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November 13, 2025 • 25 mins
Brady and Dan discuss the popularity and the controversy surrounding one of the most successful daytime talk shows ever: The Jerry Springer Show. Were you a fan? Did you hate it? Let us know and enjoy friends!
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is Brady one more time. I'll look back on
all things nineties and two thousands. The movies come on
the album. Yelly clarkson the awkwardness.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Or bizarre step as we watch on live television O. J.
Simpson negotiating with a police dispatcher being followed down a
closed freeway by nine sheriff's deputies and most of the
Los Angeles news media.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
Here's your host, Brady Broski. You probably did it. Wow,
that was a trip down memory lane. Hey are you ready?
So let's time take care of yourself and each other? Yeah,
that's so good. Love us some Jerry Springer from the
Fod of God about that side off you did. It's
a little ironic, don't you think that we're playing it

(00:50):
in the beginning?

Speaker 3 (00:51):
No, just the side off with the content of the show.
That that's his sign off, take care of yourself and
each other? Like is that what his show did?

Speaker 1 (00:58):
No? Yeah, but you know what. I'm gonna move this
monitor so I can see your face. How's that? But
I need to see my notes? Can you see your ye?
I can see my.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
Spind the No, no, no, you're good, okay, We're good there, Okay,
all right, I can see you now.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
This is my favorite open ever. Yeah, we're gonna do
some Jerry Springer talk today. That's what it's. It's Brady Welcome, Welcome, Welcome.
It's the most nostalgialistic podcast. I'm planning to earth fact. Yeah,
I am Brady. I am the host with them. Well,
I'm not really the host of the mom like the
host with like just like just the right amount. It's

(01:32):
just what you need to get by. That's what that's
not the most. That's what the podcast strives to be. Yes, well,
because the most is that's a lot. Yeah, I think
about how much the most is. I'm like the host
with Yeah, he's got some stuff for you. No one's
gonna have the most.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
At at six pm on a Thursday.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
Brady from Brady one more time, and Dan is here
the kickball King? What uh the kickball King? We got
snowed out on Tuesday. Yeah, the field was too icy.
It's gonna be three more weeks to go. A guy
who you never want to bring with you as a
wingman to Christmas barcrawl because will leave you within twenty minutes.

(02:07):
That did happen in two thousand and eight. It is delicate,
Dan Ginsburg, do you realize that that happened so long
ago that it falls within the time range that we now,
like nostalgically look back on on this podcast. Is that
not crazy? Can we do an episode of of Single
Brady Dan and Dan's Adventures it's a tea box episode.
Oh yeah, yeah, we sent each other some fun memories

(02:29):
on Facebook and Instagram that pop up. I just realized
that was in two thousand and eight. Would you like
to Yeah, what definitely wasn't Would you like to explain
that story of the.

Speaker 3 (02:40):
Well, so tea Box is a lovely bar crawl that
starts at what time? Did we start like eight nine am?

Speaker 1 (02:46):
Pretty early? Yeah? Every cereal? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (02:48):
You bring cereally, you pour it in people's mouths. You
meet people, and I met I was I was single,
and I met a lovely woman and and I spent
some time with her while you continued to the bar
crawl with some random strangers for the rest of the day.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
What time, if people are asking themselves listening right now,
what time did Dan leave said bar crawl to just
go enjoy some quality time with this new friend. I
would say it was somewhere like eight o'clock. At night earlier,
a little earlier. Okay, so what are we talking here,
I would say, maybe like twelve thirty pa, I'm like

(03:23):
the new now. Yeah, yeah, I was there. I was like,
we're okay, well it's just me now. But anyways, she
made some freshly baked muffins that she was providing a
people day. Yeah. No, she made them when you guys
hung out.

Speaker 3 (03:35):
Yeah no, no, no, she had made them that morning.

Speaker 1 (03:38):
For her friend. Brought them to the Barkrawl. Not exactly.
They were somewhere.

Speaker 3 (03:42):
I went home with one and my dear friend Brad,
who was in town visiting. He was living in New
York at the time, and he was staying with me.
He and I split that muffin when I got home.

Speaker 1 (03:53):
Ah. Yeah, Brad's a great guy to share with.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
Yeah, he also met someone that day, Sorry, Brad, Yeah,
that's whatever.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
You know what. Brad's a part of this as well
at this point, So a secondary character. Here we go,
we're talking about Jerry Springer today. We have a game.
We're in a fun game here in just a second
where Dan's gonna give me the name of a Jerry
Springer episode and I have to guess if it's a
real episode or fake one. That's what we're doing.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
Excited, Okay, and if you get better than fifty to fifty,
it's surprised.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
If you know what we should do.

Speaker 3 (04:26):
We should also flip a coin and see if you
can beat the coin flip.

Speaker 1 (04:30):
You want to do that too? Can it be a
penny rip pennies? I saw that rip pennies. Had so
much fun with pennies, like bought candy with them back
in the day.

Speaker 3 (04:39):
We should really be doing this whole podcast about pennies.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
We'll do it. We'll do one topical. We'll do one
on change, what we used to buy with change, where
we used to find change machine. Uh, clearly we are
already off the rails. Jerry Springer, Yeah, right, that's what
we're talking about. I thought I bring it up. I
mean Jerry Springer the TV show. First of all, Jerry
a law degree graduate here in Chicago. Yeah, Northwestern. I

(05:04):
didn't know that until I was doing he was a Chicagoan.
He s he was in politics for a long time
mayor of Cincinnati at one point. Yeah, it's actually so
my you know.

Speaker 3 (05:14):
I got my start on Z one O four in
Madison and then the second station I worked for. It
doesn't exist anymore, But Madison had a progressive talk station
that was part of one of the stations our company owned.
In the first station, I was on air on after
Z one o four. It was called The Mike ninety
two point one and it was Air America, which was
like this syndicated network of basically like liberal talk shows.

(05:36):
And Jerry Springer had a show and I used to
cut in and do the you know, the syndicated national show.
I used to cut in and do the local news,
you know, the local Madison news on the syndicated show.
But it was like a serious political talk show.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
That's while I didn't know that. And this is while
his TV show is running.

Speaker 3 (05:52):
Yeah, this, and it would have been probably toward the end,
it may be after the show or toward the end.
This would have been like two thousand and six. Now, no,
because it ended in two thousand and nine.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
Okay, so yeah, show was still on then. Sorry, No,
it ended in twenty eighteen. In two thousand and nine,
it moved from Chicago to Connecticut, so the show was
definitely going on when he had the radio.

Speaker 3 (06:12):
Yeah, it's interesting, pretty wild set of two different things
to be doing.

Speaker 1 (06:16):
Serious, and I'm not really serious over here with the
TV show. Yeah, and the TV show, you know, the
long one of the longest running daytime talk shows, really
started in ninety one.

Speaker 3 (06:27):
Yeah, and it was political and social issue for the start,
that was that was his wheelhouse.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
Yeah, but Rail it didn't work, and somebody came in,
you know what we're gonna do. We're gonna do I
don't want to use the word it's derogatory, but we're
going to use small people. This is what we're gonna do,
is we're going to do a lot of things that
are just going to make people go, what the fuck. Yeah, So, yeah,
it was the way.

Speaker 3 (06:50):
You know, Phil Donahue kind of went that direction first
he did.

Speaker 1 (06:54):
Yeah, I thought Phil was always seen. Now Phil Phil
got a little bit more edgy.

Speaker 3 (07:00):
Yeah, and then Jerry Springer sort of took a page
out of the playbook and went just completely extra with it.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
I'm going to tell you how I felt about the
show because growing up that was we watched that show
as kids. But at the time it was it was.
It was really met with a huge negative response. The
Chicago Tribune said it was the second worst show of
nineteen ninety six. Which I feel like that was. It's
a good question. We'll have to find out. But it
was the second worst show. It could have been worse,

(07:31):
which is why I think ninety six is probably its peak.
Like that's when it was really getting like the craziest.
It was a topped TV Guide magazine's list of the
worst TV Shows Ever. And then this guy, Bernard Goldberg,
he has a book out titled one hundred People who
Are Screwing Up America and Jerry Springer was in that

(07:51):
book quoted as being TV's lowest life form. That's that's
a little that's a little much. Yeah, wrong words, But
I also get where the sentiments come. I mean it
was I don't know that it was contributing.

Speaker 3 (08:05):
To society in a positive way, right, Well, okay, I
mean it was normalizing a lot of shit. It was
normalizing violence, which granted a lot of things were doing that.
It wasn't just him, just like dysfunctional families people. It
was making you know, the crowd was I think what

(08:25):
made me what I disliked the most?

Speaker 1 (08:27):
Well, hold on, before you go any further, I'm just
going to ask you straight up the first question, did
you enjoy the show? Did you watch it, Did you
like it?

Speaker 2 (08:34):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (08:35):
I watched it like I watched a train wreck. I
would say, I don't know if I was entertained by it.
I don't know if I would go so far as
to say I liked it. I think I kind of
felt icky when I watched it, but I was but
it was one of those things you just couldn't turn off.

Speaker 1 (08:48):
Okay. I think when it evolved into like all of
the fighting and Steve Wilko's breaking up fights and all
of that. Steve Wilco Chicago guy, Yeah, there you go,
has his own show. Yeah, right right, he turned that
role somehow into his own career. I don't know, I
think I as I it was.

Speaker 3 (09:08):
I don't know if it was me getting older and
being more aware of the world and thinking about societal
impacts and stuff that I didn't care about when I
was a kid, or just their direction the show took.
But there was a time when I was entertained by it,
and I think a time when I.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
Was just like, this is too much, because just judging
by just judging by the tone of your voice, it
sounds like you like now as you've matured and you
understand some of the topics that they were, you know,
providing on television were wrong. Yeah, ethically for you right
right now, you're looking back at it as like, I

(09:41):
don't I don't know if I liked it, because I
have a similar I have a similar thought process of
if I enjoyed the show to that of south Park. Yeah,
because south Park was so outrageous and they did things,
but it was a cartoon so they could get away
with more. This was being ridiculous just to be ridiculous, right,
I mean to me, there's a big difference. Though I

(10:01):
get the comparison, but there's a big difference to me
because yes, south Park was extremely like obscene and offensive
and all that, probably even more so they murdered one
of the kids, every right, and I mean in every way.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
But like south Park also had like a political statement
met like was commenting on society and making actual, like
real like valid points about issues with society, whereas Springer
was more just sort of mocking society and some.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
TV the word trash. I dispute that. For me, it
wasn't anything representative of where I grew up or how
I grew up, but more so what I was exposed
to with entertainment. You know, I grew up a huge,
huge wrestling w w F WWE fan, and I understood

(10:57):
what real life is in it is scripted and what's
fake for the purpose of entertainment. And at that same time,
when the WWE was blowing up to the highest ratings
they ever had, they were doing some of the most
outrageous things possible and in my mind, in everybody's fans mind, like,
this is just entertaining. Like it's obviously they're obviously not

(11:19):
blowing up a limo. And Vince McMahon's in it, right,
Like same thing with Jerry Springer. This guy obviously doesn't
do you know this this uh whatever, wearing the dog
the dog collar, walking around feeding him dog like I understood,
I understood it.

Speaker 3 (11:35):
And that's a really interesting comparison. I think that's dead on.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
I love that.

Speaker 3 (11:39):
Yeah, because right there was a lot of the content,
I mean, there was all kinds of controversy surrounding Springer,
but a lot of it was this is all fake
and if you were really watching the show, there wasn't
a question about that.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
Yeah, of course. My so my point is, uh, if
you're taking it at phase value, it's just this stupid
hour show that you're gonna be you're gonna laugh, or
you're going to be like whatever. But if you took
it serious, that saying a little bit more about you. Fair. Fair.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
But they also like marketed it like it was serious.
But so this is a weird analogy and sorry to
get a little bit political, but I would compare it
like Fox News, you know how they say like they
are the truth if they just marketed themselves. I think
when people have an issue with Fox News, it's because
they're presenting it like this is the truth and the

(12:28):
others are line, whereas if it was marketed as where
like a conservative slant on what's going on in the
world today, I feel like people wouldn't have as much
of an issue with it. Similar with Springer, They're they're
presenting each episode like these are all real people doing
real things. I think if if it were more self aware,
I feel like WWE is more self aware of these

(12:51):
are athletes, but these are these are all scripts and entertainment.

Speaker 1 (12:53):
See. I think I just think maybe I'm in the
minority here. I just always sat down and if I
ever watched it, which I didn't watch on the regular,
if it was on, I would like, watch it's funny.
I thought it was entertaining because it's so stupid and
so out there. How far can they go? There's a
small window where I like, really enjoyed it. But I
think that was my maturity level. But if if I
ever sat down and did see an episode, I'm like,
within this within a second, I'm like, that person's not

(13:15):
really that person. I just think I I just think
I had like, like I said, maybe growing up watching
wrestling made me think that everything I see on TV.
And by the way, there's a lot of stuff on
TV we see now that think your your news example,
I don't. I don't believe much is real, real quotes,
the real world wasn't real, right, So that's my that

(13:38):
that that's what that's that's how I looked at it.
I think that's fair.

Speaker 3 (13:41):
I would just say I if I had to bet,
I bet a way higher percentage of w w E
viewers know, you know, what is and isn't real when
they're watching that versus Springer viewers back, especially.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
Early on, especially early, especially early on, but then but
then I feel as the show progressed, it got even
more and more ridiculous. Yeah, because I think they had
to kind of own up, like, Okay, we're not really
this isn't really, this isn't real violence. This is stage violence.
But there was real violence after the show. There were
a lot of you know that.

Speaker 3 (14:13):
A lot of the other criticism it got was there
were there were some deaths and some fights and some
messed up stuff that happened to some of the people
who came on the show after they were on the show.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
That's crazy. What would that content it ended in twenty
I think I said twenty eighteen, would that content be
acceptable in twenty twenty five?

Speaker 3 (14:34):
A lot of it wouldn't. I would say most of
it wouldn't. Yeah, but some you know, the are you
the father type stuff that's still that's still gets survived. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
which is hilarious, hilarious.

Speaker 1 (14:45):
I mean the has become more about the reaction than
people actually trying to figure out we care about this
this this this child and who it's it's father is
going to be. It's more about like how can we
make this funny or yeah or yeah?

Speaker 3 (15:01):
I mean, I think the stuff targeting people's physical character,
you know, targeting over you know, making fun of overweight people,
making fun of little people, making fun of disabled people.
I mean, that type of stuff would be immediately.

Speaker 1 (15:16):
Right not it makes it just makes me wonder, because yes,
you have to evolve. I mean, we went to a
comedy show last weekend. Comedians have had to evolve, right,
so I would think they would have to do they
would have to be a lot more careful. And I
don't think that show was built on the foundation of
being careful careful.

Speaker 3 (15:32):
It's kind of the opposite is how much, how far
can we push the line? I mean that's where your
South Park analogy really does fit.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
I think I met Jerry, Yeah, I did so when
he moved when they moved the studios from Chicago to Connecticut.
He was doing like a Connecticut kind of radio tour
and I was in Hartford at the time, and it
was really excited obviously just because legend. And sure, I
will tell you he was a very during the interview,
very kind, but also like really really soft spoken, like

(16:04):
like there was you know when somebody walks into the
room and they you know, they immediately grab your attention,
all eyes are on this person. He was the opposite
of that. He was just kind of like, I don't know,
he just it didn't feel like, not in a bad way.
He just didn't have the spotlight. I don't I don't
think he. I don't think he ever really wanted it.
From what from the brief interactions that I had with him,

(16:26):
I just feel like he, deep down he was a
kind person who really did care about people. Hence Jerry's
Final Thought, and he just got thrown into this talk
show that turned into this insane just blew up, you know,
snowballed into this wild thing, and he went along with it.
But I also think when he did do his final Thought,

(16:46):
that was a way for him personally and kind of
be like a human you know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (16:51):
Well here, I mean right, it's almost an interesting like
societal like how far would you go?

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Type of thing?

Speaker 3 (16:56):
Right, because I agree with you, and you know, when
I was doing news for his uh syndicated show, I
mean he if you listened to his show and we're
told this is the same guy who's doing the Jerry
Springer show, you'd be like, how is that possible? Because
he sounded similar to what you're describing. He was very
you know, he would take callers and talk cartfeld about

(17:17):
issues that mattered to him.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
It's interesting. I mean, you know, what, what would you do?

Speaker 3 (17:23):
You know, let's say they took your Kiss FM afternoon
show and kept pushing and pushing to get it edge
or and edgeer to try to get every little sliver
of extra ratings they could out of it. You know,
at what point is there a point where you become
uncomfortable with it and you say, I'm not going to
do this anymore?

Speaker 1 (17:41):
Or do you go along with it?

Speaker 3 (17:43):
Because you know, every time you bring in more of
an audience, you bring in more money.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
Oh yeah, more money. More money is the answer. More money.

Speaker 3 (17:49):
And yeah, I think most I think most people would say, yeah,
would say, if you were in Jerry Springer's shoes and
you knew you could make millions more by making this
show trashier, you know, it's hard to blame him.

Speaker 1 (18:03):
It's a matter of ethics. Yeah, yeah, right. But I
think in the nineties too, because look, the TV show
was sex, drugs, and rock and roll, and that's what
that and that's what that era was. It was. It
was say whatever you can say to make people go,
oh my god, I can't believe he just said that.
That's what that era was. Like some of the comedians
back in the day would just be trying to try

(18:23):
to top Howard Stern. Yep, yep, right, Howard Stern. He
built He built a huge foundation in a career in uh,
you know, an empire based on how far can I go?
And ended up off terrestial radio for that reason. But
he also got paid abilities. But yeah, I think I
think it's I think it was a sign of the times.
I think it was sex, drugs, and rock and roll.

(18:45):
It was everything that everybody thought was funny. So twenty
twenty five, it probably wouldn't have the same reaction, or
if it did, it would be half of the audience,
half of America, really right, there would be protests outside
certain Yeah, yeah, it's pretty interesting. And then last, before
we get to the game, it wouldn't be a podcast

(19:06):
episode if I didn't bring up a Mount Rushmore. Okay,
so Mount Rushmore Springer episode. No, no, no, okay, I
don't know that. I would say the Mount Rushmore of
daytime talk show hosts is he? Is he on your
Mount Rushmore all time? I meantime, what's the criteria? If
it's just like your person, your person, I wouldn't put

(19:26):
him on my person he's not on your person? Who's
not who's on your personal line?

Speaker 3 (19:30):
Your person?

Speaker 1 (19:31):
Don't really watch Daytime? Where were you at school? Dan?
Who goes to school? Who does it? Skip? And watch Springer?
Kelly Clarkson Actually, okay, hold on a second. Is she
on your Mount rush? I know she is so good.
I did not see that coming, did you? No?

Speaker 3 (19:49):
No, you told me when you know Breakaway was number
one on CHR. That's worth her.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
She's an honorable mention for my Mount rushmore. But she's
definitely going to be on there in and Oprah Ellen
and Oprah are mine. So there's Jerry, I have Jerry mine,
but you so you're putting Kelly saved three?

Speaker 3 (20:06):
Yeah, I got Kelly Ellen, Oprah?

Speaker 1 (20:08):
Yeah, Regius, you can put Regis on there. He was great, Yeah,
he has he had his he has Yeah, Maury's on
my fourth. Okay, yeah, because I mean, yes, I mean
everybody knows like the father bit right, of course? Of course? Okay,
you're ready to play the game. Yeah. I was trying
to figure out what the hell the worst show was

(20:28):
of nineteen ninety six was, but I gave up. Did
the list? It was from the Chicago Tribune Okay, Yeahune.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
Tribune Worst Shows of night and it.

Speaker 1 (20:38):
Was and it was shows, not just talk shows. I
would say, what was that? Oh? Is that The Waynes Brothers.
No way, this guy's lost zero, he has zero. The
Waynes Brothers was amazing. Worst show, the Wayans Brothers.

Speaker 3 (20:54):
Any show this bad deserves some kind of award as
long as those involved.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
No, this is not a good thing. Yeah, yeah, I can't, can't,
can't take that guy serious. Wonder wonder what Steve Johnson's
doing these days? He probably still.

Speaker 3 (21:08):
Works across the That'll be our next episode.

Speaker 1 (21:11):
Okay, So we're gonna play a game. I'm gonna say so,
let's go with five. You're gonna pick five. I'm gonna
try and get I'm gonna try and get three. I'm
gonna try and go over five hundred. I'm gonna try
and get three. Okay, all right, what's what's your over under?
What do you think?

Speaker 3 (21:25):
Well, I mean we'll go over unders two and a
half if you can do better than a coin foot?

Speaker 1 (21:29):
Do you know what are you picking? What do you
you're sitting You're picking the under? Uh for three? Yeah,
if it's three, I'm gonna take I'll take then you're
taking the under Okay, okay, okay. So Dan's gonna give
me a name of a Jerry Springer episode that is
either true or not true, real or not real. So
and if I get it correct, let me know, give
me the thumbs up. And I am gonna play Wolf

(21:49):
Farrell saying I drive you dot tratus. And if I
get it wrong, that's the right. Yeah, I forgot. I
forgot to put an air worn thing cool. Wrong, It's
just a buzzer. Okay, So it's a buzzer. We're will fair.
I mean that's fair. Okay.

Speaker 3 (22:03):
I've got thirty here, so I'm trying to make this
as hard as hard as I possibly can.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
All Right, don't overthink it, dang.

Speaker 3 (22:09):
Okay, all right, first one, stripper wars my poll, my rules.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
That's definitely that's definitely a real one. What stripper balls?
That's fake that you did that? That was tricky because
that is so some He loves stripper poles on that
show and strippers. Okay, damn for one? What do you got?
All right? You stole my man at the family reunion.

(22:37):
So that leads me, based on the first one, that
leads me to think it's an obvious. Yes, but the
way that you're playing this game, I'm gonna say no,
you're correct, I'm correct. Okay, one and one? Okay, I
see this, Sam, see now. Now it's more of a
game of me versus. It's not a in about spring. Okay.

(23:02):
Are you thinking I'm gonna go fake or real? Here?
What do you think? Do you think I'm gonna go fake? No?
Don't play that game. No, just just give it to me.
What do you got? Okay? Uh?

Speaker 3 (23:15):
My boyfriend stole my wheelchair.

Speaker 1 (23:20):
I shouldn't be laughing, but I am because it's funny
and it's true. It is true. True, two and one? Oh?
All I need is one? All I need is one more.
Here we go, Here we go.

Speaker 3 (23:35):
Uh My man won't stop dressing like a baby.

Speaker 1 (23:39):
That's true. I saw that one. That is true. Just
give me one more.

Speaker 3 (23:46):
Even though over to speed around here, I'm having your
baby and your dad's too.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
I think that's true that I'm really good at this game.
It's like I've played it before. I'm in love with
a mannequin. True? And you got these from what chatchebt? Yeah,
just give me some of them. I wrote some of them. Jimmy,
give me like a really like a ridiculous chat GPT

(24:16):
false one A false yeah, yeah, yeah, like a ridiculous one.
My dog is my baby now I think I would
have guessed that's true. Yeah. My girlfriend thinks she's Beyonce.
That's a false one. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (24:28):
Chat GPT did pretty well. They're tricky because three way
fiance fiasco. I mean, that's a great episode right there,
but it's fake. Yeah, awesome, till next time. Take care
of yourself.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
I love it. Can we start signing off every episode
that way? And Jerry Jerry, Jerry Jerry, what did you think?
What do you think of Jerry Springer? I would let
to know what people thought of it? Were they were
they fans? Were they not fans? Were they fans a
little bit? And then as they got older they're like, yeah,
were they fans like me that liked it at first?

(25:01):
And then it just was like, okay, it's the same thing.
Now we're just now we're just dumb. Yeah, I mean,
you grow up, you evolved.

Speaker 3 (25:07):
I was a fan of leaving tea box at twelve
thirty PM back in the twenty tens.

Speaker 1 (25:12):
And now you leave at one thirty. Depending if a
girl's got a muffin for Dan to eat. Oh what
a good line, ladies. If you're listening, just bring a
muffin and find Dan at Brady Radio on Instagram.

Speaker 3 (25:24):
Do I want to give out my Instagram at this point?
I think this is the best time for you to
give it out at dan Ge zero for eight too.

Speaker 1 (25:31):
I love it. Follow, like, subscribe, share, and we will
talk to you this day.
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