All Episodes

August 4, 2024 52 mins

In this weekly series, we share highlight clips from the past week of some of the podcasts on The Nashville Podcast Network- Take This Personally with Morgan Huelsman (NEW!!), In The Vet's Office with Dr. Josie (NEW!!), The BobbyCast, 4 Things with Amy Brown, Sore Losers Movie Mike's Movie Podcast and Get Real with Caroline Hobby.  You can listen to new episodes weekly wherever you get your podcasts. 

You can find them on Instagram:

-The Bobbycast- @BobbyCast

-Take This Personally- @TakeThisPersonally

-In The Vet's Office- @DrJosieVet

-4 Things- @RadioAmy

-Sore Losers- @SoreLosersPodcast

-Movie Mikes Movie Podcast- @MikeDeestro

-Get Real: @GetRealCarolineHobby

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
We're back with another Sunday sampler. I said down with
Cooper Allen got massive on TikTok. Really cool artist, not
a kid, but like a young dude. We talked about
his career. Pretty cool. Let's do this. So Morgan has
a brand new podcast. We're going to start the sampler
with her podcast. Here's a clip from the first episode
of Take This Personally with Morgan Hilsman.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
I want to bring on Amanda White. She's a therapist
and the founder of Therapy for Women. You know, she
was super frustrated and the options out there for modern
approaches to therapy, so she created Therapy for Women to
help provide people with authentic and compassionate therapists who provide
people with real life tools.

Speaker 1 (01:04):
Personal with the mogulsmen.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
I know, something that you're familiar with is addictive behaviors.
How are we supposed to distinguish between the two?

Speaker 3 (01:17):
Yeah, I think the best way to understand an addictive
pattern is it does serve a purpose in our life.
And addiction can get this bad reputation as something that's
you know, immoral or something that someone is you know,
doing to harm themselves or others. But it's important to
remember that someone wouldn't have started doing it if it

(01:37):
wasn't helping control pain in some way, if it wasn't
giving them a sense of control over their emotions or
their life, or giving them an escape. So it's a
myth that there's an addictive personality.

Speaker 4 (01:51):
The truth is addiction is complicated.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
It is a variety of different factors, and some of
us are more genetically disposed to it. And also if
you've been through trauma, depending on how you're raised, if
you grew up around you know, certain substances that can
definitely make it more likely that you'll turn to that
substance or develop an addictive behavior.

Speaker 4 (02:14):
But it's complicated, so it's hard to know.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
I don't think there's a woman I've met in my
life that doesn't deal with some kind of body image issues.
Whatever that looks like, however that came to be, everybody
deals with it in a different way. What are some
steps that you suggest for any of us who feel
that body image is a struggle to just kind of
start to get out of that constant negativity space.

Speaker 4 (02:40):
Yeah, and I completely agree with you.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
I think it's something that women especially struggle with because
we are objectified.

Speaker 4 (02:48):
Much more in the media.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
So what happens often is we start to objectify ourselves.
So self objectification is when you kind of pick apart
your body. You imagine like maybe you're getting dressed right,
and you imagine what someone is thinking about how you look,
or you know you're sumped over in a chair, and
you like correct yourself because you don't want anyone to

(03:13):
see a certain angle of you that is objectifying yourself.
So one thing that we can do kind of to
snap out of that is to stop looking at ourselves
as just body parts and try to look at ourselves
as a whole.

Speaker 4 (03:27):
Holistic being.

Speaker 3 (03:29):
And when you notice yourself, maybe like in the mirror,
body checking or checking out different angles, trying to come
back to wearing things that make you feel comfortable, wearing
things that make you feel like you, that make you
feel beautiful.

Speaker 4 (03:43):
I mean, a big thing I say.

Speaker 3 (03:45):
To people often is if you had the body you loved,
if you were totally confident in how you felt, how
would your life be different?

Speaker 4 (03:54):
What would you wear, what would you do, what would
you say?

Speaker 3 (03:58):
And then try to practice that even if you're in
a body that you don't feel that way, and yet.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
There's a connection as women too, that we've been taught
not only have we been objectified so much, but also.

Speaker 4 (04:10):
We've been told not to love ourselves.

Speaker 2 (04:12):
We've been told, you know, if we take too many
pictures of ourselves, or if we do things that make
us feel good, we are narcissistic, or we are too
much into ourselves. And I do feel like as we
keep having these conversations and women keep talking about, oh,
we're all feeling this way, there's this huge empowerment happening
of like, no, we deserve to feel that way about ourselves.

Speaker 4 (04:33):
Are you seeing that kind of happen right now?

Speaker 1 (04:36):
I am?

Speaker 5 (04:36):
I am.

Speaker 3 (04:37):
I think it's a good change, and I think it's
I'm excited to see more women kind of taking back
the idea too, that like your hobbies matter, like what
you like matters, even if other people think it's dumb
or they're not interested in it.

Speaker 4 (04:50):
It's okay to like what you like.

Speaker 3 (04:52):
It's okay to be basic, it's okay to enjoy things
that maybe other people don't. And it makes me so
sad when and people are struggling with their mental health,
people struggle to find things they care about these days,
and love and what we don't need is a bunch
of people telling women what is okay for them to
care about or be interested in.

Speaker 2 (05:12):
Speaking of taking things less personally, I know you can
touch on this a lot. I want to know the
world of social media and just in person too. But
how can we try to not take things so personally?

Speaker 3 (05:26):
I mean, I will say it's very difficult, and I
don't think anyone can do it one hundred percent perfectly.

Speaker 4 (05:33):
My best tip for it.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
What I do and what I teach clients to do,
is when someone gives you a piece of feedback or
says something that's particularly difficult for you, I would write
down on a piece of paper what the person said,
and then on the other side of the piece of paper,
write down what is your interpretation of what they said?
Because words are painful, for sure, and a lot of

(05:57):
times what keeps us up at I what really stings
is the interpretation of what that means.

Speaker 4 (06:06):
That's such a good tip and really hard to do too.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
It's really hard to take it out of your head
and your emotions and just leave it as what was said.

Speaker 1 (06:21):
When did you start to play music or when did
you start caring about music other than just listening to it.
Start playing guitar in sixth grade? Why did someone give
you one? Or were you like I need one of those?

Speaker 5 (06:33):
I was playing the trumpet. That was like my first
instrument because I was like heavy into disco. You know
Casey in the Sunshine band Abbatius, I mean dead ass.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
Okay, who then was around you to expose you to
that in sixth grade?

Speaker 5 (06:48):
So I think I saw Mama Mia when I was
in like third grade.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
Okay, that's enough of a thing.

Speaker 5 (06:54):
Yeah, yeah, I got hooked on this, yeah yeah, and
then got into more of the disco scene. Then my
brothers were like, dude, you got you got to stop
playing the trumpet. It's just there's nothing cool about it.

Speaker 1 (07:04):
Did you learn to read music to the point where
it still as beneficial to you, not to where it's
still beneficial. I could read a little bit, because you
have to do I guess play the trumpet. But then
when I started playing guitar, it was all I learned
my ear, you know, from my teacher. He just wanted
to said what songs do you want to play? And
I gave him a list of whatever.

Speaker 5 (07:22):
He told those songs I'm a miya of course, have
you heard AB's greatest hits.

Speaker 1 (07:26):
What did you want to play then when you picked
up the guitar?

Speaker 6 (07:28):
Why?

Speaker 1 (07:28):
Because you're moving? You were at trumpet because something inspired you.
So what then was the new musical inspiration that made
you pivot instruments?

Speaker 5 (07:36):
We got Guitar Hero on the PlayStation two, Guitar Hero too,
and it was just like it opened me up to
a whole world of like frickin rock music.

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Good for you for learning the guitar as you played
Guitar Hero. I have so many friends that excelled at
Guitar Hero, and if they would have just put half
the time into learning the guitar that they learned playing
the hardest level of Guitar Hero, they would be a
freaking good guitar player. But instead they mastered a video
game that now they don't even play anymore.

Speaker 5 (08:05):
Dude, I will I will take this to my grave.
Playing through the fire and Flames on expert on Guitar
Hero is harder than anything on the electric guitar you
can play.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
My wife is younger than I am.

Speaker 5 (08:17):
How old are you twenty eight?

Speaker 1 (08:18):
Yeah, my wife is thirty one, and so she will
sing songs that are from like sixties and seventies classic
rock that I knew because I listened to the oldies
station growing up. Or she'll sing like some of the
nineties alternative stuff and I'm like, you don't know this
song and she's like no, no guitar hero yeah, or
rock band. She would play guitar and sing and like
her dad will play the drums. Like that was such

(08:40):
an introduction of music. It's funny, that's what really got
you into rock music. My favorite was a tambourine and
rock band.

Speaker 5 (08:45):
If you were the singer, you also got to play
the tambourine, and so you're just like wailing on this mic?

Speaker 1 (08:49):
Was it on those like on did you need to
hit it with the same rip that was the tampa?

Speaker 5 (08:53):
Yeah? Yeah, And there were like different levels of tambourine
expertise and like cow bells like Mississippi Queen also had
the hit the mic it was. It's impressive stuff.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
When you go and say I want a guitar, Who'd
you tell that to?

Speaker 5 (09:05):
My dad? And I was like sixth grade when I
told him my first guitar I got for Christmas that year.
It was the Les Paul Junior.

Speaker 1 (09:14):
You stop playing trumpet at that time? Did you just
go one to the other.

Speaker 5 (09:17):
I think, yeah, I think I did stop. I remember
the day I quit band. I think it was in
sixth grade. You know, big, big drama at the middle school.
But it was time.

Speaker 1 (09:27):
Yeah, I heard. I heard the stories when you quit band.
I know they call it the day the music died
in North Carolina.

Speaker 5 (09:32):
Absolutely green sleeves will never be the same.

Speaker 1 (09:37):
When do you realize that maybe you want to do
music like as as, like bigger than just being a hobby.

Speaker 5 (09:45):
I mean, I started my band in eighth grade, and
so we were called below the line.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
That's actually kind of cool for an eighth grade band,
not to.

Speaker 5 (09:53):
Be confused with blowing the line. It was. There was
a little bit of controversy there.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
I never heard of that band.

Speaker 5 (09:58):
Well, just I think the the coke.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
Reference, right, Yeah, I don't know coke references.

Speaker 5 (10:03):
So well neither do I just I thought i'd sound
cool for a second.

Speaker 1 (10:07):
Oh yeah, I am not so. I don't know any
thing about cocaine. However, I think that's a pretty cool
name for a group of eighth graders. I know, usually
it's like Willie's Gibblett and you're like, yeah, that name sucked. Yeah,
that's a pretty good one.

Speaker 5 (10:20):
How bad? So it was below the Mason Dixon line
because you know, we're kind of course and we played dude,
you know, all all kinds of stuff. We played a
little bit of country, but it was mostly like it
was hooty. It was fire for fighting, you know, Tom Petty,
Like we took a little while to get to the
full country band.

Speaker 1 (10:37):
Were you the singer as well?

Speaker 5 (10:38):
I was singer and I played guitar until we hired
another guitar player. I was lead guitar for way too long.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
When did you realize you could sing? And did you
start singing before you actually could sing?

Speaker 5 (10:53):
I did, like choir and chorus and all that stuff.
And I mean, you can look back at some eighth
grade videos and it is it's terrible. But I could
at least like hold some sort of tune. You could
tell there was something there a little bit.

Speaker 1 (11:07):
Did you go through the whole voice puberty change?

Speaker 7 (11:09):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (11:09):
Of course it was it obvious while it was happening,
as you're if you're a singer, Yeah, was there a
stage where you're like change?

Speaker 5 (11:16):
Yeah, it was kind of eighth grade was prime, prime
voice cracks, and then you go through the phase of like,
I want to sound like hooting the blowfish, and so
I'm not really going to enunciate the words, and it's
really cool when he does it. It's not very cool
when I do it. We went through a lot of phases.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
And how did you find three or four other guys
in your town that wanted to play the other instruments?

Speaker 5 (11:36):
One guy played drums in the band like you know,
marching band, not marching band, but school band. And the
other played the bass and the keyboard, so he would
switch off between bass and keys, and we just all
went to the same school.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
Who was the leader of the band? It got the
group together? Was it you?

Speaker 5 (11:53):
We practiced in my house?

Speaker 1 (11:54):
Were you the below the line leader? Like, Hey, what
want to sort of band? Let's get together and do this?

Speaker 5 (11:58):
Yeah, I mean sort of. It was all. Everybody was
pretty stoked about it. But I mean somebody probably, I
probably care.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Somebody's got to string the band, somebody's got to have
the idea of let's start a band.

Speaker 5 (12:08):
Yeah. I don't want to take too much credit, but yes,
it was. Is there credit to take?

Speaker 1 (12:11):
I mean, blow the line not really a thing anymore, right,
unless you guys get back together. I will go to
that show reunion.

Speaker 5 (12:15):
We had some damn good years. Let me tell you
for a moment, he didn't fight for fighting. We didn't
even play that one. We played the riddle, which is
a kind of a deep cut hit.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
You didn't do Superman. No whatever that song was.

Speaker 5 (12:29):
No, I can't. I couldn't sing that high. Then my
falsetto was not developed.

Speaker 1 (12:59):
Little for you.

Speaker 8 (13:02):
Life.

Speaker 9 (13:02):
Oh it's pretty, but hey, it's pretty beautiful.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
That's a little more city you're kicking it with full
with Amy Brown.

Speaker 7 (13:17):
Hey it's Amy Brown from Four Things with Amy Brown.

Speaker 10 (13:19):
And here's what.

Speaker 7 (13:20):
We talked about this week on my podcast. We put
up a question box last weekend and people sent in
questions and I'm going to hand you the reins as
part of your internship.

Speaker 11 (13:32):
Okay, Well, to start things off, I wanted to start
with a list I came up with for those of
you wondering what it would ever be like to live
with Amy. Some things about Amy and living with her
is that she only drinks water from a measuring cup.
She uses the word bandwidth all the time. If she
doesn't want to do something, it's because she didn't have
the bandwidth for it. If she just want to cook.

(13:53):
It's a bandwidth issue, not anything else. And the list
goes on and on. None, I like to my band Yeah.

Speaker 12 (14:00):
And her bandwidth is not large.

Speaker 11 (14:04):
No, it is big because you do so many things.
It's funny when it comes to the little things and
it's like cooking or so many little things, and it's
the word bandwidth just comes out of her mouth every
time she slaps her face before bed every single night
when she's doing her skincare routine, like slaps her face.

Speaker 10 (14:23):
Make sure it's all on there.

Speaker 7 (14:25):
Good.

Speaker 12 (14:25):
Yeah, but you can just rub it in.

Speaker 10 (14:27):
I rub it then slap.

Speaker 11 (14:29):
She puts Greek yogurt on everything leftover spaghetti, Greek yogurt,
toast with jelly, We're adding Greek yogurt. Eg salad, We're
gonna add grek yogurt. She likes to do her brain
exercises in the kitchen with little three pound pink dumbbells
alongside her Tracy Anderson armworkouts on YouTube that are like
twenty years old.

Speaker 7 (14:49):
It's one video she made it for Gwyneth Paltrow when
Gwyneth was training to be on Iron Man.

Speaker 12 (14:54):
No and your arms are toned.

Speaker 11 (14:58):
She does meditations on YouTube and plays books while she's
sleeping to absorb the information subconsciously, is how she describes it.

Speaker 12 (15:06):
Are you sharing you about the move?

Speaker 10 (15:08):
Yeah, we can.

Speaker 11 (15:08):
It was when mom was here, when Christy was here,
and we walked in from the Zach Brian concert and
you were sleeping in the kitchen and you had a
book or something playing. It was like two in the morning,
and you said you were absorbing the information subconsciously.

Speaker 12 (15:22):
So that was funny.

Speaker 11 (15:24):
You toss the what does this make possible? Phrase around
all over the house. If anything goes wrong, she just says,
what does this make possible?

Speaker 12 (15:33):
While I said that that's how I survive. Yeah.

Speaker 11 (15:35):
While I said that in a way that sounded like
it was annoying, it actually has helped me a lot
change my mindset about certain things because there's a lot
of truth to that phrase.

Speaker 10 (15:43):
And I did learn from you though and Stashira.

Speaker 7 (15:46):
With certain things, I don't need to say it off
the bat, Like if it's with me and my own
stuff that I'm going on, I can say it to
myself right off the bat, but it's not helpful for
other people to hear that right away.

Speaker 10 (15:57):
I need to sit with them.

Speaker 7 (15:58):
In it and then later, what is this made possible?

Speaker 12 (16:03):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (16:04):
Oh, enters a room in the house, and usually the
first thing that comes out of her mouth is do
you smell that?

Speaker 12 (16:10):
Then usually it's cat peet.

Speaker 11 (16:11):
Then the whole day is derailed cleaning the rug where
the cat pee potentially was that.

Speaker 12 (16:16):
I can't even.

Speaker 10 (16:16):
Smell, you know, I always find it.

Speaker 11 (16:19):
She always finds it the entire day, some hours out
of time, and I might have a domino effect that
impacts the day a little. I have three more should
I make dinner? I'll say that sometimes, like, oh, we
should make dinner, and she's like, oh, I was just
thinking we could order food tonight, And usually it ends
up being a Caesar salad.

Speaker 12 (16:41):
Well, we went through a phase.

Speaker 11 (16:41):
We got that caesar salad from Urban Market and the
Burgers salmon Burger.

Speaker 12 (16:46):
It's so the smash Burger beef.

Speaker 13 (16:49):
Yes, Slash Burger's really good.

Speaker 7 (16:51):
And I love Chipotle takeout, Yes, or Chewi's.

Speaker 12 (16:55):
Yeah, we're getting Mexican tonight.

Speaker 7 (16:57):
Zeks that rice and salmon and oh yeah that was
really good.

Speaker 14 (17:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (17:01):
No, I mean it's a bandwidth thing.

Speaker 12 (17:03):
Bandwidth.

Speaker 11 (17:04):
Yeah, almond milk and cold brew must be in the
fridge at all times, and if there's not ice for
the almond milk and cold brew, then that's an issue.
But that's always the ice an ice maker. So we've
been having a hard time with ice.

Speaker 7 (17:17):
We've been buying ice and then putting it in the
freezer and it's fine.

Speaker 12 (17:21):
No, I just yeah, it's not an issue.

Speaker 11 (17:23):
I'm just saying that's something I noticed about you.

Speaker 7 (17:25):
Yeah, it's like an allman.

Speaker 12 (17:26):
Yeah, which ice is really important to me too.

Speaker 11 (17:29):
And the last one is wearing the same outfit for
a month or two months at a time, which I
believe just takes a decision off your plate and that's
why you do it. But you've been wearing the same
blue workout set for two months now.

Speaker 12 (17:42):
And I'm leaving tomorrow, but I'll probably see you in
it bear the fall. So but it's it's one of
your colors right on your color pellet, the blue.

Speaker 10 (17:51):
It's Yeah.

Speaker 7 (17:52):
From my it looks really really good when I had.

Speaker 10 (17:55):
My colors done.

Speaker 7 (17:56):
I'm a cool summer and yeah, this part of my
cool summer palette.

Speaker 11 (18:02):
Yeah, and that is the sum of my list. If
you're ever wondering what it would be like to live
with Amy.

Speaker 13 (18:07):
Wow, I feel like I'd be really fun to live with.
That girl sounds fun and funny and put together and inspiring,
sounds like she has a good time.

Speaker 7 (18:18):
Oh yeah, it's a good tash, just like some clean
catfee and vacuum and mop and I'm specially didn't say
anything about cleaning counters.

Speaker 12 (18:25):
Oh well, I did put in here. I didn't even
say it. It was right now.

Speaker 11 (18:28):
You're kind of obsessed with your vacuum, like you clean
in your stressed and clean encounters. Yeah, but you recently
been vacuuming a lot. I don't even know if you
know that you're doing.

Speaker 10 (18:36):
That, but I know if I'm vacuuming.

Speaker 11 (18:39):
You walk in and you pick up the vacuum and
you start like vacuuming the kitchen rug and you're like,
everyone move.

Speaker 12 (18:46):
And I've just noticed it.

Speaker 11 (18:48):
And yes, you do it with the counters too, but
lately it's been your vacuum.

Speaker 12 (18:52):
And oh gets the house all loud and then you're like, okay,
I have to go, what do we need to do next?

Speaker 7 (19:00):
I can work, sometimes I can't. You guys got laundry finish?
I love laundry. I love laundry, but I sometimes I
can't finish my work like my computer work.

Speaker 12 (19:09):
Or relaxed while the house is clean.

Speaker 7 (19:10):
Yeah, y'all, Like if we want to just chill out
and relax and watch something, I understand I want everything
to feel clean, and maybe I need to chill out
on that.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
Yeah, you're listening to in the Ve's Office with doctor
Josie Horshak.

Speaker 10 (19:33):
Shannon, you want to lead us into our nextpert.

Speaker 6 (19:35):
Yeah, So this one we're going to do a little
differently this week because there's the three of us here,
So normally this is the point in the show where
we get some questions from some of our listeners and
we're gonna actually hand the controls over to you, Bobby,
and see if you have any questions.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
I have a couple because out of Boston Terrier when
I was a kid and as my first dog that
was mine like that I loved and it slept on
my chest every night.

Speaker 15 (19:56):
And.

Speaker 1 (19:58):
I remember it wasn't aggressive generally, but it was the
bossy was so a rat. It was just everywhere all
the time that every once in a while it would
bite something, and every great once in a while on
that side of every once in a while it was
a human. Wasn't trying to buy a human which just
bite random things, and sometimes it'd be a human. And

(20:18):
so what it happened was and like bit the mailman
or something like ninth bite of the day was a
human the mailman. So I love the dog and I
had bites on my chest because the dog would sleep
on my chest and it would have nightmares and wake
up and go bite me.

Speaker 6 (20:38):
What was his name, Bradley, Bradley, Bradley the Boston.

Speaker 1 (20:42):
Loved again, loved him. Just had a whole therapy session
about why I love dogs so much. It's because I
couldn't connect with humans, so I found a safety in dogs.
And Bradley would bite me. I have stop scars. But
he bit the mailman and the Mailmai. I was gonna
pres charges. Now my stepdad had to we don't want

(21:02):
to get sued. But he had a friend that he
worked with that had a bunch of dogs on his property,
big farm, so he took an in let Bradley live
over there. And now I wasn't I just didn't want
to see Bradley. Wouldn't let me go see Bradley because
ikn'd be sad. I told my wife the story, say
bid the ball wasn't terrier. I loved him so much.
My stepdad put him out and he went to a
farm with the guy that where She was like, you

(21:23):
never saw him. You never went to the farm and
saw him. No, no, this is too sad for me.
She goes, I don't think that the farm was real.
And I said, what this is like a year ago? No,
I said, what do you mean the farm's not real?
I started to get mad at her. She goes, she,
I think because it bit somebody. Bradley's now was not alive.
After that, my mind's blown. I'm like, there's no way.

(21:45):
So I called Arkansas Keith, my step former stepdad. Oh no,
I get him on the phone through the speaker and
I go, hey, man, Bradley, I didn't lead him to it.
So what happened. He goes, Oh, it bit the melman.
I shot him.

Speaker 12 (21:57):
Ah, Bradley, Oh no, oh it.

Speaker 1 (22:02):
Now, and this is why you're in therapy in Arkansas. Oh,
he didn't pay money for a vet if an animal. Yeah,
it sucked. That sucks to have it happen, but that's
what you do in the country.

Speaker 6 (22:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
And I was like, well, he didn't go to some
guy's farm. He goes, you believed that, And my wife
is trying so hard not to laugh hysterically because she
knows I'm dealing with trauma of my dog just now
being told at forty my dog's dead from twenty five
years ago. And also how stupid I wasn't there really
was a farmer although animals went to.

Speaker 10 (22:32):
Play, right, we all believe that at some point, not
at some point.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
I don't two years ago. Yeah, yeah, and so I
was like what, but I remember he would just bite.
So my question after telling that story, because it made
me think about the biting part. Do you get bit randomly?
And what's the kind of dog that you know it
doesn't have to be an aggressive dog. Is there a
type of dog that kind of bites the most? Because
they're just nuts?

Speaker 6 (22:57):
I don't want to stereotype dogs, but there are some
When we see the breed coming in, we're like, oh,
we should be extra careful. I have a German Shepherd,
but German shepherd's up there, Rottwilers are up there.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
Is that because they're bigger so they're buying This is
always in my theory about big dogs. Yeah, we think
they buy it more because but when they do bite,
it lasts longer and it's more hard. Exactly.

Speaker 10 (23:17):
It's not that they bite more until comes in. I'm like,
you're a mosquito.

Speaker 1 (23:19):
That the ain't making the news if it bites somebody.

Speaker 6 (23:21):
Exactly, German shepherd is going to rip your face off.
So it's a little bit different.

Speaker 1 (23:24):
You think it's they don't buit it more, but when
they do bite, it's more of a situation because of
how severe it could be.

Speaker 6 (23:30):
Yeah, I'd say that's probably right for sure. And I
mean also they're bread to protect, so they kind of
have that like stereotype of being a little bit more aggressive,
which may or may not be true. So yeah, I
think they've just gotten labeled that.

Speaker 1 (23:41):
Way out of pit bulls. A great dog ever had
only if you listen to this, but you just have
too many surgeries. We're still getting there. But I had
him for thirteen years.

Speaker 10 (23:48):
We're gonna jump into him.

Speaker 1 (23:49):
He was Yeah, he was the best dog ever. And
people would like be scared for a second, Yeah, oh
you got a pit bull? Yeah, and then you're just
then it was over the biggest baby.

Speaker 16 (23:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (23:58):
Yeah, So do you get and what's the worst you've
been bitten?

Speaker 6 (24:01):
I've only ever been bit on the job twice. The
first time was by a camel in bet school.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
A camel, like an actual camel.

Speaker 6 (24:09):
Yeah, we were taking care of it and it reached
around and it bit my shoulder. And every bite I've
ever seen in my entire life, you guys, does not
compare to this camel bite.

Speaker 10 (24:16):
Do you have scars? It took a big old chunk
of skin out and it hurts.

Speaker 1 (24:19):
Funny, so bad.

Speaker 10 (24:20):
Is that normal for in vet school, that you're dealing
with camel?

Speaker 1 (24:23):
Yeah, they have camel.

Speaker 10 (24:24):
You you kind of deal with anything that comes along.
And this is the University of Cairo.

Speaker 6 (24:30):
No, this is at a highest state university, and they
have had a camel. Yeah, like farmers would have a
random camel, or like we took care of a lot
of deer like random things.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
Yeah, did you worry about with deer? Did you worry
about like lime disease? Because since you were around really
absolutely that would be scared because just living in the
country or now just being in the wood, you worry
about it, just as existing with a tick. But if
you're with deer, yeah, they are the host.

Speaker 6 (24:54):
They carry those ticks around and those are the ticks
that spread lime disease.

Speaker 1 (24:58):
So definitely top three. Bites number one a camel, Number one.

Speaker 12 (25:02):
A camel expecting that.

Speaker 6 (25:03):
I've only ever been bit one other time, and it
was a dog waking up from anesthesia. I'm in that
school again, so still a rookie. This dog's waking up.
He's got his breathing tube in and he looks at me,
like wakes up out of nowhere. I look at him,
and he goes and bites down on his tube.

Speaker 1 (25:19):
I did that, m colas, the same thing except tub.

Speaker 10 (25:24):
Oh man, this is why I love you.

Speaker 6 (25:27):
And so he spits out the one half and heals
the other, the other piece of tubes going down into
his strachia, and so I being.

Speaker 10 (25:35):
The dummy, I'm like, I'm gonna save his life, and I.

Speaker 6 (25:38):
Stick my whole hand in his mouth to grab the tube,
and he just goes and bit down on my entire.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Hand because he was probably scared.

Speaker 6 (25:46):
Yeah, so afraid, like waking up from anthesia, and it's
just their natural reaction.

Speaker 1 (25:50):
Yeah, we're gonna do it live.

Speaker 17 (25:53):
We are the one two three sore losers.

Speaker 8 (25:59):
What up ever? Everyudy, I am lunchbox. I know the
most about sports, so I'll gave you the sports facts,
my sports opinions, because I'm pretty much a sports genius, y'all.

Speaker 17 (26:08):
It's Sison. I'm from the North. I'm an alpha male.
I live on the North side of Nashville with Bayser,
my wife. We do have a farm. It's beautiful, a
lot of acreage, no animals, a lot of crops. Hopefully
soon corn pumpkins, rye. I believe maybe a little fescue
to be determined.

Speaker 14 (26:27):
Over to you, coach.

Speaker 8 (26:29):
And here's a clip from this week's episode of The
Sore Losers. Wednesday night, We're going Nashville, sc right with
his buddy, his best friend. We're meeting him at the game,
Gonna have a bro time and we park our car,
who pay twenty dollars to part or walking in the stadium,
he's holding my left hand with his right hand.

Speaker 14 (26:49):
Wait, it's just you and the kid? What did you
do with the other two?

Speaker 8 (26:51):
They stayed home?

Speaker 14 (26:52):
So it really was just baby box kid day week.

Speaker 8 (26:57):
Well, it was his buddy's birthday's present. His dad bought
him tickets and he got to invite one friend.

Speaker 17 (27:02):
Okay, because I just never think I got one on
one time with Pops. It was always me and the
bro and the cis Yeah, and.

Speaker 8 (27:08):
The other two were very sad when we were leaving
without them, like that's not fair.

Speaker 14 (27:12):
This is huge.

Speaker 17 (27:13):
Just remembered it Colorado Rocky's game. My dad took me
and left my brother and sister at home. I was
a kid that got picked. Wow, that's I just had
that feeling. That's how your kid felt.

Speaker 8 (27:23):
Yeah, And we had to sit down the four year
old and be like, well, look, Bud, you know baby
Box's friend. He got tickets for his birthday and they
invited baby Box.

Speaker 17 (27:32):
They the kids understanding this explanation, and we're like, doesn't even.

Speaker 14 (27:37):
Know what apple juice is.

Speaker 8 (27:39):
Now cut my banana, and my wife said, don't worry,
you're gonna get Hey, don't tell, don't tell your brother,
But you guys are gonna get a special treat.

Speaker 14 (27:47):
You guys are making back in deals alliances.

Speaker 8 (27:50):
You're gonna get a special treat.

Speaker 17 (27:51):
They're already learning about secrets now and keeping secrets unbelievable.

Speaker 8 (27:56):
When we leave, when they leave, you're gonna get a
special treaty. So we're walking to the game and I'm
gonna tell you what happened right after this.

Speaker 17 (28:10):
I mean, hell of a cheez, I hope. A homeless
guy came up and threw a shoe in the air.

Speaker 8 (28:16):
Like I said, he's holding my left hand with his
right hand and we're walking. I said, Bud inside joke.
Are you at all excited about kindergarten or what are
you feeling? He said, Dad, I'm a little bit excited.
I said, oh that's good. Well what other so are
you feeling? He goes, He goes, I'm a little nervous.

(28:38):
I said, why, Bud, what's going on? He said, Dad,
I'm kind of shy. So I'm a little nervous about
all my friends meeting friends. And he goes, but it's
okay because I have the you know, and he starts
naming the kids, ABC, D and E. He's like, they'll

(28:59):
be in my class. Yeah, son, I'm like, how do
I break this to you?

Speaker 5 (29:06):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (29:07):
Yeah, they might be in your class. But they might
be in your class. And I said, but then you
got to think of it. Every kid that's going to
be in your class, this is your time to shine,
I said, every single one of them. It's going to
be their first time at that school. Hell of a speech,
I said, Nobody.

Speaker 14 (29:22):
Tell them about Garrett tell them about Forest.

Speaker 8 (29:24):
Have never been has been to that school. I said,
just imagine when I walked into kindergarten, I didn't know anybody,
and I made all sorts of friends. And then my
mom and dad decided to move. At the end of kindergarten.

Speaker 14 (29:35):
Me and your mom walked into a bar together, never
knew each other. Look at us now, so.

Speaker 8 (29:38):
And so Granny and Grandpa decided we were going to
move at the end of kindergarten. And so going to
first grade, I had to start a whole new school again.
Granny and I went out first grade. I walked into
Summon Elementary and I walked into Miss Anderson's class. I
didn't know a soul, didn't know anybody.

Speaker 14 (29:54):
It was Miss Curry.

Speaker 8 (29:55):
That was kindergarten.

Speaker 14 (29:58):
Legs noted in first.

Speaker 8 (30:00):
Grade, I'm just there the two hotties in my class,
Amy and Candy. That's where I met aj. I mean,
it happens, man. I said, you're gonna be okay, and
it's okay that you're a little bit of shy. You'll
meet some kids. He goes, okay, But I'm just really
sad right now because my brothers couldn't come to the
soccer game.

Speaker 5 (30:21):
Okay, like.

Speaker 8 (30:23):
This supposed to be a good, happy moment. So we
meet up with his buddy. We go in the stadium
and we're all exciting. Let me tell you there are
plenty of good seats still available for that game.

Speaker 14 (30:33):
As Dad placed his bets.

Speaker 8 (30:34):
No, there's no bets because they are so bad.

Speaker 14 (30:36):
I thought, you bet like sometimes over one.

Speaker 8 (30:39):
Oh, sometimes I'm like all over three goals. But they've
been so bad you can't even you can't do that.

Speaker 14 (30:44):
What about muck Tar?

Speaker 8 (30:46):
Mooktar's there? We get our new coach. Let me tell
you it was his first game on the job. And
I did get an email from him before the game
and it's said here goes said, Hey man, sorry I
missed you last Friday at the welcome event at Gyodas Park.
It was great to meet you and some of your

(31:06):
Oh no, it was great to meet so many of
your fellow nashvillec fans and I felt nothing but welcome
since arriving in Nashville last week. As I mentioned to
the fans and attendance on Friday, our team will reflect
Nashville and you each night. You can expect a team
that is hard working and playing with relentless mentality for
ninety plus minutes.

Speaker 5 (31:24):
Guys cover.

Speaker 8 (31:25):
We are going to give you every ounce of effort
to represent our city, and we expect you to hold
us to that standard every match day. The future is
bright and we're ready to get started. I hope to
see you at our first match in the League's Cup
tournament on Wednesday, July thirty first at Giodas Park. Thanks
and see you soon. BJ Callahan, Nashville sc head coach,

(31:47):
look forward to taking into the coach individually emailed me.
Sounds like a cookie cutter, Y know.

Speaker 17 (31:54):
Also, I have an email I got from a Nashville
professional sports team. Can we foreshadow that and do it
a second?

Speaker 8 (32:00):
Yes, we can't. So we go to the game. I'm like, hey,
coach wants.

Speaker 5 (32:03):
To meet me.

Speaker 14 (32:03):
Does this story improve?

Speaker 8 (32:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 14 (32:06):
We go to the Gainst borderline.

Speaker 8 (32:08):
But no, we go to the game and national just
gets her.

Speaker 17 (32:11):
Ask boy, they they got even. I didn't mean to
say gay. The day got even worse for the kid.

Speaker 8 (32:18):
They lost two to nothing, They.

Speaker 14 (32:20):
Got shut out.

Speaker 1 (32:21):
Come on, dimner man.

Speaker 8 (32:25):
They are just so bad. I don't know how they
are so bad.

Speaker 14 (32:28):
So tell me this. Do they make the playoffs this year?

Speaker 8 (32:30):
Probably not. Wow, but this is a Leagu's Cup. It
doesn't even count the the regular season standings. But we're playing.
We were playing a team from Mexico that last year
we beat them like five to nothing, and this year
they wiped the floor with us. We didn't even we
barely had any shots on goal.

Speaker 14 (32:44):
So I take it we didn't win the cup.

Speaker 8 (32:46):
Well, I don't know. This is the last year when
we played Messi for the Cup championship, and since then
we have gone straight off a cliff, like we were
in the League's Cup championship in a shootout against Lionel
Messi and this year we can't even freaking sniff aa.
It is so bad to watch. The kids are depressed,
The kids are sad. I had to pump their spirits
up at halftime. We had to get Dippin' dots and

(33:07):
that brought the energy back to the kids.

Speaker 14 (33:09):
The future.

Speaker 8 (33:10):
Yes, because they were ready to give up. They were
ready to give in, and we didn't tell the other
boys we got ice cream because that was their special
treat at home, and so they weren't thinking baby Box
is getting ice cream at the game. We got smoked.
It was terrible. BJ Callahan you lied to me and
said you're gonna reflect me. No, I score goals, I
don't lose two nothing.

Speaker 14 (33:29):
Wait, what did you tell your kid though about the
coach emailing you?

Speaker 8 (33:32):
I told him, Hey, he wants to meet us. Should
we go down there?

Speaker 14 (33:35):
Get with your kids?

Speaker 8 (33:37):
And he goes, really data, right, Yeah, So we went
down there and he goes, Dada, which one's the coach.
He's on the other side, and goes, well, shouldn't we
go over there since he wanted to meet you. I'm like, Bud,
I don't know if he you know, I should go
meet him like during the game. Ah, And he goes,
but Dad, he said, you said he emailed you and
said he wanted to meet you at the game.

Speaker 7 (33:56):
Good.

Speaker 17 (33:56):
You gotta stop doing that crap because eventually he's gonna.

Speaker 8 (33:59):
Know, Well, he's only six, so it's pretty cool for
him to think the coach wanted to meet me.

Speaker 17 (34:03):
That's cool at that age, but seven to eight then
he's gonna say, yeah, Dad, prove it.

Speaker 14 (34:08):
Prove it, Dad, go over and talk to him.

Speaker 8 (34:11):
So it was a long night. The game didn't start
till eight. We left there at nine forty five. We
left with like ten minutes left in the game down
to nothing.

Speaker 14 (34:20):
Oh, always leave early theory.

Speaker 8 (34:22):
No, it wasn't no, there was no traffic. It wouldn't matter.

Speaker 14 (34:25):
It sounds like you no traffic.

Speaker 8 (34:27):
His buddy was ready to go and they were tired,
so I was like, oh, we might as well walk
with them. We took two separate cars, but it was
two nothing. We had no hope. And my kid's like, no,
d have we got to stay to the end of
the game so you can talk to the coach And
I'm like, no, Bud, I gotta work.

Speaker 5 (34:43):
In the morning.

Speaker 8 (34:43):
We gotta get going. We gotta get going.

Speaker 14 (34:45):
Why did I tell that lie?

Speaker 8 (34:46):
And so we get to the car and I'm like,
but are you tired it all? He goes, no, Dad,
I wanted to stay for the whole game. He fell
asleep in the car. In the eight minute drive home.
He was already asleep in the car. And he went
home told mom bad news, bad news. She's like what
and he goes, we lost to nothing? And Dad, I
didn't even go talk to the coach.

Speaker 18 (35:20):
Hey, it's Mike d And this week I'll movie Mike's
movie podcast. I did a big Marvel episode. Not only
did I give my spoiler free review of Deadpool in Wolverine.
But I also did a lot of Marvel Mount Rushmore's
what I'll Play for you. Here is my Mount Rushmore
of the best and the worst movies in the MCU.
Check out the full episode to hear what made my
Superhero and Villain's list. But right now, here's just a

(35:42):
little bit of movie Mike's movie podcast. In that first slot,
I would put Infinity War. It is the best in
theater experience that I've had from any of the Avengers movies,
even more so than Endgame, because Endgame really only has
that one big moment that we all know at this
point that every theater in America is freaking out.

Speaker 1 (36:04):
That is a core moment.

Speaker 18 (36:06):
But I still think overall, the first time I experienced
Infinity War left me feeling way different, and it was
also more expected. I kind of knew what was gonna
happen in Endgame, which was the end result of every
Marvel movie that came before it. We all knew what
was gonna happen, we all knew what it was building towards.

(36:28):
There was nothing I got in Endgame that came out
of left field. Really great moments, a fantastic movie. But
when I sit down to watch an Avengers movie, I'm
gonna watch Infinity War. I still think it is the
best one. So in that number one slot, I'm going
with Infinity War. At number two, it goes to Iron
Man being the first MCU movie back in two thousand

(36:50):
and eighty and one that still holds up. There are
not that many movies from Phase one that you can
go back and just think that, oh, nothing here has
changed the whole lot. Everything still works out. Iron Man
is that movie. I would argue some of the visual
effects in the first Iron Man look better than some
of the MCU movies that have come out in the

(37:12):
last five years. This was back when all the VFX
artists weren't being worked to the bone and the technology
was new at the time, with Transformers being one of
the first movies to really use like that photo realism
making things actually look like the surfaces that they are.
That was a big deal back in the day. So
Transformers was very influential on Iron Man. It got it perfect,

(37:35):
it got the suit down so well. Everybody benefited from it.
At number two, I have Iron Man. At number three,
I have Black Panther. Not only because it's such a
great movie. Has the fantastic villain, has the fantastic hero.

Speaker 4 (37:49):
But I would say because.

Speaker 18 (37:50):
This movie looks unlike any of the other MCU movies
for a couple of reasons, for the cast, the representation.
It just looks different the people who are represented in
this movie, which was huge.

Speaker 4 (38:03):
We didn't have that.

Speaker 18 (38:05):
Me as a Mexican American, I didn't get that until
well on the DC side, Blue Beetle, but even in
Wakanda Forever with our first Mexican villain. But that was
important for kids who didn't have a hero that looked
like them. And now you have this awesome black superhero
who was also noble and smart and quite possibly stronger
and more fierce. I mean that has to do a

(38:26):
lot with the technology they had, which is so advanced
and everybody wants, but it looked different because of the
cast and the representation. And number three in that slot,
I have Black Panther at number four because this movie
changed my life because it felt like my inner kid
just having complete joy in the year of twenty twenty one,

(38:48):
which this movie single handily probably saved the movie theaters
that year, bouncing back from twenty twenty.

Speaker 1 (38:55):
It is No Way Home.

Speaker 18 (38:57):
Aside from what I was mentioning earlier of Infinity War
being my overall favorite theater experience for a Marvel movie,
this one has my favorite moment, Yes even more so
than Endgame, my favorite cheer moment, which any good MCU
movie has at that moment that we all want to
get out of our seats and yell and clap and applaud.
This movie did it the best. I will never forget that.

(39:20):
So those are my mount Rushmore of the best MCU movies,
Infinity War, Iron Man, Black Panther, and No Way Home.

Speaker 1 (39:28):
Chase a Little Man, Boys, Here we go.

Speaker 18 (39:32):
All right to close us out, my mount Rushmore, Oh,
the worst MCU movies at number one, And I would
say for all of these movies, I've only seen them once,
and not only that, I never want to watch them again.
And out of all of the thirty three MCU movies,
these are the only ones that I would consider bad.

(39:54):
There only happens to be four of them, which is
pretty good. But in that number one slot it goes
to the the eternals, hands down the worst MCU movie
of all time. It tried to do too much, tried
to create such a big world, introduced too many characters,
tried to be like a more intellectual Avengers. Every element

(40:16):
of this movie fell flat, and it wasn't until the
Captain America Brave New World trailer that came out that
it finally addressed one of the biggest cliffhangers and all
of the mco this big floating rock. Hey, we forgot
about that. Let's go back to that. Number one goes
to the Eternals at number two. I guess putting a

(40:36):
the is a bad sign for MCU movies because at
number two of the Marvels, and I think it was
probably due to tone. It also felt like they didn't
have enough story to make a movie. This probably should
have been a Disney Plus series. And bre Larson. I
love her as an actor and I think the character
is great, but I really feel like she phoned in

(40:58):
this performance. And maybe it has to do with doing
the majority of this movie in front of a blue
or green screen, no cast chemistry. This movie did not
work for me. Goes in my number two slot. At
number three, it goes to Thor The Dark World, primarily
because this movie is so forgettable. And this was also
at a time where they really didn't have the Thor

(41:20):
character down. Chris Hemsworth still had the long blonde hair.
They were making him too mythical. They tried a little
bit to bring out the humor and Thor, but Chris
Hemsworth didn't really know how to play him just quite yet.
Didn't truly nail it until the next movie Thor Ragnarok,
which I was like, oh that store, he had to
look down. They cut his hair and that led to

(41:42):
better Avengers movies. So I think it's just a product
of the time. I love the first Thor movie, but
this one was not it whatsoever. I never want to
see it again.

Speaker 1 (41:54):
At number three is.

Speaker 18 (41:55):
Thor The Dark World, and in that Ford slot it
is Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. For a
movie being titled The Multiverse of Madness, they didn't really
have much to do with making the Multiverse mad and
me being somebody who loves a good horror movie. Having

(42:15):
Sam Raimi one of the most beloved horror directors of
all time, the product just didn't match his body of work,
also being the director of the Best Spider Man trilogy.
It is also largely cited to being a part of
the decline of the MCU and a movie we really
had to bounce back from. As me being one of

(42:36):
the people still fighting for the MCU. I got to
make excuses for this movie, so that is why you
put it. And I only saw it in theaters once
and was never inclined to go back and rewatch it
on Disney Plus because I just didn't enjoy it. So
in that force slot the Multiverse of Madness rounding out
that list, it is the Eternals, the Marvels for the

(42:58):
Dark World, Doctor strut in the Multiverse of Madness being
my mount rushmore of bad MCU movies.

Speaker 1 (43:04):
But again they're only being four.

Speaker 18 (43:06):
What I would consider bad movies in the MCU that
I just would not watch again.

Speaker 8 (43:11):
Not bad.

Speaker 18 (43:11):
So do those We carve them and then destroy them
out of the stone.

Speaker 16 (43:27):
Carn She's a queen of talking, if you son, she's
getting really.

Speaker 19 (43:34):
Not afraid to things, So just let it flow. No
one can do we quite car Line. It is sounding, Caroline.

Speaker 10 (43:45):
I'm so excited to be here with Bradney Foster.

Speaker 1 (43:48):
Thank you.

Speaker 9 (43:48):
I'm excited to be here with you. Carolyn.

Speaker 13 (43:49):
You're a legend.

Speaker 10 (43:50):
You're a text.

Speaker 9 (43:51):
I don't know if I don't know if I'm a legend,
but I sure appreciate it.

Speaker 15 (43:53):
You're a Texas legend, you're a Nashville legend, and you're
one of the og like country like country country artists
like you know, like they're there are.

Speaker 9 (44:03):
People when when I was in Foster and Lloyd, there
were people who did not consider as country music, which
was kind of really strange because I listened. I don't know,
but I think it was because we had long hair
and earrings and ship like that. So can we say
that on on air?

Speaker 1 (44:17):
All the ship you want? Okay, great, So people that
Foster and Lloyd wasn't coming.

Speaker 9 (44:20):
Yeah, we were way too left a center for those guys.

Speaker 6 (44:22):
Oh my god.

Speaker 4 (44:23):
And if y'all listen to your songs back because I.

Speaker 9 (44:24):
Was actually sounds perfectly hillbilly.

Speaker 15 (44:26):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm like man, because it was I.

Speaker 9 (44:30):
Mean, all we were doing was really taking, you know,
what we loved about rock and roll and then what
we loved about country and just mixing to together, which
people have been doing forever. We just did it our
own way because we loved the Everly Brothers and we
loved Buck Owens, and we loved the Beatles. So we
just like mixed in the Birds and all the all this,

(44:50):
you know, the southern California stuff that was really changing
country music even though they weren't calling it country music,
like the Birds and the Flying Burrito Brothers. But how
do you listen to grand part? Since then? I call
that country music? You know?

Speaker 15 (45:02):
So how do you feel today and age that like
the TikTok generation has no idea what you're talking about?

Speaker 1 (45:07):
You know what's amazing. What's amazing.

Speaker 9 (45:09):
What's amazing is how many of them do know really
well because they have the library of Alexandria in their
back pocket, right, I mean my kids, you know, I like,
how did you learn about my son? Was one of them.
Was cleaning up the studio and U and I walked

(45:31):
in at one point and he was listening to an
Al Green record, and then I walked back out because
I'd gotten whatever I needed from the studio. And then
I walked back in and he was listening to crossby
Steels Nash's first album. And I was like, how do
you even know about this stuff? And I said, well,
your record collection first of all. I said, yeah, well
there's that, but you know, it's like YouTube, it's all

(45:54):
it's all there.

Speaker 15 (45:55):
Isn't it fascinating? I find this fascinating because I'm forty
years old now and I've now lived through some shifts,
some generational shifts. You know, I've always just felt young.
I was in my youth forever, and then all of
a sudden, I hit like thirty five.

Speaker 12 (46:07):
I'm like, oh my.

Speaker 1 (46:08):
Gosh, I'm an adult.

Speaker 14 (46:09):
I'm an adult.

Speaker 15 (46:10):
And like, not only am I an adult, but like I'm
get close to halfway mark, and you know, it's just
and then you realize there's a whole new youth generation
and their feelings are all different than mine, and what
they think is cool is different, and I'm like, I
can't believe I'm here. You know, when you used to
be in the middle of like everything that's happening. You're
a creative, you're creating things, and like it's like your world.

(46:32):
You're in that world, and then all of a sudden,
I'm like, oh my god, there's a new world. So like,
I feel like that's happened to you.

Speaker 10 (46:39):
How tell me about.

Speaker 15 (46:40):
Your when this all started for you, and how this
el this evolution, what it's been like so much In
country music.

Speaker 9 (46:48):
I was I was playing and singing and writing songs
in college and I you know a guy who's kind
of lit who we thought was ancient. I'm sure he
was twenty nine, you know, we were at all twenty
and he said, man, who does those three songs? Because

(47:10):
we had a band that was kind of like the
Nittigritty Dirt Band. We would rock up a country song
and country up a rock song and you know, and that.

Speaker 1 (47:16):
Was very cutting edge back in the day.

Speaker 9 (47:18):
Yeah, And so he knew all the other songs because
they were just you know, Guy Clark and dirt band
covers and and Burrito Brothers and stuff like that.

Speaker 10 (47:28):
And then got a look of these Burrito Brothers.

Speaker 1 (47:30):
Oh yeah, you know, I mean what a name?

Speaker 9 (47:32):
Yeah you need? Yeah, that was barely born out of
the Birds. It was the guy like Bernie Leaden, who
was an original Eagle and Chris Hillman, who was an
original Bird started that band.

Speaker 4 (47:43):
So it's kind of like the Traveling Wilbury's.

Speaker 9 (47:46):
Yeah it was at the time. Yeah, it was okay,
along with Graham Parsons, who it's a it's worth worth
worth going to look up, okay, And so we were
playing all that kind of stuff and the guy said, well,
who wrote what banned does those three songs, and one
of the guys said, you can't get them. Our singer
wrote them. He said, Man, I don't know anything about
the music business, but I've got a buddy who's a

(48:07):
producer in Nashville who I went to college with. And
I'm like, sure you do you know? And so I
wrote down on a match book my name and my
phone number. Now my phone number. I don't want to
match book.

Speaker 1 (48:19):
Yeah, switch is yeah, because there's no cell phones.

Speaker 12 (48:21):
There's no cell phones, no, no, page's probably there.

Speaker 10 (48:24):
No what year we talking about.

Speaker 9 (48:25):
We're talking in nineteen seventy nine.

Speaker 10 (48:27):
You are og rock star, country star.

Speaker 9 (48:30):
It's so cool.

Speaker 10 (48:31):
So you're trying to get your starts.

Speaker 15 (48:33):
You're like, okay, you can have another on.

Speaker 1 (48:34):
A match box.

Speaker 9 (48:35):
And it's the payphone at the end of the hall
in the dorm.

Speaker 15 (48:38):
So she just used to wait by the phone for
it to ring literally right, yeah, right, yeah.

Speaker 9 (48:42):
So sure enough, Like about two weeks later, there's a
note tacked my you know, corkboard on the front of
my dorm door.

Speaker 4 (48:51):
Is anybody walking by want us to answer it?

Speaker 9 (48:53):
Well, it was kind of the deal. It was the
honor system. So if you didn't answer things for the phone,
then you know, nobody else is going to answer for you.

Speaker 7 (49:00):
How we got contacted?

Speaker 15 (49:01):
Like you just better hope that somebody's walking by the
phone with somebody you and you.

Speaker 9 (49:04):
It was kind of the ethic, you know, yeah, oh
it's just parents.

Speaker 16 (49:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (49:08):
I was like, call you.

Speaker 9 (49:09):
And there was a note you know, and a pencil.
It is like call your mom and dad. Consider it
on the guy's door and uh so uh it had
a six to one to five area code and I
was like, that's Nashville. And it had the name Brown Banister.
And I was like, who's Brent? What? Why do I
know that name? Why do I know that name? And
I realized, you know, from reading the back of every

(49:29):
single record that I'd ever listened to in my life,
in every girl's dorm, there was this record by this
new contemporary Christian angu named Amy Grant. Brown Banister was
the producer on the record. Oh man, So I was like,
that's a real guy, and uh it's like that drunk.

Speaker 1 (49:49):
I wasn't kidding, you know, so and and he followed through, and.

Speaker 9 (49:53):
He followed through, and so Brown said, Hey, my buddy
says my buddy says I need to come, you know,
listen to some of your and so we kind of
arranged where I could, you know, get to see him,
and I played him like five songs and he said,
you got to have a serious talk with your mom
and dad about doing this for a living. And so
that that really was someone giving me permission to do

(50:15):
this because my my you know, my great grandfather was
the first lawyer in Del Rio, Texas, and he sent
every single one of his boys to law school.

Speaker 15 (50:23):
You're joking, No, he was going to carry this legacy.

Speaker 9 (50:26):
And then my father went to law school. So I
knew my lot in life was to go to college and.

Speaker 10 (50:31):
Go to law school, which is a good lot.

Speaker 9 (50:32):
No, it's a yeah, it was a good thing.

Speaker 15 (50:33):
That knowing that you had that lot pre planned, was
that like maddening a little bit.

Speaker 9 (50:38):
I mean, I think, you know, the scariest part was,
you know, you know I did this in the worst
possible way. Is you know, I woke my parents up
in the middle of the night.

Speaker 4 (50:48):
Wait, you woken them up in the night.

Speaker 15 (50:49):
Just tell them that you're moving to Nashville.

Speaker 9 (50:51):
Yeah, you know, I basically I woke them up in
the middle of the night, and I said, I think
God wants me to drop out of college so I
can be a singer and a songwriter and both of them,
and set bolt up right in bed. My mother was
a school teacher, small town school teacher. My daddy was
a small town lawyer. And he breathed the longest sigh
I've ever heard in my life.

Speaker 15 (51:10):
Was there a reason we went for the middle of
the night. Was it just like shocked that you thought
maybe they're sleeping.

Speaker 9 (51:16):
I couldn't sleep anymore. And I was supposed to go
back to college in like three days, So.

Speaker 15 (51:20):
You're not gonna wait till tomorrow. You're like, it's happening now, what's.

Speaker 9 (51:22):
Happening right now? I got to get off my chest.
So my dad said, said, this is the exact words. Son,
I've don't got a long, long time.

Speaker 5 (51:33):
Like that.

Speaker 17 (51:33):
I don't.

Speaker 9 (51:34):
I don't believe he wants any son of mine to
drop out of college to be a singer and a songwriter.
You heard wrong.

Speaker 10 (51:41):
I can't wave your dad for no.

Speaker 1 (51:43):
No.

Speaker 9 (51:44):
You heard you might want to go back and you
won't want to.

Speaker 1 (51:48):
You might won't go back and check that out. That's
what's up. You got all those podcasts, you got the Bobbycast,
you got in the Vets Office, you Got four Things
Sore losers. Check it out. It's a Sunday sampler. We

(52:09):
let you sample stuff. But if you like any of
those podcasts, why don't you go subscribe to one that
would help us?

Speaker 9 (52:15):
All right?

Speaker 1 (52:15):
Thanks? Also check out our Instagram, the Nashville Podcast Network,
Boom at the Nashville Podcast Network. If you don't mind
subscribe rate review that literally helps us, I promise you
so thank you, have a great week. Bye everybody.
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Hosts And Creators

Bobby Bones

Bobby Bones

Abby Anderson

Abby Anderson

Amy Brown

Amy Brown

Stephen "Scuba Steve" Spradlin

Stephen "Scuba Steve" Spradlin

Morgan Huelsman

Morgan Huelsman

Daniel "Lunchbox" Chapelle

Daniel "Lunchbox" Chapelle

Eddie Garcia

Eddie Garcia

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