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December 8, 2025 • 28 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly Nash Borrow show Today tomorrow be Tuesday, the
ninth of December. We got another day for you to
win some great price. If you want some more Christmas lights,
We've got more Christmas lights you can stare at. Yes,
you can drive all the way to Charlotte. Oh not
quite sure.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Yeah, you don't have to cross over. You could go
to North Carolina. Remember half of it's in South Carolina
as well. Carowins. The Winterfest is back and that's going
to roll all the way until January third. We're giving
away four packs of tickets to Winterfested Carowins. This is
promoted as the premier holiday festival of all the Carolinas.

(00:37):
And so not only do you get Santa Claus, you
got specialty holiday food and drink. You've got the attractions
all lit up, and we're gonna get you in with
the four pack of passes. If you know what the
word pugnacious means.

Speaker 1 (00:53):
Yeah, pugnacious is pain in the butt, argumentative.

Speaker 2 (00:59):
Not just argumentative, someone who is quick to argue. Oh,
if you're quick to argue or fight, meaning a fist fight.
If you're somebody who's just ready to throw down at
the drop of a hat for no apparent reason. You're
pugnacious and.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
That Kevin Costner from WYAT or I've been in a
bad mood for a couple of years, so why don't
you just leave me alone?

Speaker 2 (01:23):
Could be that way, could be here in a bad mood,
could be that that is your mood. You are just
a pugnacious individual. Either way, it doesn't matter if you're
pugnacious or not. You just need to know that the
three word answer is quick to argue. And that's on
the Morning Rest blog at ninety seven five w sos
dot com. If you have that ready for us about
six thirty, Jonathan will tell you what number he's looking for,

(01:44):
and if you're that person, then you get the four
pack of tickets.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
There you go or holiday cheer cheers everyone.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Speaking of cheers, I will not be going to the
company Christmas party this year because I'm actually going to
be out of town when they have it. But a
survey of one thousand, one hundred fifty five full time
US workers between the ages of twenty one and forty five,
so this is most of the younger half of the workforce.

(02:17):
One out of three thirty actually thirty four percent of
them said that they would rather get a root canal
than go to the holiday Christmas party.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
Wow, you really hate your job if you want to
go there with their servant liquor.

Speaker 2 (02:35):
Well, that's what they say. It's a trap. The whole
thing is designed to end your career. Why would I
want to go and participate in this when the boss
is drunk, making inappropriate advances at people and saying inappropriate things,
and if you correct them, you're in trouble. If you
don't correct them, you're in trouble. Other men and women
are making sexual advances and if you deal with them

(02:56):
or don't deal with them, either way you're in a
bad spot. The company Christmas party is becoming the most
hated thing about work. They'd rather go to work. As
a matter of fact, seventy five percent say I'd rather
have another day of work that you don't pay me
for than to actually have to go to three hours
of the company Christmas party.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
Wow, it'd rather go to work. Oh, I'll volunteer to
work while we have the Christmas party. That's good.

Speaker 2 (03:28):
How do you feel about the company Christmas.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
I always go to the company Christmas party. I like
the entertainment of it all.

Speaker 2 (03:35):
You like watching people have awkward moments, Yes, you know,
I love to embrace the awkwardness. It's interesting. Another survey
from Sonny, a nonprofit focused on improving the social connection
at work, and they're calling what we're seeing the last
five to ten years the great disconnection. They say it's

(03:56):
almost impossible now to have a work culture. Things like
hybrid working has made it a lack of connection. Also,
the fact that you're using zoom ai is coming online.
You cannot have an engaged culture if the people are
not in the same room. The fact that they're on

(04:19):
conference calls or that they're on zoom meetings and those
types of things does not actually equal culture, and people
do not feel engaged, which makes it harder to retain employees.
Is what the Betsy Parker, CEO of this nonprofit is
saying is that this is a double edged problem. One
is for the employees who don't like their jobs anymore,

(04:41):
they don't feel like that in the olden days, there
was a time when the bosses can make you feel
like you were part of a family, that you're part
of a team, that we're all pushing towards the same goal.
Nobody feels that way anymore. So that works against the employee,
but it also works against the employee er because it's
saying people are much quicker to quit their jobs now,

(05:03):
they're much quicker to just look for It's all really
about the bottom line. It's not the culture, it's what
are you paying me? Because I'm not expected to be
in a culture.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
The only thing I miss or don't man employees who
show up wearing some type of perfume's I missed the
teamwork days of the conference room meetings.

Speaker 2 (05:26):
Yeah, we don't have those anymore. There's nobody to fill
our conference room, so there's why would we have a
conference meeting when there's nobody. We have five people here, yeah,
so there's no there's no reason text.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
We literally we couldn't fill up one side of the table.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
Yeah, we used to be staying room only. We used
to have to bring in extra chairs and all that
sort of stuff. And that was just for programming. Now,
never mind programming, sales, engineering operations. You get five or
six people at tops for something like that.

Speaker 1 (05:54):
I miss it.

Speaker 2 (05:56):
Hey, the original nineteen seventy seven Star Wars is coming back,
but not till February nineteenth, twenty twenty seven. That'll be
in the movie theaters. According to George Lucas, this is
the fiftieth anniversary of the movie, and he's got a
newly restored version of the classic Star Wars and so
I don't know, I mean what computers can do or

(06:16):
AI can do or whatever, it's it is the same movie.
It'll just look better than it did in nineteen senty seven.
They're also doing The Lord of the Rings, which turns
twenty five, and that will be round next that's next month,
January sixteenth through the nineteenth at select theaters. So we've
got all kinds of movies. Do you feel like we've

(06:39):
run out of just creativity in Hollywood? Like there's just
no more movie ideas.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
I can't remember the last movie I saw from Hollywood
that was an original idea, because even Top Gun Maverick
was just speaking of Star Wars. Top Gun Maverick was
a ripoff of Star Wars. And I enjoyed the movie.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
Yeah, it's a great movie. They but I just don't
feel like there's any creativity left. And so now we're
left with this sad we're just kind of regrade, you know,
redoing the classics. We'll remake it. We'll on this one.
We're not even remaking it, we're refreshing it, or.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
A sequel like Top gum Maverick was, would you.

Speaker 2 (07:19):
Be interested in seeing a remake of the original Star
Wars with an all new cast and all new special effects?

Speaker 1 (07:26):
And although they did such a limited budget, the acting
was a little short of the mark. Maybe if they
maybe if they had different it would be interesting to
see to compare it, or would that ruin it because
it was such a landmark motion picture.

Speaker 2 (07:44):
I mean, you know, in nineteen seventy seven, it's hard
to you know, put myself back in nineteen seventy seven.
But at no point did I feel like that those
special effects were cheap.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
That's true.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
In the theater, I felt like, this is amazing, But
again I was ten.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Beginning with the dialogue would disappear into it. It was amazing.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
How do they do that? It was really cool.

Speaker 1 (08:07):
It was.

Speaker 2 (08:09):
So we're we're keeping an eye on the movies that
they're making over and over and over and over again.

Speaker 1 (08:18):
There's a there's a person I want to set the
lines where Sally goes and this guy make sure that
he watches the newest hall I guess there's a weekly
feature Hallmark Christmas Movie. It comes out on Saturdays.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
Oh yeah, every Saturday night at eight.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
I think, yeah, that he's always at home with Saturday
nights at eight during the holidays to make sure he
can watch the movie. And I'm like, is this really
got a different premise from the first fifty of these
I've kind of watched because Sally enjoys them. I don't
think so.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
Did you ask him?

Speaker 1 (08:49):
No, I didn't have the conversation with him.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
Yeah, I think. I mean the joke about how all
the Christmas movies are the same, I don't think that
that's even a debate anymore. Like, I mean, there's literally
just a formula that they cut and paste, and they're
and they're even using the same actors, Like they'll just
rotate the role that they play this one is that
girl been in?

Speaker 1 (09:11):
What's her name?

Speaker 2 (09:12):
I don't know it. They're all the same. I mean,
they've literally got like ten female actresses and like eight
female leads or male leads, I should say, and they
just rotate this crew. As a matter of fact, what's
her name? Right now? It doesn't mean I shouldn't say
her name? She worked for Alan Wilson. She was if
you've been to Alan Wilson's office, she was at the

(09:33):
front desk. He doesn't work there anymore now. She works
for Curtis Loftus. But she every year, her and her daughter.
She's got an adult daughter. I'm guessing the daughter's probably
in the thirties. They go on a Hallmark Christmas cruise
where they shut the hell up. They have all the
actors and actresses that start in all of the movies

(09:53):
this year, and again there's only about forty of them.
That is the crew that make all the movies, and
they go on Hallmark Cruise and you interact with them
and then you talk about your favorite roles that they've
played through the last ten years or so.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
I'm so disassociated with these movies. I don't even know
that a cruise existed.

Speaker 2 (10:10):
Yeah, and that's the highlight I guess of her season.
And I think, if I remember right, that Hallmark Cruise
takes place in January, because if I remember right, she
always is getting ready to go right around the time
that we have the South South Carolina Citizens for Life dinner,
which is usually the first or second week of January.

(10:31):
So I think that's she can't come to the dinner
often because she's getting ready to go on the cruise.
If I remember right, I might be misremembering that. We
got a weird We got a weird story out of Waterbury, Connecticut,
my old stomping grounds. Aaron Rodriguez has been arrested twice
for stealing the same car in the same week.

Speaker 1 (10:53):
He likes that car.

Speaker 2 (10:54):
According to now, the Waterbury Police Department screwed the pooch
on this one because they are arrested Aaron for stealing
an unnamed woman's red Honda Civic. All right, they arrested him,
they processed him, the woman was giving her car back.
What they didn't realize is that the way Aaron stole

(11:15):
it was he had actually stolen the key fob. So
when he oh got out, he was thinking about it.
I really like that Honda, walked back to the house
and stole it again. He sut of it. He just
keeps driving off with it. So this time they got
the key fob back from him. That's on the morning rest.
Another weird story. But how about this story, Jonathan, This

(11:37):
is probably what I had thought all along. According to
a survey, fifty eight percent of Americans. This is five
thousand Americans across fifty states. This is young and old alike.
If you're wondering what to get your loved one for Christmas,

(11:58):
fifty eight percent, this is an overwhelming majority, have all
agreed on one thing. The answer cash. I don't even
want a gift card because then you're limiting me.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (12:10):
Just give me straight cash, or I guess, like a
Visa gift card, or if you're gonna get a gift card,
get one that they can just use.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
Don't get their wacific one like a fifty dollars gift
card Chick.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
Fil A or Walmart or whatever. No, just give me
the straight cash. Homie.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
As Uh had this conversation yesterday because on the meal
train for one of my neighbors who just had a baby,
they had a seventy five dollars gift card to Chick
fil A. Okay, and Sally chose that one, Like, why
don't you just instead of getting on the meal train,
just go get them a seventy five dollars Visa gift
card and take it across the street.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
Maybe because they feel like they have to still go
get the food. Whereas when you'll training for.

Speaker 1 (12:52):
Diapers or whatever you need it because you don't know
these meal trains. I mean, this play probably usually leftovers
there could be and.

Speaker 2 (12:59):
You probably uh losing your tupperware. I've heard that complain often.
I hear that complain on the middle. Don't get about that.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
Look my dad. My dad told the story he was
at someone's house. It was a bereavement and someone showed
up with a side item and they had written their
name on the bottom of the tumpaware and they said,

(13:28):
I just want to make sure I get the tumpleware back.
And my dad looks at it and he said, tell
you what, you stay right there. He went in the
kitchen and tell my mom get this out of this dish.
I'm going to give it to this woman now and
wash it. And my mom diad. He went back to
the doorstep and he said, I'd hate to see you

(13:49):
lose something valuable like a like a tupperware dish for
a family who just lost their dad. But here you
can have it back.

Speaker 2 (13:58):
I thought he was going to be more Jonathan Rush's
coarseness and John I could imagine a very ticked off
Jonathan Rush going, oh you want you need it back
to you. Tell you what, give me a second, just
walk to the back, dump it in the trash can.
Here you go. I didn't want I didn't want you
to miss out on any of it. Oh did you

(14:18):
hear me? Dump that meat loaf in the trash? All settled?
And in case you're wondering. And I always find this
ironic that the people spending the most money are the
ones complaining about money the most. Right now for this holiday,
millennials are going to average one three hundred and sixty

(14:40):
nine dollars on Christmas gifts. Jen X will come in
next at about one and twenty dollars. And the baby boomers,
the ones who got all the money, they're going to
come in at eight hundred and forty two dollars. Okay,
So the millennials are the ones complaining that they have
no money, are going to spend them? Was double with
the people who are tiring rich are gonna spend Wonder

(15:02):
why they got the baby boomers got to retire.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
Wonder why they have so much money? Oh, they don't
spend as much.

Speaker 2 (15:07):
They don't spend as much. That could be a lesson.
I don't know. Don't quote me on it.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
It'd be a lesson buried there somewhere in that statistical study.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
And finally, Jonathan, we will have another morning Rush challenge
of the day. This lady, Now, I'm not gonna I
don't want to assign blame here. I'm going to say
both were tired and both overreacted. She thinks that he overreacted,

(15:40):
and he thinks, along with some of her friends, that
she overreacted. They decided for Thanksgiving and again, apparently they've
been in a long term relationship though they're not living together,
but they do do things like vacation together. That they
were going to go on a vacation over thanks Giving
rather than go see anybody with their family.

Speaker 1 (16:04):
It's like a four Christmases thing. Yes, the family going
on vacation. We're gonna we're.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
Going to the Fijis and we're gonna we're gonna teach
kids how to whatever, how to crack lobsters or something.
But according to her, when they got there, she says, yes,
I overslept. She didn't wake up till about nine thirty,
which is a little bit later than normal, and she

(16:30):
knows that he's an early riser. Turns out, according to
her email, he had been up since about five am,
and as I started getting ready for the day, that's
when he chose the time to pick the argument. And
the argument starts with basically, and she doesn't have his
exact words here, but he said, you're selfish because you

(16:54):
always sleep late when we go away on these vacations,
and then it ruins the idea of what we were
trying to get done. So by the time you get dressed,
we've already missed the morning breakfast that they had available
for us. We're gonna have to go to a restaurant,
We're gonna have to pay more. So we missed the
free breakfast. We wanted to be on the we wanted

(17:14):
to be hiking by nine point thirty. We're not going
to get there now to almost noon. You're just ruining
the vacation, and she said, and so I said, you
know what, fitt and I broke up with him right
there and I caught the next flight home.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Smart girl.

Speaker 2 (17:31):
And so her friends are like, wait a minute. You
said you loved them and you had one fight and
you broke up with him like that, And she says,
I don't know, maybe I did overdo it.

Speaker 1 (17:41):
No, No, these two were incompatible. You're gonna do nothing
but sign up for a lifetime a misery. And if
I were him, I would have already left the house
by five thirty. I'd be fishing. I go do what
the hell I want to do, and then wait for
her to text where are you? I'm doing what I
want to do. You up? Okay, I'll be there in

(18:01):
a minute.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
Well you won't be there in a minute if you're fishing.
They got to bring the boat back in and all
that minute, you see in an hour or two something
like that, which is probably the time she would need
to shower exactly and get her hair done, and.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
Otherwise totally incompatible. This couple should not they should not
have been a couple to begin with.

Speaker 2 (18:22):
Well, we'll see what morning Russian regulars. Maybe maybe because
the way you just described that I think is perfect,
and they could have worked on that compromise, but you
got to work it out.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
I almost blame him. He shouldn't have attacked. You already
knew she'd go sleep in he was.

Speaker 2 (18:39):
I'm saying he was in a bad mood that day,
oh okay, and that she woke up in a bad
mood and the two of them, that's I think that
it's if Look, if you really feel closely to this guy,
I think it wouldn't be a problem to try to
reach out and say, hey, I think I overreacted on that,
and maybe we can work things out. But like like
I heard Jonathan Rush on the radio, we go on vacation.

(19:04):
You just go do you in the morning, that's right,
and then you know, I'll call you when I wake up,
and then we can reconnect right later on, and then
we can.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
Still have a great vacation. You two could have had
a wonderful vacation if you just communicate. Yes, say in bench,
she's not gonna do anything till about lunch, So you
get up and go do your bike ride, or go fishing,
or go have your cup of coffee and.

Speaker 2 (19:25):
Probably get eighteen holes in.

Speaker 1 (19:27):
Oh easily, I said, A great girl to go on
vacation if you love golf, A great idea. Oh we
should be marriage counselors. We did to serve these problems
before you ever get before it becomes quick sand and
you're up to your neck and.

Speaker 2 (19:45):
I think you really hit it, man, I mean the
way you described it was perfect.

Speaker 1 (19:49):
Sally likes to sleep late on vacation, she says, I'm
on vacation. Well, I wake up naturally early in the morning.
I did that on Sunday.

Speaker 2 (19:58):
That's why when you said you tour incompatible, Well, you
and Sally make it work. And she doesn't like to
wake up early, and you wake up early all the time.
You go get her coffee.

Speaker 1 (20:05):
Exactly what's gonna happen about five o'clock in the morning.
One of the reasons we don't sleep in the same bedroom. Hey,
during the week after get up at four oh five.
She didn't want to be woken up, even on Saturday
or Sunday. Now Sunday, Saturday night, we're in the same bed.
So Sunday morning, I woke up about quarter to five.
I laid there quietly. I have my quiet time. I

(20:25):
couldn't turn on a light, read the word, but I was.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
Praying, we're gonna get you a braille version.

Speaker 1 (20:30):
Yes, So then about five forty five I slipped out
of bed. Yeah, I was smart enough to already have
my flatman lined up with my keys in my pocket,
so I wouldn't have to pick up She wouldn't even
hear the jingling of keys. That's planning.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
Yes, yes, it's right out of here. I remember, well,
this past Saturday Friday night, Angela said she was We're
both gonna sleep late. That was the plan. We're gonna
sleep so late, and when I wake up, I'm gonna
make cute This is what her her words. I'm wanna
make make you the best pancakes you've ever had. It's
going to be a great Saturday, I said, okay, looking

(21:05):
forward to it. Well, you know the deal. I really
struggled to sleep past like five thirties or whatever. I
forced myself. I went to the bathroom, I came back,
I climbed back into the bed. It probably took me
about another twenty or thirty minutes. I fell back asleep.
I woke up again. It's like seven point fifteen. Yeah,

(21:27):
she's still out what do they call sawn logs or whatever?

Speaker 1 (21:30):
Right totally.

Speaker 2 (21:31):
So I get up, I go to the bathroom. I
kind of wash up, and I'm trying to figure out, well,
what am I going to do? What am I going
to do? Because I don't expect her to wake up
to at least eight thirty nine o'clock. Maybe is it
too much of me to just say I want to
go get in a workout now, so I don't have.

Speaker 1 (21:48):
To say so late. That's a perfect time to go
to do it.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
I got you, and as I was getting ready, I
was not the Jonathan Rush stealth prepared and I made
did I forget exactly what the noise was that I
made in the bathroom, but I bumped into something, I
rattled something, and I heard her move, and I said
to myself, well, now you've done it.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
You just poked the bear. Now you've done She wanted
to sleep in late and you woke her up.

Speaker 2 (22:11):
Yes, that's what I'm thinking. So I gave it about
thirty seconds and I said, okay, let me open the
door and see how much damage I've done. I opened
the door. She's out. She's already fallen back asleep. She
just rolled over. So I slid out. Go to the gym. Now,
when I'm at the gym, I hate to admit this
about myself, but the gym is like my happy place,

(22:34):
like in the sense that if I'm taking my time
I liked. I like to relax at the gym, like
between workouts, like somebody was telling me, like between lifting,
if you really want to get your muscles to grow,
you're supposed to take three minutes off between each set,
which is.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
A turn it.

Speaker 2 (22:52):
I was doing thirty seconds, so now for three minutes.
So you do a set of ten twelve curls. I'm
sitting there scrolling videos, blah blah blah, answering emails. Let's
do another set, blah blah blah. I've got like fifteen
different sets that I'm doing out here. So I mean,
we're talking about a two hour workout at least, and
you're just farting around for most of it. And so

(23:16):
I'm like, I really got to knock this out. I gotta,
you know what, She's gonna wake up and she's going
to be angry because she wanted to make pancakes. So
I get done in a little later than I thought.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
It's ten to fifteen.

Speaker 2 (23:28):
So I call the house and.

Speaker 1 (23:29):
This is always my call the house.

Speaker 2 (23:31):
Yeah, this is my excuse. At ten fifteen, I'm going
to call and I'm going to say I thought she
was going to say, where the hell are you or
something like that, and I was going to say, well,
I just left the gym a little bit later than
I expected. Didn't know, maybe we need something from the
grocery store. While I'm out right, that's always my excuse.
She answers the phone, oh, and she goes, oh my god,

(23:53):
it's ten fifteen. I said, yeah, are you just waking up?
And she was like, yes, I've been asleep since like
eleven last night. This is you let me sleep for
like eleven hours. This is crazy. So I was in
trouble for letting her oversleep.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
Oh wow, I didn't see that coming.

Speaker 2 (24:10):
But we did need things from the grocery store, so
it worked out perfect. I went to the grocery store
and got home and right all the time I got home,
she was just getting out of the shower and she
was so we had we had our pancakes, but it
was like a lunch because we had about moon.

Speaker 1 (24:24):
Gotcha.

Speaker 2 (24:25):
But I like, you, Jonathan, try to sleep, But I
got to do you the Jonathan Rush plant. Yeah, and put.

Speaker 1 (24:30):
Together in the pocket. In your pocket because you don't
have anything jingling, no, no loose change, nothing. Two dollars
and thirty nine cents is what it cost me when
I go excuse me, three dollars and twenty nine cents
is what it cost me when I go get my coffee.
I've either got three twenty nine in my pocket or
I make sure my wallet's in there. It's unlike a

(24:50):
jingle any change.

Speaker 2 (24:52):
You are a smart man. We're all learning at the
feet of Jonathan Rush.

Speaker 1 (24:56):
You're quiet. Hey, Hey, what's going on in your bedroom? Seriously,
I want to know what's happening, What you got going on?
What are you doing for Christmas? What kind of plans
you got? Sally one of us to make plans to
go out of town for our anniversary. And I'm like, Sugar,
we've already got this schedule, on that schedule and it's
going to be New Year's weekend. Where are you going

(25:16):
to find a room? Where you going to find a
room in New Year's weekend? I hadn't looked. I never
thought about it. And she calls the Grove Park in Oh,
the GTI, and I'm like, oh my, please tell me
their book. It's been seven hundred dollars for the night. Oh.

Speaker 2 (25:32):
I was going to say, it's a beautiful place to go.

Speaker 1 (25:34):
No, I love it. You don't want to go there.
We'll go there at the end of January when you
get the same room for like four to twenty five.

Speaker 2 (25:42):
Ask, I mean, don't tell her this. But also the
New hotel up in Greenville is amazing.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
Which one.

Speaker 2 (25:51):
It's a Marriotte property. I think it might be called
the Marriotte. It's not Bonvoy. I'm trying to remember the
name of it, but it's it's they built it's right,
it's so where I guess it's main Street. And then
you walk across that bridge. When you walk across that bridge,
it now ends on their properties.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
Oh yeah, that stayed there before.

Speaker 2 (26:12):
Yeah, they just opened it last year, so we got
to stay there last Christmas.

Speaker 1 (26:15):
Sphing different across the d river where the curb bridge is.

Speaker 2 (26:18):
Yeah, it's like a seventy five MILLI. It's the first
five star hotel that they had in Greenville. Been there
a year and a half or so. Yeah, yeah, let
me just open that.

Speaker 1 (26:26):
Up Greenville, like two winters ago.

Speaker 2 (26:29):
Greenville, Mary.

Speaker 1 (26:31):
I got a weird name. Got all the weird trophies
on the first level too, trophies, you know, like animal trophies.
One room they got.

Speaker 2 (26:42):
It's probably I'm guessing the Grand Bohemian that's it. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
Grand Ohemian, first five star.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
Nice.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
Oh my gosh, you love the river.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
Walk across the river too.

Speaker 2 (26:54):
When you get across that if you leave the Grand Bohemian,
you walk across the bridge. The first restaurant on the
right a French restaurant, and that is fantastic. I mean
everything about that is just set up so nice.

Speaker 1 (27:06):
That's nice.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
Yeah, I wonder how much it costs right now to
stay there at the Greenville Grand Bohemian. You want to
go there for New Year's You say.

Speaker 1 (27:14):
Yeah, the thirtieth. We won't be able to find a
room on the thirty first. Maybe we'll look up and
get one for the thirtieth.

Speaker 3 (27:19):
Check availability, right, thirtieth, that's our anniversary. It is okay, beautiful,
So let's go for which Greenville will be better than
going all the way to the mountains, too, because then
we could go see your aunt.

Speaker 1 (27:32):
She wants to go see some family. Not January three,
I go stay in. Anderson puts that hotel downtown she
likes so much.

Speaker 3 (27:42):
It appears that they're they're booked, they're booked out, they're booked.

Speaker 2 (27:47):
Literally, it appears through February at this point.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
Wow, so I'm having a late anniversary trip. Figure we're
going to go first to March.

Speaker 2 (27:57):
Yes, it'll be fantastic for spring time.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
It'd be nice if we're got to go all the
way to the mountains. I'd rather go on March than December,
and tell you that right now. All right, so you
reach out to us on social media. You know how
to do that. You could also email us I am
rushing at ninety seven five WCS dot com.

Speaker 2 (28:12):
NASH ninety seven five w SUS dot com.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
Don't forget six thirty. If you want to win the
tickets for the Caro Wins Winter Fest, the number is
a oh three ninety seven eight nine two sixty seven
and it will be the same number tomorrow morning at
eight thirty. We don't change the number. It's ATO three
nine seven eight nine two sixty seven ninety seven eight
w COS
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