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April 28, 2024 34 mins

In this episode, you'll hear highlight clips from the past week of some of the podcasts on The Nashville Podcast Network- 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!

Find them on Instagram:

-The BobbyCast- @BobbyCast

-4 Things- @4ThingsPodcast

-Sore Losers- @soreloserspodcast

-Movie Mike's Movie Podcast- @MikeDeestro

-Get Real- @GetRealCarolineHobby

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
Hey guys, it's Amy here and welcome to this week's
Sunday Sampler. I'm sitting in for Bobby this week as
we share clips from some of the podcasts that are
on the Nashville Podcast Network. These are episodes that came
out this week on the Bobby Cast, My Four Things podcasts,
Solord Losers, Movie Mike's Movie Podcast, and Get Real with
Caroline Hobby Now on My four Things podcast, I talked

(00:31):
with my cousin, you know her on the Bobby Bone
Show as my psychic cousin, but she is so much
more than that. She has so much wisdom and insight
and being that I'm going to be selling my house
and moving. We talked about address numerology, you can change
the energy of your home. We also talked about conscious neuroplasticity,
which I know sounds kind.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
Of complicated, but it's really not.

Speaker 1 (00:53):
It's you doing simple things like small habit changes that
are going to make big changes in your life, like
just brushing your teeth with your non dominant hands, stuff
like that. On Movie Mike's Movie Podcast, Mike Dee went
through the most underrated actors in their standout performances. He
also talks about Apple's new rom com called fly Me

(01:14):
to the Moon starring Scarlet Johansson and Channing Tatum, which
I think I'm gonna have to check that movie out.
And then this week on the Bobby Cast, co Wetzel
stops by Bobby's house to talk about new music, why
he feels that people relate to his lyrics, and then
he shares what he learned from the first time that
he went to jail.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
So let's say you're on the road and you're going
to look, who's your hole back guy that you would
actually listen to if they're like you are. You're always
out of control, but you're a little too out of
control right now.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
Man, My boy Dre is always that guy. But it's
kind of bad because most of the time he's almost
on my level, so he's like holding me back, but
he's also kind of like, I want to see how
this turns out type shit.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
If he steps in and goes, you got to chill,
Do you listen? No?

Speaker 4 (02:04):
Not really, I don't. I don't. I don't at all.

Speaker 3 (02:08):
Actually, you don't have an appointed hold back guy by
somebody else?

Speaker 4 (02:10):
I don't. I do. I actually have a couple of them,
but like you said, I just don't. I don't listen.

Speaker 3 (02:16):
If you don't want to listen, you're not gonna listen.

Speaker 4 (02:18):
That's the deal. Once I get to that level, it's
kind of like, okay, I got that look at my
and everybody kind of knows not to.

Speaker 5 (02:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:26):
I mean you're also like, I wouldn't fight.

Speaker 4 (02:28):
I wouldn't want to fight you, man, because you.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
Talk about fighting because she's a bit. He's a big
strong guy that sucks.

Speaker 4 (02:36):
Yeah, Well, you get.

Speaker 3 (02:37):
People challenging you just because.

Speaker 4 (02:40):
No. Usually, I mean, I don't know, it's not I mean,
we don't go out looking for fights.

Speaker 3 (02:45):
But guys, I know that would be like MMA fighters.
I won't even say people like challenge them because they'd
be like.

Speaker 4 (02:51):
Oh that's like, hell, that's so stupid.

Speaker 3 (02:54):
That's so I feel like people be like, oh, cots,
so playing football. It doesn't happen at all.

Speaker 4 (03:01):
No, not really. It's it's always pretty much love man.
And And like I said, man, we don't. I haven't.
I can't remember last time I got to an actual
fight with.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
Uh, with somebody that wasn't yeah, somebody.

Speaker 4 (03:12):
That I just was some random person. I mean, it's
usually I can't remember it was a while back. We'll
say that it was.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
Well, I'm not gonna mention any names, but I have
a friend, a very big country using star, got in
a fight bar with somebody didn't know, beat the crap
out of the dude, and it was do everything possible
to make sure it doesn't get out.

Speaker 4 (03:34):
Yeah for ever.

Speaker 3 (03:35):
I mean it was all layers. We we have those
two because he beat the crap out of the dude,
and you got to shut that crap down quick because
all of a sudden, there we get a little money.

Speaker 4 (03:46):
Well, well it'll go back to that with us as well, though,
Like people kind of expect that out of us, and
so it's kind of, oh, well, co got who gives
a ship?

Speaker 3 (03:56):
That's true until someone Yeah, until something someone wants to
money or they're like, my insurance, my car insurance is
higher because I'm a public profile. Because people will be like,
oh that's that dude, Oh my net Curt's a little
more because they know they could probably get a little
more money out of somebody. It's a weird reason to
have high insurance. Uh, it's a good reason. I'm happy. Yeah,

(04:17):
for sure, I wouldn't trade it, but you know, being
a it's like I've watched it kind of have I
don't even know what fame is anymore because it's so fractured,
it's so splentered, but i've watched kind of get famous.
Has your life changed at all because of the success
that you've had. Have you had to alter? Like you say,
Walmart after dark? Do you make any decisions based on that?

Speaker 6 (04:39):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (04:40):
Yeah, I do, and and we kind of all do,
as far as you know, going out to eat before
shows and things like that, you know.

Speaker 3 (04:48):
Especially close to the venue. Yeah, that's it. That's the word.

Speaker 4 (04:52):
And well, you know it will be a nice sprinter van.
Let me beating on the windows. But uh yeah, I
have just little minor ways they're in and my mom
gets upset every time I come back home. She always
wants me to take her out to dinner. I don't
know if it's because she wants me to wants to
show me off, or whatever, but its usually I'm so
tired and I just kind of want to be with
the family and hang out, watch movies and stuff. And

(05:14):
she's like, you're not gonna take me out to dinner.
I'm like, well, if we go out, it's gonna be
an ordeal and but she gets you know, so it's
it's cool.

Speaker 3 (05:22):
Why do you think people relate to your lyrics so much?

Speaker 4 (05:24):
Because they're real and they're we're all it's something that
I think it's it's stuff that other people are not
afraid to say. It was just kind of I don't know,
Maybe I would rather not say for fear of what
it would do to their career.

Speaker 3 (05:43):
Maybe do you feel that your lyrics are so raw
and real? And I'm gonna talk out this question after
I say it to you that sometimes you don't even
relate to it anymore because in a different part of
your life, your raw and real lyrics were true to
you then. But you've gotten older a bit, you've learned
things where you can listen back to be like, man,
that's still raw and real, but I don't even relate

(06:04):
to that anymore.

Speaker 4 (06:05):
Yeah, well, it's kind of like the February twenty eighth stuff,
and and that's became just blown out of proportion, you know,
stuff like that. But I mean, I wrote that song
whenever I was twenty two, twenty three years old, and
now that I'm thirty one, looking back at it, it's
like every night, it's like damn, we gonna sing the
song again. But people come to the show for that song,
you know, a lot of people come just to hear

(06:25):
that song. So, but songs like that, you know, it's Yeah,
I've grown up a little bit and I've gotten a
little bit wiser, i'd say, And the songs that I
wrote in college and how I was living my life
back then are completely different than how I'm living my
life now. So yeah, absolutely, like.

Speaker 3 (06:44):
It's I know, still rang and real and true to
who that was. Absolutely, that'd be a little bird though
to sing stuff that you don't.

Speaker 4 (06:51):
Feel absolutely anymore. It is your new record? Though?

Speaker 5 (06:55):
What is it?

Speaker 4 (06:55):
When?

Speaker 3 (06:56):
Tell me about that? So what's what's that? And how
has that changed.

Speaker 4 (06:59):
Its skinny into more relationship like more raw and reil
about relationships and and uh just life, you know pretty
much from what I just said, from growing up in
the scene and doing that kind of stuff and and
uh making that type of music to now what I'm making,
you know, and how my life has changed from that.

Speaker 3 (07:21):
Any of these songs, were they borderline? I don't know
if I want to share that much. I don't know
if I want to I don't know if I feel
like saying it right now? Is there any of that
where it's not you listen, You're gonna say it if
you feel it, but maybe like maybe the time isn't
right now.

Speaker 4 (07:34):
Yeah, we held back on a little bit of it.
There was a couple of lines and songs that we
had wrote and it was like, we really want to
go there, and then we would record them, and then
we would come back to them and be like, let'sten
to them for a couple of days, like maybe not,
Let's let's hold off on it and just see how
everybody takes this kind of newer sound that we're putting out.

Speaker 7 (08:00):
Joy cast up little food for yourself life. Oh it's pretty,
but hey, it's pretty beautiful, beautiful that for.

Speaker 3 (08:16):
A little mouth exciting.

Speaker 7 (08:21):
Said he you're kicking it with full thing with Amy Brown.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
Hey it's Amy Brown from Four Things with Amy Brown.
And here's what we talked about this week on my podcast.
Part of this conscious neuroplasticity is changing up small habits
in your day to create big change. And something that
I have heard that we should try to incorporate is
every once in a while, like say, you always brush
your teeth with your right hand, you you know, switch

(08:49):
it over to the left hand every now and then.
To switch things up? Is that sort of an alignment
with what you're saying.

Speaker 8 (08:56):
I do that all the time with myself. I play
games with myself and things that and notice where I'm dominant,
because first of all, it's the awareness of I dominantly
do this. So brushing your teeth is an easy place
to start because most likely you brush with the dominant
hand that comes naturally to you. So switching those things up,
it's awkward, it doesn't feel good, it may take longer,

(09:18):
but you're changing brain patterns and you're building new neural
networks between the right and the left hemispheres of the brain.
So you're connecting the logical, the pragmatic with the intuitive
the creative, and it strengthens brain frequency and cognition. But
it helps with intuition, it helps with discernment, it can
help with regulating the nervous system. So a lot of

(09:40):
times with clients when we're working on intuitive development or
awareness and cognition, I will suggest things like switching stuff up.
For example, for me, I notice it in a lot
of little things because I am very aware and when
I drive, I naturally lean a little to the left,

(10:00):
and I drive with my left hand, like I'll put
the right hand down whatever is going on, And I've
gotten to where I notice that, and then I will
switch and just hold the steering wheel with the right hand.
And it's uncomfortable and I have to adjust. I have
to adjust my posture. I have to sit up straighter.
I mean, obviously I'm attempting to be aware while I'm driving,

(10:22):
but I notice where my body sinks into comfortable patterns,
and by just that awareness and those minor tweaks that
are uncomfortable, and it's uncomfortable for me to turn the
steering wheel without hand, and I know I should be
driving with two hands ten and two, but I'm talking
about things that I notice. So shaving your legs, which

(10:42):
hand do you open the front or back door with?
You can notice and play with these things. And the
more conscious you are, the more first of all, the
more aware, which is really a place for intuitive development.
And secondly, when I'm doing something like brushing my teeth
and it is awkward with the non die and at hand,
that's when I laugh first and foremost, which shoots chemicals

(11:04):
into the body into the brain, which are happy receptors, serotonin,
all the things that are released, and then I laugh
a little bit because it's awkward. And then I set intentions.
You know, I am consciously shifting and developing neural networks
in my brain today. I am wiring myself for happiness
and joy and ease and laughter as I'm smiling and

(11:25):
feeling awkward. It's easy places to get aware, to set intentions,
to use your biology and chemistry in the body that
is also enhancing and tapping into your intuition.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
You mentioned driving, So another one that I've heard of
before is if you're used to turning left out of
your neighborhood to go where we're going, but you have
an option to turn right go that way to work occasionally,
to switch up that as well.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
Yeah, it's about spontaneity.

Speaker 8 (11:55):
And like I always say, go to a different grocery store,
even if it takes you twenty more minutes to get
to that grocery store. And this is the simplest example
I can give. When I go to a different grocery store,
I don't naturally know, Oh, the granola is on this aisle,
you know, at this end cap in this section, I
have to look up I have to find the granola

(12:17):
or whatever it is that I'm looking for on my list,
but I have to pay attention. I have to read signs,
I have to wander down aisles because things are not
in the place where I'm familiar, so I'm busting up patterns.
But also now we have all this these navigation systems
on our phone and our vehicles. Everything is automated. Do
you remember when we pulled out maps or we ask

(12:39):
for directions. A lot of times, if I'm going somewhere
and I don't know the exact route, I will map
it and look it up, and then I will turn
the phone off and I will drive if I have time,
if I'm not in a rush.

Speaker 2 (12:50):
Simple things like that.

Speaker 8 (12:52):
They're really good for anti aging, or at least I
don't maybe that's not the best way to say it,
but vitality revitalizing your brain, which can also help prevent
things like Alzheimer's dementia, working on neuroplasticity, but it really
is good for helping people, helping us tap into intuition

(13:12):
and spontaneity, which is that other hemisphere of the brain
that we don't drop into as easily, but the more
we practice it in those little things and consciously, the
easier it is to tap into intuition, creativity and connect
it with the logical and the practical.

Speaker 9 (13:44):
We're going to do it live. We are the one, two,
three Sore Losers.

Speaker 6 (13:51):
What up, everybody? I am lunchbox. I know the most
about sports, so I'll give you the sports facts, my
sports opinions, because I'm pretty much a sports gen.

Speaker 5 (14:00):
Y'all.

Speaker 9 (14:00):
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. Over to you, coach.

Speaker 6 (14:21):
And here's a clip from this week's episode of The
Sore Losers. And here's a clip from one of and
here's a clip from one of the episodes this week
on The Sore Losers. Take this clip and play it.
Work as a firefighter. Then on the days off, he
would be a mover to make extra money.

Speaker 9 (14:38):
So they're doubling up two salaries.

Speaker 6 (14:40):
Or he would take a rat. You get paid more
so you'd work forty eight hours and then you're off
a day. But the great thing is for vacation. He
would take four days off and he'd have two and
a half weeks off, so he could go on vacation
for two and a half weeks by taking four days off.

Speaker 9 (14:55):
That's when it's the best job in America. Not so
much when he got back.

Speaker 6 (14:58):
So many freaking amazing things Mark thanks to our service member.
He got called one time on a fat lady and
she was on her bed, couldn't get up, overweight, trying
to take her to the hospital. They're like, we'll just
drag around on the mattress. Lady, hey, quiet.

Speaker 9 (15:17):
Disrespect number two put it on the board.

Speaker 5 (15:19):
Yep.

Speaker 6 (15:20):
So they said, I will just pull her out on
the mattress. So they get they can't get out the door,
and one dude just starts yelling, falld he like a
tacold her like.

Speaker 9 (15:34):
A taco fourth meal. And there one of those new
casandia's where the cheese on the outside tantinas, so they
literally cheese roll up.

Speaker 3 (15:47):
Man.

Speaker 6 (15:48):
They literally folded this freaking lady in her mattress like.

Speaker 9 (15:51):
Miss the potatoes. Hit her with the old nacho fries.

Speaker 6 (15:55):
They fall her like a taco loacho pizza.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
What is it?

Speaker 9 (15:58):
Mexican pizza.

Speaker 6 (16:00):
They folded her like a taco to get her out
of the house.

Speaker 9 (16:03):
They'll do it, dude, we'd be good on the force together.

Speaker 6 (16:08):
I mean, those stories he used to tell me were fantastic, fantastic.

Speaker 9 (16:13):
Oh you're cn I mean that. It also is a
lot of death and stuff like that.

Speaker 6 (16:17):
But yeah, he did have one death where the guy
he showed up, that dude was dead in bed and
he died while banging. A chick went into cardiac arrest,
went down fighting and the lady is like freaking out.
She's in the driveway. She's like, I gotta go. I

(16:38):
gotta go, like I'm out of here. And they're like, no,
you're gonna have to talk to police, you know, because
fire is first one there. And she's like, no, no, no,
I can't, I can't. I've got to go. And they're like, man,
you're not in trouble. Don't worry, like you know what
I mean, Like we just they just have to get
a statement.

Speaker 9 (16:52):
Football Ray fire police ambulance.

Speaker 6 (16:55):
And she said, well, you don't understand his girlfriend's going
to be home.

Speaker 9 (16:59):
And this just took a turn and it's like, oh no,
we're about down some drama.

Speaker 6 (17:05):
More about down some drama. So she knew she was
the side piece and he died while she's banging the
side piece and she was ready to get out. She's like,
I don't want to. I don't want to deal with it.

Speaker 9 (17:16):
Rest in peace. It wasn't McNair.

Speaker 6 (17:18):
No, No, this similar situation san Antonio, San Antonio, different city. Yeah,
so that was one of the funnier ones that he had.
But I didn't realize we're going to do stories from
the fire department.

Speaker 9 (17:29):
But I take a break, bro, we do Yeah, Oh no,
that was a lot to stomach.

Speaker 6 (17:34):
I mean we we already we took a break out
to the vomit.

Speaker 9 (17:38):
Our second outro break is after the.

Speaker 6 (17:42):
I mean, we're doing a lot of bodily fluids today.
And then my wife.

Speaker 9 (17:47):
We just launched new advertising and this is what they're
tuning into.

Speaker 6 (17:51):
I don't think we just launched new advertising.

Speaker 9 (17:52):
I've never seen it before. And now Justin had an
article written on him a couple of days ago. It
said Ray and Justin on the brink of a relationship,
does that or something?

Speaker 6 (18:01):
And Justing a what the is this?

Speaker 9 (18:04):
That's an actual article written about it and it was
on Bobby Bones.

Speaker 6 (18:08):
Oh they wrote it like an article about our show. Yeah,
I thought you meant oh dude.

Speaker 9 (18:14):
And so my friends are seeing this crap. They're like,
what is the.

Speaker 6 (18:19):
I thought you meant that. Someone interviewed Justin about his
job at Bandy like he was in a vandy like
press release.

Speaker 9 (18:26):
Things are starting to get released titled after how you
title him about our podcast.

Speaker 6 (18:32):
So so far today? If you were brainstorming, what would
you title today's podcast Lunchbox.

Speaker 9 (18:37):
Had a sleepless night of vomiting. People are like, oh
my gosh, he's back on the bottle. And then that's
a front page headline where you just think you're titling
it for iHeart, dude, you're titling it for websites, Instagram,
all over, they've blasted all over.

Speaker 10 (18:51):
Hey, it's Mike dar And this week a movie my
Spook podcast, I shared my top five most underrated actors.
These are all actors that I who instantly make a
movie better but don't get the recognition or more importantly,
sometimes do not get the money they deserve. So I
want to share a couple of them. With you here
on this segment, but be sure to check out my
full podcast to hear all these deep dives that I

(19:13):
do on topics like this, also spoiler free movie reviews
and breaking down all the latest trailers of movies coming
out in theaters and streaming at home for you.

Speaker 11 (19:22):
Be sure to check it out. I'd appreciate it. With
the actor who inspired this entire list. After watching Civil War,
which I'll get into my full thoughts later, I saw
Jesse Plemons in that and he immediately made that movie better,
and that is what he always does. And Jesse Plemons
has been added for so long. As a child actor,

(19:45):
you're a fan of Friday Night Lights, you're probably familiar
with his work. He's done a lot in TV, and
that's not even what I'm going to dive into here,
but he has really become one of my favorite actors.
Maybe it's because he's from Dallas, Texas, so there's some
hometown bias there, but I feel like, for a very
long time, Jesse Plemmons was somebody who I would see
in so many movies and TV shows, And oftentimes there

(20:07):
are people like that that, even though I'm exposed to
their work so much, I don't know their name, and
that is unfair of me, and that is why I'm
doing this episode today, because there are so many people
like that that we appreciate but we undervalue because they
aren't the Brad Pitts, they aren't the Leonardo DiCaprio's, they
aren't the Kate Winslets of Hollywood. But they are doing

(20:31):
the roles that nobody else can do. The hard work. Now,
if there was a blue collar worker in Hollywood, it
would be these people on this list, because they are
consistently in good movies and making things that inspire me,
and not only that, but giving us all different kinds

(20:52):
of looks. The range on these actors is why I
decided to include every single person on this list, because
they can do it all. They can do big dramas,
they can do comedies, and that is something that is
so undervalued. And oftentimes the people at the top really
could just only do one thing really well, and that
is what they get paid for. Tom Cruise, he's really
great at action. I'm not the biggest fan of his

(21:14):
drama movies, but you could argue that the rock is
only really good at one thing. But Jesse Plemans, if
you look at the list of movies he's done. There
are so many great ones to pick from, where he
looks completely different and acts like a different character in
every single movie, where he can do the dramas, he
can do the comedies. And the movie that really set

(21:35):
him apart in my mind and solidified him in my
list of actors I'm gonna watch everything they are in
now was Killers of the Flower Moon, which right now
is his best role because he commanded the screen so
much in that movie, and I really wish he had
a bigger role in that, because oh, I feel that

(21:55):
way about every single movie he's in before that. I
would say one of my favorite movies of his is
called Game Night, which is a very generic title for
a movie and one that I thought was gonna be
kind of a waste of time. You also have Jason
Bateman and Rachel McAdams, but that is a movie that
has a bad title that doesn't really tell you a
whole lot about it. In any comedy, there's always one

(22:17):
scene that I feel defines the entire movie that I
could forget all the other plot points, but there's gonna
be one scene that sticks out to me, and that
scene for me in this movie is whenever Rachel McAdams
and Jason Bateman get home from grocery shopping, they're gonna
have the game night, but they don't want to invite
Jesse Plemmon's character because he's kind of weird and they
don't want him interacting with all their friends. So they

(22:39):
have this iconic interaction.

Speaker 9 (22:43):
Three bags of tostito scoops.

Speaker 3 (22:45):
I notice there was a special on these tonight three
for one, three for one.

Speaker 4 (22:54):
Yep?

Speaker 3 (22:55):
How can that be profitable for Freedom A?

Speaker 11 (22:57):
If I could get a movie quote tattooed on my
he it would be an honor of Jesse Plemons. How
could that be profitable for Freedo A? A classic? He
deserves all the praise. He is an underrated actor in
my opinion. Next up on my list is Ben Foster,
who is somebody who acts with so much emotion I

(23:18):
cannot believe that he is not more famous. My favorite
movie of his is Alpha Dog, where he acted his
face off and it's such a sad story. But in
this movie, Ben Foster plays kind of a junkie who
gets into some trouble with a drug dealer. He refuses
to pay him. This drug dealer or the young guy
thinks he's the King of La so he's gonna kidnap

(23:42):
ben Foster's character's brother played by Anton Yelchin, who sadly
passed away. And maybe that's why this movie still hits
me on a weird emotional level of just knowing how
he tragically died. But Ben Foster is so ferocious in
this movie. Some people would argue that he overacted a bit.
I remember when the reviews came out for this movie
back in two thousand and seven, they were saying that

(24:05):
Ben Foster was over dramatic in this role. I don't
think that is the case whatsoever, because he's playing into
his characters so well, and I love it when an
actor goes to that level shows you that range of emotion.
Ben Foster almost has this patented yell and anger look
on his face, and he makes me feel what he

(24:25):
is feeling. In this movie. He goes from rage to
sadness to fighting Emil Hirsch's character and breaking into his house.
So it's my favorite performance of his. Another really great
movie that Ben Foster was in was a western crime
movie called Hell or High Water that came out in
twenty sixteen and Originally I was interested in this movie

(24:46):
because it gave me a lot of vibes of No
Country for Old Man, kind of shot the same way,
has similar cinematography. Was actually also shot and takes place
out in West Texas. Chris Pine plays his brother in
the movie, and they are going around Texas robbing different banks,
and then Jeff Bridges plays a Texas ranger who tracks

(25:08):
them down and tries to stop them. It really is
one of the best modern day westerns. We don't really
get a whole lot of them anymore. And Hell or
High Water was a movie I got a lot of
praise and a lot of buzz whenever it first came out,
but rarely do I hear people talk about this movie now.
So if you're looking for just a fun watch, and
also if you are somebody like me who needs a

(25:28):
movie to watch what the father figure in your life,
that is always hard to do. My dad does not
watch movies whatsoever. He doesn't watch TV, he doesn't watch movies.
Anytime we want to take them out to a movie,
he doesn't want to go because he knows he's gonna
fall asleep within five to ten minutes. All my dad
does is work, sleep, eat, mow the lawn, and drink beer.

(25:49):
He has no time for anything, so oftentimes I have
trouble bonding with him over any kind of movie. And
if I do want to pick a movie, it has
to have something with guns, chases, police, and a lot
of foul language, because my dad always finds it hilarious
when people cuss in a movie. So already thinking ahead
for you. If you need an activity for the father

(26:11):
figure in your life coming up for Father's Day in
a couple of months, Hell or High Water is a
great place to start, and you will not be disappointed
with Ben Foster's performance. That is why he's on this list.

Speaker 5 (26:42):
Carral, she's a queen of talking.

Speaker 4 (26:46):
You a son.

Speaker 3 (26:47):
You she's getting really not afraid to face with so
so just let it flow.

Speaker 4 (26:53):
No one can do with quiet Carl.

Speaker 6 (26:58):
It is time for Caroler.

Speaker 12 (27:01):
Hey y'all, it's Caroline Hobby from Get Real with Caroline Hobby.
And here is a clip from this week's episode.

Speaker 2 (27:09):
So how did this all get going? Y'all? Brothers?

Speaker 12 (27:11):
So y'all like the Kelsey Brothers of rock and roll, right,
you know, because two brothers making all this history together,
which is really awesome. How did it get going. Y'all
are in separate bands. AJU originally were the drummer of Razzle.

Speaker 5 (27:24):
I mean we started we went to all the concerts together.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
When we were Orange County kids.

Speaker 12 (27:29):
Orange County kids, that was a big scene too, right, Uh.

Speaker 13 (27:33):
Well, there were a lot of I mean OC's massive, but
as far as like music scene goes, we were We're
more of a Hollywood scene band. So there was like
being young kids in high school, there were no venues
that were, you know, under eighteen, so our friends from
school had had to make the track. Were get party
buses and bus everybody up to like the Roxy and

(27:54):
the Whiskey and so those are the shows. That's where
we kind of got our roots in our school as
far as like how to market band and.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
How to what'd you learn? How'd you do it? And
how did you market a band? Back then? How old
were y'all?

Speaker 6 (28:04):
Gorilla style?

Speaker 5 (28:06):
In fifth hours?

Speaker 2 (28:07):
Do it when you're fourteen?

Speaker 5 (28:09):
We just I piloned his car because I wasn't driving yet.

Speaker 14 (28:12):
I was two years I was two years older, and
we went to We went to We went promoting every
Friday and Saturday night. Was never a matter of where
we were going. It was just a matter of well
it was.

Speaker 5 (28:21):
He social media.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
We had yeah, no social media. It was all word
of mouth.

Speaker 14 (28:25):
So me and T Bone, who he runs House of
Blues now in Anaheim, but he grew up with us
and he was like our He just kind of got
thrown into the mix that you know, hey, dude, you're
going to be the tour manager.

Speaker 5 (28:36):
Hoka.

Speaker 12 (28:38):
I love that though, like builds, y'all built it as
a family from such a young age.

Speaker 2 (28:42):
It's like a different kind of band and bond that way.

Speaker 10 (28:44):
It was.

Speaker 13 (28:44):
Yeah, it was full brotherhood from her brotherhood and it's
not like it's talent, but it's also the brotherhood aspect
that you just can't recreate that as you get older.

Speaker 12 (28:52):
Okay, so t Bone he's tour managing, what are you doing?
Does he know how to do this?

Speaker 14 (28:56):
So him and I in high school. In high school
then we would have to take these It was called
R O P. I don't even if they still have that,
but it was like trade school and you would leave,
you know, you would leave high school at lunchtime. You
would go to this other campus and you would learn
how to build brick walls or fixed cars or we
took print shop, and so we made flyers and we

(29:16):
were able to get reams of paper at cost, and
so we would we would print like five thousand flyers,
a whole case of flyers for shows, and then we
would just go relentlessly and just pass them out, put
them in stores hand to hand, literally hand combat.

Speaker 13 (29:33):
Stacks, not even exaggerating like this big, freezing cold.

Speaker 5 (29:37):
We just put gloves on and grab some grab a bottle.
Sorry that I just want to but yeah, no, it
was fun though. We had a good time.

Speaker 13 (29:51):
Like the whole bam would get together and we're meeting
new people and we're meeting chicks, and we were just.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
Of the stars from the beginning.

Speaker 12 (29:58):
How did y'all know you wanted to be a rock
star though, because so if you're fourteen years old, you're sixteen, right,
two years apart?

Speaker 2 (30:02):
Is that right? Y'all are so young?

Speaker 12 (30:04):
How did you guys even get the grand notion to
be rock stars and then actually pursue it?

Speaker 2 (30:10):
Who in your life helped? Was your parents? Just like,
go get it boys? Like how did y'all have this
freedom just.

Speaker 12 (30:17):
To go so hard like you did into this at
such a young age.

Speaker 5 (30:20):
A combination of a few things I think.

Speaker 13 (30:22):
You know, our grandfather was a jazz musician, so we
were always around like he had an organ in his
living room and he was and he had a drum
set in the garage, so he was always playing something,
always singing and playing the end of the old standards
and we always thought that was just so cool. But
our dad was in radio. Our dad was radio dj
our whole lives, so we had all the new voice

(30:43):
and then and then really it took like I think
going to a rock show, coming to a concert, and.

Speaker 5 (30:49):
We just like looked at each other just like couldn't believe.

Speaker 14 (30:53):
We were nine here I was nine and he was seven.
Our dad took us to a concert.

Speaker 2 (30:57):
What show, Iron Maiden, okay Off opening.

Speaker 14 (31:01):
For UFOs, super random, but.

Speaker 2 (31:03):
We went hard from the start.

Speaker 14 (31:05):
We were heavy metal kids, and right from the very
beginning we were like, that's what we want to do
when we grow up instantly, but we didn't know how
we sure to do it. You know, I wasn't even
I didn't play guitar yet, and he, you know, we
were just like, we want to do that, and then
together as years is.

Speaker 12 (31:20):
A mutual dream that hit you at the same time
was that when the dream I think, so, I mean
we dream literally hit you at.

Speaker 2 (31:25):
The same time.

Speaker 5 (31:26):
Yeah, I mean it was that was the impact you
know that an arena rock show had.

Speaker 2 (31:30):
This is what we need to do.

Speaker 13 (31:31):
Do we get pictures and I can talk about fakes
he and make it. We literally had like broomsticks and
fake sweat. We'd wet our hair and we were just
posing for pictures and like, you know, we did we
just we didn't, we thought and it's crazy being that
young and just going, Okay, that's what we're gonna do,
like now what we got to do to get there,
and just doing all those little things, you know, and

(31:52):
just watching watching.

Speaker 2 (31:54):
Them bands in the beginning.

Speaker 13 (31:56):
Yeah, not for very long, but yeah, because he you know, actually,
y'all tell your story because I.

Speaker 2 (32:02):
Was how did y'all?

Speaker 14 (32:03):
Yeah, because at sixteen, I was a little older, and
I was I was I was living with my dad.
He was living with my mom for a couple of years.
We were kind of and I dropped out of school.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
Your parents were divorced. Yeah, at that age, y'all each
lived with.

Speaker 14 (32:16):
A different parent just for like at that time, like
at sixteen, I moved in with my dad and you know,
dropped out of high school so I could just focus
on being in a rock band. And I was in
a band with some older dudes, and we were playing
bars a couple of nights a week and rehearsing three
nights a week. And that was kind of my almost
like my junior college, if you will. I just was

(32:36):
learning and observing and all that. And then a couple
of years later when AJ and Kevin started driving and
started you know, you know, a couple of years into puberty,
and and then and we were like, hey, we should
all do this together. So we you know, did you.

Speaker 2 (32:51):
Guys miss each other when y'all didn't live together? Did
you even think about it?

Speaker 5 (32:54):
We were still we were always doing things together, you know,
I was.

Speaker 2 (32:56):
Always I never knew that piece of the story.

Speaker 5 (32:59):
Frands And yeah, we lived, I don't know, two miles
from each other.

Speaker 2 (33:04):
And the parents get along though, did they all together here? Yeah,
a big divorce story.

Speaker 5 (33:09):
Ever, that's a whole other.

Speaker 14 (33:12):
But our mom and dad and our mom's boyfriend share
a place here next.

Speaker 2 (33:18):
Yeah, I mean, come on, that's amazing. That's the dream
to be able to realize.

Speaker 12 (33:23):
Okay, we love, we love each other, but we're not
going to be together, but we still love our family.
And then to be able to circle back around with
a new boyfriend all live together, that's that's pretty crazy.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
All right.

Speaker 1 (33:41):
I hope you enjoyed this week's Sunday Sampler. New episodes
are out each week, so there really is something for everyone,
all right.

Speaker 2 (33:49):
Hope y'all are having the day that you need to have.

Speaker 1 (33:51):
Bye SSI Singers,
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