER_14]: Perfection that they have.
17:47.553 --> 17:53.507
[SPEAKER_14]: You know, they don't have the ability like we all do and I think about in particular what we do.
17:53.968 --> 17:54.268
[SPEAKER_14]: Oh yeah.
17:54.289 --> 17:59.841
[SPEAKER_14]: And how shabby it's done really compared to the perfection of a surgeon.
18:00.202 --> 18:02.748
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah, there are very few businesses that require it.
18:02.848 --> 18:05.434
[SPEAKER_15]: Medicine is one also a car wash.
18:05.414 --> 18:25.212
[SPEAKER_15]: you want a car wash to be perfect yeah right now they're automatic they're automatic and you know what that's what's wrong with them you know if they could bring back hand-washed cars you're saying we're getting up every day at 530 with us with us with a smile on his face and we'd have a little extra cash coming into the house which we've got fantastic
18:25.192 --> 18:36.545
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, so I was thinking just in terms of how much I admire someone in particular a surgeon who can get in there and do that type of thing.
18:36.565 --> 18:44.975
[SPEAKER_14]: So I don't know why I brought that up, but I just thought it was interesting that, you know, when you when you think about our little floppy lives that, you know, we have.
18:44.995 --> 18:51.182
[SPEAKER_14]: And I love what I do don't get me wrong, but I just don't, you know, I compare it to other professions and it pales in comparison.
18:51.162 --> 18:52.364
[SPEAKER_15]: car wash, of course, the joke.
18:52.384 --> 18:55.849
[SPEAKER_15]: Can we think of any other profession that requires perfection?
18:56.310 --> 18:56.991
[SPEAKER_15]: Airline poll.
18:57.672 --> 18:58.133
[SPEAKER_15]: That's true.
18:58.554 --> 19:00.497
[SPEAKER_15]: And you know, to a certain extent, numbers.
19:02.380 --> 19:06.647
[SPEAKER_15]: Seriously, if you, I mean, you have to make sure nothing leaks or the entire house.
19:06.747 --> 19:07.809
[SPEAKER_15]: Is it risk?
19:07.829 --> 19:10.633
[SPEAKER_13]: Anyone that I hired to do a job, I expect perfection.
19:11.434 --> 19:14.159
[SPEAKER_14]: I would say, I appreciate that, Josh.
19:14.179 --> 19:14.559
[SPEAKER_15]: Thank you.
19:14.579 --> 19:17.524
[SPEAKER_14]: It is not always achieved, but
19:17.504 --> 19:23.054
[SPEAKER_14]: there is no real margin for error with a police officer when they are in a difficult situation.
19:23.535 --> 19:29.706
[SPEAKER_14]: They have to, you know, they have to respond to very, and there are gray areas because you're dealing with other people.
19:29.766 --> 19:31.309
[SPEAKER_14]: So that's where it gets a little sloppy.
19:31.729 --> 19:31.830
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
19:31.850 --> 19:33.593
[SPEAKER_14]: But, yeah, surgeon is there.
19:34.474 --> 19:36.538
[SPEAKER_14]: Let's see, drive airline pilot.
19:36.718 --> 19:37.159
[SPEAKER_13]: What's that?
19:37.640 --> 19:38.481
[SPEAKER_13]: The drive through worker.
19:39.143 --> 19:40.525
[SPEAKER_13]: I don't want to get my food messed up.
19:41.669 --> 19:50.478
[SPEAKER_14]: Obviously, this is landing on my, my cohorts that don't share my, you know, my esteemed for the medical profession.
19:50.498 --> 19:56.844
[SPEAKER_15]: It leans towards St. Augustine, where the problem is because he's about to say the quality control people at skills.
19:57.265 --> 19:59.047
[SPEAKER_15]: You want to have the proper distribution.
19:59.367 --> 20:00.668
[SPEAKER_15]: The cut goal of a guy.
20:00.688 --> 20:02.170
[SPEAKER_15]: You got to have the right number of bubbles.
20:02.390 --> 20:03.892
[SPEAKER_13]: Well, I don't know.
20:03.992 --> 20:07.255
[SPEAKER_13]: If you have an M guy, what if a peanut ends up in the non-penas?
20:07.235 --> 20:08.257
[SPEAKER_13]: You know what?
20:08.698 --> 20:24.214
[SPEAKER_14]: It's probably happened, but when you think about all of our food services, by and large, packaged foods in America, we live, we have a pretty high standard, even how the restrictions are being lifted right now, to
20:24.194 --> 20:27.179
[SPEAKER_14]: Make sure that they can have a free reign.
20:27.459 --> 20:29.122
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, maybe they won't be peanuts.
20:29.142 --> 20:34.350
[SPEAKER_14]: Maybe you'll get like a hazelnut in your M&M's with all this lack of regulation.
20:34.370 --> 20:38.377
[SPEAKER_15]: And also what about you always get a piece of an onion ring if you get fries at Burger King?
20:38.397 --> 20:39.078
[SPEAKER_15]: That's no good.
20:39.719 --> 20:43.946
[SPEAKER_14]: You know, he mentions the one food tray where I think he might be right about that too.
20:44.046 --> 20:46.590
[SPEAKER_13]: Well, that's the food chain with problems.
20:46.570 --> 20:49.335
[SPEAKER_14]: I really think you're right, it's so true.
20:49.355 --> 20:59.655
[SPEAKER_14]: The equivalent of getting a little nub of onion ring in your french fries is I fight it one of the most expensive things in my life.
20:59.815 --> 21:04.444
[SPEAKER_15]: I am bothered by it because I have to think what went wrong.
21:04.424 --> 21:08.650
[SPEAKER_14]: to get to that point and address the comments, all right.
21:09.111 --> 21:14.158
[SPEAKER_14]: All right, nobody tell Mike, is that why you put it in our comments that I read every day?
21:14.619 --> 21:20.106
[SPEAKER_14]: Nobody tell Mike that medical malpractice is the third leading cause of death in America.
21:20.447 --> 21:26.636
[SPEAKER_14]: So not perfection, and I didn't, you know, maybe I misspoke when I said it has to be perfect.
21:26.656 --> 21:28.238
[SPEAKER_14]: The pursuit.
21:28.218 --> 21:29.240
[SPEAKER_14]: of perfection.
21:29.520 --> 21:29.741
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
21:30.082 --> 21:33.127
[SPEAKER_14]: That it can be a life and death experience.
21:33.147 --> 21:35.592
[SPEAKER_14]: I think that puts a, yeah, it is the unit actor.
21:35.893 --> 21:36.313
[SPEAKER_13]: You'll never.
21:37.295 --> 21:37.476
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
21:37.616 --> 21:41.383
[SPEAKER_13]: If you put it in those terms of the pursuit of perfection, then we're all doing that.
21:42.815 --> 21:46.042
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm most of us, I don't even know why I brought this up.
21:46.062 --> 21:52.996
[SPEAKER_14]: I really don't know, but I just, you know, the margins for error, you have to be, you have to be more skilled.
21:53.016 --> 21:54.058
[SPEAKER_14]: You have to be more trained.
21:54.078 --> 21:55.180
[SPEAKER_14]: You have to be more careful.
21:55.221 --> 22:01.313
[SPEAKER_14]: That's what I was saying, Greg, by the way, what dies if our microphones pop.
22:01.293 --> 22:02.094
[SPEAKER_14]: precisely.
22:02.214 --> 22:03.456
[SPEAKER_14]: Well, dilapving.
22:05.961 --> 22:10.688
[SPEAKER_14]: By the way, superchats are welcome and I'm just particularly encouraged encouraged.
22:10.848 --> 22:12.932
[SPEAKER_14]: I want to get to my angst.
22:14.074 --> 22:20.624
[SPEAKER_15]: This is I feel this is going to be something because this is twice now you've teased it and you're kind of avoiding it.
22:21.686 --> 22:25.512
[SPEAKER_14]: Rob, if you were to
22:26.048 --> 22:40.608
[SPEAKER_14]: look at me and my life and throw out a guess as to one of my more, I don't want to say difficult, but super chat comes from Greg Klein.
22:40.669 --> 22:42.231
[SPEAKER_14]: Thank you very much.
22:42.251 --> 22:44.354
[SPEAKER_14]: Thanks for your attention and happy day.
22:44.754 --> 22:45.736
[SPEAKER_14]: What a nice guy.
22:45.996 --> 22:47.398
[SPEAKER_14]: Greg, he's your act.
22:47.378 --> 22:51.263
[SPEAKER_14]: Um, no, my, my interpersonal relationship ranks.
22:51.724 --> 22:52.445
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
22:52.465 --> 22:58.854
[SPEAKER_14]: Uh, what would you say would be one of the, uh, one of the more, I don't, see, I don't want to use negative words.
22:59.274 --> 23:12.272
[SPEAKER_14]: One of the more, but they're all negative, problematic, strained, uh, difficult, uh, struggling, challenging, challenging, uh, one of those, who, who would fall into that category, do you think?
23:13.788 --> 23:17.857
[SPEAKER_15]: In what respect like you're attitude towards them and they're attitude towards me.
23:18.358 --> 23:27.799
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah, I would have to say hmm not all of them, but some of the, oh, he broke up.
23:28.160 --> 23:33.872
[SPEAKER_14]: He broke up right at the key moment when you leave, when you leave.
23:34.291 --> 23:37.816
[SPEAKER_15]: Apparently, right now, because you're not happy.
23:38.817 --> 23:46.347
[SPEAKER_15]: No, my guess is that it would be not all of them, but some of them, the people you golf with.
23:46.367 --> 23:46.548
[SPEAKER_14]: No.
23:47.309 --> 23:47.589
[SPEAKER_15]: Okay.
23:48.170 --> 23:49.191
[SPEAKER_14]: Think closer to me.
23:50.653 --> 23:52.676
[SPEAKER_15]: Could it be your beloved wife?
23:53.457 --> 23:53.637
[SPEAKER_14]: No.
23:54.278 --> 23:54.859
[SPEAKER_14]: Two clothes.
23:55.319 --> 23:55.820
[SPEAKER_14]: Two clothes.
23:55.860 --> 23:58.564
[SPEAKER_14]: A little less close, but in the same category.
23:59.425 --> 23:59.505
[SPEAKER_15]: Hmm.
24:01.105 --> 24:06.013
[SPEAKER_15]: Josh, do you have a photo on this or he's so yeah yeah yeah it's he's I'm warning ladies.
24:06.113 --> 24:07.014
[SPEAKER_14]: I do I do.
24:07.034 --> 24:07.254
[SPEAKER_13]: Yes.
24:07.615 --> 24:08.336
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh go ahead John.
24:08.356 --> 24:09.217
[SPEAKER_13]: It's got to be family.
24:09.858 --> 24:10.339
[SPEAKER_14]: It's family.
24:10.680 --> 24:18.051
[SPEAKER_14]: It's in particular in my sister because I believe that we have had plenty of
24:18.031 --> 24:35.172
[SPEAKER_14]: death energy on the show over the last couple of weeks and it's been a difficult time Rob is done a marvelous job coming back on the show because Rob knows what I've known for a long time when you when you come back and do this It's you know, it's a good escape for an hour and hour and hour.
24:35.192 --> 24:35.672
[SPEAKER_14]: It's helpful.
24:35.773 --> 24:46.806
[SPEAKER_14]: It truly is helpful But yesterday was the 10th anniversary believe it or not 10 years my mom wow past away 10 years ago yesterday and
24:46.786 --> 24:54.053
[SPEAKER_14]: I just, I don't think I'm overreacting, but I think this is all about me.
24:55.074 --> 24:55.935
[SPEAKER_14]: This is all about me.
24:55.955 --> 24:58.438
[SPEAKER_15]: Well, I mean, the name of the show is the Michael Marasho.
24:58.498 --> 25:00.100
[SPEAKER_15]: Let's talk about Michael Marasho.
25:00.120 --> 25:03.503
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm talking about, I'm talking about, I'm talking about, I'm talking about in the exchange.
25:04.104 --> 25:07.167
[SPEAKER_14]: So was it a phone call or a text message?
25:07.187 --> 25:08.128
[SPEAKER_14]: It was a text message.
25:08.468 --> 25:10.610
[SPEAKER_15]: She doesn't do a lot of talking, does she?
25:10.790 --> 25:11.331
[SPEAKER_15]: On the phone.
25:11.351 --> 25:12.372
[SPEAKER_15]: She's very busy.
25:12.352 --> 25:15.457
[SPEAKER_14]: I think she does with people she calls.
25:15.717 --> 25:15.978
[SPEAKER_14]: All right.
25:15.998 --> 25:17.220
[SPEAKER_15]: Let me remind her of it.
25:17.500 --> 25:20.585
[SPEAKER_15]: Your sister is very busy, and she seldom speaks to you on the phone.
25:20.625 --> 25:21.987
[SPEAKER_15]: But often she will text.
25:22.007 --> 25:26.754
[SPEAKER_14]: We communicate by this text, usually every year on the anniversary of my mom's death.
25:26.774 --> 25:29.018
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, that means you get to put whatever tone you want on it.
25:29.559 --> 25:30.760
[SPEAKER_14]: I relate to what she wanted.
25:30.861 --> 25:31.041
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
25:31.221 --> 25:34.707
[SPEAKER_14]: I said thinking of you today, which I was there to give you a hug.
25:35.107 --> 25:36.049
[SPEAKER_14]: Let's catch up soon.
25:36.449 --> 25:40.215
[SPEAKER_14]: I am thinking today that no daughter was ever better to her mother than you.
25:40.195 --> 25:43.083
[SPEAKER_14]: Here's to mom Carl and I will toast your memory tonight.
25:43.484 --> 25:45.189
[SPEAKER_14]: That's what I wrote to our sisters.
25:45.209 --> 25:46.733
[SPEAKER_15]: And may I guess how she replied?
25:48.438 --> 25:49.902
[SPEAKER_15]: Some sort of frog meme.
25:51.316 --> 25:54.119
[SPEAKER_15]: I was thinking a simple, why today?
25:55.400 --> 25:58.142
[SPEAKER_15]: Oh, now that's that's that's that's dealing her.
25:58.162 --> 26:02.346
[SPEAKER_14]: She always she was the best daughter to my mom that anyone could have.
26:02.846 --> 26:04.087
[SPEAKER_14]: She took care of my mom and was fine.
26:04.108 --> 26:05.669
[SPEAKER_15]: You were a pretty good daughter too though.
26:05.909 --> 26:08.251
[SPEAKER_14]: I was a good daughter too, but but make no mistake.
26:08.291 --> 26:09.212
[SPEAKER_14]: Kathy ran point.
26:09.232 --> 26:13.696
[SPEAKER_14]: She was up there with her, you know, she brought her into their family.
26:14.517 --> 26:21.323
[SPEAKER_14]: During the years that, you know, my my situation perhaps not
26:21.303 --> 26:24.488
[SPEAKER_14]: There you go, the response.
26:24.508 --> 26:26.171
[SPEAKER_14]: I don't know why this bugged me.
26:26.191 --> 26:33.643
[SPEAKER_14]: Okay, the response is Aw, A, W, W, W, W, W. That's it.
26:34.464 --> 26:36.748
[SPEAKER_14]: We were a good team, especially toward the end.
26:37.229 --> 26:39.733
[SPEAKER_14]: Ten years seems impossible, exo.
26:41.907 --> 26:45.472
[SPEAKER_15]: I think you know what I can see where that might bother you.
26:45.512 --> 26:46.834
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah, that's very sweet.
26:47.415 --> 26:56.007
[SPEAKER_15]: And that awe is in that's replacing Thank you and your right and that's indicating that thought it is.
26:56.168 --> 27:01.215
[SPEAKER_13]: I mean, when you say But she throws her all the way with we were a good team
27:01.195 --> 27:02.997
[SPEAKER_13]: as in mom and I were a good team.
27:03.017 --> 27:03.458
[SPEAKER_13]: Where were you?
27:03.498 --> 27:04.459
[SPEAKER_13]: No, no.
27:04.479 --> 27:04.839
[SPEAKER_13]: It was me.
27:04.939 --> 27:05.460
[SPEAKER_13]: It was me.
27:05.520 --> 27:06.101
[SPEAKER_13]: It was me.
27:06.121 --> 27:06.942
[SPEAKER_13]: It was a very good team.
27:07.102 --> 27:08.584
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah, we were a good team.
27:08.624 --> 27:10.285
[SPEAKER_15]: And that's a pretty good.
27:10.366 --> 27:11.687
[SPEAKER_15]: That's a pretty good.
27:11.787 --> 27:15.572
[SPEAKER_14]: So you've confirmed Rob what I suspected.
27:16.292 --> 27:18.955
[SPEAKER_14]: And this is how I feel.
27:19.496 --> 27:22.900
[SPEAKER_14]: I am, you know, my sister's not getting any younger.
27:22.998 --> 27:24.199
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm not getting any younger.
27:24.480 --> 27:25.981
[SPEAKER_14]: You've just lost your dad.
27:26.422 --> 27:27.123
[SPEAKER_14]: It makes you think.
27:27.143 --> 27:28.905
[SPEAKER_14]: Everybody that's around something like that.
27:29.486 --> 27:34.652
[SPEAKER_14]: They don't only think about the person that's grieving in morning, they think about our time on this planet.
27:34.892 --> 27:36.854
[SPEAKER_15]: Your mortality is your mortality.
27:37.074 --> 27:38.356
[SPEAKER_15]: Absolutely, front and center.
27:39.177 --> 27:44.483
[SPEAKER_14]: And I believe that I can do better.
27:44.783 --> 27:53.321
[SPEAKER_14]: when it comes to the relationship I have with that family, with both my sister and my brother-in-law.
27:53.762 --> 28:00.075
[SPEAKER_14]: I wouldn't, I won't count their kids in it, but it's something that I have always probably wanted
28:00.055 --> 28:09.129
[SPEAKER_14]: more of, which because in no small part because of my own angst, which I just demonstrated, because you're saying, oh, that's there's nothing wrong with that.
28:09.370 --> 28:10.411
[SPEAKER_14]: That's me.
28:10.672 --> 28:11.593
[SPEAKER_14]: That's that's the way.
28:11.894 --> 28:18.925
[SPEAKER_15]: But you also have had sort of, and this is not negative, a checkered past with your sister and her husband.
28:18.905 --> 28:19.245
[SPEAKER_15]: Right.
28:19.265 --> 28:31.619
[SPEAKER_14]: I mean, it's not always been such a shining wall across, you know, the older sister younger brother, baby brother in this case, relationship with a seven year age difference.
28:31.639 --> 28:39.007
[SPEAKER_14]: I don't think it's unusual to have, you know, a, it's not I don't call it a strange.
28:39.067 --> 28:39.988
[SPEAKER_14]: I don't call it strange.
28:40.169 --> 28:41.290
[SPEAKER_14]: I send her a message.
28:41.310 --> 28:42.291
[SPEAKER_14]: She got right back to me.
28:42.751 --> 28:48.658
[SPEAKER_14]: I think that I think that I want more out of it.
28:49.550 --> 29:10.242
[SPEAKER_14]: uh... and i would have regrets if uh... you know if she worn around about what we have i have a tremendous amount of a steam for her i i i i love my country i i do what is that that because we're defensive in our family we don't like to lay it all out on the table
29:10.222 --> 29:12.124
[SPEAKER_15]: Michael, let me just tell you this.
29:12.364 --> 29:15.707
[SPEAKER_15]: I made what I thought was going to be kind of a lame New Year's resolution.
29:15.767 --> 29:16.428
[SPEAKER_15]: Sorry, Scoob.
29:16.468 --> 29:17.849
[SPEAKER_15]: I'm sorry to hear you're dealing with that.
29:17.969 --> 29:18.690
[SPEAKER_15]: Sorry about that.
29:19.791 --> 29:23.354
[SPEAKER_15]: My New Year's resolution was to tell more people that I love them.
29:24.355 --> 29:32.962
[SPEAKER_15]: Because at the time of New Year's, there was some indecision or uncertainty about where my father was headed.
29:33.803 --> 29:39.148
[SPEAKER_15]: And I got to think about there are people that I lost that I never said it to.
29:39.365 --> 29:42.351
[SPEAKER_15]: and you need to let people know.
29:42.371 --> 29:47.662
[SPEAKER_15]: And I mean, it's the last thing, no, not you.
29:47.963 --> 29:48.885
[SPEAKER_15]: I sent him a telegram.
29:50.608 --> 29:57.222
[SPEAKER_15]: But with my dad, I will always know that the last thing I said to him is I love you.
29:57.202 --> 30:08.961
[SPEAKER_15]: And I have to hope he hears it, heard it, but when you say you hold your sister in a high esteem, that's a little defensive, but really what you're sharing is, yeah, well beyond that, you love your sister.
30:09.081 --> 30:09.983
[SPEAKER_14]: I love my sister.
30:11.084 --> 30:13.608
[SPEAKER_14]: She really can make me laugh.
30:14.730 --> 30:19.318
[SPEAKER_14]: I admire what she's done with her beautiful kids and their beautiful families.
30:20.139 --> 30:23.985
[SPEAKER_14]: And it's something that I think we have
30:24.303 --> 30:27.949
[SPEAKER_14]: I had somebody, I'm really layin' myself bare today.
30:28.290 --> 30:28.831
[SPEAKER_14]: I had somebody.
30:28.851 --> 30:29.312
[SPEAKER_15]: It'll help.
30:29.432 --> 30:30.033
[SPEAKER_15]: It's good.
30:30.053 --> 30:31.656
[SPEAKER_14]: In therapy.
30:31.676 --> 30:41.653
[SPEAKER_14]: When I was dealing with the angst of going up to where my cousins and my sister are during the summer and not feeling like I was part of it.
30:41.633 --> 30:48.563
[SPEAKER_14]: And the therapist said to me, and I buy into it, the therapist said, why are you pursuing something you can't have?
30:49.424 --> 30:50.505
[SPEAKER_14]: And it made sense.
30:50.545 --> 30:52.588
[SPEAKER_14]: And you see a lot of that online nowadays.
30:52.628 --> 31:00.179
[SPEAKER_14]: You see a lot of people giving that advice that you should not try to keep going back to a situation that makes you unhappy.
31:00.519 --> 31:04.144
[SPEAKER_14]: That's a big, big theme in psychology.
31:04.164 --> 31:06.848
[SPEAKER_15]: It has an overlap with literal insanity.
31:06.828 --> 31:10.272
[SPEAKER_15]: where you do the same thing every time expecting a different result.
31:10.372 --> 31:13.035
[SPEAKER_15]: And you're wanting to be in that career.
31:15.197 --> 31:16.619
[SPEAKER_13]: You mean the the brokenness?
31:17.560 --> 31:17.921
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.
31:18.021 --> 31:18.361
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.
31:18.421 --> 31:21.685
[SPEAKER_13]: I mean, go into a job and go into that environment every day.
31:22.265 --> 31:22.666
[SPEAKER_14]: Oh, yeah.
31:22.686 --> 31:23.647
[SPEAKER_14]: Well, that was different.
31:23.747 --> 31:27.491
[SPEAKER_14]: That was what we called the the golden handcuffs.
31:27.772 --> 31:29.374
[SPEAKER_14]: That was the golden handcuffs Josh.
31:29.434 --> 31:30.755
[SPEAKER_14]: That was what that was all about.
31:30.995 --> 31:33.358
[SPEAKER_14]: But that certainly didn't help.
31:33.524 --> 31:44.474
[SPEAKER_14]: Because there was a harshness, and there is a harshness in the business of show that, you know, totally, screws up, it f's up your entire existence.
31:44.534 --> 31:47.116
[SPEAKER_15]: Let me ask you a question that I don't think we've ever covered.
31:48.057 --> 31:56.004
[SPEAKER_15]: Do you think you were broken before you got under the business or getting into the business, did that break you or is it something in the middle?
31:56.645 --> 31:59.487
[SPEAKER_15]: Because when I got into the business, I don't think I was broken.
31:59.687 --> 32:01.489
[SPEAKER_15]: I don't think I was broken yet.
32:02.701 --> 32:03.462
[SPEAKER_14]: Are you sure?
32:03.502 --> 32:05.104
[SPEAKER_14]: Are you really?
32:05.265 --> 32:07.067
[SPEAKER_14]: Are you sure you want to stick with that one?
32:07.828 --> 32:10.913
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, I mean, I was that key kid sitting in front of the TV.
32:11.293 --> 32:12.976
[SPEAKER_14]: My dad can be around.
32:13.076 --> 32:13.637
[SPEAKER_14]: Come on now.
32:13.817 --> 32:14.298
[SPEAKER_14]: Really?
32:14.558 --> 32:15.780
[SPEAKER_13]: Some things never change.
32:15.800 --> 32:18.183
[SPEAKER_13]: 30 years to figure out.
32:18.203 --> 32:19.926
[SPEAKER_13]: You were conceived out of wedlock.
32:20.507 --> 32:22.009
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, I'm a bastard, Josh.
32:22.029 --> 32:22.690
[SPEAKER_13]: You can say it.
32:22.710 --> 32:24.412
[SPEAKER_13]: Well, I'm glad you're saying it.
32:24.432 --> 32:26.555
[SPEAKER_13]: You maybe there were some broken things beforehand.
32:27.016 --> 32:31.763
[SPEAKER_15]: No, but you see, I found that out after I got under the business.
32:31.743 --> 32:37.736
[SPEAKER_15]: I, you know what, I had never been, and you know, sort of the history of who I worked with you today.
32:37.896 --> 32:41.785
[SPEAKER_14]: Somebody said to you day, no, nobody's going to finkry you ass.
32:42.046 --> 32:43.328
[SPEAKER_14]: It's not going to happen here today.
32:43.629 --> 32:45.774
[SPEAKER_14]: But I think the answer to your question, wait a minute.
32:45.794 --> 32:48.199
[SPEAKER_14]: Let me get you a question that you asked.
32:48.179 --> 32:49.781
[SPEAKER_14]: The answer is yes, I was before.
32:50.102 --> 32:50.462
[SPEAKER_15]: I don't know.
32:50.482 --> 32:51.504
[SPEAKER_15]: Okay, guarantee.
32:52.205 --> 33:00.978
[SPEAKER_15]: And to me, I had never been in a situation until I got in the business where I was constantly diminished constantly every day.
33:01.699 --> 33:03.862
[SPEAKER_15]: And that, I think, is what broke me.
33:04.543 --> 33:06.246
[SPEAKER_15]: And it didn't take very long for it to happen.
33:06.887 --> 33:11.354
[SPEAKER_15]: Because, you know, you just, you have to bend or break.
33:11.594 --> 33:14.338
[SPEAKER_15]: And if you're constantly being told, you suck.
33:14.318 --> 33:31.382
[SPEAKER_15]: or something to that effect or you can't do this right or you're not doing this right that'll break you and it causes you to do more wrong in fact when you're and think less of yourself I mean it really does and so I think that would you say that the business broke you more a hundred percent
33:31.430 --> 33:33.193
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah, okay, so we can agree on that.
33:33.354 --> 33:34.917
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, we worked with the guy that was difficult.
33:34.957 --> 33:35.578
[SPEAKER_14]: That's all that is.
33:35.698 --> 33:41.028
[SPEAKER_14]: I don't care if anybody knows that my relationship and your relationship was done with Dom was difficult.
33:41.509 --> 33:42.151
[SPEAKER_12]: It was difficult.
33:42.171 --> 33:42.972
[SPEAKER_14]: It was difficult for him.
33:43.032 --> 33:53.252
[SPEAKER_14]: You were to 20 secradiostations, you know, it is something that I look back on and I'm happy for.
33:53.570 --> 34:05.977
[SPEAKER_14]: All the monetary success and all the other successes that I had, but I'm very, very, I certainly don't look back on that with regrets because of the success.
34:06.398 --> 34:10.768
[SPEAKER_14]: But at the same time, I know how it further.
34:11.660 --> 34:14.024
[SPEAKER_14]: brought to the surface all the insecurities I already had.
34:14.444 --> 34:16.508
[SPEAKER_14]: And I think there's that's not an accident.
34:16.668 --> 34:28.487
[SPEAKER_14]: That people that are in this business, you've got that and you've got people that are broken, but dominant that get over on people that are broken
34:28.467 --> 34:47.826
[SPEAKER_14]: and not dominant right and that's that's our business you can look at it you can see with Johnny Carson and Ed McMan you can say the only thing that I did differently than anybody else in our jet stream and Rob was around when this happened occasionally I would not I would get to a point where I would I would rebel and I would I would stop taking crap.
34:47.806 --> 34:55.278
[SPEAKER_14]: uh, because it would, you know, there was a, you know, a feeling of, that's enough, uh, and it was, it was a difficult environment.
34:55.298 --> 35:07.097
[SPEAKER_15]: And I think, yeah, it enhanced the, the problems that, uh, yeah, the one, you know, upon thinking on it, the one break I probably had or, or crack in the whole system, the thing that broke me or started it,
35:07.077 --> 35:18.694
[SPEAKER_15]: is you said, you know, coming from broken home with my folks divorced, although I've been reflecting on it and I think I probably had better parents growing up than most people that parents they stayed together.
35:18.714 --> 35:19.215
[SPEAKER_15]: It was okay.
35:19.756 --> 35:32.595
[SPEAKER_15]: But I was because of that forced to spend a lot of time with extended family and my mom was one of eight kids and I was only nine years younger than the
35:32.575 --> 35:38.683
[SPEAKER_15]: I always craved attention, spoke out in class, and stuff like that, and that I turned into this.
35:38.703 --> 35:41.927
[SPEAKER_15]: I wanted to make people laugh, I wanted to make people look at me.
35:42.908 --> 35:48.275
[SPEAKER_15]: And I think that's, if that's not being broken, that's certainly hairline cracks that can lead to being broken.
35:48.355 --> 35:50.538
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, and so we all dealt with that.
35:50.678 --> 35:56.946
[SPEAKER_14]: And I think that if you keep going back and pursuing it, but with a family member,
35:56.926 --> 36:02.155
[SPEAKER_14]: It's different because there's the blood relation that I have and I can't get it to it.
36:02.175 --> 36:02.676
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
36:03.056 --> 36:08.946
[SPEAKER_14]: And I am hesitant because I don't want to leave myself out there.
36:09.507 --> 36:18.062
[SPEAKER_14]: And I think I've made overtures before but not as directly as I could have and I think I can.
36:18.883 --> 36:21.668
[SPEAKER_15]: I think I'm going to 100% think.
36:21.648 --> 36:27.974
[SPEAKER_14]: I don't think it's going to be phone or text, I think it's going to be face to face and I think that's the way it should be.
36:29.176 --> 36:32.279
[SPEAKER_15]: But so you'll have to fly to Columbia where she's spending the winter.
36:32.299 --> 36:34.081
[SPEAKER_14]: Is that how it's going to work?
36:34.521 --> 36:36.904
[SPEAKER_14]: No, it's just but love admiration.
36:38.045 --> 36:38.685
[SPEAKER_14]: Respect.
36:39.486 --> 36:41.929
[SPEAKER_15]: Does she really have all of that toward her?
36:41.949 --> 36:42.790
[SPEAKER_15]: Probably not.
36:43.470 --> 36:44.611
[SPEAKER_15]: I need to tell her, man.
36:44.892 --> 36:45.492
[SPEAKER_15]: You need to find out.
36:45.532 --> 36:46.293
[SPEAKER_14]: I want to find out.
36:46.533 --> 36:48.195
[SPEAKER_14]: I want to find out.
36:48.445 --> 37:03.552
[SPEAKER_14]: If my moving away, backing away from being up in that area in the summertime, had any kind of effect, I'd like to know that, or whether she even noticed, I don't know.
37:03.532 --> 37:04.273
[SPEAKER_14]: I'd like to know.
37:04.533 --> 37:06.695
[SPEAKER_14]: And I don't it's not like I want to hear yes.
37:06.895 --> 37:12.139
[SPEAKER_14]: I just am curious about you want to know because I've thought that it's it's complicated.
37:12.260 --> 37:13.220
[SPEAKER_14]: I'll let you know.
37:13.320 --> 37:18.845
[SPEAKER_15]: I would think I would think that there is a very good chance she wrestles with similar demons.
37:19.686 --> 37:29.535
[SPEAKER_15]: But neither of you have reached out to confirm it because sometimes it's nice to leave it in doubt because you know you're not going to hear what you're afraid you're going to hear.
37:30.275 --> 37:33.538
[SPEAKER_15]: But
37:33.518 --> 37:39.351
[SPEAKER_15]: get to her and let her know how you feel because it's very positive.
37:39.832 --> 37:41.035
[SPEAKER_15]: How is she going to take it wrong?
37:41.255 --> 37:42.478
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, you're right.
37:42.498 --> 37:42.939
[SPEAKER_14]: Okay.
37:42.959 --> 37:43.159
[SPEAKER_14]: All right.
37:43.320 --> 37:50.295
[SPEAKER_14]: You know, the thing is, though, with my family, the way they're super slow, sometimes this is the clip that does it.
37:50.275 --> 37:58.047
[SPEAKER_15]: Hey, I heard I'm talking about a billion downloads because everyone wants to hear it.
37:58.988 --> 38:00.230
[SPEAKER_15]: Stick me on the ass before.
38:00.370 --> 38:09.023
[SPEAKER_14]: But yeah, and by the way, Jacob says to Rob, look at how many people you have been here for you all talking to you right now.
38:09.123 --> 38:11.046
[SPEAKER_14]: Rob A, you have nailed it.
38:11.066 --> 38:14.832
[SPEAKER_14]: 100, that's why we show up and watch.
38:14.812 --> 38:27.526
[SPEAKER_15]: What would it what is he referring I would like to say, you know Do you know what he's talking about like I said I like to tell people I love them I'd like to tell Jacob to study grammar because What he was he referring to?
38:27.606 --> 38:28.227
[SPEAKER_14]: Come on.
38:28.247 --> 38:44.565
[SPEAKER_15]: No, I think he's agreeing with what I said about telling people the way you were listening What did you say And also I think he's appreciative of the fact that we open up our hearts on this show not always but sometimes
38:44.545 --> 38:52.220
[SPEAKER_14]: No, I mean, you protect yourself, but we, this incarnation is more, I'm more comfortable than I've ever been in my own skin.
38:52.260 --> 39:00.776
[SPEAKER_14]: And there are varying degrees, my strategy, my emotional strategy, when people are on this show and leave for whatever reason.
39:00.836 --> 39:04.663
[SPEAKER_14]: It's usually, uh, Cia, and I don't look in the rear view mirror.
39:04.643 --> 39:14.460
[SPEAKER_14]: And I don't feel that that's necessarily productive, because my fears, if I do that, then I'll open myself up to being feeling like crap again.
39:14.600 --> 39:16.263
[SPEAKER_14]: And I don't want to go through that.
39:16.464 --> 39:18.928
[SPEAKER_15]: Because you have your tendrils back in the old business, though.
39:19.629 --> 39:22.935
[SPEAKER_15]: You know, where you think of someone who is not with you is certainly against you.
39:23.516 --> 39:25.760
[SPEAKER_15]: And that's how I was brought up through the system, too.
39:26.721 --> 39:28.204
[SPEAKER_15]: We would...
39:28.184 --> 39:32.854
[SPEAKER_15]: have literal wars with other people that we were on the same radio station as.
39:33.115 --> 39:37.685
[SPEAKER_15]: That doesn't make any sense at all because you want the radio station to excel.
39:38.006 --> 39:42.074
[SPEAKER_14]: I am watching and not to get political, but I'm going to get political so bear it.
39:42.616 --> 39:44.640
[SPEAKER_14]: I am watching
39:45.245 --> 39:53.496
[SPEAKER_14]: Rand Paul, a man that I do not necessarily agree with politically, grilling the new nominee for Head of Homeland Security.
39:54.277 --> 39:57.782
[SPEAKER_14]: I think his name is Mark Wain, Billy Bob.
39:58.503 --> 40:00.505
[SPEAKER_15]: He does have a hyphenated mind.
40:00.986 --> 40:02.208
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, it's Molly and something.
40:02.228 --> 40:05.191
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, Mooney, you want to talk about broken.
40:05.211 --> 40:11.640
[SPEAKER_14]: You want to talk about, Rand Paul is trying to get this guy
40:11.620 --> 40:20.875
[SPEAKER_14]: acknowledge and apologize that he should not have said he understood the guy that attacked Rand Paul.
40:21.236 --> 40:22.198
[SPEAKER_14]: Rand Paul went through.
40:22.218 --> 40:30.531
[SPEAKER_14]: Remember when he got tackled in his backyard by his neighbor and Rand Paul is going through all of the injuries he sustained.
40:30.672 --> 40:36.261
[SPEAKER_14]: What he went through with that exactly in this guy won't yield and I realize that
40:36.241 --> 40:41.350
[SPEAKER_14]: You know, we think the business of show is take no prisoners tough.
40:41.770 --> 40:50.365
[SPEAKER_14]: The business, the business of politics, you cannot even conceive how broken a person is.
40:50.565 --> 40:54.913
[SPEAKER_14]: By the most broken of all being the president of the United States, it's incredible.
40:54.953 --> 40:56.415
[SPEAKER_13]: It really is what we're going to say, Josh.
40:56.435 --> 40:58.519
[SPEAKER_13]: Well, none of them can ever admit wrong.
40:58.499 --> 41:00.403
[SPEAKER_14]: That's the new thing.
41:00.684 --> 41:04.251
[SPEAKER_14]: The new thing is never healed, never admit when you've made a mistake.
41:04.752 --> 41:16.137
[SPEAKER_15]: And I like him as a president, but we took a turn when we elected Bill Clinton because he was the first president we ever had that just set out to be president.
41:16.117 --> 41:17.198
[SPEAKER_15]: that's what he wanted.
41:17.238 --> 41:18.619
[SPEAKER_15]: He didn't serve in the military.
41:19.160 --> 41:26.266
[SPEAKER_15]: He lived his life and then he worked up through that he didn't have a history to back up what he was saying.
41:26.326 --> 41:28.368
[SPEAKER_14]: He was a very troubled family life, too.
41:28.628 --> 41:29.509
[SPEAKER_14]: Very troubled family.
41:29.529 --> 41:32.131
[SPEAKER_15]: Very, very slick, wonderful politician.
41:32.751 --> 41:32.992
[SPEAKER_15]: Right.
41:33.012 --> 41:34.113
[SPEAKER_15]: I've been in a room with him.
41:34.213 --> 41:35.394
[SPEAKER_15]: It's electric.
41:35.414 --> 41:44.942
[SPEAKER_14]: But you know, you can't blame it all on unstable, broken home
41:44.922 --> 41:51.173
[SPEAKER_14]: true, you know, came up with a probably the least issues of anybody, but the ambition is still there.
41:51.213 --> 41:58.306
[SPEAKER_14]: And then you go right to George Bush, who had a fabulous family, you know, the of service that that he did.
41:58.626 --> 41:59.849
[SPEAKER_14]: I worked with his family.
41:59.869 --> 42:00.830
[SPEAKER_14]: There are amazing people.
42:00.890 --> 42:02.914
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm watching this exchange.
42:02.894 --> 42:07.702
[SPEAKER_14]: And I'm saying to myself, this is the seed of power in America right now.
42:08.283 --> 42:26.674
[SPEAKER_14]: You have people that, and it also proves that this Mark Bobby Sue, whatever his name is, might be like a former Mixed Marshall Arts fighter, and he challenged a guide to a fight, this guy,
42:26.654 --> 42:29.338
[SPEAKER_14]: There are so ridiculous.
42:29.518 --> 42:30.159
[SPEAKER_14]: It really is.
42:30.299 --> 42:36.188
[SPEAKER_14]: And physical courage does not necessarily translate into moral courage.
42:36.729 --> 42:37.690
[SPEAKER_14]: You're absolutely right.
42:37.831 --> 42:47.265
[SPEAKER_14]: And I'm watching this and just so all I was saying to myself is, you know, acknowledge the fact that this guy was completely f-ed up by this attack.
42:47.285 --> 42:47.505
[SPEAKER_14]: Right.
42:47.525 --> 42:51.351
[SPEAKER_14]: Nobody deserves that political violence to be dumped on him.
42:51.371 --> 42:53.915
[SPEAKER_13]: And that's all he was trying to get the guy to say, come on.
42:53.995 --> 42:54.195
[SPEAKER_13]: Right.
42:54.235 --> 42:56.138
[SPEAKER_13]: You can easily say,
42:56.118 --> 42:58.981
[SPEAKER_13]: Like, I understand his frustration, but he took it too far.
42:59.682 --> 42:59.822
[SPEAKER_13]: Mm-hmm.
42:59.842 --> 43:02.504
[SPEAKER_13]: Should never attack no matter how many leaves you put in his yard.
43:02.524 --> 43:09.111
[SPEAKER_14]: That would have been, I don't know if it would have been 100% acceptable, but it might have been better than what he did, right?
43:09.131 --> 43:10.012
[SPEAKER_14]: It would be a nod.
43:10.132 --> 43:11.733
[SPEAKER_14]: It would be at least an acknowledgement.
43:11.954 --> 43:22.204
[SPEAKER_14]: And now this, this, this sparring that goes on where the people that are going before Congress, the new playbook, is give it as good as you get.
43:22.844 --> 43:24.606
[SPEAKER_14]: Uh, it's just,
43:24.586 --> 43:25.267
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, not at all.
43:25.287 --> 43:25.948
[SPEAKER_13]: No, not at all.
43:25.968 --> 43:27.130
[SPEAKER_13]: No, not at all.
43:27.290 --> 43:27.911
[SPEAKER_13]: No.
43:28.352 --> 43:34.823
[SPEAKER_13]: And I feel for Rob having to fly on on Saturday with the government shutdown still going on.
43:35.484 --> 43:35.885
[SPEAKER_15]: Oh, yeah.
43:36.466 --> 43:37.748
[SPEAKER_14]: I will pray.
43:38.048 --> 43:39.691
[SPEAKER_14]: What would I do if he said that about me?
43:39.711 --> 43:41.734
[SPEAKER_14]: I would go out of my mind right now.
43:41.774 --> 43:44.599
[SPEAKER_14]: I'd probably take the train after what you just just said.
43:44.619 --> 43:45.581
[SPEAKER_14]: I will.
43:45.661 --> 43:47.404
[SPEAKER_15]: I think my flight is at 8.30.
43:47.504 --> 43:49.547
[SPEAKER_15]: I'll get to the airport at 6.
43:49.527 --> 43:52.853
[SPEAKER_15]: And that's no fun, but I mean, I got to get home.
43:53.074 --> 43:59.366
[SPEAKER_15]: And every day when I watch David Muir, I get pissed off all over again.
43:59.386 --> 44:03.754
[SPEAKER_15]: The fact that these TSA agents are showing up without pay.
44:04.535 --> 44:08.042
[SPEAKER_15]: I mean, just so we can travel.
44:08.022 --> 44:24.985
[SPEAKER_14]: Well, you know, we've gone way too long in this opening segment, which always tells me it's a good segment and I've been informed by the powers that be out of Jacksonville St. Augustine Florida that I have to get a new commercial and read it live on the show.
44:25.005 --> 44:27.909
[SPEAKER_14]: Let me, let me get my specs here.
44:28.971 --> 44:34.398
[SPEAKER_14]: Do you want to give any kind of information on this commercial and why you wanted me to read it?
44:34.478 --> 44:35.920
[SPEAKER_15]: Well, it's very clear.
44:36.338 --> 45:00.000
[SPEAKER_14]: yeah okay and also i'd like for our show to skew a little younger i think that's good so you have included jargon the kids will eat it up all right so i'll do the best i can i've not read this yet all right dead lock it in pack the drip we outside
45:02.866 --> 45:03.607
[SPEAKER_14]: The T.M.O.S.
45:03.647 --> 45:19.103
[SPEAKER_14]: crew is spinning the block back to the ocean, and it's about to be full sand, zero chill, and absolute cinema, F real, vibe check, Mike, for real, am I supposed to say for real?
45:19.524 --> 45:20.285
[SPEAKER_14]: For real, yeah.
45:20.305 --> 45:21.306
[SPEAKER_14]: Oh, let me try again.
45:21.326 --> 45:22.006
[SPEAKER_14]: All right.
45:22.026 --> 45:27.572
[SPEAKER_14]: And it's about to be full sand, zero chill, and absolute cinema, for real vibe check.
45:28.273 --> 45:29.835
[SPEAKER_15]: Nailed it.
45:29.855 --> 45:30.055
[UNKNOWN]: Thank you.
45:30.490 --> 45:34.699
[SPEAKER_14]: Y'all said lower the price, make it longer, give us a heads up, we said bet.
45:38.747 --> 45:41.833
[SPEAKER_14]: Say less, done and dust it, no cap.
45:44.238 --> 45:48.246
[SPEAKER_14]: We gettin' all up in the brand new Margarita Village C.
45:49.643 --> 45:50.265
[SPEAKER_14]: Islander.
45:50.686 --> 45:51.268
[SPEAKER_14]: Oh, let me do.
45:51.308 --> 45:51.790
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm sorry.
45:51.990 --> 45:53.515
[SPEAKER_14]: I thought that was jargon ago.
45:53.535 --> 45:56.404
[SPEAKER_14]: We're going to get all up in the brand new Margaritaville at Sea Islander.
45:56.805 --> 46:01.780
[SPEAKER_14]: We jet non-January 21st, 2027, it's going to be straight gas, no brakes.
46:02.283 --> 46:07.331
[SPEAKER_14]: roll through with Mike Robb and Josh for a five day four night main character arc.
46:07.892 --> 46:29.826
[SPEAKER_14]: We talking big laughs, unhinged moments, low key chill, high key chaos, and exclusive TMOS sauce you can't get anywhere else, for real, for real, I love the sauce.
46:30.329 --> 46:33.424
[SPEAKER_14]: Two days and see, vibes on vibes and macula-only.
46:34.831 --> 46:38.972
[SPEAKER_14]: Cosmela and Saturday touch and sand, but make it elite without there.
46:39.830 --> 46:41.713
[SPEAKER_14]: One more CDA before Monday.
46:42.394 --> 46:44.557
[SPEAKER_14]: Got to love a soft landing, yo.
46:45.358 --> 46:46.560
[SPEAKER_14]: We love that for you.
46:47.481 --> 46:48.663
[SPEAKER_14]: Expect live pods.
46:48.703 --> 46:49.545
[SPEAKER_14]: We go on crazy.
46:49.625 --> 46:51.768
[SPEAKER_14]: Meet and greet and don't miss out, punk.
46:52.649 --> 46:53.651
[SPEAKER_14]: Exclusive events.
46:54.172 --> 46:58.378
[SPEAKER_14]: You had to be their energy and gift bag that's high key stacked.
46:58.758 --> 47:00.040
[SPEAKER_14]: No lies detected.
47:00.621 --> 47:02.824
[SPEAKER_14]: Nothing mid this joint slays.
47:03.345 --> 47:03.846
[SPEAKER_14]: Hey, Matt.
47:05.243 --> 47:10.288
[SPEAKER_14]: Tap in it, micromarishow.com for all the deeds, all the tea, all the everything.
47:10.388 --> 47:14.633
[SPEAKER_14]: Don't lag, the best cabins are about to be snatched up quick, fast, and a hurry.
47:16.234 --> 47:18.897
[SPEAKER_14]: Move now or stay mad before they gong gong.
47:19.918 --> 47:21.640
[SPEAKER_14]: Blink, and it's clipped.
47:22.561 --> 47:23.662
[SPEAKER_14]: Don't play yourself.
47:24.082 --> 47:28.006
[SPEAKER_14]: It's gonna be iconic, unreal, and low-key life-changing period.
47:28.267 --> 47:29.007
[SPEAKER_14]: It's BUSIN!
47:29.228 --> 47:29.648
[SPEAKER_14]: BAT!
47:33.205 --> 47:34.727
[SPEAKER_14]: There you go, welcome back to the show.
47:34.747 --> 47:36.930
[SPEAKER_15]: This is the best way to get your T.M.O.S.
47:36.950 --> 47:39.153
[SPEAKER_15]: saw us is to go on this boat ride.
47:39.233 --> 47:40.075
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, saw us, baby.
47:40.115 --> 47:41.016
[SPEAKER_14]: Hit the new sound.
47:41.036 --> 47:42.418
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm ready to do the news now.
47:42.558 --> 47:45.723
[SPEAKER_14]: Everybody, back, back.
47:46.564 --> 47:48.466
[SPEAKER_14]: Josh, you have a 12 year old.
47:48.486 --> 47:53.994
[SPEAKER_14]: Do you think he got the the delightful pattern down a little bit on that?
47:54.996 --> 47:58.200
[SPEAKER_14]: Uh, no, but I think it works.
47:58.636 --> 48:03.461
[SPEAKER_13]: Would it be skewing more wrapper and less 12 year old?
48:03.741 --> 48:08.306
[SPEAKER_13]: It's skewing more 18, 20 year old, I think.
48:08.486 --> 48:12.770
[SPEAKER_13]: Not 12, maybe we'll skew it younger for next year.
48:13.171 --> 48:15.213
[SPEAKER_14]: Oh good, week, next week, very good.
48:15.293 --> 48:17.075
[SPEAKER_14]: Back to the drawing board, but I still like it.
48:17.095 --> 48:18.216
[SPEAKER_14]: I think everybody did too.
48:18.396 --> 48:21.439
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah, and right now Josh, we're going to do something that's called low key tidbits.
48:21.820 --> 48:26.044
[SPEAKER_15]: And these are bits of news that Mike does that are low key, but bet you're going to love them.
48:26.024 --> 48:27.807
[SPEAKER_14]: All right, Batman, man.
48:27.847 --> 48:29.790
[SPEAKER_14]: That, come on, man.
48:30.090 --> 48:31.012
[SPEAKER_14]: Hold on, I get it.
48:31.032 --> 48:33.756
[SPEAKER_14]: I think the best part of this spot was the first and better.
48:34.177 --> 48:37.181
[SPEAKER_14]: I hate the sound boards that we use on this show.
48:37.662 --> 48:38.323
[SPEAKER_14]: I truly do.
48:38.343 --> 48:39.805
[SPEAKER_15]: They've never made a good one, Mike.
48:39.825 --> 48:40.967
[SPEAKER_14]: I mean, I don't know.
48:41.528 --> 48:43.251
[SPEAKER_14]: Well, you, when's the last time you checked?
48:43.271 --> 48:44.473
[SPEAKER_14]: To see if there's a good one out there.
48:45.013 --> 48:45.614
[SPEAKER_15]: Couple weeks ago?
48:46.075 --> 48:47.798
[SPEAKER_14]: I really took all the time.
48:47.998 --> 48:49.641
[SPEAKER_15]: All the time they don't make a new one.
48:50.983 --> 48:51.784
[SPEAKER_15]: I can't answer that.
48:51.844 --> 48:53.787
[SPEAKER_15]: Mike, it's Loki Hasel.
48:54.442 --> 49:15.420
[SPEAKER_14]: gas prices are crazy right now and well it's nice that there are a bunch of articles floating around teaching us fuel saving uh it's also annoying the best piece of advice uh is to go buy a hybrid yes yes who's burp was that was mine i i thought i could get away with it hey i'm in mourning
49:17.307 --> 49:18.769
[SPEAKER_15]: I got to keep that right here.
49:18.829 --> 49:20.331
[SPEAKER_15]: I just rolled the dice really well.
49:20.371 --> 49:21.092
[SPEAKER_14]: You got away with it.
49:21.452 --> 49:21.993
[SPEAKER_14]: All right.
49:22.013 --> 49:24.016
[SPEAKER_14]: So let it pumped gas in three weeks.
49:24.396 --> 49:25.437
[SPEAKER_14]: Kyle has got a hybrid.
49:25.858 --> 49:26.819
[SPEAKER_14]: It's bliss.
49:27.280 --> 49:27.760
[SPEAKER_14]: It's bliss.
49:27.981 --> 49:29.242
[SPEAKER_14]: I mean, she, it's incredible.
49:29.463 --> 49:35.931
[SPEAKER_15]: I think that's the best way to save money is buy a car and then go to Florida for four weeks.
49:36.351 --> 49:37.132
[SPEAKER_14]: And you don't drive by.
49:37.313 --> 49:38.774
[SPEAKER_14]: And then you don't buy any gas at all.
49:38.814 --> 49:42.639
[SPEAKER_14]: I get the impression you are really looking forward to get off that airplane and drive your car around.
49:42.940 --> 49:43.180
[SPEAKER_15]: I would
49:43.160 --> 49:47.704
[SPEAKER_15]: want to drive my beautiful car and I haven't had the opportunity.
49:47.724 --> 49:51.848
[SPEAKER_15]: The last time I drove it Mike, it was like a day that school was canceled.
49:51.888 --> 49:54.270
[SPEAKER_15]: The roads were crappy and I had to go out.
49:54.530 --> 49:55.551
[SPEAKER_15]: So I'm ready to learn it.
49:56.132 --> 50:01.376
[SPEAKER_14]: Here are the very, very cliche written suggestions to say money.
50:01.416 --> 50:03.238
[SPEAKER_14]: Don't go fast in the 65.
50:03.278 --> 50:04.299
[SPEAKER_14]: Oh, God.
50:04.759 --> 50:06.381
[SPEAKER_14]: Use cruise control more.
50:07.362 --> 50:13.167
[SPEAKER_14]: If you see a red light up ahead,
50:13.147 --> 50:13.748
[SPEAKER_14]: Sure.
50:13.768 --> 50:16.133
[SPEAKER_14]: Make sure your tire pressure is correct.
50:16.173 --> 50:23.349
[SPEAKER_14]: I know that under inflated type of lava reduce your car's drag by removing roof racks or bike racks.
50:23.429 --> 50:24.852
[SPEAKER_15]: Now that one is still up.
50:24.872 --> 50:26.456
[SPEAKER_15]: You have all the racks on your cars for the.
50:26.957 --> 50:28.540
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah, for all my 10 speeds.
50:28.520 --> 50:44.924
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, exactly and also my car has got a lot of it has Ted Cruz control and the last one is a real F You want consider compilly F you fight my ass right about Siping your neighbor's gas there you go beautiful idea I'm the old fashioned way.
50:44.944 --> 50:47.007
[SPEAKER_15]: I want to hear you suck it with a hose.
50:47.067 --> 50:47.828
[SPEAKER_15]: I don't want the pump.
50:47.908 --> 50:50.051
[SPEAKER_14]: I got to use it with mouth Here's quick question.
50:50.091 --> 50:52.114
[SPEAKER_14]: Do you know what a flamper is?
50:52.094 --> 50:53.618
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, the dancers in the 1920s.
50:53.678 --> 50:54.922
[SPEAKER_14]: That is incorrect.
50:54.982 --> 50:55.784
[SPEAKER_14]: Let's wait.
50:56.085 --> 50:57.428
[SPEAKER_14]: You're tired from a long day.
50:57.448 --> 50:58.531
[SPEAKER_14]: You're about to get into bed.
50:58.571 --> 50:59.614
[SPEAKER_14]: So you take off your clothes.
50:59.694 --> 51:01.579
[SPEAKER_14]: Put them on the floor next to you and follow sleep.
51:01.920 --> 51:05.229
[SPEAKER_14]: Those clothes are now in the flampy.
51:05.389 --> 51:05.770
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.
51:06.031 --> 51:07.194
[SPEAKER_13]: That's the floor hamper.
51:07.495 --> 51:08.297
[SPEAKER_13]: The floor hamper.
51:08.277 --> 51:14.447
[SPEAKER_14]: The floor hamper, a lot of these clothes aren't dirty, and if you only wore it once, does it really need to get washed right away?
51:14.707 --> 51:15.308
[SPEAKER_14]: Gross.
51:15.688 --> 51:17.191
[SPEAKER_14]: That is close.
51:17.571 --> 51:20.456
[SPEAKER_14]: If not, the flamper is a perfect place to store them in the meantime.
51:20.917 --> 51:23.100
[SPEAKER_14]: Jeans might be an exception.
51:23.260 --> 51:27.186
[SPEAKER_14]: I think jeans can be worn a couple of times depends on the day.
51:27.627 --> 51:29.510
[SPEAKER_14]: If you've had an accident in your pants, maybe.
51:29.590 --> 51:30.191
[SPEAKER_14]: Exactly.
51:30.231 --> 51:30.812
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
51:30.832 --> 51:36.040
[SPEAKER_14]: Some people have a big chair to get all their clothes tossed on.
51:36.020 --> 51:37.141
[SPEAKER_14]: the champion.
51:37.822 --> 51:42.768
[SPEAKER_15]: I have a big share that I used to help me get dressed in my bedroom.
51:42.788 --> 51:43.990
[SPEAKER_14]: It's called a it's called a Walker.
51:44.390 --> 51:50.498
[SPEAKER_15]: No, this is why are you giving a name to someone being a piggy because you're just throwing your clothes on the floor.
51:50.798 --> 51:51.619
[SPEAKER_15]: Don't be a dick.
51:51.760 --> 52:00.070
[SPEAKER_15]: Hang it up if you're going to use it and then and then go and spend two dollars and buy a basket at tier one and put your crap in that.
52:00.050 --> 52:00.911
[SPEAKER_15]: I put it away.
52:01.071 --> 52:02.033
[SPEAKER_13]: I put it in the flamper.
52:02.894 --> 52:03.555
[SPEAKER_13]: Flamper?
52:03.795 --> 52:04.256
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.
52:04.276 --> 52:05.237
[SPEAKER_15]: Flamper on the floor.
52:05.297 --> 52:07.360
[SPEAKER_15]: That's making something up that doesn't exist.
52:07.480 --> 52:12.707
[SPEAKER_14]: But after Valve Kilmer's death, he's going to appear in a new movie thanks to the magic of AI.
52:12.747 --> 52:20.978
[SPEAKER_14]: The film is called as Deep is the Grave and writer director, Coerite Voorhees, says he wrote the part specifically for Valve.
52:20.958 --> 52:32.658
[SPEAKER_14]: Filming originally began in 2020 but by that time Val was having a really tough time Voorhees knows some people will be against the AI thing but he says quote This is what Val wanted.
52:32.698 --> 52:34.722
[SPEAKER_14]: He also got permission from Val's family.
52:35.042 --> 52:43.978
[SPEAKER_14]: His Val's daughter Mercedes confirmed that saying quote He always looked at emerging tech with optimism as a tool to expand the possibilities of storytelling.
52:43.958 --> 53:00.969
[SPEAKER_14]: This spirit is something that we are honoring within this specific film of which he was in the integral park, so I don't know, and it doesn't say whether they will go back to really, really old school footage of Val or whether it might be more recent.
53:01.109 --> 53:02.331
[SPEAKER_15]: I don't appreciate this.
53:02.431 --> 53:03.974
[SPEAKER_15]: I mean, I know that you don't.
53:04.034 --> 53:04.816
[SPEAKER_14]: You're old school.
53:04.836 --> 53:06.118
[SPEAKER_15]: You're gone with the wind.
53:06.098 --> 53:23.027
[SPEAKER_15]: but i mean like you know that nancy marshan who played um mama soprano died between seasons and they had to a i or in those days i guess photoshop or use some sort of digital technology to play off her death in the episode and that was already in motion
53:23.007 --> 53:27.915
[SPEAKER_15]: I don't like this and the reason I don't like it is I think it diminishes Val Kilmer.
53:28.035 --> 53:43.680
[SPEAKER_15]: I think he's a great actor, charismatic, when I think of him in the doors, I think it's one of the greatest performances ever to a point that when I think of when I think of Jim Morrison in my head, I picture Val Kilmer and he lives such a great legacy.
53:43.720 --> 53:49.048
[SPEAKER_15]: He did a great documentary about the end of his life,
53:49.028 --> 53:51.491
[SPEAKER_14]: the proof will be in the result.
53:51.531 --> 53:53.013
[SPEAKER_14]: We'll see what happens.
53:53.033 --> 53:55.335
[SPEAKER_14]: They made so many strides out right now.
53:55.636 --> 53:59.720
[SPEAKER_14]: Hey, super chat comes to us from Racer PGT.
53:59.820 --> 54:00.621
[SPEAKER_14]: Thank you very much.
54:00.922 --> 54:03.344
[SPEAKER_14]: Says I hate hiding behind user names.
54:03.805 --> 54:05.187
[SPEAKER_14]: Mr. Roboto.
54:05.227 --> 54:06.508
[SPEAKER_14]: Tomo, how are they got?
54:06.528 --> 54:09.211
[SPEAKER_14]: Roboto, Mr. Roboto.
54:09.732 --> 54:15.238
[SPEAKER_14]: North Korean elections.
54:16.180 --> 54:19.666
[SPEAKER_15]: That's the, for my, for my money, you could end this story there.
54:20.467 --> 54:22.991
[SPEAKER_14]: They're not like American ones where everyone is equally split.
54:23.251 --> 54:27.598
[SPEAKER_14]: They're more like, are you promisquito or anti-misquito?
54:27.658 --> 54:29.121
[SPEAKER_14]: North Korea just held an election.
54:29.181 --> 54:29.942
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, they really did.
54:30.002 --> 54:34.089
[SPEAKER_14]: And the turnout was 99.9% because it's required.
54:34.549 --> 54:41.260
[SPEAKER_14]: And the Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un got 99.3% of the vote.
54:41.240 --> 54:45.928
[SPEAKER_14]: That's a seven tenths of a percent it didn't get oh my god.
54:45.948 --> 54:47.751
[SPEAKER_14]: It's a pretty good result for him.
54:48.152 --> 54:53.200
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, it's no it's really not for us It's notable not for how high it is but for how low it is.
54:53.601 --> 54:59.451
[SPEAKER_14]: This is the first time since 1957 that anyone has voted against the regime
54:59.431 --> 55:25.573
[SPEAKER_14]: or the first time their state media admitted to it at least there aren't any official numbers but estimates say there are more than 18 million eligible voters in North Korea and 0.07 of 18 million is around 12,000 people so 12,000 very very bold people may have voted no there's no opposition in North Korea you can't just vote for or against
55:25.553 --> 55:42.735
[SPEAKER_14]: and the votes are not secret either so people online are saying that North Korea's population is about to drop by zero point zero seven percent you know what can fix this mail-in ballots yes yes that's right Rob thank you
55:42.715 --> 55:44.097
[SPEAKER_14]: Thank you very much.
55:44.157 --> 55:45.199
[SPEAKER_14]: That's great, Rob.
55:45.219 --> 55:46.381
[SPEAKER_14]: I appreciate it.
55:46.401 --> 55:46.762
[SPEAKER_14]: Nice to be here.
55:46.982 --> 55:48.384
[SPEAKER_14]: Hey, yeah, that's not what I wanted to play.
55:48.404 --> 55:49.166
[SPEAKER_14]: I wanted to play this.
55:49.226 --> 55:50.348
[SPEAKER_14]: The sound for the news.
55:50.428 --> 55:56.718
[SPEAKER_14]: Finally, we have seen plenty of high speed chases involving criminals, but this one, well, not so much.
55:57.039 --> 56:03.930
[SPEAKER_14]: Police in Florida were chatting with a 28-year-old suspect named Chase Cruz.
56:03.910 --> 56:18.969
[SPEAKER_14]: On Monday when he suddenly ran off, I gave this to Josh to share with our listening audience with video of Mr. Chase Cruz and he runs into the ripper for the lawyer we're advised before we ask you any questions to have a lawyer president What?
56:18.990 --> 56:19.511
[SPEAKER_14]: There he goes.
56:19.571 --> 56:20.333
[SPEAKER_14]: Oh, look at him.
56:26.658 --> 56:27.999
[SPEAKER_14]: He's in the river.
56:28.019 --> 56:30.342
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, they're on paddle boards.
56:30.402 --> 56:35.487
[SPEAKER_14]: Those are the cops and they're going out to fish him out Looks like he's having a little trouble in the river.
56:35.947 --> 56:53.425
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah Jail is better than drowning apparently and now one of them There might be a protocol for that because it looks like that one the cop is staying on the paddle board and letting the other guy get in And he looks like as much as you can be when you're drowning you can be a lot more cooperative Yeah, I think he's going out
56:53.405 --> 57:01.016
[SPEAKER_15]: I don't, I don't, I don't, never have, I swim all out of the ground and go into a fetal position.
57:01.877 --> 57:06.784
[SPEAKER_14]: Chase was charged with loitering, resisting arrest, and prowling.
57:07.304 --> 57:12.271
[SPEAKER_14]: Now prowling, if your curious, is legal in some parts of Florida, like the villages.
57:13.133 --> 57:15.356
[SPEAKER_14]: Am I right, ladies?
57:15.436 --> 57:17.679
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, I'm sorry, all right, we got to take a short one.
57:17.699 --> 57:18.400
[SPEAKER_14]: We'll come back.
57:18.380 --> 57:27.016
[SPEAKER_14]: With more fun and thrills, you are listening, ladies and gentlemen, to the Mike O'Mara show well, well, well, well, well, well, well, well, well, I'm not getting any younger.
57:27.217 --> 57:28.399
[SPEAKER_14]: In fact, none of us are.
57:28.479 --> 57:32.607
[SPEAKER_14]: It seemed like energy crashes at 2 p.m. became my new normal.
57:32.968 --> 57:40.221
[SPEAKER_14]: So naturally, I went down to the internet rabbit hole and started Googling symptoms like a hypochondriac, low t kept coming up.
57:40.282 --> 57:41.063
[SPEAKER_14]: Here's the thing.
57:41.043 --> 57:47.069
[SPEAKER_14]: Doctors act like testosterone replacement therapy is no big deal, just weekly shots for the rest of your life.
57:47.349 --> 57:47.650
[SPEAKER_14]: Cool.
57:47.930 --> 57:48.491
[SPEAKER_14]: Thanks, Doc.
57:48.731 --> 57:51.774
[SPEAKER_14]: Then you dig deeper and you realize what you're actually signing up for.
57:52.194 --> 57:57.820
[SPEAKER_14]: Three grand a year to shut down your body's natural production forever, terrifying.
57:58.160 --> 58:01.484
[SPEAKER_14]: So I'm making things easier on my body, the natural way.
58:01.804 --> 58:09.852
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm taking Mars men, a natural testosterone stack that optimizes your body's ability to forge usable testosterone.
58:09.832 --> 58:14.856
[SPEAKER_14]: Mars men is like hitting the reset, but none your hormone factory, instead of shutting it down.
58:15.317 --> 58:19.580
[SPEAKER_14]: It gives me more consistent energy, stronger lips, and better focus.
58:19.921 --> 58:25.145
[SPEAKER_14]: It's a steady drive all day, not the quick spike you get from caffeine or injections.
58:25.506 --> 58:29.329
[SPEAKER_14]: Plus, there's a 90 day money back guarantee, so there's no risk.
58:29.349 --> 58:32.211
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58:56.628 --> 59:00.915
[SPEAKER_14]: Please support our show and tell them the TMOs sent you.
59:00.895 --> 59:04.299
[SPEAKER_14]: It was really hard getting in that suit at the end of that commercial.
59:04.459 --> 59:05.681
[SPEAKER_13]: I thought it looked great.
59:05.721 --> 59:06.822
[SPEAKER_15]: You look like Ironman.
59:07.343 --> 59:09.185
[SPEAKER_13]: I haven't gotten it off was the problem.
59:09.565 --> 59:11.067
[SPEAKER_15]: I'm going to put it in this flamper.
59:11.908 --> 59:14.471
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm going to show back in the day.
59:14.491 --> 59:19.337
[SPEAKER_14]: We spent a lot of time on Bob Barker for a variety of reasons.
59:19.457 --> 59:21.840
[SPEAKER_14]: I love doing an impression of him.
59:21.860 --> 59:22.802
[SPEAKER_14]: It was always fun.
59:23.322 --> 59:28.168
[SPEAKER_14]: We got the pleasure of interviewing Bob out of television city.
59:28.148 --> 59:35.958
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, it was fun and so Bob Barker has always been kind of floating around this show When did Bob buy it?
59:36.038 --> 59:37.721
[SPEAKER_14]: When did he buy the farm?
59:37.841 --> 59:54.763
[SPEAKER_15]: Bob passed away in 2023 at age 99 99 god bless him and you have some Bob Barker info for us today right the headline reads and I quote former prices right model Exposes dark truth about Bob Barker
59:54.743 --> 01:00:01.824
[SPEAKER_14]: No, another spokesmodel making me uncomfortable after my death.
[SPEAKER_15]: Bob, do you remember the three original?
[SPEAKER_15]: And did you know that the Barker's beauties were named after Charlie's Angels?
[SPEAKER_15]: It was a homage to them.
[SPEAKER_15]: Really?
[SPEAKER_15]: That's what he said.
[SPEAKER_15]: No idea.
[SPEAKER_15]: Let's play Planko.
[SPEAKER_15]: So the three original models of memory serves Diane Parkinson, Janus Pennington.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yes.
[SPEAKER_15]: And the one we're going to discuss today.
[SPEAKER_15]: Holly Holstrom.
[SPEAKER_14]: Brunette.
[SPEAKER_15]: Redhead.
[SPEAKER_14]: Redhead.
[SPEAKER_15]: No, that's a Brunette.
[SPEAKER_15]: Well, I remember her with red hair, uh, but yeah, you know what, that's best.
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm looking at a picture of her as a brunette.
[SPEAKER_15]: Okay, you know what?
[SPEAKER_15]: Sometimes models change the color of their hair.
[SPEAKER_15]: They do.
[SPEAKER_15]: All right.
[SPEAKER_15]: All right, Mark Wayne.
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm just sitting there with photographic evidence.
[SPEAKER_14]: Right in front of your eyes.
[SPEAKER_14]: There it is.
[SPEAKER_13]: Now, as I found an order picture of her, it is still brunette, but it leans a little bit more.
[SPEAKER_13]: Do you have it available?
[SPEAKER_13]: Is it, uh, can you show this to us?
[SPEAKER_14]: Here we go.
[SPEAKER_14]: That's, uh, that's Ms. Holstner.
[SPEAKER_15]: Miss Holstner.
[SPEAKER_15]: And she's interviewed on a show that's on the E network.
[SPEAKER_15]: And it is called.
[SPEAKER_15]: Let me get this name right.
[SPEAKER_15]: The dirty rotten scandals is on.
[SPEAKER_15]: Is that what we were going to do?
[SPEAKER_15]: That's a little reddish.
[SPEAKER_15]: It's a little bit more.
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah, all right.
[SPEAKER_15]: And that's also much, much more recent if you look at it.
[SPEAKER_15]: Well, everybody gets older, Rob.
[SPEAKER_14]: You're a part of life.
[SPEAKER_15]: That's the way it goes.
[SPEAKER_15]: Hello, Holly.
[SPEAKER_15]: When Holly was told to come on down on audition for the show, she was sold.
[SPEAKER_15]: She thought it was going to be like a circus.
[SPEAKER_15]: She thought it'd be fun every day.
[SPEAKER_14]: Here's the story of it.
[SPEAKER_14]: And they read it.
[SPEAKER_14]: That's just for people that are watching at TV.
[SPEAKER_15]: Go ahead, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob
[SPEAKER_15]: They were kind of the new thing and I loved my job.
[SPEAKER_15]: I thought this is what you have to do.
[SPEAKER_15]: If you're going to be an actress on TV, you have to look at the part.
[SPEAKER_15]: I thought it was just party getting the job, having the job, and keeping the job.
[SPEAKER_15]: The turn Bob?
[SPEAKER_15]: Bobbi?
[SPEAKER_15]: I thought they were spectacular.
[SPEAKER_14]: Were you in favor of the implants?
[SPEAKER_14]: All the models on the prices, right?
[SPEAKER_14]: Should have big, gigantic gazongas.
[SPEAKER_15]: Hey, here's a question, Bob.
[SPEAKER_15]: We haven't talked in a while.
[SPEAKER_15]: Hey Rob, how do you like the new mail models on the prices great?
[SPEAKER_15]: I think it's most shit.
[SPEAKER_14]: Come on up now.
[SPEAKER_14]: What about Drew?
[SPEAKER_14]: Drew is a pale replica of me to even say my name and his in the same sentence as an absolute bunch of me.
[SPEAKER_15]: So, the she goes on to say she got a breast implants and she hated them.
[SPEAKER_15]: I hated them for years and years.
[SPEAKER_15]: And the fact that I had to pay for them didn't surprise me because the executive producer was so cheap.
[SPEAKER_15]: He said, I'm not paying for them.
[SPEAKER_15]: You want this job.
[SPEAKER_15]: Wow.
[SPEAKER_15]: Wow.
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_15]: That all happens.
[SPEAKER_15]: Bob, price is right here show.
[SPEAKER_14]: I, but I was not the producer.
[SPEAKER_14]: You're not going to throw me under the bus for that one.
[SPEAKER_14]: Let's go and see what's behind or number three.
[SPEAKER_15]: The real friction between you and Holly.
[SPEAKER_15]: I know you'll remember, uh, has to do with the Diane Parkinson allegations.
[SPEAKER_14]: I had a relationship with Diane Parkinson.
[SPEAKER_14]: That was a potential.
[SPEAKER_14]: When you go to a buffet and there's filet mignon on the table, you're going to make an attempt to grab for it.
[SPEAKER_15]: So she was asked to do a press tour and say that Bob was innocent of any wrongdoing and she refused to do it and then her line is that put me on Bob's shit list.
[SPEAKER_14]: So they asked her to go on a show and say that Diane Clark was lying.
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_14]: And that she refused to do for a fact that Bob had gotten Jiggy with it with Diane Marker.
[SPEAKER_15]: And it's always a little fuzzy for me because he said that it happened, but it was consensual and how can you really prove that in a court of law, but I tend to think that a man in that position of power and a good looking man and a man who'd been single since Dorothy Joe Barker died in 1981.
[SPEAKER_14]: A man has needs.
[SPEAKER_14]: Holly, I want you to see my microphone.
[SPEAKER_15]: It's very long, Bob.
[SPEAKER_15]: Talkin' to the microphone, Holly!
[SPEAKER_15]: And let me be appropriate, Mike.
[SPEAKER_15]: It's Dorothy Joe Barker, Nate Giddy, and she was Dorothy Joe.
[SPEAKER_14]: It was the love of my life.
[SPEAKER_15]: It's time to submit to me.
[SPEAKER_15]: Holly, Holly refused to purge herself, and then,
[SPEAKER_15]: to combat this, barker comes and says, we're going to fire Holly, but he can't fire her for not testifying.
[SPEAKER_15]: So he fires her by saying she's overweight.
[SPEAKER_15]: I thought she was fatty fat fat fat fat, fat rob, fat fat fatty fat.
[SPEAKER_15]: Is that why you arranged for the producers to show her behind-cars in a place?
[SPEAKER_14]: I wanted Holly.
[SPEAKER_14]: The truth of the matter is I wanted Holly and I will use your line.
[SPEAKER_14]: I will use it Daniel's Herbert.
[SPEAKER_14]: I wanted Holly to do a diet and Parkinson did.
[SPEAKER_14]: Let me do Coca-Cola for boobies.
[SPEAKER_14]: That's wonderful.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_14]: Hello, honey.
[SPEAKER_14]: And Rod Roddy locked that door.
[SPEAKER_15]: Now it was Rod ever handsy with the girls.
[SPEAKER_14]: No.
[SPEAKER_14]: Rob had other proclivities.
[SPEAKER_14]: We're not going to discuss here.
[SPEAKER_15]: Did he have trouble with producers?
[SPEAKER_15]: Have fun in Thailand, Rod.
[SPEAKER_15]: Also, Mike, there's a producer that says the entire show, the entire set, was toxic.
[SPEAKER_15]: And that sometimes she'd be an elevator with another producer and he just grab her breasts.
[SPEAKER_14]: You know, can I just look?
[SPEAKER_14]: I do not in any way diminish anything that may have happened and it's terrible, but it's just when I look at that show, I think to myself, you know, when you don't have
[SPEAKER_14]: of creating, really, really creating.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, it's just amazing.
[SPEAKER_14]: It just shows the business of show why we're all broken and how that happened.
[SPEAKER_14]: I don't doubt for a second that it was toxic.
[SPEAKER_14]: You know, they had nothing to do, but, you know,
[SPEAKER_14]: If they were behaving like that, a Bob was behaving like that if the producers were behaving like that.
[SPEAKER_14]: Of course.
[SPEAKER_14]: And those bastards with Bob Barker and with the producers of the show, what an easy gig.
[SPEAKER_14]: And if you're hands to yourself and no pressure on anyone.
[SPEAKER_15]: And sheep to produce a whole license to print money last question.
[SPEAKER_15]: Yes.
[SPEAKER_15]: I'm here, it says you consistently denied wrongdoing and maintained that all relationships were consensual.
[SPEAKER_15]: How did you deal and I didn't realize this?
[SPEAKER_15]: That at this time, how did you deal with all the hate mail you got?
[SPEAKER_14]: I would throw it in the trash.
[SPEAKER_14]: I had, I had, who was the producer of the show?
[SPEAKER_14]: Do we remember that?
[SPEAKER_14]: No, it was unnamed in the name producer.
[SPEAKER_14]: I would have one of my assistant directors put a giant oil drum in back of television city.
[SPEAKER_14]: And then I would have him bring that mail down there and set it up fire.
[SPEAKER_14]: What town is television city in?
[SPEAKER_15]: Television city in Hollywood.
[SPEAKER_15]: So Bob.
[SPEAKER_15]: Yes, now that you're gone.
[SPEAKER_15]: I'm sorry that this is happening.
[SPEAKER_15]: This is a bad thing, but at least you're in heaven with Dorothy Joe Barker in May, getting it.
[SPEAKER_14]: How about a bump?
[SPEAKER_14]: Let's put it on the back of Hollyholstrom's tramp stamp.
[SPEAKER_14]: Hello.
[SPEAKER_14]: Wonderful.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yes, blow off of the beauties.
[SPEAKER_14]: Let me ask you this here.
[SPEAKER_14]: So before we wrap this up.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_14]: Do you think that?
[SPEAKER_14]: I would like to think that maybe it wasn't true, but probably it was.
[SPEAKER_14]: Now, did I always felt she alleged it was not consensual, right?
[SPEAKER_15]: Erasmid, sexual harassment was okay, but I have always felt deep in my heart of hearts.
[SPEAKER_15]: that she probably saw an opportunity and, you know, maybe she's seduced and trapped and that's very 2026 Rob, way they go.
[SPEAKER_14]: That's great.
[SPEAKER_15]: I tend to agree with a man as a rule.
[SPEAKER_14]: And a girl's can be teachers and secretaries, stories, and that's fine, but, you know, just send all your cards and letters to Rob Epstein.
[SPEAKER_14]: Ladies and gentlemen, go ahead.
[SPEAKER_14]: Wonderful.
[SPEAKER_14]: We got more show coming up.
[SPEAKER_14]: We'll be right back after this every part.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Hello Fresh.
[SPEAKER_14]: uh... really want to thank everybody you know usually when i goose the uh... super chats everybody steps up and they always do and they've done a really really well today we appreciate at any time you can send along a super chat for the show uh... and that uh... the people that are the trolls will call that begging and i don't care if you don't want to call begging i'll beg that's fine peace
[SPEAKER_15]: Don't lower yourself.
[SPEAKER_15]: Mike, we appreciate your generosity because a lot of people don't realize this, you have to pay for your own breast implants.
[SPEAKER_14]: There you go, and I'm in the mud already, Rob.
[SPEAKER_14]: Don't worry about it.
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm deep in the mud.
[SPEAKER_14]: Now listen, I sent this one.
[SPEAKER_14]: Oh, here's a programming note for the bonus show tomorrow.
[SPEAKER_14]: I want to take a deep dive into the world of clickbait.
[SPEAKER_14]: and I specifically shared one.
[SPEAKER_14]: And for those of you that enjoy a sexually charged content segment, even more so than the Barker segment, I've got because I am like many, many red,
[SPEAKER_14]: There's nothing I like more than an attractive, beautiful woman, and I think the algorithms will pop on.
[SPEAKER_14]: Now it's not a... Mike Barker.
[SPEAKER_14]: Well, it's not really porn-serving, but it's, you know, but I get a lot of stuff, again, and I wouldn't mind doing a deep dive into it, too, or I'll show you what to, yes.
[SPEAKER_13]: Like we've been doing bonus show members getting an email today, they can join live at 4 p.m. 4 p.m.
[SPEAKER_14]: Tapping today, if you would like to join us for the bonus show, just remember I'm a dirty old man.
[SPEAKER_14]: There it is.
[SPEAKER_14]: Generation Jones.
[SPEAKER_14]: You heard this term maybe six months ago, maybe a year ago.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, right.
[SPEAKER_14]: Generation Jones part of the boomers, um,
[SPEAKER_14]: I've never really zeroed in on all these generations, and that makes me sound like an old guy, but because of the years that are mentioned, this particular clip about generation Jones resonated with me.
[SPEAKER_14]: And I have to, even though I know nothing about it, agree with this woman 100%.
[SPEAKER_07]: So about Generation Jones, 1954-1965 is a microgeneration within the baby boomers.
[SPEAKER_07]: They grow mostly in the 70s and missed the 60s revolution.
[SPEAKER_07]: They transition from rotary phones to smartphones, tide fighters to computers, and paper math to GPS.
[SPEAKER_07]: At the best thing about Generation Jones, they're the best of the boomers and Gen X.
[SPEAKER_07]: Do you agree?
[SPEAKER_07]: Let me know in the comments and follow for more.
[SPEAKER_13]: What happened to her video?
[SPEAKER_13]: Did I get messed up?
[SPEAKER_13]: I don't know why we didn't see the video.
[SPEAKER_13]: Okay, but the voice is what we needed.
[SPEAKER_13]: Do you agree with her, Mike?
[SPEAKER_13]: That wise, wise, wise woman?
[UNKNOWN]: Really?
[SPEAKER_15]: I do remember it.
[SPEAKER_15]: I remember the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I read the time that I
[SPEAKER_07]: They grew up mostly in the 70s and missed the 60s revolution.
[SPEAKER_07]: They transitioned from rotary phones to smartphones, typewriters to computers and paper maps to GPS.
[SPEAKER_07]: At the best thing about generation Jones, they're the best of the boomers and Gen X.
[SPEAKER_07]: Do you agree?
[SPEAKER_07]: Let me know in the comments and follow for more.
[SPEAKER_15]: I do, Gen X.
[SPEAKER_15]: You are, Mike since you are a generation Jones person.
[SPEAKER_15]: Does generation Jones have anything to do with drawn on eyebrows and mischapin noses?
[SPEAKER_14]: Now, you know what, you are a bastard.
[SPEAKER_14]: I swear.
[SPEAKER_14]: I know we established that as a perfectly normal looking woman.
[SPEAKER_14]: And I don't know why you must throw rocks.
[SPEAKER_14]: I know because you are not fortunate enough to be part of Generation Jones.
[SPEAKER_15]: I'm an ex or Mike.
[SPEAKER_15]: I'm an exer.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, which is, you know, color me selfish.
[SPEAKER_14]: That's sure.
[SPEAKER_14]: That should be our bumper stickers of all exers color me selfish.
[SPEAKER_13]: That's what it is.
[SPEAKER_13]: The gen X had videos like that, but it's all about growing up analog and then transition into digital.
[SPEAKER_15]: yeah and you know what which is no transition at all they always talk about drinking water have a out of a home I don't care about that you know what I'm talking about boomers or are you talking about Jenna and I guess everybody talks about going out and playing outside and drinking out of a hose and coming home when the lights come on on the street I don't care about that if you're drinking from a hose good for you but that does not define a generation
[SPEAKER_14]: Well, you're singling out one particular thing that I also did do.
[SPEAKER_14]: We did that on a regular basis.
[SPEAKER_14]: No, I don't consider that any big deal.
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm not going to go out and brag about that.
[SPEAKER_15]: But Josh, don't you see that in many, many of those videos?
[SPEAKER_13]: And also Pels on Facebook?
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, the videos towards our generation.
[SPEAKER_13]: That's what they point to.
[SPEAKER_13]: They point to the lights and the lighting your bike and you can add a water hose.
[SPEAKER_14]: All right, so I would tell you that, uh, let me throw a few generation Jones things at you.
[SPEAKER_14]: Uh, I also, that she left out because it's not all the good stuff.
[SPEAKER_14]: I really think that, uh, generation Jones, that particular era, I really think that we honed and refined binge drinking.
[SPEAKER_14]: I really agree.
[SPEAKER_14]: We're the first ones to really dive in where Friday night is during to the
[SPEAKER_14]: And that is not a hand of the down, not one little bit.
[SPEAKER_14]: But I do remember that when I was in the state of Connecticut growing up, 1977 was my 18th birthday.
[SPEAKER_14]: And I remember it was a really big deal because that was legal.
[SPEAKER_14]: You were legal to have a drink.
[SPEAKER_14]: And we all were trying to sneak into places well before that to get in and have it.
[SPEAKER_14]: So the alcohol gene was very active in that.
[SPEAKER_14]: Now, I will also tell you that, based on my experience with people in my neighborhood in my town, you know, I think we were also in pursuit of other substances as well.
[SPEAKER_14]: The substances were a big part of generation zones.
[SPEAKER_14]: They really, really were.
[SPEAKER_14]: I'll tell you what, wasn't a part of a generation zones, the lack of work ethic.
[SPEAKER_14]: I grew up in an area where it was a badge of honor where you'd just, at least where I was from, you just worked.
[SPEAKER_14]: There was no hanging around.
[SPEAKER_14]: There was no lying around.
[SPEAKER_14]: You didn't do that.
[SPEAKER_14]: Work was a big deal.
[SPEAKER_14]: Even when you were like 13, 14, 15.
[SPEAKER_14]: What's that?
[SPEAKER_03]: You needed a drink.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, that's where I drank, and we were, uh, I think that people born in that area, a lot of our parents, especially on the early side of it, were World War II veterans, of course.
[SPEAKER_14]: And because of that, they didn't take a lot of crap.
[SPEAKER_14]: they did not take a lot of crap and they were a lot more I think the attitude of a lot of parents from that era where you know we survived a world war you can go out and do whatever the hell you want you're on here there was more personal responsibility back in those days you know nowadays when we have a war it's in the second page of the paper
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, it's just surreal and how many people have we blown up and destroyed where we don't even blink over here, because we don't get a whiff of it.
[SPEAKER_14]: I got news for you.
[SPEAKER_14]: Well, goes around comes around and I think about that all the time.
[SPEAKER_14]: I think really that you never ever know, you know, you align yourself with a country that is in full scale war all the time and
[SPEAKER_14]: I pray that something does not happen, but I worry that it could look like we have a commander and chief who's a classy guy.
[UNKNOWN]: Hey, man.
[SPEAKER_15]: See, we can't go wrong.
[SPEAKER_14]: Wasn't part of Generation Jones.
[SPEAKER_14]: We'll take a break and we will come back with some beautiful video right here on my camera show.
[SPEAKER_14]: It's always a good time to better yourself.
[SPEAKER_14]: It seems like lately, everyone's trying to clean up their habits.
[SPEAKER_14]: Like Rob, and honestly, having one less drink has never felt easier for him.
[SPEAKER_14]: Instead of pouring a cocktail, Rob has been reaching for souls out of all of this drinks.
[SPEAKER_14]: Soul makes feeling good simple.
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[SPEAKER_14]: Sol is the alcohol alternative that puts you in control of your mood, and they're best selling out of office gummies to deliver a customizable, calming buzz.
[SPEAKER_14]: From a 1.5 milligram microdose for a gentle lift to 15 milligrams for a deeper, more elevated experience.
[SPEAKER_14]: Josh is a gummy guy too.
[SPEAKER_14]: He knows it's the easiest way to unwind without the grugginess or next day regret of alcohol.
[SPEAKER_14]: Stay tuned for a soul gummy announcement that will change your life.
[SPEAKER_14]: Give yourself the gift of a healthier, unwind at the end of your day.
[SPEAKER_14]: Right now, soul is offering an hour audience 30% off your entire order.
[SPEAKER_14]: Go to getsold.com and use the code TMOS.
[SPEAKER_14]: That's getsold.com promo code TMOS for 30% off.
[SPEAKER_14]: Be a soul survivor.
[SPEAKER_14]: The cool things about the show we're doing right now is we're actually going back during an actual broadcast and giving you a highlight.
[SPEAKER_14]: This was a comment from Rob a little bit earlier in the show if you were listening to it.
[SPEAKER_15]: Was that I was reacting to your relationship with your sister, right?
[SPEAKER_15]: Well, thank you very much.
[SPEAKER_15]: Can we do this?
[SPEAKER_14]: That one's got a lot of it.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, yeah, we're gonna do it.
[SPEAKER_14]: Go ahead.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, like that.
[SPEAKER_14]: Some beautiful video.
[SPEAKER_14]: Jerry.
[SPEAKER_15]: Mike hats off to Alabama, who saved a dog.
[SPEAKER_15]: The entire state, but people in Alabama found a dog with a bucket stuck on his head.
[SPEAKER_15]: And because they're clever, they named him buck.
[SPEAKER_15]: Bucks a bucket dog.
[SPEAKER_01]: What's up with me here, Ken?
[SPEAKER_01]: Sometimes get a bad rap, but there are times when it can bring people together for a good cause.
[SPEAKER_09]: And that happened this guy.
[SPEAKER_09]: This guy, someone in the Winston County area, spotted a stray dog with a bucket stuck on its head.
[SPEAKER_09]: They posted pictures on Facebook asking for help trying to catch the skittish pup.
[SPEAKER_01]: WVTM 13.
[SPEAKER_01]: The skittish pup shows us the five-day crusade to save the scared dog and his buddy.
[SPEAKER_06]: The lab bakes now called buck and his Belgian melon lab best friend, they call Milo, are we laxing it all?
[SPEAKER_06]: Good boys.
[SPEAKER_06]: Good boys.
[SPEAKER_06]: Together on Facebook to track their movements, trying to catch them and remove the bucket that was stuck on buck's head.
[SPEAKER_06]: It's not too long.
[SPEAKER_06]: It paid off.
[SPEAKER_06]: I know.
[SPEAKER_08]: I come up behind him with a pair of Yeah, I come up.
[SPEAKER_08]: It's got a cutting on the bucket.
[SPEAKER_14]: Yeah, there we go.
[SPEAKER_08]: He's the bucket and got the bucket off his head.
[SPEAKER_08]: Senator Mark Wayne Mullins.
[SPEAKER_08]: As soon as that bucket came off his head, he was just, you could see the relief on him, and he just went almost limp.
[SPEAKER_06]: Kaila Vestil is a trap or he was helping as well.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips too silly.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips too silly.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: Lips.
[SPEAKER_06]: They think of a veterinarian references, I think they'll be fine.
[SPEAKER_14]: All right, we get it, thank you, John.
[SPEAKER_15]: And then Buckley, my wife, she's Buckley, my wife.
[SPEAKER_15]: Buckley, my wife, then.
[SPEAKER_14]: Why do I laugh at that?
[SPEAKER_14]: I don't laugh at anything as much as that during the whole show.
[SPEAKER_15]: Did she fall?
[SPEAKER_15]: That's real Rob Spuac right there, ladies and gentlemen.
[SPEAKER_15]: And this is sort of a tradition.
[SPEAKER_15]: I'd like to play it every year, you know, the NCAA NCAA basketball, the brackets going on right now, the March man, we'll have our
[SPEAKER_14]: Listen, we'll have our brackets coming up in June, so you might want to stay tuned for that.
[SPEAKER_15]: And at least until tonight at 8 p.m. VCU is still in it.
[SPEAKER_15]: VCU, VCU, go Ram to go.
[SPEAKER_15]: But are they doing that now?
[SPEAKER_14]: Are they doing it now?
[SPEAKER_15]: Today's the first day of the playing, yeah.
[SPEAKER_14]: I guess American University in it this year.
[SPEAKER_15]: They're in the theater division.
[SPEAKER_15]: They've been in the they find out I know I know back when you were on the team.
[SPEAKER_15]: I'm still concerned.
[SPEAKER_15]: I don't know We'll we'll look into that.
[SPEAKER_15]: But Mike listen because if they are they will be in this song Let us have the March Madness song 2026
[SPEAKER_10]: Hornthrocks, double-docs, J-Hawks, and Hawkeye's Blue Devil's Billicins, Brewins, Benders, and Bokkeye's Red, Hawke's Red, Raiders Red, Stormcrints, a tie-fighting, a lie-dye, Rainbow Warriors, and a pride-royals, Raiders, Rams, Rams, Rams, Rams, Rams, Huskies, Huskers, Three Wild Cats, Cowboys, Longhorns, Bulls, Broncos, Attivice, and they're still 32 to go.
[SPEAKER_10]: Halfway there.
[SPEAKER_10]: Tar heel, Shorten, Spartan, Snipes, Boyle, Omega's, Cyclones, Hurricanes, Alsharks, and Gators, Commodore's, Cardinals, and the Cavaliers, Wolverines, Vandals, and the Volunteers, Caledans, G
[SPEAKER_10]: And honor of my father, I'll tell his favorite joke right now, the Cavaliers are in it, but they don't care if they win her with it.
[SPEAKER_14]: I got their Cavalier at it as she fallen my favorite part of the show came at the very end We got to get out of here.
[SPEAKER_14]: Don't forget we'll be sending out a very special email To all you bonus shows subscribers to join us this afternoon at 4 p.m. for a bonus show where I will examine my inner dirty madness.
[SPEAKER_14]: That's what we will be doing.
[SPEAKER_14]: Manness madness
[SPEAKER_14]: That's right.
[SPEAKER_14]: I love you, Bob.
[SPEAKER_14]: Want more?
[SPEAKER_00]: Make sure you check out the Michael Maribona Show.
[SPEAKER_00]: Get it at Michael Maribona Show.com.
[SPEAKER_11]: Michael Maribona, radio entertainment.
[SPEAKER_10]: Oh, you should see what I look like from out here.
[SPEAKER_08]: So what do I mean to drop my pants off for a rocket?
[SPEAKER_08]: You jack with me and you'll be gone before you know it.
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