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September 24, 2023 31 mins

In this weekly series, we share highlight clips from the past week of five podcasts on The Nashville Podcast Network- The Bobbycast, 4 Things with Amy Brown, Sore Losers, Get Real with Caroline Hobby and Movie Mike's Movie Podcast.  You can listen to new episodes weekly wherever you get your podcasts. 

You can find them on Instagram:

-The Bobbycast- @bobbycast

-4 Things- @radioamy

-Sore Losers- @soreloserspodcast

-Get Real- @carohobby

-Movie Mikes Movie Podcast- @mikedeestro

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 (00:10):
Hey guys, Bobby Bones Here Sunday sampler highlights from five
podcasts on the Nashville Podcast Network. This week, on Get
Real with Caroline Hobby, Caroline sat down with Madison pru
At Trout, who was a finalist on the Bachelor. She
got a new book, So are losers right? Mundo talks
about going to the Titans game. On the Bobby Cast,
we talked with artists about the jobs they had before

(00:31):
they were famous. You'll hear all of it, So let's
do that first to kick things off. Here's a clip
from this week's Bobby Cast with Trisha Yearwood. Did you
feel when you were working at the front desk and
people would come into work in a profession that you
wanted to do, that you were as good as they
were already? And because I know it's frustrating when people
are doing what you want to do, but did you

(00:51):
feel like, oh, I'm I'm their talent.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
Wise, it's just I gotta put in my time.

Speaker 3 (00:56):
My thing was I believed in my voice. I believe
that I had a voice and that I could sing.
But I'm basically an introvert. I mean, I'm not like
I grew up watching Barbara Mandrel on television, and she
played every instrument and she danced and she did all
this stuff. And I'm not that kind of an entertainer.

(01:16):
And so I really thought, you know, I can sing,
I'm a little bit overweight. I don't play an instrument. Really.

Speaker 2 (01:24):
I can play a.

Speaker 4 (01:24):
Little big of guitar, but I don't.

Speaker 3 (01:26):
So I didn't think I had enough. I thought, I've
got this one skill that I believe in, but I
don't have all these other ones. So I think for
me it was I did have a strong belief in
myself and I don't I think if I didn't, I
wouldn't be sitting here. But at the same time, I
had all these doubts about the things that I thought
I needed to be able to do before I could
be successful at it.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
So you felt you had to develop. Even then, you
felt like you need to develop a bit more. Yeah,
you weren't so strong, No.

Speaker 5 (01:53):
No, I mean.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
And I went to Belmont where there were so many
music majors, and you couldn't you throw a stick without
somebody telling me what a great singer they were, you know,
And I was not that girl. And even actually at
at MTM Records, after I got my record deal. There
were people at that building who said, we didn't even know,
we didn't know you sang.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Really yeah, so you weren't. You aren't one of the
ones that were like, hey, I sing, I sing again?

Speaker 4 (02:16):
I was not.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
I was not. How did you change that?

Speaker 1 (02:18):
Then?

Speaker 2 (02:19):
How did you start telling people I sing I sing?

Speaker 3 (02:21):
I think it was because I was shy and I
wasn't bold about telling people I was a singer. But
after working at that label for about six months and
answering the phones and ordering liquid paper and not and
watching people do what I wanted to do, I realized,
if I don't tell somebody this is what I do,
if I don't really get off my butt and try
to make this happen, then I'm going to get to

(02:41):
do this for the rest of my life.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
And I reconnected.

Speaker 3 (02:44):
I had I had a couple of songwriters, one was
Kemp Lazy that I had done demos for, and I
just found those guys again and said, hey, I'm trying
to find I'm trying to get some demo work, and
demo work was my way out. Once I started to
get enough work that I could actually quit my job.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
Who wasn't for you that took the big shot, like
you went, Wow, this person really like put it out
there for me to believed in me when maybe they
didn't have to.

Speaker 3 (03:09):
I mean, there was there were several, There were a
lot of people. The chain of events were the two Garths, honestly,
because when I met Garth Brooks, he was the person
who introduced me to Alan Reynolds, his producer, and Alan
was really a great friend to me because Alan gave
me advice based on what he thought was best for me,
not what he thought I could maybe do for him.
And he was the guy who said you should meet

(03:32):
Garth Fundas. He's a guy who I feel like you
guys are really hit it off. And Fundus was the
one who, when he heard me sing, said let's do
a showcase. He's the one who went to bat for
me at the record labels and to help me get
a record deal. And he was the one who helped
me get the music that was in my head onto tape,
what I really wanted, how I really wanted to sound,

(03:54):
and the music kind of music that I wanted to make.
So it was it was really all of those people
together because I would never met Garth Fundus if wouldn't
have been for Garth Brooks. And so I guess it
really was, you know, ended up being my husband, the
one that really believed in me, that was like to
start just telling everybody about me. And he didn't even
have a single on the radio.

Speaker 2 (04:13):
So he was doing that before. He was yeah, freaking
Garth Brooks. Yes, he was just a guy named Garth.

Speaker 4 (04:18):
He just was.

Speaker 2 (04:18):
Yeah, he was a less famous Garth probably at the time.

Speaker 5 (04:20):
Yeah, and he was.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
And then it was like, I know two Garths now.
Eventually a guy there's a guy who's a tour manager's
name is Garth and he came in and did an
interview for a job and I told him, I said,
you're probably great at what you do, but I can't
know you, like, I just can't, Like I have two
Garths in my life. It's already two weird Like, I
just can't do it. That's a true story that happened.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
That's a lot of gard I mean, even two Garths.
I know obviously your husband a bit. I don't know
any other Garth.

Speaker 6 (04:45):
I know.

Speaker 3 (04:46):
It's so odd and actually if we're all in the
studio together, which happens, it's very strange, you know, so
actually I started calling Garth Fundus, Tennessee because I'm like,
I have to have like a nickname for you, because
I can't because I'd say Garth. They both whip their
head around, you know, I'm like, because they never hear
anybody else call guard. So yeah, so it's a it's
a thing.

Speaker 5 (05:18):
Cast up little food for yourself life. Oh it's pretty,
but hey, it's pretty beautiful that for a little more, said,
he your kicking it with four with Amy Brown.

Speaker 7 (05:38):
Hey, it's Amy Brown from Four Things with Amy Brown.
And here's what we talked about this week on my podcast.
If you want to make new friends when you're strangers
with someone, there's one simple thing you can do that'll
strike up conversation and build a connection one thing, and
that's share a pet peeve. Just tell them something that

(05:59):
bugs you and then the conversation will follow. Researchers discovered that,
I guess in the early stages of any relationship, sharing
pet peeves it bonds people faster than sharing even like
a mutual passion about something. Plus, when people talk about
pet peeves, they tend to discuss a wider range of
things for longer, which allows them to learn more about

(06:21):
each other. And this comes from Texas Tech University.

Speaker 4 (06:24):
So what's your pet peeve?

Speaker 7 (06:26):
Wire hangers? No, why are hangers hangers? What movie is
that from?

Speaker 4 (06:32):
Mommy Dear?

Speaker 2 (06:32):
Is that's it?

Speaker 7 (06:33):
Okay? So just wire hangers like from the dry cleaner.

Speaker 8 (06:37):
Yeah, that's all John uses to It draws me crazy.
I'll use the velvet ones.

Speaker 7 (06:41):
I have those too, Yeah, which kind of have a
metal top. But it's not why which of you use those.
I don't really care if people actually use them, but
something about them just bugs me when they get all
tangled sometimes and I'm trying to or the hangers where
the little hook like swivels too much when you're at
a store and everything is all caught and you're trying

(07:02):
to hang it up, and so hangers really just get me. Also,
people that flip people off when they're driving. That's a
pet peeve of Biden, Like, there's no reason to do that,
to be so angry towards someone you never know the situation.
It's okay if you want to be like hey or
react in a way, but you don't need to flip
them off and go out of your way. Like I've

(07:23):
had people literally speed up just to like, flip me off.

Speaker 8 (07:28):
Road rage, man is a real thing, especially here in Nashville.

Speaker 7 (07:31):
It's worse other places, Like I think Houston has hands
down the worst road rage I've ever seen in my life.

Speaker 8 (07:36):
I have witnessed Houston road rage and it is frightening.

Speaker 7 (07:39):
Would shout out Houston? Yeah, love anybody there that's listening.
But if you live there and you drive on those highways,
you got to know what we're talking about. What's a
pet peeve that you have?

Speaker 8 (07:47):
Might happened yesterday actually on Granny White. I'm at the light.
It turned green and it had been green for a nanosecond,
and this rain driver behind me laid on the horn
like I didn't even have time to switch my foot
from the.

Speaker 4 (08:01):
Break to the gas.

Speaker 7 (08:03):
Yeah, it made me want to go slower. Wait, did
I see a post about this? And I think you've
posted a song about the middle finger?

Speaker 6 (08:08):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (08:08):
So is my pet peeves something that you do? Oh
my gosh, would you flip me off? Well?

Speaker 4 (08:12):
I didn't do it, Okay.

Speaker 8 (08:14):
It's just honestly, I really like this girl.

Speaker 4 (08:16):
Her name's Kaylin Roberson. She's new.

Speaker 8 (08:19):
I saw her at the listening room here and she's
got this song well, it's about her ex boyfriend and
that's the middle fingers for him.

Speaker 7 (08:26):
No, the song sounds so cute. Yeah, came out last Friday.
It's great. Okay, Well maybe if people, if you got
a relationship where you're probably wanting to give someone the
middle finger, maybe that song will be like a theme song, yeah,
for your weekend coming up. Things that are annoying for
most people. This is from a totally different survey, but
these are pet peeves that are common. Sitting in traffic,

(08:48):
essential home appliance is not working, being behind a slow
walking person.

Speaker 8 (08:54):
Oh wait, yeah, I hate that too, But Amy, you
were around.

Speaker 9 (08:58):
We did.

Speaker 8 (08:59):
But y'all, if you were ever walking with Amy Brown,
get your motor you are a fast walker.

Speaker 7 (09:06):
Well I like to get out there and go.

Speaker 4 (09:07):
You are not wasting time.

Speaker 7 (09:09):
Yeah, let's get there. Top chop cleaning the house, only
to have your kids or partner mess it up soon after. Yeah,
do you not see what I have done? Does anybody
notice that there was dishes everywhere and now the dishes
are gone, or that there was laundry everywhere and now
it's put away?

Speaker 8 (09:27):
Does anybody or like, my husband will come in, he'll
see me doing the dishes and then set a coffee
cup right there on the counter. Really you can just
like put it in the dishwasher.

Speaker 7 (09:39):
Yeah, you see, what do I look like? This is
where you just drop your stuff and I put it away.
Which technically the dishes are my daughter's thing, and she's
very good at doing them. She's good at loading and unloading.
But there's times where it's full and she's not around
and I can't wait. My friend Claire will wait. It's
her daughter's job too, and she will wait for her

(10:00):
dughder to do it, and I cannot do that. I
have to have many more hours or when, and then
she's gonna have homework. I might as well just do it,
because I almost can't get my work done if there's
a mess in the kitchen. I don't know what I
need to work through with that, But I wipe down
my countertops an unhealthy amount. It's almost what I do

(10:20):
if I am feeling some stress. In a way, it's like, well,
I have a lot to do, might as well wipe
down the counters What makes you feel in control? Yeah,
maybe that's it.

Speaker 4 (10:31):
It sounds like there's anything wrong with that.

Speaker 7 (10:32):
Well, probably need to work on it because I should
be able to focus on whatever task you need to
do and just get it done and not distract myself
with trying to control something. It could be worse, true,
definitely could be worse.

Speaker 2 (10:59):
Let's do it. Oh the shoo, so loser?

Speaker 5 (11:07):
What up, everybody?

Speaker 2 (11:08):
I am lunchbox.

Speaker 10 (11:08):
I know the most about sports, so I'll give you
the sports facts, my sports opinions because I'm pretty much
a sports genius.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
What up, y'all? At his scison, I'm from the North,
I'm in Alpha Male. I live on the West side
of Nashville with Baser, my wife. We do have a
white picket fence at the apartment complex. Soon I'm gonna
have two point five kids and yes, sadly, I will
die of a heart attack when I'm seventy two years old.
Here's a clip from the last podcast.

Speaker 10 (11:36):
When I walk in my foundation, bet is the roulette table,
my foundation starter. Every time I go opening, bet is
on the roulette table. I do you want to know
what it is?

Speaker 2 (11:46):
The numbers? We know because for my freaking birthday, you
won and I lost.

Speaker 10 (11:51):
Your bachelorette party, Yeah whatever, it was bachelor, My women's
your bachelor party. So what I'm going to do, and
I usually do it before I even the room. I
still have my luggage with me as I'm walking by
the table.

Speaker 5 (12:03):
One of them.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
I'm one of those people that guy's been fiending since Phoenix.

Speaker 10 (12:07):
I've been I bet, I've been listen. I've been thinking
about it. I've been trying to go over it in
my head. I'm the lights, the spin of the ball,
the ding ding ding ding ding ding, And.

Speaker 2 (12:16):
I like to do a palm tree.

Speaker 10 (12:18):
I like to do one hundred and twenty five on red,
and then I do twenty dollars on eighteen, Red nineteen,
Red twenty one, Black seventeen, and red twelve. Those are
the five numbers I do.

Speaker 2 (12:37):
Okay, so you could hit seven twenty if one of
your numbers hit, and if it's.

Speaker 10 (12:40):
Red, you break even. See what I'm saying, you do
one hundred dollars. I'm in one hundred dollars, one hundred,
got it?

Speaker 2 (12:46):
Got it? So you want to hit one of your
numbers for seven twenty, and if it's not one of
my numbers, only one of my numbers you hit red,
you'll break even. Yes, I actually like that. Yeah, that's
a plan.

Speaker 10 (12:56):
And the only number that is black seven is seventeen
is black, so that's that it's the only one. If
it hits, you still win the seven hundred, but you
lose a little bit more because you have the one
hundred on red, but all the other numbers are red,
and I should do number four, but I don't. My
youngest son, his birthday is excluded because that makes it
too expensive of a.

Speaker 2 (13:15):
Bet and you end up not breaking even.

Speaker 10 (13:17):
Yeah, it's like I'm like, oh, that's a lot to
put it out there, and like twenty one, nineteen and eighteen,
they're all in the same spot on the wheel. They're
in the same area.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
I like that. So you try to my girl at Caesar,
she had the little thing that'll show you the areas. Yes,
so you'll know the numbers for the areas.

Speaker 10 (13:33):
Yes, You've got to listen if you're putting random numbers.
If you're putting like thirty five and two and they're
on opposite ends of the roulette wheel, it's kind of
hard to you know, have those two numbers. I try
to get the numbers all right around each other, so
you have a section of the wheel cornered off, and if.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
You lose the worst case scenario, you're down two hundred.

Speaker 10 (13:52):
I'm down two hundred right up to bat and then
it's a slow night. Then you have to slow it down.
Then you then you pump the brakes and you're like damn,
and you're like, oh, it's so sad. But if you win,
you haven't you haven't even put your bags in your
room yet, and you are feeling like a freaking champ.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
Do you have something against I do where if I
have to work, I won't bet before because I'll always lose,
and then you're gonna go to work and your life's
gonna suck because all you think about is how you
lost some money and how your life sucks blows.

Speaker 10 (14:18):
No, I haven't thought about that. Don't do that, Okay.
I don't have anything against work.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
It does for me. So if I have to work,
I don't gamble until after I'm done with the work
or the next day.

Speaker 10 (14:26):
No, no, no, I got no problem gambling before work,
after work, during work, doesn't matter. I don't mind gambling whenever, okay,
Because what if I get hot and I start hitting
and I win some money before work, then I'm in
a great mood.

Speaker 2 (14:37):
Yeah. See, when we went on the cruise, I knew
we had to post, and I knew we had to
go to like you had to go to some training
course to learn how to jump off the ship and
not drown.

Speaker 10 (14:44):
Oh yeah, yea at the very beginning, and you had
to go in there and you put your life vest on.

Speaker 2 (14:48):
So I didn't want to gamble before because I thought
I'm gonna lose and then I'm gonna have to go
to a course. I'm gonna have to go to dinner
and have an annoying conversation with people, and then I'm
gonna have to do these posts for the company and
fake like I'm happy because i just lost my ass.
So I'm big against doing the work first and then
go and playing after.

Speaker 10 (15:05):
The Only problem is if something gets hot and you
have to go, then you're pissed. That's when it's like,
damn it, man. But it's always better to leave when
it's hot then to stay and they let it get
cold and lose your money.

Speaker 2 (15:16):
Except for me, Bahama guy. He said it ended up
hitting for four hundred more. Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 9 (15:20):
I love.

Speaker 10 (15:21):
That's a regret. And so there will be there will
be craps played this weekend.

Speaker 5 (15:25):
There will be.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
All tall small ball ball.

Speaker 10 (15:28):
Hit them all you got. You can play the features.
Always play the features every single time. It's worth your money.
And it has to hit everything before seven. Yes, and
you do it at to come out. You couldn't do
it at to come out, or you can wait a
come No, always at the come out, always at the
first rule.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
I wish I would ask you that before the cruise,
because it was right there waiting for me, and I
didn't know how to do it.

Speaker 10 (15:46):
It's all it's always before the come out roll and
you put it out there boom.

Speaker 2 (15:52):
And it has to hit every number except for seven.

Speaker 10 (15:54):
Well, you can hit you can all small as two, three,
four five six.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
Yep, all tall is eight nine, ten, eleven, twelve.

Speaker 10 (16:03):
Eight nine, ten, eleven, twelve two three four five six. Yeah,
that's right, okay, So you can go both those or
one or the you can hit one other other. So
you hit all small great, or you can hit the
all tall. To them is when you won a thousand,
that's when you made like eleven hundred buck. When I
was with yeah, and you're going nuts, lunch's got a
fucking backpack on.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
We're trying to act like we're having a blast. It
was a pandemic. We're trying to have a blast in
my bachelor party. Lunch is cheering with a backpack on,
and we got the one dude with his backpack on
and they're like a bunch of turtles celebrating.

Speaker 10 (16:34):
It was awesome, dude, it was great.

Speaker 5 (16:37):
It was so fun.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
It was so great.

Speaker 10 (16:38):
But yes, that is my favorite.

Speaker 5 (16:40):
At it every eleven she's a queen and talking.

Speaker 9 (16:53):
It was so she's getting really not afraid to feed
which episode so just then no one can.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
Sound Caroline.

Speaker 11 (17:07):
Hey, y'all, it's Caroline Hobby with Get Real Podcasts. I'm
pumped about this week's episode.

Speaker 4 (17:12):
I have Maddie Preuitt Trout on the podcast.

Speaker 9 (17:16):
She is such an inspiration.

Speaker 4 (17:17):
You probably remember her from The Bachelor.

Speaker 11 (17:19):
She was a finalist and she was such a captivating
contestant on The Bachelor. She doesn't settle on love so
much that she wrote a new book called The Love
Everybody Once. It's all about living a life of faith
and trusting that God's plan for your life is bigger
than what you can see. This was such an inspirational podcast.
I cannot wait for you to listen to it.

Speaker 5 (17:39):
Check it out.

Speaker 12 (17:42):
I read this part of your book, and I was like,
oh my god, that would be so hard as a kid.
You had gotten a bike with like training wheels, and
you were like super stoked about it, and it was
pink with like streamers, and I just got sunning one
of those. It's like pink with streamers, and she loves it.
She's on her little training wheels like cruise in the hood.
It's really adorable.

Speaker 4 (17:59):
She just loves it. But your dad was like, Okay,
you need to give that to your younger sister.

Speaker 8 (18:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (18:04):
I was devastating.

Speaker 2 (18:05):
That's hot.

Speaker 4 (18:06):
That's like a that's a huge testing moment that your
dad just like dropped on you.

Speaker 6 (18:10):
Yeah, I was devastated. I remember he like comes into
my room and he's like because he made it a
moment for a moment and like that. I mean, I
think like my parents did such a good job of
like trying to find very like practical things to like
usher in you know, God, and he teaches life lessons
and so like, you know, something as silly as like

(18:31):
something about a bike, you know, my dad used that
as an opportunity to like teach me about something way
more valuable. But yeah, he came in and he just
was like, hey, you know you've had this bike for
a little bit. I know you love it, but you know,
what do you think about giving it to your younger sister?

Speaker 5 (18:45):
Think not? I think not.

Speaker 4 (18:46):
I were a pault.

Speaker 6 (18:48):
I was like, I will give you the dollhouse, I
will give you my new tennis shoes, but I'm not
going to give you my bike, like I was.

Speaker 4 (18:55):
So I was like, how dare you ask that of me?
And I just remember like he was.

Speaker 6 (18:59):
He was super sad that, like I didn't, you know,
agree at first, but I was like, I said, Okay,
I'm gonna think about it.

Speaker 4 (19:04):
You know, this is like a big decision for me.

Speaker 12 (19:05):
It's probably like one of the bigger decisions in your
life at that point.

Speaker 4 (19:08):
Oh absolutely.

Speaker 6 (19:09):
I was like, let me think about this. And you know,
the next day I had tears in my eyes and
I was like, Dad, Okay, I really thought hard about it,
and I just I trust you and I love you,
and so I know that she needs it more than me,
and so I'm gonna I'm gonna give you like I'm
going to give her the bike.

Speaker 4 (19:25):
Oh and I like brought him the little helmet.

Speaker 6 (19:28):
It was such a dramatic moment and he's probably like
fighting back, like laughing, but uh, he just used that
moment to be like, Maddie, I'm so proud of you,
and like he he gives her the bike or whatever
and to watch her, and I'm watching her get excited,
and I'm kind of sitting there and I'm like, okay,
so are you able to I did a good deed.

Speaker 5 (19:45):
I was like, I did a good deed.

Speaker 4 (19:46):
I'm that's great, Like yeah, I'm fighting back tears. But
then he leads me out. He like takes me around
the corner.

Speaker 6 (19:53):
He grabs my hand and he's like, I want to
show you something, and he takes me around the corner
and he shows me this like bigger bike without training wheels,
super cool, like definitely more expensive than the other one.
And I just felt like the most the coolest, most
important person on the planet that my dad would pick
out something like this for me and then he would
take time to think about me like that, And I
just remember hugging him so tight, and he just like told.

Speaker 4 (20:12):
Me that moment.

Speaker 6 (20:13):
He was like, Maddie, I'm so proud of you because
you traded in good enough for something better, Like you.

Speaker 4 (20:18):
Didn't even know that better was there and I had
no idea, but he like showed me.

Speaker 6 (20:22):
He was like, sometimes God is going to ask things
of you, like he's going to ask you to lay
down something that you don't want to lay down because
it feels good in the moment, but you have to
trust that when he asked you to lay it down,
he's got something so much better for you. How old
are you, probably like I don't know, I don't know
how old are you?

Speaker 4 (20:39):
When like young you're like.

Speaker 12 (20:41):
A seven That reminds me of that teddybear thing, you know,
or God's like, yes, but I love my teddy bear.
It's this tiny little teddy bear. But God's like, give
me the teddy bear and he's like a giant one
one behind him and literally such a good lesson for
life though, like there there is something waiting for you
that will bless you.

Speaker 4 (20:58):
Yeah, you have to trust, Yeah, And trusting is really hard,
so hard.

Speaker 6 (21:03):
And sometimes it's it's peace, Like sometimes it's not in
the context of a person or a thing, it's just
it's inward peace.

Speaker 4 (21:11):
It's joy, it's you know what I mean.

Speaker 6 (21:12):
And I think that's what I've seen is like sometimes
the better that awaits me is different than what I expected,
But it's greater than what I could have imagined.

Speaker 12 (21:19):
Exactly because we get one idea of how it should be,
because we've pieced together what it could be based on
like our own life and what we've seen, But we
have no idea because history's writing itself every single day, right,
you know, so who knows what can happen. There's infinite potential.
I think I realized that when I was in my
band and like the band abruptly ended, I thought my
life was over, and then all of a sudden, I
got a call to go on the amazing race.

Speaker 4 (21:40):
Yeah, and I was like, oh my god.

Speaker 12 (21:41):
I would have never, ever, ever, ever dreamed that up
and it was the greatest experience of my life, one
of them.

Speaker 4 (21:47):
But like, could never plan for it. Didn't even know
that was an option. You know, that's so crazy.

Speaker 6 (21:52):
Yeah, you just walk my faith and life will be
life will be full of surprises. But like, man, just
the journey is so it's so worth it when you
choose to live a life of faith and just be like, Okay,
trust to God, Like don't know what's gonna come with this,
but I just trust that your ways are better than mine.

Speaker 8 (22:10):
I love it.

Speaker 12 (22:10):
Okay, the love everybody wants. What the love everybody wants,
what you're looking for is already yours. So true, it's
right there in your heart with God. And you know what,
you give some amazing steps of how to really I
love that you give steps.

Speaker 4 (22:25):
I love a step.

Speaker 12 (22:26):
I think steps and like hand talk to actions that
you can like really apply to your life. You give
such great applical advice.

Speaker 4 (22:33):
Thank you.

Speaker 7 (22:34):
It's really great, especially for young girls, like I.

Speaker 12 (22:37):
Feel anyone young anyone, but like, yes, girls, like read
this book before you dive hard into the dating world
or you're already in there, read it now.

Speaker 4 (22:44):
So yeah, like clean it up totally. But it's so great.

Speaker 7 (22:47):
I love what you're doing with your life with your platform.

Speaker 4 (22:50):
I admire you for that. I am grateful for you
for that.

Speaker 12 (22:52):
I'm so grateful to see beacons of light in the
world who are like sharing God's message on a big platform.
We need, we need your inspiration. So just thank you
for following God and sharing your journey with us.

Speaker 4 (23:06):
Thank you, and thank you for you being a light.

Speaker 6 (23:09):
And it's so cool to see like what guy can
do with a yes, like just us being like okay, God,
use me and just what that It looks different for
all of us, but just what he can do with
that is abundantly more than we could ever imagine.

Speaker 9 (23:35):
Hey, it's Mike d from Movie Mike's Movie Podcast. I
did an episode recently about Disney's one hundred disc collection
that costs fifteen hundred dollars. I wanted to know out
of that collection, which would be the movies I would
save and which would be the movies I would get
rid of. So if you want to hear this entire list,
be sure to check out my episode, But for now, enjoy.

(23:55):
So what I want to do on this episode is
go through all one hundred movies, move through them pretty quick.
But I want to tell you which ten I would keep,
which five I would immediately burn. We are going to
open up the Disney vaults and take a look inside.
Oh man, there's so many things in here.

Speaker 5 (24:12):
Wow?

Speaker 4 (24:12):
What all?

Speaker 5 (24:12):
At all?

Speaker 9 (24:13):
I can hear my echo, echo, All right, We're in
the Disney vault and the first movie in this one
hundred disc collection is the first animated Disney movie ever,
from nineteen thirty seven, Snow White in the Seven Doors.
I actually think this is a really great movie and
it's surprising to me that this movie was made in
nineteen thirty seven, given the sophisticated quality of the animation,

(24:34):
and this was back when they were hand drawing every
single frame, every single movement was hand drawn, essentially making
like a big flip book. That's how they would make
these movies and then take photos of those animations and
make it all come together, come to life. Starting off
in nineteen thirty seven with the first film in this collection,
it's actually one that makes.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
The vault for me.

Speaker 9 (24:57):
Because of the history, because of the characters, and because
of the legacy of this movie. I think it is
a Disney classic and one of the first Disney movies
I remember watching and crazy to me that this movie
is almost one hundred years old coming out in nineteen
thirty seven. So that is an easy entry for me.
So we have one down. We'll run through this list

(25:17):
from nineteen forty. You have Pinocchio from nineteen forty. You
also have Fantasia. That's an almost for me, given that
it was made in nineteen forty is so experimental and
so out there. I wish Disney made more movies like
Fantasia and took more animation risk like they did back
in nineteen forty What an amazing movie that I believe

(25:37):
was ahead of its time. But moving down the list,
we have Dumbo from nineteen forty one. That's not going
in there. Bamby from nineteen forty two. Get that movie
out of here. It's sad. It's a classic. But no,
I don't need that movie on my life anymore. Yes,
sa Lulos Amigos from forty three, The Three Caballeros from
nineteen forty five. No, no, we're not in a good
era right now. Make my music from forty six now, fun,

(25:59):
fancy and free from forty seven.

Speaker 5 (26:00):
Nah.

Speaker 9 (26:01):
They would hard on the musicals during this time. Melody
Time from forty eight, The Adventures of Ichabod and Mister
Toad from forty nine. Nah, ooh. But then we get
to number twelve from nineteen fifty Cinderella, another Disney classic
with one of the best Disney princesses of all time.
You also have a great supporting cast in Cinderella and
a lot of great songs. I have a lot of

(26:23):
great memories with this movie, and this is a movie
that I feel like really represents what Disney was trying
to do to establish themselves as being the great storytellers
that they are. This movie has everything. It has fantasy,
it has a lesson, it has great animation, especially for
the fifties. So with the twelfth movie on the list,

(26:46):
we have our second entry in my vault, going with
Cinderella from nineteen fifty all right, moving down the list,
Alison Wonderland from fifty one. We're getting into some pretty
good territory here. I love that one, just not enough
to put it into my collection. That as my third pick.
After that, we have number fourteen from nineteen fifty three,

(27:06):
Peter Pan.

Speaker 10 (27:07):
Oh.

Speaker 9 (27:07):
I love this movie. One of my favorite movies to
watch on VHS. I just feel like it adds to
this level of warm to this movie. A classic tale,
one of the best Disney characters of all time that
I believe even transcends Disney. I don't immediately think Disney
when I think Peter Pan I think we're gonna have
to have another one right here. So the third movie

(27:28):
in the vault in my collection, I'm going with Peter
pan I need this movie on my life, all right,
Moving on down the list now, the fifteenth disc is
Lady in the Tramp from fifty five.

Speaker 12 (27:40):
Nah.

Speaker 9 (27:40):
I never really loved that movie, didn't like the remakes,
so neither of those are gonna make my list.

Speaker 2 (27:45):
Sleeping Beauty from fifty.

Speaker 9 (27:46):
Nine, hah nah, I'm good there. One hundred and one Dalmatians,
a great movie, just not great enough to enter my
top ten. So leave that one in nineteen sixty one,
The Sword in the Stone from sixty three. I'm good
oncle Book from sixty seven, A great movie, was just
never one of my favorites, so we're not adding that one.
The Aristocrats from nineteen seventy. We get a little bit

(28:08):
more experimental in the Disney storytelling here.

Speaker 5 (28:11):
I never really liked that movie.

Speaker 9 (28:12):
I remember always seeing the commercials for that one as
like commercials inside other Disney movie and thinking, what did
they do there? I'm good without that one. You have
Robinhood from seventy three, The Many Adventures of Winning the
Pooh in nineteen seventy seven. I'm good here, The Rescuers
from seventy seven, Fox and the Hound from eighty one,
The Black Cauldron from eighty five, The Great Mouse Detective

(28:35):
from nineteen eighty six. We have entered the xerox era
here for Disney, which is often criticized as being one
of their laziest eras when they were reusing backgrounds, reusing characters,
and a lot of people say the animation during this
time was just very lifeless. But at twenty seven, even
though it's in the xerox era and some people would
say is not a great Disney movie, I have one

(28:57):
that I'm adding into the vault as our fourth pick.
I'm going from the twenty seventh disc in this collection,
Oliver and Company from nineteen eighty eight, has a great soundtrack,
a movie that hits me on an emotional level. I
love this one. Let's throw it in the vault as
our fourth pick. All right. Moving on down the list.
Right after that from nineteen eighty nine is the twenty

(29:19):
eighth disc, we have The Little Mermaid. It's a really
good one. It's a classic, but I'm not putting it
in my collection. I'm just not the twenty ninth disc,
The Rescuers down Under from nineteen ninety. I actually like
that one better than The Rescuers. I watched that movie
a lot as a kid, but still not enough to
put it on in my list. Here. The thirtieth disc
is The Beauty and the Beast, from ninety one. Okay,

(29:40):
we are entering the Renaissance era here, some really great
movie is gonna have to make some really tough decisions here.
Beauty in the Beast does not make my list though.
At thirty one we have Aladdin from ninety two. I
was just never that big of an Aladdin fan. There
were just something about that movie that just didn't really
call to me. A lot of people love that movie,
not making my list. At number thirty two, we have

(30:02):
Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas from ninety three. I'm
good there. Then disc thirty three The Lion King from
nineteen ninety four. That is an easy one. Do I
need to say more about that one? That is our
fifth one? So five entries down, only five spots remain
in the disc. Right after that at Disc thirty four

(30:22):
is a Goofy movie from nineteen ninety five. It's a
classic for me. Even though I feel this one still
gets overlooked over and over again, and as a cult
following that, I feel people will appreciate more now than
when it came out in ninety five. You know we
are putting this movie on my list. Give me a
goofy movie from nineteen ninety five, and.

Speaker 2 (30:50):
That was this week's Sunday Sampler. New episodes are out weekly.

Speaker 5 (30:53):
Go check them out.

Speaker 2 (30:54):
Check out Movie Mike's podcast, check out The.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
Bobby Cast, check out Get Real with Caroline Hobby, all
the Who There, Sore Losers, Four Things with Amy Brown.
So much and please subscribe, rate, and review them because
it does help us out. Thank you, have a great week, everybody.

Speaker 7 (31:09):
M
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