Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
We're twenty one, baby Brady one more Time?
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Oh wait, I'll leak back on all things in nineties
and two thousand. Sorry the movies. This is Houston. Say again,
please Houston, we have a problem.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
The music.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
You make it so good.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
I don't want to leave, but I gotta's fane the awkwardness.
Speaker 4 (00:27):
It's small madness in your show till your drug game
that really talks.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Here's your host, Brady Brosky.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
Welcome, Welcome, Welcome to the Brady one More Time Podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
It is I Brady Broski. That is Dan over there.
What up? And you do what I'm doing? Good?
Speaker 1 (00:46):
And after what we learned last week, I think there's
only one way to really truly start the show.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
Oh no.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
Dan wrote a song summer into college here yeah, yeah,
for a girl he had a crush on and he
recorded it sent to know.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
This one's actually about something even darkier. It's about man.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
It's about band can So this wasn't for your secret.
Oh well, you know what, that's a good intro for
me to talk into.
Speaker 5 (01:10):
Here is that feeling way down team inside of me?
Speaker 4 (01:15):
Oh my god, will never slipway?
Speaker 2 (01:21):
Oh my god.
Speaker 4 (01:22):
Now that the moment is gone, fuck.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
It's perfect.
Speaker 5 (01:29):
The feeling backed into just one week.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
Oh my god, this is so bad. I really hope
nobody listens to this episode. But that was.
Speaker 5 (01:44):
The we're building one the most beautiful times being such
sad and now the Man movies day, only un.
Speaker 3 (01:58):
Now the Man they'll haunt you, Hunt, They'll taunt you
because they were so good there are think The idea
was that nostalgia makes you sad because you had such a.
Speaker 4 (02:13):
Great time, but now it's right literally yeah, yeah, but
then if you let the song play, which you absolutely
should not, and the last time I go through.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
The chorus, it changes.
Speaker 4 (02:24):
To keep the memories even though they'll haunt me, or
something like that, The idea being that even though it's
sad that it's over, you're still happy that it happened.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
Now, I'm gonna ask you, like normally do you when
I interview artists in Yeah, well, how long did it
take you to write the song? Was it?
Speaker 2 (02:41):
Did you have to? Did it just come to your head?
Speaker 4 (02:43):
It came to me while I was making sandwiches in
the deli of the grocery store Bushes where I was
working in high school. Called Bushes was the name of
the grocery store perfect, and I was it was my
first shift back after band camp, and I was sad
that band camp was over, and I wanted to write
a song about it, and that that den In and
(03:04):
you know that that that guitar lick that is now
just instantly recognizable worldwide. It just came to me, you know, Yeah, that.
Speaker 2 (03:13):
Was four minute masterpiece that I only played two minutes of.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
So can I too many? Can I give you a
couple of porners? Yeah, I'm a music I'm one of
the you know, country's biggest music directors radio.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
That's a fact.
Speaker 4 (03:24):
And this was what this would have been, uh, twenty
six years ago, So it's time for a remaster.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
So yeah, let me hear your tips.
Speaker 1 (03:32):
It needs a feature, Okay, you want to be you
want to rap the verse? No, I need we need
a little a little maybe a little dirker.
Speaker 2 (03:39):
Just one of the little way. Yeah. Uh, if you
could cut it down to two minutes, just because.
Speaker 4 (03:44):
Right well back then, yeah, then four and a half
minutes was okay now?
Speaker 1 (03:48):
And uh, maybe like a like a second like a
second version, like a K pop version, Okay, yeah, maybe
a foreign language version, yeah, maybee.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
Maybe we could get bts to do something that they
probably would love to.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
They're easy to get ahold of. I've heard, Yeah, I
have them all on Speed Dive.
Speaker 1 (04:05):
That is Dan's song is original. Now the Memories is
what it's called this original UH song that goes to uh?
Speaker 2 (04:13):
Which album? That was with me? Walk with Me? It
was more of an EP. Walk with Me? Was the
was the song for the girl that you had to
crush on? Yes?
Speaker 4 (04:23):
Okay, yes, and I'm checking media base and yes, now
The Memories now has one spin.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
It's a hit.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
We'll come back to that over and over again. If
you don't mind, I gotta hear you gotta send me
the other one because intro to the show, you knew
I was going to play if you sent it to me, right,
you knew.
Speaker 4 (04:41):
You told me when you were up that after the
last episode that you didn't have a clip ready to go.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
So I felt like I had had no choice but
to provide. Oh, now we have it ready to go forever.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Great today's topic, we're going back to the nineties. Yeah,
we're gonna do board games. Yeah, we've done similar, We've
done toys. Yes, we're doing board games. It's a great topic.
So we're gonna do Mount Rushmore. So you get a
Mount Rushmore. I get the Mount Rushmore and then we'll
let like people think decide who's they're more siding with,
or they can create their own board games. I have
(05:11):
a closet full of them still, I do.
Speaker 4 (05:13):
I have some of them are in my parents' house still,
and like when we go back for like Thanksgiving, we'll play.
You know, I have a niece and nephew who will
play like our games and get bored of them after
like five minutes because everything's so much cooler now.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Why they're called board games? There you go, Okay, so
you have some at home.
Speaker 4 (05:31):
But yeah, a few here, including one that's on the
Mount Rushmoka.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
I have a huge closet full, like right when you
first walk into our place, there's the coat closet, and
above all the coats are all the board games.
Speaker 2 (05:43):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
My wife and I, Uh, if you ask me how
many times we have played any of those board games,
it is a zero.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
They're just sitting there, like, yeah, they're like artifacts.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
We always say, like we should have game night is
never we end up just watching Netflix.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
It's sad. Yeah, I don't.
Speaker 4 (05:59):
I mean, I'm kind of I mean, I have a
closet full of newer games too.
Speaker 2 (06:02):
That just yeah, rarely actually come out.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
So back in the nineties it was it was like
game night or you know, friends came over, especially family
with siblings.
Speaker 2 (06:10):
Yeah, always blast.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
So my Mount Rushmore is probably gonna be a little
bit different than yours because I'm going based off like
what I love playing in that era.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
Yeah, I was a little bit older than you, yep,
So mine's a little all over the place.
Speaker 4 (06:24):
But also none of not all of these were created
in the nineties, but they were all around popular.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
You played them in the nineties. Yeah, I think the
same with mine.
Speaker 1 (06:32):
Actually, I don't think any of mine were created in
the in the nineties.
Speaker 2 (06:35):
They're classic board games. Okay, I'll let you go first.
Speaker 1 (06:37):
So your mount Rushmore of board games from the nineties.
Speaker 4 (06:41):
Well, we're gonna start with one that is still in
a big part of my life and by extension, your
life and all my friends' lives to this day. And
that's gonna be the nineteen ninety version of the Family
Feud board game. And I know, I don't know, do
you know the history of how all that came to
be a thing?
Speaker 2 (07:01):
At my parties?
Speaker 4 (07:02):
Because now you know it's all digital. Yeah, but bad
I do, but I don't think the listener. The listeners
most certainly did I know this. So twice a year
I host family feud parties where I literally host family feud.
But it started with the nineteen ninety board game that
my family played growing up. It was Family Feud Questions.
It was very not intuitive, but you had like a
(07:24):
plastic board and you would slide there were like a
bunch of different answer sheets, so you whatever round you
were doing, you needed to have a host. They would
like slide a sheet of paper in, and then there
were little yellow plastic tabs. So like if I did
a question and you guessed an answer and it was
number two, and I was hosting, I would look and
I would see you got number two, and I would
like slide out the tab so that the answer for
(07:45):
number two revealed itself.
Speaker 2 (07:47):
Survey says, and then you pull the tab.
Speaker 4 (07:48):
And I still have that game at my And when
I first started hosting people when I moved to Chicago,
like fifteen sixteen years ago.
Speaker 2 (07:55):
That's how the feud tradition started. Was US.
Speaker 4 (07:58):
You know seven eight of us I did when I
moved here I didn't know a lot of people. You know,
we would sit around and play that and all get
sarcastically way too into it. And then at some point
it evolved into digitally. I did some googling discovered there
was this software out there that had all the music
and sound effects, and it became what it is today.
But blongs on your Mount Rushmore. It has to be
on my Mount Rushmore and yours alone. Yeah, there's nobody
(08:20):
else listening right now. Is ever it was around? I
don't know it, It was only got I never I
never heard of it.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
Yeah, I don't know. I mean Family Feud, the TV
show was solely popular, So I don't remember the game though.
Speaker 4 (08:30):
Yeah, I don't know, but this is your Mount Rushmore Dan, Yeah, okay.
Speaker 1 (08:34):
There you go.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
On what else you got? I gotta go with the
Jimanji board game?
Speaker 4 (08:38):
And that was very nineteen nineties, and you can couldn't
get a board game that was more uh fittingly tied
to the theme and the movie.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
In this case that it was. It was surrounding. So
I feel like h.
Speaker 1 (08:54):
On on unpopular opinion?
Speaker 2 (08:58):
Oh boy, do you mind?
Speaker 1 (09:01):
You?
Speaker 4 (09:01):
The movie was just saying I wouldn't put it up
there as one of my favorite movies.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
I wouldn't disagree.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
Oh I get murdered when I say that. Really, yeah,
it's just a sorry carry on. I mean no, I
also have been watched it in twenty plus years.
Speaker 4 (09:16):
Don't bother. Okay, it's overrated, I don't, but I don't
ever remember being it was never one. In fact, I've
probably only ever watched it once. It was not a movie.
I went back like Home Alone and Willy Wonka and
all of the childhood classics and rewatched. But the board
game was fun, Yeah it was. It was a lot
of action going on board game. Yeah, okay, very nineties. Okay,
that's number two.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
What else?
Speaker 4 (09:38):
So created in the sixties but reissued in the nineties,
And I feel like this one was reasonably popular in
the nineties.
Speaker 1 (09:46):
Mouse Trap loved mouse Trap if we were doing one
in the eighties.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
For me, that is when I dabbled in the mouse
just when you had your mouse Trap peek. But actually
I wouldn't.
Speaker 1 (09:56):
Put it on I wouldn't put it on my Mount
Rushmore because here was the thing with my experience with
mouse Trap.
Speaker 2 (10:01):
We wouldn't actually play the game. You would just build
the traps, build the trap. The whole game. You have
to like get to build it right.
Speaker 4 (10:08):
You have to like win, yeah, every round, you have
to land on the right thing, and then the thing
has to actually work at the end to trap them.
So there's a famous family story of my sister and me.
We had a babysitter one night and we played mouse
trap and you know how so you're building this contraption right,
and it's one of the pieces in the contraption, like
(10:29):
a marble hits something and it makes a guy do
a backflip off a diving board into a pool. Amazing,
But the pool was just empty unless you put water exactly.
So that's what we did one night when our parents
weren't home and we had a babysitter vodka.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
No we weren't.
Speaker 4 (10:47):
We weren't old enough to know what vodka was. But
the water did spill everywhere and warp the board, and
we were never able to play again because nothing ever
lined up.
Speaker 2 (10:56):
P s A. Don't use water in mousetrap unless they've
you know, unless they have advanced the.
Speaker 4 (11:02):
I would guess the board still is warpable. Good, Well,
Moustrep's fun Okay, is that three?
Speaker 1 (11:08):
That's three Okay, you got Family Feud, Jumanji, and Moustrepps.
Speaker 2 (11:12):
All right, so I'm down.
Speaker 4 (11:13):
I have I had six totals, so i'll mention. I'll
give a brief shout out to my honorable mentions later,
but I think my fourth has to be the electronic
version of Battleship Oh so good. Yeah, which, again, Battleship
was a game that existed for ages, but I want
to say late eighties early nineties was when the electronic
(11:35):
version came out where you could you would like if
I wanted to bomb B three, you would program into it,
like when you set up your ships. It was like
a very primitive probably computer chip in there. So like
you would set up your five ships and you would
enter the coordinates into it.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
And so then like I would enter.
Speaker 4 (11:53):
B six and you'd hear this boo and then either
nothing or like what you hear.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
And then either silence or if I hit one of
your ships. Wow, what a what a violent game that was?
Speaker 4 (12:08):
Yeah, it was, but when you think about the idea
of the game, it's a little disturbing.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
It stark, But wasn't there a guy that would talk
to when you say you sank my battleship or no, mine.
Speaker 4 (12:18):
Did not have a voice, but there was a you're right.
There was a different sound when you got the ship
because the ship would be like two or three or
four five like spaces, and so you'd have to figure
out which way it was facing. There was some other
sound to tell you, like you sunk a ship, like
the battle the battles.
Speaker 2 (12:34):
The ship is down, ships down.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
Think about battleship and this might be a theme here.
You easy to cheat on.
Speaker 2 (12:42):
Because you could, you could. You're like they guess.
Speaker 4 (12:47):
Yeah, that's probably why it became so popular in the
nineties is that everybody was cheating prior to that. Somehow
they bombed every space on the board and still not
hit a ship because you're just moving them around.
Speaker 1 (12:58):
Wow, we weeded out all the liars and cheaters with technology.
Speaker 2 (13:01):
Yeah, there you go. And you said you honorable mention.
Speaker 4 (13:03):
Too because you have well, I'll give a couple of
shot outs. So this is an old one, but I
just we played it growing up. I feel like it
was around and a big thing, not hockey. Did you
play that?
Speaker 2 (13:11):
Knock? It was?
Speaker 4 (13:13):
I mean, I'll turn my computer around. It looked like that. Okay,
it was. It was like, yeah, yeah, yeah, you guys.
Speaker 2 (13:20):
Need not it was showing the camera.
Speaker 4 (13:23):
It was uh it was like an ice hockey game
that you played it on like a wood little wooden ring.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
My niece and nephew are still have fun.
Speaker 6 (13:30):
With it to this day, like a mini like a
mini foosball kind of kind of, but you're using just
like a hockey stick and you're trying to get this
wooden puck through through a little hole, okay.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
And there's a little obstacles in it looks it looks
very vintage, very very old school.
Speaker 4 (13:45):
It was, but it's still around. It's like one of
those yeah no, uh no, we got it. I feel
like when we were kids.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
Ok yeah.
Speaker 4 (13:52):
And the other one, I don't know. If you're listening
and you have heard of this, please comment that probably
doesn't apply to anyone, but it's very nineteen nineties. It
looks like it came out in eighty eight. But we
had this game called VCR California. It was it was
a board game. The goal was like you were driving
(14:13):
down the West coast from like La to San Diego
to catch a flight. But it was there was a
board game and a VHS tape and so you would
put the VHS tape in that had different segments, and
when you landed on certain spaces on the board, you
had to hit play on the remote and you would
find out your fate based on like the next video
(14:35):
on this VHS tape, which was just like a bunch
of clips of people like doing surfing tricks, and some
of them would like do really cool tricks and you
would like earn fifty dollars. Some of them would like
fall flat on their face and you'd have to like
go back five spaces or whatever. So you'd land on
a space, you'd play the video, you'd see your fate,
and then you'd like move your piece or collect money
based on what it sat on the tv VCR VCR
(14:58):
California Games was the was the name of it.
Speaker 2 (15:00):
Yeah, it's so so advanced. It's it was.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
You needed a tv TV, a VC star, yeah, a
remote control that hadn't been lost under the couch.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
And a lot of things had to go right for
you to play that game. Yeah, yeah, you're right. Never
nobody's ever heard of that except you. I think if
that one person out there, all.
Speaker 4 (15:20):
Right, that's according to board game geek dot com. Okay,
thirty five people own it, and five say it's on
their wish list, and six people are willing to trade it.
So if you, uh, if you want to trade in
another board game for it, head to board game geek
dot com.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
Would you trade your Family Feud video game that you
own that you played for California VCR California.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
No, no, no, no, that's that's that's no way, absolutely not.
I wouldn't trade that for like one hundred thousand dollars. No,
that's not true. That's not true. I yeah, we would.
We would find a way to play Family Feud with
one hundred. It can be done. Ah cool, You didn't
don't have any overlaps.
Speaker 4 (16:01):
There's so many board games out there they figured that
would be the case. But all right, I'm very curious.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Very very eclectic. Yeah, it's all over the place.
Speaker 4 (16:09):
A lot of them weren't terrible, but the Battleship was
probably the most popular one.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
Jumanji had. It's had its time this moment.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
Yeah yeah, but for me, way more mainstream, way more mainstream.
My mount Rushmore starts with guess who oh yeah, okay,
the guessing game.
Speaker 4 (16:23):
Have you seen the the TikTok trend? Of the the
no physical trait version of guess who I have?
Speaker 1 (16:32):
Not, but what we used to do the older I
got was played inappropriate okay, Yeah, where you would guess
who the person was based on overtly stereotypes.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
Oh wow, yeah okay.
Speaker 4 (16:44):
This is kind of the exact opposite of that you're
not allowed to use any physical traits. I played this
with my niece and nep because we have it when
we go home for Thanksgiving. So it would be like,
does your person is your person? Someone who? If Starbucks
got their drink wrong, they would raise a fuss in
the store.
Speaker 1 (17:03):
Similar to that, it would be just a very raunchy
and off color version where you would say things that
you probably would get canceled for.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
So how often did you actually end up with the
right person at the end?
Speaker 1 (17:15):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (17:16):
Inappropriate or regular and inappropriate pretty quickly? Okay, which is sad. Yeah,
see we usually fail at the no physical traits? Got it?
Speaker 1 (17:25):
Yeah? But guess who the original as a kid? Not inappropriate?
That was my jam I love that guy? Yeah hell again,
thought about something just now. We could probably make a
version for our like our group of friends.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
We should put a little picture like that would be fun.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
Like, uh, like, this person goes out of her way
to cook ridiculously fancy meals and when we go to
her house, Dan breaks something.
Speaker 4 (17:50):
Hold on, I'm putting down everyone except Bridget.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
Friend Bridget, she likes to have house dinner party that's
she makes.
Speaker 4 (17:57):
If you haven't tasted Bridget's cooking, you really should sometime
give her her number two of the day.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
Number two.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
And then again, this is like my nineties era. I'm
kind of coming of age now. If you have a
like a if you have like a party, if you
have like a party, like a like a seventh or
eighth grade party in Twister, Oh man, yeah, it was
like four I think it was four people to play
at a time. Yeah, oh man, I definitely want to
(18:23):
Oh yeah, I want to play with like Michelle Hancock.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
Uh, we've talked.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
About her before, right, I don't know, maybe Phil Laura
Sager's gotta be in my group. But yeah, you have
your mount rushmore people you want to play Twister with
grade Yeah, I would.
Speaker 4 (18:42):
Be Rebecca Rankin, Carly Kleiman, and Christine Veelopolski.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
Did you write songs about any of them?
Speaker 4 (18:50):
No, I wasn't. It was before my songwriting days. But
those were my six and seventh grade girlfriends. Shout out
to them. I hope they're all doing well. I think
they're all married with children. Their names aren't that anymore?
They have last Yeah.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
Yeah, so Twisters on, I mean, just so much fun
and you know, you you get the you get all
tangled up and then you fall, and then it's funny
and then it's cute and then all of a sudden
you're playing seven Minutes in Heaven.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (19:10):
It was definitely like I feel like, maybe not officially
but framed as like a flirty Oh yeah for sure.
Yeah you want to playing that with your parents? No, no,
you have to take up your shoes. You remember you
get Yeah, it was like a mat right with four
different colors, and then you spun, spun ye.
Speaker 1 (19:26):
Spin the thing number three on my list, So I
got guess who twister number three? Zero strategy involved, which
is why I loved it because I don't have a
lot of brain salts Yachtzi love.
Speaker 4 (19:38):
Come on, we play that still too at the at
the Old House Silver Thanksgiving.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
Okay, yeah, it's go on. Yeah, that's my one of
my mom's favorite. So shout out to Tama ram always
wants to play us some yachtzi, don't cut.
Speaker 4 (19:49):
Yourn, don't don't sell yourself short. There's some strategy a
little like you got to decide. Am I going to
put these towards the ones towards three.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Of a kind?
Speaker 1 (19:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (19:58):
Yeah, yeah that's fair.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
Uh And last but not least, on my Mount Rushmore.
I'm pretty much going like super mainstream here with guess
who twister Yachtza. I was gonna put Monopoly on. I
mean that's like the George Washington of board games. Yeah,
but then I thought about it and I was like, realistically,
nobody ever wanted to play Monopoly.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
You so much of a time investment, so much time. Yeah,
you're like, I want to play Monopoly.
Speaker 4 (20:22):
Oh, I don't know. It's we're going to be You
need to get Monopoly deal. It's a card game. It's
based on Monopoly. It's like a fifteen minute game. It's
a great date night game you can play with two people.
You and you and the wife would would enjoy a
lovely night of Monopoly.
Speaker 1 (20:36):
We say we'll play it, and then we never will.
So the last one on my list, then Monopoly is out.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
Okay. The Game of Life Okay, that was never the
game we had. I remember, I mean I obviously remember it.
I've played it. Yeah, but we did. We didn't have
that one.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
You spin the wheel, get the little car, get the
pink of the blue. What's the goal to finish life?
Which sounds like you're dead, to finish life? Life with
the most money?
Speaker 2 (21:01):
Okay, now now I'm more interested.
Speaker 1 (21:04):
And the first the first part, the first like decision
or option is do I want to go to college
or do I want to like start my career?
Speaker 2 (21:11):
Ooh? And then along the way you add children.
Speaker 1 (21:14):
The little pegs are kids if you land on it,
so you can cruise their life without like any kids,
or you can cruise their life with like a full
car full of children. And each time it's like costing
more money.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
Do you have to Yeah, so you have to have
money for different Like do you have to have money
for college?
Speaker 4 (21:28):
I guess yeah, in nineteen ninety you probably didn't have
to have If you played that game, the twenty twenty
five version, you'd have to go around the freaking board
three thousand times just to be able to.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
Afford college, right, Yeah, and maybe you're still paying for that. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
Stood alone in twenty twenty five. Right, so that's my
Mount Rushmore. I've got guess who twister Yatzi in life?
Remind me what you have again?
Speaker 4 (21:47):
Jumanji, juman Jude Family, Feud, the mouse Trap these are
and battleship Visire California.
Speaker 2 (21:55):
It was just an electronic bowtship, the electronic battleship, mouse
Trap Family.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
I love it all right, So that's it man? How
did we do? What is on your Mount Rushmore? Board games?
Just growing up in general, let's have to be the nineties.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
Let us know.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
Comment, you can like, you can subscribe, you can do
other things to a podcast, share love the sharing one right,
oh right, yeah we're getting good ratings.
Speaker 2 (22:20):
Yeah we are five stars. What country were biging?
Speaker 1 (22:23):
Was it?
Speaker 2 (22:23):
India? Is India? Yeah? What's up India? Hey that's where
our traffic continuity team is.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
Okay, until next time on the Brady One More Time podcast.
Just remember just oh noray, hold until the mauies don't
get available?
Speaker 2 (22:46):
Where are sold? Which is nowhere? Now that's what I
call music. Let's from this Okay. Wow