Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's got you ready, Curdie b I'm ready to just
(00:02):
just laugh and laugh and laugh. And also, Banana's Fest
two is October fourth. For everybody who only listens to
the first fifteen seconds of our podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Scott, you know, we're not a We're not a we're
not a potty mouth podcast, right.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
No, No, far from it. We're the good boys. We're
cold takes and kindness.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
Yeah, we're not. We're not toilet humor guys, all right.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
Not at all. I've never Peeter pooped in my life, exactly.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
And that's a that's that's he's got on the record
as that. But I'm gonna just read this because I
think it deserves the whole, the whole, the whole episode
being about this, the whole enchilada. On the set of
The Princess Bride, Andre the Giant once quote let out
a sixteen second fart and brought production to a standstill.
Nobody said anything except director Rob Reiner, who said, are
(00:50):
you okay, Andre, to which Andre replied, I am now boss.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
Okay, all right, let's just rip into a brand new
episode of the Banana's Podcast.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
Do world honest, would your sillion pieces? Would Bananas.
Speaker 2 (01:31):
Guys, goals, non binary pals. Welcome to yet another episode
of the delightful podcast named Bananas.
Speaker 1 (01:37):
It is Bananas. My name is Scottie Landis you call
me Banana Boy number two. Thank you for listening to
the silliest little podcast sever was and happy pride to
all of our listeners celebrating pride. You know you're welcome here.
And if this comes out in July, I hope last
month at this leasnth.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
Is the beginning of June for us. Just know that.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
Yeah, okay, but we just love you. And sitting across
from me is the one and only Kurt Brown Older. Hey, Kurt, Hi.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
Listen folks, right now, right now, tickets for Bananas Fest
are on sale.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Go to our website bananas podcast dot com. Go to
our instagram the Bananas Podcast. Go to our linktree linktree
dot Bananas Podcast. Probably I don't know their tickets are
up right now. They will sell out. There's only I
think there's only four hundred tickets for the actual event.
The fest itself is free. If you don't get tickets
(02:33):
for the actual live recording, you can of course still
come to the festival in Denver on October fourth, Saturday,
all day long, we're splitty in the city in the
morning where we'll walk one k dressed as Bill Downhill,
and we'll drink all day long and we'll have the
best time ever and you'll meet so many of the
(02:53):
coolest people you've ever met in your entire life. Now,
I'm very excited about our guest today.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
We got her back. We got at her back. It's
been three years.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
It's been three years. Our guest today is an amazing musician. Yes,
her band, Beach Bunny just released their third full length album,
Tunnel Vision. Please welcome the FANTASTICO Lily Trifilio.
Speaker 4 (03:19):
Thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
We're so happy.
Speaker 5 (03:25):
Hi Lily, Hi, I can't believe it's actually been three years.
Speaker 4 (03:30):
That's crazy?
Speaker 2 (03:32):
Is that is?
Speaker 1 (03:32):
That?
Speaker 2 (03:32):
Has it been three years?
Speaker 1 (03:34):
It's flowing my mind because here's what's even weirder. Gang
of three. Last time we talked to Lily, she was
in a hotel in Texas with panic at the disco.
That's how long And I remember being like cool. And
then in between that time and now you've toured as
the headliners, gone all around the world, and now you
(03:57):
have a European leg to your current tour.
Speaker 4 (04:00):
Holy moly.
Speaker 5 (04:01):
Wow, So I guess I can only do this podcast
when I'm in Texas.
Speaker 2 (04:05):
Yeah, well that's cool.
Speaker 1 (04:09):
How's the tour go away? Yeah, you're touring on tunnel Vision.
Your new album.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
It's excellent, by the way, I congratulations.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
So thank you. Thanks for checking it out.
Speaker 2 (04:19):
I listened to it, I think four times in a
row getting ready for the podcast.
Speaker 4 (04:23):
Thank you. Yeah, the tour has been great.
Speaker 5 (04:26):
I mean, we took a little bit of a break
from releasing music, so it's really nice being on the
road and having new music out in the world. And
we're kind of at the tail end of this American
tour now, so I can I can confidently say it
was a good tour.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
Oh that's great.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
Yeah. I listened to your I listened to your music,
but I also listened to it at the gym, and
I think people must look at me when I'm working
out and go like, here's a full grown man. This
is a grown man. This is not an eighteen year
old boy, and they are probably like, I bet he's
lifting weights to Metallica or I don't know, hip hop,
(05:08):
maybe he's got out cast on and I'm just over
there listening to beach Bunny. It's just I'm serious and
I always have this like fantasy that's some like newspaper
or influencer. Somebody's gonna be like, hey, we do a
thing called gym buds and pull our earbuds you want
to listen to and then it'll just be me listening
(05:28):
to all of your albums and I'll be like, sorry,
it makes me happy.
Speaker 4 (05:32):
And do you think it helps you work out better?
Speaker 1 (05:37):
Definitely? It's so positive. It's so absolutely you're music, so
up the eat up tempo.
Speaker 4 (05:44):
We need to start this like this narrative at the gym.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
Yeah, yeah, so you did. So we're doing Bananas Fest
in October, and you did you do Pool Party right
in Chicago. That's right, Yeah, so tell us about Pool Party.
Speaker 4 (06:02):
I've just I just always have loved music festivals.
Speaker 5 (06:06):
Yeah, so it's kind of been like a like a
little bit of a pipe dream and have my own,
but it took quite a while to get started. And
this will be the third installment of Pool Party, so.
Speaker 4 (06:17):
I'm very excited.
Speaker 5 (06:18):
It'll be at Salt Shed in Chicago early September. And yeah,
just some local music and all bands I really enjoy.
Speaker 4 (06:26):
So yeah, it should be a blast.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
Oh that's awesome. It's just a full day one day
and then you close the night.
Speaker 4 (06:33):
Yeah, m hm.
Speaker 5 (06:34):
And hopefully there'll be some like some good food trucks.
One of the years we had someone doing tattoos. Maybe
we'll do that again.
Speaker 2 (06:43):
I've been trying to do that. We're trying to do
that at bananas We really wanted to do it last
year at Bananas Fest, but we realized if even if
we had like six tattoos going all day long, you
could only give out like thirty tattoos.
Speaker 4 (06:56):
Right right, Like wait, they kind of take a while.
Speaker 6 (07:00):
Yeah, if you need to guys, if you need two guys,
just as bananas just podcasting at the back, at the
very back of the honestly the audience or the stage,
We'll just come out there and just talk to Randa's
walking by.
Speaker 4 (07:15):
That would be so awesome. They'd love it.
Speaker 1 (07:18):
I feel like there is some overlap there. The first
time we yeah, we talked it for the first time
in twenty twenty two. And before that, Kurt and I
had done a show in Kansas City and we were
driving to through Iowa to Minnesota. I think that's right,
and we had a we had a rented burgundy Chevy
(07:40):
something Chevy Traverse. Yeah, and Kurt had never had a
pumpkin spice lattee before never, so we documented it on
our Instagram stories for our listeners. But that was the
first time I had heard your music. I had heard
Beach Money, and so that was the first time Kurtibe
introduced me to Beach Money. Was drinking in Iowa in
(08:01):
a rental car, drinking pumpkin spice lattes at nine am.
Speaker 2 (08:05):
And that's amazing and it is it is interesting that
that that you've been on now on Bananas for twice,
because I discovered you in an Indianapolis coffee shop on
tour with Bananas. We were just there. I went in
there and I heard it and I was like, what
is this? I shazammed it and I was like, all right,
I'm in, I'm in. I like this, okay cool.
Speaker 4 (08:28):
So that's another link. The coffee. It's the thing wow.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
Coffee and just blasting quads. That's the two connections.
Speaker 5 (08:39):
The pumpkin spice thing, though, I mean, I know people
say like, oh, yeah, that's that's like such a basic,
like a basic girly drink. But I'm you know, I'm
a fan. I can't even even be I can't even
be mad at that.
Speaker 1 (08:53):
It's delicious.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
It's delicious.
Speaker 4 (08:55):
Yeah, what's not to like?
Speaker 2 (08:57):
It's sweet niceness. And also I love the idea of
giving people something to look forward to as ever as
the seasons die. Do you know what I mean? Like,
as everything is dying, I have one thing to look
forward to. The days might be darker, but I get
a pumpkin spice Lotte.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Yeah, I could drink a little Christmas present every morning,
just to make me get through the six hours of
sunlight before I feel like having dinner at four pm. Again,
that's so true.
Speaker 2 (09:30):
Maybe we're at the beginning of summer. We'reever gonna die?
Speaker 1 (09:34):
That's the bright spot, curty b. Is there more to
that story about Andre the giant farting for sixteen seconds?
Speaker 2 (09:40):
So fucking much about this story? So I had I
found this on I don't know. It was like it's
a meme, you know, And I was like is And
I like, I had, you know, put it in my stories,
And I was like, I don't know if this is true.
I don't really want to find out. I love this idea,
and so but then and I looked it up and yes,
(10:01):
totally one true and it comes from a book.
Speaker 1 (10:08):
I love reading.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
This was in So this is in Snopes. I went
to snopes dot com real. It's real, and it's by
Dan Evon or evon ooh, best in the biz, best
in the business. And here's what he says. The specific
incident recounted in the meme above originated with a passage
from Andre's Princess Bride co star Carrie el wes twenty
(10:32):
fourteen book As You Wish Inconceivable Tales from the making
of The Princess Bride. El's is it El's.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
Or el We's?
Speaker 2 (10:40):
I don't know, Elwi's Eli's.
Speaker 1 (10:42):
Okay, he's Welsh, right, I think I don't know.
Speaker 2 (10:45):
Writes that this I can't even pronounce that took place
while filming the scene in the bridge of the castle
where his mostly dead character takes up miracle pill from
Miracle Max. We get this is from the book. We
get to the moment where I wake up from being
mostly dead and say, I'll beat you both apart, I'll
take you both together. Fezik cups my mouth with his
(11:08):
hand and answers his own question to Inego in Ego,
is that. How you say it, anybody? Okay? As to
how long it might there's people screaming at me right
now because people love this movie. How long it might
be before the miracle max pills begin to take effect?
By stating, I guess not very long. As soon as
he delivered that line, they're issued forth from Andre one
(11:29):
of the most monumental farts any of us had ever heard. Now,
I suppose you wouldn't expect a man of Andrea's proportions
to bass gass quietly or unobtrusively, but this particular one
was truly epic, a veritable symphony of gastric distress that
roared for more than several seconds and shook the very
foundations of the wooden plaster set we were now gabbing
(11:50):
on to out of sheer fear. It was long enough
and loud enough that every member of the crew had
time to stop what they were doing and take notice.
All I can say is that it was a wind
that could have been held at blah blah blah blah baha.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
Quote.
Speaker 2 (12:06):
We tried a few more takes, but they were all
in vain. Every time I would think I was past it,
I would look at Andrea and his big grin and
the smoking hair piece, and the giggles would erupt all
over again between myself, Mandy, and Andre. Finally Rob realizes
someone had to try to get the scene back on track. Okay, guys,
let's try this again, he said, Andre, are you okay?
You need to take a break. No, boss, I'm okay.
(12:28):
Now more laughter, even from Andrea. So it is true.
But then I was like, Ah, this guy, Andrea, that
John is such a fascinating persona in general, and so.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
Just a tragic life, like an incredible life and sort
of like he was just so humongous. Everything was uncomfortable
for the guy.
Speaker 2 (12:49):
Yeah, it was uncomfortable. But here's so I looked up
even like more weird facts about Andrea the Giant.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
It's an educational podcast.
Speaker 2 (12:57):
It's an educational podcast. One I had never heard before. Listen.
I've heard the stories of him like drinking, like warming
up with just a case of wine, like that was
how before he would go out, he would have one
case of wine, twelve battles of wine because he would
just hold it in his hand like it was like
the size of a beer bottle for his hand. Wow,
(13:19):
But hear this stuff I'd never heard before. He was
driven to school by Samuel Beckett. Really, yes, any English
major or theater buff Worth A. Saltchuk recognized the name
of playwright Samuel Beckett, who wrote dozens of plays and poems,
including the famous Waiting for Goodot, and received a Nobel
(13:39):
Prize for his contributions to literature. That same Samuel Beckett
also purchased a large plot of land in France, becoming
neighbors and friends with Boris Rusimov, the father of the
man who would one day be known as Andre the
Giant Une. Even at a young age, Andrea's akro akro magally,
that's his the disorder that makes him so large made
(14:02):
him awkwardly large, to the point that he could not
take the bus to school. Upon hearing of Andrea's troubles,
Beckett offered to drive him to school in a truck,
and the two bonded, apparently over a love of cricket.
It's possible that Beckett was at least partially responsible for
Andrea's professed love of the theater, although he never went
because he was afraid that he would block the view.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
Of other paprients.
Speaker 4 (14:26):
Story.
Speaker 2 (14:27):
It is a sweet story. I love Andre the Giant.
What a nice guy. And the fact that Beckett, like
Droke Beckett, is a notorious like misanthrope, like he hates people,
and he liked Andre the Giant. I love that. And
it was before he was the Giant. So it was
just Andrea the child, the large child.
Speaker 1 (14:45):
He was seventy four or five hundred pounds, so that's
how big he was. And I know he drank one
hundred and nineteen beers in one sitting. And then other
people said he drank one hundred and fifty six cans
of beer in one night.
Speaker 2 (14:59):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
I know, but it doesn't even seem proportional, like like that.
Speaker 4 (15:05):
Still seems insane.
Speaker 6 (15:07):
It's still insane, Like that's still a lot for a
guy that size.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
Yes, man, And I also know he I think has
the record and I'm not kidding that his he got
cremated and his ashes this is one hundred serious weighed
seventeen pounds.
Speaker 4 (15:24):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
Ashes weighed seventeen pounds wow. So like a like a
four month old baby or something, just a big old
He's just uh, he was the best. He was the
eighth Wonder of the World. That's what they called him.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
He really really was true icon, a true icon. Do
you ever play any like arenas where wrestling happens at Lily?
Speaker 4 (15:48):
Not to my knowledge, but maybe it does.
Speaker 2 (15:51):
Yeah, where did you play? Where have you been playing
in this On this late late last tour?
Speaker 5 (15:58):
We did the Will Turn in a which was really exciting. Yeah,
and we did Brooklyn Paramount in New York, so.
Speaker 2 (16:07):
Kind of that outside A gorgeous spot, yes, truly beautiful.
I'm opening for Kumal Nanjianni there in I think June
twenty second.
Speaker 4 (16:18):
Amazing.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
Yeah, so I'm looking forward to being backstage at that
place because I've only seen shows at that venue and
it's so gorgeous.
Speaker 5 (16:26):
The only con I would say, and I'm just giving
you a heads up, is once you get in, getting
out and.
Speaker 4 (16:33):
Getting back in is very difficult.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
Oh yeah, you can.
Speaker 5 (16:36):
Only go underground or you will be just in the
middle of Manhattan or Brooklyn. I guess.
Speaker 1 (16:44):
Interesting. So when you were a kid, you're a singer.
Now you have a rock band. Yes, that's very cool.
When you were a girl a little Lily, did you
were there singing movies that you loved?
Speaker 2 (17:00):
Ooh? Yes, Well, what were.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
Your top one or two singing movies?
Speaker 5 (17:05):
I mean, I don't know if this is fully a
singing movie, because if I think about it, there's not
that many songs, Like, it's not a musical.
Speaker 4 (17:12):
But I was obsessed with The Wizard of Oz.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
Of course, of course, of course.
Speaker 5 (17:16):
And The Lord now as an adult with that movie
makes me love it even more.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
Very creepy, very odd. There's a lot of weird history
about it. Also, it's terrifying, like there are scenes in
The Flying Monkeys are legitimately a horror movie level of terrifying. Agreed,
It's interesting because Kurt loves a surf so like he
loved The north Shore growing up, a surfing movie. Some
(17:42):
people would say it's not the greatest movie ever made,
but if you love surfing, the north Shore is like
something that everybody's watched a million times. Yeah. This I
was curious, like because I was trying to think of
like singing movies outside of Disney movies, and the only
one I could think of was Sister Act and Mama.
Those are the only two that I could think.
Speaker 4 (18:03):
I can mean both very.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
Good, honest, that's incredible.
Speaker 5 (18:08):
I'm never gonna say that that that's like below the
musical world or something that is some peak peak composition
right there.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
I know. And they're coming back for a third one.
I heard. I think Whoopy's coming back to do sister.
I'm pretty sure I'll have to check that out, because
as a writer, I wasn't like a little kid aspiring
to be a writer. But if I had, it's like,
all you have are Stephen King's stories and Barton Fink,
and they're just the darkest, saddest movies. And you were like,
you're just gonna die. You're gonna be in a house
(18:40):
that turns into a prison, So get used to it,
you loser. Absolutely, Oh let's see. Uh, here's one for y'all.
Amy Ha sent this in. You can always send us
your strange news stories to the Bananas Podcast at Instagram.
Toddler has a surprising fear that John Wilkes Booth is
(19:01):
hiding under her bed. Okay, nice. This was in People magazine,
written by and she's good. A lot of people think
this is the best journalist in the history of the planet.
Meredith Willshire.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Really yeah, she's good. Well named will sheharborl Boulevard after
That's how good she is.
Speaker 1 (19:22):
That's so true. And I can't think of anything named
Meredith but I'm sure there's something named Meredith named after
her too.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
Meredith Burgess was named after her.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
That's right. What were you afraid of as a kid?
For Laney Lytton cute name, it was John Wilkes Booth.
Cassie Litton and her family were in the DC area
for Thanksgiving when people decided to visit the Ford's Theater
Museum as part of their trip. The Tennessee native talk
to People magazine exclusively about how their seemingly harmless experience
(19:53):
had a lasting impact on her family. While walking around
the museum, the three year old Laney Litton they were
at the historical site, and they told her they needed
to be respectful. Cassie then gave Laney the briefest overview
of what happened at Ford's Theater again three years old,
ah noting that someone named John Wilks Booth had hurt
(20:14):
then President Abraham Lincoln and she really held onto that,
her mom said. Although the mother of two tried to
explain that it happened a very long time ago, Laney
believed this threat still persisted. It's so good. There was
a statue downstairs in the museum as part of the
(20:36):
theater She said, is that him over there? And I responded, no,
that's not him. It happened a long time ago. Cassie
told people she was already on edge. So when we
went in for the presentation and they were talking about
how Abraham Lincoln and how it all went down that day,
she really held onto that too. This is a little young.
Speaker 2 (20:57):
Yes, I'm not a parent. I would not tell a
three year old about any of this. I honestly wouldn't
bring a three year old to a museum about Abraham Lincoln.
I'd be like, you know what, we're going to go
to McDonald's and go in the ball crawl and you
can go to the Abraham Lincoln Museum. That's what a
(21:19):
three year old wants to do.
Speaker 4 (21:22):
What the word assassination meant in real time.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Also, Abraham Lincoln not a not a handsome devil. Nobody's
looking at Abe Lincoln and being like that guy. I
just wanted him to hold him on my shoulder and
burt me. He'd probably be great at it, but nobody's thinking.
Speaker 2 (21:38):
It a man, tall man, extra long arms.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
So she was very fixated on Abraham Lincoln for the
rest of our trip. When we uh Then when they
got to link from Lincoln Memorial. A few days later,
Laney recognized the statue of the man who got shotted,
Cassi recalls, and from that day forward, Laney had a
new fear.
Speaker 4 (21:58):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (22:00):
This is also a precocious three year old.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
Yes. While Cassie says that mentions of Booth or not
an everyday occurrence, she does say John Wilks Booth tends
to find his way into just about all of our
day to day conversations. We were at church on Sunday
and the preacher was talking about how Jesus loves us.
And she looks at me and says, Mommy, I love Jesus.
(22:24):
And I said that's right, and I'm glad you do.
And Cassie says, and Jesus loves us and I said
that's right. And then she says, you know who he
doesn't love who? She said, John Wilkes Booth.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
He's about this. Here's my question about this? Who? Who?
Do her parents know that this is a news story
because my kids do so cute and precocious things too,
But the fucking newspaper has never written about it.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
I'm with you is Meredith will Sure hanging outside of
the John Ford's Theater Museum. Maybe she is, she's just second.
Maybe did you have a childhood fear? Lily who? What
was your biggest thing?
Speaker 2 (23:11):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (23:12):
Yeah, I mean I still hold on to it.
Speaker 5 (23:13):
But my my, my dad's favorite movie is Jaws two
where the shark eats all the teenagers, and yeah, I'm
still very scared of sharks. I even I was in
the pool today and people were counting me in and
I was like, thank happy thoughts, think happy.
Speaker 4 (23:33):
Yeah, specifically.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
Just two. Yeah, it's the one where all the teenagers
go sailing and then they start to like tie their
boats up together to create a little floating island, and
then the sharks just like this is perfect?
Speaker 2 (23:47):
Am that the one where they eat where the shark
eats a helicopter?
Speaker 1 (23:52):
That's four four. I love that.
Speaker 2 (23:56):
That's the best eat. They're like, what else could this
shark eat like a helicopter?
Speaker 1 (24:04):
Get it in there?
Speaker 3 (24:06):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (24:07):
Yes, two is yeah because in one they put in
a scuba tank in his mouth and then he shoots
it and blows it up, which is great ending.
Speaker 2 (24:18):
And it blows up as if the tank is filled
with gasoline. Right, yeah, yeah, we're all down there just breathing,
compressed gasoline.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
Uh, and they were like, Okay, that was pretty good.
We have to make another one. They had the greatest
slug line ever for their second movie, which was just
when you thought it was safe to get back in
the water, which is like they basically invented that that
type of phrasing and the people absolutely yeah. And then
they were like, how do we killed this big son
of a bitch? There's another one and they electrocuted curtain,
(24:52):
they lift up I remember my power line out to
remember they caught or Amity Amity Islander, And there's a
great tweet that does go around Kurt that is like
why voting matters since because the mayor of Amity got
re elected after the first Jaws. That's really real. Yeah,
sharks are a good one.
Speaker 2 (25:13):
What's your one?
Speaker 1 (25:15):
I don't like the open ocean, Like if I I'd
be more afraid of.
Speaker 2 (25:20):
You have fasophilia or fasophobia.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
Yeah, the an open ocean for not only but sharks. Yeah,
I mean if I was in there, but I don't
I swim in the ocean. I'd like to dive through waves.
But but yes, I would be very afraid if a
plane crashed in the mill the ocean, I would be.
That would be my number one fear.
Speaker 2 (25:42):
I think my I like, my childhood fear was Gremlins.
That was my childhood fear. And then I saw there
was a cover of a VHS of a VHS from
movie called it was a Gremlin's parody called Goolies. Oh,
(26:05):
of course, and the Goolies was it was like a
Gremlins type animal that was coming up out of the
toilets the toilet. And then every time I went to
the bathroom, I thought that a gremlin was going to
I guess eat my asshole. Sure, like that's what I was.
That was my main fear. And then behind every door
I thought there would be a gremlin every every single
(26:28):
door for like, I don't know, for like eight years.
Speaker 5 (26:32):
Because mine I was like, Oh, I'm not in your water,
so I'm good.
Speaker 4 (26:36):
Right, you were in your own home.
Speaker 2 (26:39):
Oh yeah, terrorized, terrorised every time I went to the bathroom. Yeah,
my little Goolies is gonna come up and pop my
little pucker.
Speaker 1 (26:47):
But if you're swimming in Lake Michigan, I bet you
think twice. But I bet you think twice.
Speaker 2 (26:57):
I can tell you, guys, something very weird is happening
right now. Okay, great, tell us a June thunderstorm in
Los Angeles, California. I have never seen it. Have been
there for twelve years, thunderstorms never happened. It is a
full on thunderstorm. I have to actually go grab something,
hold on.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
That is yeah, that never happens. Wild also live in
Los Angeles, and I'm in Los Angeles and it is
not raining at my house. What a town.
Speaker 4 (27:25):
I wonder if it moved from. I actually don't know
how rain means work.
Speaker 5 (27:30):
But when we were in Arizona a couple of days ago,
it was also raining, and that had broken a drought.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
So I don't know, well it we do act weird
when it does rain out here in Chicago, y'all get
truly all four seasons to the extreme. But oh yeah,
out here, when it rains, you go outside and you
just look at it. You're just like, look at this,
this is this is amazing. I'll finish the story up
for you because there is a little cute ending, so Cassie.
(27:57):
Eventually the mother told the daughter Laney that is no
longer on this planet, that he existed such a long
time ago, and because Laney thought a long time ago
could mean yesterday, and while that made her feel better,
it didn't quite quell her obsession with John Wilkes Booth,
who died in eighteen sixty five. She asked, what if
he comes and tries to take all my stuffed animals away?
(28:19):
So it turns out Laney isn't the only child with
an irrational fear of long dead assassins. Many commentators on
the post I guess people said that many commentators revealed
that they also became obsessed with President Lincoln's death after
visiting that museum. Strange, strange. I wouldn't. I'm talking to
(28:39):
my family, and my three year old is also aware
of John Wolkes Booth, said one commenter. Yeah, I think
it's pretty interesting. Yeah, they don't even go into lists.
I thought they were just going to list a bunch
of rational fears. I guess other children have gone and
are now afraid of John Wilkes Booth. So apparently he
was a handsome devil. He was an actor who.
Speaker 2 (29:00):
Yes, yeah, there's and there's a there's a apparently at
Keynes in Manhattan, the steakhouse. John Wilkes Booth has a
pipe signed and on the he was like he had
a pipe that was like you could go and you
could have pipes there, but you would like have you
would buy a pipe and then you would sign your
(29:20):
name on it and then you would put it up
in the rafters. And John Wilkes Booth wasn't act And
then there's a connection between Keynes and the There was
like a theater that was next door, and so the
actors would run over and have like a quick whiskey
and a quick smoke of their pipe and then run
back in between acts of the play. And John Wilkes
Booth performed at that theater next door. Okay, dumb, dumb, dumb.
Speaker 4 (29:45):
I love that.
Speaker 5 (29:45):
I'm learned so much about John John Wilkes Booth. I'm
getting scared already, guys.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
I can't go to sleep tonight until somebody looks under
my bed and Martha Texas for John Wilkes Booth. You
never know that is a fun town.
Speaker 2 (30:05):
I'm gonna tease you into some thumbs up here, man mine.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
Please all right here it is.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
China hosts world first half marathon raised beeen humans and robots.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
Okay, no way, yeah, okay, I bet the robots if
they win first time, They're gonna win every other time
after the first time, Oh damn. Thumbs up. So, Lily,
we started doing these I think after you were on,
which is just people shouting themselves out and other people
out and their friends out and it's very nice. So
first up is Trina Nicole. Trina Nicole wants to thumb
(30:41):
up her husband Stephan for being the best husband. They're
about to have their second child in June, and he
has been an absolute chant making this pregnancy as easy
as possible, doing all the diaper changes, basic basically doing
ninety percent of the toddler parenting for their two year
old and cleaning the house and doing all their chores.
Trina is so, I mean, Kurt, you're that wow.
Speaker 2 (31:03):
Nice work, very nice.
Speaker 1 (31:06):
Trina says she's so grateful for Stefan Wane to share
this because everyone deserves a partner who loves and respects
them the way that he does her. Yeah, that is nice.
Speaker 4 (31:19):
That's super nice.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
Thumbs up if it's big thumbs up. Also, if that
was the case, Lily, your first two albums might not exist.
If the guys were just these perfect guys all the time,
it just carried all the way.
Speaker 4 (31:32):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (31:35):
April Thompson is thumbing herself way up for graduating with
a master's degree. She says bananas has helped her so
much in life. It helps her stay positive and it
got her through long nights and tough days that come
along with being in grad school. April also wants to
thumb up herself up for having a full time job
lined up after she graduates. I mean, incredible these days.
Speaker 4 (31:57):
Incredible graduates.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
Some congratulations, April. Our best in the biz postcard center, George, Lily.
We have a fan named George. He's the best. He
travels extensively, and he sends us pretty much a postcard
or two every single week for the last few years.
We love we love mail, we love snail mail. It's
the best. He is graduating. Oh, he's thumbing himself up
(32:22):
for finishing his pH d in space physics.
Speaker 2 (32:26):
Oh my god, is what it's.
Speaker 4 (32:29):
Called the genius?
Speaker 2 (32:30):
I thought it was called astrophysics. It's just called space
physics in Europe.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
Maybe it's called space I'm reading what he said me.
Speaker 2 (32:40):
That's so awesome.
Speaker 4 (32:42):
Maybe he's dumbing it down for us.
Speaker 2 (32:44):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, he's dumbing it down. He's like, I
don't want to use the word astro and blow your
fucking mind. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:51):
Uh. He is also thumbing up his partner, Crystal for
tolerating all the stress and anxiety and in quote fun
that comes with earning this degree. She is the best,
he says. Bananas was acknowledged in George's thesis for making
his trip more pleasant. So, Kurt, we're in a PhD thesis.
We finally got That's so cool. I love cool and
(33:13):
last but not least Eric and Eric, I'm going to
blow your last name and I'm gonna try my best buddy, Eric,
I think it's harragus or I think it's hairogus, and
I'm so sorry. Eric H is thumbing himself up because
he had to officiate his mom's funeral with less than
two weeks notice. Public speaking is his biggest fear, but
(33:35):
he handled it.
Speaker 2 (33:37):
So I think Banana of the week, Banana the week.
Speaker 1 (33:41):
To you, Eric H. Eric Harragus harragees and is You're
the Banana of the week. Great job. That must have
been extremely difficult, but she deald it should you proud
of you?
Speaker 2 (33:52):
And I would like to thumb up Mother nature. Look
at this. It is a full just thunderst In June
second or something June third. Thumbs up to Mother Nature
and thumbs up, of course, to Lily Trifilio. Oh thanks guys,
thank you for being here. And so where do you
(34:14):
go next? Where do you go next? On tour?
Speaker 5 (34:17):
We're in Houston, so we're just kind of finishing out
Texas and then we got Oklahoma City and then we're done.
Speaker 2 (34:22):
Or Marshalls were.
Speaker 1 (34:24):
In Europe, right, I thought you were yes.
Speaker 5 (34:27):
Yes, that'll be in October. So I got my I
got summer vacation coming off.
Speaker 2 (34:33):
Incredible. Oh that's great. And are you doing Pool Party
again this summer?
Speaker 4 (34:38):
Yeah, it'll actually be. It's September seventh in Chicago.
Speaker 2 (34:42):
September seventh, look at that. You can come. You go
September seventh to Pool Party, then October fourth to Bananas
festiv Perfect.
Speaker 1 (34:51):
Yeahful, Lily, I read online and this could be a lie,
so please correct me that between albums you had a
little bit of writer's block you had to push through.
Speaker 4 (34:59):
I did, certainly did.
Speaker 1 (35:01):
Is that the first time for you? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (35:03):
I kind of I almost convinced myself I couldn't write.
Speaker 4 (35:06):
Songs, which it was brutal. It was brutal.
Speaker 2 (35:10):
It was brutal.
Speaker 4 (35:11):
I had a had to get.
Speaker 5 (35:12):
Through some insecurity, but you know what, I think, I
was just burnt out, and as soon as I actually
let myself rest.
Speaker 4 (35:20):
It was fine and the floodgates open. Then we got
a new album.
Speaker 5 (35:23):
So yeah, I'm just trying to be mindful after this
tour and like go live some life and then hopefully
make some more songs.
Speaker 2 (35:30):
Yeah. That is the thing, is like, because when you're
working all the time, you don't have any you don't
have any experiences to actually draw from and to write about. Literally,
you know, no one wants to legitimately listen to like
the days in sucked, tonight and now and they didn't
have the pizza I like at the venue.
Speaker 5 (35:51):
Right on, yeah, and steared at a wall in my phone.
Speaker 2 (35:57):
Yeah, I got here five hours early. I just sat
in a room by myself.
Speaker 1 (36:04):
Do you write with your guitar?
Speaker 5 (36:08):
Yeah, an instrument, yeah, usually, But I think on this
last little writing era, I've gotten more comfortable just kind
of singing stuff into my phone and then going back
to it with the guitar and just building off that,
which has been a great great that I figured out
how to do that, because now I can be a
(36:29):
little more fluid.
Speaker 2 (36:31):
And do you find that there are certain activities that
encourage the brain to just kind of kind of get
inspired with little pieces of melodies.
Speaker 5 (36:43):
Yeah, yeah, I mean honestly, like walking or driving or
things in motion.
Speaker 4 (36:48):
I mean, I'm sure you things.
Speaker 2 (36:51):
Yeah. I was just wondering if it was the same
for music, because yeah, walking trains for me are basic.
The idea, I don't know, it's so interesting, isn't it. Yeah,
But if.
Speaker 4 (37:04):
I sit down and try to write, it's not going
to happen.
Speaker 1 (37:08):
It's tough, it really is. We Uh, I'm more of
a I'm just more of a sit down writer just
because I'm a screenwriter. And that's how it goes. That
makes sense fine. When I like if I have a
little bit, if I sell a couple of things and
I have a little time off, I call it an
input phase. Somebody told me they called it that, and
I will just binge books, movies, music and so COVID
(37:31):
like the great choir in Lockdown was actually such a
blessing for me because I've been pushing so hard for
about fourteen years, just like never turning down a job
writing for as many people as I could. That all
of a sudden. I had a over a year just
to absorb all media stuff I had always wanted to
watch her listen to. And I gotta say now, even
(37:53):
when I get like a week off or when I
go on vacation. Now, vacation for me is like listening
to music and reading, which I never used to do,
and it helps.
Speaker 4 (38:03):
That's so awesome.
Speaker 1 (38:04):
Input phase is so underrated. And I think people that
are sometimes no artists or no friends who are aspiring
and the music or dance, are painting or whatever, they
don't Sometimes they seem like the person's just like sitting there,
but they don't realize how much thought is actually happening
where they're creating on a blank canvas. It's really hard
to do.
Speaker 5 (38:24):
I'm glad. Did you guys get it? I told my
manager the other day. I was like, Hey, so yeah, Juli,
I'm gonna take a month's social media break so I
can just go live life.
Speaker 4 (38:36):
I feel like everyone was like, do you have an album?
Are you sure?
Speaker 5 (38:40):
And I was like, well, I want to write the
next thing, so that's kind of the only.
Speaker 4 (38:45):
Way to do it.
Speaker 2 (38:46):
Yeah, totally agreed, dude. I go on like little adventures
with social media where I'm just like, all right, that's it,
And for like two months I post a clip of
stand up every single day and then totally hit a
point where I'm just like, I don't give a fuck anymore.
This machine, I hate feeding Mark Zuckerberg's goddamn machine. And
(39:12):
then I just stopped.
Speaker 7 (39:13):
From people, and then all forward progress of my social
media coutch just halts and then starts reversing itself, and
then I'm just like and then until I get frustrated
up again, I'm like, all right, now we're back on it,
and then I just posting I hate it so much.
Speaker 4 (39:29):
It's a weird time we're living in.
Speaker 1 (39:30):
It really is a nightmare. It's a nightmare. But you
did a good job also naming your band beach Bunny,
because I'm sure people come up to you and call
you beach Bunny, right, people must know are you beach
Bunny all the time, which is very cute. And I've
also a very cool name, like you could have a
(39:51):
band called the Scabs and then they're like, are you Scabs?
And oh god, I guess I am so good for you?
Are you?
Speaker 2 (40:01):
Are you cunt locker?
Speaker 4 (40:04):
Do you guys have a cute name? For your banana fans.
Speaker 2 (40:08):
Yeah, bananimals, ban animals.
Speaker 4 (40:10):
That's so cute.
Speaker 2 (40:11):
I love that and that. We took us a long
time and it was a it was a fan who
came up with it.
Speaker 4 (40:17):
It's really good.
Speaker 2 (40:18):
It's really really good.
Speaker 1 (40:20):
Yeah, we have all the merch that are like banana
claws ripping through T shirts and stuff.
Speaker 5 (40:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (40:24):
And the episode that Curt announced it back in twenty
twenty or twenty twenty one, we got a one star
review on Apple on Apple podcast and this woman was like, bananimals.
You're called really, you're calling your listeners animals. I don't
think so unsubscribed.
Speaker 2 (40:42):
It's just like that's oh my gosh, I'm so happy
you're gone.
Speaker 5 (40:45):
Nope, you're like, I want to know what happened to
you today that they got you to this point.
Speaker 1 (40:53):
That's right, that's right. So we weren't calling you an animal.
Speaker 4 (40:57):
No, it's cute.
Speaker 1 (40:59):
That's so cute. It could be a serial called Animals
and everybody, but it was my favorite thing to eat
while watching cartoons.
Speaker 4 (41:05):
That's so funny.
Speaker 1 (41:07):
Yeah, I remember that one record too. Yep, we were like,
thank god, you're not going to be a bananas fest.
That specific did you have one or do I have one?
Speaker 2 (41:18):
Crittybee, I got one. China hosts world's first half marathon
race between humans and robots. This was in sky News.
It was written by.
Speaker 1 (41:34):
Nobody swinging sky News staff.
Speaker 2 (41:38):
And it was written by one of these robots. Baby
robots have raced against humans and a half marathon for
the first time since twenty one. Humanoid robots raced alongside
thousands of runners around the twenty one kilometer thirteen mile
course in Beijing, China, on Saturday. Some of the robots
that took place That took part were as short as
(41:58):
three foot nine inches, others were as tall as five
foot nine inches. They had to resemble humans and be
able to walk or run. Wheels were not allowed. The
winning robot was Tiangong Ultrah, which crossed the finishing line
with a time of two hours and forty minutes, while
the men's winner of the race had a time of
(42:19):
one hour and two minutes. Oh woow, let's go.
Speaker 1 (42:23):
Let's go. Finally, I can't recall faster than my mister coffee.
I try, I try, and I just can't do it.
Speaker 2 (42:36):
Can you imagine running also thirteen miles in an hour
and a half like crazy. I don't want to boast,
but I think no other robotic firms in the West
have matched Tiangong's sporting achievements. He says, No, oh.
Speaker 4 (42:56):
This was very funny.
Speaker 2 (42:58):
He added that the robot's battery was changed only three
times during the place. The needed three battery changes.
Speaker 1 (43:08):
Okay, we got a few years on these things.
Speaker 2 (43:11):
Yeah. One robot fell at the starting line and lay
on the ground for a few minutes before getting up
and joining the race, crashed into a railing, causing its
human operator to fall over. I love that. Okay, so
these were not autonomous robots either. They were just remote
(43:31):
controlled by human beings with little So.
Speaker 1 (43:34):
The lesson here is when the murder robots come to
your neighborhood, run for at thirteen and a half miles,
and you have to be able to ditch these things I.
Speaker 4 (43:44):
Need to work out.
Speaker 2 (43:45):
Yeah. Also, I feel like the United States military is like,
we're not going to put our robot in that race
because we don't want everybody to know how fast and
horrifying it is.
Speaker 1 (43:55):
All right, I know those Boston Dynamics robots that can
do like front flips off of boxes and then dance
and you're like they'll do the Dougie and you're like, no,
why are we doing doing?
Speaker 7 (44:10):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (44:11):
Please God?
Speaker 4 (44:11):
No truly?
Speaker 1 (44:15):
Yeah, well, I think you gotta get I think you
have to sponsor one of those robots next year and
just have it play Beach Bunny New Music as it
runs thirteen.
Speaker 2 (44:25):
Actually, you know we should we should do is we
should try and find a like a robotics firm in
Denver and have a robot that's just dancing all day
long to yeah yeah to our theme song at earths Fest.
Speaker 1 (44:39):
That's a great idea. It's a great we can make
fun of it before you know, the turn happens before
they go offline and we're running for their amusement and
I'm falling over at the starting line.
Speaker 2 (44:50):
The amount of the amount of news stories that we
are sent that are about AI doing something creepy and
upsetting is like it's starting to approach like fifty percent
of the stores, and so it's just like we're not, well, yes,
it's happening out there, but this is not the this
is not where we're going to hear about it anymore.
Speaker 1 (45:10):
We were.
Speaker 2 (45:11):
I used to be obsessed with AI and now I'm
terrified of it.
Speaker 1 (45:14):
Yes, yeah, but also this is a relief. I'm I'm
lieve they had to change the batteries, and I'm gonna
leieve it didn't run on its own. Like if it did,
it was like, Oh it ran it in forty five minutes
and did push ups at the end. I'd be like,
oh God, I feel like we still have some time here.
Speaker 2 (45:31):
We have a little bit of time.
Speaker 1 (45:32):
Yeah, Lily, did you ever steal anything when you were
young as a teenager? Did you ever steal some some makeup?
Did you ever steal a chainsaw from home depot?
Speaker 2 (45:41):
No?
Speaker 5 (45:42):
No, but my my my dad would steal cookies from
the grocery store and give them to me, So I
was a you know, accomplice. But I actually I never
did steal something because my my one friend, she stole
something from Claire's and it broke immediately when we went
through the door, and I was like, oh.
Speaker 4 (46:04):
Like like God's like smiting her right now.
Speaker 5 (46:06):
So like I'm not gonna do that was my thoughts,
like a ten year old.
Speaker 1 (46:11):
Yeah, judgment was happening. You were being watched the ultimate
security system.
Speaker 4 (46:18):
I can't do that.
Speaker 1 (46:21):
You have a pure soul. That's good to know.
Speaker 4 (46:24):
How about y'all.
Speaker 1 (46:25):
Sure, not a ton, though not as much as you'd
think we were. We were pretty good boys.
Speaker 2 (46:31):
I think the weirdest thing I stole was the keypad
at a at a McDonald's, Like the kids crazy, it's
a really it's a really crazy thing to steal. I
was just standing there and I was just like, I
think I can just unplug this. And then I was
in I was like eighteen or nineteen. I was like,
I think I could just unplug this and walk away,
and I like put it in my bag as I
(46:52):
was standing there, and then I was like, yep, I can.
And then I got it home and I was like,
what the fuck am I going.
Speaker 5 (46:57):
To do.
Speaker 2 (46:59):
McDonald's bad.
Speaker 1 (47:01):
Yeah, a lot of kids have that. We also have
a lot of those stories that it's like something iconic
was stolen from a town, like the big tomato outside
of the Italian restaurant, and it's returned after six months
and people leave a note with it that's like.
Speaker 2 (47:13):
Sorry, I don't know where to put this.
Speaker 1 (47:18):
I did steal sign once that's a party time from
a Baskan Robbins and my sister, my older sister and
her friends went to like a Dave Matthews band concert
and a fish concert, and they took it with him
and they would pose with people and they would all
hold this giant party time sign that colorful balloons, and
it made people so happy. It was like they needed
to pose in the parking lot outside.
Speaker 2 (47:40):
Of Sometimes thievery works, guys, that's rights in this message.
Speaker 1 (47:45):
In this instance, it didn't get out and explore. Philly
sent this one in and Kurt obviously the story takes
place in Phya, Pampa, Tampa, Florida. This was in Yahoo News,
written by Caitlin Sticky Fingers Fernandez. I don't know if
that's true. I'm sorry, that's a little And arrest made
(48:09):
after man steals his eighth dump truck finally.
Speaker 2 (48:15):
The first seven were okay.
Speaker 1 (48:18):
On Holy Shit, Tampa, Florida, w f l A, A
man was arrested after Deputy Still said he stole eight
dump trucks worth one point two million dollars and then
rebranded them with a Tampa, Tampa company's logos. So he
stole them and then started using no he did not,
oh y see did. The Hillsboro County Sheriff's Office of
(48:41):
Detectives investigating one stolen dump truck from Duval County went
to a business on Hubert Avenue in Hubert Avenue in Tampa. There,
they said they found a forty year old Alonsi Morrero,
which is an incredible name.
Speaker 3 (48:58):
It is a.
Speaker 1 (49:00):
Lance Morero, I like a Lanci. I'm gonna name something
a Lanzi in a script, who was altering the dump
trucks VINCE vehicle identification numbers.
Speaker 2 (49:10):
But that's not easy to do.
Speaker 1 (49:11):
Wow, no, queen, it isn't. Detectives said they obtained a
search warrant for the property as well as two conjoining
properties related to the same business, and they found you
guessed it, seven more stolen dump trucks. That was good
at what he did, you gotta get it.
Speaker 2 (49:28):
But also but they were all for his company.
Speaker 1 (49:32):
Yeah he was. Then he was rebranding them and so
he was just taking using trucks. All eight were stolen
between twenty twenty three and twenty twenty five, So in
two years he stole.
Speaker 2 (49:41):
That means every two or three months he's stealing another
dumpy really long steam, I know it's a really it's
also but like also why not stop at six? You
got six dump trucks? You got six stump trucks. It's
a large amount of dump trucks to have six, that's
a lot. That's a lot of good. Meant think about
how much you dump it?
Speaker 1 (50:01):
Man, also a dump truck. I didn't realize so it
was at one point two million dollars for eight. I
ran the numbers over here. One hundred and fifty thousand
dollars a dump truck. Look at that. Wow, you guys,
you know you have to buy guitars, Kurt, you buy
a surfboard. Didn't you think a dump truck costs more
than one hundred and fifty thousand dollars? I would have
(50:23):
guessed they cost three hundred thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (50:26):
Look, if you're having some truck, if you're talking cement truck,
I think three hundred thousand dollars. But U truck's just
kind of it's just it's just like a very large
pickup truck that moves up.
Speaker 4 (50:39):
Very very very smart, very very like.
Speaker 1 (50:44):
A Toyota Corollas like thirty thousand dollars. So I don't know.
I expected dump trucks to be a little price heer,
I think a bit of a coward.
Speaker 2 (50:54):
He wanted you, you wanted to steal more.
Speaker 1 (50:58):
Yeah, I wanted some real numbers. Deputy said all the
dumb trucks had been rebranded with his company's logos. These
stefts didn't just hurt business owners across Florida and the Southeast,
but they impacted families, employees, and construction projects, which is
all true, that's all very true. Yeah, we're committed to
help those blah blah blahlah blah. Morrero was arrested on
grand theft and criminal mischief, which is the best that
(51:18):
you can charge, Jeff, pretty good. So, yeah, don't steal
dump trucks. And if you do, stop at seven, you idiots.
Clearly you're taking a break from social media. But let's
plug some stuff, ug some stuff, album whatever you want.
Speaker 5 (51:38):
Yeah, yeah, we have a new album that it's called
Tunnel Vision. You can stream it on any music platform.
If you're in Chicago, come to Pool Party September seventh.
Speaker 4 (51:48):
Take it. So are out and available. It's going to
be awesome.
Speaker 5 (51:52):
And yeah, and we'll also be in Europe in October,
so you can go to Beachfunny music dot com for
all that.
Speaker 1 (51:59):
Infoly music dot com and I will have vinyls and CDs.
Did you do still print stuff?
Speaker 4 (52:06):
Oh yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (52:07):
We have.
Speaker 4 (52:07):
We have some really awesome colors too. It's it's all
on the website, guys, trust.
Speaker 1 (52:11):
Me to the website. Use the internet and find the
website and read it with your eyes and then listen
to the music with your ears. Tunnel vision.
Speaker 2 (52:20):
Tunnel vision.
Speaker 1 (52:21):
Yet another great, you know, incredible run of Beach Bunny.
Speaker 2 (52:25):
Yes, here's my three favorite songs. Are you ready?
Speaker 5 (52:28):
Well?
Speaker 2 (52:28):
I got three Verdigo, Pixie Cut and Chasm Thank you.
Speaker 1 (52:34):
I had Chasm Pixie Cut just around the corner.
Speaker 2 (52:37):
All right, cool, followed up by Clueless. Clueless is also
up there, but I only put three.
Speaker 1 (52:45):
Kasm makes me sad. I do sad, curls and expressing
when I'm listening to it. Put on sports again. I
need sports. Thanks. Great to see you, Great.
Speaker 4 (53:01):
To see y'all. Thanks for all the awesome stories. I
learned a lot.
Speaker 2 (53:05):
Just an educational podcast.
Speaker 1 (53:07):
If you want to say bananas with us on three
That's how we end every episode one, two, three. Banana
Banana Bananas is an exactly right media production.
Speaker 2 (53:21):
Our producer and engineer is Katie Levine.
Speaker 1 (53:23):
The catchy banana theme song was composed and performed by Kahan.
Speaker 2 (53:27):
Artwork for Bananas was designed by Travis Millard.
Speaker 1 (53:30):
And our benevolent overlords are the great Karen Kilgareff and
Georgia Hart Start.
Speaker 2 (53:33):
And Lisa Maggott is our full human, not a robot,
part time employee.
Speaker 1 (53:37):
You can listen to Bananas on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, Spotify,
or wherever you get your podcasts, and please feel free
to rate and review as many times as you can.
We love those five stars.