Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is He Said a Yadiho with Eric Winter and
Rodlin fantab.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
All right, welcome back to another episode of He Said
A Yet Voh, this is leading up to our Halloween week.
You're not gonna be here.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
No, thank you guys for listening. Yeah, I'm not gonna
be here.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
No, I'm missing a lot of stuff.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
I'm gonna miss Halloween. I'm gonna miss Dylan's birthday, although
we're going to celebrate it when we're back, but his
actual birthday, I'm not gonna be here. And those are
the moments when you go, oh, what am I doing?
What am I doing? What am I doing?
Speaker 2 (00:36):
I'm not sure?
Speaker 1 (00:37):
My mom gave me so much coca.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
You have no idea for what?
Speaker 1 (00:40):
For leaving again to go to work?
Speaker 2 (00:42):
Oh my god, but she always gives you crap if
you don't work.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Too exactly right, exactly right. But she was like, why
are you doing that again? You leave in your family?
Those kids, Well, Mom, I know, but they're with Grandma
and Nanny and Eric and they are happy and they're thriving,
and they go to school and they have their activities
and is it But it doesn't matter. They don't have you.
I don't know why you're doing it really bugged me.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
Listen, it's funny. We had a conversation you and I
just the other day when our good friend Siano is
in town and there's a project that we're going to
start developing with another company that they came to us
to help them, you know, produce together and for Rozland
to possibly star and the show would be set in Oregon,
and I said, you know, for me, roz this is
a no go unless they can guarantee shoot this in
(01:25):
Los Angeles, like Gray's Anatomy is a Seattle based show,
but it's shot in LA.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
Would explained to people that shooting in LA is very expensed.
Speaker 2 (01:33):
It's very difficult, very expensive. But there are plenty.
Speaker 1 (01:36):
Of actors Portland, Yeah, is that cold.
Speaker 2 (01:39):
Yes, that's going north northwest, very chilly, beautiful Portland, Organs
great but very overcast, very gloomy like most of the year.
But you know, listen, there are plenty of actors that
do have to put the foot down and say, hey,
I won't relocate, and not everybody's in that position to
be able to do it, but that was our stipulation.
(02:01):
They were okay with it, so we're going to carry on,
but it was important. I said, ro, you can't go
do a network potentially a network procedural type show and
be gone for nine months out of the year and
you're the star of the show. We did it with
Fantasy Island Brutal and now this would be even longer
if it was to work. So your mom's not wrong,
but then your mom also gives you crap when you
(02:21):
don't work, So it's a very tough balance. It is
a bummer because she's leaving again so soon, like she's
lamping home for a few months and she's been working
non stops and she got back and then to the movie.
Then she comes back for like a week, and then
she's gone again for almost a week and a half.
So it's not it's definitely not fun.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
And the kids are incredible. I'm very understanding, and they're like, no,
they wish they could go with me. That's the only thing.
They're like, caw, we go to Spain with your mom.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
But I mean, we'd all love to go to Spain
if we could go to Spain.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
For that's why say they should be homeschooled.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
No, that's not the ants. That doesn't solve.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
These because it's more flexible.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
There are so many people in this business that we've
had this debate so many times that don't agree with
homes schore in this situation, and it's up to the
parent to make the decisions. If the parent's going to travel,
it's on the parent. I'm gonna do it their whole life,
so they understand.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Guys, let's talk about homeschooling for a second and problem
and the way the world is at the moment. I
understand that there's a very important reality to socialization and
for kids to be able to experience, yeah, going to
school and having friends and the clicks and the senior
from junior from all the dances and the recitals and
(03:27):
the extracurricular activities and going to the mall. And you know,
having like the way we grew up. Yes, that's what
I said, is very very very important. It is. And
I had a blast when I was in high school
and you know high school and it was amazing, but
it was it was different times. And nowadays the stuff
that Sabella comes back telling us, granted she's she's in
(03:50):
a private school, you know, really fundomenal families. We pay
a lot of money for her to be safe to
come back home and talk about things that you just
go the peer pressure. And because these kids they have resources,
they are able to get into trouble and to buy
things and to do things.
Speaker 2 (04:11):
I went to public school with with like not any
wealthy area.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
And Okay, I guess the problem some parents problems even
not actors or athletes or none of that. Some people
they believe that because the way kids grow up, they
grow up so fast nowadays, and the social media and
everything is so accessible to these kids, and they grow
so fast, they learn things way too fast when they're
(04:39):
they're in school. So there are a lot of parents argue,
and I'm not talking about only celebrities or big professional
athletes and very wealthy people that they decide to go
to the homeschooling route so they can protect their kids,
or you know, because they want to keep their lives
very private. Regular people more and more are inclining into
the idea of home schooling because at least you feel
(05:03):
that all this outside influences, you know, they're a little
bit more sheltered.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
Yeah, but sheltering a kid doesn't always guarantee the success
and the same either. I'm not saying that do you
know how many stories I've heard about kids that a
were homeschooled and they go to college and they don't
know how to navigate the courses of the classes because
their studying habits been totally different. Yes, this is I've
heard this directly from other students. Not only that there.
Speaker 1 (05:28):
Are eric there are homeschooling programs that now big like
Ivy League colleges are looking into those kids to be
able to recruit them because it's like really high quality education.
We're not talking about homeschooling. They know, but they learned.
They learn a lot.
Speaker 2 (05:45):
You're not even here who's gonna stay home and make
sure you're doing her homework? No, I'm not saying every
kid that I know that home school has a parent
managing the curriculum or somebody being fully invested in what's
going on in the homeschool. And these kids at twelveyears
old aren't just fully navigating all their own homeschooling stuff
and setting it up. So are you going to do that? No?
Speaker 1 (06:09):
I don't have time to do exactly any of that.
But are you missing the point? I'm not saying that
we're going to do it. I don't think it's conducive
to our lifestyle at the moment, you just say what
I'm saying. What I'm saying. What I'm saying is I'm
trying to give you the two sides of the coin.
You know, some people think they're in favor of home schooling.
Some people are against. I am just trying for you
(06:30):
to understand that there might be benefit when it comes
to homeschooling. And listen, it depends on the amount the
kind of curriculum you have them on. It doesn't mean
that they're going to be home playing video games. If
you have them doing sports.
Speaker 2 (06:44):
And managing all of it, then.
Speaker 1 (06:46):
You get somebody to manage it.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
Yes, oh my god. Yes, it's not as easy as
she's making a sample.
Speaker 1 (06:53):
It's not as complicated as you make it.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Middle. I'm not saying it's bad. There's a good and
bad to it. Definitely. Here's a topic that randomly. Have
you heard about this, Kim Kardashian's daughter getting her a
twenty thousand dollars necklace for her for her birthday?
Speaker 1 (07:12):
No, I haven't.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
It's something it's called a scimity toilet graphic, some kind
of design. But is there a world in which you
think that her daughter actually got her a twenty thousand
dollars necklace or this was just gifted And this is
again great press because how does her daughter have access
to twenty thousand dollars? I don't care how rich is
does she have a does her daughter a credit card
(07:34):
with twenty thousand dollars on it?
Speaker 1 (07:36):
They're both pretty pretty rich. Twys Northwest probably has.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
So she went to her nanny's. I'm buying my mom
a twenty thousand.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
Dollars Well has a lot ones that is twenty thousand
dollars away. I think grandma paid for it and said
this and you're going to give this? This is you
they pay for it.
Speaker 2 (07:55):
I think this is a publicity thing and that they
were gifted this necklace and it's retail value is twenty
thousand dollars. But there's no way it is a I mean,
we all know jewelry is one of the most overpriced
things out there, so it didn't cost twenty thousand dollars to,
you know, get this necklace made. I think it was
gifted and I think it's a fun publicity thing.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
But what do we know about it?
Speaker 2 (08:18):
Look, I mean they're saying it was just a gift.
And it was something that was sentimental and something that
was fun. I think, you know, the idea of anything
that comes from the kid to the parent I think
is wonderful. Would you be you love it if our
kids got you a twenty thousand dollars necklace? I actually
know that for a fact.
Speaker 1 (08:34):
You love it.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
I'd be furious. I'd be so annoying.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
Why did you buy me a twenty thousand dollars necklace?
As what's said? First of all, so.
Speaker 2 (08:47):
You could you know? I'd be happy? Very nice things.
But my point is, okay, just so you know. The
skippy d refers to a series of surrealists videos Popular
and You, which features an army of human headed toilets
fighting a war against another army of camera headed men.
(09:08):
This sounds like a fun, wacky thing that they must
enjoy together. But look, my point is, would you be happy?
You would love it? I'm right, m oh my god,
kids got me a twenty thousand dollars necklace, and you
would love it that they spent that kind of money.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Not really, Eric, Now, no, no, I'm going to get
twenty thousand dollars for my kid like I should. We
should be gifting them.
Speaker 2 (09:33):
Twenty We get them twenty thousand dollars. Our lives are
gifting them everything that there. There's thousands and thousands of
dollars we spend with them on a daily basis. Guys,
So teach these kids something about earning money and with
a value of money.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
And like Eric, when you are Northwest and your parents
are twenty thousands, probably two ballionaires, exactly, let them be
to them. Twenty thousand is no what twenty thousand means
to us. Don't be a hater, and I hate it
is what it is. I mean, I wish they will
just go downtown LA and feed some some poor families
(10:06):
with those twenty thousand, But that's not what they do.
Although I shouldn't say that because I'm sure they do
a lot of charitable a lot of charitable. Yes, So listen, let.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
Them be north I have no problem with very rich
people spending the money the way they want to spend it.
There's some problem.
Speaker 1 (10:19):
So, guys, this is a true story. So not Eric
Dylan Gabriet Winter. He has been asking for a gold
necklace because.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
And he's obsessed with baseball right now. He doesn't play
baseball all, by the way, but he thinks he is.
He played. He's obsessed with the baseball playoffs and now
the World Series, like I mean, lives for it.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
And the cutest thing is that every time they go
to bad, he gets up and he grabs his bat
and he's batting at the same time that the TV
person is bad and ask.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
Him if he wants to play, and he's like, he's
obsessed with their necklaces too, because all these baseball players
have these big gold changes. Yeah, and he's like, how
much you think that one costs? Can I get a
necklace like that? What do you think done?
Speaker 1 (10:54):
You're twelve anyway, twelve or so, Dylan has been asking
for a old necklace. Of course, Mommy here, I'm not
going to get him a fake gold play it. I'm
going to get him a gold necklace. So I said, Eric,
you know what, I'm just gonna go.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
She's always word is going to turn their neck green,
and they do.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
So I'm like, we don't do it like fake jewelry.
Like it kills me because I think it gets green
and tarnishes and it's like you get bacteria. I hate it. Anyways,
So I go to this place that I love in
Beverly Hills that they have jewry.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
It's a jury store actually for a decent price. It's
not like yes over.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
So I'm there and I'm looking for something, and I'll
tell the lady. I said, listen, I'm looking for my son.
He's six years old and he wants a gold necklace
and I want something that is reasonable and like like thin,
you know. And she's like, how old is he? He's six?
And she's like, wow, okay, that you're a really really
(11:49):
good mom. So let's go over here. And she said,
which is.
Speaker 2 (11:51):
Crazy, but this, and listen, I was against it big
time because he has a friend that has like a
gold rope. I think that one is like I used
to have as a kid, probably play and you know.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
Anyways, we're gonna give it to him today.
Speaker 2 (12:02):
We're gonna get my little necklace for his birthday today
together for birthday before. Mom.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
He's so cute. I paid for it, you only have.
I already told our business manager to make sure. And
then Eric just getting Eric's I don't know why I
did didn't do that, and then Eric goes like how
much was it? I'm going don't worry about it, and
the lady keeps saying you can go a little thinner.
You know, he's only six, and I go, what if
he doesn't like And I'm going, oh my god, I
will worry because it's beautiful.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
So no, no, we're gonna love It's it's a crazy gift.
This actually goes hand in hand with us saying we
shouldn't talk about anybody's gifts. Crazy gift for a six
year old. I was fully against it, but we actually
know it's very it's actually very easily priced. But we
this kid doesn't He loves toys and stuff, but he
just this will mean so much more to him to
(12:47):
have these little neck he's wearing like a fake plastic
necklace around right now. I know, so for a Halloween costume.
So he just really wants this. So it's I guess
we do, you know, treat them occasionally for something?
Speaker 1 (12:57):
Yes, we do.
Speaker 2 (13:07):
Have you heard about it? I just saw this the
other day. Funny enough about this engaged couple who have
they have never kissed, saying they're saving the moment for
their wedding day. Now, obviously we've heard about people not
having sex before they get married, but have you ever
heard of something not kissing? No, that's wild good for them,
(13:29):
I guess in some way that clearly means that I
wonder if either of them have ever kissed anybody else
at some point, you know, just in a dating experience
before this this engagement. That's pretty that's a strong, strong commitment.
But I have to I mean, like, in my opinion,
for me, you gotta know a little bit what you're
(13:52):
getting into. No, you got to know if the person's
a good kiss if someone's a bad kisser. To me,
that's a major turn off. Like kissing is a big
thing for me.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
Let me ask you something. I mean, it's truly you're
gonna be almost fifty years old, But do you think
you could have married a woman that wanted to excuse
a cause celibacy, said I'm not gonna have sex until marriage.
Would you marry? Would you have married her?
Speaker 2 (14:17):
If I was super super I mean, if I was
gonna get married, I'd have been very in love with
a person.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
Maybe yeah, But what if marriage was like she's like,
I don't want to do it until i'm married, and
I don't want to marry like in four or five years.
Speaker 2 (14:28):
Boo. It would be tough. May really, I don't know.
I would have to be would you be cheating left
and right. No, that's terrible. I have to be very
very much in love. But a kiss, I'd have to
at least have a kiss.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
What if jesuys I don't care say that, I'd.
Speaker 2 (14:45):
Be probably out, Not probably, I'd be out. Be a
deal breaker for sure, even though not having sex before marriage,
I'd be a little bit like, woo, why you kind
of want to know what you're getting into. But if
I was in love, love love with the person, and
there was a lot of potential obviously for us to
have great physical connection and all that that, I probably
would be able to manage that. But you got to
be able to have a kiss of some sort. I
mean if they haven't even kissed. There's never been any
(15:06):
four plan of any kind, like nothing, because there's plenty
of people that will do everything but have sex.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
I'm watching, at least I'm watching the new season of
Love is Blind. You know that I'm a big fan
of the show, And there was a couple. Now they
picked the six or seven couples that actually make it
to the big beautiful vacation in Mexico. They're there for
a week and then they go to meet their parents,
and then after that is when they actually get married,
(15:34):
if they're going to get married anyways. So there's this
couple that she was talking about before the show. She's
been not actively, not sexually active for a while because
she made a conscious decision to be like, you know,
at this stage of my life as a woman, I
don't want to continue giving myself to people that are
(15:55):
not worthy, you know, deserving of me, because it's a
soul connection. You know, she's very Christian. The guy that
she picked is also they're actually a lovely Couplelympig fans.
He's also very very Christian, And she was saying, I don't,
I don't. I just don't want to do it anymore,
you know, unless it's somebody that I know. But I
get that, I know, so I was. But so you
(16:17):
believe you believe that when you actually have intercourse with somebody, right,
it's not only a physical act of skin to skin
and just your organic Do you think it's a spiritual connection?
Speaker 2 (16:30):
I fully do. You don't. I think it can be.
Sex can be two different things, right, it can be
I don't. I don't mean transactional in the sense of cost,
but sex can just be transactional in the sense of pleasure. Right,
someone can just be like I need to have sex
and it and that's it. It feels good. But then there's
also a much more deeper rooted connection for sure that
I think two people can experience beyond the physical place.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
So why do people just do it for for leisure?
Speaker 2 (16:56):
It can be transactional, or it can be.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
I know, no, but it's not about transactional or or spiritual.
She believes that it doesn't matter if a is a
one night standing. It doesn't matter if it's fast or
slow with a person you love or not love. She
believes that the act of having sex, there is a
little piece of you energetically that always stays with other
(17:18):
person and vice versa. So if that's the case, it's.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
A little bit I think that is a stronger I
could be wrong, stronger feeling for a woman. Okay, I
mean you're letting you know what I mean. It's a
it's a much different it's a bit more of a
different situation, right, So I could I totally see how
a woman can feel I'm giving a piece of myself
with any partner I sleep with. I fully understand that
(17:42):
in comprehend and I fully respect it, by the way,
but I think in the school.
Speaker 1 (17:47):
So you think of a man, they don't care.
Speaker 2 (17:49):
Not ever, not all men. Some men take it very
personal and feel very much that it's you're giving a
part of yourself, your spirit, a spiritual connection. You know
that you're you're you're giving something to say somebody that
you may never get back right if you break up,
and that that piece is gone. There are plenty of men,
I'm sure that feel that way. I just think it's
less for men than women. But I do think there
(18:10):
is a true spiritual connection with a partner, when you're
deeply connected with someone, and that's sort of what will
continue to build that relationship and make it stronger.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
It's interesting because I think girls nowadays it's like we
have become men, you know, and there's all these young girls,
because there's these young girls that have absolutely no respect
for sex or their bodies and they just think it's
fun and they love going. I know, you're right, you're right,
but I'm like now because of the podcast world, you know,
I listened to a lot of podcasts of girls from
(18:42):
all ages, and a lot of them it's such a nonchalant,
it's so casual, for them to to talk about about
sexual encounters. And I and I slept with this, and
after last night, I kept thinking about it. And maybe
it's because now I have a daughtery, right, and I
keept thinking about it, going, yeah, it is absolutely true.
They only knew if women, if these young girls only
(19:05):
knew that every time you allow something to go inside
your body, they take something away from it. I don't
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (19:12):
There's a different way of perceiving the sexual encounter. But
at the end of the day, I think what you're
there's twofold, right, There's always been women like that, but
you're hearing about it more because of podcast, social media,
et cetera. Right, things are news and information is much
more accessible. Number one. But number two, you have a rise,
you know of a female movement, you know over these
past decades, right, and women are taking more control over
(19:34):
their rights, deservedly, so.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
Rtect about it.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
But a woman has a right to pick which what
it means to them, and at the end of the day,
whatever that feels to that purse, to that woman, it's
her choice. And because I've always said this, women rule
the world in every sense of the you know, the
word as far as I'm concerned. You know, if a
female there is no man that can just walk into
a bar and be like, I'm going to sleep with
somebody to night, Like that man is at the mercy no,
(20:02):
but he's at the mercy of the woman saying okay.
But there is any woman at that bar could walk
in and be like, I'm getting laid to night, and
you know what, one hundred percent she will because if
a woman wants to get laid, she's going to get laid.
If a dude wants to get laid, no guarantees percent. Yeah, women,
(20:23):
as soon as women realize that, like they have the
powers in their hands in a relationship, we realize it. No,
it's happening more and more, but like it wasn't always
the case because they didn't have that position in society.
And that's what is happening.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
In parts of the world. There's all the countries that
women will never have the luxury or the ability, or
the will or the shind to to have that kind
of mentality. But that's why I will never It's interesting,
that's why I would never be able to forgive or
move past an infidelity because now I see it as
(20:58):
you have put your thing and energetically disrespected me because
you're going to go to that and then come to
me and then come into my body.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
It would be it would be the exact same thing
for a man. Who think about how bad it would
be for a man, for a woman that cheated on
a man. Not only did that person put themselves inside
your wife and you have to live with forever knowing
your wife was screwing that person. It's the same thing.
It goes both ways. That's why you can see how
people struggle so much with overcoming it.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
That's one of the things that when the whole Tiger
Woods is even Tiger Woods.
Speaker 2 (21:35):
I mean, that was an insane amount of ways.
Speaker 1 (21:37):
I know. But to me, the most painful thing for
me feeling for the wife was like, it's not only
it was not only one, it was so many of
them without protection. How can you do that and go
back home and be with your wife and pretend that
nothing is going on the amount of disrespect to her
(21:58):
body and to her life, because when you know you're
bringing back all kinds of probably diseases and like like
STDs guaranty.
Speaker 2 (22:09):
Why I feel like you're always attacking? Why are you
attacking men. I'm man, women do exactly the same thing
you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (22:17):
No, No, it's not the same.
Speaker 2 (22:18):
Are you talking about? It's not the same.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
You can't keep being not as much? How do you
know that statistically? I'm sure it's a textbook. I'm pretty
sure this. God forgive me.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
I would love to know the status men cheating that
way women and men cheating. How big the disparity really is?
Speaker 1 (22:36):
List of the research I fol that right now.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
I think you're you're not going to be You're gonna
be surprised.
Speaker 1 (22:42):
Maybe maybe I'll be surprised.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
But you're always, uh, you're always very one sided in
this topic. Maybe you know that, you're always very okay.
Men are more likely to cheat the women, but the
gender gap varies by age. Twenty percent of men and
thirteen percent of women reportedly have sex with someone other
than their partner. So it's not that, but it's it's
only seven percent difference.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
But that's a big percentage really, and that's on an
age range.
Speaker 2 (23:10):
That's not like I still think National Survey of sexual Okay,
let's say fifteen percent of men have had an overlapping
relationship in a previous year, but only nine percent of women. Okay,
so that's a little bit more in that way. You know,
it's it's it's more men, for sure. But I'm just
saying to you, stop acting like women are all saints.
Speaker 1 (23:30):
I'm not saying that. I don't plenty of women.
Speaker 2 (23:34):
That cheat and go out there and their marriages over
over stuff. I know. All right, let's shift to another topic.
This one's actually it's a horrible, horrible topic. But I'm
curious how you felt about the way TMZ handled the
Liam Paigne situation, which was so shocking and tragic. I
(23:55):
feel so bad for his family and you know, everybody
that's always supported him him and he seemed like such
a good guy, just dealing with a lot of issues. Yeah, really, really,
it really hit I don't know why they hit me.
Saw when I read it, I was like, I was
very much in shock, and it felt just felt so
bad and seeing his dad at the scene and looking
(24:16):
at over the balcony all this stuff, like the family
had to go.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
I haven't seen that.
Speaker 2 (24:19):
Oh my god, his dad went to Argentina and his
dad was looking off the balcony that he fell off
of and at the site where he let I mean
just awful to have to go through that, But what
do you think about teams? He releasing the images of
so much stuff so quickly. It didn't surprise me because
that's what these do, these trades do. Yeah, but you
(24:43):
probably think it's wrong, right, it was going to come
out anyway. Yeah, it's going to come out. But it
just feels like obviously people just making money off of it.
You know.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
Of course it's super sad and money rules the world
and they don't care. You know who said? Whoever took
the picture and decided to go to the raise and
and that's even worse because they got it from somebody.
So the person that should be accountable is that person
that said, you know what, let me just I'm assuming
an employee.
Speaker 2 (25:09):
You know, there's gonna be problems. There's gonna be lawsuits
because it happened with Kobe Bryant. I don't know if
you remember, but there was a massive lawsuit family won
against the Sheriff's department. I believe it was because they
released photos of the of the crash and it was awful.
So there could be massive lawsuits. But we'll probably get
(25:30):
sued because they got the rights from somebody else.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
But Yeah.
Speaker 2 (25:35):
Anyways, well, thoughts and prayers go out to his family.
We covered a lot. I know I'm gonna go to
work film some rookie and you're gonna go get a
facial I'm gonna go to facial spot, which is gonna
be really interesting.
Speaker 1 (25:49):
Then I'm gonna go do my grades and then I
have to finish packing and then oh if I go, guys,
wish me a long. I'm going to do a movie
called Spicy Will with Chris gear And and Harvey Gijen
Harvey Harvey, Harvey Gjen and very excited Chris Hoole, Mexican director.
This is an American comedy. It's a lot of fun
(26:11):
and you'll be seeing things I'm going to be posting
on Instagram and stuff like that. So you guys are
part of the journey. Thank you so much. Love you,
love you, love you.
Speaker 2 (26:20):
Thanks for listening. Don't forget to write us a review
and tell us what you think.
Speaker 1 (26:23):
If you want to follow us on Instagram, check us
out at e said ajb or was at email Eric
and Ross at iHeartRadio dot com. He said, AJAB is
part of iHeartRadio's Mike would do that podcast network.
Speaker 2 (26:35):
See you next time ye