<v Speaker 1>Jerry Katy and Josh one hundred. I got a whole
<v Speaker 1>stack of stuff here. It's a little odds and end segment.
<v Speaker 1>Like I said, the key to tell you right owners,
<v Speaker 1>there's so many.
<v Speaker 2>Of them, They're everywhere everywhere. That's like the most the
<v Speaker 2>vehicle I see the most out there is probably the
<v Speaker 2>key to tell you ride.
<v Speaker 1>I did an endorsement for Kia not too long ago,
<v Speaker 1>and the GM at the dealership was like, we cannot
<v Speaker 1>keep these things on the lots. As soon as they
<v Speaker 1>come in, boom, they're gone. Well, anyway, this is kind
<v Speaker 1>of scary, So heads up to all the Key I
<v Speaker 1>tell you ride owners. Roughly almost half a billion of
<v Speaker 1>them have been recalled because there's a little switch I
<v Speaker 1>guess on the side of the seat that can get stuck,
<v Speaker 1>so the power seat motor can essentially overheat and catch
<v Speaker 1>your car on fire. All things to be worried about
<v Speaker 1>your little a little back and forth thing on the
<v Speaker 1>on the seat. So they're encouraging people to get into
<v Speaker 1>a dealership they do like a little fuse thing on
<v Speaker 1>there to try to fix it. But in the meantime
<v Speaker 1>they are encouraging people that have Ki Telia rights to
<v Speaker 1>be parking their vehicles outside, you know, just in case
<v Speaker 1>it blows up or something.
<v Speaker 2>Goodness, he's half a million people are dealing with that.
<v Speaker 1>Well half a billion. Check that, yeah, half a million,
<v Speaker 1>half a million. I added a zero. That's a lot
<v Speaker 1>of people.
<v Speaker 3>Geez.
<v Speaker 1>Anyway, So check your key tail right, make sure that
<v Speaker 1>little motor's not sitting there going fine.
<v Speaker 4>That's just going to press you up against the steering wheel.
<v Speaker 2>You like, you'll never stop.
<v Speaker 1>I'm going story about ants this morning. If you see
<v Speaker 1>an ant in your kitchen, your first instinct is probably
<v Speaker 1>to squish it, right. Biology experts are saying, don't squish
<v Speaker 1>ants in your house because it's gonna make the problem worse.
<v Speaker 3>I didn't know this.
<v Speaker 1>When you sqush an ant, it automatically releases pheromones that
<v Speaker 1>signal to other ants in the area or in the
<v Speaker 1>colony that there is distress somewhere. And what happens, All
<v Speaker 1>the other ants rush over to remove the body or
<v Speaker 1>to help that ant, and the next thing you know,
<v Speaker 1>you've got a swarm of ants in your house. It's
<v Speaker 1>kind of like like if you're at the club at night,
<v Speaker 1>you know, the big girl dancing up on you. Guys
<v Speaker 1>release pheromones or other buddies come over.
<v Speaker 2>And save him, or vice versa. If you're a girl
<v Speaker 2>and so no sweaty.
<v Speaker 3>Gush end of the night, that big girl's on you
<v Speaker 3>and you're like pheromones.
<v Speaker 2>No, that goes both ways.
<v Speaker 3>Where my boys, you know, they rush over and they
<v Speaker 3>carry you off. Anyway, you should.
<v Speaker 2>Just go put your aunt outside, Put your aunt outside?
<v Speaker 3>Are you laughing at Joe?
<v Speaker 4>I didn't think you'd say that, But nothing, get off me.
<v Speaker 2>Have you had that problem so many times that that
<v Speaker 2>was your example?
<v Speaker 3>Oh yeah, you've been at the club at the end
<v Speaker 3>of the night, you know, and Pickens. You know you
<v Speaker 3>got the big girl on you.
<v Speaker 1>Jervase, My boys come rushing over and they lift me
<v Speaker 1>up and carry me out.
<v Speaker 2>We have wing women too, just so you know, all right.
<v Speaker 3>And then the final thing I have is the how
<v Speaker 3>do you even say this?
<v Speaker 1>The sicklos spora has that house the lettuce turds, the
<v Speaker 1>nation lettuce infection. They're saying it's the worst year on
<v Speaker 1>record for this type of infection from produce, something like
<v Speaker 1>close to five thousand infections already. The weird thing is
<v Speaker 1>is thirty three hundred of these are coming out of Michigan.
<v Speaker 1>There's a lot of going on in Michigan. Is happening
<v Speaker 1>in Michigan again, more evidence pointing to lettuce any sort
<v Speaker 1>of green salad mixes.
<v Speaker 3>Luckily no deaths have been reported.
<v Speaker 2>Goodness, because it seems like it really makes you sick.
<v Speaker 4>Just pooping themselves.
<v Speaker 1>Okay, Yeah, So I was talking to knick Knack about
<v Speaker 1>this last night. I was like, Oh, what's the big deal?
<v Speaker 3>It sounds refreshing.
<v Speaker 1>She's like, apparently, if you look into this like it
<v Speaker 1>happens incredibly unexpectedly, you have no notice.
<v Speaker 3>All of a sudden, you'll be.
<v Speaker 1>Sitting there and you're like, oh my god, I can't
<v Speaker 1>stop it, and you'll just release.
<v Speaker 2>Did you imagine if we're just doing the show right
<v Speaker 2>here and all of a sudden, I know.
<v Speaker 3>She's like, what if it happens at work. I'm like, well,
<v Speaker 3>then your coworkers are gonna know you on a whole
<v Speaker 3>different level.
<v Speaker 2>I guess we're already pretty close.
<v Speaker 1>But it's like, it is so bad that your poor
<v Speaker 1>little sphincter cannot hold on and that damn will break
<v Speaker 1>like and it.
<v Speaker 2>Is like constant. That's what they're saying is it's just
<v Speaker 2>like you let.
<v Speaker 3>Things go good.
<v Speaker 2>I didn't even know you still had any. But the
<v Speaker 2>good news is, here's the thing. This is a nationwide
<v Speaker 2>issue right now, so when they're talking about it, they're
<v Speaker 2>really talking about it in that dynamic. But Colorado, the
<v Speaker 2>Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment said the number
<v Speaker 2>of cases in Colorado this year is fairly typical. This
<v Speaker 2>is about how many cases we see every year because
<v Speaker 2>this is not a new thing. It happens all the time,
<v Speaker 2>and it usually is caused by the fruit and vegetables
<v Speaker 2>that were contaminated by irrigation water tainted with feces, So
<v Speaker 2>not a new thing, it has happened before. And the
<v Speaker 2>bad foods, like you said, prepackaged lettuce and salad mixes,
<v Speaker 2>raspberry cilantro, that kind of stuff. But there's things you
<v Speaker 2>can do to like combat it, even if you are
<v Speaker 2>really worry even if you're like, no, Katie, I'm not
<v Speaker 2>eating those things, even if Colorado's not at risk. Well,
<v Speaker 2>they're saying, like, if you have a salad every day,
<v Speaker 2>instead have like a stir fry bowl or a bowl
<v Speaker 2>of yeah, because then you're still getting your veggies and everything,
<v Speaker 2>but in a different way them because that's the key.
<v Speaker 2>You have to cook your vegetables or make sure you're
<v Speaker 2>using frozen vegetables or fruit. So there's some things that
<v Speaker 2>you can do, but I think the wide scope of
<v Speaker 2>things is saying everyone is at risk. Where Colorado we're
<v Speaker 2>still pretty safe with it.
<v Speaker 3>Still I am not eating bag lettuce right now. It
<v Speaker 3>is fun because most of this is coming from the
<v Speaker 3>lettuce issues. Okay, that's like the main thing that you know.
<v Speaker 1>There's no lettuce in the produce section at stores right
<v Speaker 1>now and fast food companies that pulled the lettuce. But
<v Speaker 1>I was reading the stats in about I think it
<v Speaker 1>was like sixty percent of the cases are women. Oh no,
<v Speaker 1>spot on it because all my wife eats is salads. Like,
<v Speaker 1>if we go out to dinner, she's getting a salad.
<v Speaker 1>What do you want for dinner at home? I want
<v Speaker 1>a salad. So it's all the ladies and the salads
<v Speaker 1>that you guys love. There are us guys over here
<v Speaker 1>just eating our cheeseburgers and pigan on. It ain't nobody
<v Speaker 1>getting I feel great cheeseburger at some point on the show.
<v Speaker 1>I honestly would love to talk to somebody who's had
<v Speaker 1>these the lettuce diarrhea and just to kind of hear
<v Speaker 1>like what they're going through, like a firsthand experience.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, well, I heard it's like antibiotics that will help
<v Speaker 2>you clear up, right, Like do you get prescribed anabiotics,
<v Speaker 2>You go to the doctor, it'll take care of it.
<v Speaker 2>But a lot of people aren't doing that because they
<v Speaker 2>thinks of antabiotics when you get you know, those symptoms.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah yeah, I mean luckily nobody's died, but like I
<v Speaker 1>said yesterday, like honestly, after vacation and eating out for
<v Speaker 1>like ten days, I know, it sounds incredibly refreshing.
<v Speaker 2>Ah dairy, right, homie.
<v Speaker 1>Right, it's like starting fresh. It's like a colon clean.
<v Speaker 3>It is a clean slate for sure.
<v Speaker 1>At some point on the show, I honestly would love
<v Speaker 1>to talk to somebody who's had these the lettuce diarrhea
<v Speaker 1>and just to kind of hear like what they're going through,
<v Speaker 1>like a firsthand experience.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah well, I heard it's like antibiotics that will help
<v Speaker 2>you clear up, right, Like do you get prescribed antabotics,
<v Speaker 2>You go to the doctor, it'll take care of it.
<v Speaker 2>But a lot of people aren't doing that, Like who
<v Speaker 2>thinks of antibiotics when you get, you know, those symptoms.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, yeah, I mean luckily nobody's died.
<v Speaker 1>But like I said yesterday, like honestly, after vacation and
<v Speaker 1>eating out for like ten days, I know, it sounds
<v Speaker 1>incredibly refreshing, you, right, Homie, right, same, It's like starting fresh.
<v Speaker 2>It's like a clean flight.
<v Speaker 4>It is a clean for sure.
<v Speaker 1>Katie started talking about Baby Nana yesterday and what she's collecting,
<v Speaker 1>and I guess this is the thing.
<v Speaker 2>Huh, well, yeah, well here's the thing is, Baby Nana
<v Speaker 2>has always loved stuffed animals, like even when she was
<v Speaker 2>a baby, the bigger the stuffed animal, the bigger, the
<v Speaker 2>smile on her face, like she's always just been fascinating
<v Speaker 2>with all of them, like all of them. And so
<v Speaker 2>she's got older and even you know, moved out of
<v Speaker 2>the house and everything, she still asks for stuffed animals
<v Speaker 2>and all that stuff. And I was just like, is
<v Speaker 2>this ever gonna end? Like is this always gonna be
<v Speaker 2>a thing for you? And now we have like the
<v Speaker 2>La Boo boos, And if you're familiar with the jelly cats,
<v Speaker 2>oh gosh, I just spent a whole hour in New
<v Speaker 2>York about jelly cats. But she's always kind of gravitated
<v Speaker 2>towards these things trendy little stuffed animals that people start buying,
<v Speaker 2>and then because everybody's buying him. I mean those labooboos
<v Speaker 2>were up to like eighty bucks sometimes, you know, like
<v Speaker 2>super spendy. But uh, I was kind of asking her
<v Speaker 2>about this yesterday. I was quizzing her, like, why do
<v Speaker 2>you buy them? Is it like the feeling of it
<v Speaker 2>when you purchase it, Like, don't.
<v Speaker 3>Be offended, but why are you still collecting stuff?
<v Speaker 4>Well?
<v Speaker 2>I just wanted to kind of get some of the backstory,
<v Speaker 2>like why is this something that still intrigues you in
<v Speaker 2>your early.
<v Speaker 3>Twenties because I saw some pictures.
<v Speaker 1>You actually showed me some pictures yesterday of her standing
<v Speaker 1>in this store like holding.
<v Speaker 3>Her little stuff.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, and I was like, oh, that's adorable for her,
<v Speaker 2>that's really cute. But we're in all of her friends
<v Speaker 2>do it. So that's where I was like, this isn't
<v Speaker 2>just something specific to her and like some kind of
<v Speaker 2>weird childhood she could not grow.
<v Speaker 3>Nobody's dating and it is like, well, but that's.
<v Speaker 2>It, and I want I asked her this specifically because
<v Speaker 2>you know this gen z they're all about like talking
<v Speaker 2>to your her child and not ignoring they don't grow up.
<v Speaker 2>They don't grow up like you thought we were bad
<v Speaker 2>with toys r us Like she still no, no, no,
<v Speaker 2>she's not wearing. But they definitely he's telling me to
<v Speaker 2>urinate my opinion. But they do embrace the childhood factor
<v Speaker 2>of life and so swings up. They think it's a
<v Speaker 2>good thing that they don't grow up in that aspect.
<v Speaker 2>I mean, let's be honest. Baby Nana still has two jobs,
<v Speaker 2>she goes to school. I mean, she has a career,
<v Speaker 2>she has a podcast stuff, he's a boyfriend, she has friends.
<v Speaker 2>Like she's a very well rounded individual and so this
<v Speaker 2>little stuffy animal thing, I was just like, again, I
<v Speaker 2>just I wanted to know more about it.
<v Speaker 4>Is it just that she's a slave to trends? Being
<v Speaker 4>like she loves the what were those dumpling things too?
<v Speaker 4>Like it's not just the.
<v Speaker 3>Stuff squishy butter, Yes, the butter.
<v Speaker 4>And it's so it's not just like she she I
<v Speaker 4>think this generation sees all this stuff on TikTok or
<v Speaker 4>Instagram or whatever and they're like I need it instantly,
<v Speaker 4>and that to me, like I see it with my
<v Speaker 4>sister who's just a little bit older than your daughter,
<v Speaker 4>and it's like they see these things and instantly are like,
<v Speaker 4>we got to go to five below and get the
<v Speaker 4>dumplings or we got it, like and that's.
<v Speaker 3>Why they sell out so quick. Yeah, and it's just like,
<v Speaker 3>maybe it's not stuffies themselves.
<v Speaker 1>We gotta come up with something that all these weirdos love. Yeah,
<v Speaker 1>they'll buy from us, and they can buy from us, right.
<v Speaker 2>But that's the thing is I think not only is
<v Speaker 2>there that where they want to have the trendiest, latest
<v Speaker 2>thing that they see, but then you have the social
<v Speaker 2>media platforms, I mean TikTok shop, They're like, we see
<v Speaker 2>you here, we come. Now they have everything that they need.
<v Speaker 2>So now they'll scroll and they'll see somebody's stuffed animal
<v Speaker 2>and maybe not that she told me. She's like one
<v Speaker 2>of the things that girls specifically like to do. They'll
<v Speaker 2>go buy the thirty dollars key chain, I mean the
<v Speaker 2>stuffed animals the size of like the tennis ball, right,
<v Speaker 2>the size of a tennis ball is thirty five dollars.
<v Speaker 2>But it comes on a keychain and they hang it
<v Speaker 2>from their purse and then when they go get coffee
<v Speaker 2>and they take their Instagram post your chain. Keychain's in
<v Speaker 2>there and people see it and they're like, oh God,
<v Speaker 2>I love her keychain. And then should I start doing
<v Speaker 2>seeing that on TikTok and you hit the TikTok shot
<v Speaker 2>button and buy that key chain instantly.
<v Speaker 3>It's so easy.
<v Speaker 1>You asked her how much money she's spent on all this?
<v Speaker 1>She added all this up by chance.
<v Speaker 2>I am so afraid to ask her how much money
<v Speaker 2>she has spent on stuff to animals.
<v Speaker 1>This is not a good investment. Like this reminds me
<v Speaker 1>of beanie babies. I know the craze behind that. Everybody
<v Speaker 1>had to have them. There was lines And now you
<v Speaker 1>know what, I've got a couple bins in my basement
<v Speaker 1>and I don't know what to do with them, Yes,
<v Speaker 1>because I feel guilty throwing them away.
<v Speaker 2>And that's the thing is that was before the day
<v Speaker 2>and age of the internet, So that was just word
<v Speaker 2>of mouth and TV and radio and stuffy. Way worse
<v Speaker 2>now now it is in your face all the time.
<v Speaker 1>My daughter is into these, Uh they're Douglas stuffed animals.
<v Speaker 3>You seeing the Douglass.
<v Speaker 2>Ones so expensive and the other.
<v Speaker 3>Thing, and I'm even like, you're going into middle school?
<v Speaker 3>Is this something you're still.
<v Speaker 1>I guess it's fine then, because it's like her and
<v Speaker 1>her little girlfriends, they all search out these Douglas dogs.
<v Speaker 3>They're like collecting all the dogs. But she's much younger
<v Speaker 3>than your daughter. She is.
<v Speaker 2>But again, like you're saying, you would think that it
<v Speaker 2>would kind of curb a little bit if she gets
<v Speaker 2>in school, and it doesn't. And that's where so weird
<v Speaker 2>because I remember so well.
<v Speaker 1>You know what, Listen, I don't have room to talk
<v Speaker 1>because I collect.
<v Speaker 3>I have an action.
<v Speaker 2>You do you do? And for me though, like so,
<v Speaker 2>I don't know if it's different for girls who like
<v Speaker 2>grew up and became adults in like the early two thousands,
<v Speaker 2>because when I became an adult, all I wanted to
<v Speaker 2>do was be an adult. I didn't have stuffed animals
<v Speaker 2>and kiddy things.
<v Speaker 3>Weird, you know for me is that she puts all
<v Speaker 3>these in her car too, like all across her back seat.
<v Speaker 2>She did until she got her window smashed out that one.
<v Speaker 3>Time somebody was on the lookout for stuff told her.
<v Speaker 2>You have things in your back seat, even if it's
<v Speaker 2>stuffed animals, because people think that they're valuable. So she
<v Speaker 2>stopped doing that, but it wasn't for her.
<v Speaker 1>With a stuffed octopuss in the back seat. You you
<v Speaker 1>want to think you want to.
<v Speaker 2>Take it octopus? You know.
<v Speaker 3>You had to steal that stuffy octopus and put it
<v Speaker 3>on the black muk. We can make throwing it bucks
<v Speaker 3>you sure.
<v Speaker 2>Again, So, but it is a thing, and I just want,
<v Speaker 2>like other parents call in and tell us if you
<v Speaker 2>are Yeah, you know kid kids hundreds of dollars on
<v Speaker 2>stuffed animals in their early adult adults.
<v Speaker 3>Yes, you got a grown ass adult in your life
<v Speaker 3>and they're collecting stuffies. We want to hear about it.
<v Speaker 2>They're not going to the club anymore, they're not spending
<v Speaker 2>all their money.
<v Speaker 1>On they're not drinking, they're not smoking, they're not having promiscuous,
<v Speaker 1>unprotected relations.
<v Speaker 3>No, they're getting stuffies.
<v Speaker 2>Playing with their jelly cats.
<v Speaker 3>Different, different kind of stuffy is what they're getting.
<v Speaker 1>A shout out to Mark, who just called in and
<v Speaker 1>said he had a buddy that was dating this woman
<v Speaker 1>and they made their way back to her house. He's like,
<v Speaker 1>she had like forty stuffed animals on the bed. Oh,
<v Speaker 1>and his buddy's like, was this a red flag?
<v Speaker 2>That's a little different.
<v Speaker 3>Well, Mark said she also had four cats, so it's
<v Speaker 3>full red flags right there. Four cats and forty stuffed animals.
<v Speaker 2>Those two things combined is what gets you say.
<v Speaker 1>Yes yes, Although I like the way he ended it.
<v Speaker 1>He said, you know, my buddy wasn't really a catch either.
<v Speaker 1>He's like, so maybe he was a match made in heaven.
<v Speaker 3>I don't know.
<v Speaker 2>He should have picked up on that then, so funny
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