<v Speaker 1>Jerry Katy and Josh one hundred.
<v Speaker 2>So I'm reading this story here and it kind of
<v Speaker 2>made me smile. Here's the headline. More Americans say they
<v Speaker 2>are cooler now than they were in high school. Oh yeah,
<v Speaker 2>all day long? Are you kidding me?
<v Speaker 1>Absolutely day long. You should have seen my glasses in
<v Speaker 1>high school so bad. I just want to point out
<v Speaker 1>also that when I was in high school, we didn't
<v Speaker 1>have YouTube tutorials to teach us everything, like I was
<v Speaker 1>telling you, Jeremy. Even our makeup, Like back in the day,
<v Speaker 1>we were taught how to put on makeup because the
<v Speaker 1>back of the eyeshadow had numbers on it, and it
<v Speaker 1>would how number one goes all over your eyes, and
<v Speaker 1>then number two goes underneath, and then at the crease
<v Speaker 1>is number three, and so you like there was a
<v Speaker 1>picture and you followed the picture and there wasn't a
<v Speaker 1>thirty minute tutorial. So that's how you did it, Yes,
<v Speaker 1>And I please everybody did it like that.
<v Speaker 2>I don't feel like. I mean I had a sister.
<v Speaker 2>Growing up, there was like like makeup parties and stuff
<v Speaker 2>like you got together with your girlfriends and experimenting and
<v Speaker 2>it was a bonding thing with the girl you know
<v Speaker 2>what A lot I don't see that a lot now.
<v Speaker 1>A lot of times your mom taught you how to
<v Speaker 1>put on your makeup.
<v Speaker 2>That's what my mom did for me.
<v Speaker 1>But that's the thing, is like you who wants to
<v Speaker 1>wear Like when I was learning how to put on makeup,
<v Speaker 1>my mom was still putting on the eighties blue and something.
<v Speaker 2>Like bring it back.
<v Speaker 1>That's what my mom taught me how to bring that.
<v Speaker 1>And it was just like, like the old generation should
<v Speaker 1>not be teaching the new one what the trends are,
<v Speaker 1>you know, So I think they did get that right.
<v Speaker 1>But yeah, I would say I was much cooler now
<v Speaker 1>than I ever was.
<v Speaker 2>I would agree. The story says adults under forty five
<v Speaker 2>were more willing to cling to being cool, while the
<v Speaker 2>hardcore Gen xers and the Boomers are more willing to
<v Speaker 2>accept that they are uncool. I think, yeah, the older
<v Speaker 2>Gen xers and the boomers are probably starting to make
<v Speaker 2>that shift into you know what, I don't care anymore.
<v Speaker 2>I don't care a good feeling. I'm starting to make
<v Speaker 2>that shift. I've probably got maybe three four more years
<v Speaker 2>before I go full on in I don't care anymore.
<v Speaker 2>I don't care, but I can I can say with
<v Speaker 2>one certainty, I am so much cooler than I was
<v Speaker 2>in high school. Absolutely. I mean I was a theater kid,
<v Speaker 2>you know which traditionally you all get the picture, right,
<v Speaker 2>theater kid. I was in the four by four club.
<v Speaker 2>I lettered in academics. I was in your book, you know,
<v Speaker 2>not your typical Damn Jare was cool in high school.
<v Speaker 1>I was in orchestra second.
<v Speaker 2>Oh, there you go, there you go, so you know,
<v Speaker 2>you do definitely know, and you know, I look back
<v Speaker 2>at pictures and stuff now of like my senior photos
<v Speaker 2>and stuff, I'm like, Damn, I was a dork. Oh
<v Speaker 2>I know there's any there's anything wrong with that, And
<v Speaker 2>things have changed in that aspect, like the dorks and
<v Speaker 2>the nerds, like they are all embraced and they are
<v Speaker 2>all doing everything with the jocks. Now I noticed it's
<v Speaker 2>all one big commu. We all found out they run
<v Speaker 2>the world after they graduate high school. I know, a
<v Speaker 2>litt nicer your friend, yeah, but I think even after
<v Speaker 2>high school. My wife was we just drove back from
<v Speaker 2>Nebraska this weekend and she was just flipping through some
<v Speaker 2>old photos and memories that were coming up on Facebook,
<v Speaker 2>and there was pictures of me when we first had
<v Speaker 2>kids and stuff, and I was young, like in my thirties,
<v Speaker 2>and I was looking at myself, like I straight up
<v Speaker 2>asked her. I was like, why did you procreate with that?
<v Speaker 1>Like?
<v Speaker 2>What was the appeal I was going through your head? Later,
<v Speaker 2>I was like, that's interesting. Do you feel like you've peaked? Yeah? Yeah, yeah,
<v Speaker 2>I think I'm getting I'm getting close to peaking.
<v Speaker 1>And I truly feel like I am now in like like,
<v Speaker 1>I'm more proud of myself now than I've ever been.
<v Speaker 1>And I hope that just keeps going. I hope that
<v Speaker 1>it just keeps increasing like that, right, because I'm yeah,
<v Speaker 1>I'm much more proud of myself now than I ever
<v Speaker 1>was in high school.
<v Speaker 2>That's a good feeling, isn't it. Yeah, because I feel
<v Speaker 2>like that on multiple levels. Yeah, Like you know, I
<v Speaker 2>used to be a scrawny dude. I've put on a
<v Speaker 2>little weight, little muscle. I feel better about myself physically, mentally,
<v Speaker 2>just a lot of life experience now at this point, right,
<v Speaker 2>And you feel good about that just knowing things.
<v Speaker 1>Like you know how to approach things now, Whereas like
<v Speaker 1>even in twenties and thirties, like I was a little
<v Speaker 1>more of a hot head than I am now, And
<v Speaker 1>so I think that even just the approach of life.
<v Speaker 2>Oh no, you don't even know, you don't even know. Well,
<v Speaker 2>you were in jail, I think I was the opposite.
<v Speaker 2>I was definitely more timid and quiet, not really willing
<v Speaker 2>to speak up. And now I do. I'm more apt
<v Speaker 2>to say, I call bs on things a lot.
<v Speaker 1>Well, probably a lot more confident, more confident.
<v Speaker 2>So yeah, come yeah, I'll just kind of tell it
<v Speaker 2>like it is now, and I don't care. I don't
<v Speaker 2>know if that's a good thing or a bad thing.
<v Speaker 2>It might it's probably gonna get me fired. No, it's
<v Speaker 2>at some point we do have a meeting with the
<v Speaker 2>big boss. We kind of do. We do.
<v Speaker 1>But you know, it's funny. I actually saw a little
<v Speaker 1>statistic recently that said most women don't peek and tell
<v Speaker 1>you're in your forties.
<v Speaker 2>Like I've heard that too.
<v Speaker 1>A lot of women millionaires, like, they don't become millionaires
<v Speaker 1>until they're like forty five. So I know, like now,
<v Speaker 1>at least as far as women go, I'm on the
<v Speaker 1>right track.
<v Speaker 2>Of Why is that, I don't know.
<v Speaker 1>I think again, it comes with the confidence, It comes
<v Speaker 1>with you know, you start to realize that you've got
<v Speaker 1>to just embrace what you've got going on right now.
<v Speaker 2>You can't keep especially body right, like your body image.
<v Speaker 2>You just like I am who I am at this part,
<v Speaker 2>I'm gonna rock what I got.
<v Speaker 1>And you know, you have to work at it. It
<v Speaker 1>gets harder and harder as you get older to keep
<v Speaker 1>everything in check. So I think that gives you a
<v Speaker 1>greater appreciation for what you do and what you're doing
<v Speaker 1>for your body and your health. So I think all
<v Speaker 1>of that it comes into play when it comes to
<v Speaker 1>the confidence women have in their forties.
<v Speaker 2>And I thinkain in the forties, you got some extra cash.
<v Speaker 2>You can buy a lot of spanks too. Yeah, you
<v Speaker 2>just hold everything in life, Jeremy, I know spanks a wife,
<v Speaker 2>I know, I know. Mhm
We recommend upgrading to the latest Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.
Please check your internet connection and refresh the page. You might also try disabling any ad blockers.
You can visit our support center if you're having problems.