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May 29, 2025 24 mins

Stefon Diggs goes viral for a scandalous moment on a boat with bikini clad women and drugs, which reminds us that nothing good ever happens with athletes on a boat. And 2 stories in the world of Gen Z leave us scratching our heads, highlighting generational differences

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Speaker 1 (00:05):
Get sucking sad?

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Do it doing live thoughties?

Speaker 1 (00:09):
What's up?

Speaker 2 (00:11):
That's us? Cadino and Rich. Welcome to episode ninety four.
Over promised our bonus podcast. Ninety four great year, less than.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
The forty nineties, feting super Bowl.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
When I graduated high school out to the door in
ninety four, when I became a man.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
Absolutely, you don't tell people that I tell you graduated
in four.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
I mean in two thousand and four. Dan, what was that?

Speaker 1 (00:29):
Vegan?

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Hey speaking up when I was seventeen, when you were seventeen.
It's a much different world. Right now, we're gonna talk
about the seventeen year olds of gen Z and why
they're so weird.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
We'll explain.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
We have lots to get to fucking with us. We're
gonna talk about athletes on boats and what's going on
boats and hosts. Why is there always like a tragic story.
But before we get into that, I want to remind
everybody we're having a big party. Okay, big party, and
you're invited. This is your invite. June twentieth, twenty first
and twenty second at Circa in Vegas, a Fox Sports

(01:05):
Radio live broadcast giveaway prizes, lots of debauchery.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
I'm I'm trimming down now because I want to be
looking sweet at the pool. I don't need anyone saying
that we get Rich Davids with the dadbod.

Speaker 2 (01:16):
So I'm now all the fat guys are real concerned
about it. We need fat guys too. There, Come and
have a great time. We're having a pool party. We're
having a roof top party. We're having lots of partying
going on. That's how Rich is gonna look. Think he's
bringing about a bunch of fat guys. That's your trick.
That's the trick, right, So if you're extra overweight, yeah,
definitely come to our party in Vegas.

Speaker 1 (01:34):
You never met a hawk girl that surrounds herself with
less attractive girls as a tactic.

Speaker 2 (01:39):
It happens all the time. But there's gonna be lots
of hot women there and you're invited.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
I'm really excited to meet everyone in the Fox Sports
radio world. A lot of our old school Cavino Rich
listeners from the serious XM days, but honestly, from gambling, drinking,
do some edibles. Well, well, have some fun, man, Vegas
is gonna be a blast.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
What the hell. But if you're gonna come again. We're
having a big You have to come to all the events,
but definitely stop buying Vegas details at Covino and rich
on social media, be sure to RSVP. Okay, So, I'm
Steve Cavino. That is coach Dicky Davis. I'm coaching bro
All Stars. There. He is Richard Davis, and we're normally
on five to seven on the East on Fox Sports

(02:17):
Radio two to four on there it is on the
West side. Thank you guys for checking us out. Follow
our regular podcast of course. But let's get into it
because there's some crazy stories about boats this week, and
the question is has anything good ever happened to an
athlete on a boat?

Speaker 1 (02:33):
I have a math equation if you want to break
out your tiit two. Here we go on NFL athlete
plus boats equals shit. No way, No, there's never anything
good that happens when you combine NFL players and boats.
Exhibit a Stefan Diggs. I don't know if it's pronounced

(02:54):
toussy or tusy, but that is the pink powdery substance
that you're allegedly seeing when he's on the boat with
cardib Baby for the ladies, for the ladies. Apparently it's
a mix of cocaine, molly, ketamine, and caffeine, and apparently
it's a popular street drug.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
Now sounds healthy.

Speaker 1 (03:11):
If I were in Stephan Diggs like, I don't know,
it's crystal light, I'm making some fucking nice tea.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
Kool Aid because these are pixie sticks. What are you
talking about?

Speaker 1 (03:19):
Yo? Were having a fun time with some fun dip,
I would absolutely be like, yeah, i was leftover candy
fund dip. Because I'm an athlete, man has fierce pink
strawberry Gatoraid. If he's trying to get a reputation emergency
on a new team and the Patriots are trying to
get back to their god daies, do you think Stefan
Diggs hanging with girls on a boat and being like, yo,

(03:44):
let me bring this little box of pink substance. Like
you know, if I'm if I'm a superstar athlete or
a celebrity or just a regular guy, I'm telling everyone
put away the phones. If you're up to no good.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
That's number one number two to do what he is?
That is that?

Speaker 1 (04:02):
What is that? Oh? No, it's some rub for some beef.
It's pink Kimmalayan seasial.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
That's what it is. That's exactly what it is. They're
grilling up. That's what it is, man, it's it's what
you do recreationally on your own time. That's your own business.
But he represents a bigger organization. And the downside is
now the Patriots have to answer questions. Rabol has to
answer questions. He said, do you think that's what he
wants to do the minute he gets his job, He's acknowledged.

(04:32):
He has to acknowledge that, Yeah, obviously, I know I'm
aware of something that we're aware of, and obviously we
have to make great decisions on and off the field,
But not the look you want when you're about to
start the season. You don't want your coach getting involved.
What's he supposed to say about this?

Speaker 1 (04:49):
And he's probably thinking, like, Yo, Stefan, I know you
want to get these girls on a boat. I mean
and I and I know you probably just want to
get your your peepee touched, your stephan days.

Speaker 2 (04:59):
You're a superstar.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
But do you need to have video of potential drugs?

Speaker 2 (05:03):
What are we doing?

Speaker 1 (05:04):
We're trying to get back in the AFC East, what
do we.

Speaker 2 (05:07):
Come on and then it's out there. It's more intrusive.
This footage or the footage of Bill Belichick at the
Airbnb on the ring camera. Is he listening to me.

Speaker 1 (05:18):
On Pop two?

Speaker 2 (05:18):
K would job roll on in the background.

Speaker 1 (05:19):
Imagine all of sudden you hear me like, hey, Rich Davis.

Speaker 2 (05:24):
What you know? This is stuff we shouldn't be seeing
right now? That's odd? Well, so again that as to
the theory of has anything good ever happened to an
athlete on a boat?

Speaker 1 (05:34):
Can I say the latest story? Can I take you
back to the love Boat? Not your favorite show that
you would watch your your tita.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
It's funny you bring that up. But continue love Boat,
Love Boat, great show. Let's go back to five. I
can't believe this is twenty years ago. Do you remember
the Minnesota Vikings did like a boat cruise and apparently
it was seven players. They called it like a sex
party because whoever had a clean up on ky jelly condoms?

(06:02):
People were disruptive. Was it a freak OFFF a Vikings
freak OFFF minus the theirs? Why she's singing about the Vikings?

Speaker 1 (06:13):
I mean the Vikings love Boat was a story that
you know, unfortunately, did them no justice.

Speaker 2 (06:19):
That was two thousand and five Vikings at Lake Minnetonka. Yeah,
tunkaka Tittykuka Lake titty cucka. So before I move on
to the next one, and he loved boat thoughts, No,
I mean, but yeah, sounded like a freaky, deaky time
with these Viking players. So, yeah, a weird story in

(06:40):
two thousand and five that no one needed to hear about.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
The trend nothing goes good with NFL players and boats.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
I mean, sounded kind of good for the Vikings maybe.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
Fast forward to twenty sixteen.

Speaker 2 (06:50):
Oh, this is the worst one because again it's a
dirty word in sports apparently, but optics, optically, this was terrible. Yeah,
bad optics all around. You remember that, you know why
I felt worse for Victor Cruz more than I did.
Odell Beckham or was Sterling Shepherd was there And a
lot of people don't realize hip hop artists Tray Songs

(07:11):
is in that photo as well. It was a It
was a.

Speaker 1 (07:13):
Boat party ahead of the wild card game against the Packers.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
And yeah, this is all fine and fun. You could
even say team building in camaraderie if they win, but
they lose, so it goes back to this, Well, maybe
if they weren't partying on the boat. That's why it's bad. Optically,
you got a big game coming.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
Everyone's got a you know, suns out, guns out, showing
their abs, looking all slick. But then they get stopped
thirty eight thirteen. If they win, it's not a story
days later, So again, giants, boats, no play, no queen
move al on to just wasn't a good look, arguably
the goat. Now this is more of a funny story.
But Tom Brady on a boat almost through the Lombardi

(07:57):
Trophy in Tampa Bay. Do you remember after they won
the Super Bowl?

Speaker 2 (08:03):
Everything about this is wild, but the fact that this
was twenty twenty one also baffles me. It was that
long ago already, But imagine taking this chance. Touchdown. Tommy
gets wild when he drinks ya. He does, passes around
after Gronk caught it, he did his little still shake,
little gronk shake. Im sure somebody dropped it. Then somebody

(08:25):
dropping it got a big dent in near somewhere. Was
that at the parade? I don't know, but either way
it's the Lombardi Trophy. You're throwing it from boat to
boat again, what's that a boat boats. That's wild man,
That's how trashy were. And you could even wrap it
up by saying, Bill Belichick. The controversy of him renaming
his boat even made headlines one plus eight rings like,

(08:45):
no matter where you look, boats in the NFL is
not good.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
Love.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
Bill Belli didn't shack name his boat free throw that way.
He'd never sink it. It's a good one. Something like that.
I like that. Nothing good ever happens to athletes in boats,
or do that? You mentioned the love Boat. I was
trying to think about it, and like, what about the
globetrotters at Gilligan's Island.

Speaker 1 (09:11):
They actually crashed a plane.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
That's how they ended up on Gilligan's Island. So I
said boat, No, maybe they got away on a battle.

Speaker 1 (09:20):
You gotta keep the facts.

Speaker 2 (09:20):
Yeah, that was nineteen eighty one. But get this, you
brought the love boat that the Vikings were selling on
in two thousand and five. Good things did happen to
Joe Namath in nineteen seventy nine on the Love Boat
There was a lot of athlete superstar athlete cameos. Yeah,
look at the action he was doing, and.

Speaker 1 (09:38):
She said, I want to kiss you struggingly. How about
you kiss me? That's Fred Willard? Is it?

Speaker 2 (09:44):
Yeah? Willard?

Speaker 1 (09:45):
Holy show? Hold on?

Speaker 2 (09:47):
I mean, hey, we post a question. Does anything that
ever happen? Man TV? Maybe Love Boat seventy nine, Joe
Namath Dick Butt kiss in nineteen eighty two. Jim Brown
also appeared in eighty two. Reggie Jackson also appeared in
nineteen eighty two on the love Boat, and Caitlyn Jenner
as Bruce as Bruce in nineteen eighty all appeared on

(10:08):
a love boat. I always want to good things happened.
There was a lot of drama, a lot of controversy,
but I'm sure they got it all such that reality
boat show people Love where they all just have sex
and hook up under below deck.

Speaker 1 (10:19):
Yeah, and I want to you know what would be
cool if that style came back? Go back to the
name of the photo. Can you imagine what huge me?
I feel like that's a style Cavino would love. Why
not that big seventies? Everything comes back, man, everything comes back.
Joe Namath getting some action that sounds good to me.
Imagine partying with Fred Willard. That sounds like fun. He

(10:41):
passed away, right, and guess what, guys, no pink substance. Look,
I don't enough we know of or that we see.

Speaker 2 (10:50):
So man, Stefan Diggs, you better dig yourself out of
this hole five years ago.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
Rest in peace, fred Fred Willard.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
Now we get to Z, and it's a question of
what's weirder about gen Z? But the girl is that
the girl you hooked up with in Hoboken back in
the day on a boat? Yeah, gen Z, it was
a booze cruise. Now what is gen Z? Generation Z,
the xenials, the weiennials, anyone born from nineteen ninety seven

(11:19):
to twenty twelve. Okay, ninety seven to twenty twelve, ages
thirteen to twenty eight. But we're focusing on the older
demographic right like probably eighteen and over, eighteen to twenty eight,
eighteen to twenty eight. But it's anyone thirteen to twenty eight.
That's what gen Z technically is. And it seems like
in current day everybody's obsessed about generations. I didn't even
know what generation I was, Yeah, growing up, did you?

(11:41):
I still don't. I'm now everyone talks about it so often.
Borderline millennial gen X. That's sort of where I am. Yeah,
you're weird thing you know.

Speaker 1 (11:50):
If you're born around nineteen eighty issue, you know the.

Speaker 2 (11:52):
People are obsessed with it, but we're also seeing the
differences right so drastically in today's world. And if you
are gen X, we feel like you're in a perfect
pocket of You could relate to the boomers a little bit.
You were raised by him. You speak their language, you
understand your little old school eh. But you also are
fluent in young person because you try to stay up

(12:14):
on things and you work with them and you're trying
to stay relevant. You are rightly in the middle man.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
If you're roughly forty, Yeah, you speak old guy.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
You could understand both. You're fluid and old guy.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
But you also could speak Skim the Ohio Ris if
you needed to exactly right. And you know, for me,
I went to college without a smartphone, without a cell phone,
without my own computer. I left college and I had
a cell phone and a computer. So like, well, let
that be your value in a lot of ways. Lean
into that because it makes you unique in today's workplace,

(12:47):
and it makes you valuable. I think a way to
tie in this odd habits of gen Z. As the
NBA Finals are starting to take shape, we got Oka
c and likely the Indiana Pacers. There's a race going
to be at an all time low, probably because they're
small market teams, but also because kids don't watch the
way they used to. They'll watch highlights, they'll watch some

(13:09):
clips on TikTok and Twitter, and they'll be.

Speaker 2 (13:12):
Like, I watched the game.

Speaker 1 (13:13):
Did you watch a game? Or did you watch highlights?
So not only are the markets not helping the NBA ratings,
I just think kids don't watch games the way they
used to.

Speaker 2 (13:21):
Can I please tell you my first revelation of this, Yes,
the first time I realized this happened. Again, gen Z
doesn't watch sports the way they used to. Again, what's
weirdest about them? I'll start with this. Yeah, I remember,
it's a whole long story, but there was a group
of teenage kids that lived with me at one point.

(13:42):
My ex used to manage a boy band. That's the truth.
I think you always have to tell that part of
the story. I know, otherwise it ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (13:50):
You start by saying, there's the time when a bunch
of teenage boys lived with me, You're gonna shrift to
follow it up with because my ex wife managed the
boy band.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
Okay, I would be sitting there glued to the TV
watching every inning of whatever game I'm watching, Yankees playing whoever, right,
And I'd be glued to playoffs, baseball, whatever, And I'm
sitting there wasting my time watching every inning, watching every play.
And then every once in a while, one of these
kids come sliding into the living room in their socks

(14:17):
and their crocs and they're like, yo, man, you see
what They wouldn't know what happened before I knew what happened,
because they were getting Twitter updates and social media updates
before I was even getting it on real time, at
least I thought on my direct TV or whatever I
had at the time at my dish. So I realized
that I would waste all my day and all my
night watching games. You still do, and I still do,

(14:40):
watching Sports Center highlights like an old guy. When they
would get all the condensed versions and highlights and videos
and updates to social media, and that was good enough.
And what I realized is they knew just as much
about what was going on as I did, and they
weren't even watching.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
I operate like a gen z. If I'm busy, if
I'm coaching my kids, or i'm out in about with
my wife or doing something, you know, running errands. I'll
watch a Mets game like a gen Z. I'll look
at the box score on an app and be like, oh,
you know, Peter a Lonzo hit a home run. I'll
go to X watch the video Alonso, and within thirty
seconds that isolated home run is up there. So I'm like,

(15:19):
why do I need to watch anything more than.

Speaker 2 (15:20):
That two plus hours? Back then it was an unmanageable
three and a half hour baseball game. Meanwhile, they were
just doing whatever they were doing, and they knew everything
that was still going on. The way they watched sports
is way different. I do appreciate a condensed version of
a game though, I do like that. But there's two
stories this week that really bring it home that show

(15:41):
you the difference because it's things that we valued that
they don't value at all.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
And these are not sports related. These are just really
funny fucking things. One of them has to.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
Do it sick.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
I need you to determine which one of these things
is weirder to you. First article is there's a new
CEO of Tinder, and I'm like, oh, right, for all
the single people, new ceo and he's sort of adjusting
the apps and the algorithm that the younger people are using.

Speaker 2 (16:11):
Well, he's trying to adjust the reputation of the app
to the stigma that it has as a hookup app.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
Well, Tinder's new chief executive officer wants to revamp the
app because its reputation of a hookup app doesn't win
over gen Z because these younger kids, quote don't want
to have.

Speaker 2 (16:31):
As much sex. They're not having as much sex apparently,
you know what they do. They hang out in groups,
so they don't get a lot of a loan time,
like they're all hanging out like the ghet along game.

Speaker 1 (16:41):
This generation of eighteen to twenty eight year olds are
looking at it as I don't want to hook up.
They don't drink as much, they don't have as much sex, which.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
Makes me think are any fun And by the way
we're paintings, Yeah, they're not partying on.

Speaker 1 (16:55):
Boats, they not having a tussy with stuff on.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
Dis So gen Z is having less sex according to
these studies, to use Tinder as a way to like
meet people and hang I guess, you know, trying to
clean up the idea of what it's for My first
for gen Z.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
Yeah, these come on, bring it you got to bring
it back to Stefan Diggs And again, not all gen Z,
but for the most part the majority. My first thought
of this you were talking about the boy band kids,
and your brother would even be like you, I watch
a Yankees game and he's like, no, I watch the highlights.
I think about this also with younger kids that think

(17:37):
about what does a rock star do?

Speaker 2 (17:39):
I think of a rock star.

Speaker 1 (17:40):
I think of like eighties or nineties, they're banging groupies
and doing drugs. Rock Stars now are in a torbus,
playing games and on social media, like the what is
it like when you say we're thinking like backstage, I'm
thinking rockstar. I'm thinking some big hand dude from the
eighties and groupies in the dressing room, Like that must
be some sort of craziness going on.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
Now.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
It's like, you know, we NEI you looking dudes in
a tour bus on on TikTok.

Speaker 2 (18:07):
Yeah, making some sort of like healthy drink green juice.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
So what's weirder a that Tinder has to readjust because
Generation Z doesn't have sex or drink or I read
another article in The New York Times about how there
is no urgency for this generation to get their driver's license.
When I was a kid, when you were a kid,
when anyone listening right now or watching.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
Right now, hours the day I turned seventeen.

Speaker 1 (18:36):
Depending on your state, if it was sixteen, seventeen eighteen,
where you lived, you counted down the days you saved
your money at your part time job.

Speaker 2 (18:44):
Hey, mom, dad, can you help me? Can you lend
me money? I'm trying to buy a car? Mom, Dad?

Speaker 1 (18:49):
Can I go on your insurance plan you planned out
for when you turn that age? Kids now are like,
I don't even want to drive. I'll take an Uber.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
Yeah. Well, the freedom and liberation that we yearned for,
these kids just don't get excited about it the way
we used to. They don't value it the same way.
And the study shows that one in twenty five of
these kids are nineteen and younger, one in twenty five
or nineteen and younger when it comes to getting their license,

(19:22):
wanting it k not having it. And it's the indifference
of for what, Really, I don't have the money for
the car, the insurance of the gas.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
There's another article I got Alain Lyft. They've had Uber
and Lyft for years.

Speaker 2 (19:34):
So it's like, yeah, I get to where I gotta go,
no matter.

Speaker 1 (19:36):
What we had, like we had your quintessential like smelly
taxi driver, but yeah you have to call again.

Speaker 2 (19:41):
One in twenty five, one in twenty five. That's how
drastic this is. And I find it strange because even
my daughter, who's fifteen and a half, she's yearning for
that freedom in liberation, she wants.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
You should encourage that and be like, yo, don't be
on your phone while you drive.

Speaker 2 (19:58):
But ba, the fact I wanted to drive is nice.
I don't want to be the one teaching her to drive.
That's scary and bad things can happen. K not get
on what another related story, but one in twenty five,
kids nineteen and younger have their license the second we
turn sixteen or seventeen. That's what the article says. But

(20:21):
I mean, it doesn't mean it's you're right, it doesn't
mean it's trickle. That's what the article says.

Speaker 1 (20:24):
The fact that, again I don't want to overemphasize this,
but I could promise ninety nine percent of people listening
and watching over promise right now if I said, you
remember when you turn sixteen or seventeen, they the first
thing they probably thought of was like, I could now drive.
That was the goal. Imagine turning sixteen or seventeen to

(20:45):
being like, oh would I get around to it? But
you know what, I get around to it.

Speaker 2 (20:48):
Maybe the ubers and lifts of the world have changed
the game and the importance of it too, because I
was speaking about my daughter who she's fifteen and a half.
She's at the age that's where they get their permit.
Here in California, you could drive with someone that has
a license when they're sixteen. They don't have driver's ED
at least in this curriculum out here in LA.

Speaker 1 (21:08):
That's the way we did.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
Yeah, they don't do it. You have to go to
a DMV and do all that stuff, like they don't
have drivers that.

Speaker 1 (21:15):
It was like the gym teachers, the drivers.

Speaker 2 (21:17):
We had health, we had drivers ed, we had that stuff.
So maybe it's not prioritize. It was always the gym teacher.
Way was your gym teacher the driver's head teacher.

Speaker 1 (21:24):
No, I actually went to a driving school.

Speaker 2 (21:27):
Yeah, but you didn't have any course in school like nothing. No, oh,
so we did. I did a driving course too to
get my permit. Look, I get it. It's different everywhere,
but what's universally similar is the importance of getting it.
The way we wanted to be seventeen to get our
license or whatever the age was, the way we wanted

(21:48):
to be twenty one to get a drink. All these
things aren't as important to this younger generation that it
was to us. The value is just not the same. So,
based on the three exams we gave you, the way
kids absorb sports, right, they're not even watching the game,
they're just getting updates.

Speaker 1 (22:06):
Well not sound like an old guy, but those days
come on?

Speaker 2 (22:10):
Less sex? What the hell? But why what's that about?
No party? And I think money has to do with
the urgency for the car too rich? Is like, what
so I waste money on gas? Sure? Kids, maybe I
just need.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
To go party gen Z, Go party with Stephan.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
Dick, get some get yourself some Himalayan pink sea salt,
and do What is the weirdest about gen Z? Out
of those three things? The license, the sex, the sports consumption.
I thought about it. I think it's obviously less sex, Like,
what's the reasoning there? No? I disagree? I mean, and
how are they not the most horned up at that age?

(22:53):
But there's a reason for driving. They have lyft kids
other options.

Speaker 1 (22:56):
Kids have always been horned up, but nerdy kids never
got booty.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
I just can't.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
I can't imagine any kid not wanting their freedom to
like I want to drive, Like I get it.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
Some kids are just you know, and you know what
the less sex equals to though, probably just easier access
to porn all the time. You don't do it like whatever, No,
but think about it and they're like, yeah.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
Whatever, whatever, I have an AI girlfriend anyway, you know,
I bet you I think they're less horned up.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
We gotta go.

Speaker 1 (23:24):
I don't want to run label. Let me just say this,
Gary v Rpal Gary Vaynerchuk. Yeah, he's convinced that if
you're around our age, if you're forty ish, your grandkids
will have a robot spouse.

Speaker 2 (23:34):
I saw that, so I mean.

Speaker 1 (23:36):
Maybe they'll just funck robots.

Speaker 2 (23:37):
Have a good one. We'll see you go have sex
with a roll. We'll see tomorrow on Fox Sports Radio.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Don't forget Vegas in June.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
See you in Vegas. Hey, we'll do some drinking and partying,
maybe some sex. No, uh, dance, drive around. See you
in the over Promised Land. Day, Goodbye,
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