<v Speaker 1>Jerry, Katie and Josh six one.
<v Speaker 2>Hundred off the air.
<v Speaker 3>You've been just kind of quickly discussing all of our
<v Speaker 3>food that we ate this weekend, which is what we do.
<v Speaker 3>And I have become addicted to throw in whole chickens
<v Speaker 3>on my trigger and letting them just you know, go
<v Speaker 3>to town for about five hours.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, I'm just doing various things with them.
<v Speaker 1>Well, it's good. You get the best bang for your buck.
<v Speaker 1>First of all, I think so.
<v Speaker 4>Full of all the crap.
<v Speaker 3>You just buy a couple of organic hold chickens and
<v Speaker 3>then you seizon them the way you want. And I
<v Speaker 3>took a giant loaf of French bread, cut it in
<v Speaker 3>half and opened it up, did my rotisserie chickens for
<v Speaker 3>about five hours, pulled them off, shredded them up, and
<v Speaker 3>then I slathered that French bread with some barbecue sauce,
<v Speaker 3>provolone cheese, the shredded chicken, and then pepper jack cheese
<v Speaker 3>on top of it and more barbecue sauce, and then
<v Speaker 3>threw it back on the trigger for another twenty minutes.
<v Speaker 3>Smoked sand It was a smoked sandwich. The bread got crispy,
<v Speaker 3>that the cheese got smoked.
<v Speaker 4>A little bit.
<v Speaker 2>Oh so the bread even gets like a smoke.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah it huh sounds so good. Yeah, you could even
<v Speaker 1>have that for breakfast.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, breakfast so quick.
<v Speaker 2>So I was watching this video over the weekend that
<v Speaker 2>talked about how a lot of people are trying to
<v Speaker 2>get protein in their diet, right, but some people don't
<v Speaker 2>care for like the processed meats and eggs and things
<v Speaker 2>that are traditional with American breakfast.
<v Speaker 4>Right.
<v Speaker 1>And there was this guy who had a video. He's like,
<v Speaker 1>I'm eating shrimp alfredo for breakfast because there are no rules.
<v Speaker 2>And I started doing a little digging, right, Apparently we've
<v Speaker 2>all been duped. We've all been duped because it's essentially true.
<v Speaker 2>This hardy American breakfast ye was engineered in the twenties
<v Speaker 2>by Edward Burnet's and he completely fooled us. They called
<v Speaker 2>him the father of public relations, and he was the
<v Speaker 2>nephew of Sigmund Freud. Right, So he was hired by
<v Speaker 2>the Beach Meat Packing Company to boost the sagging sales
<v Speaker 2>of baconketing.
<v Speaker 1>It's all marketing. He came in and he.
<v Speaker 4>Consulted milk, milk, does it really do a body good?
<v Speaker 2>He consulted his agency's doctor, and they agreed that a
<v Speaker 2>heavier breakfast was better for people because it gave them
<v Speaker 2>more energy to start the day. But then he took
<v Speaker 2>this and he had the doctor right to thousands of
<v Speaker 2>other physicians to see if they agree. But then he
<v Speaker 2>published it, so he had over forty five hundred doctors
<v Speaker 2>confirming this theory that Americans need to eat heavy breakfasts
<v Speaker 2>to improve their health, and people.
<v Speaker 1>Got on board with it. This was way back in
<v Speaker 1>the nineteen twenties.
<v Speaker 2>And now we're all convinced we need bacon, eggs, sausage,
<v Speaker 2>hash browns, orange juice.
<v Speaker 1>A side of fruit, and toast to start our day.
<v Speaker 1>And it's just not true. It's not true.
<v Speaker 2>And so the thing is here, why a lot of
<v Speaker 2>people on his hair?
<v Speaker 1>But it's funny just because like I.
<v Speaker 2>Love breakfast food, but I always thought that there was
<v Speaker 2>more to it, Like why can't we have lasagna for breakfast?
<v Speaker 1>But you can. There are no rules.
<v Speaker 4>You can't guess what. You're an adult.
<v Speaker 1>You're an adult and you can do what you want.
<v Speaker 3>You can have what lasagna and chocolate if gosh, yeah,
<v Speaker 3>I'm gonna go do that and wash it down in
<v Speaker 3>the mountain dew.
<v Speaker 4>Hey, if you're on the dating world, you might be
<v Speaker 4>familiar with some of the stuff floating around. Some of
<v Speaker 4>the stories.
<v Speaker 3>Gen Z singles right now are apparently going on practice
<v Speaker 3>dates just to build confidence.
<v Speaker 4>They're going out with people that they don't really you
<v Speaker 4>have too much of an attraction to.
<v Speaker 3>They're just going out and you know, practicing talking to
<v Speaker 3>people and ordering and being out in the public. I
<v Speaker 3>guess they're calling them practice dates to build dating confidence.
<v Speaker 2>Would not just be lovely if I found out I
<v Speaker 2>was the recipient of one of those they're just practicing on.
<v Speaker 3>Mely, Yeah, they say off, they just want to stop
<v Speaker 3>performing and act natural when they're out on the dates. Now,
<v Speaker 3>that's very similar to something called goblin intimacy right now,
<v Speaker 3>and they say the idea that is, instead of working
<v Speaker 3>your butt off to present the very best version of
<v Speaker 3>yourself when you're out there dating, just show up as
<v Speaker 3>a goblin. Now, not in full costume unless.
<v Speaker 1>You, I mean, unless they're into that.
<v Speaker 4>I don't know, but just he was an ogre Katie.
<v Speaker 4>But just show up as is. Be normal, Just be
<v Speaker 4>the normal you.
<v Speaker 3>You're not hiding any of your flaws, You're being upfront
<v Speaker 3>about your baggage.
<v Speaker 4>From the beginning.
<v Speaker 3>They're saying, you're just starting things off by being real
<v Speaker 3>and the other person can just take it.
<v Speaker 4>Or leave it.
<v Speaker 2>See, and I appreciate that, but I'm gonna tell you
<v Speaker 2>right now, you're gonna scare everybody off. You can't come
<v Speaker 2>out with like, you know, unkemptear, you've got your sweats on.
<v Speaker 4>That's one thing in this story they say.
<v Speaker 3>The big key to goblin intimacy or goblin intimacy is
<v Speaker 3>not coming across as low effort. You want to be authentic,
<v Speaker 3>but you still want to present and like you take
<v Speaker 3>care of yourself, clean yourself up a little bit. But
<v Speaker 3>it's just essentially your backstory and your life. That's what
<v Speaker 3>you're just kind of laying out on the tape.
<v Speaker 2>I've tried this and it doesn't necessarily work the way
<v Speaker 2>you want it to. Like I've been the person who's like,
<v Speaker 2>can I wear a basketball jersey to the first date?
<v Speaker 1>Why not? And they know how much I love the nuggets,
<v Speaker 1>you know, but it doesn't work that way.
<v Speaker 4>I don't think that would work.
<v Speaker 2>No, But to me that that tells you everything you
<v Speaker 2>need to know, or a lot that you need to
<v Speaker 2>know about me.
<v Speaker 1>I really am a massive fan.
<v Speaker 2>A lot of my life revolves around it, so I
<v Speaker 2>would think that's easy, getting things out of the way
<v Speaker 2>type stuff.
<v Speaker 1>But yeah, you just gotta be careful with that one.
<v Speaker 3>I would like it if I was out in the
<v Speaker 3>dating scene and then the person in front of me
<v Speaker 3>just was like, Hey, here's my life, this is what's
<v Speaker 3>going on.
<v Speaker 4>And I'm just good.
<v Speaker 3>I think I don't thank you because I feel like
<v Speaker 3>that's how I would be. No, but here's the thing,
<v Speaker 3>is you Katie. So I've been into Jail's trauma about it.
<v Speaker 3>I wear men's basketball shorts and I love Jail.
<v Speaker 1>Oh no, don't love Jail. I'll stop it.
<v Speaker 2>But so it does kind of make me think of
<v Speaker 2>the new gen Z trend though, where they are dating
<v Speaker 2>people who they view as uglier for lack of a
<v Speaker 2>better term. But they're saying they're dating people that they're
<v Speaker 2>not attracted to, and kind of the same thing. Yes, homely,
<v Speaker 2>thank you, thank you, Yes the ugly tree and hit
<v Speaker 2>every branch on the way down.
<v Speaker 1>Oh does that means still yeah?
<v Speaker 2>Okay, But they say they call this the six seven trend,
<v Speaker 2>and that is not supposed to be. I know, I'm sorry,
<v Speaker 2>but you're dating a six or a seven versus a ten.
<v Speaker 1>Right, So that's where it comes from.
<v Speaker 2>But here again, I just feel like, well you would think,
<v Speaker 2>but they're saying that women primarily are doing this because
<v Speaker 2>they think that these partners are going to treat them better.
<v Speaker 2>And I've got news for you. You gotta worry about
<v Speaker 2>the ugly ones too. You just do you do? You do?
<v Speaker 3>That's been that's been a myth for years and years
<v Speaker 3>that somebody ugly because they're just happy to be with you,
<v Speaker 3>they'll try harder.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, and that is not but they all are cheating.
<v Speaker 2>You can't trust anybody out there, Jeremy. But yeah, so
<v Speaker 2>this is.
<v Speaker 3>But it's because they say a lot of it too,
<v Speaker 3>is the dating app burnout.
<v Speaker 2>Everybody who's just picking their dates based on how someone
<v Speaker 2>looks left right, swipe left right, blah blah blah. They're
<v Speaker 2>saying that take that out of the picture, and you're
<v Speaker 2>just dating somebody based on their interest level, the things
<v Speaker 2>that they have listed on their profile, you're bound to
<v Speaker 2>get a better match. But again, I'm just saying people
<v Speaker 2>are out there doing your dirty regardless of how they look,
<v Speaker 2>So just be aware, be aware.
<v Speaker 3>And it's called six seven I know, I know, I
<v Speaker 3>knew that you probably wouldn't like that.
<v Speaker 2>There's also one more broke quick just because there's an
<v Speaker 2>area on a grande term called grande en when it
<v Speaker 2>comes to the dating world, and that has a lot
<v Speaker 2>I think of his coffee exactly, But it has nothing
<v Speaker 2>to do with the part. It has more to do
<v Speaker 2>with her song thank You Next. Okay, So it is
<v Speaker 2>just well, Josh, well, it's just it was her just saying,
<v Speaker 2>you know, I've I dated this person and I'm like,
<v Speaker 2>thank you next. Like you know, she famously dated Mac
<v Speaker 2>Miller and she was nice about it in that song
<v Speaker 2>because he passed away after she made that song. But
<v Speaker 2>it was really it was Pete Davidson. She made that
<v Speaker 2>song about right. But they say, like, with that in mind,
<v Speaker 2>it is that you're not holding a whole lot of
<v Speaker 2>like you're not mad at yourself or moving on because
<v Speaker 2>a lot of people are giving your permission, arguing you
<v Speaker 2>you're not keeping yourself in relationship that's not working just
<v Speaker 2>because it's uncomfortable to end it.
<v Speaker 1>You're moving on to the next one.
<v Speaker 2>You're afraid of what exactly like, you're moving on and
<v Speaker 2>there's no qualms about it.
<v Speaker 1>So thank you.
<v Speaker 2>Next is the theory as well that gen z ers
<v Speaker 2>are looking at. And there's just so much to do
<v Speaker 2>with dating now, there's all these so confusing.
<v Speaker 3>What happened to just hooking up a church camp? I know,
<v Speaker 3>you know, and then yeah, and then you're together forever?
<v Speaker 3>What the church camp in it?
<v Speaker 4>That's my new duty phrase, church camp. So I'll go
<v Speaker 4>to church camp.
<v Speaker 1>Let's go.
<v Speaker 4>My HOA is better than your h o A. My
<v Speaker 4>HOA is better than your h o A.
<v Speaker 1>What that's a weird. Yeah.
<v Speaker 4>We went out with the entire h o A over
<v Speaker 4>the weekend.
<v Speaker 3>It was like Friday night, and we went and had
<v Speaker 3>pasta and we did some drinking and we ended up
<v Speaker 3>at a brewery with the.
<v Speaker 1>Entire h o A and it was a great night.
<v Speaker 4>So my ha is better than your h o A.
<v Speaker 2>Yes, I thought you guys were just making some laws
<v Speaker 2>and making people's lives.
<v Speaker 4>Oh, we did that. Then we.
<v Speaker 3>Sent out some notices on weeds and peak colors and
<v Speaker 3>you know, spot cracks in your driveway.
<v Speaker 4>And then we went out and tore it up.
<v Speaker 3>One of the guys on the h o as he's
<v Speaker 3>an older gentleman, but he was swearing by these drinks
<v Speaker 3>called peach billinis.
<v Speaker 1>I love a good peach below.
<v Speaker 3>I have never had a peach before, and he made
<v Speaker 3>everybody get a peach ballini.
<v Speaker 1>They're so good.
<v Speaker 3>I didn't do it.
<v Speaker 4>I fought back. I was like, no, I'm I'm ordering
<v Speaker 4>a peroni. I'm a grown man. I'm a grown man,
<v Speaker 4>I'm not a peach.
<v Speaker 3>Nick Knack got one though, and she said I drank
<v Speaker 3>it a little too fast and the the night the song.
<v Speaker 1>Of peach bllinis will catch up to you.
<v Speaker 4>I had no idea. I had never heard of one before.
<v Speaker 1>And you can get one with or without alcohol, so yeah.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, yeah, definitely had alcohol.
<v Speaker 3>And they had like a peach in it, like like
<v Speaker 3>a peach on the side, and it looked really good.
<v Speaker 4>But it came in like a Martini style glass too.
<v Speaker 1>And I was like, I can't fancy. I can't.
<v Speaker 3>Yes, that is one of those drinks that you know,
<v Speaker 3>as a guy, You're like, I'd like one, but I'll
<v Speaker 3>just make my wife order and drink something.
<v Speaker 2>Realgulous coming up on peach season Tooi's for everybody, yes,
<v Speaker 2>but I will say it was.
<v Speaker 3>You know, it costs us a pretty penny to go
<v Speaker 3>out and have some fun, and you know, the brewery
<v Speaker 3>wasn't cheap either, just to grab a couple of beers.
<v Speaker 3>And I came across this story this morning talking about funflation,
<v Speaker 3>and I was like, that's what we hit this weekend,
<v Speaker 3>was funflation. Everybody's upset that it's costing so much to
<v Speaker 3>go out and just have fun. Yeah, to go get
<v Speaker 3>some cocktails, to go to a concert, to go on vacation,
<v Speaker 3>to go to a sporting event. It's so damn expensive anymore.
<v Speaker 3>I mean, just to go to a sporting event is expensive.
<v Speaker 3>And then you go downtown you got to find you know,
<v Speaker 3>fifty dollars parking again.
<v Speaker 1>The parking now I'm over ridiculous.
<v Speaker 2>And you better pay that fifty dollars because if you
<v Speaker 2>park somewhere sketch, you're gonna be worried about your car
<v Speaker 2>the whole.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah. Yeah, you know that's mudflation.
<v Speaker 3>When you get Munds on the way back to your cart,
<v Speaker 3>it'll cost you when you have to open up your
<v Speaker 3>wallet and get cass to the muggers.
<v Speaker 4>But I know, when we.
<v Speaker 3>Go out to eat, it's just a little family of four.
<v Speaker 3>I mean it is fully expected that you know, we'll
<v Speaker 3>be dropping a Honda easy peasy at least, or you know,
<v Speaker 3>one hundred and fifty.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, by the time it's all said and done.
<v Speaker 3>I took my daughter to the movies this weekend. It
<v Speaker 3>was just the two of us. It was fifty bucks
<v Speaker 3>to go see Toy Story. After tickets, one popcorn, and
<v Speaker 3>one drink that we shared and fifty bucks.
<v Speaker 2>And that's like to have fun and everything in life
<v Speaker 2>already before that is also expensive. I mean, just living
<v Speaker 2>right now is costing us a pretty penny. So then
<v Speaker 2>when you add going out and having a good time,
<v Speaker 2>attaching that kind.
<v Speaker 1>Of price tag to it is just it hurts your stomach,
<v Speaker 1>or at least it does mine. Mike Tommy stomach hurts. Well.
<v Speaker 3>Think about vacation season now too. Everyone's going leaving to
<v Speaker 3>have fun.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah.
<v Speaker 3>Funflation is hitting you at the airport, your rental car home.
<v Speaker 2>I had to take out alone, really perfect because you're
<v Speaker 2>going to New York.
<v Speaker 3>Because I had pick the most expensive spot to go to,
<v Speaker 3>No well.
<v Speaker 1>And I had so many things hit me leading up
<v Speaker 1>to this. My car.
<v Speaker 2>I had then invest in getting a garage because I'm
<v Speaker 2>having a garny to park it. I mean, so many
<v Speaker 2>things hit my wallet already and then I have to
<v Speaker 2>go have fun.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, then you got to buy new clothes and get
<v Speaker 4>your pan on. I didn't know his job. It's this
<v Speaker 4>is perfect thinking of somebody else.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, No, don't come for my nose, my vacation.
<v Speaker 4>Ain't it your hair colors?
<v Speaker 1>Way?
<v Speaker 4>What happened this weekend.
<v Speaker 2>It's the one thing I actually got off my couch
<v Speaker 2>for and it was get a little too long.
<v Speaker 1>I wanted it this dark.
<v Speaker 2>It's gonna fade, okay, So it'll get lighter in like
<v Speaker 2>a week, and by two weeks it'll.
<v Speaker 4>Be almost back to Yeah, let's hope saying one.
<v Speaker 1>But I do the box die. I am not ashamed
<v Speaker 1>to shut up. Like no, I went.
<v Speaker 2>And did the whole salon route once and my hair
<v Speaker 2>felt I'm not like Josh will attest to this. You
<v Speaker 2>remember when I went blonde for a minute. It comes poste,
<v Speaker 2>so I've sworn all that often. It looks boxed different,
<v Speaker 2>it looks awesome. It looks like my face in the
<v Speaker 2>head is fine. Jeremy like coming for my area.
<v Speaker 4>Aren't you impressed that?
<v Speaker 3>That was like one of the first things I said
<v Speaker 3>to you when you came in that I was like, hey,
<v Speaker 3>your hair looks darker.
<v Speaker 2>It was not nice the way it was one of
<v Speaker 2>those things that you say, it's darker nice or.
<v Speaker 4>Is that I'm getting used to it. I'm definitely getting
<v Speaker 4>used to it.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah. It washes you out, for sure, you know what, Jerry.
<v Speaker 4>It looks fine.
<v Speaker 3>I saw a guy this weekend who is probably in
<v Speaker 3>his sixties.
<v Speaker 4>It's my guess.
<v Speaker 3>Okay, he's got stark white like beard, generally like salt
<v Speaker 3>and pepper, you know, hair that you know, it's got
<v Speaker 3>some gray in it.
<v Speaker 4>And he showed up and I looked at him. I
<v Speaker 4>was like, whoa, because it was like jet black.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, you know, and you know when guys do it,
<v Speaker 3>it doesn't match, like the eyebrows or the goatee or
<v Speaker 3>the beard and the hair is jet black. And you're like,
<v Speaker 3>did you just get out of your hair you're trying
<v Speaker 3>to hold onto your eues.
<v Speaker 4>Yes, absolutely, yes, I am. Hey, I did it before
<v Speaker 4>we went to Colorado Company. We're on TV. Even though
<v Speaker 4>my head is buzzed.
<v Speaker 3>I even put a little hair color in because the
<v Speaker 3>sides are gray even still, you know, so I do it.
<v Speaker 3>I get it, you understand, But generally I go with
<v Speaker 3>a color that you know accentuates my skin tone and
<v Speaker 3>looks normal again.
<v Speaker 1>I have hair,
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