Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
JoJo's Live on ninety three three FLZ. I stayed with
my parents last night. Jed and I did, actually stayed
at the hotel. We're on the road right now for
iHeartRadio's jingle Ball. We're in Detroit, Michigan. But staying at
my childhood home is nice because who needs target when
(00:22):
you got your mom's cabinet eight four nine ninety three
ninety three. That's eight hundred four and nine ninety three
ninety three. Anyone else like that where you're still leaning
on your parents for a bunch of stuff. I'm so
dependent on my mom when she's around me. I have
a full time job. I think that I do halfway
(00:45):
decent for myself. I think we all do, but that
that doesn't matter. I immediately got home with rated the
snack cabinet, grabbed a bunch of Doritos and whatnot. Upstairs,
and I noticed that someone's been staying in my childhood room.
I don't know who it is, but I don't like
(01:06):
it because they used up all my toothpaste, they took
the spare toothbrushes. I had no body, so you do.
I went into my brother's room and I took all
of his body soap. I took his shampoo. I took
all of that. I took not his used toothbrush, but
I took one of his new toothbrushes. Yeah, okay, I
took some toothpaste. I you're not alone. My grandma and
(01:33):
my aunt yesterday. And what did I do when they're downstairs?
I snoop upstairs to se because I get the essentials.
Two paste is not cheap, so I look for two
paste and they always go to like like Sam's Club
or whatever. And if I tooth brushes and tooth brushes
aren't cheap either, So I was like, surely do you
have a plastic bag like a baggie? She's like yeah.
I was like perfect, I took tooth brushes. I might
(01:54):
call my fiance and see if she wants anything. You should.
Is there anything that you need? I can bring it back. Jed,
your parents live about like fifteen minutes away from you.
Do you ever go over there and just mooch off
of their stuff?
Speaker 2 (02:08):
Oh, Joe, I am king mooch, especially when it comes
to Sunday dinner and it'll be on and off, like
I'll ask my dad, Hey, what's for dinner? And depending
on what they have for dinner. I'll go over there
and then my mom will send me home for leftovers.
And I'm like, this is perfect. I don't have to
kick on Sunday nights, and I had the rest of
the week playing with meals.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
It is the best thing ever. We're gonna have to
talk to Colt right now and shake some sense in
the Colt. Like I said, we are currently on the
road right now for iHeartRadio's jingle Ball. I was born
in Michigan. My parents still live in Michigan. So we're
(02:44):
in Michigan for the jingle Ball. And last night I
stayed with my parents and I was mooching off. I
was grabbing everything I could. You know, I am never
going back Tampa's home, but sometimes you miss mom and
dad and you go, you know what, it's kind of
nice to sleep in my childhood bed and get free stuff. Yeah.
(03:06):
And when I was fourteen years old, I hi.
Speaker 3 (03:09):
Cult, good morning, Good morning Colt.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
You know when I was your age, I wanted what
you want right now, and now when I look back
on it, I don't. But you say that you crave
independence and you can't wait to move out of mom
and Dad's house.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
Kind of I mean I depend on them for certain
things like obviously food, money, things like that, for like
because I'm a kid at fourteen. But at the same time,
like I feel like they sometimes can be oversteppy and
like they don't give me the opportunity to be independent,
and I really just want to be able, like because
of like friends, for example, like they control my devices.
I have parctical controls and practice and everything. I asked
(03:48):
about my friends. No, we don't know them and you
can't go out with them sounds like.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
Yeah, for you, I'm just saying, just to be honest,
like they're just keeping you safe. What what do you
want to do, like tell me drugs?
Speaker 3 (04:01):
Like I no, oh god, no, no no. But like
I asked them, like hey, can I go out with
my friends? And they're like, no, we're not. They don't
even like decide to go, Hey, let's go talk to
them or like see who they are?
Speaker 1 (04:13):
What did your what did your parents or what did
your friends do? It sounds like they aft up on
something and I haven't.
Speaker 3 (04:20):
Even met them. That's what they do. They haven't met
them yet.
Speaker 1 (04:25):
They ain't even got to meet them day now. Cold.
If I remember correctly, you listen and call the show
without your You don't. You don't want your parents to
know because they listened to They listened to joy f M.
Speaker 3 (04:39):
Right, you got to do? And then for a while,
for a while they had to listen to Scottie on
Magic ninety four nine, and oh my god, I wanted
to scream because how terrible it is.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
He's very nice. But I love that you love us.
So I love that. Tell a friend to tell a friend.
But okay, because what do you think it is? Because
you know every other station they beat us in the ratings.
We're the lovable losers, right, but one day I want
(05:14):
I want to be a winner for a day. You
know your mom listens to joy f M. You said
that you were forced to listen to another radio station.
What can we do to get your parents to like us?
Speaker 3 (05:27):
I think the reason why they don't like you guys
as much is just because of the content, like because
you guys need more towards younger people like So, she
doesn't like like the war, the roses, she doesn't like
the dumb she doesn't like the fact of like, oh,
why are you like exposing someone on the radio for
no reason? Like for that reason not really for the
fact of like doing a service, and I guess there's
(05:47):
mainly that, and then also like sometimes like you joke
and like go off a little bit on stuff and
like say things like other words, but I don't care. No,
not like curse, but like talking like like like you
said boobies before.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
On the redo, they don't like. So if I stop
saying boobies, if we potentially never catch another cheater, your
mom might listen. Maybe maybe you know what I don't
like that. You know what I don't like that. I'll
take you cold. Sounds like we don't I'm just kidding.
(06:27):
Let's keep it RCP. But listen at the end of
the day. You know, we were talking about going back
and me using my mom and my dad's stuff and
like grocery shopping at my childhood home. And you want
to grow up real quick, just take it in for
a couple more years. Once it's gone, you'll go You
know what, I might want to go back and listen
to joy FM to be fourteen again. I thought you're
(06:48):
about to say you'd love to listen to You're the best.
I'll talk to you later, Okay.
Speaker 3 (06:56):
I love I love when you call in thank you
talk jell lead.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
We won't tell momy. No, we won't by the way. Yeah,
we'll make it that. Yeah, we'll keep it on the
hush exactly. Hey, Lexi, Yeah, what's up a Lexi? That
mom sounds like a stiff. I'm just kidded.
Speaker 4 (07:17):
Here's the funny thing. I just tuned in and I'm
just like, oh crap, that's me, Like, that's I am
basically in a similar boat, isn't it.
Speaker 1 (07:27):
Wait, similar boats and you go to mom and dad's
and you grocery shop or similar boats and your parents
don't like you listening to us.
Speaker 4 (07:36):
Uh, he's extremely strict parents. I'm hardly even allowed to
go out with my friends. And they know my friends,
they know they're good people, but to go out in mind, jew,
I'm twenty, so I'm an adult technically, but I also
live in a Hispanic household. Okay, not only a Hispanic household,
it's a really just conservative household. So freedoms are very limited.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Yeah, I did, I realize most of our listeners with kids,
they're strict. Of course, mom can listen with the kid can't.
Speaker 3 (08:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (08:09):
I mean I love my parents a lot, and I'm
very thankful that they're very protective of me, especially growing up.
But I'm just like, hey, I can kind of make
a lot of my own decisions on my own now,
you know, And I'm just waiting to I'm waiting to
move out that.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
Things are going to change. What I'm getting is is
that there will come a time because, like Lexi, when
you have kids, you'll still listen to us, right, Oh?
Speaker 5 (08:35):
Absolutely.
Speaker 1 (08:36):
I think that there's going to come a time where
we're basically just going to outgrow these These stations are
just gonna probably die and then we'll be the only
station people listen as people get older. Well, right now
we're kind of dad. Well, we're like an infant and
(08:58):
we're growing up. At some point, Lexi, Uh, maybe one
day we'll convince your parents to listen to good Luck.
I love you like that, right, love you? What if
you started? We got callers calling in texting and they
can't listen to us because of their parents. That was cool? Cool? Well,
(09:20):
I think I think this is good to the parent.
It is showing, like our boss Tommy, this is proving
Tommy's point that it's just going to take a little
bit more years and then everyone will be yes. Uh, Maddie,
do your parents hate FLZ No, not at all.
Speaker 5 (09:40):
Actually, me and my mom grew up listening to you guys,
and you guys are cool mom. Yeah, cool mom. And
then I reached cool mom's status myself because the entire
time before I was pregnant in twenty two, every morning
going into work, you were guy. You were the ones
I was listening to going into work doing all that
kind of stuff. And even after having my daughter, like
if we're Aaron's and you guys are on like you
(10:02):
are guys, but pretty much how we start our day.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
In other words, you'll be raising your daughter to catch
cheaters and one day we'll have an intern who is
Maddie's daughter. Yeah, yep, exactly.
Speaker 5 (10:16):
That'd be so smart.
Speaker 1 (10:17):
I can't wait. And when you go to moms by
the way, to your grocery shop and do all that,
oh one.
Speaker 5 (10:22):
Hundred percent, it's a whole different ballgame going back to
your childhood home when you become a parent, because I
was a very young parent. I became a parent the
day after I turned twenty two, and so it was
kind of that in between line of like, Okay, you're
an assult, so but you're a young adult, so we
(10:42):
can still kind of tell you what to do. But
the second I had, like my daughter became pregnant, it
was kind of like I'm the adult and now I'm
the parent. It was kind of like a Uno reverse
on them of like what are you going to do?
Speaker 3 (10:53):
I like that.
Speaker 1 (10:58):
It was Audo reverse, have more.
Speaker 5 (11:00):
Questions than were anything because I've reached their level of parenting.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
Yeah, I love that. Well, Hey, Maddie, thank you so
much for for trusting us and listening to us and
raising your daughter the right way. Listening to ninety three
three f l Z and The Joe Show, we Love You,
We Love You, guys to love you, Love You