Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
And now move the sticks with Daniel Jeremiah and Bucky Brooks.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
What's up, everybody?
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Welcome to move the sticks DJ and Bucky with you.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Fuck.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Uh, not a lot of sleep last night, buddy.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
The uh the.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Old Monday, the old Monday night turnaround. I mean, I
guess it's a good thing. It's not a road game
because then you're really get home in the middle of
the night. But uh, I love I love games at
so Fi. It's a great atmosphere. It was unbelievable atmosphere
is a crazy game last night, but getting out of
that stadium is a flipping nightmare.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
No, I don't envy you. I know Monday nights in
Englewood can be tough. When I when I when I
just watched the game, and I watched how it was,
because it can be a bit of an Eagles takeover.
There a lot of Philly for Eagles fans that are
in town and then they descend upon so Fi, So
it can be a bit of a mess.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
But it had to be a great game to watch.
Speaker 3 (00:51):
And I just keep saying this man, Tony Jefferson has
to be my age. But he's still playing, I mean,
like still playing, still being around the ball, make plays
or whatever. So good for him, like Carl had a
great career.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
I mean he's set the stage for you know, people
coming out of retirement, which we'll get to another person.
Who's who's going to do that? Here it sounds like shortly,
but I mean the man was in the scouting department
for the Ravens and totally ready to move on. And
then I always come back and he's made some enormous,
enormous interceptions for this Chargers team. And it goes back
(01:25):
to you know, what you preach as a high school coach,
Buck good things happen when you chase the ball man good.
Speaker 3 (01:31):
Uh So there are a few different things because I
got to say this, one of my assistant coaches is
like the biggest Charger fan, and so he was in
the building watching it. And weird team that plays a
lot his own. But one of the benefits of playing
zoner You've seen it on your own eyes with Jesse
minner Man when you play zone and you get eyes
on the ball and then just the reaction, so it's
not even Tony Jefferson's play, it's the corner. Yeah, Kim
(01:55):
Hart just kind of hanging out in the flat, he
sees Jalen and eyes he makes a late we actually
get a tip, and then you talk about Tony Jefferson
running to the ball. It is just that kind of stuff.
And we've seen more teams go to his own looks.
But when you play visit and break tips and overthrows,
becomes a real thing when it comes to taking.
Speaker 1 (02:13):
The ball away.
Speaker 2 (02:14):
Yeah, no, it was a real thing.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
And last night, you know, I give Justin Herbert a
tremendous amount of credit to man. He's out there playing
with a broken hand. He just had surgery, pins and
a plate inserted, and he was sacked seven times when
he ran the ball ten times, so technically he was
tackled at least seventeen times, not counting other times he
might have been hit within the pocket. So an incredible
(02:37):
amount of toughness that he displayed. And I was talking
to somebody else on the team and that was new
to the team and said like that was the biggest
surprise to him or what he did not know going
into it was how tough Justin Herbert was. He's like
from the side from other teams, you watch him and
you know the town how talented he was. But he said,
I did not know just how tough he was and
(02:58):
doesn't complain. You know, truly kind of a football player,
more so than even a quarterback.
Speaker 3 (03:03):
Yeah, DJ, when looking at Laura Retlis talk about the injury,
I think it's very similar to what I did in
my hand. I think it's a third meta car fool injury,
like a spiral fraction. So the thing that he had
on the pad is very similar to what I wore
in college when I did mine. Now I played in
like eleven days. For him to play in a week
(03:25):
is ridiculous because I can still remember the thriving and
have it, and I know they probably gave him a
little sum agent, a little something to take it off.
But DJ even in that, and you can see it's
in his non throwing hand. But when bodies are around,
you have to change your natural reactions when it comes
to putting your hand down, how you protect yourself. He's
(03:47):
even running the ball that the normal inclination is to
put two hands on it, but then that exposes that
the context. So just having to rewire your brain in
less than a week. Man credit to him because they
needed him and he showed up.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
Like franchise quarterbacks.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
I was supposed to shot for EA, your team. Yeah,
and look it wasn't perfect. He had a couple of fumbles,
you know, had a couple of throws he'd like to
have back. But man, it was you know, it was
a gretty tough performance in a couple other things stood
out in that thing. Man, Man, it's such a luxury
when you got a kicker like Cameron dicker is I
think five five field goals last night and Buck he
(04:24):
doesn't even flirt with the uprights. Man, everything is true.
It is right down the middle of It didn't matter
it's fifty five yards or thirty five yards. When you're watching,
I know how you do it when you're you know,
on the sidelines and where we are situated. We're kind
of in the corner of the end zone where our
booth is for those home games, so you can't it's
not like you have a great angle to see the kick.
So you have options when you're broadcasting the game. You
(04:44):
can either watch the monitor. You could watch the screen
in the middle of the field the oculus, or.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
What I do is I'll watch reaction.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
So and I'm telling you, but it's like from the
swing from the legs swinging to the to the stick,
the hand eye to shake the holder's hand like it's
kick and then it's shaked.
Speaker 2 (05:03):
They're like, oh, he's this thing's right down the middle man.
Speaker 3 (05:06):
Look, man, there's a luxury to having a great kicker,
and there's also a luxury to having a bit of
an old school coach who takes the points where the
points are there at a time where everyone is going
for it on fourth.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
Down and whatever.
Speaker 3 (05:18):
Like Harba's willingness to take the points and just stack
the points to give yourself a chance to win.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
I love that.
Speaker 3 (05:25):
But look, when you have a kicker who is nails
and let's just say nails from fifty end, nails from fifty.
Speaker 2 (05:31):
Five in, it changes the way that you call games.
Speaker 3 (05:34):
You know, I just need to get to the sweet spot,
the thirty five yard line, and we have points available.
So for the Charges, it's a huge advantage and it's
one that paid off for them last night.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
Yeah, I want to get to one other Charger thing.
Then we'll flip over to the Eagles because we need
to hit on that thing. But man, it was nice
to see from the Chargers standpoint of Mario Hampton back
and he catches a touchdown, It runs the ball thirteen
times for fifty six yards, so they know he's gonna
be a little bit of.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
A pitch count.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
First game back Camani by dal it doesn't look like
much fourteen for forty four, only three point one yards
with a long of eight, but he ran hard and
they also popped a long catch, so he gets a
sixty yard catch early in this game. So that that combination,
I think is going to be a nice one to
two punch. You know, they think about this team. Buck,
I'm looking at the landscape of the AFC and I'm like, man,
(06:20):
he can't say the what ifs, but holy cow, if
you had your two all pro level tackles and.
Speaker 2 (06:27):
Yeah, they lost.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
They've been out without their top two running backs for
the majority of the season, so you lose Najie Harris,
you know, for the majority of the year, and a
Marion Hampton only played a couple of games. So it's
kind of the what if thing. But where they are
now and is it wide open? Is the AFC looks
you know, they've got to They've got to figure out
some pass pro in terms of just schematics, not physical beats.
(06:49):
You're going to have physical beats. You can't have him
to Kobe Dean, you get m a clean run through. Now,
there was a times that Big Fangio special where he
was able to exploit a little bit of their pass protection.
So they've got a schematic adjustment that needs to be
made there.
Speaker 3 (07:02):
You know, here's the thing about the AFC, and I
say this obviously being down in Jacksonville, it is as
wide open as it's ever been in terms of who
can go to the show. And it's a combination of
playing your best ball, but it's also being healthy at
the right time, being able to have all your guys
going into the tournament and the final part of it
in terms of who goes the matchups. Those first round
(07:25):
matchups are really going to matter in terms of who
you get lined up against, because there's some teams that
each team matches up better against the other teams that
are nemesis that you necessarily don't want to see in
their first round. To me, I can't say that they're
blaming weaknesses in any of the guys any of the
teams that we right now for casting a playoff field,
(07:47):
but some teams might have a potential to go to
a higher ceiling. But it's gonna be interesting because when
I look at the Chargers, I look at the Texans,
the Jags and everyone that's in there, very compel matchups.
But the one trade that remains true that we've talked about,
it's a quarterback driven league. You got to have a
(08:08):
quarterback to be able to get it done. Now it
looks like quarterback in defense and coach. But if you
got a quarterback, you got a good defense.
Speaker 2 (08:16):
You got to heit coach. He knows how to run
the game. Man, you got a shot.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
All right, let's do the not so nice thing. Let's
flip it over to the other side. Now, first of all,
Vic Fangio, those corners, that defense, even without Jalen Carter,
that's real. That group is very, very talented. I know
the Bears ran all over him last week. Chargers that
I know that was their game plan weren't able to
have that same success. But man, they fly around. I
(08:41):
mean they cover as well as anybody on the perimeter.
That is not an issue. They have a super Bowl
caliber defense, especially they get Jalen Carter back in the mix,
and Jalen Phillips has been a nice addition for them
now we got to go though and spend our time
on the other side because I want to get to
just your reaction on one play, because everybody's going to
talk about the foreigner steps to fumble like the two
(09:01):
hundred and two turnovers on the same play from Jayalen.
I've never seen that before. That was a that was
a first to me. There's opportunities that are there that
he's not seeing or attacking or taking advantage of. And
there's one play I want to get your thoughts on
because I'm watching it, and they end up taking Saquon Barket.
(09:23):
They removed from the backfield, they split them out wide
chargers have and I can't remember if it was Still
or Heart, but it had the starting corner on Davante
who at the time was in man on the line
right yep. So if Barkley goes out, they bump, so
corner goes out with say kuon coverage zone. Now you
get Elijah Moulden who walks down over Davante Smith. There's
(09:45):
nobody else there. So now I'm sitting, well, man, they
got the that's where you start, That's where your eyes
are going to go. Is I think it's a third
now it is a big play, but he never even
got He never even looked there, even go there. And
I'm like, Davante Smith is good outrunner as you get,
and you've got that matchup sitting there waiting for you,
and it was never even in his eyesight, never even
(10:08):
went there.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
The one thing that I worry about now with Jalen,
because I won't put it all on him, I'll say
it's one of the things that we always talk about.
There's a trust issue that is going on in Philadelphia,
and so it could be player the player, it could
be player to coach, it could be player regarding the scheme,
and the quarterback has to have the trust in all
of those parties to be able to play at his best.
(10:33):
Meaning when a play call comes in, I trust it's
a great play call.
Speaker 2 (10:37):
I know it like the back of my hand, and
I'm gonna trust it.
Speaker 3 (10:39):
I can just let the ball go to whoever's supposed
to go to and they're going to make the play.
Because of all of the noise, I just feel like
Jalen just has like a cloud, just a lot of
clutter in his brain and so he just doesn't see
it and it's just not playing the game the way
that we've seen him play. Now, there's a lot on him,
and he should be for a lot of it. But
(11:01):
I just think the job of the head coach and
everybody is to simplify everything to allow the most important
player to play the game the right way, and right
now I can't say that Philly is doing it.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
I had a theory on another theory on this, by
the way, which I don't know is I haven't been
I haven't, you know, obviously been on the sideline with
this team, and I haven't paid attention to their mic
depth segments over the years or what have you. But
I know that offensive linemen that are usually the better
offensive lineman on your team, that are usually the vocal
leaders on your team. I've seen it on teams where
they can bully play callers buck and I'm sitting there
(11:36):
in that game with Saquon popping some runs and getting
the run game going, and even to the end of
the game where they're throwing the ball. Where I've been
on teams where I just wondered, with this team, if
you had Kelsey or if you had Lane Johnson playing
in this game, if they wouldn't have been able in
between series to bully the head coach and the play
call or be like, hey, we're running the ball, like
(11:56):
what are we doing?
Speaker 2 (11:57):
Just run the ball?
Speaker 1 (11:59):
And I don't know, maybe maybe there is somebody that's
trying to do that, but I've seen it before. I
know you've been on teams before. You see offensive line
that can be like hey, enough, like we don't need that.
I know we're turning the ball. We don't even need
why we're throwing the ball, like, what are we doing?
Run the ball?
Speaker 3 (12:12):
And so unfortunately this happens at every level. The squeaky
will gets to grease. Yeah, and sometimes when you have
people who have a lot of opinions and they're very
loud and you're trying to placate them, you move away
from what the team does.
Speaker 2 (12:31):
Well.
Speaker 3 (12:32):
If we're really honest with the Eagles and why the
Eagles have been a dominant team for two and a
half three years, it's because their ability to run the
football consistently says of everything else, and the quarterback run
game was a big part of that. The more they
move away from that, the more they come back to
the pack in terms of being just like everybody else.
(12:52):
And I'm not saying that it's over and that they
don't have enough time to fix it. But it's going
to take Nick Sirianni step it up and be like, hey,
this is what we're doing. Decide we got to get
it done, and I don't care whose feelings are hurt.
Speaker 1 (13:07):
Hay Gavin put it in the chat.
Speaker 3 (13:08):
Now.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
I know the Chargers had a long drive to start
the third quarter, which ate up, you know, I think
eight or nine minutes, so they didn't have the ball
quite as much. But Saquon had five carries in the
second half. Buck, Like, that's insane.
Speaker 3 (13:18):
It's insane, particularly when Saquan has popped one. We pops
one on a big play. The first time we really
get him going, we don't give him the ball. And
I understand as a play caller, sometimes the game can
get away from you should get like, oh, man, Saquon
hasn't had a carry in a lot, but like he's
the driving force of the offense and when he has
(13:40):
it going, it makes it easy for everybody else. I
know they've had players only meetings, I know they've had
team meetings in those things, but at.
Speaker 2 (13:48):
Some point, man, they got to cast us out.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
All the individual's agendas and get back to playing team
ball so they can be the team that many of
us expected them to be this year.
Speaker 1 (13:58):
Let me make a quick baseball ology for you from
my podre fandom. This this what the end of this
game reminded me of was a few years back when
the Podreys were playing the Phillies and the NLCS or
a chance to go to the World Series. Bryce Harper
comes up the bat and late in the game, eighth,
eighth or ninth inning, crucial part of the game. They've
got Josh Hater, the best left handed reliever in baseball,
(14:20):
sitting in the bullpen, warmed up like he looks like
he's looking peering out towards the field. They leave the
other picture, and I think it was Robert Suarez and
Shoreber hits a home runs the game for him, and
I'm sitting here going like you're you're You're all the
way down to like the twenty five or thirty yard line,
wherever you are.
Speaker 2 (14:35):
You've got Sake. That's your closer. Your closer is the
guy that's going to the game. That's him.
Speaker 1 (14:41):
And I just fixed I pictured Saquon was in the
bullpen last night going like why am I not closing
this game.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
You guys are throwing the ball. We just lost because
we got our closer sitting here to waiting to come
in all warmed.
Speaker 3 (14:50):
Up, and and it's a game where look, in this situation,
you can't like, it's really a no lose situation. Either
we right it or whatever we get to field goal
and we extended, or we've run it in four touchdown. Yeah,
but at no point should what that showed up to be.
Shouldn't that be on the asakar? It shouldn't be on
the thing.
Speaker 2 (15:09):
And man, that's one.
Speaker 3 (15:11):
Now they can get into the playoffs, they can win
a division because the Cowboys won't be able to close
unless they completely unravel.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
But if the Eagles are going to make a run,
they have to have one.
Speaker 3 (15:21):
Of these hard realities face the music moments where they say, hey,
let's figure out a way to get this done.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
Well, they need to get their right tackle back. It
sounds like Lane Johnson with that foot injury is going
to be coming back. And man, I don't know that
I've ever seen a non quarterback with the win lost
splits that they have with Lane Johnson. I mean, it
is like six hundred and something percent when he's on
the field in three hundred and something percent when he's
not on the field, like it's insane. He's kind of
(15:50):
the lynchpin there that kind of makes the thing go.
Speaker 2 (15:52):
And I also think that's where I go back to
my theory.
Speaker 1 (15:55):
Is he the bully?
Speaker 2 (15:56):
Is he the play calling bully for the offensive line? Like, hey,
what are we doing?
Speaker 1 (15:59):
Just run the ball?
Speaker 3 (15:59):
Man might be man who is the elder statesman, who's
the guy that is the voice of reason on that,
like Gavin just putting the chat that fifteen and twenty
seven record when Lane Johnson is a little I.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
Mean, that's just every one of the best teams in
the league.
Speaker 3 (16:15):
And one of the things that we've always talked about
the Philadelphia Eagles is how they've committed to the offensive line.
They're big on the trenches. But now we're seeing is
he the Jenga piece? Is he the piece of the
puzzles that you remove him, everything falls apart. If that's
the case, Man, they didn't need him back, and they
need him back in a hurry.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
I mean, I you start sizing up the rest of
the NFC and you're looking at it going like, okay, man,
I don't know that they're in that top tier right now,
which sounds nuts. They just won the Super Bowl, and
I do look out there. I was talking to somebody
and their and their media side after the game was over,
and I said, man, like the thing about the Eagles
(16:56):
when you look out there and you see, first of all,
you're down there to warm ups, you see the size
and the physicality and what some of the body types are.
And these guys and you see Saquon Barkley, you see
AJ Brown, and see Devonte Smith, you see Dallas Goddard.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
I'm like, the heck, is this offense not better than this?
Man Like that does? That does not add up?
Speaker 3 (17:13):
I'm telling you, just because they're not playing to their superpowers.
It's almost as as if they just don't want to
lean into what they need to be. And I understand
this team has been well constructed where they don't have
from a personnel standpoint of glad weakness on offense. We've
talked about the line injuries in those things, but they
got two code number one receivers on the outside.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
They got a big time tied end.
Speaker 3 (17:36):
They got a huge look at all for running back
and a quarterback that can drive the bus and they
refuse to. Just Hey, let's run it first and get
to the weapons. Just because we have those guys out there,
it doesn't mean we have to run it through them.
Run it through sta Quon and they get to them.
Everyone can benefit if they play a certain.
Speaker 1 (17:55):
Way one percent. All right, quick break, Let's get to
this Philip Rivers conversation the funnel right after this. All right, Buck,
I heard about this h morning, the morning this came
out in the afternoon. I heard about it in the
morning that this was this was likely to happen. I
(18:17):
think it's fantastic. I think it's such a it's such
a microcosm of how Philip Rivers plays football, and that
Philip Rivers does not care. Hey, you could look. You
could end up embarrassing yourself. This could look bad.
Speaker 2 (18:29):
He does.
Speaker 1 (18:30):
He is ready fire aim like. That's how he's lived
his life like. He's he is all the way down
on the gas pedal. And he loves football as much
as any player I've ever been around. I've been around
the NFL since three I've been around a lot of
different players. I don't know that I've been around anybody
who loves football more than Philip Rivers and the fact
that at forty four years old, he wants try and
give it another spin. I think it's hilarious and I
(18:52):
think it's awesome, and I absolutely love it.
Speaker 3 (18:54):
Well, one thing that we do know about great players,
All the great players we've ever been around, love it.
And his love for the game is undernied. But he
hadn't hung up to cleats and he was already coaching
high school ball, and so you know, the love is there.
And I'm a believer in why not man like until
the wheels fall off, because once you're done, there's nothing
(19:18):
else that gives you that same building like.
Speaker 2 (19:21):
You can get it in different ways, but not that same.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Man in the arena, the gladiator in the coliseum feeling
that you get from playing. And if you're Philip Rivers,
you have an opportunity in a four game run to
save the day for the Indianapolis Coast and whatever capacity,
whether that's as a starter, back up, mental, whatever, that is,
why not your high school season is over, jump right in.
Speaker 2 (19:43):
And just see what you can do.
Speaker 3 (19:44):
Well.
Speaker 1 (19:45):
The other thing is game plan wise, they had Daniel
Jones with a broken leg out there, right, so you
were having to design an offense with a guy who
really couldn't move it all. He's on one leg, so
you just trying to incorporate the same game plan in there.
But I'll tell you the thing I would be doing
if I was, you know, if I was Shane Steichen
on that offense, running that offense is tight end. Let's
(20:06):
see how many different things can we install here? Tight
ends screen, slip screen, tunnel screen, bubble screen, like every
type of throw that can just get the ball out
of Philip Rivers's hand. And then the thing that's going
to be nice is you know who's going to like
having him there is Jonathan Taylor because he is going
to check if you have a head coach at the
line of scrimmage. He's going to find opportunities in the
run game. He's going to get you in the right calls,
(20:28):
in the right plays. There is zero learning curve. He
played in this offense. He already knows all the terminology.
He knows he's taught this offense, so he's going to
know where the you know where the holes and defenses are.
He's seen every blitz known to mankind, so he's going
to have all that stuff dialed in to me, it's
just a matter of can he get hit and get
up off the ground at forty four years old, you know,
haven't been five years removed here. Yeah, But one thing
(20:51):
that we do know about him, his playing style has
not changed since he ended the league. He's never been
a mobile quarterback. He has always had to get the
ball all out of his hands quickly. He has always
been great at winning the game at the line of scrimmage.
Watching the game on Sunday where Ridley.
Speaker 3 (21:07):
Leonard in the game and Rodley Leonard actually did a
really good job for his first appearance.
Speaker 2 (21:11):
He did a really good job.
Speaker 3 (21:12):
His anticipation, his instincts, his athleticism all served him well.
But there's only so much that he could do because
he doesn't have an encyclopedia of knowledge in terms of
looks and things or whatever, where Philip Rivers has that.
Speaker 2 (21:27):
Now physically he may not be able to do some
of those things.
Speaker 3 (21:30):
But some of the junk looks that you would like
to throw at a young quarterback, those are off the table.
Jonathan Taylor will benefit. And we've talked about the Indian
Outficis Coast under Chris Ballad and what they've attempted to do.
They wanted to get the best athletes, the most explosive athletes,
and teach him how to play ball. And there's him
be in a situation where they can impact it. Where
if we're just talking about get the ball in the
(21:52):
hands of your best playmakers, Philip Rivers can do that
and they can scheme up enough things to help those
guys on the PERI have a big impact on the game.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
Yeah, here's where the rub is. This is a team
coming off the loss to you know, your Jags last week.
They're in second place in the AFC South and Philip Rivers.
If this happens and he gets the nod, you are
at Seattle, San Francisco, Jacksonville at Houston.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
Not that is a murderers row, buddy.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
I mean, there's nothing like easing them into it. Just
we're just gonna drop you right into the deep end
and see if you can swim. But I think if
you're Indianapolis, I think there are eight. The number number
is ten. M they got to find a way to
get to ten. Philip Rivers coming over with that helped
them find a way to get closer to ten. You know,
(22:42):
I would say the division games are probably gonna be
their best outlook because you know those teams well, the
Jags and the Texans. Can Philip Rivers help you win
one or two of those games to help you solidify
yourself into the postseason.
Speaker 2 (22:55):
Last thing, last thought on this one.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
When we were kids, because we're similar age buck, there
was a show, remember called That's Incredible. There was a
there was a guy actually from the church that was
on the show because he was riding a motorcycle at
like eighty or one hundred miles an hour while playing
a guitar, like playing a full song.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
So he made it. It was a big deal in
our church. He made it on That's Incredible the show.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
If Philip Rivers takes this team to the playoffs against
that schedule as a grandfather h forty four years old
just celebrated his birthday off the high school field, it
leads them to the postseason. They need to revive that show, man,
because that would be absolutely incredible.
Speaker 3 (23:32):
I mean, look, man, it'd be one of the greatest
feast that we've seen an older guy get off the cows,
five years removed from playing, takes the ball and it
goes well. Now, the Hollywood ending yeah, would be that
the young before it would be Yeah. He realizes, Yeah,
just wasn't a great idea. So well, here's the thing
(23:53):
about it.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
Buck, there's no in between.
Speaker 2 (23:56):
It is going to it's gonna be great, but it's
gonna be read. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (24:00):
It's like watching you talk about being a kid watching shows.
It's like looking at evil Codnievel.
Speaker 2 (24:05):
It's all good, it's all good at when we're.
Speaker 1 (24:07):
Going yeah, until it's not. Yeah, a lot of broken ribs.
If you missed that jump, All right, that's gonna do
it for us, and I hope you guys enjoyed it.
We'll see you next time. Right here on moving this way,