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August 21, 2025 52 mins

Discontinued products that we miss, disappearing trends that Liz wants to hold on to, PLUS a great game of Pick 2!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
In the morning.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
It's the Morning mixed with Matt Harrison, Liz Luda.

Speaker 3 (00:07):
Good day all, Good day, Ludo and good day.

Speaker 4 (00:10):
There tj.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
A little rain in the forecast for later today and
maybe tomorrow. There was the hurricane hitting the Outer Bank
sol crazy videos of that yesterday. But that's moving off
the Outer Banks coast. It should be slowing down a
little bit. I know you love your your pumpkin spice

(00:33):
and all that sort of thing.

Speaker 5 (00:34):
I do.

Speaker 4 (00:35):
And and you were talking about how it's later this year.

Speaker 5 (00:39):
It's later, and I feel like it's not as trendy, but.

Speaker 3 (00:44):
You might be mistaken according to this article, but is
later on the one thing which was the pumpkin spice
Starbucks thing.

Speaker 5 (00:53):
Yeah right, yeah, it's like a week later this year.

Speaker 3 (00:55):
Yeah, but of course, now my I had this problem earlier.
I was prepping in these show that my computer died.
I got it back. Now pumpkin spice, Lota, you said,
it's it's next Tuesday.

Speaker 4 (01:07):
Yeah, four days later than last year.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
The twenty second was the earliest they ever did.

Speaker 4 (01:14):
A new report for.

Speaker 3 (01:15):
Vintstic Cart found pumpkin spice season really is getting earlier
and earlier because they looked at sales of pumpkin spice products,
not necessarily the marketing, but over the past four years,
no one buys them from February through July, but then
sales skyrocket.

Speaker 5 (01:29):
Yeah, so there's something about at the.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
End of July when you're starting to get those back
to spell lives No, and you're like, it's hot. It's hot,
and you're like, I just want to turn the ac on,
make it dark in my house and pretend that it's
not so hot outside right now.

Speaker 5 (01:43):
It's like a little escape thing.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
The peap pumpkins spice season isn't actually when they sell
their most stuff, and this is just instacart late September,
but it's a moving closer mid months.

Speaker 4 (01:55):
It keeps moving up a little bit.

Speaker 3 (01:57):
Back in twenty twenty one, sales didn't peek until oct Yeah.
Last year's peak was September seventeenth, which was ten days
before twenty twenty three.

Speaker 4 (02:05):
So it just keeps going up.

Speaker 5 (02:06):
It keeps getting earlier.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
Yeah. And the thing is, though, is because Christmas keeps
spreading out earlier and earlier earlier. So it's like on
the seventeenth of September, you have your Pumpkins spice.

Speaker 5 (02:15):
Latte and then the next day you wake up with
eggnog like right.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
And this is according to It's the cart the where
pumpkin spice outpaced the national appetite North Carolina plus twenty
eight in South Carolina plus twenty two.

Speaker 5 (02:31):
So they're still passionate.

Speaker 4 (02:32):
Yeah. Yeah, I just feel like I've.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
Seen a Halloween decoration by now, usually on my own house.

Speaker 5 (02:37):
Maybe I'm just slacking and.

Speaker 4 (02:39):
I'm just well, have you been to Lowe's.

Speaker 5 (02:41):
Have you been to Oh? Yeah, Oh they're out there.

Speaker 4 (02:43):
They just haven't seen them in decorating.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:46):
I haven't seen people putting them out yet.

Speaker 4 (02:47):
Oh gotcha, gotcha? You know what I saw.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
This is also they talked about which coffee creamer each
state loves.

Speaker 4 (02:54):
I'm outraged by this. The vanilla is big across the Midwest.

Speaker 3 (03:00):
Caramel and sweet cream are big into souths and so
North and South Carolina is sweet cream. What if I
have a bunch of flavors there, I'm not going sweet cream.
I don't go sweep anytime.

Speaker 5 (03:09):
You know why. You can also use it to add
to a soda to make a dirty soda.

Speaker 4 (03:15):
No, it wasn't. I've never done a dirty soda.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
Yeah, it's because we don't have those as many of
the locations as they do in the other parts of
the country, so we got to make it.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
At home because yeah, sweet cream would not be on
my no, not at all, Like that's my number one
really every time. Yeah, I don't know if I've ever
I mean I've done it, probably without it thinking because
it's there, but I've never chosen it.

Speaker 1 (03:33):
Oh, that would be my first choice when I see it,
always go oh real cream, a fancy Yeah, I might
have to try it.

Speaker 6 (03:41):
I'll go vanilla, or if it's not there, I'll just
just skip it all thea like a.

Speaker 5 (03:46):
Vanilla sweeter, you know. Okay, I don't know how to
explain it.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
It's good, but a couple of pumps in your doctor pepper,
like I'm giving you terrible advice for your documes.

Speaker 5 (03:56):
Weird.

Speaker 4 (03:56):
It does seem weird to me. I would never even think, oh.

Speaker 1 (03:59):
My gosh, creamer and then you do a diet coke
and a twist of lime.

Speaker 4 (04:03):
Oh, they should put it over by the sodas or
is it by the sodas?

Speaker 1 (04:07):
Oh no, I'm not buying shelf stable. It's got to
come out of the fridge.

Speaker 4 (04:11):
Oh really, Yeah, no, Okay, oh.

Speaker 5 (04:14):
That's right. We do have shelf stable.

Speaker 4 (04:15):
Here, don't we. Yeah, like if you go to a
QT you circle. Okay, it's yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (04:19):
I'm thinking about when I grocery shops. I'm like, you're
buying it as like an individual.

Speaker 4 (04:23):
Okay, I got Jeff, we might have something back in
the break room Morning.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
Lay.

Speaker 3 (04:31):
It's Thursday, the twenty first of August, Morning Mixed Burthday's
powered by Mark Spain in Real Estate.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
And we're starting off with Hayden Pantier, who is thirty six.

Speaker 5 (04:40):
She's been in a lot of stuff.

Speaker 1 (04:41):
She was in Nashville Heroes, she was in Scream four,
she was in everything for a while. It felt like
also moving on, Casey Muskraves is thirty seven. She's a
country singer who I believe she also did some stuff with.

Speaker 5 (04:54):
Did she do someone Taylor Swift?

Speaker 4 (04:55):
Maybe? Maybe?

Speaker 5 (04:57):
So, I don't know, like early on, yeah, I might
have something Chris crossed in my brain.

Speaker 1 (05:01):
Anyways, Happy birthday, case you didn't mean to diminish your
star on that moment. And then Callise is forty six,
and I want you to know since the early two thousands,
I have had this song stuck in my head, my
milkshake brings on a voice of the yacht and then
it's better than yalla, Sammy is better than yall. Like
to this day, you cannot say milkshake without my brain

(05:24):
finishing the line.

Speaker 4 (05:25):
You have to, yes.

Speaker 3 (05:26):
But it's also weird when it came out to see
like young kids singing again.

Speaker 1 (05:30):
Oh my gosh, remember me girls, the little sister dancing
to it with it on the TV.

Speaker 4 (05:34):
I remember, I do.

Speaker 5 (05:35):
Remember to the seeds.

Speaker 3 (05:36):
Yeah, being at like events or birthday part or whatever,
and they're like four year olds are singing in like,
oh that is happening.

Speaker 4 (05:42):
Whoa, whoa.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
Anyways. Also celebrating today is Kim Cattrell. She is sixty
nine and she was Samantha on the Sex and the
City series, but she talked about her own dating life.

Speaker 7 (05:54):
I've had the relationships that I've been and have been
usually for five, six, seven, eight years. I've been arid
twice and those relationships have lasted quite a while. Whereas Samantha,
you know, she's she's onto the next very quickly.

Speaker 4 (06:09):
It's so weird.

Speaker 5 (06:10):
Yeah, yeah, I don't know what it is. I'm so
like she's trying to be fancy She doesn't do that
when she's in character, though, does she.

Speaker 4 (06:19):
I'm she had a different kind of talk.

Speaker 5 (06:22):
Is sorry?

Speaker 6 (06:24):
All right?

Speaker 4 (06:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (06:25):
Also we remember her from a mannequin.

Speaker 4 (06:27):
What Great's so awful?

Speaker 6 (06:30):
You know what?

Speaker 1 (06:30):
I loved that movie as a kid because it starts
out and it's got a cameo via stell Getty Sophia
from the older girls, and she wasn't wearing all the
golden girls like regalia, and so she looked younger and
I'd be.

Speaker 5 (06:40):
Like, oh my gosh, it's Sophia, and then they're no
longer with us.

Speaker 1 (06:44):
But today would have been Kenny Rogers's birthday and just
some solid life advice right.

Speaker 4 (06:49):
Now, you got the whole no, when the fool, no,
when the awful. I go with that right now.

Speaker 1 (07:02):
So I reference that there was a very short period
of my life where I lived near a Kenny Rogers
like chicken place.

Speaker 5 (07:10):
They had the best corn bread of my life. I
don't know where I need to find the recipe on
the internet, but that is a.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
Core childhood memory, is just wanting cornbread, nothing else.

Speaker 4 (07:20):
Kenny Rogers, I mean.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
Kenny Rodgers, like it was just play like you know,
the cornbread is where it was at.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
That specific cornbread from that specific place. Yes, okay, yeah,
it was so good.

Speaker 1 (07:30):
Well, I'm sure like they followed the same rule at
all the different Kenny Rogers restaurants.

Speaker 5 (07:34):
So it's got to be out there somewhere.

Speaker 4 (07:36):
Yeah, it probably is.

Speaker 5 (07:37):
I shouldn't find it on the Reddit threads I've tried.
And then today's national holidays.

Speaker 1 (07:43):
It's a national Senior Citizens Day, so happy day to
everyone who celebrates that as well.

Speaker 3 (07:48):
A senior citizen afrigetting permission, right gently, how long do
you think you guys can hold your breath?

Speaker 4 (07:54):
I struggle sometimes in a long cemetery, so.

Speaker 1 (07:57):
I think they do a solid four three seconds.

Speaker 3 (08:02):
This Croatian free diver beat a mere Marisik. I apologize
if it's wrong, said a new Guinness World record held
his breath underwater twenty nine minutes three seconds.

Speaker 4 (08:11):
No, wow, no way, he's longer than Tom Kers.

Speaker 3 (08:15):
Yeah, and who was the other, Kate Winslet.

Speaker 4 (08:18):
Yeah, he held in a three meter deep pool.

Speaker 3 (08:22):
The previous record was like twenty four minutes, so we
obliterated that. He did some weird things to prepare for that.
Most you can't do. I did a process called de
nitrogenation falls breathing pure oxygen for several minutes ten minutes.
In this case, he's able to raise his blood oxygen
level so five times the normal range.

Speaker 4 (08:42):
He said.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
This is a very advanced stunt done after years of
professional training, should not be attempted without proper guidance and safety.
Two and CO two toxicity can be lethal. It's not
about how much you inhale, it's about little much you need.

Speaker 4 (08:56):
No panic, no.

Speaker 3 (08:57):
Thoughts, just silence, uh, because.

Speaker 4 (09:01):
That that is.

Speaker 3 (09:03):
Do I know that we're to do. When I was doing,
you know, we would do try to go to like
the lake of the pool or twice. Oh yeah, And
then in your head you're like you could do. You're
not gonna try, You're not gonna right, like you talk
yourself through it to hold it a little bit extra.

Speaker 5 (09:14):
But then that panic still sets in a little bit.
Yeah you still like all cool and can.

Speaker 6 (09:19):
Stand up right, I can just stand up and be
you know, breathe all I want, like so fast, But
I'm still like in mom, I guess your flight or
fight fight whatever kicks in.

Speaker 5 (09:29):
You're automatic, and it's like you know, just.

Speaker 4 (09:32):
Your brain stops you probably for more than you're capable
of it.

Speaker 3 (09:35):
Yes, you probably go further right, but your brain's like
you get get app there right.

Speaker 1 (09:38):
The fact that you said though like quiet and no
thoughts like that sounds really born.

Speaker 5 (09:42):
Twenty nine minutes. I know I have a hard time
sitting through a television show that's.

Speaker 4 (09:46):
I don't know. I don't Yeah, I would.

Speaker 5 (09:48):
Be so bored.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
I'd come back because I you know what it is.
I don't know that it's necessarily that I can't hold
my breath that long. It's that I can't go that
long without talking.

Speaker 5 (09:54):
I knew you. Yeah, okay, that might be the problem.

Speaker 3 (09:57):
There's no way you could do it in perspective. To
put this into perspective, the world's it's eleven minutes. Thirty
five seconds. Is the record for holding your breath unaided,
The bottle nose dolphin fourteen minutes, the harbor seals thirty minutes.
The let's see the record for diving animals holding the

(10:21):
breath is a whale that's two hundred and twenty two minutes.
But he's doing it longer than like, let's see dolphins
and seals and things like that.

Speaker 4 (10:30):
That's crazy. You imagine you're a seal or something down
there and you see this dude, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
Like what, yeah, do you ever think about the fact
that whales lives somewhere they can't breathe And you're just like, oh,
that doesn't seem like a very smart.

Speaker 4 (10:43):
Move yause he's yeah, constantly have to find air and.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
They're always like going diving deep and stuff. And then
it's like, oh, I got to make my way back
up to the surface.

Speaker 5 (10:51):
We have focus.

Speaker 4 (10:53):
You always got to make your way to the grocery store.

Speaker 6 (10:55):
Yeah, that's sure, right, Yeah, I could throw my own guard.

Speaker 4 (11:01):
Morning makes Matt Harris.

Speaker 3 (11:03):
The quirky oft of the quirk is ludas looks at
social media, so you don't have to.

Speaker 1 (11:07):
Don't leave your pants on the floor, because that's how
you get spider bites.

Speaker 5 (11:12):
I said what I said. Uh So, there is a
lady on TikTok.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
Her name is Cade's and she's a third year medical student,
and she talked about how one of her favorite things
she likes.

Speaker 5 (11:20):
Is when she gets put in rotation on.

Speaker 1 (11:22):
Different like different places in the hospital. And right now
she was doing a family medicine one and there was
a doctor there. They were treating somebody with a brown
recluse bite, and the doctor said, this is why you
don't put your pants on the floor, to which she
was like, I'm sorry, what And the doctor.

Speaker 5 (11:40):
Said, often when people of Okay, the.

Speaker 1 (11:44):
Doctor said, they shared an anecdotal story that when people
come in with the spider bites, it always seems to
happen like when they put their pants on, like that's
like a thing that they've seen a pattern of that. Yes,
and that's why a lot of spider bites that are
really bad on your thighs or like in your.

Speaker 5 (12:01):
Hips and stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (12:03):
And basically don't set your pants on the floor because
when you're sleeping or whatever, like a spider can crawl in,
you're not going to see it. You're not shaking them out,
you're putting your leg in, and then you're just getting
chomped on.

Speaker 4 (12:14):
I'm not going to stop putting my pants in the flock.

Speaker 6 (12:16):
I'm going to I don't put my pants on the
floor because there's dog hair on the floor.

Speaker 5 (12:21):
That's also it's like a reason.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
So this med student said that they like, you know,
put that away in their brains like a thought or whatever,
and then they weren't even thinking and they went to
go visit their mom who lives out of town, and
they left their shorts on the floor and they went
to pick up their shorts and two spiders fell out,
and they said, who, this is the thing in the woods.
Well the thing is though, well that or Florida, you

(12:46):
know what I mean. In the South, we get the heat,
we get those spiders. They're trying to find dark places
to hide. And the thing is is you're just not thinking.

Speaker 5 (12:53):
When you go to put your pants on.

Speaker 1 (12:54):
If you see a spider on the ground, you know
what I mean, you kind of can square off with them.

Speaker 5 (12:58):
You know, they can only come in one or another.

Speaker 4 (13:01):
They had a lot of legs and reached around you.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
But when they when when you're paint, when your leg
goes in that pant, you're not looking. And I knew
somebody one time that they got bit by a I
think it might have been a brown recluse spider because
they had to like go and get treatment and it
was in their boot.

Speaker 5 (13:16):
Oh yeah, I want to slide.

Speaker 6 (13:17):
I've had that happen several times because they keep shoes
in the garage.

Speaker 4 (13:20):
Oh yeah, that's true. So like that would make sense.

Speaker 5 (13:23):
I started, you know, like shaking them, put them on.

Speaker 3 (13:26):
Because my shoes are at my running shoes and all
that stuff are out there.

Speaker 5 (13:29):
Uhs, I can look through the holes in there.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
But I shake my shoes every time when I do.
Oh my gosh, Ever since I heard that story, Yes,
it's one person telling me that to put the fear
in me.

Speaker 3 (13:41):
The two people I know who had brown recluse bits
was on their fingers and messed up there. They had
to have part of their finger moved and stuffy. Did
that happen because the brown recluse?

Speaker 5 (13:50):
No? But I mean, how did the recluse get on
their hand?

Speaker 1 (13:52):
Like?

Speaker 5 (13:52):
Did they put their hands somewhere and the spider.

Speaker 4 (13:54):
Was sometimes reaching somewhere? Probably I don't know.

Speaker 1 (13:58):
Were they reaching into their pants to put the because
I just want to say, this could go full circle.

Speaker 4 (14:03):
You better not even reach to someone else's pants. Apparently
there might be as.

Speaker 6 (14:08):
Okay, it depends on where they were before. That's if
they were on the floor.

Speaker 3 (14:12):
Then there you go. That girls out camping for you,
another reason for you not to go outside. I don't
go camping.

Speaker 4 (14:17):
I know.

Speaker 5 (14:17):
Well, there's just another reason I don't live that life.

Speaker 4 (14:19):
You don't walk into the woods.

Speaker 5 (14:20):
No, that's none of my business. That's not my home.

Speaker 1 (14:23):
I feel like that I put a safe I put
a boundary out there. They stay in their home. I
stay in my home.

Speaker 4 (14:28):
Okay, that's the deal. You've done with it all right?

Speaker 2 (14:31):
In the morning, it's a morning mixed with Matt Harrison,
Liz Luda.

Speaker 3 (14:37):
I reached somebody in this room enjoyed grocery shopping. It
wasn't Liz Luda, who does enjoy food. Yes, TJ enjoys
cruising around.

Speaker 5 (14:45):
I just like to wander around the store.

Speaker 3 (14:48):
Yeah, I don't, but I appreciate a fancy grocery store,
oh death, even though I don't want to necessarily spend
a lot of time in there, and I never would
never want to go with other people like no, my
kid occasionally know that they're older, but then they're only
gonna be throwing junk in the thing.

Speaker 5 (15:04):
Correct.

Speaker 4 (15:05):
But there's something.

Speaker 3 (15:06):
There's two things I wish more grocery stores have, and
there's not enough of them at this store.

Speaker 4 (15:10):
I go is the mini shopping cart? Yes?

Speaker 3 (15:14):
Oh, why aren't there enough? There's only I think there's
one in the grocery store because it's always.

Speaker 4 (15:17):
Like, where's that mini?

Speaker 5 (15:18):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (15:19):
I love the mini shopping cart.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
I think it's probably because you buy less with.

Speaker 5 (15:23):
The mini car, because when you have the mini card, it.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
Gets full quicker, and then you're like, I can't put
anything else And here I'm already busting at the scene.

Speaker 4 (15:29):
That's why they don't have them.

Speaker 3 (15:29):
I get, yeah, but I love the mini shopping cart.

Speaker 6 (15:33):
To the other side, like I'm not gonna fill up
the big one, right, so like I'm only gonna get
what I'm gonna get, so right.

Speaker 3 (15:41):
I guess like a lot maybe they are, or maybe
not enough. Not enough people would use the mini because
you know, people are shopping for families or whatever, blah
blah blah. But the mini when when you get that
and it's so much easier to strive better.

Speaker 5 (15:53):
Yes, it's the best.

Speaker 6 (15:54):
Feel like you're in a little go kart, just kind
of like, yes, I was, I almost.

Speaker 3 (15:59):
I really seriously thought about it. The other day, went
in and the mini one was gone, because I think
there might be one. I saw the little kid one.

Speaker 1 (16:05):
Oh my gosh, I thought the little kid went around
those Those are hard.

Speaker 5 (16:09):
To find too.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
Like when my kid was younger, we would specifically go
to certain locations just so he could have his own
mini car.

Speaker 4 (16:15):
To push.

Speaker 3 (16:15):
Now the problem comes in with the mini cart is
the parent isn't necessarly paying attention to the kid.

Speaker 4 (16:20):
The kids just running around. He's like all that people's angles.

Speaker 3 (16:26):
So I would like that the mini cart is sweet.
I when I lived, like in City City, they might
have met in here. Some of the smaller stores you
could only have a mini cart.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
Oh, or the thing were you have the cart and
they put the basket in.

Speaker 3 (16:40):
The cart and oh yeah yeah yeah, many carts are
like five below.

Speaker 4 (16:44):
I've seen some mini carts.

Speaker 3 (16:45):
But also I need more drinkholders on the shopping cart.

Speaker 4 (16:50):
Oh, not all of them have it. Some have it.

Speaker 3 (16:52):
You're bringing a drinking No, but like let's say you
get a Target or someplace or even Sara's Teeters or whatever.
There's a Starbucks there.

Speaker 5 (16:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (16:59):
True, I wouldn't mind having a coffee.

Speaker 5 (17:01):
Yeah, retreating yourself. You're having a little coffee.

Speaker 3 (17:03):
Maybe walk I have in the past, especially sometimes when
you go back with the kids back to strip shopping
or something. But and some of the some stores have they, yeah,
not all of them.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
But see, I think that's a waste of space because
my phone's always too fat to fit in the cup holder.
And I'm like, well, what's the point of this because
I don't know. Well, I know, but I don't ever.

Speaker 5 (17:23):
Get a drink.

Speaker 4 (17:24):
Yeah, but why do you need it?

Speaker 3 (17:25):
But it doesn't take up space the cup holder because
it's outside of the well no, I know.

Speaker 1 (17:28):
I just get frustrated because I try to jim my phone.

Speaker 5 (17:31):
What if they added a phone holder to the that'd
be great.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
But the problem is the phone size is keep changing,
so some of the ones that have the phone holder,
your phone will just like fall right.

Speaker 5 (17:40):
Out or not updating.

Speaker 3 (17:41):
But yeah, because like I saw someone the other day,
I just thought of this. They had their iPad. Must
have been something you can attached to the grow oh
off the shopping car and it was on you know, like.

Speaker 4 (17:50):
The the baby seat.

Speaker 3 (17:52):
Yeah, it was like on there but up obviously looking
at her listless. Yeah, but that's not a bad that's
a good one too, to look through there.

Speaker 4 (18:01):
I don't know. I went to hold her and I
went that and I'm good to go. Thanks for starting
your day with The Morning, Miss.

Speaker 2 (18:07):
It's The Morning mixed with Matt Harris and Lizzett and
now here's your latest pop up Beat.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
And the Pop brought to you by and powered by
Mark Spain.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
Real Estate, and Jamie Lee Curtis is glad that her
cleavage can bring us all together for the Freaky r
Friday movie. For Your Friday came out in theaters like
two weekends ago now, and they've been trying to push
it and keep the momentum going. And there was like
a publicity thing or whatever that Jamie Lee Curtis did,
but in it, her cleavage is cleavaging.

Speaker 5 (18:37):
I mean, it is magnificent.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
And when I first saw it was like getting shared everywhere.
People were like, WHOA didn't know that that was hiding
underneath shirt or whatever, And I was like, oh, man.

Speaker 5 (18:47):
I hope she's not embarrassed.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
Well, she got on Instagram and yesterday she's not embarrassed.
She says, actually she loves the fact that this has
gotten more attention than any other since the announcement post
with Lindsay Lohan sparks the movie getting made, So she's actually.

Speaker 5 (19:02):
She's loving that.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
Or she had to know, right, I mean, I mean
maybe not because maybe some people. Yeah, because if you're
you would hope that you'd have an assistant something sy
just so you know, I don't care if you like it.
Or not, but just sometimes you imagine sometimes you don't know, right, yeah,
someone tells you. But it is interesting because sometimes well
you see something, you know when I like your guy, like, oh,
I can't even comment whatever, But it doesn't even mean

(19:25):
like it's like you're getting all excited about it.

Speaker 4 (19:28):
Sometimes it's just an oddity.

Speaker 5 (19:31):
Haven't you seen that in a while?

Speaker 3 (19:33):
Like a guy walks in with giant muscles. You can't
help but like go.

Speaker 4 (19:35):
Like, whoa, it's like something a big dude, right.

Speaker 3 (19:39):
I mean maybe it's not I'm married anymore, but we're like,
but a couple should be able to say like.

Speaker 6 (19:43):
Wow, look at that. Yeah, or and it's nothing, no, thread,
it's no nothing, it's just like out of the norm. Yeah,
and do you know what I'm saying. Yeah, And it's
not to put the person down or anything.

Speaker 5 (19:54):
I noticed. I was like, whoa, Yeah, yeah, she's excited
that it's doing.

Speaker 3 (20:00):
I noticed it, and I didn't want to tell anybody
I noticed, but now I guess I can since she's
happy about it.

Speaker 4 (20:05):
You love Dawson's Creek, didn't you?

Speaker 1 (20:07):
Oh my gosh, it's one of my favorite shows. I
will watch reruns.

Speaker 5 (20:10):
Really.

Speaker 3 (20:11):
The cast of Dawson's Creek be back together on stage
for the first time since the show wrapped in two
thousand and three. So for in two thousand and three,
a one night only charity event to benefit f Cancer
and Dawson's Creek alum James Vanderbeek.

Speaker 5 (20:26):
He's fighting cancer right now.

Speaker 4 (20:27):
He's going to be on it.

Speaker 3 (20:29):
Michelle Williams, Katie Holmes, Joshua Jackson are at the Biggies
right Yeah. Mary Beth Peel, she plays Grahams.

Speaker 5 (20:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (20:37):
John Wesley's Ship he played Mitch Mary.

Speaker 3 (20:40):
Margaret Humes played Gail Nina, who played Bessie Potter Busy Phillips.
They're reuniting in New York City September twenty second, a
live reading of the show's nineteen ninety eight pilot episode.

Speaker 4 (20:52):
Cool.

Speaker 3 (20:54):
Not something i'd necessarily pay, but for a charity, I
hope other things.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
When you first said they were reuniting, I don't want
to give us spoiler, but if you're a fan of
Dawson's Creek, we know how it ends, and one of
those characters meets their end in the last episode.

Speaker 5 (21:08):
So I was like, I don't know how they're gonna
pull that one off.

Speaker 3 (21:11):
Vanderbeek diagnosed with stage three colorectal cancer in twenty twenty three.
He didn't share until November twenty twenty four, So they're
doing it for him, and that's super cool, super super cool.
What you got.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
Paris Hilton has a new kids show that I was
ready for a reaction.

Speaker 5 (21:27):
I was like, oh yeah, yeah. It took a minute
or process.

Speaker 3 (21:30):
It's like seeing you know, Ooop Doog do the kid
show too, or ice Cube doing the family movies. Yeah,
actually be there yet, right, or those movies, and.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
All of a sudden you're like, oh, okay, that's like
an next generation for them.

Speaker 4 (21:42):
We can all reinvent ourselves. People. You can always re yourself.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
So it's gonna premiere on YouTube on September twenty third.
It's an animated children's show called Paris and Pups, and
it's about a twelve year old girl named Star and
all of her five dogs that she has in the
adventures of them.

Speaker 5 (21:59):
She does not voice the character, but she does sing
the theme.

Speaker 4 (22:02):
Song, well that's hot, Well yeah, don't you.

Speaker 5 (22:06):
Know she had that one hit, the Starsko Blind song.

Speaker 4 (22:09):
Wow was it a hit hit?

Speaker 5 (22:10):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (22:10):
It was this discontinued items that just you want them back,
you miss them seven or four five, seven oh one
of seven nine.

Speaker 4 (22:17):
It started because you.

Speaker 1 (22:18):
Can't find actually the audacity of a brand to get
you hooked on an item, to show you how amazing
it is for them to only rip it away from you,
and then the next thing you know, you can't find
it and you're scouring the internet late at night for
a hush puppy mall Walker two because put the most
support of any sneaker or tennis shoe that you have

(22:38):
ever worn.

Speaker 5 (22:39):
And apparently they were discontinued in twenty twenty two.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
And I will tell you right now, if I had
known that was gonna happen, I would have taken out
a credit card and bought ten pairs to get me
through life.

Speaker 4 (22:51):
You know why they discontinued because I.

Speaker 5 (22:52):
Was the only one wearing them.

Speaker 3 (22:53):
Apparently the other people that were wearing them all died,
so they locker shoe they demo all died very well.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
I do have the foot of quite an elderly woman
or maybe a man.

Speaker 5 (23:08):
I'm not sure. It's very wide.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
But they did this whole rebranch relaunch thing in twenty
nineteen where they put them in fun colors.

Speaker 5 (23:16):
And so I have the silver pair.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
But at the time they were like one hundred and
nine dollars and that's a lot of money for a shoe.
I bought one pair and then they were so good
I bought a second pair, and I did buy the
Velcrow model.

Speaker 5 (23:30):
The Velcrow did not.

Speaker 4 (23:31):
They all died off.

Speaker 5 (23:33):
But they were bright colors.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
They were bright and shoes were the average person's age
is eighty, right, you know they need to.

Speaker 6 (23:40):
Be bright colors because they're dementia patients who you need
to be able to find them.

Speaker 5 (23:44):
Well, I also need help finding my shoe.

Speaker 1 (23:46):
But they were the best. They gave my foot support
I had. I had a good toe box happening, but
the all support was there.

Speaker 4 (23:53):
Crazy.

Speaker 1 (23:54):
I could walk for days in these shoes. And I
was on Posh Market and e Bay. I was looking
for anybody. They're gone, They're gone, We're gone.

Speaker 5 (24:07):
They took them away? Was there?

Speaker 4 (24:08):
What?

Speaker 5 (24:08):
What?

Speaker 7 (24:09):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (24:09):
What's the height on the You miss?

Speaker 5 (24:11):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (24:11):
A butterfinger bebees? Don't remember that. They're like little maltballs
butter fingers.

Speaker 5 (24:16):
They still butterf But you remember I part Simpson did
the commercials.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
Yeah, right, I don't don't my butterfinger.

Speaker 4 (24:23):
Baby or whatever. Okay, what was your food item?

Speaker 1 (24:26):
Mineus the candy corn oreos because I never got to
experience them.

Speaker 5 (24:29):
They came out one year. It was the year that
I was pregnant.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
Of course, I had gestational diabetes and I wouldn't sheat
on the diet at all, and so I wanted to
try them so badly. I bought a pack at Target,
sat in the parking lot and smelled them for thirty
minutes and then made my husband throw them away so
that I wouldn't be tempted with them in the house.
And I said, next year, I'm going to get these
and I'm going to try them.

Speaker 5 (24:50):
And you know what happened. They never came back.

Speaker 4 (24:53):
I never never.

Speaker 3 (24:54):
I mean, you say it exists somewhere, but the when
the McDonald's fried apple someplace, but I gotta find it.
But in general, you're not gonna find them, right And
now they're baked, and I want to it's a treat
for me.

Speaker 4 (25:09):
Get baked.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
You get the baked one, and I'll just bring my
fried addy over and drop it in.

Speaker 5 (25:14):
We'll make some magic.

Speaker 3 (25:17):
Is there an item or items that have been discontinued
that you're wishing would come back seven O four five
seven one seven nine.

Speaker 4 (25:26):
Somebody had put serge.

Speaker 3 (25:28):
Yeah, that would be on my list, but I think
with all the energy drinks we have now, it.

Speaker 5 (25:32):
Was the original one.

Speaker 4 (25:33):
I like that taste. Really, it was a special like
a flavor.

Speaker 5 (25:36):
Yeah, I've had it. I've had a jolt. I never
had jolt. I remember it, which was like a danger
mountain dew. I don't even know. It had like a
mountain dew taste, but with more a little bit.

Speaker 4 (25:46):
Yeah. Yeah, it was like citrusy like I.

Speaker 6 (25:49):
Don't know, it smelt it or tasted a little uh
like nuclear maybe, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (25:53):
And your parents didn't Wan should have it for sure,
and that's why it was so good. But now you
have high schoolers down in Red Bull or whatever. Yeah, yeah,
Morning Mix Matt Harrison, Liz Luda and there's your TJ
play along at home with pick two.

Speaker 1 (26:05):
Yeah, so you get to pick two. I'm going to
give you five options. Obviously this is all hypothetical, but
it's fun. Not real, it's not it's not, but it's
fun to think, like, what would you pick in this scenario?
And your first option is that your dream job calls
with an incredible offer. And it's not like you've been
applying or you've been no. Just out of nowhere. They

(26:25):
just call you and they say, hello, we're your dream job.
We're going to give you dream money and a dream
opportunity for everything you've ever wanted professionally.

Speaker 4 (26:32):
I have it right now.

Speaker 5 (26:33):
That's what I was doing. I have it, just not
the dream money.

Speaker 3 (26:36):
Yeah, there you go, or yeah, or security that's.

Speaker 5 (26:40):
What I thought. I was like, I'm I'm not going
to even be tempted by that one. Now.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
There would have been other points in my life where
I would have been tempted, but not now.

Speaker 4 (26:46):
You know what matters?

Speaker 3 (26:47):
Uh, But I guess I don't get to ask. That's
the thing. Is it how long.

Speaker 4 (26:51):
Is it for?

Speaker 5 (26:52):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (26:53):
You indeed that job for the rest of life? Or
are you like on a week to week contractor true?
That changes everything big time.

Speaker 4 (27:00):
Who knows what.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
Would have happened if you would have got what was it,
Celebrity Jeopardy, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (27:04):
For that one time, you know, uh yeah, yeah, no,
rock and Roll Jeopardy, Yeah, rock and.

Speaker 5 (27:08):
Rock Jeopardy Jeopardy.

Speaker 4 (27:09):
Yeah. For all we know, you could be one survivor
right now. Damn Jeff Ropes.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
The second option is you can time travel, but the
only time travel you can do is to give your
younger self advice.

Speaker 3 (27:19):
That's a good one. That is a good one, Okay,
But the thing is.

Speaker 5 (27:23):
I wouldn't have listened, so it's not on void.

Speaker 3 (27:25):
I would listen ause it'd be like so freaked out.
I would like to think that I would listen to
like whoa, what right? What is happening right now?

Speaker 6 (27:31):
Yeah, I'd go back to myself and be like, hey,
look how terrible you turned out.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
You can fix this? Yeah, I mean, I mean the
butterfly effect. It might change a lot of other things too.
But yeah, if I could have, if I would listen,
which I hope that I would, there's some mistakes I
would prefer not to have made.

Speaker 4 (27:49):
Okay, go ahead, all right.

Speaker 5 (27:50):
Number three, All your shoes feel comfortable.

Speaker 6 (27:53):
But you you're the only one stand Definitely not picking
I am taking that one.

Speaker 5 (27:57):
That is my first pick off the.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
List, although a lot of parents would pick that for
their kids.

Speaker 4 (28:01):
Oh yeah, that the socks and shoes don't bother kid?

Speaker 1 (28:06):
Yeah that that line is always perfectly on top of
your toes and not rubbing in correct, you if.

Speaker 4 (28:12):
You had young kids, you might pick that over everything,
so you would do the.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
Time travel to go back and tell yourself, the new
socks are coming, I've picked them. Your best body with
zero effort, and that means in shape, healthy, all the things,
eat whatever you want, live the whatever lifestyle.

Speaker 3 (28:29):
Because when you say, well, say again, I don't know
if I can ask questions, but I'm assuming does the
best body to come with health or you just look at.

Speaker 1 (28:35):
It means health inside you've ever had though, so how
much hard work you did, so it's not like you're
gonna wake.

Speaker 4 (28:43):
Up, Oh the best body you've ever had.

Speaker 5 (28:45):
Yeah, oh that's not even that great.

Speaker 3 (28:48):
Come on, I thought it was like a perfect body, right, yeah, okay,
that's that's still my twenty something body or whatever, right,
with no effort, that's.

Speaker 5 (28:57):
The big thing.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
I have the ability to lose weight, but maintaining weight
loss that's where it gets hard. So okay, I'm picking
that one. By the way, just have the health. I want,
good shoes and healthy body.

Speaker 4 (29:08):
That's good. Okay.

Speaker 5 (29:09):
I am an old person trapped inside here, right all
of them? Nope.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
The last one is you can read minds, but only
when you want to. So You're not constantly being inundated
with other people's thoughts floating into your brain.

Speaker 5 (29:20):
It's just when you want to turn it on and off.

Speaker 4 (29:25):
I think read minds is a definite.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
Because like negotiation, like you notice a high number anything
with a low number if you're like buying something expensive,
like how cheap could I get this washer?

Speaker 3 (29:36):
What's this person thinking right now about right? Or what
does this lady like it? I don't know read minds
my kids minds?

Speaker 5 (29:45):
Right, I don't want that. That seems like a dangerous
But it's.

Speaker 3 (29:47):
Only when you want to though, so I could also
be along with it, wrapping a mental issue right now,
I can help them or whatever. Oh yeah, yeah, dream
job if it came with security, that's number one. Uh uh,
time travel and give advice, Like you said, would I
listen and then.

Speaker 5 (30:07):
Would you create a worse world golf today?

Speaker 4 (30:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (30:09):
Health, health of some I'm.

Speaker 3 (30:11):
Gonna take the health with the best body, and then
I'm gonna I have my dream job if the if
the bosses are.

Speaker 4 (30:17):
Listening, yeah I do.

Speaker 5 (30:19):
I have my dream job.

Speaker 4 (30:20):
The best body and read mind.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
In the morning, it's the morning mixed with Matt Harrison, Liz.

Speaker 3 (30:26):
Lude Hold on, Liz, here's the headline Wall Street Journals.
They're a boomer if you wear leggings.

Speaker 5 (30:36):
Oh listen, I'm not giving them up.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
They give them up in the late nineties, early two thousands.
I actually got dress coded for them. In two thousand
and one, I was in the seventh grade. I got
sent home because they were considered spandex pants.

Speaker 5 (30:50):
And you know what didn't stop me. I kept going.
I kept going, and.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
I refused to give them up. And I've got enough
of them in my collection.

Speaker 3 (30:58):
They'll take me to the boomer. Not even a film
used to be an elder millennial.

Speaker 5 (31:02):
I am not a geriatric millennial. I am on the younger.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
You're in high school in two thousand and one, I
am basically I was not in high school in two
thousand and one. That is the middle school years. I
am almost a cusper for gen Z, thank you very much. Sure?

Speaker 3 (31:16):
Sure after twenty years is the raining workout where the
stretchy fitted bottoms are losing around the baggy styles that
gen Z wears, the black Lululemon stretchy pants.

Speaker 4 (31:26):
Well you probably didn't go that expensive.

Speaker 7 (31:28):
But the.

Speaker 3 (31:30):
Whole time, how there you? Because you've told me you don't.
You don't spend money on No, I'm just too.

Speaker 5 (31:36):
Fat for that part. It's not that I'm not classy enough.

Speaker 3 (31:39):
Okay, well maybe Lassie, Yeah, maybe not Lululemon, Lulu Cravy.

Speaker 4 (31:48):
No, you're not that big. I'm just or a big
at all. Anyways, I did that at all.

Speaker 3 (31:53):
Oh, so, they they're the the it's more of a
like the nineteen nineties. Think of the nineteen nineties dancers, tinytops, loose,
swishy parachute pants.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
I wear the.

Speaker 5 (32:03):
Parachute pants like what I have on tonight today. These
are night ye.

Speaker 4 (32:07):
There they are. There you go.

Speaker 1 (32:08):
I wear voluminous pants as well.

Speaker 5 (32:10):
I don't discriminate.

Speaker 4 (32:11):
There was some.

Speaker 3 (32:14):
Fashion like big report was titled the Death of Leggings,
and leggings have noted a substantial drop over the past
three years. Twenty twenty two, leggings responsible of forty six
point nine at leisure wear bottoms, and this year it's
down about thirty eight percent and dropping fast. In fact,

(32:36):
the people like the Lula Lemons and all those people
are starting to design a little.

Speaker 5 (32:41):
Flare on the bottom. Now.

Speaker 1 (32:42):
I like the ones that are still fitted, not a
yoga pant, because a yoga pant fits different, especially if
it has the fold over band tight now yet, But
I do appreciate the ones that are like leggings with
a little bit of flare. And it's because it hides
my Canklessually in a legging, I have to wear.

Speaker 5 (32:56):
A higher boot, you know what I mean to hide that.
So it's got the little flare.

Speaker 1 (33:01):
I can still wear my crocs and get away with it.

Speaker 4 (33:02):
There you go.

Speaker 3 (33:03):
Well, leggings became part of the every woman wardrobe. Early
two thousands, the Museum of Modern Art featured Lululemon yoga pants.
They were first developing ninety eight, and in twenty seventeen
the Museum of Art put it in as the most
influential one of the most influential fashion items from the
two thousands.

Speaker 1 (33:21):
I'd also like to share that I'm one of those
people that fought hard. I fought hard for all of
us when they were like, leggings aren't pants. You should
wear it with a tunic, And I said, no, you're
gonna see my butt cheeks. I'm one hundred sure with this,
and I don't care what anybody's got to say.

Speaker 4 (33:37):
Well, I fought for us.

Speaker 5 (33:39):
To have these leggings.

Speaker 4 (33:40):
Don't you want to appreciate it?

Speaker 1 (33:42):
Now I will bring the fight back again. You will
see the publics wherever walking around with.

Speaker 5 (33:49):
My butt out and I'm going to do it because
I'm doing it for you.

Speaker 4 (33:52):
And the guy leggings Are they out too?

Speaker 3 (33:54):
I want?

Speaker 5 (33:55):
My husband never got into them. Were they ever in?
I don't know? I mean, yeah, I like football players,
like you know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (34:02):
Like, I mean I know people that had them and
they still sell them. I see them advertised all the time.

Speaker 1 (34:06):
Yeah, but they were more of like an athletic thing
versus lakings are just there.

Speaker 4 (34:10):
For everybody they want to. Yeah, put the baggy pants.

Speaker 3 (34:13):
I mean I used to have a pair of couple
pairs of parachute pants, which is really sad but true.

Speaker 5 (34:18):
Why is it sad yet? Again? Look at my pants today?

Speaker 4 (34:21):
That was a guy. I'm a guy too, Like, yeah, yeah,
it is sad. Your pants.

Speaker 3 (34:27):
Morning mixed Matt Harris list ludaprous TJ. I'm surprised by this.
The average American drops their phone how many times a year?
And I told jump surprize, so you'll probably guess pumping in.

Speaker 5 (34:37):
Just like randomly walking down they drops it.

Speaker 4 (34:39):
Yeah, ten times.

Speaker 5 (34:41):
Yeah maybe really?

Speaker 3 (34:42):
Yeah, it is ten I thought when I first read this,
Oh yeah, I dropp it ten times a day. I
thought a day, Oh I dropped my phone. I wouldn't
say ten times a David three to five times a day?

Speaker 4 (34:53):
Wow, I drop it.

Speaker 5 (34:54):
You drop a lot of things though. You forget your thing, bro.

Speaker 4 (34:56):
Yeah, I mean some of it is like running it.

Speaker 3 (34:59):
Don't put it in my pack well and it falls
out or it's on top of my card. It's not
a the doorfall. Yeah, you don't drop it at least
once a day? No, really, what am I doing wrong?

Speaker 4 (35:08):
Okay?

Speaker 3 (35:08):
So anyway I forget, I'm holding it and I just
drop it. A third of people have said they've cried
because their phone broke.

Speaker 5 (35:17):
I cried for that. Definitely, not my kid has Yeah,
you have uh some to replace.

Speaker 1 (35:22):
Yeah, I'll be like no, and then you're mad because
you're like, this is one hundred percent my fault.

Speaker 4 (35:26):
Yeah, usually it is. Yeah, So then you do that.

Speaker 5 (35:28):
Whole like blaming yourself, Like, no, would.

Speaker 3 (35:30):
You rather use your wallet or your phone? I mean
I assume you. I assume in a wallet is a
credit card at ATM and a license.

Speaker 5 (35:39):
Oh, I'd rather lose my phone.

Speaker 1 (35:40):
I think I'd rather lose my wallet because I can
turn off my cards on my phone. It's like my
bank cops, so nobody's gonna I don't carry cossh oh.

Speaker 3 (35:50):
I wouldn't worry about them using my phone for something
or getting it open. I'd just be I don't have
a phone for hover long it takes.

Speaker 1 (35:56):
I just mean, if I drop my wallet, it's easier
for me to replace the cards because I can just
turn them off, so nobody's gonna get money out of me.
They might get my license.

Speaker 3 (36:04):
Ye, I think it's a pain, though I think i'd
rather the license is the hardest. I'd rather use the
wallet rather lose the wallet, because I don't want to
be without a phone for however long it takes to
get a phone.

Speaker 1 (36:12):
That true?

Speaker 4 (36:13):
Yeah? Yeah uh.

Speaker 3 (36:14):
Twenty five percent said breaking their phone would be more
upsetting than crashing their car.

Speaker 4 (36:18):
WHOA, no, come off about this?

Speaker 3 (36:20):
Twenty five percent that would be more upsetting than losing
their child in a supermarket.

Speaker 5 (36:24):
What I mean?

Speaker 3 (36:26):
But I mean they probably don't mean lose them. Lose
them probably like where the hell is little Jady?

Speaker 5 (36:30):
Yeah? They were just on now three Now they're on now.

Speaker 4 (36:33):
If it was that temporary feeling, yeah, sure of course.

Speaker 3 (36:35):
Yeah, no, the temporary feeling you'll lose your child versus
actually losing your phone.

Speaker 5 (36:41):
I would rather keep my child.

Speaker 4 (36:43):
That's five second panic where you're like, where are they?
I've had that before. You get over it. Are older,
They're not really lost. They were younger at one point.

Speaker 5 (36:52):
Maybe you just lost them enough times they lost me.

Speaker 3 (36:56):
Uh, the adult in the situation. Yeah, okay, that's always
the way you wandered off.

Speaker 5 (37:02):
Okay, So would you do these.

Speaker 3 (37:03):
Things dive into a pool fully clothed at a wedding
to save your phone?

Speaker 6 (37:08):
No, no, but only because it's probably gonna be ruined anyway.

Speaker 3 (37:14):
Maybe not, but also at the wedding that now, what
do I do? Like, I I gotta leave the wedding,
So yeah, I'm not doing it.

Speaker 1 (37:20):
Then you're taking the attention from the bride. And then
what kind of water are we talking about?

Speaker 5 (37:23):
Like a swimming pool? With talking about a fount?

Speaker 6 (37:25):
Now, I'm definitely looking for the net, the long pole
net that I can like scoop it out.

Speaker 5 (37:30):
I would do it at someone's house, Oh yeah, definitely, because.

Speaker 4 (37:33):
I got a trade your clothes, assuming I get a
change of clothes. Right.

Speaker 3 (37:36):
Yeah, yeah, But my daughter this summer dropped her phone
and a pool got it out.

Speaker 5 (37:43):
It worked, all right, Just shout out to that we
have entered the future.

Speaker 3 (37:48):
Would you climb into a dumpster to find your phone
if you drop your phone in dumb.

Speaker 5 (37:51):
It depends on how wet the dumpster is.

Speaker 3 (37:53):
Yeah, let's say it's wet. Let's say its outside a restaurant.
I'm definitely in.

Speaker 1 (37:58):
If it's it's like out behind, like like like a
TJ Max and it's like dry goods or something, I'd
go after.

Speaker 3 (38:05):
That it's a grocery store or a restaurant or no,
one hundred percent you'll probably go in. Fifty six percent
said yes. By the way, I didn't tell you that
sixty percent of people would jump in the pool. Would
you reach down to uh, well, let me do this
one first. But you missed an international flight?

Speaker 5 (38:20):
Oh yeah, phone. I think because you're now you're it,
you're probably gonna need it.

Speaker 6 (38:23):
Yeah, it might be hard to get a phone at
international right and Google translate.

Speaker 4 (38:27):
Half of people would do that. I think I'd I
think I think I would miss the flight.

Speaker 5 (38:31):
I would miss the fight.

Speaker 4 (38:32):
It depends when's my next flight? I said a day.

Speaker 3 (38:34):
If you're but you're not taking a trip, you lose
a day of vacation. Maybe yeah, tough one, but.

Speaker 6 (38:39):
Not having the phone that could cause so many other problems.

Speaker 4 (38:42):
Would you climb onto subway tracks?

Speaker 5 (38:44):
Never? They would absolutely not.

Speaker 1 (38:48):
Really, I'm more like forty.

Speaker 5 (38:51):
Percent people do that, Like, you shouldn't do that. No,
you shouldn't.

Speaker 4 (38:56):
But what are the chance to get electrocuted? Careful?

Speaker 1 (38:58):
Right?

Speaker 4 (38:58):
Not that?

Speaker 1 (38:59):
Yeah, how careful are you gonna be? You're jumping in
some tracks? Like I.

Speaker 4 (39:04):
Price is not higher than I'll be honest.

Speaker 5 (39:06):
Yeah, I think I think I would do that. Absolutely not.

Speaker 4 (39:08):
I'd be on that.

Speaker 1 (39:09):
There's a train that could potentially come. You could get electrocuted.
There's also the initial jump itself, like what is wrong
with you?

Speaker 3 (39:15):
And finally, we should reach into a porta potty at
a big music festival, fifty four percent of people would.

Speaker 6 (39:20):
Oh yeah, DJ had a good question. Day one, maybe
day three or four? No way, but the.

Speaker 4 (39:27):
Pile might be high enough you don't have to reach
it far.

Speaker 5 (39:29):
Oh my god, no, no, no, it's all of that.

Speaker 4 (39:35):
I'm definitely reaching in.

Speaker 6 (39:36):
I'm definitely reaching early in this. If I can see it.
I'm grabbing it. Yeah, probably morning.

Speaker 3 (39:42):
Morning mixed man, Harris Liz Luda. You had a big
accomplishment yesterday.

Speaker 5 (39:46):
I graduated physical therapy.

Speaker 4 (39:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (39:50):
I didn't know I was going to until I got there,
and so it's a little it's a little mixed emotions.

Speaker 3 (39:55):
Yeah, you know, you tell them what you mean. You
got to explain why you're in physical therapy.

Speaker 1 (39:59):
So I must shock survivor. I was in the ICU
two years ago. It was a really bad, scary thing,
and of the medication they put me on it just
kind of messed with some stuff long term that I
wasn't able to fix on my own. And so like
the left side of my body's just substantially weaker than
my right. And then I didn't know it wasn't normal
to fall like six times a week. Apparently that's what

(40:20):
I number. And so they put me in physical therapy
to work on like my core strength and to help
me have less tumbles and then you know, do things
like use my hands. I know, I didn't know until
I got in there because I was just because I've
always walked right. So when I got out, like obviously

(40:42):
stamina was an issue, but I would just push myself
and I would just kind of, I guess, clumsily move
my feet like.

Speaker 5 (40:47):
I thought I was supposed to.

Speaker 1 (40:49):
And it wasn't until I went to physical therapy where
they like put a post it note on the floor
and they told me, hey, can you touch it with
your toe? And I was like absolutely, and it turned
out in fact I could not, and.

Speaker 4 (40:59):
So I had to start doing your right to your foot.

Speaker 1 (41:03):
Yeah, and so I was having a hard time, like
if you say left hand, do this, right hand.

Speaker 4 (41:07):
Do that, Like twister would be terrible.

Speaker 5 (41:09):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (41:11):
So that was a large part of the physical therapy
was that and then making sure that I can go
up and downstairs, which I've gotten substantially better at.

Speaker 3 (41:17):
How long were you in for three months? And then
yesterday what they say.

Speaker 1 (41:21):
They I come back in three months for another evaluation.
But right at this point, I have so many exercises
that I've been consistently doing and I've shown so much
improvement that Insurance is kicking me out.

Speaker 5 (41:36):
Like when I started, they give like a.

Speaker 1 (41:39):
Six minute timer and I could only get like nine
hundred steps in in six minutes, and yesterday I think
it was like fourteen forty three.

Speaker 5 (41:49):
That's a big difference.

Speaker 1 (41:51):
Yeah, So doing stuff like that and I've gotten better
about you know, this is where my left foot goes,
this is where my right foot.

Speaker 4 (41:57):
Goes, and home exercises. Are you good at that?

Speaker 5 (41:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (41:59):
I do?

Speaker 4 (42:00):
Ye yeah yeah, because a lot.

Speaker 3 (42:01):
Of people in rehab you're talking to enough therapist and
stuff and they'll be like they only do it for
the one hour they cry here and I get you
do so much, right, Yeah, you're good at that.

Speaker 4 (42:09):
That's what's that's why it's working for you.

Speaker 1 (42:11):
And that's why they are like, Okay, we're going to
come back and evaluate you again in three months.

Speaker 4 (42:15):
So how do you feel about this?

Speaker 5 (42:16):
I am a little.

Speaker 1 (42:18):
Nervous, gonna be honest, because they also had some stuff
that I can't necessarily do at home, Like they have
some different equipment that I was like, I'm really going
to miss that.

Speaker 7 (42:26):
But.

Speaker 5 (42:28):
Yeah, it goes.

Speaker 4 (42:29):
But one are the mixed emotions.

Speaker 1 (42:31):
Like it's scary because I'm like, I don't think I'm
well enough yet.

Speaker 4 (42:34):
Does that make sense?

Speaker 5 (42:36):
Because like you have this.

Speaker 1 (42:37):
Idea that you're like gonna feel exactly like you felt
before you got sick, and that's been the hardest thing
for me in my recovery process over the past two
years is accepting a new version of normal because I'm
never going to be like an athletic beast, you know
what I mean, Like I can work to keep getting better.

Speaker 3 (42:54):
The problem is was therapy at it's kind of a
you know, occupational physical therapy. The thought your mind is
always like I need bigger like steps forward. Yeah, and
when you're doing such small innchormags, it doesn't seem like
it's you know, it doesn't seem like you're accomplishing much,
but you are.

Speaker 5 (43:09):
Yeah, absolutely, you know what I mean. And so the
idea of like.

Speaker 1 (43:12):
I thought, you know, yeah you get a gold star
or something like that.

Speaker 5 (43:18):
No, No, I don't think i e.

Speaker 3 (43:21):
No, thanks for starting your day with The Morning, Miss.

Speaker 2 (43:25):
It's The Morning mixed with Matt Harrison, Liz Luda.

Speaker 3 (43:27):
No, here's your latest pop up d powered by Mark
Spain Real Estate. And you love the Dawson's Creek Liz Luda,
I don't want to wait. We'll be back together on
stage for the first time since the show wrapped in
two thousand and three one night only charity event benefit
f Cancer and Dawson's Creek. Alum James Vanderbeek, I got

(43:48):
Vanderbiek will be there, Michelle Williams will be there, Katie
Holmes will be there, Joshua Jackson.

Speaker 4 (43:52):
Will be there. Busy Phillips will be there.

Speaker 3 (43:56):
It's in New York City on September twenty second for
a live reading of the show's nineteen ninety eight pilot episode. Vanderbeek,
diagnosed with state three colorectal cancer twenty twenty three, did
not publicly share that until November twenty twenty four.

Speaker 4 (44:09):
But that is really cool. Yeah, yeah, that'd be cool.
I can imagine.

Speaker 3 (44:13):
I'm starting to think about shows that would be cool
to see him reading the script. Yeah, you would want
it to be like a sitcom's gonna be quick, though
it's so twenty minutes.

Speaker 6 (44:20):
I think that would be better though, Yeah, generally just
because just the laughs, you know, like you feel the
chemistry a little better. That's true in a comedy versus yeah,
a dramatic teen drama.

Speaker 5 (44:32):
Yeah, that is true.

Speaker 4 (44:33):
That is a point.

Speaker 1 (44:34):
The pilot was good, don't get me wrong. I wish
they would have chosen a better episode, though.

Speaker 3 (44:37):
Yeah, for sure, Well they did the I don't know
as yeah, yeah they did. The pilot I thought was
the first episode, which sometimes not the pilot, So yeah,
you would just say, like maybe one of the more
famous ones.

Speaker 1 (44:45):
Yeah, I'd like to go somewhere in the second season.

Speaker 5 (44:47):
Maybe you know what I mean, dive deep there. Okay,
we'll work on it, but I'll accept it.

Speaker 4 (44:51):
You know.

Speaker 1 (44:51):
Maybe if it goes well, they'll do the second episode,
then the third, than the fourth.

Speaker 5 (44:55):
Maybe we could just do a whole stage show.

Speaker 4 (44:56):
Whole stage show.

Speaker 1 (44:58):
Yeah, this I should do with like casts of shows
that are all like the actors looking for work now,
they should just bring them all together and be like,
we're gonna just lean into what works.

Speaker 3 (45:06):
No, no, no, I don't think it would perfect. Strangers
the stage, but you're.

Speaker 5 (45:13):
Like, pasty, how old are you now? And you're still.

Speaker 4 (45:15):
Okay, Balkie, you can't be serious. What do you have?

Speaker 1 (45:19):
Dolly Parton so delicious because she's got her own Coca
Cola flavor now, which I think is really cool.

Speaker 5 (45:24):
It's called fortieth.

Speaker 1 (45:25):
Pop Fizz and it's to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of Dollywood,
which is turning forty next year. And they said it's
got like a creamy cherry taste, so kind of like
a cherry cola cherry vanilla cola.

Speaker 5 (45:37):
But you're gonna have to go to Pigeon.

Speaker 1 (45:39):
Forge, Tennessee if you want it, because that it's only
going to be for sale inside of Dollywood House.

Speaker 4 (45:46):
You haven't gone yet this year.

Speaker 5 (45:48):
I've never actually been to Dollywood.

Speaker 3 (45:49):
Have it?

Speaker 5 (45:50):
You should love it with all your love?

Speaker 4 (45:51):
And you want to giant Dolly T shirt today?

Speaker 1 (45:53):
I know, I know, I just I never have gotten
the opportunity.

Speaker 4 (45:58):
You've gotten the opportunity you try you love.

Speaker 1 (46:01):
Yeah, no, I know, but I just like in the
scheme of like life and the way things have always
worked out, like I just haven't.

Speaker 5 (46:07):
I haven't had the opportunity to go.

Speaker 3 (46:08):
Are you gonna go this Christmas? Go make a plan? Pickles?
You love them, don't you so much? Generally they did
this instacart survey or whatever and for whatever reason, highest
rate of pickle orders North and.

Speaker 4 (46:21):
South Dakota huh.

Speaker 3 (46:22):
Dakotas love their pickles, generally, Pickles most popular in the
middle of the country. Wisconsin is third after the Dakota
is called by Iowa, West, Virginia, ver mom Mississippi, Minnesota,
and the state least in the pickles Florida, then Hawaii.

Speaker 5 (46:37):
Watching their sodium in Florida.

Speaker 3 (46:39):
Very true Hawaiian, then Cali, Carolina is both of north
and south right smack dab in the middle, right in
the middle.

Speaker 5 (46:46):
Of Motiva, close to the top. That's what I would
have thought.

Speaker 1 (46:50):
Well, we have mount Olive, you know what I mean,
they make a delicious pickles.

Speaker 5 (46:53):
We've got that.

Speaker 1 (46:53):
But I think a lot of people in this area
we make our own pickles, and so we're not love
eating really of pickles because we're pickling at home.

Speaker 5 (47:01):
I don't know anything pickle. I don't know anybody either.

Speaker 4 (47:04):
Yeah, pickle pickles. I mean you make.

Speaker 1 (47:05):
Pickles, Yeah, Like I reuse the pickle juice, and I
like create other pickled items.

Speaker 4 (47:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (47:10):
But do you know I make pickled eggs all the time.

Speaker 4 (47:11):
Yeah, but don't count that as pickles.

Speaker 1 (47:13):
Well no, but I'm just saying, like I am, I'm
clearly pickling in my pickler.

Speaker 3 (47:17):
The top brands nationwide mount Olive, lassek Clawson, Oh Snap,
don't know that.

Speaker 4 (47:22):
And Grillo's Pickles.

Speaker 1 (47:24):
Yeah, people are passionate about Grillos. They just did that
collaboration with Sonic.

Speaker 2 (47:28):
Rub in the morning. It's a morning mixed with Matt Harrison,
Liz Ludo.

Speaker 3 (47:34):
Buzz dother think on the pettiest reasons people have stopped
hooking up with somebody broke up with them, whatever, and
I think they sain petty, but you might be uh
on board?

Speaker 4 (47:43):
Well what do you?

Speaker 3 (47:44):
I think this might apply to you, Liz, but not specifically,
but you get the idea. She got mad that I
never viewed her Instagram stories. I did, just didn't use Instagram.
It's not my thing. Would you be bothered if so somebody,
I'll tell you what yours is. You're like, oh, here's
a picture of so and so or something. If the
person said, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (48:02):
If you don't invest in things that are important to me,
So if that was important to her, then yeah, then
I understand that.

Speaker 3 (48:07):
But he's like, I'm not on Instagram, but I so, yeah,
I don't know if I.

Speaker 1 (48:12):
Yeah, that wouldn't have affected me. But like if you
changed it to something that was important to me, yeah,
or you know, because like when I'm at my husband,
you know, social media.

Speaker 3 (48:20):
Yeah, the he okay, this would be I would consider it.
They had their last name tattooed across their back.

Speaker 5 (48:28):
Oh I told you, Yeah, that's that's a no go.

Speaker 4 (48:30):
That's rough.

Speaker 3 (48:31):
But what if they said, he listened, it was ten
years ago, I was an idiot, blah blah blah.

Speaker 6 (48:35):
You can you can explain yourself out of it, I
would imagine if you.

Speaker 4 (48:39):
But you have to have that approach. You can't be like,
look how cool this is?

Speaker 5 (48:41):
Yeah definitely.

Speaker 6 (48:43):
Actually if you say that about any of your tattoos unless.

Speaker 5 (48:46):
Your brand new too.

Speaker 6 (48:48):
Yeah, but they'll be like, hey, look how cool my
tattoo I got? You I got that's a red flag.
I feel like you're not a real tatt person either, right,
because they don't do like that.

Speaker 4 (48:56):
Yeah like that, Yeah you have.

Speaker 5 (48:57):
A lot though you've pought eleven yeah, something.

Speaker 3 (48:59):
Like no, but I mean he's a real bad I say,
A real tat person wouldn't be like, look how awesome this?

Speaker 5 (49:04):
Right?

Speaker 3 (49:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (49:04):
Yeah, yeah, you just come across as like a phony.

Speaker 4 (49:07):
I guess, yeah right right right.

Speaker 1 (49:09):
It's like if you have some temporary tattoos and I've
rolled my sleep up to be like, look how cool
this uniforn is?

Speaker 5 (49:15):
Right, it is a red flag. You're right.

Speaker 3 (49:18):
They never said thanks to anyone. That's an obvious. That's
that's not petty. No, that's not petty at all. They
chew too loud. Oh that's not that's big.

Speaker 5 (49:26):
It's a habit that's not going to change.

Speaker 3 (49:28):
Right at the point, Oh, talk NonStop? I was trying
to watch a show or movie?

Speaker 5 (49:33):
How dare they? That is absolutely I'm.

Speaker 4 (49:35):
Not sure that can change either. That may be.

Speaker 1 (49:37):
Oh, it won't change, and you should embrace it because
it's magical.

Speaker 4 (49:39):
Oh you do it.

Speaker 5 (49:40):
I talked to him. What's the longest you've ever heard
me be quiet?

Speaker 3 (49:43):
That's true, but I block it out so well, don't
even do it during a movie or TV show.

Speaker 5 (49:48):
Yeah, I will too. I'm bad at a theater. Oh,
it depends on how full the theater is.

Speaker 3 (49:54):
Like, yeah, that's insane. Like you can't just watch a
show or a movie or something. I mean, yeah, one
thing or another, just like say like, oh did you
see that? Or a quick comment maybe at home, but
you're talking throughout it.

Speaker 4 (50:07):
Yeah, oh good lord.

Speaker 5 (50:10):
They also don't ride in the car quiet.

Speaker 4 (50:11):
Oh good lord.

Speaker 1 (50:12):
So, like, if you're on a road trip with me,
this unless I fall asleep, which is your your best
case scenario?

Speaker 5 (50:18):
I guess it's six hours of non stop chatter.

Speaker 4 (50:20):
I'd be slipping you a mickey.

Speaker 5 (50:24):
This is that it means McDonald's and it would be delicious.

Speaker 3 (50:26):
Yes, baby talk. Yeah, I would definitely break up over
Yeah that's bad. Yeah, that's not I don't think that's
petty at all. No situational morning makes Matt Harris, Liz
ludapnus Er TJ.

Speaker 4 (50:37):
How are we happy at work?

Speaker 5 (50:38):
Have friends?

Speaker 1 (50:40):
Isn't that amazing? That's the secret to happiness in the
workplace is they found like you know, like obviously if
you make more money, blah blah blah blah blah. But
at the end of the day, if you have friends
or camaraderie at work, it makes you happier overall, of course.
And I think that's amazing because for so long there
was like the idea of, uh, these are my friends.

Speaker 5 (50:58):
I just come to work. Business is my business, like
a whole stay.

Speaker 1 (51:01):
Aloof from your coworkers, right, And I think that was
leading to problems.

Speaker 3 (51:06):
If you're too aloof, you don't necessarily have to share it.
You have to know, you have to know the room. Yeah,
but you're sure to not share it just like any
other friend group, because they might not be Well, you're
saying friends I'm assuming that just means you are more
than just coworkers. You're not necessarily in the same Like
you know, you always have that super friend circle that's
like you're the main and then you have the core friends.

Speaker 5 (51:27):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (51:27):
This thing if you're in a job interview and they
say it's like a family here red flag. But once
you start working there, if you do start to feel
like your coworkers are your friends and family, not a
red flag, you enjoy their company.

Speaker 3 (51:40):
I think it's a key, right, Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's
maybe the labels that freaks people out, but if they
enjoy their company, you're talking about things that aren't work
And I.

Speaker 1 (51:48):
Love how diversal workplace can be, you know what I mean.
I remember when I was a waitress. One of my
favorite friends was like I was like an eighteen year old,
like in my freshman year of college, and I think
this guy was like sixty five I've had wasn't account
at a different point in his life and You're just like, hello,
we'll be besties.

Speaker 3 (52:04):
It's the closest resemblance to college, where you meet people
that or from different just everywhere socio economic things.

Speaker 5 (52:12):
Like you know what I mean, Like that's that I
was working with.

Speaker 1 (52:14):
He was a grandpa, like just like the We were
so vastly different that I would have never been friends
with him in any other capacity.

Speaker 5 (52:21):
But the workplace put you there.

Speaker 3 (52:22):
And you're like, oh, but yeah, if you're not enjoying
the people around you, yeah, it's so I haven't. I've
been fortunate in that situation. But I know people who
just they're like, oh, I got to see these people
at work. I hate them, right, And you're horrible lucky,
you know what I mean. You have me and TJ,
and we are amazing.

Speaker 4 (52:39):
You you are he TJ is kidding. I'm kidding. Your
great this is the morning makes
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