Randy and Robin discuss Randy's ownership involvement with San Antonio's Professional Indoor Football Team The Gunslingers.  Robin uses the rodeo to learn about her kids.  Randy ruins Robin's favorite songs by turning them into parodies....
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Hates Randy and Robin. This is another episode of Randy
and Robin Unfiltered. We're up in the studio today and
Robin has got a glass of wine. She said, I
don't know. I just can't lose something that I need
to drink, and drink a glass of wine before we
do this.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Well, I've been in work movie today, so now I'm
winding down and you said unfiltered, and I spend most
of my time filtering everything, So you want unfiltered, wells.

Speaker 1 (00:33):
Drink a glass of wine and because more unfiltered. Okay, Okay,
I got it. I got it. Last episode we talked
about the change in my job and what that was
starting to entail and the adjustment to that. Well, one
of the things said that I teased, and the last
deal was a big announcement. Since then, we've made the announcement.

(00:53):
I am now part of the ownership group of the
San Antonio gun Slingers, which is our indoor football team
here in San Antonio. A lot of people get confused
when they hear the name Gunslingers. They think about the
early eighties when we had a USFL football team called
the gun Slingers that played down at Alamo Stadium. That's

(01:13):
not what this is. There's no association. This is indoor
football and the gun Slingers are part of the Indoor
Football League, which has sixteen teams all across America. And
if you've never been to indoor football, it's crazy because
it's unlike a regular football field. This field is only
fifty yards long. It's about eighty five feet wide. The walls,

(01:37):
the padded walls, are the out of mounts. That's the sidelines.
So there's a lot of crashing into the walls, a
lot of going over the walls.

Speaker 2 (01:44):
It is so fun. I know, I'm a woman, and
what do I know about football, But it is so fun.
It's like wrestling meets football. And some would say Nascar.
I don't really see the Nascar aspect, but I definitely
see the wrestling because if you're near a wall and
somebody's coming over it. I mean, my daughter one time

(02:05):
did not get you know, you tell people, hey, don't
get so close to the wall they could get well,
she fell flat on her butt.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Absolutely, it's so fun though. It really is a lot
of fun. Don Rackler, who is the owner of John
Wayne Service Company, he took over this team two and
a half three seasons ago, and we started going to
the games. We got addicted to them. We really did.

Speaker 2 (02:28):
We yes, we have. It's so fun. I joke about
my daughter doing that, but she had a blast and
just being in the excitement being close. But anywhere you
sit in the stands, it's so fun to watch this game.
It's gas paced. There's no goals like sometimes you see
in the NFL, where it's like can somebody just hurt
up and score? I mean, they're going back and forth
and scoring and it's just wild. And the gun slingers

(02:52):
that I feel like Don Rackler and Pamberlcker. They do
a good job of making it exciting. So if they
when the gun slingers, it's not if. But when they score,
they got the lights and the pyrotechniques. It's just a
fun time and the families enjoy it. They always have
a theme at every game, which I think is so fun.

(03:14):
I like theme stuff. They always they honor the military
and first responders. You've seen the national anthem a few times.
This is just a it's just put together really.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
Well, that's right. It really is a lot of fun,
and that's why we were encouraged to become more involved,
and thus now I'm part of the ownership group at
the team, and I am loving it. I really am.
This is something that provides entertainment here in San Antonio
that I like to tell people. It's affordable, but it's

(03:49):
not cheap. A lot of people think when they hear
the word affordable, it's something I can take my family say, oh, well,
it's not going to be that entertaining. No, this is
a first class show, from the game on the field
to the production inside and the fireworks and everything that
goes off, and the fact that in the indoor football

(04:09):
off the ball goes out of bounds and you catch it,
and your kid catches the ball, they get to keep it.
At the end of the game, kids can go down
on the field and get autographs from the players, take pictures,
do all the autograph their jerseys, anything like that that
they want to do. It's just a fun game for
the entire family. And one of the cool things about

(04:32):
this team in particular is we're very patriotic. We love
our military, we love our first responders and the people
that take care of us, and we're not ashamed of that.
Every game we say a prayer, We do the national anthem.
As you mentioned, I've sang the national anthem. I'm actually
going to sing the national anthem at the open season

(04:54):
opener yeh, March twenty second. So it's just a lot
of fun anyway, that's part of what we're involved in
now and we love that and you're going to be
seeing more about that on our social media. And if
you want to come to a game, hit me up.
I'll hook you up with some free tickets to go
to our first game.

Speaker 2 (05:15):
Yes, and I get to be the wife of an
ownership part of football teams.

Speaker 1 (05:23):
Well, if I'm involved in it, you're involved in it.

Speaker 2 (05:26):
Right, So yes, everything, you know, we do everything we can.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
We can make you an honorary cheerleader.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
What did somebody call us? We're like bell Crow. I'm
a bell Crow puppy or you're a bell Crow puppy
or I don't know.

Speaker 1 (05:39):
Yeah, people gotta make fun of us because we do
a lot of things together and I love that. I
do too, I really do. It's something that's important to
me and I think it's important to you too, and
we get to do it.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
You're my best friend.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
We've got a house guest.

Speaker 2 (05:55):
I know it's been kind of it's been fun. It's
been fun. I like it.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
Yeah. We have a visitor from Norway.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
Yes, and I love that whole family. They came in
in September. We talked about the whole for my son
in the LHOS thirtieth birthday. Lots of people here from
Norway and that my daughter fell in love with the
Norwegian so my second daughter, Riley. So he's been here

(06:23):
and it's been fun. And he went to his first rodeo. Yep.
He landed in Austin that Thursday and we scooped him
up and went to the rodeo.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
After flying all night long.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
I know, I don't think you had any in the world.
He rode with Reagan and but yeah, but it was
ranchrodeo that was kind of different. So he wanted to
see bull riding and stuff. But he saw ran trodio,
which was fine. I think it was a little shocking though.
They thought he thought that they were getting one of

(06:58):
those cows rangeling it down and brandon it right there
in front of God and everybody. That he just thought
that's what they were doing, and he didn't know it
was like a sponge.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
He and Riley got all sensitive and thought they were
hurting these cows and it's a fake branding, it's a.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
Fun or whatever. They were just like, oh my god,
the horror. Anyway, Anyway, I know you have so much
more things to say about that, but it was funny,
it was cute. They're precious.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
Yeah, and you've had a lot of girlfriend boyfriend stuff
happening here, I know.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
I just like to give a shout out and a
big thanks to the San Antonio Rodeo who helps me
kind of meet who my kids are talking to. My
son at Texas State, he's in a fraternity. I don't
think since he started college that I've met anybody that
he's dated. And Rindon brought a date.

Speaker 1 (07:57):
Yeah, he's very private.

Speaker 2 (07:58):
He bought tickets to Ko Wetzel because he didn't want
to wait to see if we were going to have
any so he bought co Wetzel tickets and brought a date.
And I got to meet probably one of the many
girls that his career in Texas State.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
But that girl's not listening.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
They're in San Marcos. They're not gonna listen to us.
She was prejudiced though, and it was cute and I
was so excited that. You know, he let me meet somebody.
Even when we went to what the Parents thing, I
met so many I didn't even know which ones or who.

(08:43):
I was like, nice to meet you.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
They're kind of private like that. They don't want us
prying into their lives.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
Not my daughters. They tell me everything I never want
to know, Like, just can you not tell me anymore? Please?
La la la la la. My daughter's told me everything.
The boys, yeah, not so much.

Speaker 1 (09:03):
Yeah, we saw a zach Top.

Speaker 2 (09:06):
I know, I was so excited at the rodeo and.

Speaker 1 (09:08):
Now that was a pretty you know, we got some
last minute tickets, uh kind of up high, but you know,
we could still see what was going on.

Speaker 2 (09:16):
I was so thankful for that wonderful in it.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
It was fun to see him, that huge crowd of
people singing every song. And this guy is a relatively
new artist.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
Yeah, but I'd heard about him from my kids early on,
so instinctively I wanted to buy tickets. But I know
you're always like, just waita blah blah blah. But instinctively
I wanted to. And my daughter's friend, Gabby, Reagan's friend Gabby,
she bought floor seats right when they first came out
because these young kids, they know right away, like they've
been listening to him. Remy even has a hat already.

(09:50):
He left it at the house and says zach Top,
So I knew he was big already. And she had
got floor seats and they were debating on selling those
because they could sell him for like, you know, one
or two grandeats, but they went ahead and went to
the show. She bought him when they first came out
for three hundred years.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
And it's interesting to see the music kind of swinging
back a little more traditional country, kind of the whole
bro country era seems to be not going away, but
fading to the background. Some of these traditionalists like Zach
top are coming out now. And I had a chance

(10:28):
a couple of weeks before Rodeo started the Rodeo Western
Art event down at the Brisco Downtown. They were handing
out their scholarships, their Western Art scholarships, and I had
a chance to m ce that and they had hired
a guy named Jake Worthington to play acoustic there, and

(10:49):
I was familiar with Jake. Again, he's a very traditional artist,
kind of like zach top is, And so I got
a chance to hang out with him down at the
the Brisco, and it was pretty cool just to meet
him and also see another artist in this generation of traditionalists,

(11:10):
you know, that are that are keeping country alive, kind
of like people used to say about George Straight, He's
always keeping a country.

Speaker 2 (11:17):
I love old country, though, so I'm excited for Zach Top.
It was a great show. I love his music. He
is bringing back you know, nineties even older country back
and the college kids are loving it, which means they
made him big. I mean, they're the ones making these
guys big. They're seeing him. I don't know if it's
on TikTok or what, but they're making them all big
before we even get to hear them.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
That's I think that's where a lot of these artists,
you know, I mean, that's that's the way people are
getting discovered today on TikTok and Instagram and social media,
social videos.

Speaker 2 (11:51):
You know.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
It's not like the old days were just wandered around
and pray to record. Executive wandered into wherever you are playing,
you know, and you got discovered. Yeah that way. Now
it's instead of some executive making the choice. I mean,
ultimately they do, but it's after the fans have kind
of voted the fans demand on social media. Then these

(12:13):
guys go in and get a record deal set and
somebody to back them. So yeah, yeah, it's cool.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
Oh yeah, you put me on a diet, well kind.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
Of, I didn't put you on a diet. Well.

Speaker 2 (12:26):
You know. Wait is something that I never struggled with
until later in life.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
You know, Well, that's a problem. As you get older,
your body changes, it's not producing certain hormones, and that
affects your weight, and your mood, your libido, all kinds
of things can be affected by that. And sometimes people think, oh,
it's only women that go through hormonal changes, No, but

(12:57):
guys do too. And I found out about Male Medical
Group Yeah, and started doing some advertising work for them,
and I found out that Male Medical Groups not just
doing hormone replacement for guys, they do it for women
as well. A lot of wi.

Speaker 2 (13:13):
I am really glad you found them, because I went
and it was so thorough and I was just really
blown away by They just sat down for it was
over an hour. We went through all kinds of stuff
and then they did this body scan, which was a
little eye opening. I haven't even shown it to you,
yet I'm like, do I look like that? Oh my god.

(13:37):
You know, I'm thankful for it. They have implemented some
things that I think are going to help me, like
long term, not just as I'm trying to lose some
weight right now, but you know, I've been kind of
stuck at the same weight for a while now, so
I'm looking to lose twenty pounds and they said they
can help me do it, and so far, I feel
like pretty good about it.

Speaker 1 (13:58):
And I kind of like the fact that we can
go together, my husband and wife can go together, because
you want to kind of be on the same same page.
And you know, if one of you doesn't have any
energy and the other one's got all the energy, that's
not good.

Speaker 2 (14:11):
That is not good, you know.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
And so if you both can kind of get that
balanced out where you're both feeling good, it just improves
your quality of life. And that's kind of what what
Male Medical Group does. So I guess I guess I
better say hashtag ad this is a commercial here?

Speaker 2 (14:28):
Oh for it? Is this a commercial? I don't even know.
I just know it's something we've been on.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
It's part of our life. But we'll just make sure
you know that.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
We I don't know any of the radio rules.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
Well, we just make sure that you know that people
know y'all. These people are helping us, but I'm also
getting paid to advertise them, oh you know, on the radio.

Speaker 2 (14:47):
So got it.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
Everybody knows it's a it's official here. But if you're
interested in that, you can go to their website Mail
Medical Group dot com and check them out. And again,
just because it says mail and the name, it's not
just for guys.

Speaker 2 (15:01):
They have a whole section of her stuff and a
lot of stuff that I haven't even tapped into yet.
Then they do what did they do?

Speaker 1 (15:07):
Like the cool cool?

Speaker 2 (15:09):
They do some laser laser facial stuff and there's a
lot of stuff I haven't even checked out yet.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
So yeah, if you want to feel better and feel
better about yourself, check them out Male Medical Group dot com.
You go to the website's got all the all the
stuff there and check that out. But that's that's some
of the stuff that we've been doing. So what were
we covered here? We covered rodeo, we covered gun slingers,
we covered boyfriends and girlfriends.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
How about what it's like to be married to Randy?
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (15:42):
I don't know if I want to know, what are
you going to say about it? So fun?

Speaker 2 (15:47):
Well, we went to the rodeo and then we tried
to eat a lot of different places, but apparently everybody
had the same idea as we did after the radio yesterday,
so all the places we went to were jammed. But
we did end up Elmo Cafe and they were playing
this old nineties country song that I loved. It was
Keeper of the Stars, and I was listening to it

(16:08):
while we were waiting, and I was like, oh, I
love this song. And then I said to Fandy, oh
I love the song. It kind of reminds it kind
of makes me think of us. I love this song,
Keeper of the Stars. And then he looks at me,
but he doesn't respond right away, but that's typical. He
usually thinks through his response and he's slow to speak

(16:29):
but has wonderful responses, but still no response, and so
I thought, maybe it's our song fun. But then I
started looking at his eyes when we're up and I'm like,
you're thinking of a parody. That's what you're doing, because
every time I say it like a song, he comes
up with a parody of it and kind of kind
of ruins a song, but also it's funny, so and
I was, I.

Speaker 1 (16:50):
Mean, I just it's naturally. I've always been that way.
I hear a song and immediately starts singing, thinking of
a funny way to sing it, a parody of it,
and that song is it was no accident me finding you.
I was graduating high school, you were turning two. I

(17:14):
don't I don't think our age difference is that much,
but it's about fifteen sixteen years anyway, So that's immediately
where my mind went.

Speaker 2 (17:21):
And the song no longer felt the same, that is romantic,
the romance just withered away. But that's that's still fun
And yeah, it was a funny moment.

Speaker 1 (17:33):
That's and that's one of the things I loved about
my career through the years is you know, I love music,
you know, kind of a frustrated musician. So being on
the radio allowed me to do parody songs, Yeah, for
different things, And.

Speaker 2 (17:50):
You have some really good ones and and funny story,
I have a lot of songs, but I sang them
all while raising my children, and I come up with songs.
I have a song for like everything, So it's I
wrote a song one time for a title agent that
you sang for me.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, for one of your title agents.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
I remember that, yeah, shameless plug. I worked for west Core.
If you have a title agency, I would like an underwriter.
You need to partner with west Court and call me.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
If speak of these parody songs. I got in trouble
one time for a parody song I did. God bless
Randy Travis. He remember the time before he had the stroke.
Yes he was I don't know what he was drinking
or taking, but he decided to jump in his Camaro

(18:42):
naked and go for a ride.

Speaker 2 (18:44):
It was such a sad story, though I felt my
heart felt bad for him because he's always been one
of my favorites and just to know that he was
on this road that wasn't becoming of who everyone thinks
of when they think Randy Travis.

Speaker 1 (18:59):
It was sad, all right, But but me being on
the radio, that being in the news, I've got we've
got to talk about it, and sometimes we do it
with humor, right, And so Randy had wrote around in
his car naked, showed up at a convenience store, walked
in to buy some cigarettes, and they ran him out.
Because he didn't have any clothes on. And then he drives

(19:20):
down the road, crashes, gets out of the car, lays
down in the middle of the highway, and the highway
patrol shows up, picks him up and arrest him. Anyway,
so I got to thinking I got to write a
song about that. So I took Randy's song I Told
You So, and I wrote a parody of it, which
basically was, suppose I got lit up one night and

(19:43):
wrote around buck naked in my car, just driving all along,
and suppose I went into the store to buy a
pack of Marlboroughs. They laughed at me and told me
to go home. If I let's see, if I crashed
my car into a ditch. I can't remember it. I
wrote the song you can't remember anyway. The hook of

(20:05):
it is, would you believe me if I said they
stole my clothes? Stole my clothes? Anyway? Yeah, that's one
of my favorite. But I also kind of got in
trouble for it.

Speaker 2 (20:17):
I would think so, because I'm over here with the
bleeding heart going.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
There are some people who thought it was the greatest
thing that ever happened. There are other people thought we
were making fun and we shouldn't make fun of a
country icon. So, but that's what you deal with when
you're doing morning radio, and also when you're doing anything
with humor. Humor is always going to have a victim.

Speaker 2 (20:38):
Oh, of course absolutely, And so you don't know that
other thing. My sweet dear husband has been battling what
some would call the rodeo crud.

Speaker 1 (20:48):
Yeah, I did get the rodeo crud, got it. I
haven't had a sinus infection for like eight years.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
And we don't know for sure. You were not diagnosed
with the sinus infections, so you can't get up here
and say you had a sinus infiction, but you have
symptoms of a sinus infection.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
I'm pretty sure it was. I know it, even though
it's been eight years. I know what a sinus infection was.
I called the doctor. The doctor said, yeah, it sounds
like a sinus infection, and he caught me something in
took care of me. So what are you saying, Mike?

Speaker 2 (21:16):
You don't want to say that.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
I don't want to say what I know.

Speaker 2 (21:19):
We're unfiltered, but you don't want to be like I
called the doctor and you just called me something in
without laying an eye on me or talking to me.

Speaker 1 (21:26):
It's a friend of mine. My doctor is my friend.

Speaker 2 (21:30):
And so everyone here knows who your doctor is.

Speaker 1 (21:33):
No, they don't. Not everybody knows him anyway, Randy and
Robin unfiltered. This is the unfiltered part.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
You're gonna filter this, No, I'm not.

Speaker 1 (21:45):
I'm not gonna edit it. What I'm gonna leave it.

Speaker 2 (21:47):
You're not gonna edit this show.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
No, I'm want to leave it just as it is.
That's that's what they're getting with. They're gonna listen to
this podcast, Randy and Robin. They're gonna get the the
unfiltered version. No, I'm just I'm glad right now we're
not it's not the video version, which we haven't done yet.
Because you're over there in your pajamas.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
But they are so cute, are they not? I like
to get comfy when I'm talking about stuff.

Speaker 1 (22:13):
Your pajamas are cute, my pajamas. I look like a
homeless person.

Speaker 2 (22:17):
As soon as I can get out of work clothes
and out of like work mode, I'm in either really
comfy clothes or nice pretty pajamas. And that's if I
know I don't have to leave the house. I mean
sometimes I do look like a homeless person, Yes, I agree,
But women do. We not have those moments like you know,

(22:39):
But I think those moments are so important because the
next day, or in a couple of days later, when
you put on your makeup and you leave the house,
your husband looks at you like you're the most beautiful
thing that ever walked in the base of the earth
because you've just seen you look like crap.

Speaker 1 (22:54):
Forday, I never think you look like crap, though I
really don't.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
Yeah, but I can see the sparkle in your eyes
when I take it up a notch, you know.

Speaker 1 (23:06):
Okay, you might get a sparkle in.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
Mind, but you see the eyebrows raise and there's hope
in your eyes, and you know it makes me feel good.
But you have you have to see me at my
worst to appreciate me at my best.

Speaker 1 (23:21):
That's what That's what marriage is, right, what marriage is.
So you see each other exactly as you live. It's
all the reality.

Speaker 2 (23:31):
Y'all live like pigs. No, we're not.

Speaker 1 (23:36):
The most organized people in the world. I'll tell you
that right now. Yeah, but we clean, we do clean.

Speaker 2 (23:42):
We clean together.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
Yeah, we clean together. We do everything together. But we're
the Belcrow Puppies, right.

Speaker 2 (23:49):
You know, I never had to google that when somebody
said nothing about us, so I was like, whatever, hater.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
All right, we're starting to ramble, so we're gonna shut
down this this episode of the podcast today. Hey, thank
you for listening, and if you want to listen to
some of the more some more of our episodes, just
just check them out. We're going to be adding them regularly. Thanks,

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