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October 8, 2024 • 28 mins
Comedian Mary Radzinski talks with Nick about her comedy career, making a special, and being on Netflix's "Tires"
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Mexico money.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Why still speaking that that should not have made it
to the rest of us. This is Inside Thoughts. Let's Jordan.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
Check check check well, live baby. Welcome back to Inside Thoughts. Uh.
If you've listened before, I appreciate you. I don't know
what you're doing here. But yeah, if you're new and
you're wondering, hey, what's up with the intro? Well, the
music was made by my dude, David Rodriguez. He makes beats.

(00:37):
I was like, bro, I need a beat. So he
did that, and then the nice words were said by
my little sister. I was like, hey, Sammy, I need
you to say some stuff like that. She goes, no, no, no,
I I got it. Okay, are you gonna.

Speaker 1 (00:52):
Pay me for this?

Speaker 3 (00:53):
No, don't have any money. Anyway. If you're new, each
week on the podcast, I get to talk to somebody
who's actually cool. So I got a hilarious comedian, Mary Radzinski.
She was in town recently. Got to talk to her.
So I'll have that interview for you at the end

(01:15):
of the podcast. Hope you're doing good, Hope you're enjoying life.
Nature is trying to kill us, so you know, I
hope everybody in western North Carolina kinda is able to
put the pieces back together. I know it's going to
be a long time. And I know a lot of people,
you know, didn't make it because that's what I was

(01:37):
hearing from some people what the death toll actually is,
and it's not good. And then it's like, Okay, well
we're done with that hurricane. And then we got another
one coming, and it's like it's tough, and I gotta
be honest. I'm I'm all about conspiracy theories, but there's
been a couple times where I've had to get off TikTok.
It's like, okay, I'm going down the wrong TikTok a

(02:00):
whole on my algorithm. Here. It's like every time you
get to the hurricanes from man made man, every time
you get to one of those, he's like, all right,
it's time, it's time to get off the phone. I'm
go look outside. I'm just gonna be present in the moment.
I don't need to be staring at my phone because
now I'm listening to stupid people talk.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
Have hurricanes been man made?

Speaker 2 (02:23):
No?

Speaker 3 (02:24):
I mean I could be wrong, but like ninety nine
point nine percent chance they're not man made.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
Like what about harp they have the ability to affect
the weather. Yeah, they're not making hurricanes.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
They're only targeting Florida and people in the mountain. That
doesn't make sense, man, I just like that. If you
want to talk to me about like P Diddy conspiracies,
well like anything going on in entertainment, conspiracies, government conspiracies.
I'll listen to that. But as soon as you get
to the US government is making hurricanes is to only

(03:02):
kill people in Florida. Come on, bro, like what are
we doing? And it's like weird. Most of the people
that that comes from are like super potheads are usually
ay man, it's all a conspiracy, man. The government's too powerful. Man.
You don't know, man. And like super Christians, which I

(03:23):
don't understand, like what the Venn diagram of beliefs is
on that, but I don't understand, like what your thought
process is, you know what I mean? Like Christians, you
you believe Jesus is coming back when it gets bad, right, Well,
this is coming back, So sit back and just you know,

(03:43):
see what happens, like you can't do anything about it.
And then potheads y'all are lazy anyway, You're not gonna
do anything.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
He made the hurricanes.

Speaker 3 (03:52):
Man, No they didn't. No, they didn't. Like who benefits
from that? That's anytime like there's a conspiracy theory, you
gotta just look at like, Okay, who benefits from this happening? Well,
actually through suppressing Republican voting. No, why would that make sense?

(04:14):
They're just gonna target only Republican white voters. Is I
don't know, Like we all want something to believe in,
you know what I mean. But there's some times where
you're just like, Okay, that's that's enough Internet for me.
And it's tough, Like when you'll be talking to somebody

(04:35):
that you're like, yeah, this person's pretty smart. I have
conversations with them. Then they'll start being like, so what
do you think about these hurricanes? Like what what do
you mean? What do I think about these hurricanes? Like, well,
seems kind of suspicious, doesn't it?

Speaker 1 (04:49):
Does it seem suspicious?

Speaker 3 (04:51):
Or are like there are way more people on the
planet that there have ever been farting and burping creating gas,
and and big companies are just dumping toxic waste in
the ocean. You don't think that has anything to do
with it. I don't know, I'm just saying that's like
a wild conclusion to jump to. But hey, you know,

(05:15):
I'm stupid, so I don't know, you know what I mean,
Like I hope not, but I don't know. I would
just probably say a gun to my head. No, you
know what I mean. They're not making hurricanes. Doesn't make
sense speaking of hurricanes, though, I will say there are
some shenanigans going on with the University of Miami. I

(05:36):
don't know what kind of deal the ACC has with Vegas,
but Miami keeps getting away with these games at the
last minute to preserve the perfect record. It's fishy stuff
going on. That's about as far as I'll go with
the hurricane conspiracy anyway. I'm sorry. I'm not in a
bad mood. I'm just I'm tired and people keep having

(05:58):
conversations with them elves to me every time. Like I've
been working right now, I've basically been living at the
radio stations we're doing, you know this contest that I
got to be here for all day, So like seven
thirty in the morning till six o'clock at night, I'm
just I'm here. So I get I go home. I
want to go to my fortress of solitude, you know

(06:19):
what I mean. I've gotten in the elevator with people
who just need to say words in silence, and I'm like, bro, please,
you don't have to talk. You do not actually have
to talk. Hey, Nick, you don't have to talk right now.
That's not what this is about. Okay, you click that button.
I didn't make it. I'm just putting this out of
the ether. There's nobody sitting in this room with me
right now. I'm not purposefully bothering anybody. Okay, if you

(06:43):
hit play, you get mad at me for talking, that's
on you. I didn't do anything to that. Okay, this
is a consensual podcast, But I'm serious, like people just
I don't know if they don't know how to make
small talk in my apartment or they're just having conversations
with themselves at me. Like I was getting in the elevator,

(07:04):
was going back home. It has to stop on this
floor where the gym is. This guy gets on, takes
his headphones out and goes woo, and I just like
looked at him and nodded, and he was like, yeah,
all right, time to get dinner. You're talking to me, cool, what.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
Do you want me to say, what do you have
for dinner? I don't care.

Speaker 3 (07:25):
I'm actually trying to talk to as little amount of
human beings as possible right now. And you're like, should I.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
Have taken a rice bro? He just walked out.

Speaker 3 (07:33):
I gotta get protein back at my body. I don't care.
I don't care. And then I was leaving for work early.
I don't know if you can tell by you know,
just the disdain in my voice. I'm not a morning person. Okay.
It takes me until like ten o'clock in the morning
to be able to, you know, fully have a conversation

(07:54):
with another human being without looking at him like I
hate him.

Speaker 1 (07:57):
It's not like personal.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
It's just I don't like being up having to be places,
you know what I mean. If it was up to me,
i'd probably sweep untill ten thirty every day, but I can't,
so I gotta do stuff. We all gotta put pants on,
go places. I'm a little grouchy in the morning, Okay,
down't talk to me before I've had my cup of coffee.
I'm one of those people, unfortunately a bad person. I'm
a bad person, but this dude was worse. Get in

(08:20):
the elevator, to go down. It's it's seven thirty in
the morning, okay, And this dude gets in the elevator
with me, just not at him, acknowledging his presence, being polite,
but I don't want to talk to him. Maybe that's
my fault. Maybe I just got to stop nodding at
these people and just act like they don't exist so
they won't talk to me. But anyway, I nod at
him and he goes, one more day. It was a Thursday.

(08:43):
You go one more day? Just nodded again. He goes,
We got this like, yeah, dude, sure you even talking
to me? Are you hyping yourself up? Trying to get
through one more day?

Speaker 1 (08:53):
Word?

Speaker 3 (08:54):
And I just happen to be there, like stop stop
just talking to people. We're allowed to sit in silence.
It's okay. I know, like we constantly have to be
on our phones and we have to have some kind
of stimulus hitting our brains.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
We're like, I'm taking them all thoughts, that's not good.
Did my parents love me?

Speaker 3 (09:13):
Dog get on?

Speaker 1 (09:14):
TikTok.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
You're allowed to just sit with your own thoughts. It's fine,
I promise you, it'll be okay. I'm sorry, I'm you know,
well heated for no reason. It's whatever. Let's talk about
something happy. Former President Jimmy Carter made it to one
hundred years old. Now here's where the conspiracy theory comes in,
because did you guys see those pictures of Jimmy Carter

(09:36):
on his hundredth birthday?

Speaker 1 (09:39):
They wheeled that dude out.

Speaker 3 (09:40):
His mouth was open, he looked like a mummy. He
looked like the Grandma, the great Grandma and SpongeBob.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
Did somebody say chuckle it?

Speaker 3 (09:50):
I remember when they first invented chocolate. That's what Jimmy
Carter looked like. They rolled his body out. I think
this dude's been dead for a while, but we've never
had a president make it to one hundred years old.
So they're like, we're going to have to make an
executive decision. Old Jimmy's bag of bones out there. We
have to hit one hundred. That dude was dead. That's like,

(10:12):
that's a conspiracy theory I can kind of get behind.
Not a chance that dude is actually one hundred years old.
He might have been ninety nine and zero point nine
nine years old, but they rolled him out there for
his birthday. I felt so bad. I was like, why
are we taking pictures of this? Let Jimmy die in peace?
Like I was reading some wild stuff of how long

(10:36):
Jimmy Carter's been alive? Hold on, I'm googling and I
can't google and type and think and talk at the
same time. Some stupid When did Jimmy Carter.

Speaker 2 (10:48):
Born?

Speaker 3 (10:48):
Well? I messed that one up. When did Jimmy Coda
born October one, nineteen twenty four? This dude was born
in the twenties. In twenties, how do you doing this?
Sweet at roaring twenties, Great Depression, World War Two, Civil

(11:09):
Rights I'm going through my middle school history book. He
saw people go to the moon? Uh, the USSR fell?
What else happened? We got robots? The Braves won a
couple world series. Actually, the Braves won all their world

(11:31):
series when Jimmy Carter was Jimmy Carter's lifetime. Hold on,
what has happened since Jimmy Carter has been alive? This
is like crazy? Hold on, dude, do do oh? Here

(11:52):
we go? What to know about his No? I don't
care about his kids or his grandkids. This is not
giving me what was that stat I saw? Sorry? I'm
just like talking right now I'm tired. Jimmy Carter was
like the first president born in a hospital. That can't

(12:13):
be right. Jimmy Carter first president, that's crazy. James Earl Carter,
Jimmy juh was born in Georgia at the Wise Sanitarium.
They didn't even call them hospitals back there. He's the
first American president born in a hospital. That's crazy. Yeah,

(12:36):
shout out to Jimmy Carter for living to be one hundred.
Can you think like that's the kind of stuff where
I'm like, I'm normally okay with the idea of death,
but it freaks me out a little bit when you
look back at somebody's life who's like been a hundred
and you see like all the stuff that happened throughout
their life. That's a lot of change. What do they

(12:59):
have model t back then? Now we got taslas. They
just talk to people back in the day. Now we
got robots. You think Jimmy Carter was ever on TikTok
it's wild man like that. I was born in ninety two,
So if I live to be one hundred, that'll be
a plus one hundred twenty ninety two. I don't I

(13:23):
don't know if I want to see all that change,
you know what I mean, Like, I'm okay with like
the thought of not being here, but the thought of
like seeing all the change and becoming like a grumpy
old man at least, you know, as it goes on,
people won't be talking to me in the elevator because
we'll be wearing their Google glasses or have like some
kind of chip in their head that letsn't watch porn

(13:45):
on their eyes. Anyway, I'm being a hater. I'm sorry.
I just got to say this.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
Being a hater.

Speaker 3 (13:53):
Is fun. I will say that being a hater is
super fun. Like there is nothing more fun than this.
See somebody enjoying something and just going, now, that's stupid,
you're stupid for liking that, And just see the joy
leave their body. It's hilarious. Just fills you up. Again,
I'm a bad person already said that. Disclaimer. Being a
hater's awesome. Every day is a great day to be

(14:16):
a hater. But I will say being a hater makes
you miss out on cool stuff sometimes, you know, like
when everybody's like, oh, this is so cool, this is
so cool, and you're like, ma, you guys are dumb.
It's not cool. Actually we're go, okay, bro, you're missing out.
No not, you guys are dumb. And then, you know,
the dust settles, you go check something out from the

(14:38):
you know, the popularity time that it's passed. My girl
showed me Wednesday on Netflix. I remember when that show
came out like two years ago. Everybody's like, oh, this
is this is like one of the best shows Netflix
has ever done. It's awesome. Jenner or Tega is hot,
and I was like, Okay, you guys are weird. This

(14:58):
show can't be that good. It's about the Adams family.
I remember that cartoon and jenneral Ortega is not hot.
She looks like she's fourteen. What's wrong with you?

Speaker 1 (15:06):
But I watched this series.

Speaker 3 (15:09):
Me and my girl been watching this and it's one
of the best shows I've seen on Netflix in a
long time. I am sorry for being a hater at
the top. I could have I could have been watched this.
It is a great show. I'm trying to like binge it.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
I'm mad.

Speaker 3 (15:24):
I gotta be at work. I wish like I would
just sit home and binge watch the whole thing. Great writing,
it's funny, and it's got like stuff that keeps you
stringing along to wait for the next episode. Great show.
Prime example of being a hater when it goes wrong. Now,
I will tell you I was right about this. Jennal
Ortega is still not hot. Y'all are some weirdos. Jen
Ortega's hot? What do you think sixteen year olds are hot? Okay,

(15:47):
Pete Diddy, it's weird, dude, it's weird. But sometimes being
a hater it's bad. But every every day, you know,
it's a great day to be a hater. Anyway, speak
to P Diddy. The lawyer Tony Busby who also represents
Deshaun Watson. It is kind of weird. He's representing the

(16:11):
victims in uh does Busby represent de Shan Watson? That
does sound right? Maybe maybe I made that up. Tony
Busby's a Houston lawyer. He's representing like a bunch of
the victims of P Diddy. He came out last week
and was like, there are some big names on a list.

Speaker 1 (16:30):
We have them.

Speaker 3 (16:32):
You're gonna recognize a lot of these names. Get ready,
And I was thinking, not a chance this list is
ever coming out. Fifty Bucks says, this list never comes out. Well.
According to a new article, some big name celebrities are
quietly paying off victims to avoid being publicly named in
lawsuits relating to the Ditty sex assault case. Attorney Tony Busby,

(16:54):
who is representing more than one hundred and twenty of
Diddy combs alleged victims, said that huge stars are about
to be sued by his firm, and he's given them
a chance to settle up before the claims hit public court.
Why is it got to be about money? I don't
know if I'm being insensitive right here, because it's like
part of me is thinking, Okay, he just wants to
get his money, get the victims money. It's okay. The

(17:16):
other part of me is like, is it bad if
the victims' names come out to make this like a
court thing? Like I know it'll be traumatic, but also like,
don't you want to see everybody who is involved in
this go down? I don't know. I can't figure out
like what the right way to feel about that is. Also,
it doesn't doesn't affect me. I guess the right way

(17:37):
to feel about it is just let it play out
because it has no impact on my life. But some
celebrities have opted to settle Busby said, in every single case,
especially cases like this, because it's in the best interests
of the victim, we attempt to resolve these matters without
the filing of a public lawsuit. And we've done that
already with a handful of individuals, many of which you've
heard of before. Yeah, I guess, you know, be tough

(18:02):
on the victims, but also I want to know, Yeah,
that makes me a bad person, I guess. But I
know that list is never coming out, you know what
I mean. But it's whatever, all right. Ames is a
little sick, So I'm not gonna make her call up
and do the British word of the week. She's not

(18:22):
feeling too good, and I'm not gonna make her think
of another word that isn't actually English. So we'll get
to your headline of the week and then get to
this interview with Mary Ziinski. Headline of the Week. A
woman living in Washington State was recently invaded by over
one hundred raccoons. The woman said she's been feeding raccoons
in the area for almost four decades, but last week

(18:43):
she was surrounded by the animals and contacted authorities for help.
This is why Prime example actions have consequences. You've just
been feeding raccoons for forty years, that gets passed down
their DNA. Raccoons are out running around, you know, making
more raccoons, and they're like, we know where the food is.
It just comes from the magical Karen's house right up

(19:06):
right up on the hill. So yeah, we just go
up there. She has everything. She even like once in
a while she'll do the cotton candy in the water.
It makes me mad. But most of the time she
has like grapes and apples and doritos. It's awesome. This
is why they put those signs up in the zoo
that says don't feed the zoo animals because they'll chase
you down, run up to your house, run up in
your grandmama crib and uh yeah, they'll attack you and

(19:28):
you'll have to call the cops. What was that nine
to eleven or nine nine eleven? What was that nine
one one call? Like, excuse me, can I get some
police officers sent out here? What's the problem, man, there's
a bunch of raccoons out here. Oh you know, okay, lady,
have you been doing drugs now?

Speaker 1 (19:48):
Please?

Speaker 3 (19:49):
Been feeding them for over forty years, they brought their relatives.
Oh man, that's hilarious. Raccoons got a little hands too.
They probably opened the door and ran in and probably
stole over stuff out of a refrigerator. That's that's crazy. Anyway,
let's get to this interview with comedian funny, very funny

(20:12):
comedian Mary Razinsky. What's going on, Mary?

Speaker 2 (20:16):
Not much? I mean a lot, but it's I'm good.
I'm frazzled. It's a long, short week, but I'm good.

Speaker 3 (20:22):
Thanks for having me, no problem. So you're frazzled? Are
you not a fan of the four day work week?
You just? Is it too much? Too quick?

Speaker 2 (20:30):
No, it's like three tuesdays in a row. It's the
longest pat of the world. Everybody loves a long three
day weekend, but it takes me. I'm not it's bad.
I have too much fun. I think it's to be
a four day work week. Anyway, I got you.

Speaker 3 (20:44):
Well, I'm glad that you're too much fun because the
other way it could go is not fun at all,
and nobody likes that.

Speaker 2 (20:51):
Buzz kill.

Speaker 3 (20:52):
What uh? What can people expect from you this weekend?
What's a Mary Radzinsky show? White?

Speaker 2 (20:57):
What is my show?

Speaker 3 (20:57):
Like?

Speaker 2 (20:58):
I mean i'd like, you know, I have a good
opinion of it. I think it's fun, a little snark
little opinion. I'm very self deprecating. I'm very observational. I
talk a lot about my long term relationship with my
partner now fiance, and he's he's not a fan of

(21:20):
that part, and that makes up a lot of the
a lot of my acts. But I'm trying to write
at least knew mean things about him. But it's fun.
I think, you know, I stay out of politics, keeping
it fun, have some laughs.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
So there you go. So your bit about him being
scared of marriage was pretty hilarious.

Speaker 2 (21:41):
Well, I wish it was a bit nick Okay, took
him a decade.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
He look, it could have taken him too. You know.
You got to focus on the positives.

Speaker 2 (21:50):
Right, I guess.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
I guess.

Speaker 2 (21:52):
So yeah, I got to ring. But really everybody asked
me like, oh, what are you getting married? And I
have no plans on that. I just wanted the jewelry
and we're good for now.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
You got the jewelry for the Instagram picture. So what
was it like? Ause your special Not Anymore came out
last year? What was it like producing a special? Getting
it out and then like the feeling of okay, I
did the special, like what next?

Speaker 2 (22:18):
You know, it was fun. I think it was a
long time coming. I was excited. I got to record
it at Healing Comedy Club, my home club in Philly
where I live, and it was special. It was nice,
Like I it was a lot of jokes that I'd
had for a really long time, and it was nice
to sort of put them out on a platform. But
then there's the pressure of Okay, what's next, lady, and

(22:42):
still figuring that out, working on it some new stuff,
and you know, it's good. It's nice to have a
little bit of a catalog of sorts of your work.
When your work is joke, you know.

Speaker 3 (22:54):
Well, it's got to feel pretty good, like especially doing
stand up for a long time and you're just kind
of like waiting because I've read that you've opened up
for a bunch of huge comedians and you're hilarious. So
I got to feel like it was one of those
things where you're like, Okay, when when do I get
the shot?

Speaker 2 (23:10):
Yeah? No, absolutely, And it's it's nice to you know,
like people are you know, what do you what do
you like? What are your what's your stand up, like,
and now I have something to point them too. I'm
not for kids parties. Well you know, have a stiff
upper lip and take a joke. But uh yeah, it's
nice to kind of have have something to be proud of.

(23:32):
For sure.

Speaker 3 (23:32):
Well, the special is hilarious. Next time I go to
the doctor, I'm going to see if I get complimented
on my downstairs. I doubt it'll happen, because you know,
it's nothing that incredible, but I can hope.

Speaker 2 (23:46):
Now, you know, hey, let me know if you do,
because you'd be the first I've heard of.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
Yeah, that's that's not how it goes. You nailed. You
nailed that. I was like, oh, yeah, I've never got
a compliment at the doctor's office for that. So congrats
to you.

Speaker 2 (24:01):
Oh thank you, thank you on all of it. I
appreciate it.

Speaker 3 (24:05):
Now I read that you were in Tires the Netflix show. Yes, yep, okay, yeah,
I read like I watched that whole thing, but I
was hungover sometimes when I was watching it. So what
what part were you in?

Speaker 2 (24:18):
Yeah, if you were hungover went to the bathroom, you
might have might have missed it. I was episode five
for a very brief amount of time. Still very impactful
and powerful. Really, I'm quite a performer. But I played
the uh, the angry wife that pulls up in the
car when I find out my husband was at the
bikini car wash.

Speaker 3 (24:40):
Oh okay, yeah I did see that, all right. You
definitely start a scene on that, and then you get
your husband gets in the car and you bowl um yeah.

Speaker 2 (24:50):
Yeah, and tell him not to make eye contact, get
in the backseat, and it's all all improved. No, no script.
Me sort of as a method actor, reaching for some
feelings that I've dealt with in the past.

Speaker 1 (25:04):
So yeah, that's hilarious.

Speaker 3 (25:06):
So how how did that happen? Did like you get
the call from Shane Gillis or they were asking for
like comedians because I know that that was like self
produced outside in that folks, right, sure.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
Yeah. So John McKeever who is he's a director and
writer and he works for Shane. They have a production
company together, and he's a Philly stand up that I
started with. He's one of my best friends. So it
was sort of as you know, as they were putting
the episodes together, they're probably like, who's a loud lady

(25:40):
with the mouth of a long halt Strucker and I
must have came to mind, so that's how it came about.
But they're all just like they're good buds of mine,
and so it's just fun to see them succeed and
do so much, and you know, it's fun to be
part of it.

Speaker 3 (25:55):
That's awesome. Well, you are a famous comedian and a
famous actress now, so that's awesome.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
I know it's hard, you know, it's hard getting recognized.
I'm kidding. Could you imagine?

Speaker 3 (26:06):
Yeah, you got to just beat people away at Phillies
games and Eagles games or you just normally feat trunks
when you go out there.

Speaker 2 (26:13):
Yeah, just beating them off, you know, but uh, well
not literally anyway, you know, heyo shoulders. But yeah, it's fun.
It's fun too. Uh, it's fun being in Philly and
kind of just having your friends blow up around you
and sort of you know, it's just it's been a
long time coming. It's fun.

Speaker 3 (26:32):
Well, that's awesome. I'm glad you're finally getting the payoff now.
I did want to ask because I is your thing
saying that you're jazzed up, because I've heard you say
that a few times in some clips and interviews, and
then you posted it, Are you actually always jazzed up?

Speaker 2 (26:47):
My hosts up? You know, it's funny. I would say.
The truth to that is, I don't know why I
even say that. My dad was a bit older. I
think I'm not nick honestly, I have I barely have
a pulse. And I think anybody who says something like
they're jazzed up kits are They're not. They're inside And
so I say it a lot, but I mean I'm happy.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
It's just like, yeah, well, that's what I couldn't tell
if you were just like secretly super enthused or it
was one of those like I'm living the dream, aka
I want to kill myself type things when you said it, Oh.

Speaker 2 (27:25):
Yeah, yeah. I mean I constantly I'm like open mouth
breathing as a heartbeat of a hummingbird. I mean, if
that's jazzed up, maybe I am.

Speaker 3 (27:34):
I got cha. We definitely need to put that on
a T shirt. But is is there anything else that
you want to promote for I'll let you get out here.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
No, you know what, that's really that's really it. In
terms of Raleigh. I appreciate you having me there and
you know, keep in touch at Mary red zenc and
all the socials or anything that's coming up in the future.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
There you go, well, Mary go heard he this weekend.
I appreciate you taking the time talk to me and
hope it sells out.

Speaker 2 (28:05):
Well. I appreciate you very much. I thank you and
me too. You and I both all right.

Speaker 3 (28:11):
It was good talk to you man, you too.

Speaker 2 (28:13):
Take care. Thanks to Go Money for Go Money, for
Go Money for Go Money
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