Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's time to go around the room with Elvis Duran
in the morning show.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
You know what I want to do.
Speaker 3 (00:07):
Why, I'm gonna go around the room.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Okay, around the room. Let's see what's on the minds
of people in the room. Let's go around, Froggy. I
want to start with you today. What's going on.
Speaker 4 (00:16):
Well, I'm going to need everybody's opinion. So if I
go to the grocery store and I buy let's say,
I don't know, just like peppermint bark, just to just
to name something, and it's for everybody in the house,
but the last one belongs to me because.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
I bought it.
Speaker 4 (00:30):
You agree, no?
Speaker 1 (00:31):
No?
Speaker 2 (00:33):
Yeah, So Danielle are no Gandhi's undecided.
Speaker 5 (00:37):
I'm contemplating because I think if you buy it as
a gift, then it's a gift everyone.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
No, it's not a gift.
Speaker 6 (00:41):
No.
Speaker 4 (00:42):
So I went to the store and I brought home
a bag of peppermint bark and everybody can have it.
But I knew there was going to be one last
piece left. I saw it, somebody ate it. I just
feel like, if I buy it, it's my idea, I'll
share it with you, But I want.
Speaker 5 (00:54):
The last one Okay, okay, I accept you agree, I agree?
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Yes.
Speaker 7 (00:59):
I think maybe someone should ask like, hey, does anybody
want this last piece?
Speaker 8 (01:03):
Every who ever puts their hand in the back.
Speaker 9 (01:07):
Show your pepper barkup store.
Speaker 2 (01:09):
It's all gone.
Speaker 4 (01:10):
Somebody ate the last piece and now I can't get it.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
And you think it's rightfully yours because you bought it.
Speaker 4 (01:15):
It was my idea to buy it has not a
money thing, It was just it was my idea. It
was my idea to bring it into the home, so
therefore I should be able to.
Speaker 2 (01:20):
Bought it for the house. Otherwise you have to hide
it is that was it hidden? No? I gave it
to everybody, all right, but then it belongs to everybody.
Speaker 9 (01:28):
Start hiding.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
Yeah, my name on the next one.
Speaker 8 (01:32):
Publix is like right around the corner, you can go
get another thing.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
Did you know them? My father used to hide cookies
all over the house. He passed away ten years ago.
They don't even have that house anymore. They're still finding cookies.
Speaker 7 (01:45):
Ever, when my dad did that with the cinnamon buns
in the trunk of his car, and I go, Dad,
what is this your mother?
Speaker 2 (01:51):
Will he passed away? Are they still there?
Speaker 8 (01:52):
They might be scary.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
What's up with you?
Speaker 10 (01:54):
Well, I can always tell how big of a pig
I am when I'm ordering my Uber eats by the
number of plastic utensil sets they give me. Guys, I
had a four plastic utensil set kind of night the
other night. I cannot believe it. I just don't know
what I did. But I like to have leftovers on leftovers,
on leftovers. But they assume that I'm far Four people
(02:14):
is at the Cuban restaurant.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
He set us, He set us the total, the total
bill of everything he ordered delivered. It was enough for
a family for ten.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
Total.
Speaker 10 (02:27):
They said, that's four portion meal according to the restaurant.
Speaker 2 (02:31):
But you can eat it later. You still having the fridge?
Speaker 1 (02:33):
Right?
Speaker 3 (02:33):
Sure do?
Speaker 2 (02:34):
All right? Gandhi, what's up with you?
Speaker 1 (02:35):
All right?
Speaker 5 (02:35):
I just want to remind everybody that one of the
nicest things that you should be doing all the time
is entering a room and acknowledging everyone in.
Speaker 2 (02:41):
The room very well. Put, we deal with a.
Speaker 5 (02:44):
Lot of people from a lot of different places who
will walk into this studio and either acknowledge Danielle, Elvis
and myself and nobody else, or just Elvis and nobody else,
and I just find it to be the rudest thing
that people can do. When you walk into a room,
look at everyone, say hello. You don't have to have
a conversation, but just acknowledge that there's a human being there.
I think that's important, and we see it a lot
around here, and I don't like it.
Speaker 2 (03:06):
You know. The other night, we were down to dinner
and we met with a family and the wife of
the of the husband who was hosting that table was
in another conversation. But we had to leave and I
didn't get a chance to even say hello and meet her.
And I couldn't sleep all night, but I couldn't say
hi to her. I owe her. I'm going back to
that restaurant to try to find her to say hi.
Speaker 9 (03:27):
Because you're a decent person, you gotta say.
Speaker 2 (03:28):
Hy to everyone, acknowledge them, just at least to shake
their hands. So good to see you.
Speaker 9 (03:32):
Eye contact of some sort, hey and acknowledgment.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
Well, I agree, eye contact is very easy to do. Hello, producer, Sam,
what's up right?
Speaker 1 (03:39):
So I want to either remind people or let people
know that online there is such a thing as calculated controversy.
It is something that people do intentionally. So I was
chatting with a friend and she was so up in
arms about a post someone made and didn't think it
should get any traction.
Speaker 9 (03:54):
So what did you do?
Speaker 1 (03:54):
Commented her thoughts about how bad it is and how
people shouldn't be paying attention. I'm like, babe, that post
was probably literally put up there so people like you
can comment and give them more legs. Yes, if there
truly is something that you are feeling rage baited by,
it's it's calculated controversy. They're doing it on purpose. The
best thing you could do is just scroll on by
(04:17):
leave it alone.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
Very good, very good advice. Danielle, what's up?
Speaker 7 (04:20):
All right? I don't know if we had this conversation before,
but if you could pick the rudest animal, which animal
do you think it would be?
Speaker 2 (04:28):
Gandhi?
Speaker 8 (04:29):
Yeah, she does not count. She's a human rude.
Speaker 2 (04:33):
They're not rude, Okay.
Speaker 7 (04:34):
If an animal could talk, like say a geese, cat, cat,
So you say, can I say you know those geese that, yeah,
they would.
Speaker 8 (04:42):
Be very mean because they bite you right in the ass.
Speaker 9 (04:44):
There's a lot of pretty birds, like a peacock. A
male peacock seems like a butthole.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
Because they're cocky.
Speaker 8 (04:49):
Yeah, and you what do you think a cat would
say if it could talk and it was rude?
Speaker 4 (04:53):
Well, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (04:53):
But they just show their buttole all the time.
Speaker 9 (04:56):
They look you in the eye and knock something off
the counter.
Speaker 8 (04:57):
I like that on purpose.
Speaker 2 (04:59):
Yeah, you the people too, So you think geese? I
think cats.
Speaker 7 (05:03):
Yeah, maybe skunks because they just feel bad for themselves
because they smell.
Speaker 9 (05:06):
I don't know, No, I think they're sweet.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
Here's the thing about cats. I love cats, but I
think they're the meanest. I love hey straight and eight.
What's up?
Speaker 6 (05:15):
I think I'm gonna start walking around with my zipper down.
Hear me out what I'm hearing you out? You get
a little air flow down there. It cools you down.
Is your thing hot? It's hot, it's moistage, So you
get a little air flow.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
Uh, it is.
Speaker 9 (05:34):
Okay, So the zippers down.
Speaker 6 (05:36):
It's actually more functional that way, because what did the
grandma say?
Speaker 9 (05:40):
They'rear it out.
Speaker 6 (05:42):
So if it's all cooped up there, cramped up, it's
gonna be hot and sweaty. Get some are in there.
Pull that zipper down, boys, all right, walk around town.
We'll see you as we be.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
You out a jail. What the first precinct?
Speaker 9 (05:54):
Hear me out? You wore looser pants that would help?
Speaker 6 (05:58):
Doesn't help the airflow, doesn't.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
I just trust me.
Speaker 8 (06:02):
You don't have balls.
Speaker 9 (06:03):
I don't, but I know a different tight pants.
Speaker 7 (06:05):
And I sit right next to you, and I got
to stare at your quatch all the time because.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
You don't have to choose. Yeah, it's hard not to
look at it. A moose knuckle, Yeah, a moose knuckle.
All right, Well, I'm sure many people agree with you. Hey,
our guest on around the room today, Scotty Bee, scott Be,
what's going on?
Speaker 7 (06:22):
Hi?
Speaker 3 (06:22):
Well, you know how much I love nostalgia. I urge
you to be nostalgic as well. This past weekend, I
wound up being in the Pocono's. I haven't been there
in probably twenty five years, and I went to the
old Flea Market and the Old Country Kettle, and it's
all these places that I went to when I was
a child, because we used to go there every weekend.
Speaker 11 (06:41):
And I was like, oh my god, that's still there,
Oh my god, that's still there. And it made me
so happy, and I bought a bunch of candy from
the barrels of the country kettle and it just it
totally made my entire weekend. So if you have the
opportunity to go back to someplace that you used to
go as a kid, I think it'll bring a smile
to your face.
Speaker 2 (06:56):
I met everyone's thinking about that right now. Where they
went as a kid and they ate then, you know,
like we used to. We used to go to uh Stuckies. Yes,
remember Stucky, I do remember stuck It was a road
side trace restaurant. They sold prailanes and you could eat
there and you could get gas and the Stuckies near
a house. The sign actually said eat with us and
(07:18):
get gas.
Speaker 3 (07:19):
They had the log, they had that or something.
Speaker 2 (07:24):
Yeah, go back to those those childhood places. If you're
still there, exactly the same going in and coming out.
Oh my god, who left the praline log on the ground?
All right, there you go. We wereent around the road.