Bruise Newz! Mike has a medical update. All Hail Mr. Anderson! Do you know about the PE and the secret donuts? You will! A happy Spewak reunion… Josh’s citrus scheme, and why do some folks put you on the defensive?
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[SPEAKER_00]: The women of all my children will make your day.
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[SPEAKER_00]: Fantastic.
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[SPEAKER_00]: Erica, make sure day every day.
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[SPEAKER_00]: And all my children.
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[SPEAKER_00]: Michael Merra, radio entertainment.
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[SPEAKER_00]: You can listen to the Michael Marasho at michomerasho.com.
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[SPEAKER_00]: Wow, what have we here?
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[SPEAKER_07]: It’s a podcast.
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[SPEAKER_07]: Fun.
00:20.086 –> 00:20.988
[SPEAKER_07]: I want to excitement.
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[SPEAKER_07]: We have today.
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[SPEAKER_00]: It’s the Michael Marasho with Michael Marasho and Rob Spuac.
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[SPEAKER_00]: Now here’s Mike.
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[SPEAKER_03]: I cannot help.
00:32.971 –> 00:36.177
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, but smile when Rob plays certain tapes.
00:36.197 –> 00:39.924
[SPEAKER_03]: Now, did you edit that to the opening or do you have it’s free standing?
00:40.065 –> 00:41.768
[SPEAKER_04]: It’s free standing if you want to hear it again.
00:41.788 –> 00:42.790
[SPEAKER_03]: I would love to.
00:42.810 –> 00:48.300
[SPEAKER_03]: And now, if you want to know how abnormal my personality is, yeah, all you have to do is listen to it.
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[SPEAKER_03]: There’s no way I can’t smile when I hear this voice.
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[SPEAKER_00]: Ernie Anderson, because I know that all my children will make you a day.
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[SPEAKER_00]: Erica, make sure day every day on all my children.
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[SPEAKER_04]: There’s so many levels to it because obviously Ernie is about to be pissed off based on his read, but also we spend so long watching all my children.
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[SPEAKER_03]: We really did.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And the just the pipes are so good.
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[SPEAKER_03]: One more time.
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[SPEAKER_00]: One more time.
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[SPEAKER_00]: Listen, this was for all my children.
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[SPEAKER_00]: We’ll make you a day.
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[SPEAKER_00]: Fantastic.
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[SPEAKER_00]: Erica, make you a day every day.
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[SPEAKER_00]: And all my children.
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[SPEAKER_04]: The man sounds like a tumor.
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[SPEAKER_03]: He’s so, it’s the era of
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[SPEAKER_03]: the real announcer and I miss it every day.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It’s what I need to.
01:37.764 –> 01:39.609
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s what I would strive to be.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It’s what I try to be and as as my radio career wound down, I remember actually,
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[SPEAKER_03]: going to a person in New York, a coach and the coaching involved trying to make me sound less like an announcer and that was never going to happen.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It was just never.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And the only way you get it now are with play by play guys in sports and most of them fake it.
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[SPEAKER_03]: So it’s really, you
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[SPEAKER_03]: Hi, how are you?
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[SPEAKER_03]: I have a reservation for it, and that, and he didn’t have to away.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And that, that read that he does.
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[SPEAKER_03]: I know I’m over analyzing it right at the very end.
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[SPEAKER_03]: No, you’re not.
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[SPEAKER_03]: So it’s probably boring.
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[SPEAKER_03]: That read was just so effortless with him because he just had the chops.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It’s like to me as an announcer, as somebody who’s done voiceovers is whole life.
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[SPEAKER_03]: That’s like listening to a great opera singer.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Yes, pistol.
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[SPEAKER_04]: One of the greatest moments for me to hear a voice was when I was
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[SPEAKER_04]: You know, tangential to the redskins.
02:48.933 –> 02:55.299
[SPEAKER_04]: I was working with a WJFK and you got to, you know, kill some time before the game and I was up in the broadcast booths.
02:55.779 –> 02:56.640
[SPEAKER_04]: There was a row of them.
02:56.900 –> 03:01.565
[SPEAKER_04]: And they were playing the Eagles and Harry Callis was there to call the game for Philadelphia.
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[SPEAKER_04]: No, Harry Callis is also the voice event.
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[SPEAKER_04]: If one of the voices event of health films, and he had stopped by to say hi to Sam and to sunny.
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[SPEAKER_04]: And I said, it’s really nice to meet you.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Can I get you anything?
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[SPEAKER_04]: And he said, I would like a cup of coffee.
03:15.798 –> 03:40.911
[SPEAKER_03]: I was doing a radio thund some sort of benefit we had this RV that we used to broadcast from an American university where we would all hang out and I think in the steps of the student center and Tony Perkins was there and Jeff Goldberg was there Goldie and then we had
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[SPEAKER_03]: Dude Walker and Doug Limerick come by and Doug Limerick was another one of those voice guys and Doug I remember Doug Limerick seemingly about nine feet tall.
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[SPEAKER_03]: I’m not sure how a really tall he is but he towered over just and goes how about the forecast and he goes yeah it’s going to be a good look coming around in the verbs and it was just I mean it was just why I wanted to be a DJ and all that slicky boy stuff and it’s just fun.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Anyway, welcome to the Michael Mary show after all that we jumped in a little early because the energy on the show, sometimes we can’t wait, we cannot, and I’m not saying that we’re like crazy like energized, I’m just saying we were, we were rolling, I don’t even remember what we were talking about.
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[SPEAKER_03]: I can, what were we talking, serial killers, serial killers, and I said, oh, this is really good.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Join motorcycles.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Yes.
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[SPEAKER_03]: By the way, motorcycles will be featured in the show today later on in the in the program where we will be talking about motorcycles in a neighborhood.
04:43.491 –> 04:45.173
[SPEAKER_03]: So that’s a little teased for you.
04:45.193 –> 04:51.700
[SPEAKER_03]: But I want to do a start right out of the gate by showing you the, let me go to the wide shot here.
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[SPEAKER_03]: If you’ll allow me just a second.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Sure.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Is this a bruise update?
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[SPEAKER_03]: This is
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[SPEAKER_03]: a bruise.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, it’s getting much bigger, Mike.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
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[SPEAKER_04]: It’s a little bigger.
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[SPEAKER_04]: It’s a little fall off.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It’s a does the bruise are the far off.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, I’m okay.
05:11.932 –> 05:18.579
[SPEAKER_04]: I remember, and I remember an episode of the old Star Trek, the William Shattner Star Trek, where there was like a virus going around the ship.
05:18.720 –> 05:22.284
[SPEAKER_04]: And they had blue stuff that would grow on their body when they got it.
05:22.604 –> 05:24.106
[SPEAKER_04]: And it got bigger and bigger and bigger.
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[SPEAKER_04]: I just hope you’re safe.
05:25.347 –> 05:26.008
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s fine.
05:26.188 –> 05:27.410
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m good.
05:27.430 –> 05:36.244
[SPEAKER_03]: But I was nervous because we taped early because I snuck into this shoulder doctor, specialists who’s got a cancellation.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It really worked out as far as one of the things I read online about what I thought this might be is that if it is what you think it is, which is a tear, you want to get in and see somebody
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[SPEAKER_03]: as soon as you can.
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[SPEAKER_03]: So, um, I, this has got so many layers to it.
05:55.970 –> 06:05.982
[SPEAKER_04]: I go in and I’m waiting and I actually give us like just a 10 second thumbnail of what happened to lead you there because maybe people didn’t catch a Friday.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Friday.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Uh, yeah, Friday.
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[SPEAKER_03]: This is, uh, we were done taping for the week.
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[SPEAKER_03]: So, Friday, I’m on the golf course and uh, it still hurts really, really bad.
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[SPEAKER_03]: But my shoulder hurts really bad.
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[SPEAKER_03]: But I’ve determined at this point.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It’s not my shoulder.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It’s
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[SPEAKER_03]: And my bicep is not bicep, I used to call it that all the time, my bicep muscle is that’s where the pain is coming out of the shoulder and down into the front of the arm and by the way, I will explain later, so he’s there.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Well, that’s not the shoulders, not the bicep.
06:37.578 –> 06:41.862
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, it’s all, you know, the ankle bone connected to the shoulder.
06:42.623 –> 06:49.270
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, yeah, because I had that question.
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[SPEAKER_03]: of taking swings and it’s just overall more pain than I had been experiencing and I’m actually trying to figure out a way to swing where it doesn’t hurt.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And at that point, probably a more intelligent individual would say not today.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Give it a rest, don’t do it.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, you switch to a granny type swing.
07:12.351 –> 07:14.975
[SPEAKER_03]: I drove my 25 minutes to get down there.
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[SPEAKER_03]: I’m not right.
07:15.876 –> 07:16.697
[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t want to go home.
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[SPEAKER_03]: You don’t want to wait a day.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
07:18.460 –> 07:22.245
[SPEAKER_03]: I want to go out and have a miracle that it works.
07:22.666 –> 07:28.454
[SPEAKER_03]: And then, at one point, right at the end, it will happen to be, it had to be the end.
07:28.875 –> 07:41.332
[SPEAKER_03]: I went back to my old kind of handsy, rusty swing, and I take a full swing with, I think it was probably a seven-iron about a regular, normal swing, and a pro-God.
07:41.893 –> 07:44.316
[SPEAKER_03]: And it was as though,
07:44.667 –> 07:52.156
[SPEAKER_03]: It was as though someone had jammed a knitting needle, but that sharp of a pain, not a dull pain.
07:52.436 –> 07:54.399
[SPEAKER_04]: Right in there, that’s where it hurts.
07:54.419 –> 07:56.221
[SPEAKER_04]: So the bruise indicates where the pain is.
07:56.701 –> 08:12.500
[SPEAKER_03]: The bruise indicates where it, you know, I’ll get to that in a second, but when I got home after tailed between my legs, walking up to the incredibly sensitive individual that runs the game and saying, I can’t go today, something popped.
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[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t know what it is
08:16.510 –> 08:17.472
[SPEAKER_03]: All right, come over here.
08:17.993 –> 08:24.746
[SPEAKER_03]: And they said to you ever tonight on Erica, he needs pay your $30.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Yes, women of all my children will love my wife.
08:28.753 –> 08:30.677
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s just a duct into the studio.
08:30.877 –> 08:31.358
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, good.
08:31.859 –> 08:34.384
[SPEAKER_03]: And she is jotting something down to me.
08:34.364 –> 08:39.992
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, it’s it’s probably like a joke that she won’t getting I’m getting this hand off in one thirty dollars Here we are.
08:40.272 –> 08:42.515
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, who does let me put my specs on here?
08:42.575 –> 08:47.262
[SPEAKER_04]: Thirty dollars is a good mini reward if you’re playing rising rockets Emperor Josh.
08:47.522 –> 08:55.873
[SPEAKER_04]: That was one of the prizes I won in the casino tonight What tonight on all my children six thirty perfect I’m all in God bless you.
08:56.534 –> 08:56.975
[SPEAKER_03]: How you doing?
08:56.995 –> 08:57.636
[SPEAKER_03]: You just wake up?
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[SPEAKER_03]: Left you
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[SPEAKER_03]: she goes the lead of my life.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
09:03.166 –> 09:03.686
[SPEAKER_03]: What’s in any way?
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[SPEAKER_04]: 30.
09:03.846 –> 09:07.230
[SPEAKER_04]: You’re going to miss the news with David Muir if you go somewhere it’s 630.
09:07.330 –> 09:10.033
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, it’s baseball, baseball and baseball.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Danny, never stops, never stops.
09:12.775 –> 09:14.337
[SPEAKER_03]: So I feel every say dive.
09:14.477 –> 09:15.959
[SPEAKER_03]: And I said, is there anything else I can do?
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[SPEAKER_03]: Sorry, I had to cancel.
09:17.861 –> 09:19.442
[SPEAKER_03]: He said, yeah, you can give me your $30.
09:19.522 –> 09:21.264
[SPEAKER_03]: So never miss the buy-in.
09:21.525 –> 09:22.626
[SPEAKER_03]: What a good buy.
09:23.166 –> 09:23.366
[SPEAKER_03]: Yep.
09:23.547 –> 09:28.772
[SPEAKER_03]: And then after I gave, only after I gave him the $30, I hope you feel better.
09:28.752 –> 09:31.997
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, hope you have more money for the next time you come out.
09:32.277 –> 09:34.601
[SPEAKER_03]: Suck her ass for the next time.
09:35.682 –> 09:37.805
[SPEAKER_03]: So how does a $30 go to?
09:37.845 –> 09:39.167
[SPEAKER_03]: It goes into the pot.
09:39.347 –> 09:44.014
[SPEAKER_03]: Rob, it goes into the big pot for everybody and then the winners get the the windfall.
09:44.074 –> 09:47.159
[SPEAKER_03]: But is it a weekly pot or is it like a day?
09:47.179 –> 09:50.424
[SPEAKER_03]: When when we play we put it all into the pot then you see you wins.
09:50.684 –> 09:53.228
[SPEAKER_03]: Well then each individual can be a variety of things.
09:53.328 –> 09:56.953
[SPEAKER_04]: He should be out of his mind excited because that means everybody gets more money.
09:57.085 –> 09:57.846
[SPEAKER_03]: No, it doesn’t.
09:57.866 –> 09:59.688
[SPEAKER_03]: It means everybody gets the same amount of money.
09:59.728 –> 10:00.889
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s what that is.
10:00.949 –> 10:03.111
[SPEAKER_05]: And then that’s chance of someone winning.
10:03.572 –> 10:03.772
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes.
10:03.792 –> 10:05.233
[SPEAKER_03]: I say, OK, I go the medium.
10:05.293 –> 10:06.775
[SPEAKER_03]: Sean, I don’t like the narrow shot.
10:06.795 –> 10:07.255
[SPEAKER_03]: There we go.
10:07.335 –> 10:08.216
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s like a copay.
10:08.677 –> 10:10.378
[SPEAKER_03]: You just got exactly what it is.
10:10.739 –> 10:19.708
[SPEAKER_03]: So home in pain, in pain where even like picking up a, I can pick up a cup with water in it.
10:20.148 –> 10:22.030
[SPEAKER_03]: I can’t pick up a computer.
10:22.010 –> 10:24.433
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, you know, I can’t hold that with it.
10:24.553 –> 10:28.539
[SPEAKER_04]: Also yesterday, you could pick up the cup, but it was hard to get it to your mouth.
10:28.679 –> 10:30.141
[SPEAKER_04]: It was the pick up was the problem.
10:30.161 –> 10:31.263
[SPEAKER_03]: Yesterday it was starting to resolve.
10:31.483 –> 10:32.704
[SPEAKER_03]: It is continued to resolve.
10:32.765 –> 10:36.009
[SPEAKER_03]: It reasoned all the way up until going into the study.
10:36.089 –> 10:37.331
[SPEAKER_03]: It was starting to feel better.
10:37.551 –> 10:39.694
[SPEAKER_03]: Bottom line, I had no idea why, but it was.
10:39.754 –> 10:42.958
[SPEAKER_03]: And I’m not going to be upset with that if that happens.
10:43.018 –> 10:49.367
[SPEAKER_03]: However, my mind is racing about technically what I think is a tear.
10:49.718 –> 11:06.748
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, and I I was freaked out and they’ll be I they’ll be an ad on later how I compensate for my stress which involves food and it’s not anything I’m positive about or or happy about but everybody self medicates I’ll report on it.
11:06.728 –> 11:11.954
[SPEAKER_03]: So I go in, I fill out all their paperwork online.
11:12.294 –> 11:13.916
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s no fuss, no much.
11:13.956 –> 11:18.341
[SPEAKER_03]: This is the same place where they made me fully biotic where they put in my artificial hip.
11:18.361 –> 11:20.424
[SPEAKER_03]: So this is the shoulder version.
11:20.664 –> 11:23.467
[SPEAKER_03]: They got the hip guy, the shoulder guy, the knee guy.
11:23.487 –> 11:29.654
[SPEAKER_04]: Are you thinking possibly that the cure to your shoulder slash bicep might be a corpse’s shoulder and bicep?
11:29.995 –> 11:31.897
[SPEAKER_04]: Because I know you have a dead person this morning.
11:31.917 –> 11:32.938
[SPEAKER_02]: I have a dead person.
11:32.918 –> 11:47.940
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s my favorite, that’s my favorite surgery, I’ve assumed that radical measures will be needed because of the bruise, because that’s exactly what it says yes.
11:47.920 –> 11:49.924
[SPEAKER_05]: It’s also what happens when you move to Florida.
11:49.984 –> 11:53.592
[SPEAKER_05]: Once you get one thing repaired, you can just have surgeries for everything.
11:54.093 –> 11:58.462
[SPEAKER_03]: There are 80-year-old guys that then people get addicted to it.
11:58.983 –> 11:59.945
[SPEAKER_03]: I am the opposite.
11:59.985 –> 12:02.370
[SPEAKER_03]: The last thing in the world.
12:02.450 –> 12:04.013
[SPEAKER_03]: We can fix your bicep.
12:04.815 –> 12:06.438
[SPEAKER_03]: Hello.
12:07.160 –> 12:08.663
[SPEAKER_03]: Hello.
12:09.385 –> 12:14.131
[SPEAKER_03]: Now, that’s not to say, I don’t totally dig anesthesia.
12:14.652 –> 12:14.912
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m right.
12:14.952 –> 12:20.379
[SPEAKER_03]: I can understand why people get addicted to heroin because it’s just to go away to happy land.
12:20.600 –> 12:23.504
[SPEAKER_04]: Are they still using heroin for the procedures down there?
12:23.764 –> 12:23.984
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes.
12:24.244 –> 12:25.186
[SPEAKER_03]: In old Florida.
12:25.566 –> 12:26.968
[SPEAKER_03]: No, they use the same thing.
12:27.729 –> 12:36.861
[SPEAKER_03]: If you want to know the kind of anesthesia that’s used down here in Florida, I would direct you to an older movie called The Ciderhouse Rules with Michael Kane.
12:36.841 –> 12:57.803
[SPEAKER_03]: uh… and he’s self-medicates with chlorophyll yeah people ask me what i thought about the citer house i said the citer house rules rules for a movie what a movie to be required michael cane charlie’s the run as and you all very very young johnny brown and we’re all great in the mood
12:57.783 –> 13:05.171
[SPEAKER_03]: So, getting back to it, I’m waiting in the meantime, leading up to this appointment.
13:05.191 –> 13:07.054
[SPEAKER_03]: I’ve done all my research that I can do.
13:07.614 –> 13:13.000
[SPEAKER_03]: I assume this is a bicep issue and not a shoulder issue.
13:13.040 –> 13:26.676
[SPEAKER_03]: However, it’s all related Joshes I mentioned before because the bicep muscle connected to the shoulder and wraps around it at certain places and goes right in and bone and
13:26.656 –> 13:31.202
[SPEAKER_03]: So, um, I am, uh, I look up online and I say, hey, they got a shoulder guy.
13:31.222 –> 13:32.423
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s all I need.
13:32.544 –> 13:33.645
[SPEAKER_03]: Very highly regarded.
13:34.206 –> 13:37.971
[SPEAKER_03]: Uh, goes to the same place where I’ve gone for other procedures.
13:38.111 –> 13:38.752
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s good enough me.
13:38.892 –> 13:41.415
[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t do a big deep dive to research.
13:41.595 –> 13:48.825
[SPEAKER_03]: I, but I’m, I’m really glad that I’m skipping all the BS to get right to the guy that’s going to be able to tell me what the, what the, what the real story is.
13:48.845 –> 13:49.766
[SPEAKER_03]: Straight to the top.
13:49.786 –> 13:50.367
[SPEAKER_03]: Straight to the top.
13:50.387 –> 13:51.448
[SPEAKER_03]: Straight to the top.
13:51.428 –> 13:54.013
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s right, Rob, straight to the top.
13:54.033 –> 13:54.213
[SPEAKER_03]: No.
13:54.674 –> 13:58.681
[SPEAKER_03]: But I am going to be seeing a surgeon, which Tony is what I need to do.
13:59.021 –> 14:01.646
[SPEAKER_03]: So I get there, everything’s going fine, going swimmingly.
14:02.047 –> 14:04.591
[SPEAKER_03]: They’ve expanded since I was there in 2017.
14:04.611 –> 14:08.037
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, didn’t they name a wing after you?
14:08.017 –> 14:17.692
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, they might as well know they make these places or factories down here and people getting older and the procedures are getting more significant and people are getting more stuff done.
14:17.732 –> 14:24.523
[SPEAKER_03]: So I get to check in on the bottom floor and they go up to the third floor to see the doctor.
14:24.503 –> 14:38.498
[SPEAKER_03]: I guess I could probably middle aged women in the medical community, they are simply the best in my humble opinion, because I deal with two, twenty-somethings, and maybe a forty-fifty something.
14:38.739 –> 14:40.661
[SPEAKER_04]: The forty-fifty something is her name Dana.
14:40.881 –> 14:41.802
[SPEAKER_04]: Is she a charge nurse?
14:42.282 –> 14:43.784
[SPEAKER_03]: Is she, is she should be?
14:44.365 –> 14:46.667
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, because she’s got the only one too.
14:46.707 –> 14:49.410
[SPEAKER_03]: She’s just the only one.
14:49.670 –> 14:53.835
[SPEAKER_03]: She’s the only one with a great attitude.
14:54.237 –> 14:55.880
[SPEAKER_03]: very good with patients, right?
14:56.060 –> 14:57.543
[SPEAKER_03]: Is there any better than patients?
14:57.603 –> 14:58.805
[SPEAKER_03]: And that’s where she softens.
14:59.165 –> 15:07.480
[SPEAKER_03]: And the only real greeting of any pleasantness I got was from the person in the middle, who was the director of first impressions on the third floor.
15:07.860 –> 15:08.341
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m sure.
15:08.742 –> 15:13.610
[SPEAKER_03]: The barely, barely audible greeting when I checked in.
15:14.011 –> 15:15.293
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
15:15.333 –> 15:16.716
[SPEAKER_03]: Would you like to know what my greeting was?
15:17.156 –> 15:19.941
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I’d love to know.
15:21.136 –> 15:21.436
[SPEAKER_03]: What?
15:22.037 –> 15:23.238
[SPEAKER_03]: Day of birth.
15:23.258 –> 15:23.699
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, take.
15:25.621 –> 15:27.964
[SPEAKER_03]: Day of birth.
15:27.984 –> 15:29.646
[SPEAKER_03]: The, I’m a sleepy day of birth.
15:29.666 –> 15:32.069
[SPEAKER_03]: Hey, so it’s almost 10 o’clock in the morning.
15:32.089 –> 15:33.771
[SPEAKER_03]: You still haven’t had those peepers up.
15:33.791 –> 15:35.473
[SPEAKER_03]: So, but I file it away.
15:36.093 –> 15:37.915
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m not going to get, I’m not going to dwell on it.
15:37.975 –> 15:39.677
[SPEAKER_03]: I medicated to handle things like this.
15:39.818 –> 15:47.987
[SPEAKER_03]: And then the, the mercy, wonder that checks me in when I got inside the office was the,
15:49.047 –> 15:51.671
[SPEAKER_03]: doing her level best to be as friendly.
15:52.012 –> 15:54.336
[SPEAKER_03]: But it just, it wasn’t there.
15:54.376 –> 15:57.401
[SPEAKER_03]: The lady’s little, not in her genetic makeup.
15:58.944 –> 15:59.705
[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t wait long.
16:00.406 –> 16:02.550
[SPEAKER_03]: On time, everything is really going well.
16:03.111 –> 16:07.698
[SPEAKER_03]: Dr. Watson, by the way, this doctor, you know, checks all the boxes.
16:07.959 –> 16:08.880
[SPEAKER_03]: All right, this is a guy.
16:09.361 –> 16:13.608
[SPEAKER_03]: Maybe 50 at the most, all of his hair.
16:13.809 –> 16:15.291
[SPEAKER_03]: In fact, hair,
16:15.271 –> 16:31.420
[SPEAKER_03]: Uh, you know, I’m at a point now where I look at a guy like Josh Soroka or I look at anybody with hair and I get a little jealous because I have this I have this aging piece of lettuce on my head this dried kale on top of my nagging my look.
16:31.440 –> 16:36.429
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, I felt sorry for the man who had no shoes until I met the man who had no feet.
16:36.449 –> 16:37.911
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s my hair situation.
16:38.012 –> 16:38.853
[SPEAKER_03]: Absolutely proud.
16:39.033 –> 16:39.895
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
16:39.875 –> 16:40.516
[SPEAKER_03]: He comes in.
16:40.556 –> 16:43.061
[SPEAKER_03]: He’s got a guy that’s he that he’s teaching.
16:43.401 –> 16:44.062
[SPEAKER_03]: I love that.
16:44.423 –> 16:52.437
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, I do because when when you have that, you’re going to be you’re going to be treated in an exemplary fashion.
16:52.577 –> 16:54.761
[SPEAKER_04]: You know, that you know, I’ve had that happen in real life.
16:54.781 –> 16:57.867
[SPEAKER_04]: And also that is that you know, at the pit where Dana the Chargeners works.
16:57.887 –> 16:59.289
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s a teaching hospital as well.
16:59.349 –> 17:00.972
[SPEAKER_04]: So they often have people come along.
17:00.952 –> 17:10.104
[SPEAKER_03]: In short order, without any, I don’t think he, the X-ray was on the screen on the computer, and then it was in back of me where he was looking at it.
17:10.264 –> 17:15.351
[SPEAKER_03]: And in very short order, I was given the diagnosis, and I am not a medical person.
17:15.391 –> 17:16.753
[SPEAKER_03]: Therefore, I had to write it down.
17:17.434 –> 17:22.701
[SPEAKER_03]: I have, I am the victim of a proximal biceps tendon rupture.
17:24.383 –> 17:25.204
[SPEAKER_03]: Once again.
17:25.471 –> 17:43.935
[SPEAKER_03]: a Proximal or Proximal, R-O-X-I-M-A-L, I’m such a dope, I have a college degree, can you say a Proximal, Biceps tendon rupture, a tear of one of the two tendons that attach the top of your Biceps muscle to the shoulder.
17:43.915 –> 17:56.172
[SPEAKER_03]: In most cases, it’s the long head tendon is the one that ruptured, that’s the one that ruptured, okay, that’s on more the inside of your shoulder and a little like that.
17:56.192 –> 18:13.517
[SPEAKER_03]: A little tube that it goes through and as the doctor explained it to me, it’s a very difficult situation because it’s a very narrow tunnel that it goes through and then it takes a right angle into the shoulder
18:13.582 –> 18:32.316
[SPEAKER_03]: is usually why these injuries can be very common in and here we go men my age I see the diagram you can see it right up there there it is yes and you know what did I say the inside it’s more like the outside but it’s the one that’s the long one going over the back of the shoulders.
18:32.296 –> 18:36.184
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay, all right, so that’s your actual x-ray, isn’t it?
18:36.204 –> 18:39.151
[SPEAKER_03]: That is my actual, actual x-ray.
18:39.592 –> 18:42.077
[SPEAKER_03]: Sudden injury, what causes this sudden injury?
18:42.638 –> 18:45.825
[SPEAKER_03]: Many patients report a pop or snapping around it.
18:45.845 –> 18:48.972
[SPEAKER_03]: And I hate the pop, because I know you hate that work.
18:49.475 –> 18:50.536
[SPEAKER_03]: You don’t hear a pop.
18:50.576 –> 18:51.237
[SPEAKER_03]: I heard a pop.
18:51.317 –> 18:52.197
[SPEAKER_03]: You don’t hear a pop.
18:52.578 –> 18:54.580
[SPEAKER_03]: And I want to hear something that’s inside your body.
18:55.120 –> 18:56.862
[SPEAKER_04]: Some of the pops look at my eyes and these glasses.
18:57.062 –> 18:57.682
[SPEAKER_03]: They are pop.
18:58.163 –> 19:00.345
[SPEAKER_03]: Look at those baby blues, right?
19:00.365 –> 19:02.006
[SPEAKER_03]: Ah, ah, ah, ah.
19:02.287 –> 19:06.330
[SPEAKER_03]: Many patients report a pop or snapping sound accompanied by a sharp pain.
19:06.370 –> 19:07.311
[SPEAKER_03]: I got the sharp pain.
19:07.691 –> 19:08.872
[SPEAKER_03]: It felt like something snapped.
19:08.953 –> 19:10.034
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s all I can describe it.
19:10.174 –> 19:12.656
[SPEAKER_03]: In the shoulder, bruising and swelling.
19:13.056 –> 19:13.977
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, there you are.
19:14.758 –> 19:17.640
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s the, I’m going looking through the explanation.
19:17.660 –> 19:19.482
[SPEAKER_03]: Right.
19:19.462 –> 19:23.668
[SPEAKER_03]: He immediately informs me, he said, what was the line he used?
19:23.768 –> 19:28.115
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, you should, to get this done, you should pay yourself.
19:28.635 –> 19:45.520
[SPEAKER_03]: I said, what do you mean, he said, I don’t believe we will need to do any surgical intervention on this because in past procedures, there are many procedures in this injury where they
19:45.500 –> 19:50.786
[SPEAKER_03]: and they will cut the muscle that you snapped off just to relieve the pain.
19:51.347 –> 19:51.987
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay.
19:52.848 –> 19:59.336
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m just suddenly I’m realizing what he’s saying to me and he’s saying, you’re going to be fine.
19:59.896 –> 20:01.018
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s going to be okay.
20:01.078 –> 20:02.499
[SPEAKER_03]: The pain is going to resolve.
20:02.960 –> 20:09.347
[SPEAKER_03]: You can play golf whenever you want to as soon as the swelling goes down.
20:09.607 –> 20:10.789
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, of course.
20:10.849 –> 20:12.030
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s all I really care about.
20:12.010 –> 20:33.799
[SPEAKER_03]: and and also whether I’ll have function now now I was able to I have been steadily improving as far as pain but I had no idea whether I was going to have to be you know have my shoulder rebuilt have them go in there mess with tendons mess with muscles either any part of you dancing yes is there a small part of you that when he says you should pay yourself
20:33.779 –> 20:51.257
[SPEAKER_04]: You thought I’m gonna get a procedure that’s gonna make me like a super golfer like in a Disney movie No, like they’re gonna correct the muscle and you’re gonna have like five times the strength there’s something I am immediately Yeah, I am immediately like it’s it’s the greatest feeling in the world.
20:51.338 –> 20:53.863
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s the great to know that
20:54.704 –> 21:09.442
[SPEAKER_03]: nothing is going to happen that there is nothing that there is that you are simply going to, you know, let it resolve and ice it a little bit and rest it a little bit, which I’ve already done, I’ve done that for four days.
21:09.902 –> 21:10.123
[SPEAKER_05]: Yes.
21:10.283 –> 21:17.792
[SPEAKER_05]: What what happens to that now broken tending, you’re asking questions that I probably out eventually.
21:17.772 –> 21:21.096
[SPEAKER_03]: No, I think it just flaps around in there for the rest of your life.
21:21.657 –> 21:32.991
[SPEAKER_03]: And by the way, this particular injury, yes, they will do a repair if you are like 20s or teens or you’re a young man.
21:33.532 –> 21:39.559
[SPEAKER_03]: When you get to be my advanced age, they don’t, they don’t even consider it, because there’s no point in doing it.
21:40.260 –> 21:46.007
[SPEAKER_04]: But sometimes it’s too hard to give an older person a quadruple bypass,
21:45.987 –> 21:48.029
[SPEAKER_04]: It won’t support it, so they’re just a baby.
21:48.049 –> 21:50.271
[SPEAKER_03]: You’re talking 80 plus that type of thing.
21:50.351 –> 21:51.252
[SPEAKER_03]: And your age is what?
21:51.292 –> 21:52.013
[SPEAKER_03]: I never remember.
21:52.133 –> 21:52.594
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m 66.
21:52.614 –> 21:53.495
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, okay.
21:53.515 –> 21:54.395
[SPEAKER_04]: So not in your 80s.
21:54.976 –> 21:56.317
[SPEAKER_03]: Thank you.
21:56.337 –> 21:56.738
[SPEAKER_04]: 66.
22:00.041 –> 22:00.882
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s old enough, Mike.
22:01.483 –> 22:07.008
[SPEAKER_04]: You would get 25 dollars free for I at Calvary.
22:07.028 –> 22:08.049
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s my lips today.
22:11.192 –> 22:13.414
[SPEAKER_04]: Anyway, we’re doing some sexy stuff.
22:13.775 –> 22:15.977
[SPEAKER_03]: The euphoria.
22:16.193 –> 22:19.458
[SPEAKER_03]: is incalculable.
22:19.658 –> 22:23.824
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s just I feel so amazingly geared at this point.
22:24.304 –> 22:25.626
[SPEAKER_03]: I am dancing out of there.
22:25.646 –> 22:33.557
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, you know, when you get over a cold, and you have that first day where you’re feeling like yourself and you just feel like dancing, it’s that time’s 20.
22:33.617 –> 22:35.700
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s so, so amazing.
22:36.041 –> 22:38.404
[SPEAKER_05]: And I just want to frame.
22:38.384 –> 22:40.808
[SPEAKER_05]: to like anything you have to do before you go.
22:40.848 –> 22:45.436
[SPEAKER_03]: He said he said he said 10 usually about 10 days, but you don’t have to.
22:45.937 –> 22:47.620
[SPEAKER_03]: You can play golf tomorrow if you wanted to.
22:47.640 –> 22:49.403
[SPEAKER_03]: So it won’t happen.
22:49.423 –> 22:54.873
[SPEAKER_03]: Unconcerned anybody was then he gave me a thorough explanation of the injury and what happened.
22:54.913 –> 22:57.878
[SPEAKER_03]: And this is a guy that’s not trying to avoid
22:57.858 –> 23:22.718
[SPEAKER_03]: uh… you know cutting this is a guy that’s an experienced surgeon right uh… doesn’t want to do a procedure that’s not required and uh… knows his stuff and had a really great way of explaining it and i was uh… i was i was doing car i said i you cannot believe how happy that makes me i said he said y’all i understand that and then i think uh… again he reiterated yeah you uh… your body took care of what we would take care of anyway
23:22.698 –> 23:34.038
[SPEAKER_03]: And I just, you would think, right, that if a tendon connecting the biceps muscle to the shoulder was gone, that I wouldn’t even be able to move.
23:34.118 –> 23:39.968
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s not what you would be able to move like 360 degrees behind your back, because there’s nothing holding you back.
23:39.988 –> 23:42.011
[SPEAKER_04]: You’d have like almost like a stretch arm.
23:42.031 –> 23:43.975
[SPEAKER_03]: You’re back at the happy Gilmore thing, right?
23:44.035 –> 23:45.938
[SPEAKER_04]: You know, who’s to say?
23:46.576 –> 23:55.388
[SPEAKER_04]: Who’s to say that they’re like this really could turn around like the bill that turn around right senior tour at 66 here’s not
23:57.055 –> 24:03.645
[SPEAKER_03]: If you were to golf say today, because we started early, the comments, where is everybody today?
24:03.765 –> 24:04.586
[SPEAKER_03]: What’s going on?
24:04.767 –> 24:07.491
[SPEAKER_03]: We have a lot of folks that let’s get out there.
24:07.671 –> 24:07.952
[SPEAKER_03]: All right.
24:08.012 –> 24:09.153
[SPEAKER_03]: Sign in the comments.
24:10.015 –> 24:10.596
[SPEAKER_03]: We need you.
24:11.116 –> 24:15.283
[SPEAKER_04]: If you were to golf without you as soon as the show was done, like, could you aggravate it?
24:15.423 –> 24:17.787
[SPEAKER_04]: I know it might hurt, but could you make it worse?
24:18.267 –> 24:19.489
[SPEAKER_04]: You didn’t mention anything about that.
24:19.589 –> 24:20.471
[SPEAKER_03]: You didn’t ask?
24:21.011 –> 24:21.392
[SPEAKER_04]: No.
24:22.148 –> 24:25.232
[SPEAKER_03]: No, when you get that because you didn’t want to hear the answer.
24:25.573 –> 24:25.793
[SPEAKER_03]: No.
24:26.374 –> 24:26.694
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay.
24:27.215 –> 24:31.480
[SPEAKER_03]: No, because I mean, I would think that would be taken into account by him that you don’t want to get out there.
24:31.520 –> 24:37.088
[SPEAKER_03]: He essentially, you are eliminating the thing that was strained.
24:37.549 –> 24:40.312
[SPEAKER_03]: That was causing you the pain, which was in the front of my arm.
24:40.352 –> 24:41.113
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s where it was.
24:41.253 –> 24:41.594
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s great.
24:41.654 –> 24:44.057
[SPEAKER_04]: And it just happened in older people.
24:44.197 –> 24:49.945
[SPEAKER_03]: Is it time and it could you have avoided it by like stretching or anything?
24:50.093 –> 24:50.915
[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t know.
24:50.935 –> 24:51.817
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, I do.
24:51.957 –> 24:55.445
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, if I could, if I could have, it’s over years.
24:55.806 –> 24:56.067
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
24:56.087 –> 24:59.013
[SPEAKER_03]: And it’s usually athletic, uh, repetitive motion.
24:59.254 –> 24:59.414
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
24:59.495 –> 25:02.281
[SPEAKER_03]: Sometimes I’m, uh, sometimes sexual, but mostly athletic.
25:02.301 –> 25:04.085
[SPEAKER_03]: No, I don’t use them in.
25:04.105 –> 25:05.047
[SPEAKER_04]: You should treat yourself.
25:06.110 –> 25:06.651
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, he’s forget.
25:08.167 –> 25:09.351
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s for you.
25:09.371 –> 25:10.795
[SPEAKER_03]: No, I don’t use that hand.
25:10.815 –> 25:11.878
[SPEAKER_04]: But you’re left handed, aren’t you?
25:12.280 –> 25:12.560
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m right.
25:12.902 –> 25:13.724
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m right left.
25:13.844 –> 25:14.426
[SPEAKER_03]: I eat left.
25:14.506 –> 25:15.249
[SPEAKER_03]: I throw right.
25:15.409 –> 25:16.111
[SPEAKER_03]: I bat right.
25:16.493 –> 25:17.435
[SPEAKER_03]: I play hockey right.
25:17.536 –> 25:18.438
[SPEAKER_03]: I play golf right.
25:19.201 –> 25:19.401
[SPEAKER_03]: And I.
25:19.421 –> 25:20.404
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s enough.
25:20.425 –> 25:21.568
[SPEAKER_03]: Right.
25:22.190 –> 25:27.662
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m going into what the deal is here.
25:28.043 –> 25:33.234
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I want to tell you what I can’t see.
25:33.374 –> 25:34.095
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s the next thing.
25:34.116 –> 25:35.058
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m going to get new eyes.
25:36.501 –> 25:37.984
[SPEAKER_05]: The eyes would correct themselves, might so.
25:38.505 –> 25:40.349
[SPEAKER_05]: So how soon are you going to go back out?
25:40.369 –> 25:41.852
[SPEAKER_05]: Are you going to go up Friday?
25:41.832 –> 25:42.733
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m going to go off Friday.
25:43.033 –> 25:54.102
[SPEAKER_03]: And I, I already ordered up a, you know, they make these bicep and tricep compression sleeves and good put a little sleeve up there just for safety sake and rock and roll hoochiku.
25:54.263 –> 25:56.605
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m ready to go and buy the way it’s a tournament.
25:56.625 –> 25:57.065
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, good.
25:57.105 –> 25:58.827
[SPEAKER_04]: And so you’re going to show up looking like ultra man.
25:59.687 –> 26:00.688
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, you’re show up.
26:00.728 –> 26:02.129
[SPEAKER_03]: I’ll probably wear it for the rest of my life.
26:02.189 –> 26:04.291
[SPEAKER_03]: I’ll probably wear it for the rest of my life.
26:04.391 –> 26:06.994
[SPEAKER_03]: I’ll probably wear it for the rest of my life.
26:07.014 –> 26:08.175
[SPEAKER_03]: I’ll probably go off for the rest of my life.
26:08.195 –> 26:10.016
[SPEAKER_03]: And I’m bouncing off the walls here.
26:10.036 –> 26:11.097
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s really great news.
26:11.684 –> 26:13.366
[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t know if that’s going to happen.
26:13.727 –> 26:14.328
[SPEAKER_03]: I really don’t.
26:14.528 –> 26:26.144
[SPEAKER_03]: But at the same time, I feel as though I, you know, I’ve had so many pieces of bad news when I’ve dealt with medical professionals, not nearly as bad as somebody else has.
26:26.204 –> 26:27.325
[SPEAKER_03]: So I really don’t want to.
26:27.405 –> 26:36.898
[SPEAKER_04]: He’s not a stranger to the tour, but when he came back in 2026 as a scratch golfer, people started to pay attention to Mike O’Mara.
26:37.182 –> 26:41.689
[SPEAKER_03]: No, I’m, I’m very, very pleased that everything, you know, worked out the way.
26:41.709 –> 26:44.994
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I’m really, all right, here we go, I got to finally found it.
26:45.995 –> 26:54.448
[SPEAKER_03]: Let’s see symptoms and that sudden injury, many patients report a pop, a bob bruising and swelling weakness common causes overuse.
26:54.428 –> 27:03.319
[SPEAKER_03]: Most ruptures, older adults result from long-term wear and tear, often following a history of shoulder impingement or rotator cuff issues.
27:03.360 –> 27:08.626
[SPEAKER_03]: So I’ve had a short, a short shoulder, a cute trauma can do it too, falling in and out stretched arm.
27:08.646 –> 27:18.179
[SPEAKER_03]: You see that with ball players that have happened, risk factors, age, smoking, and repetitive overhead activities.
27:19.040 –> 27:21.583
[SPEAKER_03]: Maybe like what playing tennis or something like that?
27:21.623 –> 27:23.085
[SPEAKER_04]: No, I think installing ceiling fans.
27:25.124 –> 27:35.963
[SPEAKER_03]: non-surgical care this is the standard for most patients and a good rest ice anti-inflammatory medications and physical therapy not going to have to do that to restore strength.
27:36.164 –> 27:37.165
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s great.
27:37.807 –> 27:39.890
[SPEAKER_05]: Physical therapy is such a drag.
27:39.910 –> 27:45.160
[SPEAKER_05]: My candid as far as your golf game that it might affect your club face control.
27:46.081 –> 27:48.145
[SPEAKER_05]: That that’s where you’re going to have to make an adjustment.
27:48.783 –> 27:51.847
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, that’s why I’m glad I got to sleep because that’s the weakness, right?
27:51.927 –> 27:55.691
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s the… Yeah, to remember, they hit the ball with the right side of the club like the face.
27:56.152 –> 27:57.574
[SPEAKER_03]: So the non-supports guy.
27:57.594 –> 27:58.395
[SPEAKER_03]: Look at that.
27:58.415 –> 28:02.740
[SPEAKER_03]: You know, you just chuckle in short of the way with no knowledge whatsoever what he’s doing.
28:02.960 –> 28:04.642
[SPEAKER_03]: No, no, no, no.
28:05.143 –> 28:06.685
[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t know.
28:06.805 –> 28:07.245
[SPEAKER_04]: You know what?
28:07.385 –> 28:09.228
[SPEAKER_04]: I couldn’t be happier for you.
28:09.668 –> 28:11.050
[SPEAKER_03]: And that’s the God’s on the truth.
28:11.330 –> 28:12.091
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, it isn’t.
28:12.271 –> 28:12.832
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s a win.
28:13.052 –> 28:18.739
[SPEAKER_03]: And, you know, I mean, how often are you able to keep on rolling after a…
28:18.719 –> 28:19.680
[SPEAKER_03]: I hate that word.
28:19.821 –> 28:26.970
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s really one of my least moist and rupture to of my least favorite words in the English line.
28:26.990 –> 28:29.334
[SPEAKER_03]: Great song by Blondie though.
28:29.354 –> 28:30.075
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, that’s rapture.
28:30.155 –> 28:30.495
[SPEAKER_03]: Forget it.
28:30.555 –> 28:30.936
[SPEAKER_03]: Rapture.
28:31.717 –> 28:33.659
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, right.
28:33.680 –> 28:34.000
[SPEAKER_02]: That’s true.
28:34.020 –> 28:35.782
[SPEAKER_03]: Now I have to get back to normal.
28:35.802 –> 28:42.552
[SPEAKER_03]: I have to get back to being healthy again because when I go through a trauma like this, I experience what I call PE.
28:42.572 –> 28:45.195
[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t know if it’s not physical education.
28:45.876 –> 28:47.899
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s pity eating.
28:48.318 –> 28:51.162
[SPEAKER_03]: I feel sorry for my P.S.P.E.
28:51.643 –> 28:53.466
[SPEAKER_03]: What’s a self-pity eating?
28:53.826 –> 28:56.430
[SPEAKER_03]: Self-pity eating is what I do.
28:56.971 –> 29:02.580
[SPEAKER_03]: And so when this happened, it was followed by minor stress pity eating.
29:03.121 –> 29:06.065
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, that’s the kind of stress where I don’t know what’s going to happen.
29:06.125 –> 29:07.828
[SPEAKER_03]: You know, being a type A.
29:07.808 –> 29:10.654
[SPEAKER_03]: uh, not knowing what’s going to happen is the worst.
29:11.075 –> 29:11.756
[SPEAKER_03]: You don’t want to wait.
29:11.776 –> 29:13.640
[SPEAKER_03]: You want to know in ten minutes what’s going to go on.
29:13.700 –> 29:16.586
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s the way we all are being a fellow eater.
29:16.867 –> 29:23.140
[SPEAKER_04]: And I’ve done what you’re talking about was this to the level where you go out to eat or do you just forage at the house for pity?
29:23.300 –> 29:24.062
[SPEAKER_04]: Anything.
29:24.042 –> 29:42.085
[SPEAKER_03]: okay so I mean why don’t then why don’t then yeah it’s not a bad test of your bicep to see if you can eat an ice cream cone yeah yeah yeah to see or to live the big arch and by the way I was able to successfully do that without any problem now I’d be a little itching in there where it’s a little sharp in there still a little bit I mean they say it’s sour
29:42.065 –> 29:57.452
[SPEAKER_03]: Carla Carla said, how come you have the bruising and you don’t have pop IR I said pop IRM is when the bicep muscle moves down towards the elbow you have to have one in order to have it to just not doing a lot of curls in the Omera household.
29:57.512 –> 30:01.018
[SPEAKER_03]: Surely not however the pity eating.
30:00.998 –> 30:04.843
[SPEAKER_03]: But even after the procedure, I said, well, that’s it.
30:04.863 –> 30:06.725
[SPEAKER_03]: This is my last day of pity eating.
30:06.785 –> 30:24.146
[SPEAKER_03]: I gave myself one more day to get out of my system, which is why I enjoyed my lunch at the Dairy Queen with a cheeseburger and fries and no ice cream products followed by waiting for my kid.
30:24.186 –> 30:27.951
[SPEAKER_03]: I was already in the downtown area where I decided to
30:29.095 –> 30:36.986
[SPEAKER_03]: I was going to go and buy Jake a rat, but I ended up going to get the car wash. And L car wash, you know my favorite car wash.
30:37.046 –> 30:37.807
[SPEAKER_04]: It’s a great one.
30:37.947 –> 30:39.349
[SPEAKER_04]: It actually means the car wash.
30:39.449 –> 30:40.611
[SPEAKER_03]: Thanks for enlightening us.
30:42.053 –> 30:47.961
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s right next to the crispy cream and I said, well, I’ll give my favorite favorites.
30:47.981 –> 30:49.223
[SPEAKER_03]: I know.
30:49.243 –> 30:51.146
[SPEAKER_03]: Elcar wash next to a crispy cream.
30:51.466 –> 30:51.747
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
30:52.027 –> 30:53.449
[SPEAKER_03]: I only wish I’d live closer.
30:53.429 –> 31:00.299
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, that’s the further away L car wash, but we’re getting an L car wash five minutes from my house.
31:00.961 –> 31:01.584
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s great.
31:01.785 –> 31:02.528
[SPEAKER_03]: What do you go?
31:02.744 –> 31:21.009
[SPEAKER_03]: Donut’s always going to say pro tip would be always always always always always always always always always always Donuts Follow by the car wash because you don’t know how much how many flakes of crispy cream coating might fall off That’s not your auto will not be when I do this.
31:21.029 –> 31:23.773
[SPEAKER_03]: There is no plan for an interior vacuuming
31:23.753 –> 31:26.317
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, it’ll happen down there.
31:26.337 –> 31:35.550
[SPEAKER_03]: What this is simply go through the wishy washi after you buy the donuts and you only can eat your first donut once the soap is on your car.
31:35.871 –> 31:39.096
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s my little robo and I’m clear of anybody looking at me.
31:39.336 –> 31:39.777
[SPEAKER_05]: Is it that?
31:39.897 –> 31:39.997
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.
31:40.017 –> 31:42.100
[SPEAKER_05]: How many can you eat before it opens up?
31:42.265 –> 31:50.815
[SPEAKER_03]: No, because I’m not there’s no way I went with a half dozen and I was gonna I’m a it’s three for me and the three.
31:50.835 –> 31:51.095
[SPEAKER_03]: Why bother?
31:51.596 –> 31:52.177
[SPEAKER_04]: Why bother?
31:52.497 –> 31:52.897
[SPEAKER_03]: What do you mean?
31:52.937 –> 32:03.590
[SPEAKER_03]: It doesn’t if you’re gonna go make it count and maybe six jellies Well, it’s interesting you mentioned that chunk my my my idea was to get three for me and three for my son.
32:03.950 –> 32:09.657
[SPEAKER_05]: All right, and then As I got to start number You can do four and two he went and now
32:10.143 –> 32:16.292
[SPEAKER_03]: I could, and by the way, you’re going through my entire mental process of, he won’t know four and two.
32:16.372 –> 32:17.013
[SPEAKER_03]: I said, you know what?
32:17.113 –> 32:22.220
[SPEAKER_03]: If I throw everything away and just get an app can put one in there, that would be acceptable too.
32:22.741 –> 32:23.342
[SPEAKER_03]: That didn’t last season.
32:23.362 –> 32:26.286
[SPEAKER_04]: Could I please have six donuts and an empty bag?
32:26.707 –> 32:27.628
[SPEAKER_03]: I.
32:27.777 –> 32:29.379
[SPEAKER_03]: I had to lose the evidence.
32:30.020 –> 32:33.525
[SPEAKER_03]: I had to get rid of the evidence and so I went to.
32:34.086 –> 32:34.947
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, and I didn’t lose.
32:35.047 –> 32:36.710
[SPEAKER_03]: I didn’t need all six in the car wash.
32:37.231 –> 32:46.464
[SPEAKER_03]: I had probably won in the car wash and then slowly as I’m making way my way up to his school, I’m meeting one after you know, it’s not a big deal.
32:46.484 –> 32:48.847
[SPEAKER_04]: Energy energy surges throughout your body.
32:48.927 –> 32:49.448
[SPEAKER_04]: Now.
32:49.428 –> 32:52.575
[SPEAKER_03]: But people want to know, followed by an amazing crash.
32:52.636 –> 32:53.678
[SPEAKER_04]: The best crash ever.
32:54.039 –> 32:56.244
[SPEAKER_04]: Do you, um, was the sign on were they hot?
32:56.264 –> 32:57.146
[SPEAKER_04]: They’re always fresh.
32:57.166 –> 32:57.968
[SPEAKER_04]: No, were they hot.
32:58.149 –> 33:01.837
[SPEAKER_03]: They are never hot at the one downtown for us.
33:01.857 –> 33:02.138
[SPEAKER_04]: Never.
33:02.579 –> 33:04.524
[SPEAKER_04]: I used to know the schedule at Richmond.
33:04.584 –> 33:06.829
[SPEAKER_04]: I knew when I could go to get the ones that were hot.
33:06.809 –> 33:12.997
[SPEAKER_03]: But it’s a very perky, pleasant girl that I’ve dealt with before that works the counter.
33:13.437 –> 33:22.488
[SPEAKER_03]: She’s very, very happy and happy and loves her job, which to me, no matter what you do, if you have that attitude, it’s spectacular.
33:22.508 –> 33:24.150
[SPEAKER_04]: Does she have a celebrity that she resembles?
33:27.054 –> 33:35.905
[SPEAKER_03]: She’s like a combination of America, Ferreira.
33:37.285 –> 33:44.954
[SPEAKER_03]: She’s a combination of America, Ferreira, and the character in Goonies.
33:46.536 –> 33:47.998
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, one that says Rocky Road.
33:48.279 –> 33:49.921
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, okay, I can’t think of his name.
33:49.961 –> 33:51.983
[SPEAKER_04]: It’s like Twitch or Switch or something like that.
33:52.103 –> 33:52.504
[SPEAKER_03]: Sure.
33:53.004 –> 33:54.286
[SPEAKER_03]: No chunks of that kid.
33:54.306 –> 33:57.330
[SPEAKER_04]: Chunk is the fat kid, and that’s the second time you referred to Chunk’s life.
33:58.011 –> 33:59.653
[SPEAKER_04]: Sloth, I think is right, yes.
33:59.673 –> 34:01.815
[SPEAKER_03]: So there you go.
34:01.975 –> 34:05.740
[SPEAKER_03]: But actually, by the time I’m halfway up the road, I’m there gone.
34:05.720 –> 34:12.170
[SPEAKER_03]: And I’m not feeling, I’m so euphoric that I’m not feeling guilty because I, in my mind, I know the drill.
34:12.230 –> 34:14.073
[SPEAKER_03]: I know what’s going to happen the next morning.
34:14.113 –> 34:15.255
[SPEAKER_03]: Next morning, I’m going to get up.
34:15.275 –> 34:24.791
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m going to weigh myself and I’m going to start logging my food again, which is all I need to do to knock out that four pounds that I gained and I will get back on.
34:24.931 –> 34:26.594
[SPEAKER_04]: Did you get a cup of coffee or anything?
34:26.634 –> 34:29.398
[SPEAKER_04]: It starts at a crispy cream or just donuts.
34:29.378 –> 34:31.000
[SPEAKER_03]: No, they make great coffee, you know.
34:31.141 –> 34:34.286
[SPEAKER_03]: I had left over Diet Coke from my cheeseburger and fries.
34:34.586 –> 34:35.988
[SPEAKER_03]: I’ve eaten badly all day long.
34:36.609 –> 34:38.091
[SPEAKER_03]: Where did the evidence go?
34:39.413 –> 34:40.315
[SPEAKER_03]: Where did I dump it?
34:40.475 –> 34:41.156
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m trying to think.
34:41.216 –> 34:42.057
[SPEAKER_03]: Between two pillows?
34:42.778 –> 34:43.079
[SPEAKER_03]: No.
34:43.359 –> 34:46.705
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, I went through a racetrack gas station.
34:47.025 –> 34:49.208
[SPEAKER_03]: And I put it in the trash.
34:49.268 –> 34:49.829
[SPEAKER_03]: I just pulled up.
34:50.010 –> 34:51.792
[SPEAKER_03]: And it was so close to the curb.
34:52.233 –> 34:54.897
[SPEAKER_03]: Of course, I don’t use petrol anymore.
34:55.028 –> 34:58.833
[SPEAKER_03]: that I was able to just throw it from the car and I got rid of all of my evidence.
34:58.853 –> 35:00.996
[SPEAKER_03]: My very queen bag, my crispy cream.
35:02.337 –> 35:06.282
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I’m really like this, I mean, maybe the french fries leave.
35:06.442 –> 35:07.724
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, this is my champagne.
35:07.764 –> 35:11.048
[SPEAKER_03]: This is my celebratory last day of pity eating.
35:11.088 –> 35:12.029
[SPEAKER_03]: You’ve earned normal.
35:12.310 –> 35:15.654
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m really, I’m I’m looking forward to getting back to a normal.
35:15.694 –> 35:16.515
[SPEAKER_03]: You still look dynamite.
35:16.535 –> 35:17.296
[SPEAKER_03]: You got good news.
35:17.356 –> 35:18.438
[SPEAKER_03]: You deserve that.
35:18.458 –> 35:19.239
[SPEAKER_03]: I am excited.
35:19.319 –> 35:23.584
[SPEAKER_05]: Also the smoker that thinks he’s covered up with a little perfume.
35:23.682 –> 35:36.081
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes, I know, but he did not identify it because he doesn’t look for the, and by the way, Rob knows crispy cream so well that he knows the flakes of sugar that bounce off your chest and do that.
35:36.181 –> 35:40.007
[SPEAKER_03]: Now, uh, the, it’s not like I’ve ever sat down and eaten a dozen of them.
35:40.027 –> 35:44.053
[SPEAKER_03]: The SPE, uh, self-pity eating was concluded.
35:45.046 –> 36:10.395
[SPEAKER_03]: uh… by five five fifteen yesterday one of the time for dinner uh… no it was over after dinner oh over after got you eat that early yet flata i guess it was right people yeah yeah we uh… you know we write a few letters and then we uh… to bed what a day and i watch uh… another episode by the way because of the crispy cream i did not make it through peaky blinders
36:10.375 –> 36:13.238
[SPEAKER_03]: the crash episode of the second season.
36:13.618 –> 36:17.341
[SPEAKER_03]: I just kind of crapped out or the second episode of the second season.
36:18.582 –> 36:30.413
[SPEAKER_04]: One of the kindest things you ever did, Mike, it was my birthday, maybe 10 years ago, and we were coming back from the Florida road trip, not the one with the camper, but the one where we drove down to Florida and then drove back.
36:30.934 –> 36:40.382
[SPEAKER_04]: And you stopped and got, I think, 2 dozen crispy cream donuts for to celebrate my birthday,
36:40.362 –> 37:00.435
[SPEAKER_04]: And you and me and another how did I deny them of that I don’t remember the doing I thought they chose not to get them I think that we were all pissed at them because they were takers I remember that word and so you initially thought you’re gonna give them donuts, but then you brought them back So we had three people in the car and two does don’t they were takers.
37:00.596 –> 37:05.003
[SPEAKER_03]: I know I’m not saying that you’re wrong Those are all the guys that flew the coop
37:04.983 –> 37:05.584
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, they’re gone.
37:05.764 –> 37:06.125
[SPEAKER_03]: They’re gone.
37:06.145 –> 37:10.871
[SPEAKER_03]: You can tell on a road trip, whether people are with you or not, you know, and even the other guy was with us at that time.
37:11.032 –> 37:11.592
[SPEAKER_04]: At that point.
37:11.933 –> 37:18.823
[SPEAKER_04]: So we all ate enough donuts that the crash that came about 45 minutes later, we were about to pull the car over.
37:19.203 –> 37:22.548
[SPEAKER_04]: Because no one had the wear with all to even drive us out.
37:22.568 –> 37:23.109
[SPEAKER_04]: Bruce control.
37:23.189 –> 37:24.371
[SPEAKER_03]: I was so out.
37:24.591 –> 37:29.838
[SPEAKER_03]: And then Chris, my wife walks in and you know, I’m like, I don’t figure that out.
37:29.858 –> 37:32.442
[SPEAKER_03]: I wasn’t busted until
37:32.624 –> 37:41.571
[SPEAKER_03]: bedtime where it’s nine forty five ten o’clock and I go into the marital bed after tucking my kid in and I walk in.
37:42.698 –> 37:46.302
[SPEAKER_03]: And, you know, it’s just I’ve got my AirPod Max on.
37:46.582 –> 37:48.825
[SPEAKER_03]: And so it’s not that I don’t hear it.
37:48.845 –> 37:54.010
[SPEAKER_03]: She’s working, which she does 24, seven on her online business.
37:54.231 –> 37:58.295
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, she goes from literally first thing in the morning all the way to midnight sometimes.
37:58.315 –> 38:02.720
[SPEAKER_03]: So that’s what she’s communicating with people that, you know, want the telehealth stop.
38:02.760 –> 38:03.841
[SPEAKER_03]: So she’s doing that all the time.
38:03.861 –> 38:08.466
[SPEAKER_03]: And then I hear, I hear, I get this, I get the hit.
38:08.987 –> 38:12.030
[SPEAKER_03]: Get the hit on the arm and then I hear.
38:12.415 –> 38:17.906
[SPEAKER_03]: And I take a, and I, and I, I’m very, very, very accommodating when I do this.
38:17.986 –> 38:25.602
[SPEAKER_03]: I take the headphones off and I’m like, what, and she says, did you go to crispy cream, and I was busted?
38:26.123 –> 38:27.345
[SPEAKER_04]: No, she looked over the card.
38:27.987 –> 38:29.269
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, do you look at the debit card?
38:29.309 –> 38:29.850
[SPEAKER_04]: Is that what she did?
38:30.071 –> 38:30.171
[UNKNOWN]: Yeah.
38:30.607 –> 38:33.571
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, because I used a lazy, you know what I do.
38:33.671 –> 38:34.673
[SPEAKER_05]: I pay cash.
38:34.713 –> 38:35.614
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, you got to pay cash.
38:35.854 –> 38:36.475
[SPEAKER_03]: You got to pay cash.
38:36.495 –> 38:37.336
[SPEAKER_03]: You got to pay cash.
38:37.556 –> 38:40.901
[SPEAKER_05]: That debit card’s going to go in the race track trash can next time.
38:40.961 –> 38:41.662
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s true.
38:42.303 –> 38:42.844
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
38:42.864 –> 38:44.165
[SPEAKER_03]: So happy day.
38:44.486 –> 38:45.227
[SPEAKER_03]: Very exciting.
38:45.247 –> 38:47.290
[SPEAKER_03]: We got a lot to talk about on the show today.
38:47.310 –> 38:53.458
[SPEAKER_03]: Including a new feature called Rob’s record bin.
38:53.438 –> 38:54.619
[SPEAKER_03]: out the vinyl frontier.
38:55.140 –> 39:00.344
[SPEAKER_03]: If you thought maybe he was coming home from Miami and would be venturing out of the house, you thought wrong.
39:00.985 –> 39:01.906
[SPEAKER_03]: No, I did.
39:02.226 –> 39:05.049
[SPEAKER_03]: I went to a record store to bring them back to your house.
39:05.089 –> 39:05.489
[SPEAKER_03]: You’re right.
39:05.509 –> 39:07.251
[SPEAKER_03]: You did go outside to a record store.
39:07.271 –> 39:07.611
[SPEAKER_04]: I went.
39:07.631 –> 39:10.353
[SPEAKER_04]: I spent two hours of looking and it was fun.
39:10.513 –> 39:12.415
[SPEAKER_03]: And that’s going to be, that’s going to be interesting.
39:12.455 –> 39:13.576
[SPEAKER_03]: And then happens later in the show.
39:13.596 –> 39:21.083
[SPEAKER_03]: But before we talk about your record bin, yeah, I want to talk about the great reunion.
39:21.063 –> 39:21.984
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh yeah, she’s home.
39:22.424 –> 39:23.525
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, we’ll not anymore.
39:23.545 –> 39:24.506
[SPEAKER_04]: She went to work now.
39:24.526 –> 39:25.828
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, she was home all the time.
39:25.928 –> 39:26.729
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, all the time.
39:26.749 –> 39:30.753
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, we’ll get to it and we’ll get to the news right after this late.
39:30.773 –> 39:31.393
[SPEAKER_03]: His name is.
39:31.413 –> 39:36.979
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s easier to start this year strong and more delicious with Omaha stakes.
39:36.999 –> 39:37.819
[SPEAKER_03]: Stay satisfied.
39:37.900 –> 39:49.551
[SPEAKER_03]: Get energy in a few of your routine with premium pre-packaged protein delivered to your door from a handcrafted USDA certified tender steak to gourmet burgers, versatile chicken and pork and more.
39:49.531 –> 39:53.980
[SPEAKER_03]: They have an unmatched variety of high quality proteins that everyone loves.
39:54.521 –> 40:01.735
[SPEAKER_03]: Right now, you can taste the difference and get an extra $35 off at OmahaStakes.com with the promo code.
40:01.895 –> 40:02.456
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s different.
40:02.537 –> 40:07.727
[SPEAKER_03]: Remember that, Mike, at checkout, I don’t need to tell you how great OmahaStakes are, but I will.
40:08.108 –> 40:10.392
[SPEAKER_03]: They are my favorite because they do beef right.
40:10.372 –> 40:17.220
[SPEAKER_03]: unrivaled quality and variety with every bite packed by their 100% satisfaction guarantee.
40:17.600 –> 40:24.008
[SPEAKER_03]: Every stake is perfectly aged to maximize tenderness and hand cut by master butchers in America’s Heartland.
40:24.448 –> 40:32.177
[SPEAKER_03]: Omaha Stakes has been America’s original family-owned butcher since 1917 and still cutting edge.
40:32.157 –> 40:32.498
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40:32.919 –> 40:35.866
[SPEAKER_03]: Let Omaha State’s deliver high quality proteins right to your door.
40:36.147 –> 40:41.720
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40:41.941 –> 40:42.903
[SPEAKER_03]: Remember, new code.
40:43.144 –> 40:43.905
[SPEAKER_03]: So pay attention.
40:44.126 –> 40:48.196
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s O-M-A-H-A-Stakes.com promo code, Mike.
40:48.216 –> 40:49.980
[SPEAKER_03]: Terms apply C-site for details.
40:52.137 –> 40:53.699
[SPEAKER_03]: So here’s a note.
40:53.800 –> 40:55.482
[SPEAKER_03]: If you don’t know already, I hope you do.
40:55.522 –> 40:58.347
[SPEAKER_03]: The first ever TMOS love boat was an amazing event.
40:58.527 –> 41:00.390
[SPEAKER_03]: We were delighted to be there.
41:00.771 –> 41:06.380
[SPEAKER_03]: You, uh, we did ask you if you had any thoughts on what we could do to make it better.
41:06.420 –> 41:09.184
[SPEAKER_03]: You said give a longer time.
41:09.164 –> 41:14.754
[SPEAKER_03]: Give a longer lead time so that you have plenty of time to plan and that we did that for you.
41:14.975 –> 41:17.279
[SPEAKER_03]: He also said you wanted the crews to be longer.
41:17.339 –> 41:18.201
[SPEAKER_03]: We’ve done that as well.
41:18.501 –> 41:20.625
[SPEAKER_03]: You said do it after not before the holidays.
41:20.905 –> 41:22.408
[SPEAKER_03]: You said you wanted more time to plan.
41:22.428 –> 41:23.170
[SPEAKER_03]: We did that for you.
41:23.210 –> 41:25.594
[SPEAKER_03]: Most importantly, you said you wanted to be more affordable.
41:25.634 –> 41:26.616
[SPEAKER_03]: We’ve done that as well.
41:26.957 –> 41:28.860
[SPEAKER_03]: You said you wanted more parents.
41:28.840 –> 41:35.168
[SPEAKER_03]: No, they didn’t, they said they wanted a cheeseburger in a paradise like setting.
41:35.548 –> 41:55.573
[SPEAKER_03]: Listen how much lead time you have to save, to plan, to get your act together, join us aboard the Margaritaville at sea islander starting January 21st for a five-day four-night cruise to the western Caribbean with the whole crew, laughs, fun, and a trip to exotic
41:55.553 –> 42:00.540
[SPEAKER_03]: Cosmo, all departing from Tampa, Florida, roughly a year from now.
42:00.980 –> 42:06.768
[SPEAKER_03]: Details are on our website, Michael Marishow.com, so get your tickets and join us on that cruise.
42:06.788 –> 42:07.750
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s going to be very, very exciting.
42:08.511 –> 42:09.312
[SPEAKER_03]: We start today.
42:09.692 –> 42:10.173
[SPEAKER_03]: All right, Josh.
42:12.476 –> 42:14.339
[SPEAKER_03]: You don’t, we don’t, I don’t want to get into a whole debate.
42:14.459 –> 42:20.447
[SPEAKER_03]: I really know, but I just want to ask, uh, do you feel like, uh,
42:21.862 –> 42:27.578
[SPEAKER_03]: in any way that your guy is kind of going sideways a little bit.
42:28.741 –> 42:30.165
[SPEAKER_05]: I don’t like this war.
42:30.205 –> 42:35.880
[SPEAKER_05]: I think people spoke to his ego and got to make a stop in this.
42:36.442 –> 42:36.883
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay.
42:36.863 –> 42:37.844
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s all I need.
42:37.945 –> 42:38.365
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s fine.
42:38.525 –> 42:39.106
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m good with that.
42:39.307 –> 42:44.014
[SPEAKER_03]: I am really, really good with that because it’s kind of been a crazy time.
42:44.054 –> 42:45.776
[SPEAKER_03]: It really is getting crazy every day.
42:46.457 –> 42:51.144
[SPEAKER_03]: United States immigration agents have begun deploying to major airports.
42:51.545 –> 42:53.708
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s ice people across the US.
42:53.688 –> 43:15.742
[SPEAKER_03]: to under the guise of easing security lines, not locking people up, as government funding standoffs leave many airport security staff out of work, the partial government shutdown affects the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the transportation security administration, and that means many airport security officers are working without pay.
43:16.103 –> 43:17.485
[SPEAKER_03]: The financial strain
43:17.465 –> 43:24.696
[SPEAKER_03]: has led to increased absences, causing staff shortages and delays at security checkpoints.
43:24.796 –> 43:28.141
[SPEAKER_03]: I think that this is just not a good look.
43:28.361 –> 43:29.162
[SPEAKER_03]: There’s just no way.
43:29.182 –> 43:36.252
[SPEAKER_03]: If you’re putting it the best spin on it for the MAGA folks, this is just not a good look.
43:36.292 –> 43:39.477
[SPEAKER_03]: And this war is becoming more and more problematic.
43:39.517 –> 43:46.948
[SPEAKER_03]: And it’s interesting when you read new stories about the fact that they are planning
43:46.928 –> 43:55.588
[SPEAKER_03]: countries around the Gulf as well as Israel and it’s like, well, I thought we bomb the crap well, no, they’re a big, uh, very powerful military today is Tuesday, right?
43:55.808 –> 43:59.236
[SPEAKER_04]: I forget is today’s day was winning the war or we’ve won the war.
43:59.537 –> 44:02.203
[SPEAKER_04]: I know, because it seems to be one of the over.
44:02.183 –> 44:03.204
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, the war is over.
44:03.364 –> 44:04.105
[SPEAKER_05]: Okay, that’s good.
44:04.305 –> 44:04.706
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s good.
44:05.167 –> 44:13.797
[SPEAKER_05]: But I understand the idea of sending more people to work and give some of these TSA agents days off, but just sending them as ice agents.
44:14.497 –> 44:15.879
[SPEAKER_05]: It doesn’t help at all.
44:15.899 –> 44:17.421
[SPEAKER_03]: No, it depends people.
44:17.461 –> 44:17.921
[SPEAKER_03]: And they work.
44:18.042 –> 44:23.368
[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t care whether you’re from whether you’re an immigrant or not, people see ice agents and they get pissed off.
44:23.488 –> 44:26.031
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s just, you’re just causing trouble by doing that.
44:26.011 –> 44:30.259
[SPEAKER_04]: Don’t think that the TSA is just like, you know, selling hot dogs.
44:30.279 –> 44:31.481
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s a trained job.
44:31.521 –> 44:34.226
[SPEAKER_04]: You can’t just drop people in there to work the equipment.
44:34.307 –> 44:35.429
[SPEAKER_05]: It’s not great.
44:35.769 –> 44:36.190
[SPEAKER_05]: I don’t know.
44:36.210 –> 44:39.737
[SPEAKER_05]: You’ve got to greet her at the front that tells you what line they get in and he wants you to do that.
44:39.777 –> 44:40.518
[SPEAKER_03]: Hugs you’re great.
44:40.659 –> 44:41.600
[SPEAKER_03]: Welcome to Walmart.
44:41.741 –> 44:42.682
[SPEAKER_03]: Thank you very much.
44:42.803 –> 44:43.564
[SPEAKER_03]: Good job, Frate.
44:43.544 –> 45:01.047
[SPEAKER_03]: A civil jury in California found Monday that Bill Cosby was liable for drugging and sexually assaulting a woman all the way back in 1972 and they awarded her 59.25 million dollars.
45:01.027 –> 45:10.758
[SPEAKER_03]: After a nearly two-hour trial in Santa Monica, Juris found Cosby, who is now 88, liable for sexual battery and assault on Donna Motsinger.
45:11.078 –> 45:24.373
[SPEAKER_03]: They awarded her $17.5 million in past damages, $1.75 million for future damages, including mental suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, inconvenience, grief, anxiety, humiliation, and emotional distress.
45:24.693 –> 45:29.278
[SPEAKER_03]: Then in a second phase of the trial, Monday afternoon, they awarded an additional
45:29.258 –> 45:32.425
[SPEAKER_03]: 40 million dollars in punitive damages.
45:32.706 –> 45:33.187
[SPEAKER_03]: So wow.
45:33.347 –> 45:33.968
[SPEAKER_03]: There you are.
45:34.690 –> 45:39.039
[SPEAKER_03]: You know, he’s going to appeal, but who knows if he’ll be, you know, live long enough to see that.
45:39.080 –> 45:47.418
[SPEAKER_04]: If you want to put it in historical perspective, this comes after I spy, but before the Bill Cosby show, when he played chat, the gym teacher.
45:47.739 –> 45:47.959
[UNKNOWN]: Wow.
45:48.158 –> 45:51.326
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, amazing that it’s been going on that long.
45:51.366 –> 46:01.712
[SPEAKER_03]: All right, if there’s a guy that I am not going to pick a fight with, who’s one of the, one of the TV stars, it’s going to be that dude from a Reacher, Alan Richardson.
46:01.852 –> 46:04.699
[SPEAKER_03]: You know, the guy I’m talking about, literally just mantles.
46:04.679 –> 46:06.542
[SPEAKER_03]: people always the tough guy.
46:07.143 –> 46:22.266
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, he got into a fight in his suburban Nashville neighborhood on Sunday, and part of it was caught on video, Richson and his two sons were riding motorcycles through the neighborhood when he ended up brawling with a neighbor named Ronny Taylor.
46:22.246 –> 46:29.264
[SPEAKER_03]: He’s a good overnight guy Ronnie Taylor in video captured by another neighbor through their window.
46:29.605 –> 46:35.600
[SPEAKER_03]: You can see rich and punching Taylor even when he’s down, but the guy doesn’t appear too hurt because he gets right back up.
46:35.920 –> 46:38.567
[SPEAKER_03]: Richens kids are standing there on their bikes.
46:38.547 –> 46:45.998
[SPEAKER_03]: watching the whole thing, Richen claims Taylor started it by pushing him off his bike twice, but Taylor tells a different story.
46:46.338 –> 46:54.150
[SPEAKER_03]: He says the conflict began on Saturday with Richen speeding through the neighborhood at unsafe speeds and revving his engine.
46:54.490 –> 47:01.521
[SPEAKER_03]: He says he flipped Richen off and received a middle finger in return, at least he’s being honest that he wasn’t totally without sin.
47:01.981 –> 47:02.242
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
47:02.262 –> 47:02.462
[SPEAKER_03]: And
47:02.442 –> 47:05.566
[SPEAKER_03]: Sunday, Richard was back at it this time with his boys.
47:05.926 –> 47:09.551
[SPEAKER_03]: So Taylor went outside and told him to stop, which is when the chaos ensued.
47:09.591 –> 47:14.137
[SPEAKER_03]: Taylor ended up with some bruises and scrapes, but nothing that needed treatment.
47:14.477 –> 47:15.599
[SPEAKER_03]: He did call the cops.
47:16.019 –> 47:17.541
[SPEAKER_03]: No arrests have been made.
47:17.761 –> 47:19.984
[SPEAKER_03]: I just, I mean, I guess he’s a big guy too.
47:20.024 –> 47:20.705
[SPEAKER_03]: I looked at the video.
47:20.725 –> 47:23.649
[SPEAKER_03]: I didn’t bring it to you because video to me was very blurry.
47:23.949 –> 47:24.570
[SPEAKER_03]: Very blurry.
47:24.590 –> 47:27.133
[SPEAKER_03]: You couldn’t really see a lot, but he did look like a big guy.
47:27.113 –> 47:30.037
[SPEAKER_03]: that went there, but Richard was pounding out.
47:30.057 –> 47:39.369
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m pretty good, and you know, it’s just, I wouldn’t deal with that, but I think it’s an A-Home move to provide motorcycle through any residential neighborhood, don’t you?
47:39.909 –> 47:40.650
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, that’s no good.
47:40.710 –> 47:45.136
[SPEAKER_04]: And you know, they were actually going to make a show a sequel that just started Josh who was called preacher.
47:46.538 –> 47:48.280
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s coming coming this fall.
47:48.660 –> 47:52.345
[SPEAKER_04]: And fight crime with a Bible coming this fall to the WB.
47:53.523 –> 48:01.052
[SPEAKER_03]: How crazy is it to stop at multiple fast food places to build the perfect fast food meal?
48:01.472 –> 48:08.961
[SPEAKER_03]: We’ve talked on stories before, but if you have picky kids, I have some things I agree with and some things I don’t have.
48:09.001 –> 48:18.552
[SPEAKER_03]: You probably feel forced to do this to get the perfect meal, or if you yourself have a sophisticated fast food palette,
48:18.532 –> 48:31.567
[SPEAKER_03]: There’s a new survey out of America’s favorite items at various restaurants and it includes the ideal fast food plate And anybody that says the idea of fast food plate has to be a fat person exactly.
48:31.848 –> 48:37.174
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, it’s probably a board of fat people Do you remember Fatso Rob when he says you don’t manage you play exactly?
48:37.234 –> 48:38.035
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, so gross.
48:38.576 –> 48:42.160
[SPEAKER_03]: I require stops at four different fast food to stop
48:42.140 –> 48:42.941
[SPEAKER_03]: Here we go.
48:43.501 –> 48:44.723
[SPEAKER_03]: And there’s only one thing.
48:44.803 –> 48:45.784
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m going to give you all of them.
48:45.844 –> 48:47.626
[SPEAKER_03]: You tell me what doesn’t belong on the list.
48:47.826 –> 48:48.006
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay.
48:48.026 –> 48:48.347
[SPEAKER_03]: Go ahead.
48:48.447 –> 49:01.240
[SPEAKER_03]: It features a Burger King Burger, a Chick-fil-A Chicken sandwich, McDonald’s French fries, and chicken nuggets, washed down with a soda or dairy queen milkshake.
49:01.280 –> 49:03.463
[SPEAKER_03]: They’re actual multiple things on this list.
49:03.483 –> 49:06.806
[SPEAKER_04]: I think the problem is, well, there’s way too much food.
49:07.127 –> 49:08.468
[SPEAKER_03]: Right.
49:08.448 –> 49:11.593
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, Burger King Burger is not my go to.
49:11.714 –> 49:11.934
[SPEAKER_04]: I would.
49:11.994 –> 49:15.660
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, I don’t think that’s going to be your answer, but Burger King would not be my list.
49:15.680 –> 49:18.004
[SPEAKER_03]: You know, I approve of the Burger King Burger.
49:18.024 –> 49:18.205
[SPEAKER_03]: Right.
49:18.305 –> 49:18.485
[SPEAKER_03]: Right.
49:18.665 –> 49:19.928
[SPEAKER_04]: But that’s where I have a problem with.
49:19.948 –> 49:26.018
[SPEAKER_04]: And I also think I don’t know that a dairy queen shake is worth its own stop or is it?
49:25.998 –> 49:28.081
[SPEAKER_03]: I would remove on my list.
49:28.261 –> 49:30.164
[SPEAKER_03]: I would take away the Chick-fil-A sandwich.
49:30.184 –> 49:32.147
[SPEAKER_03]: You don’t need that if you’re going to get a Burger King burger.
49:32.247 –> 49:35.092
[SPEAKER_03]: You don’t want to mix your fried chicken with your burger.
49:36.394 –> 49:39.498
[SPEAKER_03]: Everybody would probably agree you keep the McDonald’s French fries.
49:39.819 –> 49:41.041
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, that’s where you start your plate.
49:41.181 –> 49:43.264
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, and you have to grab a coke there as well.
49:43.295 –> 49:45.137
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, because the coaxemic Donalds are the best.
49:45.337 –> 49:46.538
[SPEAKER_03]: I think we can agree on that.
49:46.559 –> 49:47.660
[SPEAKER_03]: I would remove the nuggets.
49:47.700 –> 49:48.761
[SPEAKER_03]: I think the nuggets are gross.
49:48.901 –> 49:52.205
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, I mean, you’ve got so I mean, if you’re going to remove the nuggets and you’re going to remove the Chick play.
49:52.225 –> 49:53.506
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, you don’t need that.
49:53.586 –> 49:55.128
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s not going to chicken.
49:55.428 –> 49:58.391
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, right, chicken influence this list.
49:59.052 –> 50:05.919
[SPEAKER_03]: Uh, but Rob, if you want a milkshake or what they call a, uh, what is not a freesie.
50:06.059 –> 50:06.920
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s a rebel.
50:07.421 –> 50:10.264
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s no, no, it’s a dairy queen blizzard.
50:10.750 –> 50:12.372
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, the blizzard’s not a milkshake though.
50:12.893 –> 50:14.475
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, blizzard is handy and stuff.
50:14.495 –> 50:15.937
[SPEAKER_03]: And the turn it upside down, it doesn’t pour out.
50:15.977 –> 50:17.560
[SPEAKER_03]: The ice cream products, Dairy Queen, to me, are solid.
50:17.580 –> 50:18.401
[SPEAKER_03]: You know, I believe in that chain.
50:18.421 –> 50:19.302
[SPEAKER_03]: The blizzard is what is known as a concrete.
50:19.322 –> 50:19.562
[SPEAKER_03]: A concrete.
50:19.582 –> 50:19.903
[SPEAKER_03]: There you go.
50:19.923 –> 50:20.083
[SPEAKER_03]: Exactly.
50:20.103 –> 50:20.724
[SPEAKER_03]: Mine would be Wendy’s burger.
50:20.784 –> 50:37.247
[SPEAKER_04]: The concrete that I was in trouble is call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus call versus
50:37.227 –> 50:38.429
[SPEAKER_04]: So dairy queen blizzard.
50:38.890 –> 50:43.638
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, it is a blizzard, but a concrete I think is that style of dessert like it’s more generic.
50:43.658 –> 50:45.561
[SPEAKER_04]: And it’s a McFlurry and McDonnell’s.
50:46.022 –> 50:47.244
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, that’s always broken.
50:48.226 –> 50:49.768
[SPEAKER_04]: But fries and McDonald’s.
50:50.049 –> 50:54.156
[SPEAKER_04]: I would go to Wendy’s first to grab a burger because a burger has a longer time that it’s still good.
50:54.496 –> 50:56.860
[SPEAKER_04]: Thank you to your fries fresh and your coke fresh and then you’re done.
50:56.920 –> 50:57.742
[SPEAKER_04]: It’s only two stops.
50:58.283 –> 50:58.583
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s it.
50:58.924 –> 50:59.304
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s all.
50:59.324 –> 51:01.268
[SPEAKER_03]: And by the way, they said a burger.
51:01.548 –> 51:02.610
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s got to be the wiper.
51:02.590 –> 51:04.192
[SPEAKER_03]: If you get it at Burger King, you gotta get a walk.
51:04.212 –> 51:04.913
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, it would think so.
51:04.933 –> 51:05.193
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
51:05.393 –> 51:06.014
[SPEAKER_03]: Get the wapers.
51:06.094 –> 51:07.856
[SPEAKER_04]: And you don’t get the wapers, don’t get the wapers.
51:07.876 –> 51:09.118
[SPEAKER_04]: Don’t get the wapers, don’t get the wapers.
51:09.138 –> 51:09.358
[SPEAKER_04]: The fish.
51:09.378 –> 51:11.621
[SPEAKER_05]: I’ve always hated, I have always hated Burger King.
51:12.322 –> 51:14.204
[SPEAKER_05]: OK. You two are a lot of fun.
51:14.364 –> 51:18.549
[SPEAKER_05]: I am also susceptible to TV ads.
51:18.569 –> 51:21.473
[SPEAKER_05]: And they got a new ad about how they’ve cleaned up their stuff.
51:21.593 –> 51:23.896
[SPEAKER_05]: And they list everything I hate about Burger King.
51:24.256 –> 51:25.878
[SPEAKER_05]: So I went back and got a waper this week.
51:26.759 –> 51:28.541
[SPEAKER_05]: And it was pretty good.
51:28.601 –> 51:29.162
[SPEAKER_05]: Yes.
51:29.182 –> 51:29.863
[SPEAKER_05]: We go back.
51:29.843 –> 51:37.431
[SPEAKER_03]: The waper is, and you know what, is if there was ever a chain with the two words clean up, they have to do that.
51:37.551 –> 51:40.454
[SPEAKER_03]: They are foul, and they’ve become filthy.
51:40.514 –> 51:50.345
[SPEAKER_03]: They need to renovate, they need to spruce it up, because the product is, I think, if you can anchor your chain with a waper, which is a great hamburger, you can, you can rebuild.
51:50.565 –> 51:51.526
[SPEAKER_03]: We can rebuild it.
51:51.886 –> 51:54.329
[SPEAKER_05]: I went through a burger king drive through, and it was fast.
51:54.850 –> 51:59.074
[SPEAKER_05]: The people were nice,
51:59.054 –> 51:59.755
[SPEAKER_05]: which was nice.
52:00.116 –> 52:03.843
[SPEAKER_04]: But amazingly, Mike, the cardboard box was like 10 inches by 15 inches.
52:03.863 –> 52:04.445
[SPEAKER_04]: It was big.
52:04.465 –> 52:05.687
[SPEAKER_04]: It was like an Amazon box.
52:06.008 –> 52:06.709
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay.
52:07.150 –> 52:09.575
[SPEAKER_03]: Introducing something you can do to work off your burger.
52:10.396 –> 52:12.099
[SPEAKER_03]: This is something brand new.
52:12.560 –> 52:13.963
[SPEAKER_03]: X-rays exercises.
52:14.244 –> 52:17.029
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s called Sword Yoga.
52:18.950 –> 52:27.959
[SPEAKER_03]: the workout mixes yoga tai chi and kung fu style movements in flowing poses while you’re holding a sword.
52:28.380 –> 52:28.640
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
52:29.241 –> 52:29.881
[SPEAKER_03]: Nothing big.
52:29.921 –> 52:35.567
[SPEAKER_03]: One lady said, it’s a tool of self expression and freedom.
52:35.747 –> 52:36.608
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, shut.
52:37.869 –> 52:38.430
[SPEAKER_03]: Please.
52:38.830 –> 52:44.316
[SPEAKER_04]: I think I bet you’d see a lot of good looking yoga ladies that you would
52:44.296 –> 52:49.784
[SPEAKER_03]: When I hold the sword, I feel like a force of femininity, beauty, and strength.
52:49.804 –> 52:53.049
[SPEAKER_03]: They say classes can burn up to 500 calories.
52:53.610 –> 52:55.553
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, you can do that walking from the car, Rob.
52:55.774 –> 52:57.456
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, you know, if you run upstairs.
52:57.677 –> 53:00.180
[SPEAKER_04]: I’m not sure why you directed that at me, but yeah, you’re right.
53:00.220 –> 53:00.781
[SPEAKER_04]: Thank you.
53:00.801 –> 53:02.384
[SPEAKER_04]: Bill’s strength and confidence, too.
53:02.404 –> 53:04.627
[SPEAKER_05]: Yes, these classes, how far apart are the people?
53:04.988 –> 53:07.772
[SPEAKER_05]: It seems like there could be some easily injuries.
53:07.752 –> 53:09.755
[SPEAKER_03]: We can only hope.
53:09.975 –> 53:18.706
[SPEAKER_03]: Sorry, it also looks intimidating if that’s what you’re going for to play with a short good luck to you I went to three pairs.
53:18.846 –> 53:21.930
[SPEAKER_04]: I went to three pairs of Lulu lemons just one class.
53:22.611 –> 53:36.409
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, another cut Anyway, a Canadian cat named Louis Vuitton has gone viral after footage of him crossing between Canada and America labeled him the border hopping cat
53:36.490 –> 53:39.413
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s the best they could do for name.
53:39.713 –> 53:56.352
[SPEAKER_03]: There’s a place in northwestern Washington state where the border between the two countries is basically just a small ditch along a road where our cameras and the occasional patrols, but no big fence or wall, a video online showed Louis the cat crossing the ditch to meet an American friend.
53:56.792 –> 54:06.042
[SPEAKER_03]: And not only is he looking to be pet, he’s also been known to smuggle stuff like snakes
54:06.022 –> 54:07.004
[SPEAKER_03]: Hi, I’m Ted.
54:07.024 –> 54:07.245
[SPEAKER_03]: Hey.
54:07.606 –> 54:08.187
[SPEAKER_03]: Hi, you know what?
54:08.207 –> 54:09.470
[SPEAKER_03]: DebTate’s name is so short.
54:09.490 –> 54:10.672
[SPEAKER_04]: It could fit on a license plate.
54:10.692 –> 54:10.953
[SPEAKER_04]: What?
54:10.993 –> 54:11.795
[SPEAKER_04]: Come over Saturday.
54:11.815 –> 54:12.456
[SPEAKER_04]: We’re gonna grill.
54:12.617 –> 54:13.158
[SPEAKER_04]: DebTate.
54:13.559 –> 54:14.060
[SPEAKER_02]: Who are you?
54:14.260 –> 54:14.922
[SPEAKER_02]: I’m DebTate.
54:15.283 –> 54:17.147
[SPEAKER_02]: Do you know the border crossing cat?
54:17.507 –> 54:17.988
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
54:18.229 –> 54:18.750
[SPEAKER_02]: My tab.
54:18.810 –> 54:19.592
[SPEAKER_02]: DebTate.
54:20.534 –> 54:38.087
[SPEAKER_02]: Dev says yes and always been such a rebel but he’s extremely friendly just loves people and uh… he doesn’t care what side of the border they’re on right now dept it when asked how he’s doing lewivotonic nor the reporter jumped up on the coffee table and farted
54:39.164 –> 54:40.165
[SPEAKER_03]: always cats.
54:40.405 –> 54:43.769
[SPEAKER_03]: And we have a final today in cat news.
54:43.870 –> 54:44.310
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s right.
54:44.350 –> 54:46.433
[SPEAKER_03]: Finally today, a second cat story.
54:46.713 –> 54:52.059
[SPEAKER_03]: Police in Washington state intercepted a stolen video, uh, let me start again.
54:52.460 –> 54:52.820
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
54:52.840 –> 54:58.346
[SPEAKER_03]: I stopped because I realized both these stories come from Washington state and they’re both about cats.
54:58.366 –> 55:01.951
[SPEAKER_03]: And my mind began to wander and then I’d be on me now.
55:01.971 –> 55:02.091
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
55:02.331 –> 55:02.752
[SPEAKER_03]: I hear you.
55:03.032 –> 55:03.613
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, cats.
55:03.813 –> 55:04.834
[SPEAKER_03]: Take that from the top.
55:06.265 –> 55:15.999
[SPEAKER_03]: But finally today, police in Washington state intercepted a stolen vehicle last week, and the 29-year-old man in 23-year-old woman inside it ran from the cops on foot.
55:16.039 –> 55:17.261
[SPEAKER_03]: The chase didn’t last long.
55:17.621 –> 55:21.307
[SPEAKER_03]: Both were taken into custody, but the woman came with extra drama.
55:21.727 –> 55:25.152
[SPEAKER_03]: She was found hiding under a pickup truck.
55:25.216 –> 55:26.298
[SPEAKER_03]: with her pet kitten.
55:26.940 –> 55:32.812
[SPEAKER_03]: And she freaked out when the cops tried to handcuff her because she was worried about the kitty cat.
55:32.852 –> 55:38.665
[SPEAKER_03]: There’s body camera footage of the arrest where she says, dude, can I please get my kitten?
55:38.685 –> 55:40.890
[SPEAKER_03]: I just wanted to keep him safe.
55:41.351 –> 55:44.878
[SPEAKER_03]: Then an officer says, you call this, keep him safe.
55:45.972 –> 55:46.874
[SPEAKER_03]: way to go.
55:46.894 –> 55:48.798
[SPEAKER_03]: Cops one fell in nothing.
55:49.079 –> 55:53.088
[SPEAKER_03]: The cat was uninsured and turned over to the Tacoma Humane Society.
55:53.468 –> 55:57.898
[SPEAKER_03]: The couple was charged with theft, resisting arrest, and other outstanding warrants.
55:58.379 –> 56:02.007
[SPEAKER_03]: After the previous story, I just wish that kitten had been able to cross the border.
56:03.286 –> 56:17.847
[SPEAKER_04]: If he’s still at the coma that shelter a dirt could dirt could rescue that cat oh that’s right because he lives in Washington state We’ll be right back everybody folks.
56:18.148 –> 56:18.308
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m not
56:18.288 –> 56:19.209
[SPEAKER_03]: getting any younger.
56:19.410 –> 56:20.591
[SPEAKER_03]: In fact, none of us are.
56:20.671 –> 56:24.797
[SPEAKER_03]: It seemed like energy crashes at 2 p.m. became my new normal.
56:25.158 –> 56:31.086
[SPEAKER_03]: So naturally, I went down to the internet rabbit hole and started Googling symptoms like a hype a conryack.
56:31.146 –> 56:32.408
[SPEAKER_03]: Low T kept coming up.
56:32.468 –> 56:33.089
[SPEAKER_03]: Here’s the thing.
56:33.410 –> 56:37.155
[SPEAKER_03]: Doctors act like testosterone replacement therapy is no big deal.
56:37.435 –> 56:39.298
[SPEAKER_03]: Just weekly shots for the rest of your life.
56:39.598 –> 56:39.879
[SPEAKER_03]: Cool.
56:40.159 –> 56:40.940
[SPEAKER_03]: Thanks, Doc.
56:40.960 –> 56:44.245
[SPEAKER_03]: Then you dig deeper and you realize what you’re actually signing up for.
56:44.225 –> 56:53.664
[SPEAKER_03]: Three grand a year to shut down your body’s natural production forever, terrifying, so I’m making things easier on my body the natural way.
56:54.004 –> 57:01.980
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m taking Marsmen, a natural testosterone stack that optimizes your body’s ability to forge usable testosterone.
57:01.960 –> 57:07.068
[SPEAKER_03]: Mars men is like hitting the reset but none your hormone factory instead of shutting it down.
57:07.528 –> 57:11.795
[SPEAKER_03]: It gives me more consistent energy, stronger lips, and better focus.
57:12.135 –> 57:17.363
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s a steady drive all day, not the quick spike you get from caffeine or injections.
57:17.724 –> 57:21.550
[SPEAKER_03]: Plus, there’s a 90 day money back guarantee, so there’s no risk.
57:21.570 –> 57:24.434
[SPEAKER_03]: Thousands of guys are feeling incredible results.
57:24.454 –> 57:25.356
[SPEAKER_03]: Just check it out.
57:25.436 –> 57:28.020
[SPEAKER_03]: Check out the reviews on the website and see for yourself.
57:28.340 –> 57:29.622
[SPEAKER_03]: For a limited time,
57:29.602 –> 57:36.893
[SPEAKER_03]: TMOS listeners get 50% off for life plus free shipping, and three free gifts at mengodomars.com.
57:36.913 –> 57:40.138
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s a perfect way to start feeling strong right away.
57:40.398 –> 57:45.886
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s mengodomars.com for 50% off, and three free gifts when you check out.
57:45.906 –> 57:48.690
[SPEAKER_03]: After your purchase, they’re going to ask you where you heard about them.
57:48.830 –> 57:52.656
[SPEAKER_03]: Please support our show and tell them the TMOs and you
57:53.260 –> 58:06.818
[SPEAKER_03]: I really do that video and for those of you that are listening on audio, we have a little video that goes along with Marsmen, and that really almost looks like it’s super imposed on Rob’s screen, but I will tell you that that picture at the end, that guy in the end.
58:07.058 –> 58:07.179
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
58:07.539 –> 58:08.681
[SPEAKER_03]: I think I’ve never looked better.
58:09.121 –> 58:09.962
[SPEAKER_03]: I really have never looked.
58:09.982 –> 58:12.045
[SPEAKER_04]: Thanks to Marsmen, you do look that good.
58:12.025 –> 58:13.106
[SPEAKER_03]: very, very exciting.
58:13.126 –> 58:24.000
[SPEAKER_03]: Do you know, it’s not easy to bench to balance Marsmen on your microphone, but they added a lot to the add and I think that’s that’s to be commended before we get to Rob Speedwack.
58:24.020 –> 58:26.042
[SPEAKER_03]: I want to thank everybody that joined us.
58:26.523 –> 58:31.429
[SPEAKER_03]: We started a little early today, so our apologies for that in the comment section and don’t forget.
58:32.670 –> 58:36.615
[SPEAKER_03]: Share that with your friends that you know, you can comment on the show and sometimes we
58:36.595 –> 58:37.776
[SPEAKER_03]: the post.
58:37.796 –> 58:47.226
[SPEAKER_03]: By the way, if you send a super chat, that gets you to the front of the line and we appreciate each and every day, the super chats that you can include to support this show.
58:47.246 –> 58:48.367
[SPEAKER_03]: Rob Spiewack.
58:48.507 –> 58:53.092
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, turning from Miami, still in morning, been a sad time for him.
58:53.973 –> 59:05.725
[SPEAKER_03]: He did not get a visit from his wife down in Miami, but she informed him that they would have a beautiful reunion on Monday because she was at another home Monday evening.
59:05.705 –> 59:19.198
[SPEAKER_04]: And, um, I remember when I told her when I was going to come home, I said I’m I’m coming home Monday Saturday early and she said do I need to pick you up at the airport and I, you know, I said no, I’ve already taken care of all that and she said, Oh, great.
59:19.559 –> 59:20.581
[SPEAKER_04]: I’ll see you Monday night.
59:21.123 –> 59:22.887
[SPEAKER_04]: I said, OK, great.
59:22.867 –> 59:33.599
[SPEAKER_03]: And so yesterday we did the show and you are the easiest person to deal with when somebody doesn’t want to do something because you’re not going to be, you’re not going to be an idiot in that way.
59:33.659 –> 59:39.626
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, Mike, as you get older, as you get older, the greatest news in the world is when someone cancels something.
59:40.026 –> 59:40.347
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s it.
59:40.387 –> 59:41.748
[SPEAKER_04]: You don’t have to be involved with it.
59:41.768 –> 59:45.873
[SPEAKER_04]: And so there’s a little bit of a win there and you’re doing an analysis there.
59:45.893 –> 59:47.315
[SPEAKER_05]: What did you say about it?
59:47.335 –> 59:49.397
[SPEAKER_05]: He said everyone, he gives that a run-and-out.
59:49.765 –> 59:50.045
[SPEAKER_05]: Right.
59:50.065 –> 59:52.108
[SPEAKER_05]: He always gives people an out to not do it.
59:52.668 –> 59:54.350
[SPEAKER_05]: It’s almost as if I crave approval.
59:54.370 –> 59:56.933
[SPEAKER_05]: It’s like a it’s like a little safety.
59:57.614 –> 59:58.475
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I did.
59:58.555 –> 01:00:00.718
[SPEAKER_05]: So that when people don’t show up, it’s your fault.
01:00:00.818 –> 01:00:01.259
[SPEAKER_05]: Not theirs.
01:00:01.679 –> 01:00:04.983
[SPEAKER_04]: So your decision yesterday was of course Monday.
01:00:05.043 –> 01:00:05.624
[SPEAKER_04]: Great to be home.
01:00:05.644 –> 01:00:07.246
[SPEAKER_04]: Great to be back in my home studio.
01:00:07.306 –> 01:00:10.329
[SPEAKER_04]: It means a lot and did some work.
01:00:10.750 –> 01:00:11.431
[SPEAKER_04]: There’s a new one.
01:00:11.471 –> 01:00:17.798
[SPEAKER_03]: When you say great to be home, if we can slow this down for a second, do you feel that way or do you miss Miami a little bit?
01:00:17.778 –> 01:00:22.704
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, my amy was nice, but it’s kind of like when you’re on vacation.
01:00:22.804 –> 01:00:26.188
[SPEAKER_04]: It was a crappy vacation because you know what we’re dealing with.
01:00:26.208 –> 01:00:27.210
[SPEAKER_03]: No, I know what you’re talking about.
01:00:27.510 –> 01:00:32.436
[SPEAKER_04]: But it’s nice, but at home, I’m surrounded by my stuff and my things.
01:00:32.516 –> 01:00:33.978
[SPEAKER_04]: And that’s what everything it is.
01:00:34.138 –> 01:00:36.041
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, I’ve spent my whole life getting myself together.
01:00:36.301 –> 01:00:37.963
[SPEAKER_04]: When you have the glow of the jukebox.
01:00:38.129 –> 01:00:44.318
[SPEAKER_04]: You know what my father no longer needs this on and you know as I see you back at some of the confines of Virginia.
01:00:44.759 –> 01:00:48.144
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I mean you you you definitely got some rays when you were down there.
01:00:48.164 –> 01:00:48.986
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, we went to the pool.
01:00:49.046 –> 01:00:49.586
[SPEAKER_04]: We had fun.
01:00:49.687 –> 01:00:50.127
[SPEAKER_04]: It was good.
01:00:50.147 –> 01:00:53.993
[SPEAKER_04]: I did I told you I got yelled at at the pool, right?
01:00:55.155 –> 01:00:57.859
[SPEAKER_04]: No, I don’t believe you’re jumping into the water.
01:00:58.312 –> 01:00:59.655
[SPEAKER_04]: Like a cannonball.
01:01:00.256 –> 01:01:06.570
[SPEAKER_04]: No, it was just like a parallel dive in, you know, they say no diving because they say shallow water.
01:01:06.650 –> 01:01:12.403
[SPEAKER_04]: It’s nine feet deep and I didn’t feel like lowering myself on the on the ladder again.
01:01:12.463 –> 01:01:15.730
[SPEAKER_04]: So I just sort of, you know, you don’t have anywhere.
01:01:15.980 –> 01:01:16.521
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
01:01:16.541 –> 01:01:18.283
[SPEAKER_04]: Overwards two and a half feet deep.
01:01:18.443 –> 01:01:19.664
[SPEAKER_04]: I’m not going to do that either.
01:01:19.684 –> 01:01:21.586
[SPEAKER_04]: How about one of those robotic chairs?
01:01:22.407 –> 01:01:22.928
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, a lift.
01:01:23.148 –> 01:01:23.609
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
01:01:23.629 –> 01:01:29.155
[SPEAKER_04]: I’m sure we actually, we actually had one of those lifts for my father that we had to return sadly.
01:01:29.756 –> 01:01:39.507
[SPEAKER_03]: I like my method of entering a pool.
01:01:39.487 –> 01:01:41.309
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, you can yell that for that doing that.
01:01:41.329 –> 01:01:41.990
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:01:42.171 –> 01:01:44.213
[SPEAKER_03]: I didn’t know you got yelled at for dying in the old days.
01:01:44.233 –> 01:01:44.394
[SPEAKER_04]: Mike.
01:01:44.414 –> 01:01:46.176
[SPEAKER_04]: We called that the Nestee plunge.
01:01:46.196 –> 01:01:46.637
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s wonder.
01:01:46.877 –> 01:01:47.778
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, exactly what it is.
01:01:47.878 –> 01:01:49.180
[SPEAKER_03]: And so he yelled at you for died.
01:01:49.200 –> 01:01:52.104
[SPEAKER_03]: He was it was it was it was one thing or what?
01:01:52.204 –> 01:02:00.235
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, it was in there was me and Kathy and three or four older people and there’s a lot of people that have and I love all people.
01:02:00.295 –> 01:02:00.896
[SPEAKER_04]: You know that.
01:02:01.297 –> 01:02:04.080
[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t discriminate against this man is a hold on.
01:02:04.200 –> 01:02:05.342
[SPEAKER_03]: I got cut.
01:02:05.322 –> 01:02:09.489
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, I love people, I don’t discriminate against anyone.
01:02:09.509 –> 01:02:13.857
[SPEAKER_04]: I don’t classify people because to me, we’re all God’s children.
01:02:14.498 –> 01:02:16.562
[SPEAKER_04]: But it’s a lie.
01:02:17.103 –> 01:02:21.931
[SPEAKER_04]: It throws me off when someone yells at me that I can’t make out the accent.
01:02:22.031 –> 01:02:24.596
[SPEAKER_04]: It might be Turkish, it might be Spanish.
01:02:24.736 –> 01:02:25.778
[SPEAKER_04]: I don’t know what it is.
01:02:25.798 –> 01:02:28.122
[SPEAKER_03]: It loves all people unless they’re from another country.
01:02:28.763 –> 01:02:28.883
[SPEAKER_05]: Right.
01:02:28.863 –> 01:02:29.424
[SPEAKER_05]: That’s right.
01:02:29.504 –> 01:02:32.029
[SPEAKER_05]: So are they came up in the pool at this time?
01:02:32.069 –> 01:02:33.011
[SPEAKER_05]: Or is this one of those?
01:02:33.271 –> 01:02:34.093
[SPEAKER_05]: Everyone’s at the pool.
01:02:34.153 –> 01:02:35.275
[SPEAKER_05]: No one wants to get wet.
01:02:35.656 –> 01:02:42.408
[SPEAKER_04]: There was three people that were, they brought those noodles, those pool noodles, you know, the long thing.
01:02:42.749 –> 01:02:46.897
[SPEAKER_04]: And they were floating like they’re in an easy chair and about the three foot water.
01:02:46.917 –> 01:02:51.225
[SPEAKER_04]: And they’re all yelling about the town council meeting that we discussed on the bonus show sometime back.
01:02:51.205 –> 01:02:52.528
[SPEAKER_04]: I don’t know.
01:02:52.708 –> 01:02:56.917
[SPEAKER_04]: I don’t know if we’re going to get a management company because are they going to what if I locked myself out?
01:02:57.258 –> 01:02:58.400
[SPEAKER_04]: What if I locked myself out?
01:02:58.420 –> 01:02:59.703
[SPEAKER_04]: What are you going to do?
01:02:59.763 –> 01:03:00.725
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.
01:03:00.925 –> 01:03:11.948
[SPEAKER_04]: I get I jump in the pool and this man almost out of nowhere rises like a golden vixen because he’s you know beautifully tan lots of gold chains and he says
01:03:11.928 –> 01:03:16.935
[SPEAKER_04]: The rules you have broken the rules and I just says it like that.
01:03:17.015 –> 01:03:20.439
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I said what he says have you not read the rules?
01:03:20.920 –> 01:03:26.407
[SPEAKER_04]: I said I know all the rules and he says look at this sign What is the first rule?
01:03:27.008 –> 01:03:30.753
[SPEAKER_04]: Not diving and I said oh, well, I wasn’t really a dive.
01:03:30.813 –> 01:03:34.037
[SPEAKER_04]: He said you must know the rules
01:03:34.456 –> 01:03:37.640
[SPEAKER_03]: I’d say if you, I would say if you.
01:03:38.201 –> 01:03:41.184
[SPEAKER_03]: There’s a way to handle it and a way not to handle it.
01:03:41.244 –> 01:03:42.165
[SPEAKER_03]: That will fart.
01:03:42.766 –> 01:03:52.478
[SPEAKER_04]: He was, yeah, he was so pissed that Mike, when I came up from the water and my head left the water, he was already yelling when I had the ability to hear him.
01:03:52.838 –> 01:03:54.661
[SPEAKER_04]: So you don’t know the rules.
01:03:55.161 –> 01:03:59.046
[SPEAKER_04]: And so I just said, you know what, it will never.
01:03:59.887 –> 01:04:01.008
[SPEAKER_04]: never happened again.
01:04:01.629 –> 01:04:04.273
[SPEAKER_03]: Alan Richson, that’s what you should have pulled on my guy.
01:04:04.633 –> 01:04:05.334
[SPEAKER_04]: But what was he’s what?
01:04:05.575 –> 01:04:07.938
[SPEAKER_04]: Give him a middle finger and then hit him on his head.
01:04:08.058 –> 01:04:08.518
[SPEAKER_04]: I don’t know.
01:04:08.538 –> 01:04:09.460
[SPEAKER_04]: I don’t think I wanted to do that.
01:04:09.480 –> 01:04:10.321
[SPEAKER_03]: Alan Richson was the news.
01:04:10.801 –> 01:04:13.866
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I wasn’t sure if there was something I had missed.
01:04:13.946 –> 01:04:14.787
[SPEAKER_03]: I knew about the news.
01:04:14.807 –> 01:04:16.028
[SPEAKER_03]: It was right here on this show.
01:04:16.489 –> 01:04:17.971
[SPEAKER_03]: So you get back to Virginia.
01:04:18.412 –> 01:04:18.672
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes.
01:04:20.134 –> 01:04:22.938
[SPEAKER_03]: Your wife can’t we’ll not pick you up at the airport.
01:04:22.978 –> 01:04:29.286
[SPEAKER_03]: No, no, she would have
01:04:29.266 –> 01:04:31.589
[SPEAKER_04]: No, I never even, he didn’t need an out.
01:04:31.629 –> 01:04:32.451
[SPEAKER_04]: I didn’t even ask her.
01:04:32.891 –> 01:04:38.500
[SPEAKER_05]: Okay, she asked where were you excited to see Carrie or your mom.
01:04:39.401 –> 01:04:42.345
[SPEAKER_04]: I was most excited to see the dogs actually.
01:04:42.425 –> 01:04:43.607
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s what I missed the most.
01:04:44.348 –> 01:04:51.038
[SPEAKER_03]: The dogs really greeted me well and she’s house sitting and will not be at your house until Monday.
01:04:51.271 –> 01:05:02.567
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, I thought Monday night, but it turned out it was Monday afternoon because she has set through Monday morning and then went to school to teach and then came home on working, working, working, working, working, working.
01:05:02.587 –> 01:05:02.787
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes.
01:05:03.208 –> 01:05:09.297
[SPEAKER_04]: Like at five, sadly at five, I had laid down to rest and taken that.
01:05:09.317 –> 01:05:11.740
[SPEAKER_04]: And so when she got home, I was asleep.
01:05:12.481 –> 01:05:20.653
[SPEAKER_04]: And I’ve gotten the habit of taking a snooze in the afternoon when I was in Florida
01:05:20.633 –> 01:05:22.336
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean sometimes it just it helps.
01:05:22.356 –> 01:05:23.198
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, we tape early.
01:05:23.298 –> 01:05:24.661
[SPEAKER_03]: You’re up early to do this show.
01:05:24.681 –> 01:05:27.145
[SPEAKER_03]: Why not you’re never want to be caught taking a nap.
01:05:27.165 –> 01:05:28.207
[SPEAKER_04]: No, you don’t know.
01:05:28.348 –> 01:05:34.680
[SPEAKER_04]: And you know, it’s funny because Carrie who is now known as a workaholic used to be known as a nap myster.
01:05:35.101 –> 01:05:40.110
[SPEAKER_04]: So the fact that she would be, you know, annoyed with anyone taking a nap is almost off the table, but
01:05:40.090 –> 01:05:51.448
[SPEAKER_04]: She came in and I said, Oh, I didn’t expect you so early and she says, Well, here I am and so she went downstairs and I got up and went down and we watched some TV together and I was still tired.
01:05:51.468 –> 01:05:52.249
[SPEAKER_04]: So I went to bed at eight.
01:05:52.509 –> 01:05:54.152
[SPEAKER_04]: I didn’t have dinner last night, but she did.
01:05:54.172 –> 01:05:54.773
[SPEAKER_04]: She had oatmeal.
01:05:56.235 –> 01:05:57.998
[SPEAKER_04]: And now all is right with the world.
01:05:58.130 –> 01:06:02.557
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m sorry we didn’t have any, you know, oh, there we let’s play the romantic heart.
01:06:02.938 –> 01:06:03.278
[SPEAKER_03]: Thank you.
01:06:04.120 –> 01:06:07.926
[SPEAKER_03]: A beautiful sounds like a beautiful, beautiful, brand new.
01:06:08.306 –> 01:06:12.112
[SPEAKER_04]: I think the best part, and I didn’t emphasize it enough, is how happy she is.
01:06:12.473 –> 01:06:13.254
[SPEAKER_00]: Nice, beaver.
01:06:13.855 –> 01:06:15.958
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s not right, that’s what we do, yeah.
01:06:15.978 –> 01:06:16.780
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s not right.
01:06:17.280 –> 01:06:20.686
[SPEAKER_03]: And then, uh, rough, sure, it’s not incorrect, but it’s not right.
01:06:20.806 –> 01:06:22.669
[SPEAKER_03]: Help to help carry downstairs.
01:06:24.218 –> 01:06:28.066
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, you know, if anything were to happen, it would be her pushing me down.
01:06:28.086 –> 01:06:29.348
[SPEAKER_04]: Her pushing me down.
01:06:29.409 –> 01:06:30.270
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, of course.
01:06:30.611 –> 01:06:32.214
[SPEAKER_04]: What was the television program?
01:06:33.116 –> 01:06:36.182
[SPEAKER_04]: I think it was reruns of Park’s and Recreation.
01:06:37.205 –> 01:06:39.409
[SPEAKER_04]: I wasn’t paying a lot of attention to it.
01:06:39.524 –> 01:06:40.186
[SPEAKER_04]: Good show though.
01:06:40.226 –> 01:06:40.767
[SPEAKER_04]: Very funny.
01:06:41.308 –> 01:06:42.892
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, and a Daniel Thurber.
01:06:42.953 –> 01:06:44.015
[SPEAKER_03]: I totally agree with you.
01:06:44.436 –> 01:06:44.938
[SPEAKER_03]: What’s that?
01:06:45.078 –> 01:06:46.421
[SPEAKER_03]: I think you earned a nap as well.
01:06:46.642 –> 01:06:47.143
[SPEAKER_03]: I think so.
01:06:47.223 –> 01:06:47.584
[SPEAKER_03]: Thank you.
01:06:47.604 –> 01:06:47.985
[SPEAKER_03]: Absolutely.
01:06:48.446 –> 01:06:49.128
[SPEAKER_03]: Thank you.
01:06:49.148 –> 01:06:53.279
[SPEAKER_03]: And so that was the, that was the, that was the extent of it.
01:06:53.299 –> 01:06:54.843
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, no, there was this morning, of course.
01:06:55.705 –> 01:06:55.845
[SPEAKER_06]: Mm-hmm.
01:06:55.825 –> 01:07:03.655
[SPEAKER_04]: When I woke up and I had showered and I was getting ready to come down stairs and she woke up and she says, I’ve been having trouble with the TV.
01:07:03.675 –> 01:07:04.796
[SPEAKER_04]: The remote’s not working.
01:07:05.357 –> 01:07:11.505
[SPEAKER_04]: So I took the remote and I realized she had put, she said, I changed the batteries, but the batteries were in wrong.
01:07:12.065 –> 01:07:14.849
[SPEAKER_04]: So I fixed the batteries and then the remote worked a lot better.
01:07:15.289 –> 01:07:18.193
[SPEAKER_04]: And I said, uh, Channel 4 is on for you now and she says, great.
01:07:18.674 –> 01:07:20.556
[SPEAKER_04]: Would you take the trash down when you go down?
01:07:20.816 –> 01:07:21.377
[SPEAKER_04]: I said, yep.
01:07:23.348 –> 01:07:24.029
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.
01:07:24.049 –> 01:07:24.590
[SPEAKER_04]: What a hero.
01:07:25.211 –> 01:07:25.811
[SPEAKER_04]: And Finn.
01:07:26.372 –> 01:07:27.373
[SPEAKER_03]: Finn, as they say.
01:07:27.694 –> 01:07:36.105
[SPEAKER_03]: And, Finn, tomorrow will you tell us about your record story trip with your brand new car that you wanted to drive so bad.
01:07:36.125 –> 01:07:41.813
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, but here’s a teaser about my fifth copy of Elvis, almost in love.
01:07:42.687 –> 01:07:44.930
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, man, our boy, we should treat it to you better.
01:07:45.091 –> 01:07:46.813
[SPEAKER_03]: Anyway, let’s take a break.
01:07:46.833 –> 01:07:48.636
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s not really a matter of being treated.
01:07:48.956 –> 01:07:50.098
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s just respected.
01:07:50.799 –> 01:07:53.343
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m pulling my son out of school early today.
01:07:53.403 –> 01:07:56.187
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s the last day of spring training here in Florida.
01:07:56.307 –> 01:07:56.888
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, that’s cool.
01:07:57.129 –> 01:08:02.296
[SPEAKER_03]: Tell y’all about that and we’ll just see if he’ll we’ll change the TV and maybe he can take the trash down.
01:08:02.937 –> 01:08:06.703
[SPEAKER_03]: See how the way he does that, Josh, when he talks about the batteries being put in wrong.
01:08:07.358 –> 01:08:10.302
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, passive me the aggressive aggressive.
01:08:10.322 –> 01:08:28.506
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, I would have been the non passive aggressive way to say that stupid thing to do Anyway, I wonder how long she’d been having trouble with it before she thought to say someone should look at this take a big At this, will you please I haven’t seen the today show and we can have
01:08:28.486 –> 01:08:39.001
[SPEAKER_03]: you ever notice how saroka over there the silence and the look on his faces just kind of funnies you know you know he’s doing he’s not trying to do anything but he’s but he speaks volumes with those.
01:08:39.021 –> 01:08:41.645
[SPEAKER_03]: He’s percolating or percolating is what he’s doing.
01:08:41.705 –> 01:08:44.449
[SPEAKER_03]: He’s ready to jump in will be right back everybody.
01:08:44.509 –> 01:08:45.651
[SPEAKER_03]: Thank you.
01:08:45.631 –> 01:08:47.653
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01:08:47.993 –> 01:08:56.661
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01:09:53.097 –> 01:09:56.041
[SPEAKER_03]: You know, yesterday I stopped by Carla’s brick and mortar store.
01:09:56.061 –> 01:09:59.987
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s one of the treatment rooms that she’s talking to you from down there.
01:10:00.007 –> 01:10:08.519
[SPEAKER_03]: And as I’m sitting out there, she wanted me to come by and pick up a license plate to turn into DMV down here.
01:10:08.679 –> 01:10:11.663
[SPEAKER_03]: And I’m as I’m sitting there.
01:10:12.014 –> 01:10:13.956
[SPEAKER_03]: She says, oh, they’re the new owners.
01:10:14.497 –> 01:10:16.239
[SPEAKER_03]: And let me see if I get this right.
01:10:16.299 –> 01:10:17.000
[SPEAKER_04]: Owners of what?
01:10:17.040 –> 01:10:20.784
[SPEAKER_03]: They’re selling the whole shopping center to look like corporation.
01:10:20.965 –> 01:10:21.205
[SPEAKER_03]: All right.
01:10:21.806 –> 01:10:31.077
[SPEAKER_03]: And the lady, Carla has a really good relationship with the management company that runs the shopping center right now.
01:10:31.457 –> 01:10:32.298
[SPEAKER_03]: They’re selling it.
01:10:32.959 –> 01:10:36.283
[SPEAKER_03]: And this big corporate company’s got to get it.
01:10:36.263 –> 01:11:05.680
[SPEAKER_03]: the way it goes is they apparently are going for a tenant to tenant to tenant doing interviews with the tenants that consists of you know how do you how do you like it how long can hear how long’s your lease and is there anything that’s been bugging you anything we can do it’s kind of an idea exchange with the and also for the the chance for the new
01:11:06.250 –> 01:11:17.475
[SPEAKER_03]: You know when you have an aura that no matter what your intentions are, you immediately feel that you are on the defensive.
01:11:17.641 –> 01:11:32.546
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, and I felt as though the interview was whether or not she could keep her office space as opposed to an exchange of information because obviously legally she has a signed document.
01:11:32.566 –> 01:11:33.066
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, of course.
01:11:33.307 –> 01:11:38.856
[SPEAKER_03]: So there is, but the demeanor of the person was
01:11:38.836 –> 01:11:52.962
[SPEAKER_03]: How would I do you know, uh, this is a prettier version, a much prettier version, by the way, of what was the, uh, the white lotus most recent, and is it puppy Harlow?
01:11:53.282 –> 01:11:53.923
[SPEAKER_03]: Is that the lady?
01:11:53.943 –> 01:11:55.045
[SPEAKER_04]: I believe that’s the name.
01:11:55.065 –> 01:11:55.687
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
01:11:55.827 –> 01:11:55.967
[UNKNOWN]: Uh-huh.
01:11:55.947 –> 01:12:00.455
[SPEAKER_03]: That was the, that was the accent, the voice, and I was like, thank you.
01:12:00.575 –> 01:12:01.016
[SPEAKER_03]: Thank you.
01:12:01.156 –> 01:12:01.918
[SPEAKER_03]: Are you doing?
01:12:01.938 –> 01:12:07.908
[SPEAKER_03]: And I felt the same vibe and Carla made a comment as soon as she left with the other.
01:12:08.189 –> 01:12:13.498
[SPEAKER_03]: Me, meanwhile, the other guy from the current management company is kind of just sitting by coolness heels and letting them do it.
01:12:13.638 –> 01:12:18.647
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, sort of set up by nervously, because I think all they care about is this sale going.
01:12:18.627 –> 01:12:22.800
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, he wants to sail to go through, but once it goes through, he’s going to be handed out cigars and Hershey bars.
01:12:22.820 –> 01:12:23.923
[SPEAKER_04]: He’s going to be so happy.
01:12:24.063 –> 01:12:25.869
[SPEAKER_03]: He’s going to have made all the money in the world.
01:12:25.889 –> 01:12:27.514
[SPEAKER_03]: No, I don’t think he’s making the money.
01:12:27.534 –> 01:12:32.248
[SPEAKER_03]: I think he’s losing a job, maybe everybody makes money, except us.
01:12:32.313 –> 01:12:33.215
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s how it works.
01:12:33.455 –> 01:12:34.316
[SPEAKER_03]: Here’s the way it goes.
01:12:35.018 –> 01:12:39.686
[SPEAKER_03]: She leaves and I felt as though I felt.
01:12:39.886 –> 01:12:41.289
[SPEAKER_03]: I have no no skin in the game.
01:12:41.789 –> 01:12:42.972
[SPEAKER_03]: I felt intimidated.
01:12:43.332 –> 01:12:43.593
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
01:12:43.613 –> 01:12:48.221
[SPEAKER_03]: And there I realized there are people that by the way, this person has put together head to toe.
01:12:48.722 –> 01:12:52.448
[SPEAKER_03]: Very corporate, very, but at the same time, I’m sitting there going.
01:12:52.428 –> 01:13:04.733
[SPEAKER_03]: And at one point but people just have that she has that aura and at one point I look at the the old management guy and go I’m just the husband
01:13:06.367 –> 01:13:11.635
[SPEAKER_04]: And you never made anyone feel defense just a husband over here.
01:13:11.655 –> 01:13:17.123
[SPEAKER_04]: I’m just sitting in the lobby and then they look at their jovial Bob, you know, it’s a, hey, how’s it going?
01:13:17.263 –> 01:13:26.417
[SPEAKER_03]: And then like five minutes later, the manager of the place is leading another person from this company around she opens door and they give a big hug.
01:13:26.397 –> 01:13:39.160
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, and the only reason I bring this up is because they give a very quick hug and the door closes and And I hear probably comes in laughing and said, what are you laughing about she said, is that your father?
01:13:41.764 –> 01:13:42.485
[SPEAKER_03]: There we go.
01:13:42.586 –> 01:13:48.456
[SPEAKER_02]: Thank you Everybody
01:13:48.436 –> 01:13:54.867
[SPEAKER_03]: I want to tell you, listen today I’ll be popping my son out of school and taking him to the ballgame, the old ballgame.
01:13:55.568 –> 01:14:04.983
[SPEAKER_03]: Josh box seats 28 beans at the Twins facility next the order where they were they were charging $78 for him next door.
01:14:05.284 –> 01:14:06.546
[SPEAKER_03]: How about that?
01:14:06.526 –> 01:14:08.551
[SPEAKER_03]: cheaper than anything I paid for last week.
01:14:08.571 –> 01:14:09.614
[SPEAKER_03]: Spectacular.
01:14:09.634 –> 01:14:10.597
[SPEAKER_03]: I am so excited.
01:14:11.018 –> 01:14:12.401
[SPEAKER_03]: Very, very excited about that.
01:14:12.762 –> 01:14:15.068
[SPEAKER_03]: Almost as excited as you are about trees.
01:14:15.289 –> 01:14:17.113
[SPEAKER_03]: And I have no idea why you’re two.
01:14:17.755 –> 01:14:19.440
[SPEAKER_03]: Why you two are talking about trees.
01:14:19.580 –> 01:14:21.565
[SPEAKER_03]: We both got into trees this weekend.
01:14:21.545 –> 01:14:21.946
[SPEAKER_03]: Really?
01:14:22.026 –> 01:14:23.668
[SPEAKER_05]: Like, you climb them?
01:14:23.688 –> 01:14:24.650
[SPEAKER_05]: No, no, no.
01:14:25.411 –> 01:14:28.055
[SPEAKER_05]: I had a storm take out a tree in my front yard.
01:14:28.075 –> 01:14:29.617
[SPEAKER_05]: Oh, I’m a couple miles away.
01:14:29.637 –> 01:14:31.139
[SPEAKER_03]: I before you go, I can’t help it.
01:14:31.239 –> 01:14:32.742
[SPEAKER_03]: I got a stop at Rolandis’s.
01:14:33.563 –> 01:14:36.427
[SPEAKER_03]: Did she look like Ben Mala from YouTube?
01:14:36.447 –> 01:14:37.769
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s the real estate guy.
01:14:37.809 –> 01:14:38.871
[SPEAKER_03]: Have you ever seen that guy?
01:14:38.891 –> 01:14:40.974
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s like, yeah, I got that.
01:14:40.994 –> 01:14:41.635
[SPEAKER_03]: No, she’s a jerk.
01:14:41.695 –> 01:14:43.157
[SPEAKER_05]: Go ahead, Josh, my apologies.
01:14:43.437 –> 01:14:45.681
[SPEAKER_05]: So I, I this tree that broke in the front yard.
01:14:45.921 –> 01:14:47.143
[SPEAKER_05]: So I needed to replace it.
01:14:47.203 –> 01:14:48.565
[SPEAKER_05]: So we’ve been looking at different.
01:14:48.663 –> 01:14:55.555
[SPEAKER_05]: palm trees and stuff, but they’re like a refrigerator like the wind came and so I did destroy it.
01:14:55.575 –> 01:14:57.518
[SPEAKER_04]: What variety of tree was it that was destroyed?
01:14:57.839 –> 01:14:58.460
[SPEAKER_04]: A dogwood.
01:14:58.921 –> 01:14:59.261
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.
01:14:59.321 –> 01:15:01.185
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, it’s a crap little tree.
01:15:01.205 –> 01:15:04.350
[SPEAKER_04]: But the tree of Virginia, the state tree of Virginia.
01:15:04.671 –> 01:15:06.193
[SPEAKER_05]: I love the name of my favorite tree.
01:15:06.233 –> 01:15:06.794
[SPEAKER_05]: Go ahead, Josh.
01:15:06.814 –> 01:15:07.195
[SPEAKER_05]: I’m sorry.
01:15:07.215 –> 01:15:08.097
[SPEAKER_05]: I don’t know.
01:15:08.217 –> 01:15:11.262
[SPEAKER_05]: Do ever any long work or anything down here.
01:15:11.242 –> 01:15:23.204
[SPEAKER_05]: I have other guys to do that, but I decided I called the tree company and they wanted like 500 bucks to replace the tree So I decided I can dig the hole myself and get to tree out So I went to home depot.
01:15:23.304 –> 01:15:27.512
[SPEAKER_05]: I bought the most expensive shovel they had 35 35 dollars
01:15:29.281 –> 01:15:31.024
[SPEAKER_03]: How high was the tree that went down?
01:15:31.064 –> 01:15:32.105
[SPEAKER_03]: How high was it, roughly?
01:15:32.886 –> 01:15:38.995
[SPEAKER_05]: Uh, it was probably about 12 feet, but it snapped at about four feet.
01:15:39.596 –> 01:15:48.589
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, I know that, I, I, I was root system though, is a tree’s root system below the ground as as big as the tree is above the ground.
01:15:48.569 –> 01:15:51.874
[SPEAKER_05]: So when you’re looking at a 12-foot tree, that’s a lot of ruts.
01:15:51.935 –> 01:15:52.836
[SPEAKER_03]: Lot of ruts.
01:15:52.856 –> 01:15:53.557
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah, I’m learning that.
01:15:54.098 –> 01:15:57.564
[SPEAKER_05]: But I thought, hey, the tree’s not that thick, so it would be okay.
01:15:58.225 –> 01:16:00.889
[SPEAKER_05]: But now I have been digging the hole.
01:16:01.010 –> 01:16:02.712
[SPEAKER_05]: I do not have the tree out of the ground yet.
01:16:03.754 –> 01:16:04.736
[SPEAKER_05]: So your yard looks good.
01:16:06.038 –> 01:16:11.407
[SPEAKER_05]: So I’ve got half a whole dug on one side of the tree as I try to get it out so I can replace it.
01:16:11.487 –> 01:16:12.248
[SPEAKER_05]: But
01:16:12.380 –> 01:16:17.264
[SPEAKER_05]: While I was looking at trees this weekend, we’ve got a dogwood in the back as well that I hate.
01:16:17.545 –> 01:16:19.727
[SPEAKER_05]: And I think it’s dead, I think it’s always been dead.
01:16:19.787 –> 01:16:23.170
[SPEAKER_05]: So I was going to replace the rear tree as well.
01:16:24.291 –> 01:16:25.011
[SPEAKER_05]: And we’re looking around.
01:16:25.031 –> 01:16:28.935
[SPEAKER_05]: We picked out a palm tree thing for the front yard.
01:16:29.275 –> 01:16:30.016
[SPEAKER_05]: Tropical, maybe.
01:16:30.036 –> 01:16:31.257
[SPEAKER_05]: That would get nice tropical.
01:16:31.337 –> 01:16:37.002
[SPEAKER_05]: And I’m looking, and I was looking at lemon trees and orange trees and stuff for the backyard.
01:16:37.222 –> 01:16:42.387
[SPEAKER_05]: And this lemon tree said that it could produce
01:16:42.367 –> 01:16:45.255
[SPEAKER_05]: Where I said that’s where the piece of advice
01:16:45.590 –> 01:16:52.458
[SPEAKER_04]: The lemon tree is very pretty, and the lemon flower is sweet, but the fruit of the poor lemon is impossible to eat.
01:16:53.059 –> 01:16:53.920
[SPEAKER_04]: What song is that?
01:16:54.401 –> 01:16:56.263
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s lemon tree, by Trini Love.
01:16:56.864 –> 01:17:00.909
[SPEAKER_04]: Lemon tree, very, very, very, and the lemon.
01:17:01.009 –> 01:17:04.853
[SPEAKER_05]: I remember this thing that told Queen’s, I said, I can’t do anything with 30 lemons.
01:17:04.914 –> 01:17:06.195
[SPEAKER_05]: I’m just going to be throwing them away.
01:17:06.856 –> 01:17:08.458
[SPEAKER_03]: Right, you are now going to fall like you would be.
01:17:09.039 –> 01:17:11.542
[SPEAKER_05]: So I changed to, what type of tree?
01:17:12.663 –> 01:17:14.365
[SPEAKER_05]: My vodka tree.
01:17:14.345 –> 01:17:29.788
[SPEAKER_05]: And I did some research and they’ve got a store down here called fruit trees only and I had over there and for a hundred and thirty dollars I can buy a sumo tree to get my own sumo oranges
01:17:31.422 –> 01:17:36.989
[SPEAKER_05]: Wow, but then you said it doesn’t take 18 years for it to yield fruit they said.
01:17:37.009 –> 01:17:37.910
[SPEAKER_05]: No, that’s it.
01:17:37.930 –> 01:17:39.913
[SPEAKER_05]: Yes, but this is one that’s already grown.
01:17:40.534 –> 01:17:41.375
[SPEAKER_05]: It’s gone through that.
01:17:41.575 –> 01:17:42.917
[SPEAKER_03]: You’re just going to transplant it.
01:17:43.177 –> 01:17:44.118
[SPEAKER_05]: You just transplant it.
01:17:44.439 –> 01:17:48.744
[SPEAKER_05]: I have to dig like a two foot by three foot hole and I can transplant it.
01:17:48.784 –> 01:17:49.305
[SPEAKER_04]: That is so exciting.
01:17:49.646 –> 01:17:50.507
[SPEAKER_04]: That is so exciting.
01:17:50.567 –> 01:17:57.796
[SPEAKER_04]: So if you thought about getting some sort of rental something to get that tree out because that’s you’re going to be digging the rest of your life.
01:17:57.816 –> 01:17:59.078
[SPEAKER_03]: Is this what you’re going to put in the back?
01:17:59.098 –> 01:18:00.079
[SPEAKER_03]: You’re going to put
01:18:00.059 –> 01:18:03.243
[SPEAKER_05]: Yes, now it was supposed to replace the dogwood in the back.
01:18:03.343 –> 01:18:06.166
[SPEAKER_05]: I’m thinking it might just go in a different part of the yard in the back.
01:18:06.807 –> 01:18:07.788
[SPEAKER_05]: Okay, I leave that.
01:18:07.808 –> 01:18:12.473
[SPEAKER_05]: But first, before I can buy that tree, I have to finish getting the first tree out that I started.
01:18:12.633 –> 01:18:16.958
[SPEAKER_03]: Do you feel as though you need heavier equipment to really get this job done properly?
01:18:17.178 –> 01:18:25.628
[SPEAKER_03]: Or, if it’s halfway up and it broke halfway up, do you think maybe you could tie a chain around it and just yank it out with the, you know, with your Tesla.
01:18:25.608 –> 01:18:28.396
[SPEAKER_04]: They just hit the button mark tree removal.
01:18:28.636 –> 01:18:30.542
[SPEAKER_05]: I still have a truck as well.
01:18:31.184 –> 01:18:31.364
[SPEAKER_05]: Okay.
01:18:32.387 –> 01:18:35.395
[SPEAKER_05]: I, uh, maybe I’ve got to dig more.
01:18:35.496 –> 01:18:37.541
[SPEAKER_05]: I think it was really just the heat that killed me.
01:18:37.902 –> 01:18:38.424
[SPEAKER_05]: Not the tree.
01:18:39.146 –> 01:18:39.306
[SPEAKER_05]: Okay.
01:18:39.326 –> 01:18:40.630
[SPEAKER_05]: I tried to do it over the weekend.
01:18:40.610 –> 01:18:42.794
[SPEAKER_04]: I look forward to a controlled burn, too.
01:18:42.834 –> 01:18:46.800
[SPEAKER_04]: I’ve seen people do that where they do a small fire on their light and nothing on fire.
01:18:46.860 –> 01:18:47.942
[SPEAKER_05]: It’s not going to happen.
01:18:48.042 –> 01:18:49.444
[SPEAKER_05]: Just once he dump man.
01:18:49.464 –> 01:18:51.007
[SPEAKER_05]: It’s from this office.
01:18:51.387 –> 01:18:53.571
[SPEAKER_03]: No such jealous his own sumo tree.
01:18:53.791 –> 01:18:54.733
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s all man.
01:18:54.773 –> 01:18:56.035
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s fantastic.
01:18:56.195 –> 01:18:58.098
[SPEAKER_04]: It’s not like he doesn’t have six jobs already.
01:18:58.158 –> 01:19:00.642
[SPEAKER_04]: Job number seven will be his citrus stand.
01:19:00.662 –> 01:19:01.644
[SPEAKER_03]: Call Alan Richardson.
01:19:01.744 –> 01:19:05.470
[SPEAKER_03]: He’ll be able to help you with that Reaper, uh, richer Reaper.
01:19:05.450 –> 01:19:06.972
[SPEAKER_03]: repurchase.
01:19:06.992 –> 01:19:10.057
[SPEAKER_03]: We have a brief amount of time for a beautiful video yet something good for us.
01:19:10.077 –> 01:19:10.498
[SPEAKER_03]: Hopefully.
01:19:10.518 –> 01:19:12.080
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, tasty tasty.
01:19:12.120 –> 01:19:13.843
[SPEAKER_03]: We’ll be right back everybody.
01:19:13.863 –> 01:19:24.960
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[SPEAKER_03]: Hello Fresh!
01:20:35.900 –> 01:20:36.240
[SPEAKER_03]: Thank you.
01:20:36.260 –> 01:20:42.126
[SPEAKER_03]: Welcome back to the show tomorrow on the show something new that we’re going to try and we need to get a price point for it.
01:20:42.387 –> 01:20:44.208
[SPEAKER_03]: You know, I love me the super chats, right?
01:20:44.489 –> 01:20:47.972
[SPEAKER_03]: This is something I decided to come up with to jog the super chats.
01:20:48.012 –> 01:20:54.279
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s kind of like a weekday show taping fundraiser, but something that we can do during the regular show.
01:20:54.339 –> 01:20:56.881
[SPEAKER_03]: So I refer to this as the Humptay Horout.
01:20:57.282 –> 01:21:03.628
[SPEAKER_03]: The Humptay Horout tomorrow will be for each super chat I get and we will have a predetermined value.
01:21:04.047 –> 01:21:09.656
[SPEAKER_03]: I will break an egg over my head on tomorrow’s show.
01:21:09.676 –> 01:21:09.856
[SPEAKER_03]: Wow.
01:21:10.397 –> 01:21:11.378
[SPEAKER_03]: I don’t know, right now.
01:21:11.458 –> 01:21:13.742
[SPEAKER_03]: Now I think that what’s that?
01:21:14.323 –> 01:21:14.683
[SPEAKER_05]: Why?
01:21:14.703 –> 01:21:17.067
[SPEAKER_05]: Why can I break an egg over your head?
01:21:17.347 –> 01:21:18.028
[SPEAKER_05]: Is that the idea?
01:21:19.050 –> 01:21:20.993
[SPEAKER_05]: Because why not?
01:21:21.867 –> 01:21:24.411
[SPEAKER_04]: People love it, eggs have been funny for a long time.
01:21:24.651 –> 01:21:25.433
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, what’s the matter?
01:21:25.473 –> 01:21:26.875
[SPEAKER_03]: You’ve got any better ideas?
01:21:26.955 –> 01:21:29.820
[SPEAKER_03]: There’s going to be, how about getting me 30 more advertisers?
01:21:29.860 –> 01:21:30.681
[SPEAKER_03]: That would be fun.
01:21:30.721 –> 01:21:31.342
[SPEAKER_03]: I’d like that.
01:21:31.743 –> 01:21:33.786
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m just, but you said, why?
01:21:33.806 –> 01:21:36.510
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, it’s like, because it’s fun.
01:21:36.570 –> 01:21:40.657
[SPEAKER_03]: And it’s amusing to see people break an egg on their head.
01:21:40.677 –> 01:21:40.737
[UNKNOWN]: OK.
01:21:41.003 –> 01:21:42.605
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m going to wear a crappy shirt.
01:21:42.786 –> 01:21:45.250
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m going to put plastic on the floor.
01:21:45.290 –> 01:21:50.678
[SPEAKER_03]: I’m going to have a bucket, you know what, I’m going to lean forward and then I’m going to do it like this.
01:21:50.698 –> 01:21:52.641
[SPEAKER_03]: So it’s all going to be kind of forward moving.
01:21:52.701 –> 01:21:53.883
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s the way it’s going to be.
01:21:53.903 –> 01:21:56.487
[SPEAKER_04]: I have, I don’t know if we want to add one wrinkle to this.
01:21:57.088 –> 01:22:01.054
[SPEAKER_04]: What if you were to bring in a dozen eggs, but six of them were hard boiled?
01:22:02.300 –> 01:22:07.070
[SPEAKER_03]: And then so because you’re making, you’re doing something, I’m not going to take the time to boil eggs.
01:22:07.932 –> 01:22:08.333
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, okay.
01:22:08.353 –> 01:22:09.756
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, maybe Mrs. could do it.
01:22:09.996 –> 01:22:10.638
[SPEAKER_03]: How about this?
01:22:11.119 –> 01:22:12.181
[SPEAKER_03]: No, no, how about this?
01:22:12.582 –> 01:22:13.303
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
01:22:13.323 –> 01:22:15.889
[SPEAKER_03]: We don’t have to involve Josh, because you know, he wouldn’t want to do it.
01:22:16.250 –> 01:22:17.151
[SPEAKER_03]: Of course.
01:22:17.172 –> 01:22:19.296
[SPEAKER_03]: But the thing is, how about you and I?
01:22:19.951 –> 01:22:41.655
[SPEAKER_03]: Uh, we’re to do it and and like on the same show and we just, you know, we just sit there and kind of wear nasty t shirt or something like that and and do it forward so that we wouldn’t get it all over our shoulders just front would just do it right on our big and you want to have a tower handy.
01:22:41.635 –> 01:22:45.062
[SPEAKER_03]: You’re making me feel like this is just a stupid whore.
01:22:45.423 –> 01:22:47.668
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s why it’s called whore out hump day.
01:22:48.069 –> 01:22:48.269
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
01:22:48.290 –> 01:22:49.612
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s whore out hump day.
01:22:49.632 –> 01:22:52.819
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s just whoring ourselves out to raise a little money for the show.
01:22:53.240 –> 01:22:59.053
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s uh, that’s uh, you know, now it was the price point.
01:22:59.287 –> 01:23:11.486
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I don’t want to like burn through a dozen eggs, uh, you know, in the first five minutes of the show, I want it to be a painful enough price point that it would take longer.
01:23:11.906 –> 01:23:13.088
[SPEAKER_04]: I don’t think painful is the word.
01:23:13.108 –> 01:23:18.577
[SPEAKER_04]: I think a satisfying price point and I think a sense of a number that has three digits.
01:23:19.538 –> 01:23:22.763
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, you really do, you think one hundred dollars per egg, yeah.
01:23:22.844 –> 01:23:24.568
[SPEAKER_03]: Josh, what are your thoughts on that?
01:23:24.588 –> 01:23:25.430
[SPEAKER_05]: I think that works.
01:23:25.771 –> 01:23:28.978
[SPEAKER_05]: And if we want to run out of eggs in the first 10 minutes, that’s perfectly fine.
01:23:29.860 –> 01:23:30.762
[SPEAKER_03]: OK. All right.
01:23:30.883 –> 01:23:33.148
[SPEAKER_04]: So $100 an egg?
01:23:33.629 –> 01:23:33.830
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
01:23:34.010 –> 01:23:36.195
[SPEAKER_04]: I’ve got to go purchase brown eggs today, though.
01:23:36.277 –> 01:23:38.260
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, it’s expensive too.
01:23:38.400 –> 01:23:42.206
[SPEAKER_03]: So, you know, that’s why we’re, it’s now I was going to be cheaper.
01:23:42.306 –> 01:23:43.568
[SPEAKER_03]: I was going to go half that much.
01:23:43.608 –> 01:23:46.532
[SPEAKER_03]: I was going to say $50, but no, I like a hundred dollars in it.
01:23:46.993 –> 01:23:53.984
[SPEAKER_03]: Now, when the new people in our audience are completely, and by the way, we will be on at eight, fifteen sharp tomorrow.
01:23:54.384 –> 01:23:54.504
[SPEAKER_03]: Right.
01:23:54.524 –> 01:23:55.406
[SPEAKER_03]: We will not be early.
01:23:55.546 –> 01:23:56.287
[SPEAKER_03]: We will not be late.
01:23:56.347 –> 01:24:00.934
[SPEAKER_03]: We will be on eight, fifteen sharp, and we will show you our brands of eggs.
01:24:00.914 –> 01:24:05.001
[SPEAKER_03]: And then we will be prepared to do the crack and egg.
01:24:05.742 –> 01:24:09.207
[SPEAKER_03]: I am getting a very negative vibe from it’s just a rock.
01:24:09.228 –> 01:24:11.010
[SPEAKER_05]: No, yeah, me too, grab some.
01:24:11.111 –> 01:24:11.792
[SPEAKER_05]: It’s the right time.
01:24:11.812 –> 01:24:13.454
[SPEAKER_05]: It’s it’s our Easter celebration.
01:24:13.875 –> 01:24:14.115
[SPEAKER_05]: It is.
01:24:14.356 –> 01:24:15.958
[SPEAKER_05]: I will grab some Cadbury eggs.
01:24:15.979 –> 01:24:18.943
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, you know, you know, you know, one might let’s tie it into Easter.
01:24:19.705 –> 01:24:23.951
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, because it is an egg celebrated Easter hump day.
01:24:24.172 –> 01:24:24.913
[SPEAKER_04]: Hore off.
01:24:26.277 –> 01:24:30.283
[SPEAKER_04]: And Mike, the finances are rising again in the third day.
01:24:30.663 –> 01:24:42.040
[SPEAKER_03]: So please, you know, put your donation shoes on and let the hilarity and suit a hundred dollar super chat from so and we will, and by the way, you have to specify which host you want.
01:24:42.080 –> 01:24:43.582
[SPEAKER_03]: Now Josh is not involved in this.
01:24:43.762 –> 01:24:44.003
[SPEAKER_03]: Right.
01:24:44.163 –> 01:24:44.343
[SPEAKER_03]: Right.
01:24:44.383 –> 01:24:46.106
[SPEAKER_03]: Because he he hates it.
01:24:46.226 –> 01:24:49.911
[SPEAKER_03]: I think you do you get the impression he also hates it when I spring something on him like this.
01:24:50.192 –> 01:24:51.113
[SPEAKER_03]: He doesn’t like that.
01:24:52.395 –> 01:24:53.957
[SPEAKER_04]: He doesn’t like Josh.
01:24:54.017 –> 01:24:54.698
[SPEAKER_05]: Was there
01:24:54.678 –> 01:25:03.473
[SPEAKER_05]: And you wait wait wait wait he was answering Rob, but I just prefer when things are more thought out and planned Well, I do it what’s there to plan?
01:25:04.895 –> 01:25:18.778
[SPEAKER_03]: I would have said let’s do it next week for Easter We could do it next week for Easter You’d like to promote it is that the or would you know, I mean the only reason I wanted to do it tomorrow because I came up with the You know the hump day or off
01:25:20.294 –> 01:25:31.392
[SPEAKER_04]: These ideas happen, and then I just can’t keep them in the, you know, my brain Josh’s promotion idea is valid because we could really build anticipation, but my question is a week from Wednesday.
01:25:32.294 –> 01:25:32.434
[SPEAKER_03]: Uh-huh.
01:25:32.454 –> 01:25:32.955
[SPEAKER_03]: Be ready.
01:25:33.436 –> 01:25:37.663
[SPEAKER_03]: It’s the Easter, hump day, horror off, egotacular.
01:25:38.244 –> 01:25:44.614
[SPEAKER_04]: And Josh would it be too much to ask that tomorrow you will announce what you will do in place of cracking an egg on your head.
01:25:44.695 –> 01:25:56.270
[SPEAKER_03]: Just come up or something or give it some thought if you you are more than welcome to join the Easter egg Tachyler if you wish to know problem join in the egg Tachyler you do okay.
01:25:56.330 –> 01:25:57.572
[SPEAKER_04]: That’s fantastic.
01:25:57.672 –> 01:26:09.167
[SPEAKER_03]: I think one more one more host is one more opportunity For each one hundred dollar super chat we will break eggs on our our heads and we will not be going back by the way if we get zero
01:26:09.620 –> 01:26:10.321
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s fine, too.
01:26:10.681 –> 01:26:11.142
[SPEAKER_03]: I could care.
01:26:11.302 –> 01:26:11.402
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes.
01:26:11.722 –> 01:26:12.563
[SPEAKER_03]: I really would.
01:26:12.664 –> 01:26:13.625
[SPEAKER_03]: I back to the parish.
01:26:13.925 –> 01:26:16.588
[SPEAKER_03]: We have run out of time.
01:26:16.648 –> 01:26:17.209
[SPEAKER_03]: We need one.
01:26:17.269 –> 01:26:18.530
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, good.
01:26:18.590 –> 01:26:21.434
[SPEAKER_03]: Beautiful video.
01:26:23.796 –> 01:26:24.898
[SPEAKER_04]: Mike, you live in Florida.
01:26:24.958 –> 01:26:26.059
[SPEAKER_04]: Josh, you live in Florida.
01:26:26.259 –> 01:26:27.681
[SPEAKER_04]: I’ve just returned from Florida.
01:26:27.821 –> 01:26:33.788
[SPEAKER_04]: And there’s so much stuff that goes on there, including Mike cocaine sharks.
01:26:34.477 –> 01:26:48.964
[SPEAKER_09]: Well Elizabeth, we’ve all been hearing about how shark activity is up, including here in Southern California, but in Florida, there have long been claims about cocaine fueled shark to do to drug dumping.
01:26:48.984 –> 01:26:54.835
[SPEAKER_09]: Well, according to some scientists, the problem of cocaine sharks may be real.
01:26:55.176 –> 01:26:55.877
[SPEAKER_04]: It may be.
01:26:56.785 –> 01:27:02.632
[SPEAKER_08]: The legitimacy of cocaine shark is mind blowing.
01:27:02.973 –> 01:27:10.162
[SPEAKER_09]: Dr. Tracy Fenerra took part in the two research team, featured in cocaine sharks, which will be part of Discovery Shark Week.
01:27:10.482 –> 01:27:17.751
[SPEAKER_09]: Through several experiments in the Florida Keys, scientists studied whether shark behavior is influenced by cocaine in the ocean.
01:27:18.152 –> 01:27:22.117
[SPEAKER_09]: The concern is real about drug addicted sharks and other wildlife.
01:27:22.798 –> 01:27:24.700
[SPEAKER_08]: We’ve seen in past studies.
01:27:24.680 –> 01:27:39.808
[SPEAKER_08]: that aquatic life, fish, eels, they will choose to go to after being exposed to a drug, like cocaine, they will choose to go towards that path every time they’re after.
01:27:39.828 –> 01:27:44.376
[SPEAKER_04]: So Mike, what happens is the people that dump the drugs during like a failed
01:27:44.356 –> 01:27:45.057
[SPEAKER_04]: drug deal.
01:27:45.438 –> 01:27:45.698
[SPEAKER_04]: Right.
01:27:45.838 –> 01:27:47.040
[SPEAKER_04]: The sharks go and eat it.
01:27:47.280 –> 01:27:48.382
[SPEAKER_03]: They’re attracted to it.
01:27:48.402 –> 01:27:48.983
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
01:27:49.003 –> 01:27:51.607
[SPEAKER_05]: And we actually, this is those drug boats were blowing up.
01:27:51.907 –> 01:27:52.488
[SPEAKER_03]: Absolutely.
01:27:52.709 –> 01:27:52.809
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
01:27:52.829 –> 01:27:55.753
[SPEAKER_04]: The vast well and drug boats dumped the dumped the coke.
01:27:55.773 –> 01:27:58.618
[SPEAKER_04]: Mike, this is that is a common news story.
01:27:58.778 –> 01:27:59.860
[SPEAKER_04]: I did some behind the scenes.
01:27:59.880 –> 01:28:03.585
[SPEAKER_04]: So I actually was able to secure an interview with the drug shark.
01:28:04.366 –> 01:28:05.648
[SPEAKER_04]: And let’s go to that now.
01:28:06.530 –> 01:28:10.616
[SPEAKER_01]: We are here on the beach where a giant shark has just eaten a girl swimmer.
01:28:11.137 –> 01:28:11.638
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, Mr.
01:28:11.678 –> 01:28:13.300
[SPEAKER_01]: Jaws, how was it?
01:28:14.680 –> 01:28:15.581
[SPEAKER_03]: Alright, that’s it.
01:28:15.601 –> 01:28:17.384
[SPEAKER_03]: We’re not playing Dickie Goodman.
01:28:17.484 –> 01:28:18.285
[SPEAKER_01]: We are not.
01:28:18.425 –> 01:28:19.286
[SPEAKER_03]: We’re passing.
01:28:19.546 –> 01:28:22.671
[SPEAKER_03]: We’re a classic cut and record before I got a blow it up.
01:28:22.711 –> 01:28:24.213
[SPEAKER_03]: Let it all right.
01:28:24.313 –> 01:28:26.716
[SPEAKER_03]: Dickie, Dickie, Gordon Dickie Goodman.
01:28:26.836 –> 01:28:27.857
[SPEAKER_03]: That’s Dickie Goodman.
01:28:28.258 –> 01:28:29.860
[SPEAKER_03]: Alright, play me again, Rob.
01:28:29.880 –> 01:28:31.182
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, Michael, we’re going to live.
01:28:31.663 –> 01:28:32.383
[SPEAKER_04]: Live now.
01:28:32.764 –> 01:28:33.625
[SPEAKER_04]: Sorry about that.
01:28:33.685 –> 01:28:35.948
[SPEAKER_04]: Live now to the beach.
01:28:36.008 –> 01:28:36.549
[SPEAKER_04]: Dickie Goodman.
01:28:37.050 –> 01:28:38.171
[SPEAKER_01]: We are here on the beach.
01:28:38.231 –> 01:28:38.832
[SPEAKER_01]: We’re a judge.
01:28:42.845 –> 01:28:45.829
[SPEAKER_03]: Just like a PS.
01:28:45.929 –> 01:28:48.372
[SPEAKER_03]: Anyway, we have got to take our chance.
01:28:48.392 –> 01:28:51.296
[SPEAKER_04]: Are you familiar with the cut and records of Dicking Good?
01:28:51.316 –> 01:28:52.397
[SPEAKER_03]: I am not.
01:28:52.417 –> 01:28:54.279
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes, it’s a mega talent.
01:28:54.680 –> 01:29:02.710
[SPEAKER_03]: Anyway, we will be back tomorrow with a brand new episode and we will hone and refine our Easter.
01:29:02.690 –> 01:29:08.596
[SPEAKER_03]: Humpty, horror, spectacular for a week from tomorrow.
01:29:08.856 –> 01:29:09.897
[SPEAKER_03]: He is a better idea.
01:29:10.418 –> 01:29:10.638
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes.
01:29:11.159 –> 01:29:12.200
[SPEAKER_03]: I am all for that.
01:29:12.420 –> 01:29:13.521
[SPEAKER_03]: For Josh, you’re okay.
01:29:13.541 –> 01:29:15.243
[SPEAKER_03]: And Rob, Spuack, Michael Marisang.
01:29:15.503 –> 01:29:16.384
[SPEAKER_03]: So long, everybody.
01:29:16.404 –> 01:29:18.346
[SPEAKER_03]: I guess the jokes on us.
01:29:18.566 –> 01:29:19.347
[SPEAKER_03]: Love you, Bob.
01:29:19.367 –> 01:29:19.928
[SPEAKER_03]: You’re welcome.
01:29:20.228 –> 01:29:22.150
[SPEAKER_09]: Make sure you check out the Michael Marisbonishow.
01:29:22.570 –> 01:29:24.372
[SPEAKER_09]: Get it at Michael Marisow.com.
01:29:24.692 –> 01:29:27.195
[SPEAKER_00]: Michael Marisow, Radio Entertainment.
01:29:28.728 –> 01:29:31.296
[SPEAKER_07]: I didn’t miss to Omar’s review come in last night.
01:29:31.757 –> 01:29:32.901
[SPEAKER_07]: Oh, he didn’t come in here at all.
01:29:33.081 –> 01:29:34.365
[SPEAKER_07]: We’re all in computers now.
01:29:35.027 –> 01:29:41.407
[SPEAKER_07]: You see, Omar wrote his reviews on his home computer and then sent it in here by Maudem’s, over the telephone.
01:29:41.808 –> 01:29:43.172
[SPEAKER_07]: Oh, my goodness, how modern.
01:29:43.674 –> 01:29:44.777
[SPEAKER_07]: Why don’t you love me?
01:29:45.078 –> 01:29:48.930
[SPEAKER_07]: Mike is very, very, very attractive.