<v Speaker 1>Jared Katy and Josh one hundred. I started a little
<v Speaker 1>bit of a purge yesterday. It was time. I'm going
<v Speaker 1>through all my subscription services and finally blowing a few out.
<v Speaker 1>Are you It's time I started adding up on uh
<v Speaker 1>you know what goes out every month, which you feel
<v Speaker 1>like is not that bad, and then you go times twelve, Yeah,
<v Speaker 1>and you look at that yearly cost of everything and
<v Speaker 1>you're like, ooh, that one stings a little bit. So
<v Speaker 1>I blew out my YouTube TV.
<v Speaker 2>I thought that's the one you liked.
<v Speaker 1>I like it, but we found that we only watched
<v Speaker 1>two channels and it's like ninety bucks a month. That's
<v Speaker 1>time to go. I blew out my HBO because I
<v Speaker 1>haven't watched anything on the HBO Max in a long time.
<v Speaker 1>And then I'm trying to quickly catch up on a
<v Speaker 1>lot of things on Netflix because I think the flicks
<v Speaker 1>might be next.
<v Speaker 2>Really plus or you're getting rid of everything.
<v Speaker 1>No, I still gotta I got a handle. But the
<v Speaker 1>big EIAs, Like I'm saying, I'm really tired of Netflix
<v Speaker 1>continually raising prices. I saw some sort of step yeah
<v Speaker 1>the other day, It's like every day they make like
<v Speaker 1>one hundred million dollars or something stupid. I was like,
<v Speaker 1>really you and you're opening up more charges to us.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, it'd be nice if they offered like a lifetime
<v Speaker 2>subscription costs, right, Like if you lock in this price,
<v Speaker 2>lock it in, you know, like this is like Kennedy price,
<v Speaker 2>lock in exactly. I need Netflix so because it has
<v Speaker 2>all my reality love shows that I like so much,
<v Speaker 2>like Love is Blind and no, you don't go that
<v Speaker 2>route so much quickly.
<v Speaker 1>Trying to watch the Hulk Hogan documentary before I get
<v Speaker 1>rid of it. Ye, yeah, I get it watching lest Island.
<v Speaker 2>It is expensive. Like I was telling you how, I
<v Speaker 2>went through a lot of my subscription and mine is
<v Speaker 2>a lot of like storage stuff. I've got a lotnest
<v Speaker 2>and it's only one of me. I don't do a
<v Speaker 2>lot of things. I don't know why I have to
<v Speaker 2>have terabytes of storage.
<v Speaker 1>I watched a video last night on YouTube on how
<v Speaker 1>you can create your own cloud at home, so you
<v Speaker 1>can have your own home base and you own your
<v Speaker 1>data and you could just have a little set up
<v Speaker 1>at home. And I'm like, I think I'm going to
<v Speaker 1>do this because I'm tired of not owning anything. You're
<v Speaker 1>essentially renting everything from these companies.
<v Speaker 2>Now, and especially coming from generations that did own physical media.
<v Speaker 2>I mean, gosh, CDs, we scratched them up good huh.
<v Speaker 1>I still have all my flipcases.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah.
<v Speaker 1>And this guy actually is probably our age Katie who's
<v Speaker 1>doing this. And he was putting in all of his
<v Speaker 1>DVDs and ripping them into the cloud smart so he
<v Speaker 1>had them all digital. He was taking all of his CDs,
<v Speaker 1>ripping them into the cloud and he's like, now I
<v Speaker 1>have access to him wherever I'm at in the world.
<v Speaker 1>He's like, and it's my data. It's mine. I'm not
<v Speaker 1>paying anybody to store all this data.
<v Speaker 2>How do you do that? Did look hard on that? Well?
<v Speaker 2>Was it?
<v Speaker 1>It was a minute process? But yeah, yeah, there's it's
<v Speaker 1>it's tempting to do something like that. Uh, you know,
<v Speaker 1>I'm getting bait. I wanna I wanna hook up a
<v Speaker 1>Blu ray player again and get blue. What's the one
<v Speaker 1>you're watching right now? Oh?
<v Speaker 2>Gosh, it is called I Shouldn't Be Alive.
<v Speaker 1>That's it.
<v Speaker 2>It's funny. So it's on Discovery, I believe, but I'm
<v Speaker 2>watching it on YouTube. I just random episodes will come
<v Speaker 2>up full episodes and I watch them and it is fascinating.
<v Speaker 2>It terrifies me to go out hiking.
<v Speaker 1>I don't know why I keep watching it. What's going on?
<v Speaker 2>So the one I watched yesterday a woman and this
<v Speaker 2>was back in the seventies. She went on a cross
<v Speaker 2>country trip and she wanted to stop at the Grand
<v Speaker 2>Canyon and go for a little hike down to a waterfall.
<v Speaker 1>Oh does that sound nice? I know.
<v Speaker 2>And so she goes to the Grand Canyon again before
<v Speaker 2>the days of GPS and whatnot. But she's got some
<v Speaker 2>maps with her or whatnot. And uh, they tell her
<v Speaker 2>to go drive to the top and then you hike
<v Speaker 2>down into this little village and that's where the waterfall is. Well,
<v Speaker 2>they didn't tell her that at a fork in the
<v Speaker 2>road she could go either left, which goes to the village,
<v Speaker 2>or right, which goes out into the vast desert tundra
<v Speaker 2>that is the Grand Canyon. And as you can imagine,
<v Speaker 2>she takes a rite and she is lost out there
<v Speaker 2>for twenty one days and in it. Oh yeah, so
<v Speaker 2>she because she has all her stuff with her right,
<v Speaker 2>but at one point she drops it because it's so heavy.
<v Speaker 2>And then she tries to track her way back to it,
<v Speaker 2>and she can't find her supplies and her water and
<v Speaker 2>her food. Yeah, things aren't looking good for her. But
<v Speaker 2>then she has in her purse eyeglass case, right, so
<v Speaker 2>what you would keep your your eyeglasses in. And she
<v Speaker 2>finds a little like spring that's barely dripping water into
<v Speaker 2>a rock, right, so it's just making it moist. Well,
<v Speaker 2>she takes her eyeglass case and it takes her hours
<v Speaker 2>at a time to fill this eyeglass case and get
<v Speaker 2>a cup of water to drink. But in the desert,
<v Speaker 2>that is what saved her. And then as she's because
<v Speaker 2>this is what she calls her home base, so she's
<v Speaker 2>trying to venture out a mile in each direction from
<v Speaker 2>this home base to try and find this village still,
<v Speaker 2>but she can't go more than an hour because she
<v Speaker 2>will die of dehydration. And that's where her water sources
<v Speaker 2>is this little spring with the eyeglass case. And here's
<v Speaker 2>the thing. She took three weeks off from work, so
<v Speaker 2>nobody's looking for You're not expecting her, No one's looking
<v Speaker 2>for her. And it isn't until she misses that first
<v Speaker 2>day of work that they deploy the rescue services and
<v Speaker 2>they finally find her team twenty one days she was
<v Speaker 2>lost in the desert, and I'm just like.
<v Speaker 1>That's an incredible story.
<v Speaker 2>And there's so many of them like that, Like a
<v Speaker 2>little girl saves her dad after he gets crushed by
<v Speaker 2>a snowmobile, but she ends up losing part of her feet,
<v Speaker 2>dude thermia. Well but they all like she lives right,
<v Speaker 2>and she but she And it's just like the endurance
<v Speaker 2>of the human brain and body when live or die,
<v Speaker 2>Like it's just like Arizona where he chopped his own
<v Speaker 2>arm off. So it's just like so and there are
<v Speaker 2>seasons and just episodes, so many episodes of the show.
<v Speaker 2>It's called I Shouldn't Be Alive, and it is fascinating.
<v Speaker 1>The Grand Canyon one got me the biggest thing that
<v Speaker 1>stuck with me though three weeks off.
<v Speaker 2>Of work, it was a different time, Jared.
<v Speaker 1>We worked back what
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