Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Have you, guys, ever caught a cheater? Have you ever
had to catch a cheater? Yes, yes, you've been cheating
on him.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Yes.
Speaker 3 (00:07):
I couldn't believe it either. I couldn't believe that man
fumbled like that either.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
I mean unbelievable. What must how much you feel now?
I don't him all this fame. I don't know. You
just maybe this is why you seem to wear the
pants in the relationship that you're in now, because you
just don't allow You're not going to allow yourself to
be put in that position again or something. I don't know.
(00:32):
For the last one seven or eight years, i'd figure
you got this man on lock, and so I guess
I just figured there was never a time where a
dude got to like go for far enough away to
be able to cheat on you. I'm never at home.
I'm the perfect person to cheating. I don't mean literally,
I just mean, like out of your purview. But now
you're distracted by TikTok all the time, so anything anything
of it. If I wanted to cheat on you, I
would just I'd be like, hey, look, baby, I got
(00:54):
you a bigger iPad with TikTok on it. In the meantime, I'm.
Speaker 4 (00:57):
Pumping Ja, Beyonce, Shakira, Kiki, they've all been cheated on
and Kalin but.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
Everybody, but never Paulina. Never, Paulina, You've never been cheated on.
Speaker 5 (01:08):
Not that I know of, is what I say.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
I don't know, smart what I said, like your philosopher,
you know, what I always say, is not that I
know of from open you know. I mean, I'm fairly
certain I've been. I mean, that's not true. I guess
it would depend on definition. But yeah, I've been cheated on,
for sure, but no, never in a way that someone's like, yeah,
I was cheating on you. It's always like no, no, no,
(01:32):
this is what's going on, and there's something totally different
is going on. But it's never like I can't say
I've been in a committed, dedicated relationship. First of all,
that's a sense by itself. I can't say committed, committed,
dedicated relationship period. But then also I don't think I've
been in one that where somebody could like actually betray
(01:52):
me like that, if that makes sense. People betray me,
but not necessarily because we know everything was hunky dory,
and you know, we're this exclusive relationship that I find
out with it or not. I bring this up because
this morning, guys and people are gonna hate me for this.
They're gonna hate me for announcing this, I guess, but
I don't care if the cheaters are mad at me
about this, and let cheaters be mam. Your supermarket loyalty
(02:14):
card is the latest way to reveal if you're cheating
or not. A London Private London Private investigator says that
apps like club Card or similar grocery reward programs wherever
you are can actually help catch cheaters. The app logs
wear and win purchases are made.
Speaker 5 (02:30):
Yes, it does.
Speaker 2 (02:31):
So.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
If your partner says, while I'm working late, then the
app shows that they bought snacks across town at a
grocery store or whatever, then that would be a red flag.
It says you were at work. Why are you in
a different part of town at a you know whatever store.
I'm not gonna pick on it. Whatever store tracks this
kind of stuff. Yeah. Tech experts also stay to watch
out for other red flags, hidden notifications, wiped search history,
(02:53):
and strange location check ins. Even if your grocery list
could be giving up the secrets, all that stuff could
be too.
Speaker 5 (03:00):
So valid, so valid.
Speaker 6 (03:01):
So I share the loyalty app for one of the
stores that my husband and I shop at, and I
wanted to buy strawberries because they were on sale like
ninety nine cents.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
I'm like, not for your boyfriend who dip in chocolate,
right and then he'd eat off your body's.
Speaker 5 (03:13):
Yeah, you know me always doing the whip cream chew.
But that was an on sale today, I see. So
I'm like, okay, well, ninety nine cents.
Speaker 6 (03:20):
These are five dollars, like absolutely, so I'm all excited
at the check out and it's not showing up as
a dollar and I was like, ma'am, like, miss mismanager, ma'am,
like this is not working. And she came up to
me and she goes, have you bought these already? And
I'm like, no, I didn't buy these. She looked at
my history and guess who bought the strawberries for ninety
nine cents across town?
Speaker 1 (03:37):
Xavier, Xavier? And who and for whom? Who was he
dining with to have said strawberries?
Speaker 5 (03:45):
Dining with the fire department.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
I don't know. Yeah, a bunch of firefighters. I want
to see this firehouse. A bunch of firefighters sitting around
eating strawberries too.
Speaker 7 (03:54):
They got to.
Speaker 6 (03:54):
Safe visual I know, well, like they switch off so
sometimes they'll go like stock up or whatever whoever's on
the ship, so like they switch off every time or whatever.
And he was the one on that day who was going,
so he took my strawberries for a dollar.
Speaker 4 (04:06):
I learned yesterday they got a whole gym in those firehouses.
Well obviously a kitchen, but I didn't know you could
like work out and cook and hang while you were
waiting for fires.
Speaker 6 (04:15):
Oh yeah, oh back in the day day, this is
like years ago. They lived there for three years.
Speaker 5 (04:20):
Well yeah, three days out of the week, not straight
at least.
Speaker 1 (04:23):
Well, I mean people people live in the firehouse, so
they have to provide there. He was a guy who
was like designated as a chef and the whole thing. Yeah, yeah, everybodys.
Speaker 4 (04:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (04:32):
I talked to a fire fridery yesterday.
Speaker 4 (04:33):
He's like, it's a frat house without drinking, dude, we'd
brank each other. I just didn't know if they had gym,
I could work out while I'm getting paid.
Speaker 7 (04:39):
I should have been a firefighter.
Speaker 6 (04:40):
And back in the day, like they would drink like wait,
just like way back in the day or like bring
your kids or whatever, like go fight a fire.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
The one in the river north over here has a
full basketball indoor basketball court. Yeah nice.
Speaker 7 (04:51):
They're always in lawn chairs as I walked by, and yeah,
boys in Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
No. I went in there one day. My friend Chris
is a firefighter there, and I went there for I've
been there a couple of times and he was a
check this out. And it's like if you're looking at
the building to the right, you go kind of around
the corner. It's like this half court indoor basketball court.
Because they're there all day. So and then they may
I get you know, who knows what they're gonna get called.
So there's a gym, there's a basketball court in there.
(05:16):
I'm sure they have like TVs and video games. Is
they get to occupy themselves until someone is their lives save.
Speaker 4 (05:21):
I almost was convinced to become a firefighter at this
career day, Like I it sounds great.
Speaker 7 (05:26):
I mean they're risking their lives.
Speaker 5 (05:27):
No, of course, of course, Oh, I think it's a
great job. Like obviously, like there's a risk and yeah,
you know, better be ready for that.
Speaker 7 (05:33):
The cop was like don't be a cop, like be
a firefighter. I was like, okay, wow, ye.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
With the career change, she would be the volunteer fire
chief for her village.
Speaker 7 (05:42):
And listen, yeah, I don't know. I just was really
overthinking everything.
Speaker 5 (05:47):
Yeah, those benefits, oh girl something.
Speaker 7 (05:49):
Yeah, they deserve it. They do, of course, but you know,
back to cheating.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
I'm sorry, no, no, don't be I'm just trying to
think if I've ever caught anyone I know that, Like
I've been in some loose situations where I was told
that the previous person was no longer involved and that
turned out to like, for example, I have a history
of this. I dated one girl and she interviewed for
a job in another city, and I, again, we weren't
(06:15):
like in a We were messing around consistently. But the
most important part of the story is the only reason
we were doing that is because I was told that
the ex fiance was no longer in the picture. And
so I sent Champagne to her room to celebrate her
job interview in this city, and he was there, so
the Champagne shows up at the door. I heard the
story later because she told it to someone else, who
(06:36):
then told it to me. The champagne shows up at
the door and it's delivered and he accepts it, and
I guess there was a card, right, I don't know.
I didn't get all the details, but like, that's happened
more than once where I've done something like that, only
for the person who's not supposed to be there to
be there to see it. I mean, well, where'd that
come from? Only see the card? Who sent you champagne
(06:56):
to your room? She didn't get the job, by the way,
or the guy.
Speaker 7 (07:00):
Dang.
Speaker 4 (07:01):
I walked in on cheating, and it's real content. It's
one of the worst pains that I've ever Like, no.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
You were just like I have no idea, and then
what happened? Oh my gosh, can you relive it briefly?
It's traumatic.
Speaker 7 (07:13):
It was really bad.
Speaker 4 (07:15):
I walked in and this girl was in a thong
with her butt up in the air on top of
my man.
Speaker 7 (07:22):
It was, yeah, just.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
Making sure he didn't have any like cancer or something,
that's what it was.
Speaker 4 (07:26):
I actually blacked out, like I don't even in that moment.
I was so like, oh my, it.
Speaker 1 (07:31):
Was this in college, so this was actually a year ago.
Speaker 4 (07:36):
This is no, yeah, yeah it was and yeah.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
There.
Speaker 4 (07:43):
It was a party and everyone was there and so
everybody saw me globalistic and but it just still I've.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
Never no, I haven't been cheated on. But I mean
to your to your point, and this is not the same.
But I have, like in college, I have had the
nightmare of the girl that I liked, you like, walk
out of your fraternity bedroom or whatever. You know, for
Saturday morning you go to brunch or breakfast or whatever,
and the girl that I like, the girl that I
wanted to hook up with, is walking out of my
(08:11):
fraternity brothers and it's like, oh, man, don't get First
of all, I announced, I made the announce, it's all
the bulletin board downstairs. I was targeting this young lady.
Second of all, but it's like heartbreaking. It's like, oh,
you chill somebody else. But no, that's nothing like being
in love with someone. And oh my god, I can't
(08:32):
imagine other ways that people get caught cheating. The one
that's uh, tails so old at time. And if you've
got a good one eight five five five nine one
o three five, Not that I want to bring back trauma,
but if you've got a good way that you cut
someone cheating the tale's oldest time. And I think people
are getting smart to this is the Apple idea. But
for a long time people were idiots because they'd have
the same like their iPad that was unlocked or that
(08:55):
they gave the password to. They're like, oh see, I'm
gonna outsmart the system. You could have my iPad password
or my MacBook password, but you don't. You don't. I'm
not giving you my phone password. That's where all the
stuff is. No, it's not. It's on all of them.
So like I know so many people who have been
on their iPad, married couple. They use one person's ID
(09:15):
and they're just going through, you know, doing whatever, and
they're not even trying to snoop. And then they see
a little green message box down there because all your
text if you set it up that way, go right
to that. And then people click on it and they're
like wait a minute, and then they read a whole
dialogue and that's its tales the old as time so old.
If you're going to be a cheater, different Apple IDs
(09:36):
or whatever whatever, you use. The email trash folder is
a way that people go through stuff like do you
think that you deleted the evidence? But a lot of
people don't go as far as to like that's sophisticated cheating.
Speaker 7 (09:50):
Cheating, cheating over email.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
I always like to email ahead of time. I hope
this email finds you. Well, this evening, I plan to
cheat with you. And here's a calendar, invite relationship. Let's
do all thisating seven o'clock alert fifteen minutes. You know.
But I guess people think that like they're being Okay, Well,
I erased the email and then I can't remember the
(10:12):
last time at work I do it. But because for
so long, you can only have so much storage. But
like other emails, I don't go in and delete the trash. Yeah,
but I'm also not doing anything I shouldn't do rouser history.
I guess, at how would you use this automatic logan
and passwords storage? How would you do? Someone with physical
(10:33):
access to your computer could use software to discover passwords
to various services and then log into your accounts. Okay,
I guess I don't know what I mean. They could
see if you were sending flowers or something. They could see,
you know, where you were spending your money. I suppose, like,
so if I had your like if I had your
laptop password, then I could if I got into that,
then a lot of times I could then log into
(10:54):
anything else because everything saved. Right, Yeah, okay, I get that.
Key loggers and stalking apps like you can put stuff,
I know on computers where it will just track everything,
everything that's been put in the keyboard and like print
it out for you or give it to you in
like a document, so you can see just the raw data,
like what you know what I mean, like what people
have been typing.
Speaker 4 (11:13):
I mean, I don't know if it's on there, but
you're deleted text folder. A lot of people don't even
know that that's a folder yet. Oh, better take a
look at that, right, Yeah, you want to clear that
out first, man.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
I knew about that. Yeah, let me see here. GPS trackers.
Of course, sexting apps give users a false sense of security,
like Snapchat. I guess that's I guess that's a sectioning app.
According to these people, they allow you to send photos, captions,
and videos that self delete after a set amount of
time use after a few seconds. Signal. Oh god, signal.
(11:46):
We all know about that. In the government, say, similar service,
but for text messages rather than images. I guess there's
no guarantee that images will be deleted, says the company's
privacy policy. Oh that's not it's encouraging. Hey, Laura. Okay,
well Laura, how did you catch your eggs cheating? What happened?
Speaker 2 (12:04):
Okay, So back in the day when flip phones were
a thing and you were able to call your voicemail
from another like your host phone. So one night I
let my X use my phone because he didn't.
Speaker 8 (12:17):
Have one, and he said he needed to use it,
so I let to use it. And that morning, when
I woke up, I called my phone to see if
I had any miss calls. There was a voicemail on
there from the other woman's boyfriend saying you can go
ahead and keep the bee. I don't want her back.
And when I ended up going to the house, she
(12:39):
was there in bed with him.
Speaker 7 (12:42):
I'm so sorry.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
That's terrible.
Speaker 7 (12:44):
Sorry.
Speaker 8 (12:44):
Yea, so thanks to cell phone they've been great.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
You threw it somewhere? What'd you do? What was your reaction?
Speaker 2 (12:57):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (12:57):
I went there and I started taking all all of
my stuff out of the house, and I packed up
my vehicle and.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
Never went back.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
There you go, he was.
Speaker 8 (13:05):
She was so scared she would not come out from
underneath the blanket, and my ex at the time kept
pushing me out of the room while I was trying
to get my stuff because he didn't want me in
there seeing what was going on. And my sister and
her boyfriend were in the house and they ran to
the other side of the house with the kids. They
had young kids at the time. They took off the
(13:26):
one to the other side because they he let me
in the door when he wasn't supposed to.
Speaker 1 (13:30):
Man, Laura, I'm sorry that happened, but thank you for calling.
Have a good weekend.
Speaker 8 (13:35):
Thank you you guys to a lodd you guys, I
love you too.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
Kenny G, Hi, Kenny G. It's an honor man for
my money. When you sing why can't we be lovers?
If we can't be friends, I mean, for me on
a Friday night, there's nothing better. But how did you catch?
You caught your cousin's boyfriend.
Speaker 9 (13:55):
Yeah, so it's my cousin's boyfriend at the time, they're
not together. But I was actually this girl I went
to college with was like, yeah, I'm dating this guy,
and she tells me about him, and I'm like, wait
a minute, and then I see who it is. And
I'm like, oh, that's my cousin's boyfriend. So I'm like,
we need to set this up. So set it up.
(14:15):
She was supposed to meet over to his house, like
and uh, well, he was supposed to go to her house.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
I stayed a.
Speaker 9 (14:22):
Block away, saw his car pull up. I pulled up
behind him like cheater style.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
Oh yeah, and then had him come.
Speaker 9 (14:28):
Out of the house and I'm like, all right, dude,
we got to have a conversation.
Speaker 2 (14:32):
Man.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
This guy's Joey deel Greca over here from Cheaters Man
on this day of the investigation.
Speaker 7 (14:39):
Wow.
Speaker 9 (14:40):
And then the funny part is this now I'm married
to his sister.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
Wow. Wow. Y'all keep in the family, don't you, Canada.
Speaker 9 (14:50):
It's a little weird.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
But okay, see Kentucky weird. Oh thank you for clarifying,
Kenny g all right, well keep making great music. Okay, bye,
have a nice day. I love this. This is from
HowStuffWorks dot Com. Ten ways the technology betrays cheaters. Reason
number one human error right right, If you're gonna be
(15:14):
a cheater, don't be a dumb cheater. That's the world
of story right, human error number one. Biggest stories of
the day headlines. Next they talk better than they These
are the radio blogs on the fresshow I guess I'll
stick around for that. I like writing in our diaries,
except we say them aloud. We call them blogs. Paulina,
Yes go, thank you.
Speaker 7 (15:33):
So much, dear blog.
Speaker 6 (15:35):
It's that time of the year, you know, in the
in the big city, big city, big dreams, where you
don't know the temperature, and like what's gonna happen right
the rest of the day, Like if you wake up
it's cold and it gets hot, then it gets cooler, right,
and then on top of that, some days have been
really hot and then some days got cold again, Like
I think today's chillier than the previous couple of days.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Okay, okay, So.
Speaker 6 (15:57):
For me, I don't sleep well unless I've got like
a fan running. I sleep like with just underwear or
like pants or whatever, like like shorts and just oversized shirt.
So I try to get in the bed comfy. But
sometimes like it's just still hot.
Speaker 7 (16:13):
I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 6 (16:14):
To me, I need to be very comfortable to sleep
otherwise it is a fight in a battle. So it's
been a fight in a battle because my husband Hobby
doesn't believe it's time to put the air conditioning on.
And I overheard in this room my lovely girlies Kaylin
and Kiki, said, your ace's already been on.
Speaker 1 (16:30):
Oh yeah, you never. My heater never went on? Your heater?
I never. I never used heat during the winter. No,
I never used heat.
Speaker 7 (16:38):
What do you do?
Speaker 1 (16:39):
I keep the house at sixty and it depends in
the season. Sixteen an we're being sixty six and sixty
eight year round, year round. Yeah, I'm maybe one or
two days. Ever did the heater come on? Maybe in
this season everything has to be it has to be
bone chillingly cold. Do you otherwise the house has got
to be meat locker cold. You wear like hood and
(17:00):
stuff and that. Yeah, sure, yeah, I don't like that,
so like that's not gonna happen.
Speaker 5 (17:03):
That's why I put the heat on.
Speaker 6 (17:05):
But I have to be so comfortable in my temperature,
and I haven't been lately because it's been so hot.
So I put on the ace, and I didn't tell
my husband because he's like, no, it's not time yet,
Like we're not going to go back and forth right
and turn the heat back on in a couple of days,
because you know it's me, I will and I was like, okay, whatever.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
It's like, is that a problem?
Speaker 8 (17:24):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (17:24):
People say that you're not supposed to do that, like
we're not.
Speaker 1 (17:27):
I mean the first time of the year that you
turn it on, it like smells weird. But I mean
other than that, I don't know why you can't just
put set your thermostat where you want to set it
and then you get what you you know what I mean.
Speaker 7 (17:36):
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (17:36):
Maybe it's like a like a mindset of like first
gen and kids too, because growing up we couldn't do
a lot of things, but my mom never let.
Speaker 5 (17:43):
Me switch it. Like there was no back and forth
once the ace was on. That's it, Like you don't
go back and forth.
Speaker 9 (17:49):
You know.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
People people talk about like having you know, you're being
aligned on religion and politics in marriage and like money management. Yes,
I think household temperature is something that it's a deal
breaker for me. Like if you're somebody who needs to
sleep at like seventy five degrees or seventy or whatever. No, no, no,
I go to the hotel and I go it goes
it's low. There's nothing more luxurious to me. And walking
(18:12):
into the hotel room and setting it as low as
it will possibly go, and then being so cold that
I wonder, like, you know, why am I? Why do
I choose to be this way? To me? Worth every
it has to be now other people that need it warm.
If you have to sleep in the warmth, then it
would never work between us because I need to sleep
in the cold, because you can always get warmer, but
(18:32):
you can never get colder.
Speaker 7 (18:34):
That is a fact.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
That is a fact.
Speaker 6 (18:35):
But if it's winter and it's you know, negative five,
then I'm putting the heat on and I'm gonna get
nice and cozy and comfy. But when I know it's
seventy five degrees outside and even the floors are so
sticky and humid in the house because it's just it's
that warm, there's humidity.
Speaker 1 (18:48):
So how do you change your husband's either on or off?
Speaker 6 (18:51):
Yeah he's on or off, but he doesn't want to
turn it on. His whole thing was, don't turn it
on because we're not ready, like it's not time. But
he was at work and he's a fireman, so he
did not come home that night right sleep to the firehouse.
Speaker 7 (19:00):
And you want to know what I did for me?
Speaker 6 (19:02):
And my child because I enjoy comfort and I want
us all to sleep well. Is I put it on
and guess why? It ran just fine and then I
shut it off. Really, Chris, I've never heard of this.
Speaker 5 (19:12):
I was so scared I turned it off.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
It's a thing. It is a thing.
Speaker 5 (19:14):
I grew up like that.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
My sister would not play around.
Speaker 3 (19:17):
No, don't touch my thermostat, don't turn the AC on,
open a window, get a fan.
Speaker 1 (19:22):
Well that's probably because of the cost. But I don't
know if it's a problem to go hot to cold
in your house, Like, I don't know if it's a
I don't think it's a mechanical issue that I'm aware
of to turn the heat on one day and turn
the cool on the next day. But I know people
that were like, don't turn the AC on because you
could save money to open a window because it's too expensive.
Not the same.
Speaker 3 (19:40):
Yeah, I gate keep my thermostat from my house now,
Like I have the app on my phone.
Speaker 5 (19:43):
Big Tim does not have the app.
Speaker 3 (19:45):
And so, like you know, he'll get jazzy and try
to touch it at home and I'll look at my
phone like, oh no, you don't, and I'll put it
back up.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
So even when you're not there, he can't control the temperature. No,
And I don't know why.
Speaker 3 (19:55):
It's really just a jerk, Like I'm really just an
idiot for that.
Speaker 7 (19:58):
But it's just a thing like this is on sixty five, Bro, it's.
Speaker 1 (20:02):
Not that because he's there and you're not. Right now,
you're here in this room. Yes, and he's at home,
but he still doesn't get to control with the temperature
as he's in bed.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
No, because when I'm born, I open the app like, oh,
what the hell, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
This is a fundamental issue you've got to be aligned on,
especially sleeping temperature. You've got to be aligned.
Speaker 5 (20:23):
Yeah, we we fight a lot about the house, things
like that.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
You want to know.
Speaker 5 (20:27):
The other latest one is we have one of those mattresses.
I don't ask. He's a people that goes back and forth.
It reclines.
Speaker 6 (20:32):
Oh the adjustable yes, okay, So he decided he wants
to buy an adjustable bed whatever the frame thing, but
doesn't want to adjust and I actually like sleeping with
a little bit of an incline. I come back and
that man puts that right back down. So now we're
fighting over that.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
So the whole bed. It doesn't have like halves like
mine has.
Speaker 5 (20:49):
Halves waiting splurge for the half I wish we did.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
So you either have to have you have to have
it up. And everybody's up or down.
Speaker 7 (20:56):
Yes, he won't do it.
Speaker 5 (20:57):
So now we fight over the head like we have
to be a mind.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
You guys, that's a little different though I don't I
don't think I want to. I don't want to sleep
at a hospital. Better everybody like I, I don't know
about them. And by the way, I guess it is
that according to the interwebs and the text, it is bad.
You can cause unnecessary stress in your HVAC by switching
between your heater and cooler when not done correctly, tending
to make drastic changes. But you're not trying to go
sixty five to ninety or something. I mean, you're like,
(21:21):
you know, it's you want it. Some days you want
it maybe seventy and some days you wanted sixty eight
or I mean, we're not talking about like, I don't
know about how big is this swing.
Speaker 8 (21:31):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
You just want what you want. I just want what
I want is important.
Speaker 7 (21:34):
Don't want to be sticky in my own house.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
No nobody wants you. Nobody wants you sticky. You should
tell him you want me sticky. Oh no, no no.
If you say it like that, it might he might
say yes. The minutes it never mind. Waiting by the
phone is new. And next, why did somebody get gohoes
but after a hose year back in three minutes on
The Fresh Show