Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly Nash, Hello Jonathan Rush.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Monday Show Today, we got a grand We got a
grand we got a grand brand new prize Monday for
what you're talking about that we do.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
I know you're a fan. I guess of this guy.
I am, and I like the name of the tour,
the Big Dumbies World Tour, because he does have big dummies.
That's probably the most striking feature of Nate Bargatzi. And
so he's appropriately named the tour and he'll be bringing
it to the Colonial Life Arena on a Thursday night
(00:33):
in just a couple of weeks, August fourteenth. What you're
talking about is the game that we play, and we
like to give you the answers early. So the answer
and the word is up right now. Cafe Clatch, Cafe Clatch,
Cafe clatch. K A ff e e k l A
(00:56):
T s.
Speaker 1 (00:57):
H sounds, but I know that's a trick.
Speaker 2 (01:09):
This is a medical device, okay, that is used primarily
when spaying dogs.
Speaker 3 (01:16):
Primarily, but could be used for other things.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
It can be with a disclaimer and usually a waiver.
Speaker 3 (01:23):
I'm surprised that this is kind of in your wheelhouse.
The Cafe Clatch is a German word that the Americans
started using back in the late eighteen hundreds. It's an
informal social gathering, often with a focus on gossip or
late hearted chat, and oftentimes involves having coffee. I guess
the German's pronounce a cafe.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
Oh, you would have thought I would have known this
because you're a German. Yeah, of German. You would have
thought I would have been aware of this, but I'm not.
So It's like, it's like you're saying, caffeine typically with
coffee is the what they drink.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
That was like, Yeah, it's k A F F E E.
I think is the German word for coffee. I think
I don't know. They just said it's a German. It's
a of German heritage, using it in the late eighteen
hundreds in America as an informal social gathering, often with
a focus on gossip or light hearted chat, usually surrounding coffee.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Coffee interesting because the Germans like their beer like they
like their women strong and stout.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
Oh.
Speaker 3 (02:30):
I thought you're gonna say, in room temperature, and they do,
like is gracious.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
Don't go fishing with a German. They show up with
a bag of beer.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
Literally it's a bag with a six back of beer
that is nasty in a hot boat.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
Doesn't it make you sick?
Speaker 1 (02:48):
I watched them drink it. I'm like, I don't know
how you're doing that.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
Then they have some Wiener schnitzel or I.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
Mean, can you imagine today, at like one o'clock, you're
outside your own lake Murray, you're fishing. The sun's been
beaten down on you for like four hours, and you
got a six pack sitting over the earth.
Speaker 3 (03:04):
But it doesn't get that hot in Germany, doesn't Germany
is not like one hundred degrees.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (03:12):
Okay, know the word. Don't worry about the word. Just
know the answer. Don't worry about the answer. Just read
it off the morning Rust blog. You get a chance
to win. How many tickets wud get?
Speaker 1 (03:19):
In a way? Two? Two tickets?
Speaker 3 (03:20):
Nate Bergatzi six point thirty Monday morning, be here for that.
Speaker 2 (03:25):
I always have to think about how to say his name,
because I want to say Berghatzy, but that's not right.
It's Burgatzi like Yachtzi. Yes, that was good. I'm glad
you gave me a forced association.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
On ber Yachtzi. He is, without question the greatest Olympic
athlete who's ever lived. You know I'm talking about Mark Spitz. No,
Mark Spitz wishes he was Michael Phelps. Only there's only
(03:55):
one person who's ever won more than nine gold medals.
Every athlete, every sport, every athlete in every sport, the
max has been nine. Michael Phelps is twenty three.
Speaker 1 (04:07):
Yes, think about in one event. Think about that.
Speaker 3 (04:13):
If in all of Olympic history, since they've been doing
this freak of nature, twenty three Olympic gold medals, twenty
eight medals in total. He's got to be the greatest
swimmer of all time. And now, yep, Janie might be
interested in this because she does swim lessons. Michael Phelps
is giving swim lessons. Can you imagine getting a swim
(04:36):
lesson from the greatest swimmer of all time? There's only
one catch.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
His coach.
Speaker 2 (04:40):
He was here here in Colombia for a while. He
met him when he was in Baltimore. If I remember correctly,
the guy is phenomenal to see swim because his wingspan
is like six inches longer than normal for his height.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
Doesn't he have like webbed feet? I thought I remember
reading where he has this rare condition where it added
extra skin between his toes and his fingers, which gives
him a little added advance. It's not illegal, it's just
a you know, it's an advantage, it's avantage. It's an advantage.
But anyway, you mentioned Baltimore. That is his hometown. Michael
(05:21):
is a huge fan of the Baltimore Ravens, and so
the only catch to getting the swim lessons is you've
got to be a member of the Baltimore Ravens. Because
the cornerback Marlon Humphrey posted a video on x and
tagged Michael Phelps. Hey, mister Phelps, We've got a problem here.
(05:41):
One in three Ravens don't know how to swim. Can
you come help us. We got a beautiful aquatic center
and none of the players know how to swim in it.
Come teach us well, he said, I love y'all, and
I'm coming to Baltimore just for this.
Speaker 1 (05:56):
I believe that he would absolutely.
Speaker 3 (05:58):
I mean, if your favorite team is that you have.
Speaker 2 (06:01):
A job, teaching an adult to swim is nearly impossible.
If you don't teach your kid to swim by the
time they get to be an adult, they're so afraid
of the water. It is nearly impossible. You can't get
them to relax. They're never gonna float. You're not going
to get them to do any kind of stroke. And
(06:22):
it's such a way that this actually could become efficient
because they're always just moving their hands in a way
that helps them keep their head above order. They're fearful
they're going to go under. So good luck with that, Michael.
Speaker 3 (06:35):
If anyone can do it, it's the greatest swimmer of
all time, Michael Phelps. But yeah, it's kind of like
also just there's no danger involved. But it's also just
trying to like learn a different language after the age
of like twenty five, right, your brain's already hardwired for
the most part. I mean, obviously we're learning more and
more about how you can rewire your brain the older
you get. But trying to learn a foreign language. If
(06:58):
you teach them at age three, while they're learning English,
they're also learning Spanish, and you know, you can have
people who speak, you know, eight nine different languages because
they learned them all as a child and so it
wasn't unusual for them. But try doing it now. I
got about three words. That's about all I got left.
In Spanish. But the uh oh, have you ever had
(07:22):
swim lessons? I think that that I had swim lessons for.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
Like two weeks.
Speaker 3 (07:27):
That's all it took. In like nineteen seventy two, I
had two weeks of swim lessons and that was it.
Speaker 1 (07:33):
And that was all. That was it.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
You didn't learn different strokes and stuff. You just learned
how to swim my American cross style.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
Had had to learn on my own after I watched
the Olympics. I probably watched Mark Spitz.
Speaker 1 (07:45):
I'm sure you did.
Speaker 3 (07:46):
And then by the time I was like nine or eight,
I was on a swim team. But those were all
self taught.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
You self taught yourself.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
Yes, bacstrokes, I actually swim competitively in the wattrike. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Butterfly yeah wow, interesting terrens your self talk. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (08:03):
Yeah, I'm not good at him, but I do him.
I did him. I haven't done him probably in thirty
years now. But that you know, because they would show
you on the Olympics, this is how they do it.
Speaker 1 (08:14):
Yeah. If you can't nail the turn, you're never going
to win.
Speaker 3 (08:16):
Yeah. It's definitely it's an art. And it seemed like
maybe it was just the pools we swam in. It
was only like three and a half feet of water
at that at the end of the pool, so it's
like you got to be freaking tight.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
Absolutely use some of those shallow winds are shallow.
Speaker 3 (08:31):
Yeah, you try to get into an aggressive spin, you
knock yourself out and be dead. Next thing, you wake
up in Jesus's arms. By the way, speaking of a spinning,
I saw a guy yesterday video. I thought this was great.
It was his fiftieth birthday. He's a football coach I
don't know where, but he announced, this will be my
(08:52):
final ever backflip. I'm turning fifty and they're getting harder
and harder every day to do. So he did it
in front of the whole football team, right, and they
all just like picked him up and carried him off
the field.
Speaker 1 (09:04):
And that is all I wish to go out in style.
Speaker 3 (09:08):
I could never do a backflip, I will. I think
I might have tried one once when I was like,
you know, nine and something stupid. I could do a
front flip for a little while. There was like a
like a year window when I could actually do the
front flip, but the backflip, I don't know how people
do that.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
It's amazing. People that can do that do amazing.
Speaker 3 (09:28):
Yeah, well people there are some like video channels out there,
like on YouTube and stuff where just like people are
amazing type of that's what it's called, like people are
amazing and they just see people doing incredible things on
skateboards and bicycles or whatever. By the way, Jonathan, sixty
percent of Americans are working side hustles, sixty percent. Now
(09:51):
most of them would like these to turn into a
full time job if possible. What are the jobs if
you're thinking about starting a side hustle. These are the
jobs that are the most likely to lean into a
full time job. First one tour guide. If you're passionate
(10:11):
about a part of your city and you can show
people around. You use sites like Facebook and others to
market yourself if you live anywhere near a big city.
Colombia is not a big city, but there are people
who visit it for historical reasons, and so you can
market yourself as a tour guide. That's like and they
(10:34):
say right now, the average is one hundred and fifty
dollars an hour. That's what you charge for to be
a tour guide. So hopefully you get like ten people
and all of a sudden you're making one thousand dollars
an hour. AI services. There's a demand for people who
understand how to use chat, GPT and other things. AI
tools like vd dot io I never even heard of it,
(10:57):
or Runway for video editing. If you can teach others
how to do that, you can make a lot of money.
Online courses. If you've had success in business or other
things like hobbies, skills people are interested in put together
an online course, you can sell them through Etsy, skill
share and Oudemi as a high brows it. Medical coding
apparently that's a great part time job that can turn
(11:19):
into a high income full time job.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
More and more anything with medical.
Speaker 3 (11:25):
Now, finally we get to the first sexy job. Fashion designers.
People who start off with designing something like this. Lady here,
Kate Sullivan, founder of Sage Vintage, started her homemade jewelry
company as a side hustle. Last year she did five
(11:46):
million dollars. Wow. Wow, she doesn't work. She doesn't work
that other main job anymore. That job is gone by
the wayside. She gave up her real estate sales job
whatever she was doing, and that's longer the secretary, and
I hurt Columbia shed make him five million bucks a year.
That is fantastic, key, but apparently that's a common thing
(12:09):
for people who are good at designing sneakers, socks, hats, whatever.
You put them up on Etsy, and apparently once you
get enough of a following, it's like, my wife buys
they're the stupidest things. I don't know why she has these,
but she's in love with them. There they look like
(12:32):
a real donut, but it's not a real donut. It's
it's a glass and the guy makes the donut to
look like he paints it, so they look like just
like Krispy Kreme donuts. They look like Dunkin donuts, you know,
the pink with the little things or whatever. I don't
even I think they go for like thirty dollars each.
(12:52):
This guy is seventy two years old. He didn't sell
his first one until he was sixty nine. Some he
started trying to sell him a local boutiques, like in
Iowa or someplace where he lives. The girl who owns
the boutique thought they were quirky and cool, and she wasn't.
She didn't have a marketing plan but she just put
(13:14):
them on her TikTok page, well the TikTok of those
of that, because she has hundreds of tiktoks about all
kinds of things that she sells at the gap, but
that one went viral, and when it went viral, it
sold out. The people were demanding, we want more, we
want more. My wife says, this guy now will do
like five hundred a month. That's how it takes him.
(13:35):
And he's selling them at like forty dollars thirty to
fifty dollars a donut and it'll do five hundred a month.
They don't last a minute. Wow, he put They say
it's coming Sunday at noon, or it's coming Monday at
one pm or whatever. They put it out on the
TikTok page. Get ready and it's and she's like, I'm
(13:56):
there lined up. So she's got like ten from this guy.
She wants like third. We've got like four or five,
maybe even six hanging on a wall. We got some
sitting in a dish. And then some people came up
with the house the other day and they're like cool
donuts and I was like, yeah, they're not real, Like
what yeah, yeah, you break your tooth trying to bite
into that thing. But that is just a weird thing
(14:18):
that this guy started doing. He liked making food. Now
apparently he's doing other things as well, Like apparently he's
making like glass cheeseburgers and glass hot dogs and so
you can have all kinds of replicas of it's very
bad for you food. But that's that's his hobby. That's
what he likes doing. And now he's in his early
seventies and he's going to become a millionaire killing it.
(14:41):
Killing it good for him. But yeah, those are these
kinds of weird side Do you have any side hustle?
Do you know anybody who's gotten well, you know what,
there was a lady at our church years ago. Her
and her husband would drive around. The husband was there
to be the brawn. She would point out garbage on
(15:01):
the side of the road that she was interested in. Yeah,
and then she would take it back and turn it
into an art piece and sell it. And now that
has gone so well. She's now moved to Manhattan and
she's like been interviewed on Good Morning America and all
these things. So yeah, she's living in like a multimillion
dollar penthouse in New York City now picking up trash
(15:22):
off the sides of the roads and then putting it
out like literally found it. I put one hundred dollars
into it, and now I'm going to sell it for
twenty five thousand dollars and people are lining up to
buy this. What was crap?
Speaker 1 (15:35):
That's great.
Speaker 3 (15:35):
I don't know how.
Speaker 2 (15:36):
I don't know how any of that works. I don't
pretend to know. I don't have the ability to see.
I don't have that kind of vision. How do I
take trash turned it into an item worth twenty five grand?
Speaker 3 (15:46):
I wouldn't value it at twenty five even the stuff
that I see her selling, I'm like, that's not like.
I feel like I could make that for like fifty bucks.
Speaker 2 (15:53):
I remember as a kid seeing it and not even
recognizing the value that it was. There was a friend
of the family, be g gardener. Okay, he'd go his
family used to go camping without a family, And he
showed up at some event with a string that he
(16:15):
had tied around a rock. And he got there and
he tied the string around a tree branch. And I
was looking at it, and somebody beat me to it. Hey,
what's up with the rock. Yeah, he said, well, that's
my pet rock. I don't want to lose it. I'm
walking it. He could walk his pet rock. And about
(16:38):
three years later there there were on the shelf a
pet rock and a little cardboard container that was his cage.
Speaker 3 (16:47):
I mean that guy. Somebody marketed that sold rocks and
it only worked for like two years. Yeah, but that's
all it took, made millions, millions. Well maybe you got
I have a vision for it. Yeah, if you've got
that vision, congrats would love to hear. What your side hustle?
A moral dilemma Monday, Jonathan. They've got a fourteen year
(17:09):
old daughter, recently turned fourteen. She's been on several dates,
but those dates have been chaperoned. Now she's pushing for
an unchaperone date. Mom's four fourteen? Is that old enough
to go out?
Speaker 1 (17:27):
What if?
Speaker 3 (17:28):
And how old?
Speaker 1 (17:28):
Like?
Speaker 3 (17:29):
What if the guy is like.
Speaker 1 (17:30):
Seventeen, I'd say he's going to be driving. He's at
least sixteen to drive at night. This is good.
Speaker 3 (17:40):
So Dad doesn't like it. Dad says he wants her
to be Dad says he wants her to be fifty
before she goes on her own chaperone dates. But mom
says fourteen, this feels about right, And of course we
don't know the girl, so I mean it's different for
different people. Sure, but maybe you could tell us, like
what your kid was when you let them go, or
how old were you when you got to go on
(18:01):
your wife? You didn't chaperone date.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
Chack, Why you didn't trust them to go on a
chaperone date?
Speaker 3 (18:08):
What made you? Who's trust in the chperone or on
sheperd rade?
Speaker 1 (18:12):
You thought it was it was going to work out
and it didn't.
Speaker 3 (18:15):
Or they lied they thought it was an You thought
it was chaperoned. Oh yeah, yeah, daddy's taking xactly and
you find out Billy's daddy didn't go mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
What's going on in your neighborhood? We should be talking about,
you know, how to reach out to us on social media?
You can also do it an email. I and rush
at ninety sevens.
Speaker 3 (18:32):
Dot com Nash ninety seven five W s Dock.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
I just thought of a girl we can talk about
Monday too, and we started talking about that. You use
the same number to chit chat you do to win
your Nate Bergatzi. I always had to slow down and
think about how to say his name. Uh, you win
the tickets Monday morning at six thirty. What you're talking about,
you know how to get the answer, how to read
it right off of the web page, so you can
win nine seven eight nine two six seven Monday on
the morning Rush