<v Speaker 1>And Josh six one hundred.
<v Speaker 2>Looking through social media, I saw something ridiculous. Did you did?
<v Speaker 3>What did you see?
<v Speaker 2>Josh had a picnic.
<v Speaker 3>With the girlfriends?
<v Speaker 2>Man dork? Okay, yes I did. First of all, yes
<v Speaker 2>I did.
<v Speaker 4>But you know what's so funny is I was texting
<v Speaker 4>a picnic. That's that's the first thing. I was texting
<v Speaker 4>my buddy and he's like, hey, man, like, what are
<v Speaker 4>you up to today? And I was like, oh, work, And
<v Speaker 4>then I go, then I have a picnic And he goes,
<v Speaker 4>that's so odd because I am gardening today with his
<v Speaker 4>said girlfriend, And I go, what happened to us?
<v Speaker 5>Man?
<v Speaker 2>What? What? Picnic? Happened to be one of the lamest
<v Speaker 2>things ever to go? Do you know? Okay, can I
<v Speaker 2>tell you something? It's so funny.
<v Speaker 4>So we had our little sandwiches that we made, and
<v Speaker 4>we had all of our assortments and everything made it
<v Speaker 4>look like totally totally huge shout out to Safeway by
<v Speaker 4>the way, because they completely supported our picnic. So we
<v Speaker 4>sat there, we went to watch park and sat there
<v Speaker 4>for about twenty five minutes and ate our food. And
<v Speaker 4>the whole thing was to have a little picnic sit
<v Speaker 4>down and then go on the walk around watch Park
<v Speaker 4>and stuff like that. And we sat there for about
<v Speaker 4>twenty minutes and she looks at me and she goes,
<v Speaker 4>are you good? Like do we really want to keep
<v Speaker 4>doing this little picnic? And I was like, oh my goodness.
<v Speaker 4>And even I looked at her and I go, y,
<v Speaker 4>I've never been more attracted to you in my life.
<v Speaker 4>Right now, let's just pack up and let's get out
<v Speaker 4>of here. She's like, we are not picnic people, and
<v Speaker 4>I was like, you're the best.
<v Speaker 2>This is amazing.
<v Speaker 3>Uh.
<v Speaker 2>It was her idea to have the picnic.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, the girls idea.
<v Speaker 2>I don't think I've ever had the idea to have
<v Speaker 2>the picnic. I don't know what's wrong.
<v Speaker 3>I love eating outside. I guess the picnic said I have.
<v Speaker 3>Are just me?
<v Speaker 2>This, it's just you. Yeah, and you're at a park
<v Speaker 2>bench or something. Well, yeah, I was laying on the
<v Speaker 2>ground with the blanket falling over and yeah.
<v Speaker 4>Look nothing against wash Park because it has been incredibly
<v Speaker 4>dry here.
<v Speaker 2>We have had like two snowstorms.
<v Speaker 4>But we sat down and the second I started eating
<v Speaker 4>the sandwich, I got grass in my mouth because it
<v Speaker 4>was dead grass flying around.
<v Speaker 2>And I was like I.
<v Speaker 4>Think this is I think I'm good. This isn't this
<v Speaker 4>isn't for me. And so we walked around all of
<v Speaker 4>wash Park, which was beautiful. It was really nice. And
<v Speaker 4>then we were like, okay.
<v Speaker 2>We're good. Do you have a patnic basket? We did.
<v Speaker 2>We had a picnic basket and bought the picnic picnic
<v Speaker 2>basket for this Yeah. How lame is that? Dude?
<v Speaker 3>We were looking at picures stupid prices and picnic baskets
<v Speaker 3>are expensive. Be a man that he splurged for a
<v Speaker 3>basket stupid just for this date. It's not stupid, it's
<v Speaker 3>be a man.
<v Speaker 2>It's being a man.
<v Speaker 3>And what put it in a plastic bag?
<v Speaker 2>Wander into home depot, buy a home depot bucket for
<v Speaker 2>three dollars, and show up with a home depot bucket
<v Speaker 2>full of food. That's how you do it.
<v Speaker 4>It would have been awesome because it could have doubled
<v Speaker 4>as a little place to sit. But there you go, walk.
<v Speaker 2>It over and you sit on it. Yeah, be a man, No,
<v Speaker 2>that's not picnic.
<v Speaker 3>Proto call guys says, you do it.
<v Speaker 2>That's how you do it, and you feel like less
<v Speaker 2>of an idiot.
<v Speaker 3>Take it from the woman who cares about the picnic.
<v Speaker 3>We've already established that you both could care less about picnics.
<v Speaker 3>You got lucky in the sense that your yes found
<v Speaker 3>out she doesn't like picnics either. But from the picnic planner,
<v Speaker 3>I'm telling you on the show single the basket matter, carrying.
<v Speaker 4>That basket around the entire two and a half miles
<v Speaker 4>of wash Park after her it was horrible.
<v Speaker 3>You would have been walking around wash Park with a
<v Speaker 3>home depot.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, but it looks like you're collecting what I.
<v Speaker 6>Want to.
<v Speaker 2>Syringes from wash Park, collecting things your treasure hunter go,
<v Speaker 2>you're not like, who's this jackass carrying a picnic basket?
<v Speaker 3>Or anyone who sees him carrying a picnic basket knows
<v Speaker 3>that is a sweet boyfriend. You see, you probably started
<v Speaker 3>a thing for all the other relationships at wash Park. Well,
<v Speaker 3>she got a picnic.
<v Speaker 2>The other guys are like that, son of that's what
<v Speaker 2>they were thinking.
<v Speaker 4>And she offered, she offered to carry it around wash Park,
<v Speaker 4>and I go, that's going to be such a bad look.
<v Speaker 2>Let me carry the basket. I walked over to a
<v Speaker 2>trash can and throwing it in. Be a man and
<v Speaker 2>throw away the picnic basket right, just quickly do a
<v Speaker 2>quick request of both of you. Sure is real, simple,
<v Speaker 2>simple little request. Yeah, stop saying bet. No, I'm not
<v Speaker 2>going to do that. No, you could both stop saying bet.
<v Speaker 3>I'm not going to do that.
<v Speaker 2>I texted that. Yeah, you've texted it. Josh has texted it.
<v Speaker 2>I've heard you say it a few times.
<v Speaker 3>I just said it to you.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, I get my blanket. How much time I go?
<v Speaker 2>Two minutes?
<v Speaker 6>Oh?
<v Speaker 2>Bet? Stop? You're both too old to be saying no.
<v Speaker 2>This is a middle school thing. I heard my daughter's
<v Speaker 2>and say it yesterdays. They're copying and you've blown way past.
<v Speaker 3>I know, but still like this is the word they
<v Speaker 3>can say. It's a lot of things we can't get
<v Speaker 3>away with. Skibbety is one no one.
<v Speaker 2>It sounds stupid. It doesn't know.
<v Speaker 3>I love it because I think it's perfect.
<v Speaker 2>I hear you say it, Oh bet, what do we bet? What?
<v Speaker 2>You know?
<v Speaker 3>My favorite part is when I said bet and then
<v Speaker 3>I texted you all the little emojis with sunglasses next.
<v Speaker 2>To it, like you bet. I don't even with that.
<v Speaker 2>I don't even remember what that text was in regards
<v Speaker 2>to but yeah, you told me to post yeah, you
<v Speaker 2>meane something I said, post it, I love it and
<v Speaker 2>go okay, bet and then you did not I didn't response.
<v Speaker 2>I'm not going to acknowledge that kind of with Jeral
<v Speaker 2>the middle school thing, I know, I think it needs
<v Speaker 2>to stop. Stop that both they're too old to say bet.
<v Speaker 2>Have you ever heard me say bet? No? Not once,
<v Speaker 2>But that's I know, it's stupid.
<v Speaker 3>That's my favorite slang I'm using right now because it
<v Speaker 3>gets that response from everybody grown ups in this dangerous
<v Speaker 3>like salespeople, they'll say something to me, but bet, and you.
<v Speaker 2>Know they're going there, they're going back to their desk
<v Speaker 2>and like katies.
<v Speaker 3>And she's a grown woman.
<v Speaker 2>Why woman who's a mom? Stop saying bet? And everyone
<v Speaker 2>over fifteen stop saying bet.
<v Speaker 3>That's funny, like like, gosh, how old is she even know?
<v Speaker 2>What's the origin of that?
<v Speaker 3>She's ten, this little girl that I hang out with
<v Speaker 3>sometimes and she says bet a lot.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, I said, it's a ten year old thing. My
<v Speaker 2>daughter's friend yesterday was standing in the kitchen. She's like,
<v Speaker 2>you have a piece of your Easter candy. My daughter
<v Speaker 2>was like, ses, okay, bat, I thank you. Instead, I like,
<v Speaker 2>all you have to say is thank you.
<v Speaker 3>I'm probably still saying.
<v Speaker 2>I'm still gonna keep saying blown away past the age
<v Speaker 2>and then speaking of your age wandered in this morning,
<v Speaker 2>You're like, I just I don't even know who I am, you.
<v Speaker 3>Wife, I know, well, it's just this time for women,
<v Speaker 3>when you go through this part of your life, it's
<v Speaker 3>like certain things happened and you don't know they were
<v Speaker 3>supposed to happen. And I just came across this thing
<v Speaker 3>that says, if your coffee smells like tuna and you
<v Speaker 3>can't remember anything and you're exhausted all the time, and
<v Speaker 3>I'm like, what that's supposed to happen to me?
<v Speaker 7>What?
<v Speaker 3>And uh, yeah, I told you the one thing that's
<v Speaker 3>really been hitting me lately. As you know, any everybody
<v Speaker 3>can relate to this. I feel when I was younger
<v Speaker 3>and I used to wait tables, right, I used to
<v Speaker 3>take orders of a twenty top, so twenty people sitting
<v Speaker 3>at a table, and I would not write any of
<v Speaker 3>them down, and I could remember one of the exactly
<v Speaker 3>what everybody wanted, how they want their steak cooked. I'd
<v Speaker 3>bring it back and I'd set everybody stuff in front
<v Speaker 3>of them, and it was almost like a party trick
<v Speaker 3>for me, right, Like it impressed people that I could
<v Speaker 3>take an entire twenty person order.
<v Speaker 2>That is very impressive actually, And I could do some
<v Speaker 2>of those people. Those waiters and waitresses screw up something
<v Speaker 2>and they.
<v Speaker 3>Write it down and they still screw it up, you know.
<v Speaker 3>But I remember all the books of the Bible. Like,
<v Speaker 3>my memory has been a strong point of mine my
<v Speaker 3>entire life. And again it's a flex of mine that
<v Speaker 3>I've had and I like it. But as I get older,
<v Speaker 3>that's something that's starting to go away.
<v Speaker 2>And she walked in this morning, She's like, what's up? Mark?
<v Speaker 6>I know.
<v Speaker 3>Who who are you talking to right now?
<v Speaker 2>Chare me?
<v Speaker 3>The things that you forget are just completely.
<v Speaker 2>Just you don't.
<v Speaker 3>You're getting that perm That's how forgetting works is you
<v Speaker 3>don't see it coming.
<v Speaker 2>My wife is definitely dealing with this, you know, it's starting.
<v Speaker 2>There's something there. Yeah, and yeah, I think she's talked
<v Speaker 2>to multiple times about her memories just kind of she's
<v Speaker 2>just off. She's just generally off. And yesterday she was
<v Speaker 2>trying to write things down and figure out schedules for
<v Speaker 2>the summer and da da da da, And I was
<v Speaker 2>just sitting there listening to her because we've got kind
<v Speaker 2>of like back to back desks in her office, and
<v Speaker 2>she was behind me while I was at my desk.
<v Speaker 2>She's like, come on, Nicole, what are you doing? Nicole? Yeah?
<v Speaker 2>Think Nicole, think like she's doing all this self talk. Yes,
<v Speaker 2>like you okay? Back there, She's like, I can't remember
<v Speaker 2>anything anymore.
<v Speaker 3>And I feel that so much, like it's almost like
<v Speaker 3>we're getting angry at ourselves because we're so used to, yeah,
<v Speaker 3>being it done and winning and just being awesome, right,
<v Speaker 3>And I'm sure Nicole is very much like that. Like
<v Speaker 3>Nicole to me feels like she runs your family well.
<v Speaker 3>She gets it done right, and so for her, I
<v Speaker 3>imagine that it's like a step back. It is it's like,
<v Speaker 3>why can't I do this? What is wrong with me?
<v Speaker 3>What happened to me that I'm not the Katie I
<v Speaker 3>was a couple of years ago, And so that's what
<v Speaker 3>you really fight with yourself a little.
<v Speaker 2>And her job is very detail oriented too, so she's like,
<v Speaker 2>I got to like extra focus on what I'm doing.
<v Speaker 3>Well, we have like I have certain things I need
<v Speaker 3>to do every day and every once in all forget
<v Speaker 3>to do that thing and I'm like, oh, like, I
<v Speaker 3>get mad at myself because I don't forget things, or
<v Speaker 3>at least I didn't up until a couple of months ago.
<v Speaker 3>And so it is. And then the smelling things, because
<v Speaker 3>they say that you'll smell things out of nowhere again,
<v Speaker 3>the coffee that smells like tuna, or you yourself smells bad,
<v Speaker 3>like all of a sudden, you get a whiff of
<v Speaker 3>something and you.
<v Speaker 2>Think it's you. Oh my god, is that me?
<v Speaker 3>Why it smelling? Phantom smells wherever you go, and so
<v Speaker 3>it's just it's like you think you're going crazy, and
<v Speaker 3>I think that, like for you to be supportive of
<v Speaker 3>Nick Knack is to just be like, you're amazing, You're
<v Speaker 3>still awesome. You're still just killing it. You're killing it,
<v Speaker 3>Nick Knack, You're killing.
<v Speaker 2>I generally just poke fun.
<v Speaker 3>I stop doing that. That's not helping. Now.
<v Speaker 2>You're so right when it comes to her running the household,
<v Speaker 2>like it's great because every day when I wake up
<v Speaker 2>in the morning, I have calendar in invites because she
<v Speaker 2>stays up a little later than me and just lays
<v Speaker 2>out the schedule. Like today I woke up to two
<v Speaker 2>more calendar invites of things going on and she runs
<v Speaker 2>a tight ship. I will tell you that right now.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, and when that starts to you, I.
<v Speaker 2>Was looking at a few of these, a few double
<v Speaker 2>bookings I saw, and the wrong months and things like that.
<v Speaker 3>Don't say anything, I'll figure you're double booked, Okay, deal
<v Speaker 3>with it.
<v Speaker 2>We were just talking briefly about how my wife is
<v Speaker 2>essentially the keeper of the schedule in our house and
<v Speaker 2>I love her for that. I can't tell you how
<v Speaker 2>much I appreciate that, because she just keeps us all
<v Speaker 2>in line and on track. And then Katie was saying,
<v Speaker 2>there's actually like a term for that.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, it's called man keeping. And the term this is
<v Speaker 3>its definition, the unpaid, social and emotional labor of managing
<v Speaker 3>a male partner's relationships, plans, and feelings.
<v Speaker 2>And when.
<v Speaker 3>The story, the story that they attached to this article
<v Speaker 3>was a woman and a man who were retiring, right,
<v Speaker 3>and the man was an introvert, and so he didn't
<v Speaker 3>have many friends, and so he relied on his wife
<v Speaker 3>to set up plans with other husbands. So he started
<v Speaker 3>playing pickleball with other husbands. But she had to initiate that.
<v Speaker 3>She had to get them to go on a meeting
<v Speaker 3>and now he has three new friends that he hangs
<v Speaker 3>out with all the times. But he wouldn't have done
<v Speaker 3>that on his own and so true, so true. And
<v Speaker 3>the behavior has been around for a long time, right,
<v Speaker 3>this isn't new. It's just the term that they attached
<v Speaker 3>to it that's made it all trendy and stuff like that.
<v Speaker 2>It happens a lot too. I talked about this on
<v Speaker 2>the air when it happened. When you have kids, Oh yeah,
<v Speaker 2>and you know, You're like, I'm fine with my three friends. Yeah,
<v Speaker 2>actually one friend now that I've had from high school.
<v Speaker 2>I'm fine. Yeah, I'm fine with it. I don't need
<v Speaker 2>any more friends. And then Nicole started hanging out with
<v Speaker 2>the mom groups. Okay, and she came home She's like, hey,
<v Speaker 2>I think you'd like so and so's dead. Yeah, like,
<v Speaker 2>let me introduce you sometimes. And you know, I was like, no,
<v Speaker 2>I don't want, no more need I'm good. I'm setting
<v Speaker 2>my ways. And now like two or three of my
<v Speaker 2>good friends are because Nick Knacks set up dad dates
<v Speaker 2>essentially with the mom group.
<v Speaker 3>Well, and it goes even further from there. I mean
<v Speaker 3>your appointments that you have, like you just said, she
<v Speaker 3>set you a bunch of calendar invites. You didn't do that.
<v Speaker 3>She did all of that, And that's what they said,
<v Speaker 3>Like when she's the one who remembers everyone's birthdays, keep
<v Speaker 3>your friendships alive, interprets your moods so as to tell
<v Speaker 3>the children, dad's a little under the weather the days.
<v Speaker 2>Everybody be quiet, exactly.
<v Speaker 3>And they're saying, like, the reason that's becoming trendy is
<v Speaker 3>because they're saying women are getting burned out because of this,
<v Speaker 3>you know. And so it's like, if you're seeing this
<v Speaker 3>in your relationship, maybe you know, give a little love
<v Speaker 3>your wife's way and be like, hey, I appreciate all
<v Speaker 3>the extra calendar invites that you're creating. And you know
<v Speaker 3>what I mean, keeping everybody you just went through the
<v Speaker 3>whole easter thing. I bet you nicknacked it a lot
<v Speaker 3>of all of.
<v Speaker 2>It, all of it.
<v Speaker 3>Well think you know that's really big of you to
<v Speaker 3>admit that she just said all of it, you know,
<v Speaker 3>So maybe keep that mind something special.
<v Speaker 2>It's one of her superpowers.
<v Speaker 3>I'm not going to nicknack it. Well, it's all of our.
<v Speaker 2>Well, yes it is most of you. Yeah, I do
<v Speaker 2>a lot around the house too, So there's there's a
<v Speaker 2>you know, there's a balance.
<v Speaker 3>And there is that.
<v Speaker 2>I just finished the basement because.
<v Speaker 3>Hands in this article that again the thing that was
<v Speaker 3>highlighted was the people who were tiring. The woman says,
<v Speaker 3>in the grand scheme of things, while it's frustrating, it
<v Speaker 3>isn't a deal breaker because he's supportive in other ways
<v Speaker 3>and handles other responsibilities that I'd.
<v Speaker 2>Rather not tack correct.
<v Speaker 3>So it's a trade off. But this, I think the
<v Speaker 3>thing that really is overwhelming is having to deal with
<v Speaker 3>everybody's well being completely. You know, it's one thing for
<v Speaker 3>you to deal with tasks throughout the day, but when
<v Speaker 3>you're dealing with.
<v Speaker 2>The days a day everything and.
<v Speaker 3>People's emotions, like who do they come to when they're
<v Speaker 3>feeling sad and feeling you know them?
<v Speaker 2>You know, she's looked at me and said, you, I
<v Speaker 2>don't if I die, like you're going to be in
<v Speaker 2>a world of her you better hire somebody, which is
<v Speaker 2>always a weird conversation when she's out of nowhere. Well,
<v Speaker 2>she comes at me, She's like, if I were to die,
<v Speaker 2>I'm sure.
<v Speaker 3>It's like it's heavy, or at least weighs on her
<v Speaker 3>mind a little.
<v Speaker 2>I'm like, is that soon I'm not getting any younger,
<v Speaker 2>and like I got you know, I gotta never mind.
<v Speaker 3>Do you have some backup?
<v Speaker 2>I mean yeah, you're A and B.
<v Speaker 3>Listen. They were going to handle that schedule like Nick nag, She's.
<v Speaker 2>Hold on tight to this one takes one hundred. Well,
<v Speaker 2>I cried again yesterday afternoon. I cried like a little baby.
<v Speaker 2>It's my low tee.
<v Speaker 3>What happened?
<v Speaker 2>Well, it's uh, it was very powerful live stream yesterday
<v Speaker 2>on the NASA channel. It's the astronauts of NASA's art
<v Speaker 2>As two mission. They entered the Moon's gravitational sphere of influence.
<v Speaker 2>Is that's also what I call the influence Yeah, so
<v Speaker 2>that's what generally what I call it. If we have
<v Speaker 2>like a live remote and people are around me, yeah,
<v Speaker 2>it's the sphere of influence. Anyway, it took them up
<v Speaker 2>to the moon about four thousand miles off the surface,
<v Speaker 2>and then they went behind the moon, the dark side
<v Speaker 2>of the Moon, where they lost contact for like forty
<v Speaker 2>five minutes. Man, I watched it the entire thing. I
<v Speaker 2>was like, where are they at? Come on, bring them
<v Speaker 2>back around, let's go, let's go.
<v Speaker 3>And then what happened when they landed did they get
<v Speaker 3>all that.
<v Speaker 2>They just went around it. They'll be back later to land.
<v Speaker 3>They didn't even land on the MOI have you not
<v Speaker 3>been following this for the past, Like, come on, they're
<v Speaker 3>just chilling up there.
<v Speaker 2>There's survey, they're sure the lunar capsule works properly.
<v Speaker 3>Go on that way if you're not going to stop,
<v Speaker 3>Like I just went forty minutes out of my way
<v Speaker 3>and made sure I picked up. Fuck as I was
<v Speaker 3>in the area, not going to travel for to.
<v Speaker 2>Get ye or a dollar store.
<v Speaker 3>You're all the way out there and you don't, okay.
<v Speaker 2>So I thought about the moon. I thought about that
<v Speaker 2>as I was watching this, and it's like, how hard
<v Speaker 2>would that be that you made that journey all the
<v Speaker 2>way up there and you can, I mean you can
<v Speaker 2>look like you can reach out and touch the moon exactly,
<v Speaker 2>and you're like, damn, we gotta zip around it and
<v Speaker 2>head home.
<v Speaker 7>Now.
<v Speaker 2>I know it would be so mad.
<v Speaker 3>I'd be like, no, you put this thing down right
<v Speaker 3>now on that moon, and I'm gonna get my moon
<v Speaker 3>and say step for man.
<v Speaker 2>This is happening, stept for man and fun everywhere for mankind.
<v Speaker 2>But no, I did cry, because it's that is extraordinary.
<v Speaker 2>It's powerful. They have traveled the farthest from Earth than
<v Speaker 2>any other human.
<v Speaker 3>Okay, that is very powerful, very powerful.
<v Speaker 2>And then other things that they did up there, it's
<v Speaker 2>like if you try to place yourself where they're at
<v Speaker 2>and what they're doing, it's it's massive.
<v Speaker 3>Real talk, When are we going to stop at the moon?
<v Speaker 2>Next trip? I think is the one where they're gonna
<v Speaker 2>stet that's when they're gonna get off. We want a
<v Speaker 2>moon base up there. So yeah, now let me ask
<v Speaker 2>you this, because I was talking to Nick Knack about this.
<v Speaker 2>So those four people up there who are zipping past
<v Speaker 2>the Moon and they can see every detail of it,
<v Speaker 2>you know, and it's like right there in front of them,
<v Speaker 2>and then they go on the backside and they're taking
<v Speaker 2>video and they're there and all that. When they get
<v Speaker 2>back to Earth, will they ever have another high like that?
<v Speaker 3>Ever?
<v Speaker 2>Again, everything I would think when they get back here
<v Speaker 2>to Earth is going to be hohum and mediocre. Nothing
<v Speaker 2>will ever top that for them in their life.
<v Speaker 3>Well, unless they get to go walk on the moon.
<v Speaker 2>Unless round two.
<v Speaker 3>Yes, if they are part of the group that gets
<v Speaker 3>to go back up and actually step onto it.
<v Speaker 2>But for the rest of their life. If they're back
<v Speaker 2>down here on Earth, nothing will reach that. Is that? Yeah,
<v Speaker 2>I'm wondering if that is a good feeling or bad
<v Speaker 2>feeling for them, that nothing will ever top that, Like
<v Speaker 2>they've reached the pinnacle because there's nothing back here on
<v Speaker 2>this goofy planet that's ever going to top that. Yeah,
<v Speaker 2>you've been in space and you can reach out and
<v Speaker 2>touch the moon. Nothing, think about it, real talkic. No
<v Speaker 2>birthday will ever amount to it. No wedding. I don't
<v Speaker 2>think I'll ever amount bird vacation anywhere. Yeah no, oh wow,
<v Speaker 2>Yeah we're going to the Bahamas. I've been to the Moon.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah. No, There's not a whole lot that would reach
<v Speaker 3>that mark, right Yeah.
<v Speaker 2>Now for everybody else, today is National Beer Day.
<v Speaker 4>Oh heck yeah yeah.
<v Speaker 2>So there you go. That's for everybody reach for that.
<v Speaker 2>Was watching Prison Island last night and love Bus and whatever.
<v Speaker 2>Cracking open a natty light. That's for the rest of you.
<v Speaker 2>While I'm over here thinking about the moon.
<v Speaker 3>Don't hate participant, it's really good.
<v Speaker 2>I'm gonna hold onto this story about the the iTunes
<v Speaker 2>artist don't play it for you later because I talk
<v Speaker 2>too much about the moon. Do we have sports stuff.
<v Speaker 2>We do, yeah, really quickly.
<v Speaker 4>The on Sunday night, the Edmonton Oilers took on the
<v Speaker 4>Vegas Golden Nights.
<v Speaker 2>Do we care about that at all?
<v Speaker 4>No, But during the second period of that game, a
<v Speaker 4>woman in the stands went into labor.
<v Speaker 2>Breaking news.
<v Speaker 5>We have word that someone has gone into labor here tonight.
<v Speaker 5>There's a baby being born on the seventh floor at
<v Speaker 5>Rogers Place as we speak. So someone's gonna have a
<v Speaker 5>great story to tell. It would be nice to have
<v Speaker 5>the mother join us in after hours to describe what's.
<v Speaker 2>Happened, but that could be asking a bit much. Oh,
<v Speaker 2>it is asking a bit much.
<v Speaker 4>The woman and the baby were The baby was delivered,
<v Speaker 4>happy and healthy. The woman is totally fine. They did
<v Speaker 4>not release the name of the woman or the child
<v Speaker 4>or anything like that.
<v Speaker 2>But what a story. You go to a hockey game
<v Speaker 2>and you have a baby.
<v Speaker 3>A heck of a story. And if they want that
<v Speaker 3>woman on the broadcast, after all she's gonna say is
<v Speaker 3>don't touch me, don't touch me, don't get away from me,
<v Speaker 3>don't you dare touch me.
<v Speaker 2>And if you're Katie, you want a massive pizza, right
<v Speaker 2>or something like that.
<v Speaker 3>A whole pizza all to myself.
<v Speaker 2>We have four people up at the moon yesterday.
<v Speaker 3>Well that's a big deal too.
<v Speaker 2>This is a big deal to.
<v Speaker 3>Come on and that's still something.
<v Speaker 2>Hey, just because you were on the back side of
<v Speaker 2>the moon, they didn't even touch it. Just because you have.
<v Speaker 3>A broken leg doesn't mean my broken pinky doesn't hurt Jeremy.
<v Speaker 3>They all matter in their own way.
<v Speaker 2>Okay, all right.
<v Speaker 3>You know what else matters is Denver's Top Park. This
<v Speaker 3>is a big deal. Okay, Okay, we had four people
<v Speaker 3>at the moon, and again newsworthy in itself.
<v Speaker 2>But when you're just why they don't want to come back.
<v Speaker 3>The bracket that Denver Parks and rec put out because
<v Speaker 3>you know, with March madness going on, they're like, we
<v Speaker 3>want to have our own fund. So they all of the.
<v Speaker 2>Parks and they.
<v Speaker 3>Pitted them against each other and had people on X vote.
<v Speaker 3>So I loved it. Okay. Voters narrowed down the favorites
<v Speaker 3>to City Park, Cheeseman Park, Wash Park, and Sloan's Lake Park.
<v Speaker 3>So then it was narrowed down to the top two
<v Speaker 3>and that was City.
<v Speaker 2>Park and Wash Park.
<v Speaker 3>And guess who.
<v Speaker 2>Right now, We're I love Wash I do Wash Park
<v Speaker 2>is beautiful. They go.
<v Speaker 3>Wash Park deserves their flowers too, and I love walking
<v Speaker 3>around it. I love all the events that they hold
<v Speaker 3>out Wash Park. That lake's pretty fun to look at.
<v Speaker 3>I would never get in it, No, exactly. It is
<v Speaker 3>still a beautiful park and again taking the top spot
<v Speaker 3>for Denver parks and wreck Bracket. How about this one.
<v Speaker 3>Do you want to just get into Waterburger because that's
<v Speaker 3>a pretty big deal that reports say we're gonna get
<v Speaker 3>one in Castle Rock. Yes, so it's still us to
<v Speaker 3>get approved. So this isn't one hundred percent just yet,
<v Speaker 3>but if it does, it's gonna mean it's making its
<v Speaker 3>way back to the Denver metro area for the first
<v Speaker 3>time since the eighties. Yeah, they haven't had a water
<v Speaker 3>Burger in the Denver metro since then. And the company
<v Speaker 3>so they bought some land near the outlets. So if
<v Speaker 3>they do approve it, that is where it's gonna go.
<v Speaker 3>One more thing to clog up that traffic, right, my goodness.
<v Speaker 3>But no word out they sure do. No word on
<v Speaker 3>when construction is gonna start, but it will be open
<v Speaker 3>for twenty four hours if it happened, So that's good.
<v Speaker 3>Make that money a good look for down there in
<v Speaker 3>Castle Rock. All right, let's do one more here. Let's
<v Speaker 3>get the new Colorado Front Range passenger rail train.
<v Speaker 2>Yes, yes, yeah, I don't even know what that means.
<v Speaker 3>Well, because they have a new name for it now,
<v Speaker 3>they voted on it. And the train that's gonna be
<v Speaker 3>along the Front Range, that's gonna connect all of our cities.
<v Speaker 3>It's like thirteen different stops, but they're gonna call it
<v Speaker 3>the Colorado Connector also known as Coco. That is what
<v Speaker 3>the train's gonna be called. It's gonna go from Trinidad
<v Speaker 3>all the way up to Fort Collins, and it's gonna
<v Speaker 3>stop along the way so people can get all travel
<v Speaker 3>the Front Range because it's been in the works for
<v Speaker 3>a long time and they still have to get frontday.
<v Speaker 2>You have to train news.
<v Speaker 3>Are you to do the train the yeah, tough guy
<v Speaker 3>with trains. Yeah, but they can still the funding and everything.
<v Speaker 3>They're still working all that out. So that's probably why
<v Speaker 3>you haven't heard, you know, the exactly weird.
<v Speaker 2>Because I'm on all the train blogs and I've been
<v Speaker 2>an email group and I'm on a Reddit page. Are
<v Speaker 2>you that's weird? I haven't heard it? Ath?
<v Speaker 3>Well, you heard it here first, Jeremy, we're just breaking
<v Speaker 3>trade news over here. So but it is neat back
<v Speaker 3>that cabooso girl, yeah, get it, chew choo, so all
<v Speaker 3>the way along the front range. I think it's a
<v Speaker 3>good look for us. Yeah, there you go. You're another one.
<v Speaker 2>No, I already stopped the music.
<v Speaker 3>Then we're done there.
<v Speaker 2>I can't take any more of this good news this morning.
<v Speaker 2>I'd like to play this fun little game that has
<v Speaker 2>absolutely exploded here in Denver. It's a lot of fun
<v Speaker 2>fast five three oh three six nine one mix three
<v Speaker 2>oh three six nine one sixteen forty nine. I'll get
<v Speaker 2>you in the studios, we'll get you on the air,
<v Speaker 2>get to know you a little bit, and then I'll
<v Speaker 2>toss the category at you and start a ten second timer.
<v Speaker 2>And when uh, that ten second time timers starts, you
<v Speaker 2>gotta get me five things that have to do with
<v Speaker 2>that category. You think you can off three oh three
<v Speaker 2>six nine one one mix three oh three six nine
<v Speaker 2>one A sixteen to the forty nine call right now,
<v Speaker 2>especially if you've never played before. Katie, give us some example.
<v Speaker 3>Okay, because you ask all kinds of stuff like five
<v Speaker 3>parts of a snowboard, quick name them or five things
<v Speaker 3>that are shaped like a rhombus. Yesterday, the one that
<v Speaker 3>wanted Aaron who could name five drinks that started with
<v Speaker 3>an oh, no problem, big winner for yesterday.
<v Speaker 2>There you go. You never know what you're gonna get.
<v Speaker 2>Categories are kind of all over the board, but that's
<v Speaker 2>the charming part about.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, we don't know what you know, right, Yeah, we
<v Speaker 3>don't know.
<v Speaker 2>We don't know you, but we want to get to
<v Speaker 2>know you. Call us three O three six nine one
<v Speaker 2>one mix three oh three six nine one sixteen forty
<v Speaker 2>nine and looking for those newbies of course today people
<v Speaker 2>that have never played before. Now the prize is epic
<v Speaker 2>this week, isn't it?
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, it sure is. I mean be Alicia Keys. So
<v Speaker 3>she has a Broadway show called Hell's k and it
<v Speaker 3>has all of her music in it. It's about a
<v Speaker 3>seventeen year old girl named Ali really really neat. And
<v Speaker 3>so you're gonna score some tickets to check it out
<v Speaker 3>at the Denver Center for Performing Arts and you can
<v Speaker 3>get your tickets online Denvercenter dot org. Get them. Now
<v Speaker 3>all went on with Fast Live.
<v Speaker 4>You go.
<v Speaker 2>You'all are doing that thing where you're calling and hanging
<v Speaker 2>up stop it that means when you get placed on hold,
<v Speaker 2>you're on hold, you'll hear the radio station in your phone.
<v Speaker 2>Just hang tight. Producer Josh is in the next room
<v Speaker 2>working through all these calls, So if you put you
<v Speaker 2>on hold, don't hang up. Three O three six nine
<v Speaker 2>one one mix three oh three six nine one sixteen
<v Speaker 2>forty nine. Diana made it through. Hi, Diana, good morning,
<v Speaker 2>Good good morning. What are you doing today?
<v Speaker 7>I'm just going to work.
<v Speaker 6>I'm a dog groomer, and then after that we can
<v Speaker 6>just caught socker.
<v Speaker 2>Practice with the kids. Tell you what we talked to
<v Speaker 2>dog groomers in the past. Y'all are making some pretty
<v Speaker 2>good bank doing that, aren't you.
<v Speaker 8>We are, honestly, Yeah.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, but I mean that's something that takes a lot
<v Speaker 3>of time and attention to details.
<v Speaker 2>You have to go.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, but you have to do. You don't know, you've
<v Speaker 3>never tried to shave up dogs.
<v Speaker 2>Come on, you don't know what I did in college.
<v Speaker 2>So what do you charge like per dog?
<v Speaker 8>I think like the average for a small dog is
<v Speaker 8>like eighty six.
<v Speaker 3>Right now, yeah, and then your bigger dogs are way
<v Speaker 3>more though.
<v Speaker 8>Yeah, yeah, I think the biggest one I've had was
<v Speaker 8>like maybe like two fifty.
<v Speaker 2>Okay, damn. So it's like five of those a day.
<v Speaker 2>You're doing all right?
<v Speaker 7>Yeah? Yeah, it's really good. I mean, but you know
<v Speaker 7>my carpot tunnel says otherwise.
<v Speaker 2>Oh yeah, yeah, Well we're a wrist guard or something.
<v Speaker 2>I guess I don't know.
<v Speaker 3>Well, it's still going to fact.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah.
<v Speaker 3>Well, it takes about an hour to groom each dog too, right,
<v Speaker 3>I mean.
<v Speaker 7>It packs maybe like two hours, yeah.
<v Speaker 3>Two hours?
<v Speaker 2>Half an hour? No, ye, yeah you do. You put
<v Speaker 2>the little bandana on them and everything when you're done, Yes.
<v Speaker 3>The boogie.
<v Speaker 2>I love that. That's ridiculous. All right. Are you ready
<v Speaker 2>to play Diana?
<v Speaker 7>Yes, I'm ready.
<v Speaker 2>Do you always smell like wet dog? Oh?
<v Speaker 6>Yeah?
<v Speaker 2>All right, well let's see if you were listening yesterday.
<v Speaker 2>I'm gonna do a repeat. I will say in ten seconds,
<v Speaker 2>give me five things in pop culture. It can be
<v Speaker 2>anything TV, radio, movies, music, five things with the word
<v Speaker 2>rainbow in it.
<v Speaker 6>Go oh, five things?
<v Speaker 2>Okay, yep, come on, no googling. Okay, that was really
<v Speaker 2>bad times already. I know God somewhere over the rainbow.
<v Speaker 2>Have you ever heard that.
<v Speaker 3>Song Rainbow Bright?
<v Speaker 2>Yeah? I did? Rainbow? Okay, Well, we'll just we'll hold
<v Speaker 2>on to that one. Maybe I'll do it again tomorrow.
<v Speaker 6>Oh, hold on to it.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, hey, listen, it was really nice talking to you
<v Speaker 2>and learning all about your business. You're a sweetheart. Thank
<v Speaker 2>you for calling.
<v Speaker 6>I thank you.
<v Speaker 3>How it could be Okay, Bye, bye, Diana.
<v Speaker 2>I think she goes home and drags her butt across
<v Speaker 2>the carpet.
<v Speaker 3>No, she doesn't.
<v Speaker 1>Hi, Kelly, Hello.
<v Speaker 2>Hello, Hi, are you in a bathroom or something?
<v Speaker 6>All right, let me speaker.
<v Speaker 2>There's Kelly. Now we can hear you.
<v Speaker 6>I wasn't expecting get on this quick.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah your second? What are you doing today?
<v Speaker 6>Work?
<v Speaker 2>What do you do?
<v Speaker 6>I watched children?
<v Speaker 2>Oh? Would you rather be a dog groomer?
<v Speaker 6>No?
<v Speaker 3>Okay, at least the children can talk right like the children.
<v Speaker 7>Yeah, I'm the bad bunny from like a week ago.
<v Speaker 2>I don't even know what that means.
<v Speaker 6>Congratulations bunny that cussed on the radio.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, we didn't let you played for very long because
<v Speaker 2>you cuss. Don't cuss today, you work with children.
<v Speaker 3>I remember we were so shocked that.
<v Speaker 2>Yet, so for everybody that wasn't listening. Kelly dresses up
<v Speaker 2>as the Easter Buddy, and then she was on the
<v Speaker 2>air with us, and she dropped an F bomb or something,
<v Speaker 2>so we had to dump move on bomb, I don't
<v Speaker 2>say that. Don't do it again.
<v Speaker 7>I won't.
<v Speaker 2>And we laughed because she dresses up as the Easter
<v Speaker 2>Bunny for Easter. And now we found out you work
<v Speaker 2>with children and you have a failthy mouth.
<v Speaker 7>No, no, no, just a little bit real.
<v Speaker 2>Exactly, full fast five with you before you say something
<v Speaker 2>you regret.
<v Speaker 6>All right, Okay, I'll promise Katie, you gotta this.
<v Speaker 2>Was a Katie one. She came up with it. You
<v Speaker 2>gotta help me out, Katie Cat in ten seconds, please
<v Speaker 2>give me five different celebrities with clothing lines.
<v Speaker 6>Go share. Beyonce Turner, I have to do the line.
<v Speaker 7>I have no idea, no idea that one all day. Sorry,
<v Speaker 7>all right.
<v Speaker 2>Katie's wearing skims. Kim Kardash I.
<v Speaker 3>Am not, but that could have been Kelly.
<v Speaker 6>God speed, have a good day, Thank you, bye, good
<v Speaker 6>one bye.
<v Speaker 2>Josh on the line, Hi, Josh, Hey, how are you guys?
<v Speaker 2>We're super dupes. I see that you're dropping your car
<v Speaker 2>off at the mechanic today.
<v Speaker 6>Yes, yep, got the child safety locks don't work?
<v Speaker 2>Oh yeah, that's a bummer.
<v Speaker 3>Do you have children.
<v Speaker 6>I do, got two three year old and a four
<v Speaker 6>week old.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah. Do you want those to work?
<v Speaker 3>Prime child block safety time? Yea?
<v Speaker 2>What kind of car?
<v Speaker 6>Uh palisade?
<v Speaker 3>Oh yeah, all right, nice ride.
<v Speaker 2>Weird that they're not working. I hope you get that
<v Speaker 2>figured out.
<v Speaker 6>Definitely appreciate that.
<v Speaker 2>Isn't it funny when you have adults in the back
<v Speaker 2>seat though, Like if you're giving people rides and the
<v Speaker 2>child safety locks are on and they can't get out
<v Speaker 2>and you do that thing, You're like, well, walking away
<v Speaker 2>happens all the time, Yes, all the time. You're like,
<v Speaker 2>it never gets old, Like, okay, well en we get back?
<v Speaker 2>Is that just me? All right? Your letter right now
<v Speaker 2>is the letter M M like moon. Okay, okay, I
<v Speaker 2>need and you can only do one per brand, one
<v Speaker 2>per brand, but I need five drinks that start with
<v Speaker 2>the letter M.
<v Speaker 6>Go Milk, moonshine, Margarita.
<v Speaker 2>Yep, yep, yep, come on, come on, God starts, Mountain
<v Speaker 2>Dew and Monster Energy. Yesterday we did oh yesterday? It
<v Speaker 2>was it was Oh I did him today? So like
<v Speaker 2>mug root beer come on now?
<v Speaker 1>Should know that amca a Martini's, so many, so many Miller, give.
<v Speaker 2>Me a cup of Maxwell House. I don't know, geez
<v Speaker 2>a mint tea. Josh, you really grap the bed on
<v Speaker 2>this one, my friend, I did, I really did. Hey, buddy,
<v Speaker 2>it was really nice talking so much. Good luck with
<v Speaker 2>your car man.
<v Speaker 6>You guys are awesome, appreciate it.
<v Speaker 2>Thanks. Jen.
<v Speaker 3>Hi, Hey you.
<v Speaker 2>I see what you're doing on the screen and you're
<v Speaker 2>the sweetest. Tell us what you're doing.
<v Speaker 6>So, my son is a specialist stationed at Fort Bliss
<v Speaker 6>in the United States Army, and every month I put
<v Speaker 6>together a package for him, all kinds of goodies, gift cards,
<v Speaker 6>and just so that he knows how much Mama loves
<v Speaker 6>him and misses him and what the why the world
<v Speaker 6>is right now? You never know, and I want to
<v Speaker 6>make sure that he's okay.
<v Speaker 2>I love you. Give me all choked up.
<v Speaker 3>I know in my heart just like once it goes
<v Speaker 3>out to you. Right now, Jen, just as a mom,
<v Speaker 3>I just want to hug you.
<v Speaker 2>Are you able to send him things digitally? Like like
<v Speaker 2>if we made this a podcast, could you send it
<v Speaker 2>to him? Oh?
<v Speaker 6>I bet you. I could absolutely well.
<v Speaker 2>Take m a shout out. What's his name?
<v Speaker 6>He is a specialist Benjamin march Banks station at Fort
<v Speaker 6>Bliss ninety third Battalion. He's a military police officer in
<v Speaker 6>the United States Army.
<v Speaker 2>Thank you for your service, Benjamin.
<v Speaker 3>Yes, we love you, and thank you mom. Thank you
<v Speaker 3>mom for raising such a good guy.
<v Speaker 2>What's in the care package this time?
<v Speaker 6>All kinds of goodies for when he's on patrol. He's
<v Speaker 6>in officer training as well, to be to move up
<v Speaker 6>to a sergeant. And I can't be prouder.
<v Speaker 3>You meh, Jen, got is going this morning.
<v Speaker 2>I'll tell you what. Josh will pull this audio and
<v Speaker 2>he'll send it to you. Can you email him?
<v Speaker 6>Absolutely?
<v Speaker 2>Okay, we'll pull this audio and you can email him.
<v Speaker 2>Let him know he's famous in Denver. Yeah, we're all
<v Speaker 2>thank you, I love you. All right, you're ready for
<v Speaker 2>your fast five?
<v Speaker 6>Absolutely, I'm gonna try all.
<v Speaker 2>Right, focus in ten seconds? Give me five things you
<v Speaker 2>love about your son. Are you ready? Okay, you're ready?
<v Speaker 2>Here we go, one, two, three go.
<v Speaker 6>He's brave, strong, amazing, outstanding and an upstanding man and handsome.
<v Speaker 2>Right. Absolutely, nobody better be mad at me today for
<v Speaker 2>that one. Jen. You just one fast five.
<v Speaker 6>So much.
<v Speaker 2>Hey, Jem, you're welcome. You go have a night out
<v Speaker 2>on us. We're sending you to a Broadway musical at
<v Speaker 2>the Denver Center for Performing Arts. So that'll be a
<v Speaker 2>nice little night out for you to blow off some
<v Speaker 2>steam and have some fun and uh, you know, just
<v Speaker 2>a little, a little moment in time not to worry
<v Speaker 2>about your son and what's going on on us.
<v Speaker 3>Okay, thank you so much, Thank you, Jen, and thank
<v Speaker 3>your son for his service from us.
<v Speaker 6>Please, I sure will. And I love you guys. You
<v Speaker 6>guys make my morning every day I take my daughter
<v Speaker 6>to school.
<v Speaker 2>So thank you, thank you, thank you. Jen. Can't thank
<v Speaker 2>you enough. Jen. I'm gonna put you on hold before
<v Speaker 2>I start bawling like me. You have a great day,
<v Speaker 2>and shout out to Benjamin. Thank you, all right, Jen,
<v Speaker 2>hold on, all right. That's how it's done, right there,
<v Speaker 2>taking people happy this morning with Jeremy and Josh mix
<v Speaker 2>one hundred. We'll play fast five again tomorrow morning, seven thirty.
<v Speaker 2>Here it makes tis one hundred. Well, I'm officially looking
<v Speaker 2>for a nude dude to uh stick his finger in
<v Speaker 2>my rear in.
<v Speaker 3>Oh okay, please clarify that looking for a nude Jeremy, get.
<v Speaker 2>Up in there and you check the old prostate.
<v Speaker 3>So a doctor, you're searching for a doctor.
<v Speaker 2>Or whoever feels qualified, whatever you're into.
<v Speaker 3>I would not just take random applications for that.
<v Speaker 2>Follow me on Instagram and reach out. Okay, so yeah, hey, well,
<v Speaker 2>first of all, good morning, It's Jeremy Katie Josh here
<v Speaker 2>at Mix one hundred. Thanks for hanging out with us.
<v Speaker 2>But I got the notice yesterday that my doctor is
<v Speaker 2>officially retiring yesterday. And I've been seeing the same doc
<v Speaker 2>for my god, uh, thirty years, probably if not a
<v Speaker 2>little bit more. I guess, yeah, a long time.
<v Speaker 3>That's a long relationship.
<v Speaker 2>That's a relation. That's a very intimate relationship, right, and
<v Speaker 2>now he's retiring, and I'm like, oh, man, I guess
<v Speaker 2>I got to get a new doctor now. I hope
<v Speaker 2>it don't get sick in the interim, right, I know.
<v Speaker 3>And how do you even go about that?
<v Speaker 2>Thank you?
<v Speaker 3>Ask people for recommendation?
<v Speaker 2>Thank you? I thought the same thing.
<v Speaker 3>Do they have a Yelp page for doctors? Can we
<v Speaker 3>find one?
<v Speaker 2>I would imagine there is, but I thought about that yesterday.
<v Speaker 2>I'm like, do I go on to Facebook and say, Hey,
<v Speaker 2>I'm looking for a doctor in the Littleton area, Yeah,
<v Speaker 2>let me know if you got a guy if he's
<v Speaker 2>really good or a girl whatever, I don't care.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, is that you just want to make sure qualifications
<v Speaker 3>are up to speak.
<v Speaker 2>I want some solid diplomas on that. I know when it.
<v Speaker 3>Comes to finding doctors for myself and all my lady friends.
<v Speaker 3>When it comes to that, I've had to find new
<v Speaker 3>doctors in that field, and I ask around that. I'm
<v Speaker 3>definitely an ask around well, because you.
<v Speaker 2>Comedy, big deal it is for you.
<v Speaker 3>It's a big deal how they do things, and so
<v Speaker 3>you want to make sure girl exactly question do they
<v Speaker 3>stay too long down there? Are they staring? Are they gazing?
<v Speaker 3>Are they in and out?
<v Speaker 2>Like selfie?
<v Speaker 3>No self faith, no selfie.
<v Speaker 2>So yeah, I don't know what to do. I've never
<v Speaker 2>had to do this in my adult life.
<v Speaker 3>I don't know what to do either.
<v Speaker 2>Do I say it now? Hey, anybody listening in the
<v Speaker 2>little scenario, you got an awesome doctor. Hit me up, bro,
<v Speaker 2>let me know I need a new guy.
<v Speaker 3>I feel when you get your exam because.
<v Speaker 2>It all chokes his side. I haven't had to have
<v Speaker 2>the finger in the butt yet. So like that's gonna
<v Speaker 2>be an initiation, like right off the ball, because I
<v Speaker 2>feel like I'm I'm right there. You should have asked her,
<v Speaker 2>I'm in the ballpark.
<v Speaker 3>Doctor to do that before you really, like before you go, because.
<v Speaker 2>You just hate solid one thing. Do me a solid
<v Speaker 2>I've been over. Hello, Hello, how are you congratulations on
<v Speaker 2>your retirement?
<v Speaker 3>You don't even ask him, You just turn around and
<v Speaker 3>bed over. I'm sure that's not the first time that's
<v Speaker 3>happened to him.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, he's like, Jared, you're in here for a throat culture.
<v Speaker 2>I know you're retiring, I must ask you a question. Yeah,
<v Speaker 2>so it's I'm in I'm there. And we were talking
<v Speaker 2>about this off the air, and it's funny because Katie
<v Speaker 2>was asking, you know, if that's the same doctor for
<v Speaker 2>me and Nick Nack. Yes, it's the same one. Nick
<v Speaker 2>nac uses as well, what is it primary G A whatever?
<v Speaker 2>And then the kids are still at the pediatrician And
<v Speaker 2>you brought up a good point too. Because I'm new
<v Speaker 2>at this, I have no idea. What was your question?
<v Speaker 3>When do you stop seeing the pediatrician and move on
<v Speaker 3>to the regular doctor.
<v Speaker 2>I have no idea. At what age do you bounce
<v Speaker 2>from the little kid doctor into the full, full adult
<v Speaker 2>doct right? Is that? I don't know because I mean
<v Speaker 2>I feel like I could probably go back if I'm
<v Speaker 2>looking for Can you see me sitting there in the
<v Speaker 2>waiting room with all the kids, the coloring books, crushing
<v Speaker 2>it on the puzzle that they got a little waiting.
<v Speaker 3>Room, the little chair, the table, sucker.
<v Speaker 2>I'm just here form my prostate exam? Kids, What are
<v Speaker 2>you in here for?
<v Speaker 3>Flu shot? He comes up. Jimmy, Jimmy, if you here to.
<v Speaker 2>See you now? Oh it's Jeremy. Yeah, that's a funny.
<v Speaker 2>I honestly don't know. I would think probably by the
<v Speaker 2>time you were in high school you probably should move on.
<v Speaker 3>Because your son is about the age where I guess
<v Speaker 3>you'd have to start thinking about moving on to the
<v Speaker 3>adult doctor right like, he's almost there. So yeah, I
<v Speaker 3>bet you I can almost guarantee. I will bet you
<v Speaker 3>money right now. Nick Knack's taking care of this. I
<v Speaker 3>will bet you money now. Nick Knack's taking care.
<v Speaker 2>Of Why you're gonna come at me like because you
<v Speaker 2>know it's true? She probably exactly you know it's true.
<v Speaker 2>Shout out to Brian who says, don't get a doctor
<v Speaker 2>with fat fingers. Oh geez. Anyway, there's actually a lot
<v Speaker 2>of suggestions coming in look for what's in network through
<v Speaker 2>your insurance? I know, but I think it's still word
<v Speaker 2>of mouth, Like I need somebody who's like, hey, I
<v Speaker 2>go see this person in they're really good. Well.
<v Speaker 3>Bedside manner is important.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, you get that off.
<v Speaker 3>Follow up is very important.
<v Speaker 2>Insurance page.
<v Speaker 3>I know, like there's so many things that you don't
<v Speaker 3>know just based on who's in your network. So yeah, I.
<v Speaker 2>Mean Stacy says I have a thirteen year old boy.
<v Speaker 2>I don't see him moving anytime soon. All right. Oh,
<v Speaker 2>Cassidy says, I saw the same pediatrician until I was
<v Speaker 2>twenty two long.
<v Speaker 3>Like, there are people I have still grown adults who
<v Speaker 3>still go to their pediatricians.
<v Speaker 2>I think if you can drive yourself to your pediatrician,
<v Speaker 2>it's probably time to find an adult doctor. Cassi, I'm
<v Speaker 2>weird about that. You light up a cigarette before you
<v Speaker 2>go in. Get that one hundred. Well, we're gonna take
<v Speaker 2>a little, uh a little adventure. Yeah, into Planet Katrina
<v Speaker 2>over here, Planet Katie.
<v Speaker 3>Are you ready to do that?
<v Speaker 2>I think so you saw something, didn't you?
<v Speaker 3>I did. I went hiking over the weekend. I was
<v Speaker 3>down in Castle Rock. I think it's called Philip Moore
<v Speaker 3>something Morris no cre I know, like not Philip Morris.
<v Speaker 3>It's in Castle Rock. It's I think it's phil Moore
<v Speaker 3>it really, I know.
<v Speaker 7>Yeah.
<v Speaker 3>But they had like ziplines and everything there, right, And
<v Speaker 3>it was like an adult themed park almost like fun.
<v Speaker 3>Don't think of like a little kids park like this.
<v Speaker 3>The jungle gym that you come upon is absolutely insane.
<v Speaker 3>I mean, it's like nothing I've ever seen. And when
<v Speaker 3>I was walking up to it, there's a bunch of
<v Speaker 3>little kids just climbing all over it, and there's like
<v Speaker 3>rafts attached to this thing. There's zipline things that are
<v Speaker 3>going every which way. Sound, the obstacles are absolutely out
<v Speaker 3>of this world, like to see something close there's again
<v Speaker 3>that's more of the kids stuff. This is more young adult.
<v Speaker 3>But what it was was like almost like a training
<v Speaker 3>course type of thing, right. And so I'm walking up
<v Speaker 3>to it and there's a bunch of kids playing on it,
<v Speaker 3>like I said, and all of a sudden, I hear
<v Speaker 3>a little baby voice scream hale l blap, and I
<v Speaker 3>was like, really, well, it caught me so off guard
<v Speaker 3>because again it's a little child voice just screaming expletives
<v Speaker 3>over and over and over again, and I was like,
<v Speaker 3>what is happening to you?
<v Speaker 2>You were shocked instead of impressed.
<v Speaker 3>I was extremely shocked for a moment.
<v Speaker 2>I feel like I'd be impressed, Like I was trying red.
<v Speaker 3>This little twelve year old boy was slinging words together
<v Speaker 3>like I've.
<v Speaker 2>Never heard a pretty solid combination around the sun.
<v Speaker 3>A few times, I was like, how did it even
<v Speaker 3>come up with that? Like it was insane to me
<v Speaker 3>the things that were coming out of this kid's mouth.
<v Speaker 3>And again, he was young, he had not been through puberty.
<v Speaker 3>That's the status of this voice, right, so I know
<v Speaker 3>exactly it was like that, and so in my mind,
<v Speaker 3>I'm like, he has to have an adul around keeping
<v Speaker 3>tabs on him, right, Like somebody needs to be in
<v Speaker 3>charge of this kid. This swearing went on, I'm not
<v Speaker 3>kidding for a good five minutes. Every other word was
<v Speaker 3>an F bomb, s h this B word that. I
<v Speaker 3>was like, what are you?
<v Speaker 7>Who?
<v Speaker 6>Are you?
<v Speaker 3>Careful not to say anything? But then I look up
<v Speaker 3>and there's a bunch of littler kids on this obstacle
<v Speaker 3>course as well. We're talking the little idy biddies up
<v Speaker 3>to like five to ten. You know, they're looking at
<v Speaker 3>this kid like Mommy, what.
<v Speaker 2>Are saying it to those kids?
<v Speaker 3>Like you're I'm watching this whole thing happen, and the
<v Speaker 3>little kids are getting uncomfortable for this older kid who
<v Speaker 3>is continuing to sound like a sailor. I mean, he
<v Speaker 3>does not stop, and then all of a sudden, out
<v Speaker 3>of nowhere, I hear, I'm so sorry for the language,
<v Speaker 3>but I'm very scared right now. I'm scared he was scared,
<v Speaker 3>buddy that at no point did these words that he
<v Speaker 3>sentences with sound scared. It sounded like he was trying
<v Speaker 3>to impress his friends by dropping all these f bombs
<v Speaker 3>and swear words and everything. And it made me uncomfortable
<v Speaker 3>as an adult. And I did not have a child
<v Speaker 3>up on this play.
<v Speaker 2>Uncomfortable the other children.
<v Speaker 3>I was uncomfortable for the other children. And at no
<v Speaker 3>point did any other parents step in and say, hey, shut.
<v Speaker 2>Your mouth, kid, you did, I would imagine you spoke up.
<v Speaker 3>I didn't.
<v Speaker 2>You didn't say hey, there's other kids around here, young man,
<v Speaker 2>didn't say a word. Why wouldn't you do that my place?
<v Speaker 3>I don't have a kid on this swing sea, no,
<v Speaker 3>And I know it takes a village, but I felt
<v Speaker 3>like the parent of this little sailor had to step
<v Speaker 3>up and saying.
<v Speaker 2>At that age though those kids run off and there's
<v Speaker 2>maybe no parent around.
<v Speaker 3>Maybe they're watching the littler one.
<v Speaker 2>Or or they're sitting in their car, playing on their
<v Speaker 2>phone or something. All the kids on the side note first,
<v Speaker 2>Philip Miller Activity Complex. They call it MAC. It's in
<v Speaker 2>Castle Rock. I love all of you. You can stop texting.
<v Speaker 2>You got a million of us. Philip Miller Activity Complex
<v Speaker 2>where the children talk like.
<v Speaker 3>Sailors side no wonder the most fun hikes have ever
<v Speaker 3>been on. Bring your kids there. Well, be careful for
<v Speaker 3>the people swearing.
<v Speaker 2>But so is that like essentially your question like can
<v Speaker 2>you discipline somebody else's kid? Can you speak up?
<v Speaker 3>Kind of because I felt like it was not my place.
<v Speaker 3>I wanted to say something to this kid, like hey,
<v Speaker 3>neither are children everywhere here? I wanted to, but I
<v Speaker 3>felt like I would immediately turn into the Karen and
<v Speaker 3>people would start recording me like random hikers starts yelling
<v Speaker 3>at child in Castle Rock, Colorado.
<v Speaker 2>Like I thought, radio personality is a social child in
<v Speaker 2>Castle Rock. That's what the headline would be.
<v Speaker 3>You know, all you need is a sensational moment, right,
<v Speaker 3>all you need is me screaming out of child to
<v Speaker 3>record that and put it on social media for it
<v Speaker 3>to go viral. There's no context behind it.
<v Speaker 2>Well, but I would like, hey, can you stop talking
<v Speaker 2>like that?
<v Speaker 3>No, but that's the thing is buddy man. What if
<v Speaker 3>he would have sweared at me and then I would
<v Speaker 3>have sweared at him, and then I would have climbed
<v Speaker 3>on and then again this sensational.
<v Speaker 2>Moment personality chess, a child on jungle gym and castle rock?
<v Speaker 3>Was it in my place to say anything?
<v Speaker 2>I think you can see it was.
<v Speaker 3>I don't think that I having I was by myself.
<v Speaker 3>I did not have any kids up in this area. Like,
<v Speaker 3>I was not responsible for the child that was dropping bombs,
<v Speaker 3>like it's not my responsibility. I felt bad about not
<v Speaker 3>saying you were the adult in the room. Essentially a
<v Speaker 3>lot of adults there.
<v Speaker 2>Parents unite. Parents speak up. Phone lines are wide open
<v Speaker 2>if anyone wants to sound off about this. Have you
<v Speaker 2>had to yell at somebody else's kid at a park
<v Speaker 2>or any location? Is it appropriate? Can you do it?
<v Speaker 2>Should Katie have spoke up? Phone lines are wide open.
<v Speaker 2>Three oh three six nine one one mix three oh
<v Speaker 2>three six nine one, sixteen forty nine. I'll get shit
<v Speaker 2>in the studios with JKJ. We would love to talk
<v Speaker 2>to you, guys. I don't know if you do. I'm
<v Speaker 2>stuck in the middle because I've been in this situation
<v Speaker 2>with young kids at the park. I don't think I
<v Speaker 2>would be, you know, as much crap as I'm giving you.
<v Speaker 2>I don't know if I would speak up. But I
<v Speaker 2>know my wife has to other kids in the past.
<v Speaker 2>She she is not afraid to say, hey, no, let's
<v Speaker 2>not let's not use those words you know around here.
<v Speaker 2>So I feel like you probably could have. The sticking
<v Speaker 2>point to me is that you're just random lady at
<v Speaker 2>the park with kids, like.
<v Speaker 3>Nick Knack has two children with her.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, that's let's all get in the way back machine
<v Speaker 2>and think about when we were twelve, thirteen, fourteen. Right
<v Speaker 2>in there, I'm such a jerk, jerk. I can remember
<v Speaker 2>running out to recess in elementary school with my buddies
<v Speaker 2>and saying every word in the book, oh yeah, because
<v Speaker 2>there was no parents around, and that was our opportunity
<v Speaker 2>to cus you know, it was just the thing because
<v Speaker 2>it was not and edgy and all the kids are doing.
<v Speaker 3>Impress your friends. But when the parents came around, you
<v Speaker 3>cooled it. You didn't do it in front of the rents, right.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, thinking this kid's rints might not have been there.
<v Speaker 2>We got one open line three h three six y
<v Speaker 2>nine one sixteen forty nine. Here is Jordan high.
<v Speaker 7>Jordan, Hello, how are you well?
<v Speaker 2>We're super dupes. Don't cuss on the air, okay, okay,
<v Speaker 2>So what do you think about this kid in this situation?
<v Speaker 8>I do think Katie should have said something. I understand
<v Speaker 8>since she didn't have a kid, it kind of puts
<v Speaker 8>her in a tough spot. But I'm a mother of
<v Speaker 8>a six year old and a two year old, and
<v Speaker 8>I hope other adults set a standard to let all
<v Speaker 8>kids see because kids take their cues from adults, and
<v Speaker 8>we're letting them see this is what's normal, This is okay,
<v Speaker 8>and it's not.
<v Speaker 2>It really is.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, that's a really good way to put it, because
<v Speaker 3>you know, that's why I wanted to say, he saw
<v Speaker 3>that there were a lot of adults around. It's not
<v Speaker 3>like kid didn't notice the adult sitting in the park.
<v Speaker 3>It was full of people, you know, So he was
<v Speaker 3>saying these things in front of a bunch of adults
<v Speaker 3>and kids knowing that it wasn't right. So yeah, you're
<v Speaker 3>right for us to just accept that. It's kind of crazy, right.
<v Speaker 8>And I'm the type of mother that would go over
<v Speaker 8>there and be like, hey, watch your mouth. There's a
<v Speaker 8>pureness in my children, and you're stealing that. I'm sorry.
<v Speaker 8>You're twelve and can do this, but you can't hear
<v Speaker 8>because my kids are here.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, be the adult. And like Katy said, it does
<v Speaker 2>take a village. This guy named John wrote in he
<v Speaker 2>said he's running into a meeting and he can't call.
<v Speaker 2>He said his ten year old son was out sledding
<v Speaker 2>and he kept dropping the F bomb and a woman
<v Speaker 2>got in that kid's face and said knock it off. Yeah,
<v Speaker 2>John says, I was very thankful they did. My wife
<v Speaker 2>and I sent the kid back over to that mom
<v Speaker 2>to say I'm sorry, and then we thanked her for
<v Speaker 2>speaking up. And then he says, thanks guys, And that
<v Speaker 2>was from John. Okay, So yeah, I'm kind of in
<v Speaker 2>cam up John too, because I'm placing myself Jordan. If
<v Speaker 2>my kids were out there talking like that, I would
<v Speaker 2>want another adult to speak up. I would be so
<v Speaker 2>fine with it.
<v Speaker 8>Speak up a not okay, it's not okay, the tone,
<v Speaker 8>help me parent mine and protect the others.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, your little son of Oh no, no, no, Jordan, thank
<v Speaker 2>you so much for the call. We're going to get
<v Speaker 2>to Gina and Laura. Now, Hi Gina, morning morning. All right?
<v Speaker 2>So the uh should Katie have spoke up?
<v Speaker 6>Yes?
<v Speaker 7>I think Katie, it would totally appropriate. I don't even
<v Speaker 7>think they would have known if you had a kid
<v Speaker 7>there or not. But I am the type of mom
<v Speaker 7>like Jordan, who speaks up there. We were at Lava
<v Speaker 7>Island once and this kid was just standing at.
<v Speaker 6>The bottom of the slide, not letting anyone down.
<v Speaker 7>And had to say some words to the little kid.
<v Speaker 7>And you know, there's a kid in the neighborhood and
<v Speaker 7>he always causes ruckus. And I'm always saying, I'm going
<v Speaker 7>to tell your mom. I know who your mom is, okay.
<v Speaker 7>And I also am appreciative when other moms speak up.
<v Speaker 7>It really is refreshing because then you don't have to
<v Speaker 7>be the one always speaking up.
<v Speaker 2>So I have a question. I have a question. Yes,
<v Speaker 2>what what's Lava Island?
<v Speaker 7>Oh gosh, it's a place where you can lose your
<v Speaker 7>kids easily. It's an indoor It's like the Mac. We
<v Speaker 7>actually live in cass Rock. It's like the Mac, but
<v Speaker 7>it's probably twenty times the size. Where there's just there's
<v Speaker 7>an enormous playground inside. You can you can just it's.
<v Speaker 6>Crazy, huh.
<v Speaker 2>They're just everywhere.
<v Speaker 7>Oh yeah, one kid was trying to shake the rope.
<v Speaker 7>That one kid was trying to climb up, and I
<v Speaker 7>had to safe sorts.
<v Speaker 3>Of kids sometimes, like you really have put them in
<v Speaker 3>their spot.
<v Speaker 7>Yeah, very very nicely, and you know, respectfully.
<v Speaker 2>But yes, why do I feel like you yell at
<v Speaker 2>a lot of children.
<v Speaker 3>Village Gina. It's all good, respectfully, not.
<v Speaker 2>All so funny. Gina, thank you for the call. You
<v Speaker 2>have a great.
<v Speaker 7>Day, See you later.
<v Speaker 2>The funny thing is is Katie's all but heard about
<v Speaker 2>the way this kid talks you guys, should hear her
<v Speaker 2>off the air?
<v Speaker 3>Come on, Like when I'm around kids, I'm just letting
<v Speaker 3>all that fly. Adult Katie comes into play adult by
<v Speaker 3>Bibby nos around because we have a lot of good
<v Speaker 3>people who said good things, like it really does take
<v Speaker 3>a village. You need to set an example so that
<v Speaker 3>the kids growing up know that this isn't acceptable. Like
<v Speaker 3>that's the biggest thing is like they think that this
<v Speaker 3>is just normal and it's not so.
<v Speaker 2>Got a set of precedence, you're telling Katie, yeas one hundred.
<v Speaker 2>We like to give you p M I it's a
<v Speaker 2>positive a and something a little bit interesting to kind
<v Speaker 2>of get you. Give you a boot as you start
<v Speaker 2>your day.
<v Speaker 3>Oh that's fun.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, going I the pe today. I never get the pee.
<v Speaker 2>Oh I get the p though. One guy's TikTok video
<v Speaker 2>just saved a small family bakery from closing. This is
<v Speaker 2>a fantastic story. The bakery is called Sweet two twenty
<v Speaker 2>in Metro Detroit. They've been struggling lately, but then a
<v Speaker 2>content creator, a TikTok dude named chow down Detroit I'll
<v Speaker 2>get paid a visit and gave some love to their
<v Speaker 2>amazing cupcakes cupcakes, and overnight the business just went crazy.
<v Speaker 2>So says this story. You should watch the video, Katie.
<v Speaker 2>You're such a foodie. Yeah, killer looking cupcakes, really big, bombastic.
<v Speaker 2>They're like those donut companies that do really weird donuts.
<v Speaker 2>Everything that's these cupcakes.
<v Speaker 7>Yeah.
<v Speaker 2>So anyway, the video is is just fantastic, so heart
<v Speaker 2>warming because there's a line out the door and down
<v Speaker 2>the street to grab this Dude's cupcakes.
<v Speaker 3>I love it because so many local businesses, especially mom
<v Speaker 3>and pop run shops like that, are feeling the effects
<v Speaker 3>of everything rise in price and for someone to help
<v Speaker 3>them out like that, Like I love people working together.
<v Speaker 3>I'm gonna help you, You're gonna help We're gonna help
<v Speaker 3>each other.
<v Speaker 2>I love that for cupcakes. Yeah, that's how you cupcake.
<v Speaker 2>I don't know you know, but that's how you cupcakes.
<v Speaker 2>It's a cupcake community. I dig it. I know you.
<v Speaker 3>Okay, I'm gonna bring it down just a little bit.
<v Speaker 3>Are you running for it? And really just a message
<v Speaker 3>to parents everywhere. This coming from Hershey, Pennsylvania and the
<v Speaker 3>Hershey Zoo America in Hershey Park.
<v Speaker 2>Right.
<v Speaker 3>So what happened was a young couple and their little
<v Speaker 3>toddler were hanging out in the wolf exhibit over there,
<v Speaker 3>and they're toddler squeezed under a fence and.
<v Speaker 2>Made their way to the wolves.
<v Speaker 3>Now, they didn't get in the wolf's enclosure, but there's
<v Speaker 3>a cage front in the wolve's habitat, right, And so
<v Speaker 3>this little toddler reached his hand and to pet the wolf,
<v Speaker 3>and the wolf instinctively bit it, like yeah, and that's
<v Speaker 3>what the guys, the zoo people are like, he wasn't
<v Speaker 3>being aggressive. This is what they do when people put
<v Speaker 3>things in there, like they think it's food, so they're
<v Speaker 3>gonna bite it. And he didn't even like bite it
<v Speaker 3>super hard. I mean, obviously the kid cried and he
<v Speaker 3>does have some injuries. It appears that he's gonna be okay.
<v Speaker 3>But the parents is who everyone's really looking at, because
<v Speaker 3>while all this was happening, while this little kid made
<v Speaker 3>his way up to the wolves, the parents were twenty
<v Speaker 3>five to thirty feet away on their phone.
<v Speaker 2>No I'm shot on their phone.
<v Speaker 3>So now the police department had to get involved. So
<v Speaker 3>according to the Dairy Township Police Department, now these parents
<v Speaker 3>each face one count of endangering the welfare of a child.
<v Speaker 3>And again they had multiple people in this vicinity watching
<v Speaker 3>it happen. They also have can they also can look
<v Speaker 3>at the parents' phones and see that they were on
<v Speaker 3>their phones when it happened. And it's just a good
<v Speaker 3>story for parents every because that's the thing. Things can happen.
<v Speaker 3>We've all been in the situation where your kid dart
<v Speaker 3>somewhere and you can't you don't know where they are.
<v Speaker 2>But the.
<v Speaker 3>Exactly. Our phones are such distractions, So they're saying, real.
<v Speaker 2>Especially if you're at the zoo, they're probably watching cupcake
<v Speaker 2>videos Detroit, is what they were doing.
<v Speaker 3>And I can't be mad, Like I can be mad
<v Speaker 3>because you had a child with you, but it can
<v Speaker 3>happen so easily. So they're just saying, if you're at
<v Speaker 3>the zoo watching your children, there you go.
<v Speaker 2>Let this bee left from the parents everywhere. Get your
<v Speaker 2>nose out of your phone, or your children can be
<v Speaker 2>eaten by a way the animal at this duel.
<v Speaker 3>You're welcome. Love Katie, Love Katie.
<v Speaker 2>All right, let's see interesting. All right, we're gonna bring
<v Speaker 2>this back with some sweet news. Gen Z.
<v Speaker 4>They are leading all generations in daily sweet treat consumptions.
<v Speaker 2>And this is something that I cannot stand.
<v Speaker 4>My younger sister is part of the gen Z and
<v Speaker 4>all she ever talks about is wanting a sweet treat
<v Speaker 4>after lunch, after dinner. And what's interesting about this is
<v Speaker 4>a study came out of like ten thousand people saying
<v Speaker 4>when they prefer their sweet treats, and baby boomers were
<v Speaker 4>after dinner around seven pm.
<v Speaker 2>Gen xers moved up a little bit. They said, we
<v Speaker 2>like it in the evening, but sometimes after lunch.
<v Speaker 4>Gen Zers are literally any time I'll wake up and
<v Speaker 4>have a sweet treat all after breakfast.
<v Speaker 2>It's insane. I don't understand this.
<v Speaker 4>And my family, my younger siblings and my family like
<v Speaker 4>they're the exact same way. They're always wanting a sweet treet.
<v Speaker 4>I was just with my younger family, so many cavities them,
<v Speaker 4>just with them from out of town, and it didn't
<v Speaker 4>matter what time we had breakfast on Saturday, and they're like,
<v Speaker 4>does anybody want like dairy queens sweet treat afterwards?
<v Speaker 3>And something else that they did is they turned it
<v Speaker 3>into a reward for them.
<v Speaker 2>That's true.
<v Speaker 3>When you do something good, it's like, oh I should
<v Speaker 3>get little sweet treats.
<v Speaker 4>And I think this comes from today, Yeah, I see,
<v Speaker 4>I think this comes from social media. This is a
<v Speaker 4>huge TikTok phase where they're showing you different made sweet treats.
<v Speaker 4>They have those dirty sodas now where you mix you know,
<v Speaker 4>different drinks.
<v Speaker 2>Together cupcakes Detroit. Come, is your sister getting a little fake?
<v Speaker 3>Sister's beautiful?
<v Speaker 2>There's one one that they're both beautiful?
<v Speaker 3>What do you mean? And your mom's pretty too?
<v Speaker 2>Your sister they're they're they're fine. Jerman. Stop, let me
<v Speaker 2>see the current picture of your sister.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, your sisters are pretty to me
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