Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
What would you talk about on your on your podcasting show.
All right, we have a choice today, Okay, do we
want to get to know ourselves a little bit better
or do we want to play family feud. This is
(00:26):
a tough call. I not do both. Let's start about
getting to know ourselves better. Thank you very much, Garrett,
because I wanted to do family feud on the show
tomorrow when I was appreciate that that was the right
answer to you trying to say you didn't want to
waste it for the people to take their time to
listen and watch this podcast because you don't have the
production ready. You don't got the dinger and I got
a dinger? All right, ding you got you get the
(00:51):
wind the last time you got the dinger? Gandhy Oh.
I haven't seen him in a couple of weeks, though,
a couple of weeks. But Friday, Friday, send you pictures
of his dinger. I'm not gonna answer that. You don't
put it on the spot like that. I think his
parents might listen to this or watch this, So he doesn't.
Does he send you drawings of his dinger? He does.
(01:14):
Nobody calls a dick a dinger. Yes, he does I
have called it a dinger? Actually, until Gandhi used the
term dinger the one day, I had totally forgotten about it.
Brandon is the one that famously said, you want to
make my digger? Yeah, okay, because that's what we called
it when we were little, because my mommy was like,
your dinger's hanging out. Put it whatever, right, hanging out?
(01:37):
So so Danielle like, what did you what did you
in kid terminology call your kids penises? And they were
please don't say the one that I hate. She called
it a pp She calls it a PPDP and I'm like,
I hate, Oh my god, frog what it's me? Of
(02:05):
all people really like, Kate, stop tugging on your dick.
You're gonna pull it off of what He was like, four,
that's crazy, Garret, what about your son? Oh? Straight, penis?
Penis the medical term? Well, I live in a medical house.
I mean that's true. You know what did you call
case guy? Why what do you refer to yours as?
(02:29):
And in case it ever came up in conversation with
your daughters? Yeah, well, when Cooper was little, we called
it my peanut. Oh, that's saying a lot about it.
Nobody ever had a big peanut. She did not when
she was little. I guess she knew the word, but
either couldn't say it or wouldn't say so. She just said,
(02:50):
daddy your peanut. You know. That's all I follow up
questions I have want to answer. So we're each other.
Were the only ones celebrating wine down Wednesday. You guys
have access to wine. You got wine glasses behind him?
Why do you fill some up? Scotty is the friend
(03:12):
that you don't ask questions too because you're afraid of
what the answer will be. No, I love asking him
the questions because you always get a fascinating answer. But
you know about Scotty is there is zero filter none.
Why should there be a filter? I agree with that.
I agree with it too. I agree with that. I mean,
I think there needs to be a filter in certain situations. Okay,
(03:34):
we have more of a filter on the radio, but
I feel like with a podcast format, we're encouraged to
just let it all hang out. So I agree, what
hang out? Er panut hang out my pp let's get
to know one another show. I'm just gonna question up
on Sunday morning with a pp T P Alright, moving on,
(03:59):
I'm just going to ask questions and if you guys
want to answer them, feel free too. I mean you
you asked, but you should also answer too if you
feel like and I all right, well let me start
with this one. Are you related or distantly related to
anyone famous Gandhi? I am yes, Okay, Gandhi not in thera.
Everybody says, oh, and they're Gandhi too, No, they were
(04:21):
not related. Gandhi is not as uncommon as the last
of the last name as a lot of people think
it is. But I am related to Mohandas Gandhi like
great great grandfather. Now, I would ask if you had
any of his possessions, but I think he didn't really
have anything, did he. Like you are correct, Um, he
really didn't have possessions that we would keep. But we
do have some letters that he sent to people that
(04:42):
we ended up getting back, have a couple of medals,
some of his clothing. Um, so that kind of stuff. Wow,
that's cool. Yeah, that is very cool, very related to
anybody famous. I've been scary scary, doesn't someone your cousin? Yeah?
I found yeah, jimmy famous record label guy. Um. I
went on the air and I said this a couple
of weeks ago, that he's related to my He's like
(05:04):
a fifth cousin of mine, about like Jimmy Ivene. He's
the guy who founded Dr Dre and all that. You know, right,
eminem I come to find out, my mother calls me.
She goes, Anthony, what do you go on the radio
saying that we're related to Jimmy Ivine And I said, well,
we are. You always told me he was on a
fifth cousin. So she's like, no, she says, it's act.
(05:24):
You've got the story wrong. It's actually a neighbor of
one of our cousins. Oh my god, I've talked about
and I'm like, are you kidding me? I've been living
a lie all these years, thinking Jimmy cousin cousin, even
like how much blood is that your neighbor is closer
than that where I'm from, that doesn't even count. You're like, yeah,
(05:51):
so I thought I was. And I take it back
here on this podcast to correct my my third cousin,
I granted that is a little far away. My third
cousin is Emily Procter, who used to be the Kylie
Duquine on CSI Miami wow, you want a Christmas card list?
Or that she doesn't even know you sis. No, No,
(06:11):
we do know each other exist and it's funny. I
had to interview her for a press junk at for
CSI Miami when it first started, and we're sitting there
and I recognized her, she recognized me because we had
been somewhere before. And then we started going, We're like,
holy shit, it is and so that's what we realized.
We're third cousins. But I mean we're not close to
that's great, that doesn't count if you wanted to make
(06:31):
out with her, not really cousin, No like that. Some
people in North Carolina would overlook that. Some would call
you out, but then most overlook it. I can say
that because I'm from there. I think it's third cousin, right,
I think you could legally marry or scary? Who would
you kiss? No idea. I kissed like a third cousin
(06:51):
when I was like ten. I didn't know what was
going on. We were at the house in Long Island,
and things happened and in touch, there was no there
was no dinger swipe. She didn't touch my press junk.
Do you still see that cousin? By the way, the
third cousin. I have a lot of cousins. I'm Italian. Hello,
(07:14):
look at this. There's a list online and in which
states allow first cousin marriages first cousin, And it says
here that there's a lot that allow first cousin marriages. Alaska, Georgia, Indiana, Yeah, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oh,
(07:34):
Mississippi says adopted cousins. About North Carolina, Jersey says first cousins, Yes,
New Mexico, New York's is first cousins. Yes, this is shocking.
Maybe it's just a moral not illegal. I guess the
leader history at good point, though Garrett brings up a
good point. You might want to delete that search history. Oh,
it says here you many states will allow it if
(07:57):
there will be no offspring from those marriages. Others allowed
cousin marriages only in special circumstances, an adoptive cousin or
a half cousin may be allowed to marry. So I
think you got to look and see if you're not
going to have kids, might be okay. First cousin means
what like how what exactly is that your uncle's or
aunt's kids kid? Yeah, so like my mom's mom's yeah,
(08:20):
or my mom's sister's kid, or my dad's brothers kids, creepy,
pretty much everyone you see at the holidays, like your
first cousin. All right, let's let's move on, shall we. Okay,
question for everybody. We'll start with Danielle. How many pillows
do you sleep with? Uh? To under my head and
(08:41):
sometimes one under my feet, just depends on the day.
So three, I guess, Yeah, Garrett, I'm a three year Yeah,
I lay I lay on two, and then I put
one between my legs. It's good for your back. It
is good too. I put one underneath my head, and
I usually fall asleep with one between like my knees.
(09:03):
One pillow, but it's very specific. It cannot be the
feather soft pillows, you know, the ones that are mushy
that you can roll up into a ball. Yeah. I
will wake up with a crazy like crinkled neck every time.
I would have back problems for days. I need a
I need a firm pillow under me, okay, froggy three? One,
(09:24):
two under my head kind of like not really on
top of each other, but just kind of kind of
like slanting on each other. And then I hug one. Oh,
it's so dude, because at Leasta won't get near you.
I mean, she's the pillow between my legs. No, I'm kidding.
(09:45):
I'm also three. One of them is kind of soft,
the second one is really I need a mushy soft pillow.
And then the third one. You remember that Brooklyn Betting
pillow we got on that trip, that great one. I
love that pillow. We have multiple of them in our house,
and one of them is that any of him have
holes in them? No, dick an, until you brought you,
(10:11):
I sleep with two. I have to have a firm
one on the base and then a soft one on
top from one on the bay. Yeah, I got yeah,
because I like that top, that that soft kind of
pillow top thing. But I actually was roommates with a
guy in college. He didn't even use a pillow, like
talk about serial killer? How did he grow up? He
would just lay on his back and fall asleep. Like
(10:33):
I thought. They said, that's really good, really for your posture,
like if he probably is if you do that. It
looked like the guy was in a casket every time
he would fall asleep. But I feel like if you
have any kind of butt at all. You're at a
weird like decline and you cline and then all the
blood's gonna rush to your head and you die. I
could never lay flat like you try it for five minutes,
(10:54):
you're you're uncomfortable, like at the times I've been in
the hospital, and if the life flat, it's so uncomorable.
I was a serial killer, um roommate. He was my roommate.
He was a very strange guy, serial killer as a roommate. Well,
so help your story here. Name. This was the roommate
that when he showed up, all he had was a
(11:17):
black trash bag of of possessions, one pair of jeans
to T shirts and he would constantly leave Margarine just
sing out because he would put it on everything. Lit roommate. No,
this was in college. This was my first roommate in college.
And he also had under his bed the sock. Who
(11:41):
does that? Never understood this. It was just like they
make disposable socks. It's called tissues. Why would you use
a sock? It was like fossilized. It was so crusty.
It in half, this sock of birth or no, how
(12:06):
let I've got a bunch of more questions. Two minutes,
two minutes. Okay, what is the best gift you've ever received?
Daniel co Oh my gosh, I mean you like your Okay, Okay,
when my husband surprised us um and took us to
Disney UM over New Year's we hadn't been in a
(12:26):
while and the kids had never been, and he held
his secret for so long and then finally he told
us that it was the best surprise ever, very good gift.
Watching Derek Jeter's last game at Yankee Stadium. Ali got
it from my birthday. We went and it was one
of those memories that I was like, I was there,
the equivalent of Froggy going to the Super Bowl. That
(12:47):
was that for me. How was this game? Did he
have a good game? Oh? It was it was history making, like,
oh he had a walk off like run at the
end of the game and he won the game and
he everybody celebrated the that's awesome. Yeah exactly, uh gandhi um. Okay.
So this one time, this dude who used to work
with us, he gave a coworker and I a good
(13:08):
amount of cash, which was nice, But then he gave
us another giant chunk of cash and said that that
money was only supposed to be spent on other people.
So if we saw somebody out somewhere, we could buy
their groceries or buy their Christmas gifts, whatever it was.
But it was the greatest thing ever to be able
to just walk around and do that like be Santa
at Christmas. Oh my god, it was awesome. You could
(13:30):
do that with your own money. Yeah, no, it's real
different with your own money. Yes, best gift you've ever received.
I ever received, Oh my god, a walkie talkie set
from my uncle, because that's what started my interest in communications,
(13:53):
in two way communications, like like I I from there
I went, I bought a CB radio on my own,
and then from there I piqued my interest in radio
and listening to people talk back and come back, the
whole back and forth communication in a time before there
was text messages and social media. So very good, Rocky,
(14:15):
oh easily. When Elvis was so gracious to me and
my son take us to the super Bowl, that's the
weekend I will never ever forget. And the other night
to hear him tell somebody who came over to our house.
I wasn't in the room, but I could hear his
conversation He said that it was the greatest weekend of
his life that will never be topped that alone. I'll
(14:37):
never I'll never forget that night as long as I
live ever watching him cry when they won, and just
it was perfect. It was the most perfect weekend ever.
Glame Elvis. If your kid is making method five years,
got nothing left? Uh, Scotty b Was it a Teddy Bear? No? No,
(15:00):
he talks back. You know. I always tell Amy I
don't need things, and I love when she makes like
videos and picture collages and stuff like that from all
our years and our kids and stuff like that. That
always means the most to me. If it's something that
makes me cry, that's the best present that there is.
(15:22):
And I love I love those things all of you guys,
and you're such a ship. We're out of time, buddy,
have a lovely day. Fifteen minute Morning Show,