<v Speaker 1>Jerry, Katy and Josh six one hundred.
<v Speaker 2>Mmmm.
<v Speaker 3>That's the same sound I make when I look at
<v Speaker 3>part of your birthday gift for Monday.
<v Speaker 4>It's a birthday weekend, Katie, birthday weekend.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, I got your little something and I was like
<v Speaker 3>one of my personal favorites.
<v Speaker 1>Really yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm so excited.
<v Speaker 2>So I'm going to give it to you.
<v Speaker 3>And then yeah, part of your gift actually arrived in
<v Speaker 3>the mail yesterday and I found it personally hilarious.
<v Speaker 2>So I hope you find it as funny as I do.
<v Speaker 4>Oh, I can't wait now.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, it's your birthday weekend.
<v Speaker 4>Very excited.
<v Speaker 2>What are you doing this weekend?
<v Speaker 3>Anything?
<v Speaker 1>I'm gonna go on a hike somewhere I don't know
<v Speaker 1>where yet. I just wanted to be somewhere I've never been.
<v Speaker 1>And then tomorrow we're probably gonna go to Naughty Bingo again.
<v Speaker 4>Oh that's good, that's fun time.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, you win something yourself, Yeah.
<v Speaker 2>You know, and then you can make that noise.
<v Speaker 4>Exactly, yes, birthday weekend playing?
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, are you taking anybody hiking with you?
<v Speaker 2>Are you just gonna go.
<v Speaker 4>So low you haven't figured?
<v Speaker 1>See? It's funny because like I have people who want
<v Speaker 1>to go with me, but then they always preface it
<v Speaker 1>with well, how hard is it? I don't want to
<v Speaker 1>go on a really hard hike. I'm like, it's my birthday.
<v Speaker 1>I'm going on a hard hike. Like it's my birthday.
<v Speaker 3>You know, don't take those people with you because they'll
<v Speaker 3>complain the entire time.
<v Speaker 1>I know, and I've had people with me before hiking
<v Speaker 1>who complain about the hike, and it ruins it.
<v Speaker 3>It's so hot, so much farther, it's longer.
<v Speaker 1>I hate that question spread when I'm hiking. There's not
<v Speaker 1>really an end to it. It's just whenever I feel
<v Speaker 1>like packing it up right, And so I don't like
<v Speaker 1>when people pressure me when I'm hiking.
<v Speaker 4>So typically I like to go by myself.
<v Speaker 2>I'm out of water.
<v Speaker 4>I know you should have planned better like that.
<v Speaker 1>What was somebody who wore jeans and then complained about
<v Speaker 1>means the entire time chafing.
<v Speaker 3>I know, my thighs are rubbing together and they're chafing,
<v Speaker 3>and my feet hurt, and I'm thirsty and hungry.
<v Speaker 4>Chase your chafe is not my problem. So yeah, I don't.
<v Speaker 3>You know when they find people like off the trail dead.
<v Speaker 3>That's why.
<v Speaker 4>Oh they were chafing, and I left.
<v Speaker 3>They went hiking with a friend and they complained and
<v Speaker 3>then the friend.
<v Speaker 2>Just snapped, just left them behind me. You just find
<v Speaker 2>bones and a pair of denim jeans.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, and then when authorities show up, they're like, yep,
<v Speaker 3>we found another complainer exactly.
<v Speaker 1>So you can see the chafing right there, the signs
<v Speaker 1>of chafing right sis of chafing.
<v Speaker 2>So don't complain while you're hiking.
<v Speaker 3>So from you to your spawn, baby, Nana, I saw
<v Speaker 3>you watching your phone all day yesterday.
<v Speaker 2>Everybody know what was going on with the no.
<v Speaker 1>She drove all the way to California with a friend
<v Speaker 1>to Coachella, and it's her first big road trip. She
<v Speaker 1>is such a little planner, so she had everything all
<v Speaker 1>mapped out for the trek. And they got a late start,
<v Speaker 1>so already things changed. They were supposed to leave at
<v Speaker 1>eight in the morning. They didn't end up leaving until
<v Speaker 1>four in the afternoon because they were having so much
<v Speaker 1>fun in Parker.
<v Speaker 5>Come.
<v Speaker 6>I know.
<v Speaker 4>So she got a late start, but she eventually made
<v Speaker 4>it there.
<v Speaker 1>And I don't know if you're familiar with Coachella, but
<v Speaker 1>when you're camping, it's first come, first.
<v Speaker 2>Surf, Okay.
<v Speaker 1>So she had to get in line to get her
<v Speaker 1>camping spot super early in the morning, and they didn't
<v Speaker 1>get there until eight or nine o'clock in the morning.
<v Speaker 4>So I still haven't talked to her.
<v Speaker 1>We've been texting a little bit, and I can follow
<v Speaker 1>her location on the find My Find My on the phone,
<v Speaker 1>So I have literally been stalking her for days now,
<v Speaker 1>just watching her around the campsite. I can see where
<v Speaker 1>she goes around the campsite. So I've just been But
<v Speaker 1>how funny is it that as a millennial parent, as
<v Speaker 1>a millennial.
<v Speaker 4>Mom, I am so proud that my child went to Coachella.
<v Speaker 2>Well that's a big step.
<v Speaker 3>That's a first major road trip out in the world
<v Speaker 3>alone on the open highways exactly.
<v Speaker 1>And here's the thing. She paid for everything. She has
<v Speaker 1>funded her entire trip, her concert tickets, the camping, Her
<v Speaker 1>and her friend are staying in some hotels in Anaheim
<v Speaker 1>after so they can go to like whatever Disney is
<v Speaker 1>in California's at Worlderland, whatever one. So yeah, they're going
<v Speaker 1>to the Disney place when they're there as well. And
<v Speaker 1>so I'm just I am so proud of her because
<v Speaker 1>when I was her age, I was this mom who
<v Speaker 1>was a young mom, and I had to make a
<v Speaker 1>lot of sacrifices to make sure that she was taken
<v Speaker 1>care of. And I'm just so proud that now the
<v Speaker 1>tables have flipped and she's able to enjoy her life
<v Speaker 1>in a way that's like, you know, I am just
<v Speaker 1>so dang proud of her being at Coachella.
<v Speaker 2>And she's got her own song.
<v Speaker 4>She doesna.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, she's way farther ahead in life than you were.
<v Speaker 2>Way are you kidding me?
<v Speaker 4>She's killing it.
<v Speaker 2>I'm proud of her too.
<v Speaker 4>Okay, we can only be proud of the not I
<v Speaker 4>good job.
<v Speaker 6>Yeah that's right. Came here Coachella girl. I'm so proud
<v Speaker 6>of you. Baby Nana. You made it to Cally, no problem.
<v Speaker 4>I know she's gonna see Justin Bieber.
<v Speaker 2>I know that's right. That's why I'm talking like this.
<v Speaker 4>Thanks so great, Yeah.
<v Speaker 3>Baby Nana, Get out of the honeybucket, baby, come on
<v Speaker 3>to the show. It's time for some PMI with Jeremy,
<v Speaker 3>Katy and Josh. It's a positive a minus in something
<v Speaker 3>a little bit interesting to send you on your way
<v Speaker 3>this morning.
<v Speaker 2>Who's got the pe today? Was it Katie?
<v Speaker 4>That would be me?
<v Speaker 1>And this trick may erase ten years of social media
<v Speaker 1>brain damage off your cobasa. Yeah, the average American spends
<v Speaker 1>roughly four and a half to five hours on their
<v Speaker 1>phone a day.
<v Speaker 4>That is insane.
<v Speaker 1>And this story had folks change their habits for fourteen days.
<v Speaker 1>So they downloaded this app called Freedom to block Internet
<v Speaker 1>access on their phone, so it essentially turned their smartphone
<v Speaker 1>into a dumb phone. It just calls and text and
<v Speaker 1>that's pretty much all you could check.
<v Speaker 4>And it was amazing.
<v Speaker 1>They say that the time online decreased from three hundred
<v Speaker 1>and fourteen minutes to one hundred and sixty one, so
<v Speaker 1>almost half the time spent on your phone. If you
<v Speaker 1>delete all the distractions when it comes to social media
<v Speaker 1>apps and just all the stuff that literally takes your
<v Speaker 1>attention away from life.
<v Speaker 3>Can you just delete the text message app I'm su
<v Speaker 3>a text message?
<v Speaker 2>Well, but Instagram? Yeah, if that one went for me?
<v Speaker 1>In so much time back, Facebook, TikTok, Reddit, all of
<v Speaker 1>the things that we look on our phone that we
<v Speaker 1>could look on a computer. If we made ourselves go
<v Speaker 1>to a desktop to do it, it would decrease our
<v Speaker 1>time spent online a lot. And not only that you
<v Speaker 1>have more attention, your mental health is way better and
<v Speaker 1>your self reported well being.
<v Speaker 4>So much better about it.
<v Speaker 3>I've definitely been limiting myself on the socials lately, and
<v Speaker 3>I can tell a difference.
<v Speaker 2>I'm not so worried about well, what's going on?
<v Speaker 4>Oh it?
<v Speaker 2>You got to get yourself in that mindset of who cares?
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, people really, they really don't care.
<v Speaker 1>I mean, if anybody you care more than anyone I
<v Speaker 1>think when it comes to yours social media. Yeah, if
<v Speaker 1>you can take the challenge here and download this app
<v Speaker 1>called Freedom, see if it makes you feel better, See if.
<v Speaker 4>The limited access helps. So there you go.
<v Speaker 2>All right, what's theus? All right?
<v Speaker 5>This is a big minus actually for a little kid
<v Speaker 5>and his mom who went to the San Francisco Giants game.
<v Speaker 5>A mom bought her son it looked like a massive
<v Speaker 5>cake cone ice cream, and it looked like she was
<v Speaker 5>just being a nice mom and helping him kind of
<v Speaker 5>make it an unmessy way if you will to eat
<v Speaker 5>the ice cream. And then it turns out that she
<v Speaker 5>stole that ice cream right from him.
<v Speaker 4>She got mom, she'd being a mom or what this
<v Speaker 4>little guys just waiting.
<v Speaker 2>Oh, I got it.
<v Speaker 4>It's a dump. You dump it into the cup and
<v Speaker 4>the little guys checking it out.
<v Speaker 2>Mom just robbed him about half his ice cream. Veteran move.
<v Speaker 2>So she scraped it off into a cup.
<v Speaker 5>Oh yeah, So she scraped more than half of it
<v Speaker 5>back into the cup, and it looked like she was
<v Speaker 5>just gonna save it, so it's unmessy. But then the
<v Speaker 5>camera pans back and she's going to town on the
<v Speaker 5>ice cream cup.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, it's in a constitution.
<v Speaker 4>That's for that baby, Yeah exactly.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, be a better baby. All right, let's wrap things
<v Speaker 2>up with the interesting.
<v Speaker 3>It's fine, it's funny, minus digital related as well. This
<v Speaker 3>story says more than half of Americans are experiencing AI burnout.
<v Speaker 3>More than half of Americans are reporting we are just
<v Speaker 3>getting so tired of hearing about AI because it's everywhere
<v Speaker 3>now it's.
<v Speaker 2>Impossible to escape.
<v Speaker 3>I was on some sort of app yesterday that didn't
<v Speaker 3>even evolve anything with AI. But then there's little thing
<v Speaker 3>popped up and said, let AI help you with this.
<v Speaker 3>Everywhere now it's being pushed through social media. And then
<v Speaker 3>the story goes on to say, well, despite the fatigue
<v Speaker 3>seventy percent of us still kind of use it to
<v Speaker 3>some degree, even if you're using your maps app and
<v Speaker 3>things like that. It's AI's built into it. A lot
<v Speaker 3>of times you're using it and you don't even know it.
<v Speaker 3>But yeah, I'm kind of getting to that point where
<v Speaker 3>I'm just it's such a buzzword right now.
<v Speaker 2>AI.
<v Speaker 3>This AI, that AI is taken over, and I got
<v Speaker 3>a little bit of fatigue with the AI.
<v Speaker 4>Over it, over it.
<v Speaker 3>I would never even use AI, of course, Yeah, I
<v Speaker 3>never straight original
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