Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, everyone, thanks for being with us. My name
(00:02):
is Sandy. This is JB. Hello, Trush Us here too,
Hi everybody, and we're off and running. BOYD, I do
something stupid. I do a lot of stupid things, but
this one. You ever do something stupid and it just
irritates the hell out of you that you did it
to begin with.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Oh yeah, you start chanting to yourself. I did not
just I did not just do that.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Yeah, And in this one, it can't be fixed because
it's I lost something, right, And when you lose something
and you can't find it, it's not like there's any
resolution until you find it. And I've yet to find it,
and I'm not gonna find it. Here's what happened. I
went to I got it was going to get a
prescription filled at Achib, which I did, And when I
(00:42):
was at AGB, I was like, you know what, I'm
gonna cruise around and pick up a few other things
while i'm here, some this and that, you know, And
I was soon as I got my prescription, I was like,
I should have done this last. I'm gonna do a
lot of walking around this AGB. I'm gonna lose this prescription. Nope, nope, no,
I'm not gonna lose it. I am gonna roll up
(01:02):
the little brown bag, the hib pharmacy bag. I'm gonna
put it in my front pocket, and everything's gonna be fine.
So I did my grocery shopping. I'm super paranoid about it.
I even remember feeling it for it in my right
front pocket as I was going through the checkout.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
Making sure it was still making sure it was still.
Speaker 1 (01:20):
There, right. And then I get home and it's not
a medication that I take. I take the medication in
the morning, and so I get home, I put the
groceries away. The next morning, I wake up, I don't
have my prescription with me, and I have absolutely no
idea where it is, no clue. I've torn the house
apart looking for it. I've torn my car apart looking
for it. And it's a medication that I take every
(01:43):
single day. But it's a very highly regulated thing, medication
that is really difficult to get a new prescription for.
And there's nothing more, really, much more humiliating than calling
not only your pharmacy but also your doctor and telling
you telling them that, yes, you a fifty six year
old man, grown adult, grown adult lost a prescription between
(02:10):
between the AGB pharmacy and home. I mean, it's just
and the medication that I lost is supposed to help
me remember things. That's just it's just the worst part, unbelievable, But.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
That you were so careful about it and felted in
your pocket and we're so aware of it.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
Yeah, it's just.
Speaker 2 (02:33):
It's so frustrating, isn't it. Yeah, Yeah, it's funny. You
mentioned my wife. We were chatting out on the back
patio this the other morning over the weekend, and she
pointed out how like when I lose things, I go
from I go from like zero to a thousand with frustration.
Oh yeah, And she's like, I don't have to deal
(02:53):
is with that?
Speaker 1 (02:54):
I go.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
I go because I have to work so hard at it,
right like you ever it go. I'm putting this here
to remember it, Like you're making this extra effort and
then it's still gone.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
You still lose it. It happens to me all the
time with my wallet, Like I've got a certain spot
in my room where I put my wallet. In my mind,
that's where I put my I don't put my.
Speaker 2 (03:17):
You ever lose stuff when you're sitting in a chair
and go I haven't moved.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
It's like little invisible demons or stealing y'all stuff.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
Yeah right, you know what happens. I think it happens
to everybody. Is I don't know how the TV remote
control gets lost in bed?
Speaker 2 (03:32):
Oh my god.
Speaker 4 (03:33):
It makes me irrationally angry when I am laying there
and have it moved and can't find it.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
You have to get out of bed, and.
Speaker 1 (03:40):
You're patting all over the.
Speaker 3 (03:41):
Place, moving all the covers around.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Right, and once you if you find it, when you're
flip of the covers, it hits the ceiling. Because you're
losing things is so much a regular part of my
life that I would think I would have learned to
deal with it by now.
Speaker 4 (03:56):
I also would think that you would learn that when
you lose something, that you stop first accusing either.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
Me or Landry of having take it out.
Speaker 4 (04:05):
He is always convinced that we have moved it. I
think he has misplaced it. I don't know how that's
still an option for you.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
I do that too. I accuse Aaron, but she often
does get rid of things.
Speaker 4 (04:18):
Yes, so yeah, I've heard how you talk about. But
I don't move sandy stuff like maybe a glass. You
were drinking a glass of water, and I put the
glass of water away.
Speaker 3 (04:26):
But I'm not going to just randomly move your wallet,
your keys and.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
Not where you think it should be.
Speaker 3 (04:32):
Well, I mean, there's.
Speaker 1 (04:33):
Aaron doesn't do that to you, right, she just gets
rid of stuff.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
She Oh, she just decides what's going to Goodwill, all right.
Speaker 3 (04:41):
I don't do that.
Speaker 4 (04:42):
Although Sandy recently did accuse me of giving getting rid
of his cowboy hatties head forever of giving it away,
I was like, I didn't do it.
Speaker 3 (04:50):
I didn't do it. And then it was in a
box that he packed in the storage.
Speaker 4 (04:55):
Unit, labeled Sandy, labeled Sandy stuff, got it home to him,
and it was like, apologize whenever you feel like.
Speaker 1 (05:04):
I remember, JB. I remember the one that Aaron got
rid of was the poop tea, Right, you bought some
tea to help you poop?
Speaker 2 (05:11):
Yeah, a whole case of it.
Speaker 1 (05:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
I thought it was bad. It'd been in the show
because I I you know, sometimes on Amazon you misorder
and didn't realize you ordered like a lifetime supply description. Yeah,
poop tea. Yeah, And I like, well, let me back up.
That story has since changed. I was convinced she threw
it out. I had put it above the stove and
(05:33):
you forgot. Yeah, she put.
Speaker 4 (05:36):
It like you said, she like categorized it with the
other teas or something.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
I think I accused her of getting rid of it
all I because I was like, I just bought this
case of tea.
Speaker 1 (05:48):
Yeah, just bought it. Where is it?
Speaker 2 (05:51):
Did you touch it?
Speaker 1 (05:52):
Yeah you did.
Speaker 2 (05:52):
I wouldn't have moved it, like we were going back
and forth.
Speaker 1 (05:56):
Did you drink did you continue to drink it?
Speaker 2 (05:59):
Well, it's fine, only have two cases, but.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
I mean, are you Are you drinking it on the regular?
It's my question?
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Not as regular as I like, but I do like it. It's
a it's a if you want to know that. This
gut doctor I went to recommended it and he's very
much a natural homeopath, and he said, well, for quit
having coffee, and I'm down to like, I just have
like half a cup a day now. But anyhow, it's
called Egyptian licorice tea.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
It is so good.
Speaker 2 (06:30):
You don't even have to add a sweetener or anything.
Speaker 4 (06:33):
It's so really but licorice, that's a that's a hard
taste to like.
Speaker 2 (06:38):
I don't know it's really good.
Speaker 1 (06:40):
I love it. Is it? Is it a black Is
it like taste like black licorice?
Speaker 2 (06:45):
Kind of?
Speaker 1 (06:45):
Yeah? Huh interesting.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
I know it's really good and it's helped my stomach.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
If you're wondering, that's good. I'm glad you've got a
healthy gut. Jb Rista's in charge of my vitamins. I
don't know. She could slip me cyanide and I'd just
take it.
Speaker 4 (06:59):
I could take it back. You just swallow the pill.
You can put anything out there.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
I have no idea what I'm taking.
Speaker 2 (07:04):
What am I killing?
Speaker 1 (07:06):
You? Probably Electricia wouldn't slowly kill me.
Speaker 3 (07:09):
No, it would be quick. Let's get right.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
What am I taking?
Speaker 4 (07:13):
You're taking multi vitamin huh, you're taking a probiotic. You're
taking an omega three, and you're taking a vitamin D.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
The Omega three is the fish oil. Yep. Every once
in a while I burp and I taste fish.
Speaker 4 (07:26):
Yeah, but this is a good one. It doesn't happen
very often, right, Some of them are nasty. Some I
took one for a while that they put lemon flavor
in it. Then it was just lemon flavored fish purps.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
It was disgusting.
Speaker 3 (07:37):
It was so gross.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
Seriously, what is the fish oil supposed to do?
Speaker 3 (07:40):
The fish is good for your brain, it's good for
your eyes.
Speaker 4 (07:44):
It's it's that's where they're like, eat fish three or
four nights a week because of all the good that
omegas do for you.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
I'm the only one in this house that eats fish, though,
is the problem.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
I'll eat it if we go eat some soush right.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
Like I went to the coast a couple of weeks
ago and with a buddy of mine, and I was like, dude,
just take the fish home, like no one will eat
it my really? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (08:05):
Why because I see the brown water that the fish
comes out of at the coast. It is like if
it were coming out of like crystal blue water like
in the Caribbean or something like that, I'd eat it.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
Just didn't cleaner than all the people smoking on the beach.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
Coming up, Trista's got the story we love. What are
we gonna talk about?
Speaker 3 (08:34):
All right?
Speaker 4 (08:34):
You remember the trend of paying it forward at the
drive through? Yes, okay, I have a new version of
that that I think is hilarious.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
All right, stay with us. The story we'd love coming
up on Austin's eighties station one O three point one
is streaming on the iHeartRadio app. Tristia says, there's a
new twist to the pay it forward trend. All right,
that's coming up in a second story. We'd love. It's
the JB and Sandy Show. Tell you something funny. It's
great having a funny kid, Like yeah. I remember when
(09:02):
Tricia was was pregnant with our now fifteen year almost
sixteen year old daughter, and she was like, boy, this
kid better be funny.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
She's gonna have to find someplace else to.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
Live here if you're not funny. And she proved her worth.
She earned her keep. The other day, we were at
a an intersection where they're building that new the new
toll lanes on one to eighty three, and this was
on the southbound side, and we were sitting at the
light and she and we looked up and they were
working on it, and they had built this temporary little
(09:30):
platform on the side of the overpass so that the
workers could do their stand on it and work on
whatever they're working on above them and without baton, and
I she goes, oh, that's nice. The homeless people got
a balcony.
Speaker 4 (09:50):
That's why she's great, because her humor is so inappropriate.
Speaker 1 (09:56):
Just about died when she said that. I guess they
all because they live under the upper really put the
stories we love lie from the left home studio shop.
Speaker 4 (10:13):
All right, So we've all heard about the pay it
forward chain at a drive through.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
It's when somebody pays for the person behind them.
Speaker 4 (10:20):
Then when that person pulls up, they have a nice
little surprise that their order has been paid for. I
will say that the follow up to that nice little
surprise is the awkwardness of whether or not you're going
to keep it going and pay for the person behind
you as well. So a woman is going viral on
TikTok because she said she went to a dunkin Donuts,
pulled up to pay for her order, and the employee
(10:42):
said that the guy ahead of her, who had just
driven off, said that she was going to.
Speaker 3 (10:45):
Be paid for his order.
Speaker 1 (10:47):
To pay it backwards, pay it backwards?
Speaker 2 (10:49):
That's oh, oh gotcha?
Speaker 3 (10:52):
How ballsy is that right to do that?
Speaker 1 (10:56):
She was?
Speaker 2 (10:57):
What's I like the word fallen told to pay it? Yes,
yes she was.
Speaker 4 (11:02):
It's the complete opposite of somebody choosing to do a
nice thing and being made to have to do a
nice thing and probably being irritated about it.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
Yeah, I would say, I have no idea what you're
talking about.
Speaker 3 (11:14):
Yeah, she didn't pay for his order.
Speaker 1 (11:16):
He got away with it.
Speaker 3 (11:17):
She did not pay for his order.
Speaker 4 (11:18):
That the employees were cool about it, and I'm sure
the employee got talked to like, yeah, no, we don't
let him drive away unless we have the money.
Speaker 3 (11:27):
But so basically, whoever it was in front of her
stole his order.
Speaker 4 (11:30):
Yeah, but I just think that's hilarious and very very
brave thing to try and do if you're the card
that drives away.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
First, I've never been in one of the pay it
forward type of things. I don't know if I would participate.
Speaker 3 (11:44):
I was caught up in it one time. Yeah, did
you do it?
Speaker 1 (11:47):
No?
Speaker 2 (11:47):
No, I've never been like, yeah, I think it's happened
to my wife. Well, for obviously reasons. She's a lot
more attractive for someone in front of her to buy it, right, Yeah,
but it's never happened to me.
Speaker 1 (11:59):
Now, Yeah, were you anyone, Trisia.
Speaker 3 (12:02):
I was with a bunch of girls.
Speaker 4 (12:04):
We were in two or three cars, and the car
in front of me was my friends. The person in
front of them paid it forward to them. So then
when they got up there, they were like, yeah, the
car behind us me will pay for us. But there
were six of them in their car and only three
in my car. I was like, not cool, ladies. Of
course I paid for it because I know them right.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
You got stuck with the tab.
Speaker 4 (12:23):
I got stuck with the big tab. And I told
the employee. I was like, look, I just paid for
six people in front of us and my three. I
was like, the people behind me are on their own.
She's like, I understand.
Speaker 3 (12:33):
That's a lot. It was a lot of money for
nine orders.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
You remind me of a stick and someone with the tab. Once.
This was years ago, a group of guys were out
to dinner and we colluded amongst each other to do this.
I can't remember where we were. It may have been
eddie Ve's.
Speaker 3 (12:50):
Expensive.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
It was expensive, and we were all like, hey, towards
the end of dinner, let's all just leave one at
a time, leave the person and stick Jeff with the tab.
And I was like all right. And so there were
five of us at dinner and slowly went I was
the last one. I was like, I don't know where
(13:11):
those guys went, I'm gonna go standing outside with the
cigarette smokers waiting for him to come out, and Jeff
was like, dude, not trul guys. He figured out pretty
quick with you exactly what. Yeah, he knew exactly what.
Try that with your friends. You'll find out how good
of friends they are.
Speaker 3 (13:32):
Yeah, like, hell, no, get back in here right now.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
It's hey, I guarantee it. It's better. Jbu waited tables
and you know that it's a waiter or waitress at
a nice restaurant. Always he would prefer to see a
table of men versus a table of women when it
comes to a splitting tab, right, Unfortunately that is true.
Speaker 3 (13:53):
Yeah, I think it's gotten better.
Speaker 1 (13:55):
Why.
Speaker 4 (13:56):
I mean, like in my group, we've had the conversation
if we're all going out to dinner, we're splitting the
tab equally, like we just start.
Speaker 2 (14:04):
From my experience, I always made a lot less because
they don't take into account that the taxes, and then
you know they just oh, I didn't have any liquors,
so I sunk tip as much. Yeah, nowt it salid.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
It has changed a little bit for me. And then
I used to always be just split it up. But
if we go out to dinner with somebody and I
don't drink, and you order a one hundred and twenty
five dollars bottle of wine. I'm not pitching in for
the wine.
Speaker 2 (14:31):
Yeah, that's true.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
That's true.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
You shouldn't have to.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
Right, I'm not doing that.
Speaker 3 (14:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (14:35):
But anyway, so there you go. Beware of the pay
it backward scam that's out there. Give it a try yourself.
Maybe you'll get away with it. Who knows. Coming up, guys,
think about this. You get a staycation in Austin, Texas.
Tell me what it looks like. What does your staycation
in Austin look like? We've got that coming up on
Austin's eighty station what O three point one and streaming
(14:58):
on my Heart radio app. Everybody should try a staycation
every once in a while. They're great. You don't have
to go anywhere, You just go somewhere else. So then
you sleep somewhere else in your own hometown. So let's
get start with trushap. You've got a staycation. Let's say
it's two days, three days, how many days you want
to say? A weekend? Long weekend? How about that? What
(15:20):
does your staycation in Austin.
Speaker 4 (15:22):
Look like now I am going to an all inclusive resort,
but I don't want to go like downtown where it's
noisy and all.
Speaker 1 (15:29):
Inclusive, like all you can eat buffets and stuff.
Speaker 4 (15:32):
There's not Oh, I guess it's not all inclusive. Let
me say it includes everything. I mean, you'll understand when
I say it. Everything that I would want to do
is inside the place resort.
Speaker 3 (15:48):
All of the things that I want are there.
Speaker 4 (15:50):
Gotcha, You're the spa resort that I can relate exactly.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Room service.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
Our daughter Landry was little.
Speaker 4 (16:00):
When it's hard being a mama with the little baby,
every light, I don't know, twice a year, I would
go and check it on a Friday and check out
on a Sunday at Barton Creek Country Club and I
OMNY which is now OMNY and it's been updated in
the last few years.
Speaker 3 (16:17):
It's amazing.
Speaker 4 (16:18):
And I would eat room service for every meal. I
would turn the air conditioning down as cold as they could,
go watch TV for days, sleep as long as I
wanted to sleep, and I would get SPA services on
Friday and Saturday.
Speaker 3 (16:36):
Then get up Sunday morning, go down to the buffet
and eat.
Speaker 4 (16:38):
All I could eat for breakfast and then leave and
be completely refreshed and not have to talk to anybody
and play on my phone or all the things.
Speaker 3 (16:47):
No, I didn't even go down to the pool.
Speaker 4 (16:49):
Now, i'd sit in the hot tub like in the
spa area, but I wouldn't. I didn't want to go
out and talk to anybody. I just wanted to be silent.
It was like my version of a silent retreat.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
By the way, shout out to the Omni Barton Creek
in the Brodel they did a few years ago, and
the service and the facility and everything they've got going
on out.
Speaker 3 (17:06):
There, they're amazing.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
If you want a cool staycation, it's pretty awesome, really
really awesome. Highly recommend it. M hm, does does that
wrap up your staycation?
Speaker 3 (17:16):
That's my Austin staycation. Yeah, that's where I'm going, all right, JB,
what's yours?
Speaker 2 (17:21):
My Like a weekend wouldn't be all that different, except
I'd be staying somewhere else, like I don't. I'm not
up to speed on like the real hipster newer hotels.
Plus I wouldn't. I would want to hang by the
pool with my wife, and I wouldn't want one that's like.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
Club the w Yeah.
Speaker 2 (17:40):
Yeah, because you know, some of those resorts will sell
like day passes now and they kind of turn it
into a club. So I wouldn't stray far from my neighborhood.
We probably and I think my wife would agree. We'd
probably stay at Saint Cecilia or San Jose or maybe
South Congress Hotel. It's we could walk to all of those,
and then we would just I we'd probably have a
(18:02):
sushi dinner, uh, you know, neighborhood Sushi on South Congress
is a good one, or Uchi. But and then we
would just have cocktails on South Congress, go to Guero's
and have a margarita, sit by the pool, have a
glass of wine at either one of those hotels, and
just chill and we just chill. We'd probably have to
(18:23):
call it. They don't have the SPA thing, and that
would you know, I don't need that. My wife would
I probably have to call one in, you know, or
something like that, make sure she got the spa treatment,
and that would just make her super chill. But there's
something about just being away from your home. When when
she's at a home and I'm maybe the same way,
(18:44):
you just don't totally relax. When you're at your own home,
you always think of something you should be doing.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
Yeah right, looking at something. Yeah right.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
My wife's really bad about that, Like she sees something
that needs to be done in the house. She can't relax.
Speaker 4 (18:59):
So you said you could would probably stay at a
hotel that you could walk to from your house and
just picture you and Aaron walking down Congress suit their
suitcases behind you.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
Well, I need to change mine up because it sounds
like I'm gonna bump into JB and Aaron on my
stay case.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
Sue, was it bad that you weren't included in my staycation?
Speaker 1 (19:20):
Part of the part of the cation part is being yeah,
I mean mine was gonna I'll change up. I just
want to go somewhere. Why I don't have to drive
anywhere else, you know what I mean? Like do to
eat where you want to eat? Yeah? I just want
to walk like yeah, Like last in December, we went
to Annapolis, Maryland, and my cousin as a house there
(19:42):
and we stayed there and we walked everywhere like it
was just down the street to go to have dinner
or go shopping. They had coffee, all kinds of breakfast stuff.
Speaker 3 (19:51):
It was just shop. It was so cool and.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
It was just great. And by the way, I want
mine to be my staycation to be in October or
in like March. I don't want staycation in August, you know.
Speaker 3 (20:04):
I don't want to walk it everywhere.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
I don't want that. It has to be that. And
but I'll change it up a little bit because I
might go out to Horseshoe Bay and go to the
resort at Horshoe Bay because they have all those fantastic
golf courses.
Speaker 2 (20:19):
That's what I was wondering. If you would pick a
golf vacation, Yeah, I might. That's like, so if it's
a staycation, I have two questions. If it's staycation golf staycation,
what's your first choice? If it's anywhere in Texas golf vacation, Oh,
that's a whole different ball game, because where's your golf
staycation and what will include anything as far as Horshoe Bay.
(20:44):
There's a new golf course in Columbus, Texas called Darwood
that I just heard great, great things about and it
was opened by uh a Texan and PGA professional House
Sutton that people have just in the golf world have
just been raving about much in Columbus. We used to
buy race there and there.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
He got probably got cheap land to build the golf course.
There's also it would almost have to be like a
staycation mini golf tour, you know, just hop from one
place to the other. But there's also another one that
it's very private.
Speaker 2 (21:19):
So you hand cock Butler pitching MUNI.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Right, then I'd stay up on Runberg and I thirty five.
I'd be really nice. Uh So, I know, say and
people there are people you talk to they've never done
a staycation, and it's it's pretty fun. It's uh, it's yeah,
it's easier.
Speaker 2 (21:44):
I was just talking to my wife about it because
we're having a hard time cramming in a quick trip somewhere.
I'm like, let's just do a quick staycation with.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
The nice pool. So I uh. I went for the
first time a couple of months ago. Had a meeting
at Hotels Cecilia. Wow, is that place cool? I love
boutique hotels, I too love them, and I didn't. I
felt like I fitted like Hotel San Jose. I'm not
cool enough. I felt like Hotel or Saint Cecilia.
Speaker 3 (22:13):
I was okay, you could pass. Yeah, they'd be like,
we're gonna let him stay.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
Yeah, I could get by.
Speaker 3 (22:17):
You're on the cusp of it.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
Well, the extra perk there is that it's it's a
it's a private bar. Only you know, you can't just
go in there and have food and drinks.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
Oh, they keep the unwashed away.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
You have to be a member or staying there to
go in there and use it.
Speaker 4 (22:34):
At Saint Cecilia, Yeah, okay, So JB, where would you
go for a vacation outside of Austin?
Speaker 2 (22:42):
Outside of Austin, I'd I'd go to Marfa. I mentioned
on the show before I got this thing for Marfa,
and you forget it. It's at i don't know, a
few thousand feet.
Speaker 1 (22:53):
I forget that.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
I mean it cools off in the evening even when
it's a little bit hotter.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
Here is the observatory there where you can look up at.
Speaker 2 (23:01):
The McDonald's Observatories in Davis, which is just a quick
next town over.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
Oh okay, i'd like to see that. That's pretty cool.
Where would you go, Tricia?
Speaker 4 (23:11):
Well, I would go to Dallas because that's where all
my girlfriends are. But I would check to see if
there's an omni Barton Creek restort there. That's just what
I want to do. I wouldn't be mad at Lost
Pines either. In bass Drops yeah, oh my gosh, they're
lazy river yeah. Oh and their foods. It's beautiful out there.
(23:32):
You can go do smores at night. We've had so
many girls weekends at Lost Pines resort.
Speaker 2 (23:37):
It's you and your girlfriends and then a bunch of
people's children havingmores. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (23:43):
Yeah, but we don't care because we want.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
I'd keep it classy if I if we're out of
outside of Austin vacation, I keep it classy. I'm going
to Portoransis fishing. I'm going fishing every day for a week. Classy, huh,
and then sleep in it. Yeah. There's some actually, some
really nice places have been built in Portoances. I don't
know if you've been there in a while, but they've
(24:07):
got the what's it what was it called? I can't remember, Pamela,
Pamela Pamela Beach. That area it's really cool little not little,
but cool houses. And then there's island Moorings with some
cool houses. But if you want to stay in your
good old thirty nine ninety nine at night, run down
condo they got that for with.
Speaker 3 (24:25):
All the shells, and.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
Yes, yeah, it looks like your aunt Sherry's.
Speaker 3 (24:30):
It looks like my aunt's house. Yes, all right.
Speaker 1 (24:34):
Coming up on the show, What's next? Can I read
my handwriting here? No? I can't because I don't have
my glasses. Maybe you don't wear reading glasses.
Speaker 2 (24:41):
Yet I do. I just when I'm looking at a
computer screen, I take them off.
Speaker 1 (24:47):
It's weird.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
Okay, here I need it for I needed for a
lot of things, but not not the computer.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
I need you guys to think about this. Here's my note.
It says, at a certain age, you stop doing certain things.
What's the age and what's the thing. I've got a
few that immediately come to mind. We'll share them with you.
Coming up on Austin's A eighty station one oh three
point one