#3577: Uncle Log

Mike is sick. Josh’s brother is here… but are Robb and Dr. Sroka actually friends? Happiness is… a 12 year old at Christmas. Hey Boomer! What’s the news? Plus. poop. This Episode Is Sponsored By: SOUL and their amazing “Out of Office” gummies.  Head to http://WWW.GETSOUL.COM and use code TMOS for 40% off your order. Your continuous support for our sponsors keeps us on the airwaves and we can’t thank you enough!

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WEBVTT

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[SPEAKER_09]: All right, welcome to our show.

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[SPEAKER_08]: And our best for the second half of the Cowover Night Show.

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[SPEAKER_08]: Well, Merry Christmas, Mike, Rob, and Josh.

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[SPEAKER_08]: May your holiday be filled with all the peace, love, and warmth of the season.

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[SPEAKER_08]: And maybe just baby, a little snow on Christmas morning.

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[SPEAKER_09]: Michael Mera, Radio Entertainment.

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[SPEAKER_09]: You can listen to the Michael Mery Show at MichaelMeryShow.com.

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[SPEAKER_10]: Wow, what have we here?

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[SPEAKER_05]: It’s a podcast.

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[SPEAKER_05]: But I want to excitement.

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[SPEAKER_05]: We have today.

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[SPEAKER_09]: It’s the Michael Mery Show with Michael Mery.

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[SPEAKER_09]: And Rob Spiewack.

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[SPEAKER_09]: Now here’s Mike.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Hi everybody.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Welcome to the Michael Mery Show.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Great to have you along on a Wednesday.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Broadcast and I am going to offer this to you that I have really no idea what this show is going to be like other than the fact that I woke up this morning at 6 a.m.

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[SPEAKER_13]: to prepare the show as I do most mornings.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And I probably had the most difficult time staying awake that I have ever had in my life.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And it is due to the fact that the VIX companies LaVoris and VIX Vaporub and the Nightquill Products, I don’t think I’ve ever been more influenced by that.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Did you take it?

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[SPEAKER_13]: I want to say eight thirty.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Why?

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[SPEAKER_12]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_12]: Eight thirty nine.

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[SPEAKER_12]: Just jumping in.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Would you think that?

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[SPEAKER_13]: What do you mean so?

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[SPEAKER_13]: It’s just jumping in.

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[SPEAKER_12]: It takes a little while for it to make a little while.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Like 14 hours.

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[SPEAKER_12]: He took it 12 hours.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_02]: 12 hours.

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[SPEAKER_02]: He doesn’t listen.

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[SPEAKER_02]: He doesn’t listen.

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[SPEAKER_02]: He doesn’t listen.

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[SPEAKER_02]: He doesn’t listen.

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[SPEAKER_02]: He doesn’t listen.

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[SPEAKER_02]: He doesn’t listen.

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[SPEAKER_12]: He doesn’t.

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[SPEAKER_12]: But I’m curious, Mike, when you’re this hyped up on goofballs like that, do you think when you look back on the show, the show will have felt like it dragged for you or will it be a show that zooms by because you’re under the influence?

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[SPEAKER_13]: I have no idea.

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[SPEAKER_13]: All I know is that they’re, you know, in all the shows where I’ve had a little, you know, fun the night before, with some adult beverages, they’ve usually even pretty goofy.

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[SPEAKER_02]: I am.

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[SPEAKER_02]: The prescribed amount.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Or did you just try?

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[SPEAKER_13]: Well, here’s the thing.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Those little dixie cups they give you on the top.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_02]: The top.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Those have gone missing.

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[SPEAKER_13]: So I chug a lug the Nikron.

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[SPEAKER_04]: I probably did a little bit more than this.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Probably two.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, that’s way too much.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Two healthy ones.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_12]: Did you put three coffee beans in it for luck?

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[SPEAKER_13]: I did not, I did not, but I actually went to a neighbor’s house the other night, a parents of a friend of Michael’s who he was he’s Sicilian on you know, and he brought out a espresso and a little shot of San Bucca, for your lovely, thank you Frank, I appreciate that it was it was it was delectable and he is no more

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[SPEAKER_13]: Sicilian looking, then I would never, ever, ever, ever pick him to be Italian in any way.

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[SPEAKER_13]: He is the most, he is the least Italian looking person.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Is he like Northern Italian like blonde?

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[SPEAKER_13]: I, we got into a discussion with Vikings and all, you know, when you talk about all of us, the human condition, we’re all a bunch of Mongols, we’re all a mixture of different

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[SPEAKER_13]: you’re really not right now I mean you may may think you are but no I don’t think yeah no I’m maybe the most mixed up of us all

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[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, I’m 50 when I did the the whole.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Oh my god, I’ve got something that I completely forgot.

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[SPEAKER_13]: There we go.

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[SPEAKER_13]: That’s that’s what that happens when you’re dealing with this.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I have to tell you that I got a fascinating letter.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Yesterday sent to my home regarding a ancestry dot com that.

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[SPEAKER_13]: How does this go?

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[SPEAKER_13]: He was, he was tracing his family trees trying to fill in the blanks and there was my Great grandfather who I never knew and my grandparents and my mother and then we used to have an A relative called Aunt Ruth and Uncle Wally they lived in California.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I remember one time when my parents and I went out to

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[SPEAKER_13]: Jacket is that the trip I believe that is it could be we went to we did two Disney’s when they’re very short time my mind I just have to say before I monopolize the conversation can we bring in your brother Matt Joyce here let’s let’s bring Matt in and say hi to Josh Roca’s brother Matt Soroka Doctor good to see you how are you today I’m doing well Mike good to see you thanks for bringing me in rock Josh hi I buddy

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[SPEAKER_13]: Great to now this is interesting.

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[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, well, this is this is a little Christmas music It’s a holiday thing.

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[SPEAKER_11]: Oh, I get interviews now.

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[SPEAKER_11]: I love it.

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[SPEAKER_11]: Let’s go.

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[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, but you’re outside You are so filled with trouble for me today

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[SPEAKER_13]: because I’m sick.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I know, I know.

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[SPEAKER_13]: It’s directed at you, but when you don’t listen in the first segment, that’s, you know, that frustrates you.

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[SPEAKER_12]: I miss one letter, A for P. I apologize.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I don’t say A, M and P, M, I said it eight, 30.

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[SPEAKER_13]: He asked me eight, 30.

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[SPEAKER_13]: He just missed the math that it was eight, 30, as for speaking.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_12]: Well, I apologize for that.

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[SPEAKER_12]: Are you now Mike is mocking me?

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[SPEAKER_12]: Stop it.

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[SPEAKER_12]: How dare you?

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[SPEAKER_12]: I don’t get to play a lot of music on the show, so when I do, I enjoy it.

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[SPEAKER_13]: We’ll get back to, we will get back to the ancestry stuff that I got really was a wildcard.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Carla brought it up to me, put it in front of me, and I read it and said, wow, and he had a diagram and everything he wants me to, he wants to send me the whole 41 page PDF on the page.

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[SPEAKER_02]: No thank you.

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[SPEAKER_02]: No thank you.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, it’s real.

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[SPEAKER_02]: It’s real.

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[SPEAKER_02]: What’s that?

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[SPEAKER_02]: Is he going to be in Maine?

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[SPEAKER_02]: He is not.

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[SPEAKER_13]: He is not.

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[SPEAKER_13]: He’s not, but I mean, we’re related, obviously.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I think in some sort of way.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Although, yeah, I can’t go into what I’ve gone into the details about my mom and my grandmother and biologically my…

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[SPEAKER_13]: maternal grandfather was not my biological maternal grandfather, but he was didn’t marry him.

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[SPEAKER_13]: He went, no, no, it was, yeah, I suppose that’s what it was, but more of a grandfather than anybody’s biological could have been.

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[SPEAKER_12]: And to what I said earlier, anyone who was fortunate enough, blessed enough to come

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[SPEAKER_12]: Okay, then I will step away like kicked my camera just briefly those of you who are blessed enough to go to our first state theater show We had pictures of our youths growing up and my youths and my quiz it Disneyland in a sport jacket.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, drop out come back in Rob That’s not that’s drop out and come back in Rob

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[SPEAKER_13]: Can Rob hear me?

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[SPEAKER_13]: Can you guys hear me?

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[SPEAKER_02]: There we go.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Can you hear me, Josh?

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Rob, all right.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Struggle until leaves.

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[SPEAKER_02]: You didn’t want to go.

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[SPEAKER_02]: You never likes to miss the conversation.

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[SPEAKER_13]: The can I just say Matt first of all you’re the efforts put forth by your brother in the year 2025 for this show have been the delightful and I Bring in Madden to praise me.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I will I have to I really have to I like to do without Rob here Because Rob gets jealous because Rob does

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[SPEAKER_13]: That’s right, nothing.

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[SPEAKER_12]: I just don’t care just in time to hear that.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Very good.

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[SPEAKER_13]: So, can you put the money that we have to use to get your efforts up against Josh Schroke, you would agree yourself that he does an awful lot for the show.

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[SPEAKER_12]: He does.

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[SPEAKER_13]: He does.

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[SPEAKER_12]: And that allows me to come along, which is nice.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Which is, you know, that being that’s that I think I express to you the other day that I want more if you can, you know, and I won’t get it.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Rob’s back in Leesburg, so I don’t have to do the Sounders and videos.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And he runs Rob runs the the some of the audio.

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[SPEAKER_13]: on the show.

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[SPEAKER_13]: So that’s that’s good too.

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[SPEAKER_13]: But I was complimenting your brother for really, you know, constantly improving things, tweaking things, making things more fun.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And as far as he’s a great video.

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[SPEAKER_12]: What’s that what I can you say that like that with that because you’re driving a wedge between is right now Okay, I thought I was going to come on here.

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[SPEAKER_12]: What a wedge between you and Josh.

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[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, and Matt you pipe down for a second We and welcome, but pipe down a wedge between you and Josh.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yes, I want to be your friend Mike You just have to return a couple texts

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[SPEAKER_13]: And remember a couple of cookbooks.

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[SPEAKER_13]: No, no, I don’t care about the friends thing.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I’m talking about work.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I’m talking about the productivity and, you know, I still see it as a divide in conquer right now.

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[SPEAKER_12]: because you’re saying, well, you know, he does so much and he’s so great and I will ask for you and not get anything and I understand.

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[SPEAKER_13]: But I mean, you know what I’m talking about, you know how they talk about, use your brain.

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[SPEAKER_13]: You have much of a how much percentage of your brain.

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[SPEAKER_13]: You use, that’s what this is.

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[SPEAKER_13]: This is, you know, but I don’t wanna make it about you.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I wanna make it about, you know, Josh and as far as friendships go when you, you like to say people are your friend.

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[SPEAKER_13]: You crave friendships, I think.

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[SPEAKER_12]: down to about three.

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[SPEAKER_12]: So I need to treasure what I have.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I’m not burdened with that.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I’m really not.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I gave up on that.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I don’t know when I gave up on that, but I love you.

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[SPEAKER_13]: You can explain that.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I love acquaintances.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And we’re friends, right?

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[SPEAKER_13]: You and I.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Yes, you and I are different.

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[SPEAKER_13]: You and I are very, very definitely friends and we’ll be until the day I drop my last breath.

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[SPEAKER_13]: What’s that?

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[SPEAKER_13]: You’ve got your call, buddies.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, but those are acquaintances, you know?

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, although I have a part of a, yes, those are friends.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Because you care about what they think.

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[SPEAKER_02]: You care about what they think of you.

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[SPEAKER_12]: But what does a friend, is that what?

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[SPEAKER_12]: Demoing’s friendship.

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[SPEAKER_12]: I think a friendship is like, would you have them over for dinner?

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[SPEAKER_12]: Would you have them over to hang out outside of how you know them?

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[SPEAKER_12]: Like Mike, you knew a lot of people when you were bowling.

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[SPEAKER_12]: But would you socialize with them other than bowling?

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[SPEAKER_12]: I don’t think so.

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[SPEAKER_13]: However, the, I am part of a large group.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And Carl and I will be going out for New Year’s Eve down here for the very first time.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And I mean, I, we haven’t been in almost my entire relationship with her.

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[SPEAKER_13]: We haven’t had a New Year’s Eve celebration.

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[SPEAKER_12]: Did you stay up till like, did you stay up till midnight last year even if you didn’t do it?

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[SPEAKER_13]: Probably not.

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[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, I haven’t in years.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And so this is going to be, this is a guy who I really enjoy and he is a New England guy and he is kind of a, how would I put it, a ringmaster when it comes to getting people together.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And this is going to be three or four couples, and it ended up, I think we have 24 couples that are going to be available.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And that’s going to be wild and festive and fun.

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[SPEAKER_13]: And I know every single person there.

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[SPEAKER_13]: So in that sense, dear friends, not necessarily, but people I know and that I would love to have Carla around 100%.

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[SPEAKER_13]: cool and well this shindig be at his home or like at the clubhouse or where will it be it’s a happy valley it’s a happy valley and you know the thing about it is that the the idea of you know YouTube being friends

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[SPEAKER_13]: that works for this show in my opinion, I think that you, and then you, but when Matt was in during the pre-show meeting today, you immediately said, my friend, and I am curious to explore that, and that’s why we bring Josh’s brother in here to, when Rob says, a friend, you’ve been, you’ve socialized with Rob, right?

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[SPEAKER_13]: Gone to a game or something like that, is that right, Matt?

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[SPEAKER_11]: Well, I’m a little nervous now, because now I feel like I’ve been thrown into middle of this kind of spat here between Cohos and talk about friendship.

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[SPEAKER_11]: I mean defined friendship.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I met Robert trouble maker that I ever tell you that’s Roca you’re a trouble man How do you get spat out of that we were talking about the fact that I was complimenting your brother and

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[SPEAKER_13]: Robin Rob, Rob said you’re driving a wedge between us and you immediately.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I think you are as frank as you took his word for I was not trying to drive a wedge between between anybody and then you said we’re thrown in with this fact So now you’re judging me too Josh Mike is what matters family dinners That’s gonna take the counter argument to try to start a big argument.

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[SPEAKER_11]: Oh, that’s just worse.

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[SPEAKER_11]: What he’s doing here Yeah, I’m not doing that here Mike

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[SPEAKER_11]: your recall of the conversation is being selective here.

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[SPEAKER_11]: You did compliment Josh.

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[SPEAKER_11]: Yes, and then take a little dig at Rob at the compliment.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Yes, I did.

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[SPEAKER_13]: But I wouldn’t call that a spat.

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[SPEAKER_13]: I do that every day on the show.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Rob does it to me.

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[SPEAKER_13]: Probably a little less, but he does that as well.

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[SPEAKER_12]: That didn’t even merit a spat.

13:40.441 –> 13:42.223
[SPEAKER_12]: And by the time we spoke to you, it was over.

13:42.424 –> 13:43.606
[SPEAKER_12]: And I, you know, I’m sorry.

13:43.666 –> 13:44.487
[SPEAKER_12]: I said pipe down.

13:44.647 –> 13:46.470
[SPEAKER_12]: That was in the moment of, you know.

13:46.450 –> 13:46.771
[SPEAKER_12]: He.

13:46.791 –> 13:47.474
[SPEAKER_11]: No, that’s fine.

13:47.514 –> 13:50.364
[SPEAKER_11]: If I need to pipe down, I mean, if you’re, it’s just your guy’s show.

13:50.464 –> 13:51.046
[SPEAKER_11]: Tell me, Rob.

13:51.287 –> 13:53.374
[SPEAKER_02]: Rob constantly mentions that you are his friend.

13:53.816 –> 13:55.201
[SPEAKER_02]: Would you consider Rob a friend?

13:55.502 –> 13:56.084
[SPEAKER_02]: Thank you, Josh.

13:57.148 –> 13:57.810
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, sure.

13:58.280 –> 13:58.761
[SPEAKER_12]: Nice.

13:59.742 –> 14:02.947
[SPEAKER_11]: Hey, that wasn’t exactly a ringing out, that wasn’t there.

14:03.228 –> 14:08.636
[SPEAKER_11]: Can I share something that happened to Rob that made me connect so much with Rob that and into the habit of Rob?

14:08.957 –> 14:11.721
[SPEAKER_12]: This is like this is what happens between friends.

14:11.821 –> 14:13.965
[SPEAKER_11]: Well, and I didn’t think I would really like to.

14:14.005 –> 14:14.987
[SPEAKER_11]: So wait for it, Mike.

14:15.247 –> 14:15.868
[SPEAKER_11]: Okay.

14:16.890 –> 14:20.355
[SPEAKER_11]: But Rob, yes, you’re experienced.

14:20.487 –> 14:49.397
[SPEAKER_11]: uh… leaving your cell phone with the uber driver yes exactly on the way to the ship at the uh… at the uh… right when we’re doing on the ns c side right remember it like it was just last week and me too well and and just note notice about me i i lose stuff all the time i’m a very absent minded person ok i think i think i was fine with you one time where i think you were with me where i went through security at the airport

14:49.377 –> 14:58.835
[SPEAKER_11]: Got on the plane and I’m while sitting on the plane realized I don’t have my laptop Yes, I left it at security That you’re all feeling good and so I’m doing Let’s hear out of love.

14:58.855 –> 15:06.930
[SPEAKER_12]: I mean it got too security, but not to the plane Yes, he got on the plane without it and it just left it in that little

15:06.910 –> 15:15.428
[SPEAKER_11]: I forget my lunch to work half the time half the time you take a lunch to carry a lunch you bring a bag at brown bag.

15:15.689 –> 15:17.352
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, he’s very cheap Mike.

15:17.733 –> 15:19.797
[SPEAKER_12]: Have you ever of the four of us here?

15:19.978 –> 15:21.541
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, I’ll just say the three principles.

15:21.902 –> 15:25.830
[SPEAKER_12]: Have you ever had to disembark a plane once you’ve gotten on?

15:26.705 –> 15:42.638
[SPEAKER_12]: because obviously that’s what you do if you let’s call it oh yeah I mean it would be think of hundreds of people going down that narrow aisle and you got to be the guy to go out front that’s a very whenever you do everyone knows it’s embarrassing but but but Rob the the the thing about it is though

15:42.618 –> 15:44.681
[SPEAKER_11]: I’m absent minded, I forgets it all the time.

15:45.062 –> 15:46.123
[SPEAKER_11]: I forget my lunch, like I said.

15:46.484 –> 15:49.328
[SPEAKER_11]: But I would never call my wife, even though it’s just seven months away.

15:49.649 –> 15:51.451
[SPEAKER_11]: I would never call her and ask you to bring it.

15:51.792 –> 15:58.923
[SPEAKER_11]: Because the thing I hate more than anything is I don’t like my absent mind in this to impact other people.

15:58.983 –> 16:01.126
[SPEAKER_02]: That’s what you were the worst in the past of other people.

16:01.487 –> 16:02.348
[SPEAKER_11]: What’s that?

16:02.328 –> 16:04.050
[SPEAKER_02]: All it does is impact it.

16:04.110 –> 16:05.953
[SPEAKER_11]: No, I know it does, but I try to contain it.

16:06.213 –> 16:08.716
[SPEAKER_11]: I try to contain it to just, and I’m not faced by it.

16:08.896 –> 16:13.141
[SPEAKER_11]: I just know going with your life, I’m going to forget and lose stuff, and it’s not a big deal to me.

16:13.402 –> 16:17.086
[SPEAKER_11]: But then when it starts to impact other people, that stresses me out.

16:17.407 –> 16:20.551
[SPEAKER_11]: And what does that stress in your part, that it was impacting other people?

16:20.671 –> 16:22.313
[SPEAKER_12]: That’s what, that’s the worst part about it.

16:22.333 –> 16:23.234
[SPEAKER_12]: That truly, truly is.

16:23.354 –> 16:29.702
[SPEAKER_13]: What does that have to do with the, the, the, the, the, the, the described spat that we were having.

16:30.053 –> 16:31.595
[SPEAKER_11]: Well, this is nothing to do with the spad.

16:31.615 –> 16:36.800
[SPEAKER_11]: I was just relaying a story about how I connected with Rob and sharing his story.

16:36.840 –> 16:38.141
[SPEAKER_02]: They put a lot of things behind.

16:38.802 –> 16:43.947
[SPEAKER_13]: OK, so you said that that bond you to Rob a little more that Rob is a little absent minded as well.

16:43.967 –> 16:45.749
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, yeah, yeah, I see what bonds me to you.

16:46.369 –> 16:47.410
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, what bonds you to Mike?

16:47.791 –> 16:50.213
[SPEAKER_11]: There was, you talked about this a couple of weeks ago on the show.

16:50.974 –> 16:57.040
[SPEAKER_11]: Maya, this is like three weeks ago when my kids walked into the living room,

16:57.172 –> 16:59.819
[SPEAKER_11]: and there was this bad stink in the air.

17:00.140 –> 17:01.584
[SPEAKER_11]: So what is that smell?

17:02.767 –> 17:06.658
[SPEAKER_11]: And you know, I have three kids, eight, six, and three.

17:06.698 –> 17:07.941
[SPEAKER_11]: They’re always into something.

17:08.423 –> 17:12.193
[SPEAKER_11]: And so the smell could be any think of, you know, it could be a number of things.

17:12.173 –> 17:22.206
[SPEAKER_11]: But they all had it and this comes to the damn of your brother making me laugh Oh, yeah, and go and then I think I was we and Emily my wife and I was trying to figure out what what is that?

17:22.446 –> 17:38.046
[SPEAKER_11]: Steak and then it was like all the kids and then we finally like we narrowed it down to their hands Oh, you know what I was I’m I’d love to hear because we maybe we’ll commissarate on this it was the Myers Gingerbread Handsop

17:41.468 –> 17:42.489
[SPEAKER_11]: It is garbage.

17:42.930 –> 17:44.352
[SPEAKER_11]: It’s the worst thing in the world.

17:45.713 –> 17:47.536
[SPEAKER_11]: It’s the worst thing in the world.

17:47.616 –> 17:49.358
[SPEAKER_11]: How they the awful smell.

17:49.738 –> 17:53.683
[SPEAKER_13]: Okay, I thought you were going to, I thought you were going to go in a different, first of all, I agree with that.

17:54.144 –> 17:54.224
[SPEAKER_11]: Yes.

17:54.244 –> 17:55.586
[SPEAKER_13]: Secondly, you know where I thought you were going?

17:55.626 –> 17:56.807
[SPEAKER_13]: Joshua relate to this one.

17:57.628 –> 17:59.471
[SPEAKER_13]: Josh, you know what I never tracked with?

17:59.991 –> 18:00.171
[SPEAKER_13]: Why?

18:00.212 –> 18:02.194
[SPEAKER_13]: The batting gloves.

18:02.630 –> 18:05.554
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh my god, batting glove.

18:05.855 –> 18:07.337
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, we would simulate you there.

18:07.357 –> 18:08.218
[SPEAKER_13]: We’re going to have a show.

18:08.619 –> 18:10.281
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, it is so horrible.

18:10.361 –> 18:11.843
[SPEAKER_13]: And I said, what is that?

18:12.024 –> 18:15.569
[SPEAKER_13]: And it was two kids in the batting cages and they’re batting gloves.

18:15.629 –> 18:18.853
[SPEAKER_13]: But getting back to the Myers thing, we cannot be alone with that.

18:19.294 –> 18:23.180
[SPEAKER_13]: Because that gingerbread is, I’m trying to think about it.

18:23.260 –> 18:24.722
[SPEAKER_13]: It’s hard to describe the snake.

18:24.782 –> 18:25.283
[SPEAKER_12]: It really is.

18:25.363 –> 18:26.865
[SPEAKER_12]: And let me just follow up about it.

18:26.845 –> 18:32.774
[SPEAKER_12]: this because when you talk about narrowing down the stink to their hands, exactly what was that procedure?

18:33.315 –> 18:35.559
[SPEAKER_12]: Did you have to smell your children all over them?

18:35.959 –> 18:42.409
[SPEAKER_11]: No, just as they’re climbing around, you start to, you know, snip around to see where is it?

18:43.030 –> 18:47.577
[SPEAKER_12]: I mean, it was never like having, you never has like little Charlie to turn around.

18:47.597 –> 18:50.963
[SPEAKER_12]: So you could check the backside of him for the smell or anything like that?

18:51.103 –> 18:53.066
[SPEAKER_11]: No, no, okay, there are kids are beyond that.

18:53.106 –> 18:54.388
[SPEAKER_11]: But it was.

18:54.368 –> 18:58.395
[SPEAKER_12]: You know how much I am and how much he does and I was just speaking figure.

18:58.415 –> 18:59.457
[SPEAKER_12]: Do you know his kids names?

19:01.119 –> 19:02.642
[SPEAKER_12]: I met I met one of his.

19:02.882 –> 19:03.784
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, what’s the what’s the name?

19:03.864 –> 19:05.086
[SPEAKER_13]: I think it’s now.

19:05.367 –> 19:06.328
[SPEAKER_12]: I think it’s Gil.

19:07.751 –> 19:08.772
[SPEAKER_11]: Is it a Gil?

19:08.873 –> 19:09.654
[SPEAKER_13]: There you go.

19:09.874 –> 19:10.515
[SPEAKER_13]: There’s your buddy.

19:10.696 –> 19:11.757
[SPEAKER_13]: There’s your buddy right there.

19:11.798 –> 19:13.340
[SPEAKER_11]: But I had you know how fruit I am.

19:13.360 –> 19:15.043
[SPEAKER_11]: I had to throw out the soap.

19:15.209 –> 19:17.473
[SPEAKER_11]: Oh, you had to hateful container of soap.

19:17.493 –> 19:18.114
[SPEAKER_11]: We had to throw it out.

19:18.454 –> 19:25.245
[SPEAKER_13]: And Myers is, I use it for hand soap and cleaning products around the house as my wife does.

19:25.465 –> 19:32.316
[SPEAKER_13]: And it is usually that’s the whole attraction of the product is the sense they missed with this gingerbread.

19:32.556 –> 19:34.739
[SPEAKER_13]: I mean, completely missed with this gingerbread.

19:34.759 –> 19:36.522
[SPEAKER_12]: Could you use anything other than soap?

19:36.542 –> 19:39.006
[SPEAKER_12]: Like, could you lube an electric car with it or anything?

19:38.986 –> 19:41.008
[SPEAKER_12]: I think I don’t know if you don’t know anywhere near.

19:41.348 –> 19:42.529
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, you don’t want that smell around.

19:42.609 –> 19:49.175
[SPEAKER_13]: And I would say the smell would be more closer to uh, curry gone bad.

19:49.996 –> 19:51.798
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, ginger can be very spicy.

19:52.138 –> 19:54.100
[SPEAKER_12]: So maybe they just leaned on the ginger.

19:54.140 –> 19:56.562
[SPEAKER_12]: Like the difference between the material and ginger beer.

19:56.702 –> 20:00.225
[SPEAKER_13]: It doesn’t matter because they just, uh, you know, it’s just not totally.

20:00.245 –> 20:03.948
[SPEAKER_02]: And it doesn’t matter to them because if they put gingerbread on the label, people will buy it.

20:04.329 –> 20:05.810
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, because people don’t make much money.

20:05.830 –> 20:06.571
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

20:06.591 –> 20:08.993
[SPEAKER_12]: What is your son’s name, Matt?

20:08.973 –> 20:09.615
[SPEAKER_12]: that’s right.

20:10.777 –> 20:13.243
[SPEAKER_13]: Mike, it has a siless.

20:13.484 –> 20:18.196
[SPEAKER_13]: I think the most common name that I hear when I go to baseball tournaments is Colton.

20:19.138 –> 20:20.020
[SPEAKER_13]: Do you guys get that?

20:20.080 –> 20:21.223
[SPEAKER_02]: Do you get Colton John?

20:21.243 –> 20:21.865
[SPEAKER_02]: A lot of Colton.

20:22.246 –> 20:23.268
[SPEAKER_02]: Lots of Colton’s.

20:23.288 –> 20:24.872
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, a lot of mavericks.

20:25.291 –> 20:25.852
[SPEAKER_13]: Really?

20:25.932 –> 20:28.134
[SPEAKER_02]: I’ve never seen a lot of fabrics.

20:28.154 –> 20:28.935
[SPEAKER_02]: That’s amazing.

20:29.215 –> 20:30.616
[SPEAKER_02]: I didn’t hear any fabrics.

20:30.636 –> 20:33.359
[SPEAKER_02]: There’s nothing going on in what they don’t want traditional names anymore.

20:34.020 –> 20:36.402
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, I’d like to drill and zoobayer.

20:36.502 –> 20:38.484
[SPEAKER_12]: We had some more exotic names in Colton.

20:38.645 –> 20:50.016
[SPEAKER_13]: Well, in the case of the kids’ names, I think for a long time, parents have been naming their kid with those kind of wild, westy names.

20:49.996 –> 20:51.158
[SPEAKER_13]: like Shane.

20:51.198 –> 20:52.060
[SPEAKER_13]: Right.

20:52.080 –> 20:59.515
[SPEAKER_13]: And, uh, Colton and, well, Maverick would be one, even though it’s for a top gun thing, but Maverick, uh, Flint.

20:59.555 –> 21:04.585
[SPEAKER_12]: That to me, Maverick should be a Western name because the old TV show and the new, the newer Western movie.

21:04.605 –> 21:07.110
[SPEAKER_12]: I think it’s a Western before if it’s a top gun.

21:07.090 –> 21:34.583
[SPEAKER_12]: Are you surprised there aren’t more kids named after their dads, like you and I named our kids after you know I think it should be traditional I mean it’s something that literally carry and I discussed before we were married I said when we have children if it’s a boy, I would like it to be Robert the third and she agreed to it way back when and does that mean he keeps the same middle name yep okay what I’m speaking there’s a there’s a whole lot of pressure on Robert to have a fourth

21:35.542 –> 21:36.143
[SPEAKER_12]: not really.

21:37.206 –> 21:38.269
[SPEAKER_02]: The third is pretty cool.

21:38.429 –> 21:39.572
[SPEAKER_12]: The third is pretty cool.

21:39.652 –> 21:39.832
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah.

21:39.853 –> 21:40.394
[SPEAKER_12]: I like that.

21:40.815 –> 21:43.000
[SPEAKER_12]: And do you enjoy having your name live on like that?

21:43.060 –> 21:43.902
[SPEAKER_12]: I think it’s very cool.

21:43.963 –> 21:45.486
[SPEAKER_12]: I feel proud for my father.

21:45.526 –> 21:53.145
[SPEAKER_13]: You know what it would it elicits for me is a just a beautiful memory of one my mom was alive and Carla was

21:53.125 –> 22:10.813
[SPEAKER_13]: was pregnant with Michael and I was going to name a Michael Sean O’Mara Jr. And my mom paused and said You’re not your dad’s name in there and the next morning the next morning at brunch with the whole family I told the whole table I said we’re gonna

22:10.793 –> 22:32.532
[SPEAKER_13]: uh… name michael michael william omyra uh… after my dad and it was just a really special so every time i think of that i i love the fact that he’s uh… michael william and my mom was not the type of person to want that but i think she knew where she was in life and uh… that was kind of cool with any of your kids did you have any names that you even considered that were like slightly off the wall

22:32.512 –> 22:48.275
[SPEAKER_13]: The other two are Catherine and Elizabeth, and you know, as far as I didn’t want to call Elizabeth Mary, because we had too many marries in my family.

22:48.335 –> 22:48.515
[SPEAKER_00]: Right.

22:48.616 –> 22:49.597
[SPEAKER_13]: My mom was Mary.

22:49.637 –> 22:50.959
[SPEAKER_13]: My aunt was Mary.

22:50.939 –> 23:10.922
[SPEAKER_13]: my cousin who’s married to many marries and that’s not unusual in an Irish Catholic family, but no I was a you know with Catherine it was for my it was Michael my nephew was named after me and I wanted to I wanted to give her the the same where you ever get a name either of your daughters Regina?

23:13.957 –> 23:15.179
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, that’s the fix.

23:15.199 –> 23:15.880
[SPEAKER_13]: Not a day.

23:16.141 –> 23:16.641
[SPEAKER_12]: They’re good.

23:16.902 –> 23:17.543
[SPEAKER_04]: They’re good.

23:17.603 –> 23:18.384
[SPEAKER_13]: I didn’t want to.

23:18.424 –> 23:22.631
[SPEAKER_13]: Josh, there was a reason you wanted to have your brother Matt in the opening segment.

23:22.731 –> 23:23.613
[SPEAKER_02]: I forgot what it was.

23:23.833 –> 23:35.772
[SPEAKER_02]: On for a special door on Christmas week, or the week after Christmas, as we take some time off, Robin, I have been working hard on some pre-recorded stuff and preparing episodes so that there’s new fresh content every day.

23:35.812 –> 23:38.096
[SPEAKER_02]: Appreciate that you guys are really taking some time off.

23:38.376 –> 23:40.740
[SPEAKER_02]: And one of those is featuring Matt.

23:40.720 –> 23:45.831
[SPEAKER_02]: and I wanted to bring him on here to kind of tease that because I think it’s a great story that we’re going to get into.

23:46.312 –> 23:49.258
[SPEAKER_13]: But now what what is this is going to be a TMLS extra.

23:49.278 –> 23:50.160
[SPEAKER_13]: We’re talking about here.

23:50.641 –> 23:52.746
[SPEAKER_12]: No, it’s just going to be on the regular feed.

23:53.086 –> 23:54.229
[SPEAKER_02]: It’s going to be on the regular feed.

23:55.151 –> 23:57.937
[SPEAKER_02]: About a time where Matt was living in Africa.

23:59.580 –> 24:00.242
[SPEAKER_11]: Okay.

24:00.262 –> 24:00.923
[SPEAKER_11]: Can I tease it?

24:02.118 –> 24:02.959
[SPEAKER_12]: Brothers, man.

24:02.999 –> 24:26.860
[SPEAKER_12]: We gave you 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20,

24:27.717 –> 24:29.162
[SPEAKER_11]: Rob’s already shushed me once.

24:29.182 –> 24:30.005
[SPEAKER_11]: I don’t want to shush me again.

24:30.326 –> 24:35.483
[SPEAKER_11]: So June 2007, I’m going to pop different locations.

24:35.825 –> 24:38.875
[SPEAKER_11]: Let’s start Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

24:39.766 –> 24:54.665
[SPEAKER_11]: a someone calls into a Christian radio show with a prayer request that a friend of her granddaughter has gone missing in Tanzania, will you please pray for this young man?

24:55.166 –> 24:58.610
[SPEAKER_11]: All right, jump over and hour later.

24:58.710 –> 25:00.913
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, I’m sorry, I don’t mean to search you.

25:02.142 –> 25:04.746
[SPEAKER_12]: But thank you David Tape for the super chat.

25:04.846 –> 25:06.269
[SPEAKER_13]: I got a large screen for you, Rob.

25:06.289 –> 25:08.392
[SPEAKER_13]: So you go and handle those today, if you don’t mind.

25:08.632 –> 25:09.213
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, of course.

25:09.273 –> 25:10.996
[SPEAKER_13]: In the comments today, my apologies.

25:11.096 –> 25:11.717
[SPEAKER_13]: Go ahead, Rob.

25:12.619 –> 25:17.146
[SPEAKER_11]: All right, so that’s an 11 AM Matt at 11.45.

25:17.346 –> 25:18.849
[SPEAKER_11]: I got 11.45.

25:19.049 –> 25:20.732
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, Bill.

25:20.752 –> 25:22.194
[SPEAKER_11]: Zoom with me here to Baltimore.

25:22.214 –> 25:23.296
[SPEAKER_11]: We’re in 45.

25:23.556 –> 25:24.658
[SPEAKER_11]: Red Jeep Patriot.

25:24.959 –> 25:25.800
[SPEAKER_11]: Emily’s driving.

25:25.820 –> 25:27.643
[SPEAKER_11]: She gets a phone call.

25:27.860 –> 25:34.890
[SPEAKER_11]: She lets it go to voicemail because she’s driving, while she’s sitting in traffic, she listens to the voicemail, it’s so shocking to her.

25:34.930 –> 25:45.885
[SPEAKER_11]: She has to pull over on the shoulder, it’s the US ambassador to Tanzania, leaving a voicemail saying her emergency contact Matt has gone missing in Tanzania.

25:47.418 –> 25:53.627
[SPEAKER_11]: Okay, meanwhile, in Tanzania, let the Zoom location wise, we’re just doing in Tanzania at this point.

25:53.948 –> 25:56.111
[SPEAKER_02]: He is the missing child in Tanzania.

25:56.511 –> 25:56.812
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

25:57.092 –> 25:57.813
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, I’m getting there.

25:58.134 –> 26:07.267
[SPEAKER_11]: So Zoom in to Tanzania, where Michael and Ford, Michael’s my friend, he’s an American, he’s with four other Tanzanians.

26:07.287 –> 26:11.934
[SPEAKER_11]: They’re running through the forest, shouting the name Matthew Matthew.

26:11.954 –> 26:13.156
[SPEAKER_11]: They can’t find him anywhere.

26:14.317 –> 26:16.260
[SPEAKER_11]: The waves are crashing, it’s really loud.

26:17.084 –> 26:21.792
[SPEAKER_11]: Then, one more time, we’re gonna zoom back to Maryland, Arnold, over Leaf Drive.

26:21.832 –> 26:35.253
[SPEAKER_11]: There’s an old man in his early 50s, I shouldn’t say old man, aging man is middle of 50s, in early 50s, walking up and down over Leaf Drive, crying, muttering about his son, Matthew being dead.

26:35.714 –> 26:37.858
[SPEAKER_11]: All right, that’s a pretty good tease, right?

26:38.458 –> 26:41.283
[SPEAKER_12]: It’s like the watching every 10th minute of a…

26:41.523 –> 26:43.767
[SPEAKER_13]: I’m trying to force teases, I’ve ever heard.

26:44.776 –> 26:46.398
[SPEAKER_13]: I’m not really done on this.

26:46.418 –> 26:47.760
[SPEAKER_13]: I’m really unclear.

26:47.780 –> 26:49.703
[SPEAKER_13]: Do you understand any of the match?

26:49.903 –> 26:52.126
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay, he’s trying to make it a movie trailer.

26:52.286 –> 26:54.008
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I’m trying to get different location.

26:54.168 –> 26:57.593
[SPEAKER_12]: I saw when you say zoom, these aren’t zoom calls.

26:57.613 –> 26:59.656
[SPEAKER_12]: You’re actually zooming in on a see.

27:00.176 –> 27:01.118
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, okay.

27:01.138 –> 27:10.530
[SPEAKER_13]: No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,

27:10.510 –> 27:14.678
[SPEAKER_11]: I was 23 at the time, so you’re an adult.

27:14.698 –> 27:21.049
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, I got lost in Tanzania, and nearly died, and it was a whole thing.

27:21.149 –> 27:22.852
[SPEAKER_13]: Has this been recorded yet?

27:23.113 –> 27:23.794
[SPEAKER_13]: Gentlemen?

27:23.814 –> 27:23.995
[SPEAKER_13]: No.

27:24.335 –> 27:25.537
[SPEAKER_13]: We’re remembering this afternoon.

27:26.058 –> 27:26.339
[SPEAKER_13]: Wow.

27:26.639 –> 27:27.361
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s pretty cool.

27:28.282 –> 27:31.388
[SPEAKER_12]: We can give you a time as you’d like to come along, Mike, for the story.

27:31.368 –> 27:34.192
[SPEAKER_13]: You know what, um, that’s an interesting part.

27:34.212 –> 27:35.213
[SPEAKER_13]: I think no.

27:35.554 –> 27:35.974
[SPEAKER_12]: Okay.

27:35.994 –> 27:38.278
[SPEAKER_13]: You’ll have to catch it when you’re in the night cool.

27:38.498 –> 27:41.843
[SPEAKER_13]: I’m going to bed after I put anything in the can today.

27:41.863 –> 27:43.485
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, so the night drug.

27:44.546 –> 27:46.008
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, so Matt got lost in Africa.

27:46.549 –> 27:47.270
[SPEAKER_02]: Scary moment.

27:47.671 –> 27:55.301
[SPEAKER_02]: Uh, back home as has calls of the missing kid and nothing we can do, except for me trying to calm my parents down that he, not dead.

27:55.722 –> 27:58.245
[SPEAKER_13]: What is the missing kid factor with this?

27:58.386 –> 27:59.367
[SPEAKER_13]: Matt’s missing.

27:59.650 –> 28:03.636
[SPEAKER_13]: be following him a child or a kid in the area where that twenty three is a grown-up.

28:03.997 –> 28:08.544
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, but on my mission area, right, you’re doing missionary work because you’re both.

28:08.845 –> 28:09.045
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah.

28:09.646 –> 28:13.051
[SPEAKER_12]: And that’s a great position when you can do some missionary work.

28:13.091 –> 28:20.383
[SPEAKER_11]: But I ended up getting lost on this island and so I was I was missing and lost on this island and no one knew where I was.

28:20.643 –> 28:22.266
[SPEAKER_13]: Glad it wasn’t a lost doggy.

28:22.246 –> 28:29.514
[SPEAKER_11]: And the ambassador from America to Tanzania got involved in it as a whole because they didn’t know it.

28:29.534 –> 28:34.719
[SPEAKER_11]: And they thought maybe like pirates got me because there’s a bunch of Somalia pirates kind of near there on the east app on.

28:34.779 –> 28:45.730
[SPEAKER_13]: I know you guys were you raised by parents who did this type of stuff who pushed you in that direction of doing missionary work and going out on the mission trips.

28:45.750 –> 28:48.253
[SPEAKER_13]: I’ve been on one in my lifetime.

28:48.233 –> 29:00.236
[SPEAKER_13]: just a just a church and that the type of churches that did that I mine was to Haiti actually I went to capation with a church group and really I one of the great experiences my life.

29:00.376 –> 29:06.428
[SPEAKER_13]: And I don’t know if this speaks to trips you guys have been on but

29:06.678 –> 29:16.875
[SPEAKER_13]: I was, even though I was decidedly secular, I still was welcomed to come on the trip.

29:17.436 –> 29:30.778
[SPEAKER_13]: And I wasn’t anti-religion, but I was not the, they wanted me to sign some sort of document that the reason I would be over there was to walk in the pathway, that

29:30.758 –> 29:39.355
[SPEAKER_13]: type of thing and I said, I don’t really feel comfortable signing this and my buddy who started an orphanage down there said, just come down and we’re just down here to love the kids.

29:39.376 –> 29:40.558
[SPEAKER_13]: It was similar for me.

29:40.658 –> 29:49.476
[SPEAKER_12]: My one mission trip was to Davis, California and I helped the people of Davis and I signed something that said, yes, yes, I love you God.

29:49.557 –> 29:53.083
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, Matt Matt’s was different because what the hell did that just hold on.

29:53.264 –> 29:55.368
[SPEAKER_13]: I don’t what is that mean I tried to just move back.

29:55.388 –> 29:56.309
[SPEAKER_12]: What was that joke?

29:56.750 –> 29:57.391
[SPEAKER_12]: What was that?

29:57.692 –> 30:00.818
[SPEAKER_12]: That you wouldn’t do a missionary trip to Davis, California.

30:00.838 –> 30:02.441
[SPEAKER_13]: Okay All right, just that was interesting.

30:02.461 –> 30:04.304
[SPEAKER_13]: We’ll choose that that location.

30:04.344 –> 30:07.730
[SPEAKER_13]: So the question We have another super chat.

30:07.891 –> 30:09.253
[SPEAKER_13]: Thank you for the super chat.

30:09.313 –> 30:11.397
[SPEAKER_12]: We will pack her gave us 20 bucks, Mike

30:11.377 –> 30:11.978
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s great.

30:11.998 –> 30:19.489
[SPEAKER_13]: And as we ramp up to giving Thursday, we are really appreciating the super chats.

30:19.589 –> 30:31.927
[SPEAKER_13]: And so getting back to it, do you guys when you would go on these trips would there be people that were not part of the church or not totally religious that would come on the trips ever?

30:32.067 –> 30:32.848
[SPEAKER_13]: Did that ever happen?

30:33.048 –> 30:34.450
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, that’s what’s a long term thing.

30:35.251 –> 30:35.952
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah.

30:36.013 –> 30:37.755
[SPEAKER_11]: On that trip, I was

30:38.360 –> 30:41.565
[SPEAKER_13]: And I was smaller, it wasn’t like a bunch of people going over, right?

30:41.585 –> 30:43.909
[SPEAKER_11]: It was you and maybe a couple other people.

30:44.049 –> 30:44.350
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah.

30:45.331 –> 30:49.197
[SPEAKER_11]: But now I take a group of Mercer students to Tanzania.

30:49.518 –> 30:50.520
[SPEAKER_11]: We go every other summer.

30:50.540 –> 30:52.343
[SPEAKER_11]: We just went last summer, actually, for the first time.

30:52.823 –> 30:54.907
[SPEAKER_11]: And we’re working with a Christian organization there.

30:55.247 –> 31:00.115
[SPEAKER_11]: But I have teachers here, pre-service teachers, and they don’t have to be.

31:00.095 –> 31:15.673
[SPEAKER_13]: a christian or share the same faith and i think that that is so cool to me so that that that leads to the point i wanted to make because i didn’t want to speak out of school on this that you know it’s just amazing the good work that’s done that doesn’t get

31:15.653 –> 31:22.083
[SPEAKER_13]: the kind of attention it probably should, with people going over and helping people in third world countries.

31:22.804 –> 31:28.614
[SPEAKER_13]: And I just think it’s, it was one of the most gratifying experiences of my, my entire life.

31:28.894 –> 31:36.987
[SPEAKER_13]: And was there any particular reason why Tanzania was, was chosen in your circumstance as Matt?

31:37.152 –> 31:54.341
[SPEAKER_11]: Originally no, I was just looking for it was I just was ready to graduate college, and I was just trying to postpone You know a life of responsibility and getting a job Right, and so it’s still better than like taking the year abroad and you know backpacking through Europe Well, he’s bettering other people.

31:54.422 –> 32:02.856
[SPEAKER_11]: I mean this is this is very selfless to do but but it was the same idea right that I wanted some adventure and Extend it before I kind of settle down right

32:02.971 –> 32:04.332
[SPEAKER_13]: I’m scared by that.

32:04.433 –> 32:09.038
[SPEAKER_13]: I’ve always thought going on a safari going to the Congo going over there.

32:09.098 –> 32:21.751
[SPEAKER_13]: I think I probably, I’m a victim of American cinema and it always seems to me when I’m watching the movies, whether it be South Africa or Uganda, you know, it’s E.D.

32:21.771 –> 32:22.913
[SPEAKER_13]: on man in South Africa.

32:22.933 –> 32:29.620
[SPEAKER_13]: It’s cry freedom and it’s just I always have that in the back of my mind.

32:29.600 –> 32:38.113
[SPEAKER_12]: identify with Anne Haseh in those movies you get captured and tortured Yes, it was now what movie was that that Anne Haseh was in?

32:38.153 –> 32:42.100
[SPEAKER_12]: It was they were trapped on an island and it was Harrison Ford.

32:42.120 –> 32:42.600
[SPEAKER_12]: I can’t know.

32:42.620 –> 32:46.847
[SPEAKER_13]: I don’t think that was Africa though But it was a foreign country is what was it?

32:46.907 –> 32:47.408
[SPEAKER_13]: Are you sure?

32:47.448 –> 32:50.713
[SPEAKER_12]: No

32:51.335 –> 33:00.266
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, but and I understand that sounds often displayed, but the reality of it is if you’re in a small village and that’s where I was at in in rural Tantania.

33:00.306 –> 33:06.233
[SPEAKER_11]: There’s there’s you cannot imagine a safe for place in the world because everyone knows you.

33:06.273 –> 33:09.758
[SPEAKER_11]: It’s very rural everyone says it’s it’s a community.

33:09.798 –> 33:11.520
[SPEAKER_11]: I’m out hang my clothes up to dry note.

33:11.660 –> 33:13.242
[SPEAKER_11]: I know no one would take it because.

33:13.222 –> 33:19.816
[SPEAKER_11]: you know there was it’s just a small village and if someone took it they would be wearing my pants and so it’s just it’s a very safe comfortable place.

33:20.337 –> 33:25.388
[SPEAKER_11]: So there was I think yeah it was going to get a bad spot because of the media.

33:25.408 –> 33:32.783
[SPEAKER_13]: That way you is at how you measure the safety of a location and if you can hang laundry up on a laundry and you’re gonna go outside the house.

33:32.763 –> 33:36.207
[SPEAKER_12]: And I can take it out from the network.

33:36.227 –> 33:44.136
[SPEAKER_13]: So both of you guys, the Seroca brothers, you both been to many locations around the world, doing this type of stuff.

33:44.176 –> 33:47.100
[SPEAKER_13]: Josh, how many joints, how many countries have you visited?

33:47.781 –> 33:49.503
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, for missionary work, I’ve only done two.

33:50.103 –> 33:51.405
[SPEAKER_02]: And that one too, shorter trips.

33:51.625 –> 33:52.166
[SPEAKER_02]: Where were they?

33:53.367 –> 33:53.868
[SPEAKER_02]: Malaysia.

33:54.949 –> 33:57.232
[SPEAKER_02]: And then I went to, I went somewhere in Africa.

33:57.492 –> 33:58.073
[SPEAKER_02]: Zambia.

33:58.333 –> 33:59.314
[SPEAKER_02]: Zambia, I went to Zambia.

33:59.515 –> 34:00.556
[SPEAKER_13]: Zambia and Malaysia.

34:00.576 –> 34:02.398
[SPEAKER_13]: How about you, Matt, where have you been?

34:02.986 –> 34:06.350
[SPEAKER_11]: I’ve just been to Tanzania, but I’ve been there multiple times.

34:06.650 –> 34:06.950
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, really?

34:06.990 –> 34:08.672
[SPEAKER_13]: So you’ve gone back again and again.

34:08.692 –> 34:10.854
[SPEAKER_13]: What is the magic of Tanzania?

34:10.894 –> 34:11.755
[SPEAKER_13]: What makes it special?

34:11.975 –> 34:12.436
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, I know.

34:12.456 –> 34:18.742
[SPEAKER_11]: Well, I mean, like you talked about the benefit that I had from going there, and this is why I’m taking my Mercer student.

34:18.762 –> 34:20.885
[SPEAKER_11]: It’s because both, yeah, we do some really good work there.

34:21.165 –> 34:22.506
[SPEAKER_13]: What’s the Master?

34:22.887 –> 34:23.327
[SPEAKER_11]: Mercer.

34:23.527 –> 34:25.690
[SPEAKER_11]: Mercer University University University University.

34:25.710 –> 34:27.431
[SPEAKER_12]: My father just got carried of Mercer.

34:28.072 –> 34:29.854
[SPEAKER_13]: You know that he taught at Mercer?

34:30.307 –> 34:30.587
[SPEAKER_12]: me.

34:30.968 –> 34:32.330
[SPEAKER_12]: Yes, you’re a mess on Europe.

34:32.430 –> 34:33.852
[SPEAKER_12]: I knew he taught absolutely.

34:34.052 –> 34:35.734
[SPEAKER_13]: No, did you know he taught at Mercer?

34:35.974 –> 34:36.675
[SPEAKER_12]: No, no, no.

34:36.835 –> 34:38.798
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s when she tried to go and down and down.

34:39.118 –> 34:40.180
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, good friend.

34:40.500 –> 34:42.783
[SPEAKER_12]: Who do you think wins by the way?

34:42.903 –> 34:47.749
[SPEAKER_12]: If Josh goes to do two different places, but Matt goes to one place over and over again.

34:48.250 –> 34:49.532
[SPEAKER_12]: Who’s the better missionary?

34:50.293 –> 34:52.956
[SPEAKER_02]: Matt, how long did you and Emily live in Tanzania?

34:53.003 –> 34:53.884
[SPEAKER_11]: We were there for a year.

34:54.585 –> 34:57.629
[SPEAKER_13]: I got to give a, I believe you have to give a map to not on that.

34:57.649 –> 34:58.169
[SPEAKER_02]: I suppose.

34:58.330 –> 35:01.674
[SPEAKER_12]: Did you make a lot of money through crooked business practices when you were over there?

35:01.714 –> 35:02.595
[SPEAKER_12]: Is that how you survive?

35:03.456 –> 35:03.917
[SPEAKER_11]: No, Rob.

35:03.937 –> 35:05.599
[SPEAKER_11]: I survived on a teacher salary.

35:05.939 –> 35:07.361
[SPEAKER_12]: I’m just checking, just checking.

35:08.162 –> 35:13.729
[SPEAKER_13]: But teacher salary would probably go further in Tanzania than it would be in a suburb of Baltimore.

35:13.793 –> 35:23.798
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, I mean we made about I mean we got paid what all the Tanzanians got paid so we made about $250 a month But there was literally you got the Tanzanian teacher salary.

35:23.818 –> 35:27.567
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, but still Mike he did live in the village in the teachers palace

35:28.812 –> 35:33.436
[SPEAKER_11]: We lived in a teacher housing, and literally we couldn’t spend $25 a month.

35:33.556 –> 35:37.019
[SPEAKER_11]: There’s not enough stuff in the village to buy For that for that amount of money.

35:37.079 –> 35:41.083
[SPEAKER_13]: So what did you I’m fascinated this is so fascinating what was?

35:41.824 –> 35:50.311
[SPEAKER_13]: Was there anything that would approach in your year in Tanzania in a rural Tanzania poor poverty strict in Tanzania?

35:50.732 –> 35:57.958
[SPEAKER_13]: Is there anything that would that you would qualify as Something of a luxurious nature that you look forward to?

35:57.938 –> 35:59.321
[SPEAKER_13]: in the whole year you were there.

35:59.442 –> 36:00.544
[SPEAKER_11]: Oh, absolutely.

36:00.564 –> 36:04.333
[SPEAKER_11]: I think that comes first to mind is the fruit, right?

36:04.353 –> 36:08.623
[SPEAKER_11]: The pineapples, the mangoes, the bananas, phenomenal.

36:08.941 –> 36:10.403
[SPEAKER_13]: Okay, all right fresh fruit.

36:10.784 –> 36:12.786
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, it’s bare bones, man.

36:12.806 –> 36:13.768
[SPEAKER_11]: That’s a passion fruit.

36:13.948 –> 36:14.328
[SPEAKER_11]: Oh, man.

36:14.349 –> 36:16.672
[SPEAKER_11]: If you’ve never had a good fresh passion fruit.

36:17.293 –> 36:17.613
[SPEAKER_11]: Oh, man.

36:17.633 –> 36:18.594
[SPEAKER_11]: You haven’t, you haven’t, you haven’t.

36:18.614 –> 36:19.656
[SPEAKER_11]: I always love passion fruit.

36:19.676 –> 36:22.560
[SPEAKER_13]: I don’t think they but I thought passion fruit rats.

36:23.201 –> 36:23.621
[SPEAKER_13]: I’m sorry.

36:23.661 –> 36:25.704
[SPEAKER_13]: You, you, you stopped me in my tracks there.

36:25.724 –> 36:25.845
[SPEAKER_13]: Right.

36:25.865 –> 36:28.348
[SPEAKER_13]: You would have rats crawling on you over there.

36:28.688 –> 36:28.969
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah.

36:28.989 –> 36:32.974
[SPEAKER_11]: We are, when we first moved into our place, it was rat and fasted.

36:32.994 –> 36:35.238
[SPEAKER_11]: So we had to take some time to go to war with those things.

36:35.518 –> 36:35.818
[SPEAKER_11]: Wow.

36:36.720 –> 36:36.920
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah.

36:37.000 –> 36:38.442
[SPEAKER_12]: Did the

36:39.232 –> 37:09.070
[SPEAKER_13]: No, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they didn’t know, they

37:09.623 –> 37:10.064
[SPEAKER_11]: Oh, yeah.

37:10.084 –> 37:11.768
[SPEAKER_11]: I mean, the relationships are fantastic.

37:11.808 –> 37:21.591
[SPEAKER_11]: I mean, you mentioned before how the media and movies and all the stuff paints a certain portrayal of of these places, but like when I think of Tanzania, I don’t think of movies, right?

37:21.611 –> 37:26.603
[SPEAKER_11]: I think of Upendo and I’m safiri and all these people that I know and have relationships with.

37:26.583 –> 37:35.237
[SPEAKER_11]: And so, and so yeah, and now with technology it’s amazing, I’m now I can stay in touch through what’s that with a lot of these people two in Tanzania, so it’s pretty cool.

37:35.257 –> 37:40.766
[SPEAKER_12]: It’s weird though because even though you don’t think of it as a movie, you tried to present the story as a movie.

37:40.786 –> 37:41.768
[SPEAKER_11]: I did.

37:42.028 –> 37:44.753
[SPEAKER_11]: I was trying to do a T’s, Rob.

37:44.773 –> 37:46.916
[SPEAKER_11]: Terrible, I think that’s funny, but I tried.

37:47.237 –> 37:50.903
[SPEAKER_13]: History is the worst T’s ever so.

37:51.794 –> 37:56.809
[SPEAKER_13]: When is the next time you see yourself going, uh, will you go back to, uh, Tanzania?

37:56.907 –> 37:58.528
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, not this summer, but next summer.

37:58.568 –> 38:00.810
[SPEAKER_11]: So we’re going to go every other summer with Mercer students.

38:01.011 –> 38:03.913
[SPEAKER_13]: Will you ever go with him, Josh, over to Tanzania?

38:04.093 –> 38:05.855
[SPEAKER_13]: No, no, no, no, no, no.

38:06.095 –> 38:07.716
[SPEAKER_12]: That was very cut and dry.

38:07.736 –> 38:08.697
[SPEAKER_12]: That’s wonderful.

38:08.817 –> 38:09.938
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s that’s exciting.

38:10.119 –> 38:16.364
[SPEAKER_13]: And as far as the holidays will the two of you be breaking bread together at any time during the holidays.

38:17.705 –> 38:18.406
[SPEAKER_11]: You don’t think so.

38:18.846 –> 38:20.588
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, I think it’s mostly on me.

38:20.628 –> 38:25.632
[SPEAKER_11]: We’re being a little anti-social, my family, this Christmas, and just kind of just hanging with just us.

38:26.017 –> 38:27.098
[SPEAKER_13]: See, I’m doing the opposite.

38:27.118 –> 38:35.329
[SPEAKER_13]: I’m actually breaking the mold of being anti-social and heading on up to Maine, where I’ll be with my sister and my niece and their family.

38:35.349 –> 38:37.933
[SPEAKER_13]: So that’s kind of- We had last Christmas together.

38:38.734 –> 38:39.315
[SPEAKER_13]: We’re good this year.

38:39.595 –> 38:40.316
[SPEAKER_13]: And last Christmas.

38:40.877 –> 38:41.678
[SPEAKER_12]: My last Christmas.

38:41.958 –> 38:42.859
[SPEAKER_12]: I gave you my heart.

38:43.480 –> 38:47.606
[SPEAKER_13]: And Rob, anything you’d like to say before we send Matt Matthew on his way?

38:47.946 –> 38:48.867
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, absolutely.

38:48.907 –> 38:54.074
[SPEAKER_12]: My one of the greatest things about friendship is learning about your friend.

38:54.094 –> 38:55.416
[SPEAKER_12]: And today I’ve learned a lot.

38:56.746 –> 38:57.267
[SPEAKER_13]: Thanks, Rob.

38:57.648 –> 39:00.993
[SPEAKER_13]: How many times have you talked to Matt outside of a show in Merman?

39:01.133 –> 39:02.415
[SPEAKER_12]: I’m probably like 60.

39:03.477 –> 39:04.799
[SPEAKER_12]: Would you say that’s about right, Matt?

39:05.841 –> 39:06.102
[SPEAKER_12]: Words?

39:06.963 –> 39:07.584
[SPEAKER_12]: No, actually.

39:07.865 –> 39:08.385
[SPEAKER_12]: More a week.

39:08.846 –> 39:11.851
[SPEAKER_12]: Zero, because as a friend, I respect his privacy.

39:13.033 –> 39:15.137
[SPEAKER_11]: Yeah, and I appreciate that respect.

39:15.397 –> 39:15.778
[SPEAKER_12]: Thank you.

39:15.958 –> 39:16.599
[SPEAKER_12]: Thank you.

39:16.659 –> 39:19.564
[SPEAKER_12]: If we would be spending time together this Christmas.

39:19.544 –> 39:25.997
[SPEAKER_13]: I, you know, reminds me of one of the tapes that was played by Bob Goldway, you know, Bobcat.

39:26.338 –> 39:26.839
[SPEAKER_13]: Yes.

39:27.059 –> 39:36.338
[SPEAKER_13]: When Bobcat Goldway was doing some recordings for us, and he said, Mike O’Mara, I never listened to Don John O’Mara, Mike O’Mara, my personal friend, and then he giggled.

39:36.318 –> 39:37.840
[SPEAKER_12]: I do remember that.

39:38.702 –> 39:41.386
[SPEAKER_13]: Such a put-up, so nasty.

39:41.847 –> 39:48.478
[SPEAKER_13]: It was really, you know, they kind of cultivated my disdain for stand-up comedians on the show.

39:48.818 –> 39:50.160
[SPEAKER_13]: You know, just there, they’re anger.

39:50.200 –> 39:54.327
[SPEAKER_13]: And then there were shows that have them on all the time, you know, snarky bastards.

39:54.307 –> 39:58.873
[SPEAKER_13]: Matt, anyway, happy holidays to you and your family.

39:58.993 –> 40:03.960
[SPEAKER_13]: Anything you wanted to get out on the show that I didn’t cover?

40:04.701 –> 40:07.144
[SPEAKER_13]: Is there any last thing you wanted to mention at all?

40:07.545 –> 40:08.426
[SPEAKER_13]: Good evening, anything?

40:08.947 –> 40:09.447
[SPEAKER_11]: No, absolutely.

40:09.467 –> 40:10.248
[SPEAKER_11]: I’m not doing any more teasers.

40:10.289 –> 40:11.190
[SPEAKER_11]: I learned my lesson.

40:11.570 –> 40:12.251
[SPEAKER_11]: Happy holidays.

40:12.532 –> 40:15.556
[SPEAKER_11]: Merry Christmas to you, Mike and Rob and Josh.

40:15.676 –> 40:16.978
[SPEAKER_11]: I’m sure Josh will talk again soon.

40:17.038 –> 40:21.023
[SPEAKER_11]: And yeah, I’m looking forward to recording our episode.

40:21.138 –> 40:42.471
[SPEAKER_13]: the episode entitled death in Tanzania will be coming up on the michael and it’s also some type of some people call death of the t’s death of the t’s ladies and gentlemen and you can come on anytime you want i love having you on the show and that is the gods on his truth so please come back and join us and Merry Christmas to you and your family we appreciate you coming on that’s wonderful

40:42.451 –> 40:57.113
[SPEAKER_13]: Before we get to our new segment I wanted to mention Christmas is coming the goose is getting fat and or a frame I got to get myself I got I’m been tardy getting them I got to get the or a frame because everybody in my family Beautiful thing it’s not too late.

40:57.494 –> 41:09.792
[SPEAKER_13]: I know we’ve closed a Christmas, but it’s not so late a great gift without a doubt the coolest digital picture frame That’s out there people love it because it’ll be all about them and it’s not all what we really want anyway

41:09.772 –> 41:11.374
[SPEAKER_13]: We just want it all about us.

41:11.534 –> 41:12.335
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s the way it goes.

41:12.736 –> 41:20.767
[SPEAKER_13]: Just download the OrA app and connect to Wi-Fi plus you can preload photos before it ships and keep adding from anywhere anytime.

41:21.147 –> 41:23.290
[SPEAKER_13]: You can even add a message before it arrives.

41:23.330 –> 41:25.793
[SPEAKER_13]: You can share photos and videos effortlessly.

41:26.174 –> 41:32.001
[SPEAKER_13]: Straight from your phone, all year long, even better, every frame comes packaged in a premium gift box.

41:32.322 –> 41:33.163
[SPEAKER_13]: Box.

41:33.143 –> 41:34.325
[SPEAKER_13]: with no price tag.

41:34.365 –> 41:38.031
[SPEAKER_13]: Remember, you can’t wrap together this, but you can frame it.

41:38.452 –> 41:51.473
[SPEAKER_13]: For a limited time, save on the perfect gift by visiting orifrains.com to get $35 off or as best selling carbon-mat frames, name number one by wire cutter by using promo code TNOS to check out.

41:51.453 –> 41:55.401
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s a-u-r-a-frame.com promo-co-t-m-o-s.

41:55.762 –> 41:59.750
[SPEAKER_13]: This deal is exclusive to our listeners and frames sell-out fast.

41:59.770 –> 42:02.655
[SPEAKER_13]: So, order years now to get it in time for the holidays.

42:02.716 –> 42:07.766
[SPEAKER_13]: Support the show by mentioning us at checkout, terms and conditions apply.

42:07.806 –> 42:10.491
[SPEAKER_13]: Take it away, gentlemen.

42:10.471 –> 42:13.435
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, I love it when Rob’s back and Lee’s bird.

42:13.455 –> 42:36.225
[SPEAKER_13]: I love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it, love it

42:36.205 –> 42:38.269
[SPEAKER_02]: I can’t even get what we Parker on board.

42:38.289 –> 42:40.253
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh boy, they’re good folks.

42:40.473 –> 42:41.595
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, absolutely.

42:42.657 –> 42:51.835
[SPEAKER_13]: If you want to make sure you have a merry Christmas, blow your whole budget on a last minute flight to the winter Wonderland of Atlanta.

42:52.321 –> 43:07.901
[SPEAKER_13]: The site wallet hub you know I love wallet wallet their surveys to me are genuine and they are legit they ranked the best cities to spend Christmas in and this year Atlanta took the top spot.

43:08.082 –> 43:15.291
[SPEAKER_12]: I am blown away by that and it’s you want to be specific you want to spend Christmas in Atlanta at Hartfield airport

43:15.271 –> 43:18.395
[SPEAKER_12]: Yes, in the airport, you can spend the whole day walking.

43:18.455 –> 43:20.617
[SPEAKER_12]: They have shops like, um, if you like to.

43:20.958 –> 43:23.140
[SPEAKER_12]: To get Mike, they have a Hudson news.

43:23.421 –> 43:25.343
[SPEAKER_12]: Yes, by almost anything there.

43:25.623 –> 43:28.507
[SPEAKER_13]: They have that New Orleans seafood restaurant.

43:28.547 –> 43:30.069
[SPEAKER_13]: They’re like so bad.

43:30.229 –> 43:30.950
[SPEAKER_13]: They base it.

43:31.010 –> 43:34.514
[SPEAKER_13]: Wallet Hub does on things like how many holiday themed events there are.

43:35.054 –> 43:43.945
[SPEAKER_13]: Seasonal businesses like Christmas tree farms, how easy it is to shop, and how much people love the holidays, based on Google searches.

43:44.110 –> 43:46.653
[SPEAKER_13]: I’m not sure, I’m not sure about that.

43:46.673 –> 43:54.400
[SPEAKER_02]: There’s quite a lot of good Christmas stuff, probably an hour to two hours outside of Atlanta, so they might be included in that.

43:54.460 –> 43:56.643
[SPEAKER_02]: There’s nice things up in the mountains.

43:56.823 –> 43:58.445
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, if you want to go to Marietta, perhaps.

43:58.465 –> 44:13.780
[SPEAKER_12]: I have a question for you about Christmas in Florida, because I just spent a couple weeks of December in Florida, the whole time I saw one live, or will not live, but a cut Christmas tree stand, a stand where they sell cut Christmas trees, the real deal.

44:13.760 –> 44:37.590
[SPEAKER_12]: I only saw one and I never saw what you call them a cut in the state of life because if they were live They would still have the dirt on the bottom of them and then they would transplay the so cut Christian’s trees I saw no one in this lot ever ever do people but even do Christmas trees in Florida Like go out to the stands or cuts

44:37.570 –> 44:47.244
[SPEAKER_13]: And there are a few parking lots that have them down here, and I’ve seen a few cars that get closer to the holiday, and that’s what it seems like down here.

44:47.264 –> 44:49.347
[SPEAKER_02]: Can you go cut your own anywhere in Florida?

44:50.368 –> 44:51.310
[SPEAKER_13]: It sounds miserable.

44:51.610 –> 44:53.974
[SPEAKER_13]: Maybe the northern part of the state was certainly not down here.

44:53.994 –> 44:56.337
[SPEAKER_12]: I remember the last time Mike did it was a palm tree.

44:56.738 –> 44:57.499
[SPEAKER_13]: He was a palm meadow.

44:58.500 –> 45:00.523
[SPEAKER_13]: Let’s get it right.

45:00.503 –> 45:12.537
[SPEAKER_13]: So with all those criteria, the 10 best cities for Christmas in 2025 are Atlanta, San Francisco, Seattle, Orlando, Las Vegas, St. Louis, Miami, Pittsburgh, New Orleans, and Cincinnati.

45:12.697 –> 45:15.701
[SPEAKER_12]: Not a lot of cold weather cities in there, maybe three or four.

45:16.041 –> 45:17.123
[SPEAKER_02]: This is price to me, really.

45:17.143 –> 45:17.383
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

45:17.723 –> 45:23.330
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, Orlando makes sense because the theme parks all do it up for the manufacturer.

45:23.350 –> 45:24.351
[SPEAKER_12]: That makes sense.

45:24.331 –> 45:44.179
[SPEAKER_13]: uh… vagus made the top five but of the one hundred cities they looked at north-loss vagus ranked second to last so be sure to look up the address and uh… like sadda check it twice yeah i i went to christmas at the downtown grand and uh… what they did is they set up a tree and ross sewage came up under it

45:44.159 –> 46:02.961
[SPEAKER_13]: really exciting it was uh uh uh yeah delightful uh raw sewage coming up uh all over the downtown ground we say thank you to them uh moving on ladies and gentlemen a woman in California claims and Amazon delivery driver dropped off a package last week and then stole her cat.

46:02.941 –> 46:05.528
[SPEAKER_13]: Uh, Piper was the name of her catch.

46:05.568 –> 46:11.644
[SPEAKER_13]: She saw it happen on footage from her ring camera.

46:12.025 –> 46:14.151
[SPEAKER_13]: You can see the driver leave the package.

46:14.251 –> 46:17.861
[SPEAKER_13]: Take a photo and approach a cat standing near them.

46:17.881 –> 46:18.823
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah.

46:18.803 –> 46:42.735
[SPEAKER_13]: man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man, man

46:42.715 –> 46:47.942
[SPEAKER_13]: And the cat was literally on the edge of her front porch on a suburban street.

46:47.962 –> 46:51.587
[SPEAKER_13]: So it’s strange that someone would assume it didn’t have a home.

46:51.647 –> 46:54.711
[SPEAKER_13]: It’s unclear if the cat had a collar or a microchip.

46:55.131 –> 46:59.197
[SPEAKER_13]: The woman complained to Amazon and they said they’re investigating.

46:59.217 –> 47:01.960
[SPEAKER_13]: They said they do know who the driver was.

47:02.040 –> 47:05.545
[SPEAKER_13]: They just haven’t contacted them and it’s been almost a week.

47:05.565 –> 47:10.191
[SPEAKER_13]: She also reported it to the police, but they told her that it could be weeks or months.

47:10.171 –> 47:27.049
[SPEAKER_13]: before they have time to look at it’s big package that’s big package what’s that Amazon’s normally two days it’s a long year cat when she called an as for a return they said what was wrong with the cat there you go easier to get the uh… back in the get the cat back there is no

47:27.029 –> 47:37.088
[SPEAKER_13]: Zootopia 2 has been a worldwide sensation hitting the $1 billion mark faster than any animated PG rated movie in history.

47:37.489 –> 47:42.118
[SPEAKER_13]: The film’s breakout character is Gary Dysnake.

47:42.098 –> 47:49.630
[SPEAKER_13]: who’s modeled after the highly venomous blue indonesian pit viper, while its bite is rarely fatal.

47:50.051 –> 47:56.441
[SPEAKER_13]: It can result in pain, swelling, and serious tissue damage, but that isn’t stopping fans in China.

47:56.781 –> 48:05.355
[SPEAKER_13]: From buying them as pets, blue viper are being bought and sold for several hundred dollars on Chinese.

48:05.335 –> 48:24.694
[SPEAKER_13]: on Chinese e-commerce sites all that way China China although many have removed the listings it’s because such a concern it’s become such a concern that the Chinese state media said quote in the movie the blue snake is imbued with endearing and brave human-like traits.

48:24.674 –> 48:28.981
[SPEAKER_13]: But the real-life venomous snake is far from being a harmless trendy toy.

48:29.462 –> 48:40.000
[SPEAKER_13]: If a venomous snake escapes or attacks, it endangers not only the owner and their family, but can also escalate into a public safety incident.

48:40.040 –> 48:40.561
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s a big change.

48:40.781 –> 48:42.344
[SPEAKER_12]: Josh and I were talking yesterday.

48:42.384 –> 48:45.349
[SPEAKER_12]: Any time something talks, you don’t want to eat it.

48:45.329 –> 48:49.034
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, if it’s like a talk and snake, you don’t want to eat it, talking cabbage, you don’t want to eat it.

48:49.054 –> 48:49.595
[SPEAKER_12]: It’s a stale.

48:49.615 –> 48:50.776
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, it’s creepy.

48:50.977 –> 48:51.257
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.

48:51.277 –> 48:53.099
[SPEAKER_13]: And Viper’s, you know, just say.

48:53.119 –> 48:53.560
[SPEAKER_13]: Viper’s.

48:53.600 –> 48:54.161
[SPEAKER_13]: Talk about you.

48:54.201 –> 48:56.404
[SPEAKER_13]: Triangular head there.

48:56.424 –> 48:56.945
[SPEAKER_13]: Come on now.

48:57.565 –> 49:00.429
[SPEAKER_13]: The Rolling Stones will not be touring in 26.

49:02.092 –> 49:04.214
[SPEAKER_13]: No, that’s not the bad news.

49:04.275 –> 49:05.136
[SPEAKER_13]: The bad news.

49:05.556 –> 49:11.564
[SPEAKER_13]: The really bad news is that they’ve canceled their plans because Keith Richards is an up to it.

49:11.925 –> 49:13.707
[SPEAKER_13]: This might be tough.

49:14.568 –> 49:15.049
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, no.

49:15.029 –> 49:19.235
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, rock and roll’s most indestructible man is losing it.

49:19.275 –> 49:33.216
[SPEAKER_13]: There’s no word what the problem is, but Keith turns 82 tomorrow, and he’s been dealing with arthritis in recent years, a source says, quote, who would think that Keith the thing that would take Keith Richards down would be arthritis.

49:33.236 –> 49:38.944
[SPEAKER_12]: A man who once swapped out his blood, the clean blood free of drugs is being hit by arthritis.

49:38.924 –> 49:50.796
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s the quote from source says when they properly sat down to discuss the tour, Keith said he didn’t think he could commit and wasn’t keen on a big stadium tour for over four months.

49:51.257 –> 49:53.880
[SPEAKER_13]: There is apparently a new album coming out in 26.

49:53.940 –> 49:55.701
[SPEAKER_13]: So that’s something to look forward to.

49:56.082 –> 50:03.329
[SPEAKER_13]: If Keith doesn’t die and usher in the apocalypse that is, Keith, if he can’t make it, what hope to the rest of us have.

50:03.610 –> 50:07.834
[SPEAKER_13]: I mean, how many years have we even looking at the age

50:07.814 –> 50:10.979
[SPEAKER_12]: I, you know, I’ve seen the stones many times.

50:11.480 –> 50:14.965
[SPEAKER_12]: I could count, but I don’t want to right now, but probably at least a half a dozen times.

50:15.526 –> 50:19.012
[SPEAKER_12]: I stopped wanting to see them when Charlie Watts passed away.

50:19.433 –> 50:21.295
[SPEAKER_12]: Yep, because to me, it’s not the band anymore.

50:21.376 –> 50:28.126
[SPEAKER_12]: And I appreciate making Keith and I love what they’ve done and the heritage that precedes them, but it’s not the band anymore.

50:28.487 –> 50:34.176
[SPEAKER_12]: And if they even think of taking a step forward without Keith, that’s the biggest money grab I’ve ever seen.

50:34.156 –> 50:50.460
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah and you know when you make some make fun of somebody looking old and being alive for that long it is kind of sad when it sounds like maybe the the time is not that is that’s a little freaky for me I think about that you know who we have though Rob your favorite we have Reba

50:50.626 –> 50:51.527
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, I love her.

50:51.628 –> 50:57.357
[SPEAKER_12]: And you know what, uh, happy place airs every Friday night on NBC and streams the next day on peacock.

50:57.377 –> 51:00.001
[SPEAKER_12]: And it’s a great season too.

51:00.301 –> 51:03.146
[SPEAKER_13]: This is a sad and a nice story about Reba McIntyre.

51:03.166 –> 51:12.340
[SPEAKER_13]: She’s reflecting on her time working with director Rob Reiner in a post on Instagram, Reba wrote, I enjoyed every minute I was around Rob Reiner.

51:12.360 –> 51:13.562
[SPEAKER_13]: A lot of people say that.

51:13.542 –> 51:42.604
[SPEAKER_13]: uh… he was one of a kind she also shared a throwback photo of the two on set with rob pointing toward a monitor while reba smiles over his shoulder reba said i got to work with him on the movie north and he also helped us uh… with our ending of my video uh… does he love you i sure will miss him he’s certainly not the uh… she’s certainly not the only one that has nice things to say about it i think that a north was not one of his better movies and i see this as a little bit of a

51:42.584 –> 51:48.473
[SPEAKER_13]: Uh, you know, but don’t don’t lot of people want to express it when they feel sad.

51:48.493 –> 51:49.715
[SPEAKER_13]: They want to share with everybody.

51:49.835 –> 51:51.557
[SPEAKER_13]: You know, you really think it’s that negative about her.

51:51.577 –> 51:52.098
[SPEAKER_12]: I thought I do.

51:52.198 –> 51:58.387
[SPEAKER_12]: And I also thought it was inappropriate that she claimed in the post that she played glorious civic in all my home, the family, which is not true.

51:58.407 –> 52:12.388
[SPEAKER_13]: Did you hear the other story about the Riner situation when they were at Conan O’Brien’s Christmas party that the kid, the murderer, apparently got into a little

52:12.368 –> 52:14.572
[SPEAKER_13]: that at Conan O’Brien’s party.

52:14.672 –> 52:18.158
[SPEAKER_02]: So in the left of him, this is a private conversation.

52:18.218 –> 52:21.243
[SPEAKER_02]: And he got mad that he was not invited into their conversation.

52:21.283 –> 52:25.170
[SPEAKER_13]: So it’s a lot of weirdness leading up to those tragic murders.

52:25.250 –> 52:26.432
[SPEAKER_13]: So really horrible.

52:26.532 –> 52:26.892
[SPEAKER_13]: Wow.

52:27.333 –> 52:28.094
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, very sad.

52:28.175 –> 52:28.756
[SPEAKER_02]: Barry, I’m sorry.

52:28.816 –> 52:31.440
[SPEAKER_02]: Keep in track of that guest list of who was at the Conan.

52:31.420 –> 52:35.664
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, because it sounds like an alis to a party with a lot of luminaries there.

52:36.125 –> 52:39.568
[SPEAKER_13]: Some holiday traditions never get old and stick around for decades.

52:39.789 –> 52:40.109
[SPEAKER_13]: Others.

52:40.810 –> 52:41.971
[SPEAKER_13]: Uh, Elhu Michelle.

52:42.371 –> 52:43.893
[SPEAKER_13]: Can really, uh, wear out there.

52:43.913 –> 52:44.313
[SPEAKER_13]: Welcome.

52:44.373 –> 52:46.515
[SPEAKER_13]: So here’s something, uh, amazing to try.

52:46.535 –> 52:52.161
[SPEAKER_13]: There is a custom out of Catalonia Spain called Tio de Nadal.

52:52.602 –> 52:55.565
[SPEAKER_13]: The name translates as Christmas log.

52:55.965 –> 53:00.870
[SPEAKER_13]: But it’s also known as the poop log.

53:01.525 –> 53:04.857
[SPEAKER_13]: It, uh, it does, you know, I guess it must have several months.

53:04.998 –> 53:06.303
[SPEAKER_13]: It’s uncool log.

53:07.065 –> 53:09.173
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, oh, kids love log.

53:09.912 –> 53:12.095
[SPEAKER_13]: Orants referred to as the S word log.

53:12.476 –> 53:13.117
[SPEAKER_13]: No jokes.

53:13.137 –> 53:13.858
[SPEAKER_13]: Here’s how it works.

53:14.559 –> 53:20.708
[SPEAKER_13]: In the two and a half weeks, leading up to Christmas families, keep a regular wood log in the home with a face painted on it.

53:20.728 –> 53:25.495
[SPEAKER_13]: It also has a red hat, two wooden legs in the front and a blanket over its back end.

53:25.515 –> 53:29.921
[SPEAKER_13]: The log represents a character who will poop out treats.

53:30.222 –> 53:31.684
[SPEAKER_13]: Come Christmas day.

53:32.710 –> 53:45.187
[SPEAKER_13]: Uh, to get the log to poop, children pretend to feed its scraps of food, sing to it, specifically a song about pooping out gifts, and then beat it with sticks.

53:45.847 –> 53:46.668
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, wow.

53:47.249 –> 53:48.471
[SPEAKER_13]: Sounds like fun, doesn’t it?

53:48.551 –> 53:50.594
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I’m Christmas Day.

53:50.634 –> 53:53.858
[SPEAKER_02]: That’s what Myers was originally going for with that handsop.

53:54.209 –> 53:55.531
[SPEAKER_02]: This smells like Christmas poop.

53:55.951 –> 53:56.552
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.

53:57.373 –> 54:05.443
[SPEAKER_13]: On Christmas day after the singing and the beating, the blanket is lifted off the Christmas logs back in and surprise it as poop gifts to everyone.

54:05.884 –> 54:07.245
[SPEAKER_13]: Wow, isn’t that exciting?

54:07.265 –> 54:10.409
[SPEAKER_12]: You know, that’s reminiscent to me of another odd Christmas tradition.

54:10.449 –> 54:12.953
[SPEAKER_12]: And I know Josh hasn’t been with us all that long.

54:12.973 –> 54:15.536
[SPEAKER_12]: Do you know about Black Peter?

54:15.716 –> 54:16.437
[SPEAKER_12]: Josh?

54:16.417 –> 54:18.600
[SPEAKER_12]: I, yes, I do know about Black people.

54:18.620 –> 54:19.141
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay, just listen.

54:19.161 –> 54:20.183
[SPEAKER_02]: I’ve listened forever.

54:20.644 –> 54:21.164
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

54:21.465 –> 54:21.845
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

54:21.906 –> 54:23.588
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s what he likes.

54:23.608 –> 54:24.630
[SPEAKER_13]: He’s not normal.

54:24.650 –> 54:26.272
[SPEAKER_13]: Finally today, excuse me.

54:28.836 –> 54:39.673
[SPEAKER_13]: Finally today, a 39-year-old woman in Florida named Latoya Clark was pulled over on Wednesday, blocks away from the U.S. District Court House, a licensed plate reader,

54:39.653 –> 55:03.552
[SPEAKER_13]: had flagged her vehicle as being stolen and the cops responded as she was being cuffed and officers started to explain to Latoya why she was being arrested and she said oh I know why she said she was on her way to the courthouse because she is on trial for a federal crime she’s on trial for her alleged role in a conspiracy that defrauded

55:03.532 –> 55:09.604
[SPEAKER_13]: twenty nine million dollars from government covid relief loans and grants.

55:10.145 –> 55:11.668
[SPEAKER_13]: Now she has more problems.

55:12.089 –> 55:18.763
[SPEAKER_13]: She was driving a you haul cargo van that she took out for a one day rental two months ago.

55:18.783 –> 55:20.967
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh no.

55:21.352 –> 55:23.977
[SPEAKER_13]: When she didn’t return it, it was reported stolen.

55:24.458 –> 55:33.234
[SPEAKER_13]: Now she has that to deal with along with the previous felony fraud charges, and several of those carry a maximum 20-year prison sentence.

55:33.554 –> 55:35.258
[SPEAKER_13]: Her nickname is Lucky.

55:35.799 –> 55:36.640
[SPEAKER_13]: Lucky Clark.

55:36.760 –> 55:39.145
[SPEAKER_13]: Ladies and gentlemen, there she is.

55:39.345 –> 55:40.407
[SPEAKER_13]: I want to tell you.

55:40.538 –> 55:43.645
[SPEAKER_13]: I’ve got to read that when I was sleeping.

55:44.106 –> 55:45.729
[SPEAKER_13]: Anyway, thank you all very much.

55:45.790 –> 55:46.772
[SPEAKER_13]: We appreciate that.

55:46.792 –> 55:51.041
[SPEAKER_13]: I do want to remind you that this program is brought to you by soul.

55:51.502 –> 55:55.992
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55:56.072 –> 55:59.239
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56:43.536 –> 56:56.108
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56:56.088 –> 57:16.340
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57:16.360 –> 57:23.091
[SPEAKER_13]: All right, it’s the holidays We all go through it with the kids and what we want to get them in that it’s time to talk about a little

57:23.071 –> 57:43.392
[SPEAKER_12]: boomer parenting and uh i’m a boomer i i think i fall into that category is a very end of it yes actually and uh i’m a perfect generation exer i’m in the middle of generation ex and uh Josh is what is known as the Christmas baby uh he no what what where do you fall Josh i don’t are you a millennial i i i

57:43.895 –> 57:45.702
[SPEAKER_02]: I’m not a millennial.

57:46.224 –> 57:47.087
[SPEAKER_02]: Millennials are younger.

57:47.809 –> 57:50.921
[SPEAKER_02]: I think I’m a gen- I think I’m on the tail and the tail.

57:50.961 –> 57:51.804
[SPEAKER_02]: I think you’re on the tail.

57:51.844 –> 57:54.494
[SPEAKER_02]: You’re on the back end of the gen X-Rob, you’re on the front end of the gen.

57:54.514 –> 57:55.558
[SPEAKER_02]: I believe that’s how it goes.

57:55.623 –> 58:15.994
[SPEAKER_12]: All right, and they talk here about the way boomers parent and this was a going viral a day or so ago I was a victim of this in my family and also I have done this and I’m curious if this happens in your family it has to do with giving bad news family therapists for about 10 years now she’s a family therapy the boomer parents.

58:15.974 –> 58:19.659
[SPEAKER_07]: consistently do, that I have to admit I truly do not understand.

58:19.960 –> 58:27.851
[SPEAKER_07]: And I really would like to understand this because I do think it would really help my gen X and millennial adult clients.

58:27.871 –> 58:32.437
[SPEAKER_07]: So here I am, kind of pulling the audience, phoning a friend, phoning a boomer, per se.

58:32.558 –> 58:34.320
[SPEAKER_07]: Okay, I’m going to play the part of the boomer parent.

58:35.667 –> 58:38.631
[SPEAKER_07]: Hey honey, yep, I hope you’re having a good day.

58:38.711 –> 58:41.975
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, I just want to let you know your dad had surgery today.

58:41.995 –> 58:47.242
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, yeah, it was, well, it was, it was open heart surgery.

58:47.282 –> 58:52.308
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, oh, oh, don’t, we just didn’t want to worry you.

58:52.328 –> 58:54.651
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, we didn’t, we didn’t want to worry you.

58:55.212 –> 58:55.532
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah.

58:55.833 –> 58:56.674
[SPEAKER_07]: or here’s another one.

58:56.694 –> 58:57.755
[SPEAKER_07]: Hey, honey, how you doing?

58:58.036 –> 58:58.957
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah.

58:58.977 –> 59:02.961
[SPEAKER_07]: Well, Graham that’s Graham has been on life support for the last week and it’s not looking good.

59:03.022 –> 59:05.404
[SPEAKER_07]: So, you know, we thought we’d let you know.

59:06.426 –> 59:16.417
[SPEAKER_13]: So, do you ever, like, I feel the vibe, come right through, I definitely feel the vibe of phone calls that were similar in nature?

59:16.457 –> 59:22.104
[SPEAKER_13]: What is the, I’m so used to it, I probably have made those kind of call.

59:22.124 –> 59:24.507
[SPEAKER_12]: I know I have and my kids yelled at me.

59:24.487 –> 59:44.166
[SPEAKER_12]: What is the knock on that that they don’t that they’re they’re late and delivering the news And what it’s all about they soft pedal big news and like for example is I think they don’t want to bother you Yeah, and dad is having an open heart surgery tell them like the week before so you know that it’s coming up

59:44.146 –> 01:00:00.805
[SPEAKER_12]: and not like dad had it today and it went well that’s like so that messes with your mind right grandma being on life support you got a lot of the kids know because of grandma just dies you’ve got to i mean i know it’s i think it may come from the burden

01:00:00.785 –> 01:00:05.973
[SPEAKER_13]: But it also might come from the World War II stiff upper lip crowd.

01:00:06.294 –> 01:00:10.341
[SPEAKER_13]: I know where you’re kind of, you know, you tough it out, you don’t want to ruin it.

01:00:10.381 –> 01:00:19.215
[SPEAKER_13]: I remember my brother-in-law would occasionally remind me, I was a big sharer, that’s that we all are.

01:00:19.195 –> 01:00:41.676
[SPEAKER_13]: uh… that’s why we do what we do and i would probably uh… overshare good and bad with my mom and as she got older i know that some family members including my brother and all kind of took it or maybe she doesn’t need to know that now and i remember it pissed me off so much because you know i just wanted to share uh… and then my kids

01:00:42.027 –> 01:01:04.643
[SPEAKER_13]: Katherine comes to mind that that she will let me know she will call me more often than not with uh… really good stuff that’s when she will get to that i was the same way with my mom uh… for most of my life i occasionally with over share the bad stuff but more often than not i would share just the phone calls when i’d had a uh… something really special happened to me my god

01:01:04.623 –> 01:01:10.236
[SPEAKER_12]: Michael is very young and I can see sort of censoring what he has to hear and worry about and what he doesn’t.

01:01:10.256 –> 01:01:19.076
[SPEAKER_12]: But now that your kids are older, your daughters, can you think of an instance when something rotten happened that you didn’t tell them just because they don’t need to know that?

01:01:19.417 –> 01:01:23.847
[SPEAKER_13]: I can think of an instant where something rotten happened that I didn’t know about.

01:01:23.827 –> 01:01:26.430
[SPEAKER_13]: because I got it from one sibling and not the other.

01:01:26.610 –> 01:01:29.053
[SPEAKER_13]: I got it from a sibling that it didn’t happen to.

01:01:29.593 –> 01:01:32.897
[SPEAKER_13]: And you know, that’s that’s not the way I like to hear stuff.

01:01:33.177 –> 01:01:38.383
[SPEAKER_13]: And you know, I have one daughter who’s easy to communicate with another daughter who’s difficult to track down.

01:01:38.703 –> 01:01:39.804
[SPEAKER_13]: And that’s very frustrating.

01:01:39.824 –> 01:01:44.049
[SPEAKER_13]: In fact, I was thinking about it last night to just get updated on.

01:01:44.069 –> 01:01:48.113
[SPEAKER_13]: I mean, the last I talked to her sister,

01:01:48.093 –> 01:01:53.199
[SPEAKER_13]: She told me the other sister was moving to Philadelphia, and I have not confirmed that yet.

01:01:53.240 –> 01:01:57.205
[SPEAKER_12]: That’s how that’s not what you want to hear that second hand.

01:01:57.525 –> 01:01:58.386
[SPEAKER_12]: Yes.

01:01:58.406 –> 01:02:07.157
[SPEAKER_12]: I got both Robert and Julia were really angry with me when My uncle Bruce passed away probably like six years ago five or six years ago.

01:02:07.538 –> 01:02:10.962
[SPEAKER_12]: There was a long line of leading up to it that he was sick.

01:02:10.942 –> 01:02:32.477
[SPEAKER_12]: uh… he’d been hospitalized and they both knew him they’d met him he was my godfather so he’s sort of a big deal in our family but i never mentioned that he was suffering right and when i finally told them uh… you know i’ve got some bad news my uncle bruise your uncle bruise has died they said well that’s sudden i said well not really and they said well why didn’t we know this was going on

01:02:32.457 –> 01:02:39.483
[SPEAKER_12]: You know, it’s not going to ruin their life to know that someone else is having these problems, but it does, it’s almost a courtesy.

01:02:39.804 –> 01:02:40.644
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, like people know.

01:02:40.965 –> 01:02:43.207
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, it’s a, it’s a, it’s a little bit of a little bit of a lip thing.

01:02:43.287 –> 01:02:43.987
[SPEAKER_02]: Go ahead, John.

01:02:44.008 –> 01:02:46.089
[SPEAKER_02]: I had a little bit of this last week.

01:02:46.109 –> 01:02:49.092
[SPEAKER_02]: Because my, my mom had some surgery last week.

01:02:49.653 –> 01:02:50.413
[SPEAKER_02]: Everything’s all good.

01:02:50.493 –> 01:02:55.958
[SPEAKER_02]: They told us ahead of time, but they were very active on telling the kids, uh, leave us alone.

01:02:56.419 –> 01:03:01.063
[SPEAKER_02]: We don’t want to see anyone Christmas is canceled because she’s going to be recovered.

01:03:01.432 –> 01:03:04.184
[SPEAKER_02]: So that was all fine and I call and I check it and everything.

01:03:04.586 –> 01:03:07.499
[SPEAKER_02]: All right, check in the day of the surgery to see how surgery went.

01:03:07.519 –> 01:03:09.889
[SPEAKER_02]: Remember, my parents lived 45 minutes from me.

01:03:10.156 –> 01:03:10.617
[SPEAKER_12]: That’s right.

01:03:10.637 –> 01:03:13.720
[SPEAKER_02]: I’ve checked into the day of the surgery and they’re like, oh, it’s good.

01:03:14.081 –> 01:03:19.307
[SPEAKER_02]: Our friends came over and sat with us at the medical place while it got done and took everything.

01:03:19.327 –> 01:03:20.809
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, friends came up with my kids.

01:03:21.049 –> 01:03:24.453
[SPEAKER_02]: You told me to stay away, but then these friends are welcome.

01:03:24.533 –> 01:03:29.659
[SPEAKER_02]: And then I check in the next day and it’s like, they’re back home and everything’s good.

01:03:30.300 –> 01:03:34.505
[SPEAKER_02]: Again, friends come over to visit, but they don’t want me, finally I forced myself over.

01:03:34.565 –> 01:03:35.927
[SPEAKER_12]: I found that.

01:03:35.907 –> 01:03:43.015
[SPEAKER_12]: I’ve been told not to come to hospitals or visit or anything like that and I think Mike is right, it’s not wanting to burden people.

01:03:43.135 –> 01:03:44.036
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I think it is.

01:03:44.596 –> 01:03:50.803
[SPEAKER_12]: But I do know that the times that I’ve sort of overruled it and showed up, it’s never been like awkward or unhappy.

01:03:51.123 –> 01:03:51.264
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

01:03:51.284 –> 01:03:53.246
[SPEAKER_12]: They like the people showing up.

01:03:53.266 –> 01:03:54.707
[SPEAKER_12]: But it is, it’s weird.

01:03:54.968 –> 01:03:55.788
[SPEAKER_02]: The location.

01:03:56.429 –> 01:03:57.410
[SPEAKER_02]: But apparently friends were.

01:03:57.450 –> 01:04:01.915
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, do you think there’s, you think there is an element of,

01:04:02.570 –> 01:04:05.455
[SPEAKER_13]: You know, if you do push through that, oh, don’t do that.

01:04:05.475 –> 01:04:07.218
[SPEAKER_13]: But they really do want you to be there.

01:04:07.258 –> 01:04:08.821
[SPEAKER_13]: They really do want you to hang out.

01:04:09.222 –> 01:04:11.967
[SPEAKER_02]: I think it’s really about not one to burden that.

01:04:12.047 –> 01:04:16.074
[SPEAKER_02]: And I think they always assume we have so much going on and we’re busy with kids and all.

01:04:16.234 –> 01:04:17.456
[SPEAKER_12]: And my dad said, don’t come.

01:04:17.657 –> 01:04:18.057
[SPEAKER_12]: Don’t come.

01:04:18.218 –> 01:04:20.782
[SPEAKER_12]: He says, there’s nothing you can do here in Florida recently.

01:04:20.882 –> 01:04:23.788
[SPEAKER_13]: And that was the first time when you were leaving recently.

01:04:24.008 –> 01:04:24.829
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.

01:04:24.910 –> 01:04:26.873
[SPEAKER_13]: I kind of have a good sign for him, right?

01:04:26.853 –> 01:04:29.136
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, I guess, or a stupid sign.

01:04:29.677 –> 01:04:30.878
[SPEAKER_13]: Well, the point of how is he doing?

01:04:30.918 –> 01:04:32.941
[SPEAKER_13]: I mean, and then now you, I have to ask him the show.

01:04:32.981 –> 01:04:34.603
[SPEAKER_13]: I don’t want to, but how is he doing?

01:04:34.904 –> 01:04:36.185
[SPEAKER_12]: No, he hasn’t fallen again.

01:04:36.225 –> 01:04:41.032
[SPEAKER_12]: He did have sort of a negative examination on his knee yesterday from the surgeon.

01:04:41.492 –> 01:04:46.399
[SPEAKER_12]: The surgeon’s good news was, hey, we caught this infection fast enough that he didn’t lose the leg.

01:04:46.939 –> 01:04:47.600
[SPEAKER_12]: And that’s good.

01:04:47.620 –> 01:04:48.241
[SPEAKER_13]: But that is good.

01:04:48.642 –> 01:04:52.827
[SPEAKER_12]: But also, he said, I’m looking at the arthritis that is,

01:04:52.807 –> 01:04:55.379
[SPEAKER_12]: playing along with the knee where he got the infection.

01:04:55.419 –> 01:04:57.308
[SPEAKER_13]: Nothing life threatening though, right?

01:04:57.328 –> 01:04:59.779
[SPEAKER_13]: No, but the cancel is tore.

01:05:00.637 –> 01:05:11.527
[SPEAKER_12]: He will not your dad will not be touring with the stones, but he he’s going to have a getting him to walk again unassisted is going to be tough, because of the advanced arthritis.

01:05:11.547 –> 01:05:14.189
[SPEAKER_13]: But once again, not life threatening or no, no.

01:05:14.269 –> 01:05:15.250
[SPEAKER_12]: He’s going to be fine.

01:05:15.450 –> 01:05:17.912
[SPEAKER_12]: It’s going to be a whole different world for him.

01:05:17.932 –> 01:05:20.495
[SPEAKER_12]: I mean, not being independent like that.

01:05:20.535 –> 01:05:21.015
[SPEAKER_12]: And that was it.

01:05:21.055 –> 01:05:24.258
[SPEAKER_12]: That was a tremendous Kathy was pretty broken up last night about it.

01:05:24.278 –> 01:05:24.978
[SPEAKER_12]: And that’s a drag.

01:05:25.079 –> 01:05:30.103
[SPEAKER_13]: It really all turned

01:05:30.083 –> 01:05:47.468
[SPEAKER_13]: uh… That’s the other no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no

01:05:47.448 –> 01:05:53.517
[SPEAKER_12]: He’s frustrated because he can’t walk and it makes him sort of a pain in the ass to be around most days.

01:05:53.978 –> 01:05:57.544
[SPEAKER_12]: And so we just got to get it resolved and figure out what’s on it.

01:05:57.584 –> 01:05:58.285
[SPEAKER_12]: Not a great day.

01:05:58.325 –> 01:05:59.567
[SPEAKER_12]: That’s not a great day.

01:05:59.587 –> 01:06:00.508
[SPEAKER_12]: So thank you very much.

01:06:00.528 –> 01:06:01.129
[SPEAKER_13]: I appreciate it.

01:06:01.309 –> 01:06:03.092
[SPEAKER_13]: All right, so he and he doesn’t want you down there.

01:06:03.232 –> 01:06:05.035
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s the just of it, right?

01:06:05.055 –> 01:06:06.618
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, originally that’s what he said.

01:06:06.918 –> 01:06:10.063
[SPEAKER_12]: And it turned out to be like the greatest three weeks we’ve spent together.

01:06:10.043 –> 01:06:20.138
[SPEAKER_12]: It was a really great visit and he spent all day, you know, he spent about eight weeks in bed before they even tried to get him to sit up.

01:06:20.779 –> 01:06:28.791
[SPEAKER_12]: And so he was out of his mind board and to have someone there of a similar mindset trying to cheer him up and talk to him throughout the day.

01:06:29.152 –> 01:06:29.693
[SPEAKER_12]: It was great.

01:06:30.153 –> 01:06:31.776
[SPEAKER_12]: Having gone there, I’ll never regret it.

01:06:31.876 –> 01:06:32.717
[SPEAKER_12]: It was fine.

01:06:33.178 –> 01:06:35.862
[SPEAKER_12]: But the initial thing is, don’t come down here.

01:06:35.882 –> 01:06:36.523
[SPEAKER_12]: I’m fine.

01:06:36.503 –> 01:07:04.873
[SPEAKER_13]: The only way I can relate to that Rob is that I’ve told this story before, maybe not on the air, but to improv it, at the time of my mom’s passing, my sister and brother-in-law had plan really even for them, and they’ve done well in life, but they were planning this

01:07:04.853 –> 01:07:34.590
[SPEAKER_13]: Yes, super vacation that they had and they’ve been looking forward to it for over a year and it came right down to the fact that, you know, do we go, do we not go, do we go, do we not go and they ended up turning around and flying back across the upon when my mom passed away and the only, you know, I had said to them, I’ll come up and I’ll hang with mom because you’ve been there for when she’s been ill almost, you know, double the time that I would ever be around.

01:07:34.570 –> 01:07:41.217
[SPEAKER_13]: And I was glad to do it and we did some shows from Boston when I was up there right around St. Patrick’s Day.

01:07:41.477 –> 01:07:42.779
[SPEAKER_12]: Kathy make it back in time.

01:07:42.839 –> 01:07:43.460
[SPEAKER_12]: I don’t remember.

01:07:43.700 –> 01:07:44.261
[SPEAKER_13]: She did not.

01:07:44.521 –> 01:07:49.366
[SPEAKER_13]: And it broke my heart because but at the same, there are two things that we’re set about this.

01:07:50.868 –> 01:07:58.536
[SPEAKER_13]: Right the day or two before she passed away, she said did Kathy and Paul go on their trip.

01:07:58.516 –> 01:08:27.949
[SPEAKER_13]: Can you imagine that really when you think about that that you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re, you’re

01:08:27.929 –> 01:08:29.773
[SPEAKER_12]: nice that you were cleared of all charges.

01:08:29.833 –> 01:08:39.697
[SPEAKER_13]: I know you’re a person of interest for what I was that pillow was right next to That’s the way Yeah, but anyway, don’t be a burn.

01:08:39.997 –> 01:08:43.626
[SPEAKER_13]: No, I’ll be honest be open and honest and I do all that

01:08:44.686 –> 01:08:49.356
[SPEAKER_13]: But hey, I wanted to mention that this episode is powered by incogney.

01:08:49.597 –> 01:08:51.622
[SPEAKER_13]: Your personal data’s body yard.

01:08:51.982 –> 01:08:53.486
[SPEAKER_13]: Listen up, Santa’s helpers.

01:08:53.987 –> 01:09:01.243
[SPEAKER_13]: Data brokers scoop up your info, names, addresses, even social security numbers, and they sell it to whoever’s paying.

01:09:01.223 –> 01:09:04.846
[SPEAKER_13]: Scammers, spammers, creepy marketers, you name it.

01:09:05.167 –> 01:09:07.389
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s why your phone won’t stop rangang.

01:09:07.429 –> 01:09:11.612
[SPEAKER_13]: Your inbox is a mess and identity theft is always lurking around the corner.

01:09:11.933 –> 01:09:16.597
[SPEAKER_13]: Data breaches your way up and statistically breaches increase every year.

01:09:16.977 –> 01:09:21.401
[SPEAKER_13]: In cognizant fights back, they automatically wipe your data from over 230 brokers.

01:09:21.882 –> 01:09:24.484
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01:09:24.804 –> 01:09:26.366
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01:09:26.666 –> 01:09:31.230
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01:09:31.210 –> 01:09:38.882
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01:09:39.263 –> 01:09:41.426
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01:09:46.975 –> 01:09:50.521
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01:09:51.002 –> 01:09:57.893
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01:09:57.873 –> 01:10:16.995
[SPEAKER_13]: and annual incognit plan incognit dot com slash t m o s that’s i n c o g n i dot com slash t m o s m we think incognit for their fine sponsorship right here with them yeah as far as being a burden goes i have to say that uh…

01:10:16.975 –> 01:10:28.407
[SPEAKER_13]: I wonder, I wonder to myself this week, if 12 Josh, that age is the most expensive age for Christmas, because I really do believe it is.

01:10:28.887 –> 01:10:37.876
[SPEAKER_02]: You know, there might be questions for that, yeah, and we’re like, it doesn’t look like we have that many presents because all the kids, they just need more expensive stuff now.

01:10:38.377 –> 01:10:40.940
[SPEAKER_02]: So, I feel amazing, it really is crazy.

01:10:40.960 –> 01:10:45.244
[SPEAKER_12]: I’m impressed that you’re wrapping presents on the 17th, that’s pretty far out.

01:10:45.224 –> 01:10:49.668
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, well we’ve got some things some travel and stuff going on.

01:10:49.688 –> 01:10:54.353
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, so you got to be ready because you know there’s only eight days left To get all that stuff done.

01:10:54.373 –> 01:10:54.813
[SPEAKER_12]: There it is.

01:10:55.194 –> 01:10:59.658
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, so there it goes folks My hello there the eight day one.

01:10:59.718 –> 01:11:07.826
[SPEAKER_12]: This is one of my favorites Because of the funny ending, but here comes the drunk guy Hi, I’ve you done your Christmas shopping.

01:11:07.846 –> 01:11:12.531
[SPEAKER_12]: Come out there better hurry up, or

01:11:13.270 –> 01:11:17.636
[SPEAKER_12]: That if you had to pick a hit single of the album of shopping warnings, that’s the one.

01:11:17.696 –> 01:11:18.838
[SPEAKER_12]: That’s a great one right there.

01:11:19.919 –> 01:11:20.180
[SPEAKER_13]: Wow.

01:11:20.360 –> 01:11:20.660
[SPEAKER_13]: Thank you.

01:11:21.341 –> 01:11:22.944
[SPEAKER_13]: Hey, Daniel Thurber.

01:11:22.964 –> 01:11:24.826
[SPEAKER_13]: Did you see that comment from Daniel Thurber?

01:11:25.067 –> 01:11:25.487
[SPEAKER_13]: I did not.

01:11:25.527 –> 01:11:26.128
[SPEAKER_13]: What does he say?

01:11:26.328 –> 01:11:27.710
[SPEAKER_13]: No, I’m not going to repeat it.

01:11:27.730 –> 01:11:31.636
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, no, Daniel, no, no, no.

01:11:32.076 –> 01:11:33.378
[SPEAKER_12]: That’s so weird, isn’t it?

01:11:33.438 –> 01:11:34.139
[SPEAKER_12]: Isn’t that dark?

01:11:34.480 –> 01:11:38.445
[SPEAKER_12]: And the first two words in that I don’t know that I’ve ever heard that phrase.

01:11:38.465 –> 01:11:40.408
[SPEAKER_13]: Well, that is so disgusting.

01:11:40.388 –> 01:11:41.230
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s really bad.

01:11:41.250 –> 01:11:43.113
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s so twisted and weird.

01:11:43.133 –> 01:11:50.387
[SPEAKER_13]: He looks, I wonder if he’s my age because he’s got that 77 and his, maybe he’s 77 years old.

01:11:51.429 –> 01:11:51.770
[SPEAKER_13]: Wow.

01:11:52.391 –> 01:11:53.273
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh my God.

01:11:53.293 –> 01:11:53.934
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, he’s bad.

01:11:53.954 –> 01:11:54.435
[SPEAKER_12]: That’s the best.

01:11:55.156 –> 01:11:57.320
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, Daniel, how old are you?

01:11:57.380 –> 01:11:58.242
[SPEAKER_12]: Just tell us.

01:11:58.302 –> 01:12:00.827
[SPEAKER_13]: Are you 66 Daniel or they’re about?

01:12:01.617 –> 01:12:03.440
[SPEAKER_12]: He doesn’t want to burden us, Mike.

01:12:03.460 –> 01:12:03.641
[SPEAKER_13]: So weird.

01:12:03.661 –> 01:12:04.162
[SPEAKER_13]: No, the speaking burden.

01:12:04.542 –> 01:12:05.364
[SPEAKER_13]: I have put the, I think Josh has to.

01:12:05.384 –> 01:12:17.466
[SPEAKER_13]: I put the Kabash on the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, you know, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,

01:12:18.627 –> 01:12:26.755
[SPEAKER_13]: Phase two, I went to the world of kayaks and I looked at kayaks and we have a, by the way, we have a kayak joint down there.

01:12:26.775 –> 01:12:30.118
[SPEAKER_13]: Really hard to run out pushing bonus shows subscription this year.

01:12:30.839 –> 01:12:32.080
[SPEAKER_13]: How come you’re not pushing?

01:12:32.481 –> 01:12:33.682
[SPEAKER_13]: We are going to do that.

01:12:33.742 –> 01:12:34.903
[SPEAKER_13]: Yes, yes.

01:12:35.043 –> 01:12:41.109
[SPEAKER_12]: You know, it’s, you mentioned you went kayaking with your son recently and you used a new set of muscles.

01:12:41.229 –> 01:12:42.070
[SPEAKER_12]: That’s why I remember.

01:12:42.430 –> 01:12:45.293
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, just my shoulders just got back to normal.

01:12:45.273 –> 01:12:47.839
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, I didn’t really, that was a cruise activity that you kayacked.

01:12:48.099 –> 01:12:57.419
[SPEAKER_13]: We went to their little, you know, they all have their little eye lens to be moved.

01:12:58.882 –> 01:13:05.256
[SPEAKER_12]: Uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-

01:13:05.236 –> 01:13:22.215
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, right now it’s a ridiculously it why do I look over like he’s here isn’t school It ridiculously expensive fishing reel a ridiculously expensive bat

01:13:22.195 –> 01:13:27.765
[SPEAKER_13]: and then like two other things that and they’re all ridiculously expensive.

01:13:27.785 –> 01:13:36.600
[SPEAKER_12]: I got to know because my father actually has a notable fishing real collection, classic fishing reels that he cherishes and he spent a long time curating and getting them together.

01:13:36.620 –> 01:13:37.461
[SPEAKER_12]: I love to look at them.

01:13:37.942 –> 01:13:41.508
[SPEAKER_12]: For a modern, neat, good, top of the line fishing real.

01:13:41.528 –> 01:13:42.169
[SPEAKER_12]: What are we looking at?

01:13:42.189 –> 01:13:43.111
[SPEAKER_12]: Like top of the line?

01:13:43.431 –> 01:13:44.533
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, like the one he wants.

01:13:44.553 –> 01:13:45.655
[SPEAKER_13]: Me too, hundreds.

01:13:45.635 –> 01:13:46.880
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, really?

01:13:46.900 –> 01:13:48.668
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, right, Josh.

01:13:48.708 –> 01:13:50.757
[SPEAKER_13]: If you looked at us, they’re silly.

01:13:50.797 –> 01:13:51.460
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, we’re better.

01:13:51.500 –> 01:13:52.303
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, we have a problem.

01:13:53.228 –> 01:13:54.330
[SPEAKER_02]: We haven’t jumped into that.

01:13:54.410 –> 01:13:59.036
[SPEAKER_02]: The rods are flashier so we can get away with more mid-scale $100 real.

01:13:59.737 –> 01:14:01.740
[SPEAKER_12]: Oh, so you put the money in the rod, not the real.

01:14:01.800 –> 01:14:05.906
[SPEAKER_12]: I put, well, I put it in the real, because it’s, I put it on one of your existing rods.

01:14:05.926 –> 01:14:07.287
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, that’s the way it goes.

01:14:07.968 –> 01:14:08.870
[SPEAKER_13]: But I haven’t done it yet.

01:14:08.930 –> 01:14:12.835
[SPEAKER_13]: I’m going to do it today, you know, and venture out.

01:14:12.855 –> 01:14:13.356
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, we’re not.

01:14:13.796 –> 01:14:19.244
[SPEAKER_02]: And we’re not down the baseball path, but we’re down the, uh, gaming keyboard path.

01:14:19.264 –> 01:14:19.705
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, yes.

01:14:19.945 –> 01:14:21.447
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s another big one.

01:14:21.427 –> 01:14:24.372
[SPEAKER_13]: Man, they might be the worst.

01:14:24.392 –> 01:14:29.920
[SPEAKER_13]: Big retail Rob has finally figured out how to build the American middle-class consumer.

01:14:29.960 –> 01:14:30.741
[SPEAKER_02]: They are done.

01:14:30.761 –> 01:14:32.063
[SPEAKER_02]: And I think it’s YouTube.

01:14:32.805 –> 01:14:37.311
[SPEAKER_02]: I think YouTube, that has pestered all the kids with all this ads.

01:14:37.532 –> 01:14:40.937
[SPEAKER_02]: And with this, I need it because these streamers have it.

01:14:40.917 –> 01:14:41.598
[SPEAKER_12]: Right.

01:14:41.618 –> 01:14:45.085
[SPEAKER_12]: Do you guys give or get itemized Amazon list from your children?

01:14:45.326 –> 01:14:47.009
[SPEAKER_12]: Or are they still just telling you stuff?

01:14:47.029 –> 01:14:49.054
[SPEAKER_13]: No, I’m getting the Amazon.

01:14:49.274 –> 01:14:50.777
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, I get the list from all my kids.

01:14:50.897 –> 01:14:56.248
[SPEAKER_13]: And by the way, I watch, you know, a semi-regularly, I watch my next guest needs no introduction.

01:14:56.288 –> 01:14:57.912
[SPEAKER_13]: The David Letterman series that.

01:14:57.932 –> 01:14:58.393
[SPEAKER_13]: And Mr.

01:14:58.453 –> 01:14:59.635
[SPEAKER_13]: Beast is a dick.

01:14:59.615 –> 01:15:00.737
[SPEAKER_12]: I hate Mr.

01:15:00.797 –> 01:15:14.597
[SPEAKER_13]: Beast from day one just the dick of what an A whole and he’s right in that Jimmy Fallon I want to be a cute baby talker It’s at a guy which just sucks it and also you know what his name promises something He doesn’t deliver.

01:15:14.897 –> 01:15:15.919
[SPEAKER_02]: He’s not a beast.

01:15:16.079 –> 01:15:24.812
[SPEAKER_02]: He’s barely a mister and he’s not even created enough to come up with his own name Yes, that’s that name is because it was all the time to him by Xbox

01:15:24.792 –> 01:15:46.665
[SPEAKER_13]: right and oh by the way uh you know and I’m watching this and watching the profile on everything he does well if you give away a half a million dollars to people that’s that’s the formula you want to talk about the front if you stay in prison for uh six thirty days or a hundred days you get uh you know you get this money and by the way statistics have shown that people can’t do that

01:15:46.645 –> 01:16:02.089
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, so it’s a pretty safe bed right, but you’ll with him being such a dick because there was I heard you watch it because there was a bit of tension between Letterman and this guy who’s just kind of yeah, yeah, like a me with my fake team Yeah, Mike

01:16:02.069 –> 01:16:08.040
[SPEAKER_02]: This is why if we get 100 million bonus show subscribers, we too will give away a million dollars.

01:16:08.160 –> 01:16:13.390
[SPEAKER_13]: We will give away if we get 100 million bonus show subscribers, one million dollars is coming your way.

01:16:13.430 –> 01:16:16.616
[SPEAKER_12]: But you have to listen to all of the bonus shows in a row.

01:16:16.937 –> 01:16:18.039
[SPEAKER_12]: Then you get a million dollars.

01:16:18.059 –> 01:16:19.061
[SPEAKER_02]: We’re going to try that.

01:16:19.121 –> 01:16:22.407
[SPEAKER_02]: Keyletter each one and 52 letters later, you’ll know.

01:16:22.387 –> 01:16:25.815
[SPEAKER_13]: Right now, our story asses would settle for super chats.

01:16:25.956 –> 01:16:27.700
[SPEAKER_13]: All right, we’ll, uh, we have more going on.

01:16:27.720 –> 01:16:28.301
[SPEAKER_13]: Yes, go ahead.

01:16:28.321 –> 01:16:39.248
[SPEAKER_02]: I do want to mention the bonus shows because it’s only in December in January that you can sign up for the yearly subscriptions where you can get the commercial free all year or the regular bonus show all year.

01:16:39.228 –> 01:16:44.175
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, but you got to buy it now in December and January and it’s a great way to save money.

01:16:44.215 –> 01:16:44.755
[SPEAKER_12]: Support the show.

01:16:44.775 –> 01:16:45.476
[SPEAKER_12]: Get the content.

01:16:45.496 –> 01:16:45.837
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.

01:16:45.857 –> 01:16:47.599
[SPEAKER_13]: We’re planning for our big push in January.

01:16:47.619 –> 01:16:48.781
[SPEAKER_13]: Somebody mentioned it to Josh.

01:16:48.801 –> 01:16:48.921
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah.

01:16:48.941 –> 01:16:49.722
[SPEAKER_13]: Please support us.

01:16:49.962 –> 01:16:53.467
[SPEAKER_13]: And anyway, can this is our time of the year when you do that.

01:16:53.507 –> 01:16:54.228
[SPEAKER_13]: And that’s interesting.

01:16:54.248 –> 01:16:55.229
[SPEAKER_13]: Somebody brought that up.

01:16:55.570 –> 01:16:57.793
[SPEAKER_13]: How could we not pushing yearly subscriptions?

01:16:57.853 –> 01:16:58.434
[SPEAKER_13]: We offer.

01:16:58.854 –> 01:17:00.917
[SPEAKER_13]: We do it in January more than December.

01:17:01.017 –> 01:17:04.582
[SPEAKER_12]: Do you feel like it was like almost reverse psychology on us?

01:17:04.602 –> 01:17:05.303
[SPEAKER_12]: No.

01:17:05.283 –> 01:17:07.085
[SPEAKER_02]: No, we’re not that smart.

01:17:07.105 –> 01:17:07.506
[SPEAKER_02]: No.

01:17:07.606 –> 01:17:08.186
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, he’s not.

01:17:08.307 –> 01:17:11.370
[SPEAKER_02]: I think it was someone who thinks they are smarter than us.

01:17:11.891 –> 01:17:12.832
[SPEAKER_02]: And we get it.

01:17:12.852 –> 01:17:13.413
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

01:17:13.433 –> 01:17:13.513
[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.

01:17:13.933 –> 01:17:25.267
[SPEAKER_13]: Well, all I know is getting ready for the holidays is a hassle selecting great wines to make Mary and bright shouldn’t be naked wines the sponsor of today’s show grandma and they’re pouring out a deal.

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01:17:49.492 –> 01:17:52.975
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01:17:59.110 –> 01:18:09.073
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01:18:09.053 –> 01:18:28.815
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01:18:28.835 –> 01:18:31.418
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, like that, some beautiful video.

01:18:31.438 –> 01:18:33.600
[SPEAKER_13]: Jerry.

01:18:33.620 –> 01:18:36.343
[SPEAKER_12]: It’s a cargo land.

01:18:37.758 –> 01:18:46.306
[SPEAKER_12]: Mike, we’ve taken a lot of meals together, and I guess some of my favorite memories have been eating with you, and the laughter is just uncontained.

01:18:46.326 –> 01:18:46.767
[SPEAKER_12]: Yes.

01:18:47.087 –> 01:18:50.550
[SPEAKER_12]: And we all have our standard things we do when we eat.

01:18:50.691 –> 01:18:52.672
[SPEAKER_12]: And one of yours was, and I love it.

01:18:52.733 –> 01:18:58.438
[SPEAKER_12]: I can see it perfectly to this day is after a shrimp cocktail, putting the shrimp tails on your fingers.

01:18:58.778 –> 01:18:59.659
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, look at that bit.

01:18:59.679 –> 01:19:00.700
[SPEAKER_12]: Long finger next to it.

01:19:00.720 –> 01:19:01.101
[SPEAKER_12]: Still do it.

01:19:01.281 –> 01:19:02.502
[SPEAKER_13]: Still do it to this day.

01:19:02.782 –> 01:19:03.563
[SPEAKER_13]: Absolutely.

01:19:03.543 –> 01:19:09.869
[SPEAKER_12]: If you’re not a money enough to have a shrimp cocktail, I think a good substitute for that is the classic snack bugles.

01:19:10.250 –> 01:19:11.010
[SPEAKER_12]: Remember bugles?

01:19:11.030 –> 01:19:12.131
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, I love bugles.

01:19:12.192 –> 01:19:13.433
[SPEAKER_13]: The corn chip, bugles.

01:19:13.453 –> 01:19:13.993
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, exactly.

01:19:14.013 –> 01:19:17.497
[SPEAKER_12]: And they’re like cones, and you can put those on your finger as well.

01:19:17.917 –> 01:19:19.439
[SPEAKER_12]: But this guy is troubled.

01:19:19.499 –> 01:19:21.961
[SPEAKER_12]: He says his childhood has been ruined.

01:19:22.221 –> 01:19:22.762
[SPEAKER_03]: Bugles?

01:19:23.603 –> 01:19:27.166
[SPEAKER_03]: The f*** is gone, aren’t you?

01:19:27.186 –> 01:19:29.989
[SPEAKER_03]: I bought this bag of bugles for the first time.

01:19:30.391 –> 01:20:00.381
[SPEAKER_03]: like 15 years and they added to basketball one so they looked good and I bought them because I wanted to put my finger through them like this like a little hat you know you guys I don’t know if you visit that yeah part of the fun finger hats none of them have an opening for the hat no they broke or no they were and he’s so bad at expressing himself what’s he talking about

01:20:01.475 –> 01:20:04.819
[SPEAKER_13]: Does that mean they broke or they’re manufactured?

01:20:04.859 –> 01:20:11.928
[SPEAKER_12]: No, I think they’ve changed the manufacturing method of mutants and you can’t The fiber has a point of being a bugle is that it’s a cone.

01:20:12.149 –> 01:20:12.790
[SPEAKER_12]: I know, I know.

01:20:12.810 –> 01:20:13.671
[SPEAKER_13]: I know who any more.

01:20:13.931 –> 01:20:14.792
[SPEAKER_12]: Bestords.

01:20:15.073 –> 01:20:15.573
[SPEAKER_12]: God.

01:20:15.854 –> 01:20:17.335
[SPEAKER_12]: Come on, people.

01:20:17.516 –> 01:20:18.357
[SPEAKER_12]: Come on.

01:20:18.477 –> 01:20:23.944
[SPEAKER_12]: Now Mike, I know you’ve seen the super secret miniature Washington monument in Washington, DC.

01:20:24.605 –> 01:20:28.630
[SPEAKER_12]: Did you know there are other statues of liberty around the world?

01:20:28.610 –> 01:20:31.816
[SPEAKER_12]: I know there’s one in France because it was all the one in France.

01:20:32.116 –> 01:20:32.617
[SPEAKER_13]: Yes.

01:20:32.637 –> 01:20:34.480
[SPEAKER_13]: I saw the one in the New York City, Giftsha.

01:20:35.722 –> 01:20:39.910
[SPEAKER_12]: I saw the one in the Giftsha that was broken and so the torch was being held out like this.

01:20:40.210 –> 01:20:40.912
[SPEAKER_13]: Very exciting.

01:20:41.032 –> 01:20:49.707
[SPEAKER_12]: But there is a there was a super saver type store like a dollar store, but you wouldn’t call it a dollar store because it’s in Brazil.

01:20:49.687 –> 01:20:55.352
[SPEAKER_12]: To drive business to them, they built an over 100-foot replica of the Statue of Liberty.

01:20:55.973 –> 01:20:57.214
[SPEAKER_12]: And covered its metal.

01:20:57.334 –> 01:20:59.296
[SPEAKER_12]: I mean, it’s like a really substantial statue.

01:20:59.316 –> 01:21:00.717
[SPEAKER_13]: It’s a money-metal statue.

01:21:00.958 –> 01:21:11.027
[SPEAKER_12]: It is on top of their building, and they thought this entirely through its beautiful, but they didn’t consider one thing, is do you know that Brazil gets windy?

01:21:11.047 –> 01:21:16.032
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no.

01:21:17.952 –> 01:21:20.856
[SPEAKER_13]: Oh, what a sad fall crushed your head.

01:21:20.876 –> 01:21:24.300
[SPEAKER_13]: I know it’s really bad lady, Liberty Glatt.

01:21:24.360 –> 01:21:26.623
[SPEAKER_13]: It doesn’t look like it hit a car, but that’s good.

01:21:26.643 –> 01:21:32.090
[SPEAKER_12]: No cars were hit, but they said that they were, there was urgency to get the cars out of the parking lot.

01:21:32.250 –> 01:21:32.691
[SPEAKER_12]: Figures.

01:21:32.731 –> 01:21:34.173
[SPEAKER_12]: No, it’s good.

01:21:34.193 –> 01:21:35.915
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, you saw that falling.

01:21:36.375 –> 01:21:37.156
[SPEAKER_02]: Absolutely.

01:21:37.597 –> 01:21:39.479
[SPEAKER_02]: I hope you’ve ever win the New York.

01:21:39.499 –> 01:21:39.960
[SPEAKER_02]: Wow.

01:21:39.940 –> 01:21:42.583
[SPEAKER_12]: Well, I think we might have designed it a little stronger.

01:21:42.843 –> 01:21:43.744
[SPEAKER_12]: Wow.

01:21:43.764 –> 01:21:47.729
[SPEAKER_12]: Mike, didn’t the show have sort of a past with Gil Gerard.

01:21:47.889 –> 01:21:51.333
[SPEAKER_12]: Wasn’t he one of those guests that came on, loved the show?

01:21:51.773 –> 01:21:55.858
[SPEAKER_12]: And eventually you had to like stop taking your memory would be better than mine on that.

01:21:55.878 –> 01:21:58.801
[SPEAKER_13]: What was the, what was the sci-fi show that he was on?

01:21:58.881 –> 01:21:59.742
[SPEAKER_13]: Was it good?

01:21:59.762 –> 01:22:02.004
[SPEAKER_12]: So glad you mentioned it because we’re going to see it in a moment.

01:22:02.044 –> 01:22:04.767
[SPEAKER_12]: But Gil Gerard passed from cancer.

01:22:04.807 –> 01:22:08.952
[SPEAKER_12]: He was 82, which is a pretty good run.

01:22:08.932 –> 01:22:14.560
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, but he always has to keep Richard’s outlasted book Rogers in the 25th century.

01:22:14.941 –> 01:22:22.692
[SPEAKER_12]: Okay, and I love this because I think it’s Bill Conrad doing the narration, Mike, but they wanted it to sound so modern.

01:22:25.456 –> 01:22:30.163
[SPEAKER_10]: In the year 1987, the John F. Kennedy Space Center.

01:22:30.599 –> 01:22:36.266
[SPEAKER_10]: Nasa lost the last of America’s deep space probes, the payload burst on the net.

01:22:36.306 –> 01:22:37.087
[SPEAKER_10]: That’s not Gil.

01:22:37.167 –> 01:22:37.868
[SPEAKER_10]: Nasa rocket.

01:22:37.968 –> 01:22:39.530
[SPEAKER_12]: No, no, I think that’s William Conrax.

01:22:39.550 –> 01:22:48.742
[SPEAKER_10]: Exploration vessel, Ranger III, aboard this compact Starship, a lone astronaut captain, which is the first to kill you, right?

01:22:48.922 –> 01:22:50.284
[SPEAKER_10]: Yes, you’re going to do the show.

01:22:50.404 –> 01:22:55.611
[SPEAKER_10]: Make forces be young, all comprehension, and awesome rush will death.

01:22:58.038 –> 01:23:03.451
[SPEAKER_10]: The support systems were frozen by temperatures beyond imagination.

01:23:03.811 –> 01:23:09.685
[SPEAKER_10]: Ranger 3 was blown out of its plan trajectory into an orbit of 1,000 times for a rest.

01:23:09.985 –> 01:23:10.927
[SPEAKER_12]: We bought that.

01:23:13.010 –> 01:23:16.216
[SPEAKER_13]: Yes, we did and there was a be kind of every episode.

01:23:16.677 –> 01:23:17.919
[SPEAKER_12]: No, there was a shorter version.

01:23:17.939 –> 01:23:19.041
[SPEAKER_12]: That was from the pilot.

01:23:19.081 –> 01:23:20.985
[SPEAKER_13]: Yeah, there’s a hotty on that show too.

01:23:21.005 –> 01:23:21.586
[SPEAKER_12]: Aaron Gray.

01:23:21.846 –> 01:23:22.688
[SPEAKER_12]: Aaron Gray.

01:23:22.708 –> 01:23:23.509
[SPEAKER_12]: Thank you Rob.

01:23:23.650 –> 01:23:28.198
[SPEAKER_12]: And don’t forget, uh, tweaky the robot voiced by Mel Blank, one of his last regular gigs.

01:23:28.438 –> 01:23:28.939
[SPEAKER_12]: So,

01:23:28.919 –> 01:23:32.205
[SPEAKER_12]: It wasn’t always all serious as that and let it to believe.

01:23:32.385 –> 01:23:39.958
[SPEAKER_12]: But Gil Gerard loved the show and he loved this show and safe home and condolences to the family Gerard.

01:23:40.379 –> 01:23:43.204
[SPEAKER_12]: Now, I don’t like this trend on TV.

01:23:43.244 –> 01:23:46.290
[SPEAKER_12]: This is what we’re going to close with of the Is it Kaker?

01:23:46.410 –> 01:23:46.931
[SPEAKER_12]: Is it real?

01:23:47.632 –> 01:23:48.453
[SPEAKER_12]: You shows, right?

01:23:48.734 –> 01:23:50.437
[SPEAKER_12]: Where they bake something, so that’s not real show.

01:23:50.457 –> 01:23:51.419
[SPEAKER_12]: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

01:23:51.439 –> 01:23:52.040
[SPEAKER_12]: I don’t like it.

01:23:52.060 –> 01:23:53.863
[SPEAKER_13]: Baked, baked, baked, baked, baked.

01:23:53.945 –> 01:24:00.433
[SPEAKER_12]: Other people that don’t like it include this pug, watch him watching a cake get sliced.

01:24:00.453 –> 01:24:01.394
[SPEAKER_05]: Let’s see how this guy tastes.

01:24:02.295 –> 01:24:09.824
[SPEAKER_13]: First cut right there.

01:24:09.844 –> 01:24:11.226
[SPEAKER_13]: That is so funny.

01:24:11.526 –> 01:24:12.607
[SPEAKER_12]: Let’s watch it one more time.

01:24:12.808 –> 01:24:14.470
[SPEAKER_12]: That might be a good dog.

01:24:14.550 –> 01:24:16.372
[SPEAKER_12]: Do you think it’s real?

01:24:16.672 –> 01:24:16.993
[SPEAKER_12]: I do.

01:24:17.153 –> 01:24:18.735
[SPEAKER_12]: I think it’s real, but let’s look again.

01:24:18.955 –> 01:24:19.496
[SPEAKER_12]: I like this.

01:24:19.556 –> 01:24:21.899
[SPEAKER_05]: Let’s see how this guy tastes.

01:24:21.919 –> 01:24:23.040
[SPEAKER_05]: First cut right there.

01:24:27.593 –> 01:24:29.040
[SPEAKER_05]: No!

01:24:29.061 –> 01:24:29.672
[SPEAKER_05]: Just take buddy.

01:24:29.872 –> 01:24:31.574
[SPEAKER_05]: It’s just cake, buddy.

01:24:31.594 –> 01:24:35.437
[SPEAKER_13]: Do you think there’s a conflict between the dog’s eyes and his sense of smell?

01:24:35.918 –> 01:24:44.466
[SPEAKER_13]: Where, you know, she’s cutting into the dog and he sees that he gets screaming, but he’s like he’s hanging there like a dog would by a table when people are eating.

01:24:44.526 –> 01:24:45.587
[SPEAKER_13]: That’s the way that goes.

01:24:45.687 –> 01:24:48.190
[SPEAKER_12]: Like the problem with that dog are multi-fold.

01:24:48.510 –> 01:24:50.612
[SPEAKER_13]: Multi-fold, that’s what we got to get out of here.

01:24:51.093 –> 01:24:56.538
[SPEAKER_13]: We’ll be back with another episode tomorrow, everybody are thanks to Matt Soroka.

01:24:56.558 –> 01:24:56.738
[SPEAKER_13]: Yay!

01:24:57.039 –> 01:24:59.541
[SPEAKER_13]: The Sam Dibion!

01:24:59.521 –> 01:25:00.482
[SPEAKER_13]: Mercenary.

01:25:01.504 –> 01:25:02.565
[SPEAKER_13]: It’ll be better than the T’s.

01:25:02.825 –> 01:25:04.588
[SPEAKER_13]: They’re in the T’s here.

01:25:05.529 –> 01:25:06.711
[SPEAKER_13]: Lost in Zambia.

01:25:07.412 –> 01:25:09.394
[SPEAKER_13]: Anyway, we’ll be back tomorrow.

01:25:09.454 –> 01:25:10.195
[SPEAKER_13]: Thank you, Josh.

01:25:10.215 –> 01:25:12.218
[SPEAKER_13]: Thank you, Rob, for Mike Omera.

01:25:12.238 –> 01:25:14.581
[SPEAKER_13]: This is Mike Omera saying goodbye, everyone.

01:25:14.962 –> 01:25:15.423
[SPEAKER_13]: Thank you.

01:25:15.723 –> 01:25:17.165
[SPEAKER_12]: Mike, Peerbick, Dander.

01:25:19.408 –> 01:25:20.489
[SPEAKER_12]: Just thought I’d bring that up.

01:25:20.509 –> 01:25:21.210
[SPEAKER_12]: What more?

01:25:21.611 –> 01:25:23.553
[SPEAKER_00]: Make sure you check out the Michael Maribona show.

01:25:23.954 –> 01:25:25.957
[SPEAKER_00]: Get it at Michael Marishov.com.

01:25:25.977 –> 01:25:28.380
[SPEAKER_09]: Michael Mara, Radio Entertainment.

01:25:29.879 –> 01:25:31.481
[SPEAKER_09]: What would you like me to bring you for Christmas?

01:25:31.942 –> 01:25:32.783
[SPEAKER_06]: Nothing, thank you.

01:25:34.265 –> 01:25:35.907
[SPEAKER_09]: Don’t come now, you must want something.

01:25:36.367 –> 01:25:38.630
[SPEAKER_06]: Whatever I want, my mother will get from me.

01:25:38.650 –> 01:25:41.834
[SPEAKER_06]: If it’s sensible and doesn’t cost too much, of course.

01:25:41.854 –> 01:25:44.518
[SPEAKER_01]: Because I’m all about the birth of Christmas.

01:25:45.099 –> 01:25:48.163
[SPEAKER_01]: You know, the wise guys kicked him out of the hotel.

01:25:48.563 –> 01:25:53.249
[SPEAKER_01]: They’re ejaculate, conception, and then a drummer who didn’t have to give me some perfume.

01:25:53.309 –> 01:25:54.431
[SPEAKER_01]: And then they…

01:25:54.451 –> 01:25:56.173
[SPEAKER_01]: It’s a heavy deal for me.

01:25:56.930 –> 01:25:58.805
[SPEAKER_08]: Frad Geele!

01:25:59.315 –> 01:26:00.578
[SPEAKER_08]: That must be Italian!

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