Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
In the morning.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
It's a morning mixed with Matt Harrison, Liz Luda.
Speaker 3 (00:04):
Mixt N.
Speaker 4 (00:06):
I gotta find out why Liz's face is the way
it is in a second. But it is a rain
and it's gonna be raining, mostly on and off, another
couple of inches of rain before it's all said and done.
And there's a chance to rain tomorrow as well, and
just about every day this week. But this is the problem,
the heaviest of the week as far as that goes. Uh,
it's only sixty six now, it's gonna be seventy two today,
(00:27):
then seventy five, then eighties by the weekend. H I'll
get to Liz Luda in a second. Her face is weird.
DJ welcome, right, glad to be here. Had a few
days off and he is back. What is going on
with your face?
Speaker 1 (00:40):
There's something sticky all over the counter over here by me,
and I went to move my papers and my hands
slid into the mystery stickiness. Do you see it?
Speaker 3 (00:47):
You can't see it from here.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
I don't know what it is.
Speaker 5 (00:49):
And it's on my hand and it's on the table.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
And I'm trapped because we're talking and I don't know
what to do yes, please end me a light so
al wipe. I don't know. I'm not actually sure, like
every time I come in the morning, which it's fine.
This is a communal area. Stuff is moved and shuffled.
Speaker 4 (01:05):
Does anything coming up from the use the way?
Speaker 5 (01:08):
I mean, it's kind of gross looking.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
But there was like, uh, utensils, and I moved to
the utensils like the fork, the spoon, the knife to
the side, and I had papers that were sitting here
since yesterday, and so I don't know if they moved
my papers, filled some stickiness whoever it may be, and
then put my papers back. It was a surprise moment
as I I don't like sticky things.
Speaker 4 (01:31):
It could be like coffee or something. It felt like
syrup really.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Oh yeah, it felt like syrup or like honey.
Speaker 3 (01:38):
Yeah, STICKI is like the worst.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
Like that feeling my fingers, especially unexpected. So I don't
know if somebody was having waffles or pancakes sitting here yesterday,
But that's that's the vibe it was giving. And now
I'm just going to spend the rest of the morning
trying to pull my life back together. Yeah, my face
is going to look like this though for the rest
of the day.
Speaker 4 (02:00):
When they back in the old radio wacky stunt days,
we had someone completely cover themselves in syrup. Oh god,
I can't like it. Just said like a bathing suit on,
covered up in syrup, and then they had to roll
in a bunch of like breadcrumbs or something.
Speaker 1 (02:16):
To not have sensory issues like no, no, to me,
it was horrifying.
Speaker 4 (02:23):
But I you know, looking back, I don't know what
was the listeners because I thought that was bothered everybody.
But maybe it doesn't.
Speaker 1 (02:28):
It doesn't some people are not bothered by it. But
I'm going to tell you something. When you get mystery
stickiness on your hand, I don't care who you are,
the mystery that bothers you, well, could.
Speaker 4 (02:38):
You like and this guy had to like sit through
three hours of radio show and covered in syrup. Oh yeah,
to me, that's awful.
Speaker 1 (02:45):
There's no way. Even right now, I'm trying to get
you to wrap this up, sun go wash my hands.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
She can't even handle it. She is totally freaking out.
Speaker 4 (02:55):
No, you know, now, Sticky's not fun. Well. Fifth of
August Morny Mcksburthday's Power by Marks Maine Real Estate.
Speaker 1 (03:09):
And we got Jesse Williams starting us off Turning forty four,
who was doctor Jackson Avery on Grey's Anatomy was a
really great character. H One thing though that he's had
an issue with is people still mistake him for a doctor.
And he didn't interview talking about being on a plane.
Speaker 4 (03:25):
Said this before, but I've been on a plane two
different times when they have said is there a doctor
on board? Somebody needs it and they look at me.
Speaker 3 (03:32):
Come on, and I say, the one thing you.
Speaker 4 (03:35):
Know about me for sure is I'm not a doctor. Yeah,
but yet and still exactly.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
I would I would probably look to him as well
because as doctor Jackson Avery, he was saving lives out there.
Speaker 4 (03:48):
You know, I didn't watch it, it was he on
a long time.
Speaker 5 (03:50):
He was on for a fair amount.
Speaker 1 (03:52):
Yeah, there was like a whole I don't want to
give a spoiler alert from ten years ago, just like
a whole love thing. And I know I don't think
his I'm not.
Speaker 4 (04:00):
I just like saying that.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
I haven't watched the last two seasons, but to my knowledge,
he is still alive, but not on the show. Also,
James Gunn is fifty nine Guardians of the Galaxy Superman.
Speaker 5 (04:12):
He's like a director or whatever. Then Silverman is fifty nine.
I know him from Weekend at Bernie's.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
I thought Weekend at Bernie's was like a way bigger
movie than it is because it's one of the random
ones we owned on VHL.
Speaker 4 (04:23):
Big it was a big movie, big? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (04:26):
Really was it okay?
Speaker 1 (04:27):
Because I remember, that's true. I remember referencing it on
the playground as a kid, though, and other people were
not getting it. So kids, Yeah, yeah, in hindsight, maybe
not the best for children.
Speaker 5 (04:42):
Patrick Ewing is sixty three. I'm told he's an NBA legend.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
And then Mariene McCormick is sixty nine, and she was
Marcia on The Brady Bunch.
Speaker 5 (04:52):
And I loved.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
The Brady Bunch growing up. We didn't have that many
channels to choose from, and I would literally stay up
late because it would come on at a eleven PM
and during the summers, I would say so that I
could watch The Brady Bunch. I got so many cultural references,
like when no one else knows who John Glasses or whatever,
the fake boyfriend that Jan and George George Glass. Sorry,
I'm always like, oh sad day. But in honor of that,
(05:16):
here's the Marine McCormick.
Speaker 6 (05:20):
Hey, you guys, you were really sorry.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
Oh let's take a look at it, honey. It's getting
bigger by the minute.
Speaker 3 (05:31):
She said, I think you got to get into a
doctor right away.
Speaker 1 (05:34):
I hope it isn't broken. That's a difference. It goes
my date with Duck. Priorities. Priorities. Oh no, not that
I might have hurt myself.
Speaker 5 (05:43):
Seriously, there goes.
Speaker 4 (05:45):
My date bo Susan Olsen, who played jan I got
hammered with her one time.
Speaker 6 (05:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (05:52):
Yeah, she's pretty wild. It's a good time.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
I don't even know what to say.
Speaker 4 (05:56):
That's a great like right earlier in the morning too.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
Yeah, you just like drop these little things about living
my dreams and then you're like, yeah, then I'm back
out again, all right, Good for you. Also celebrating if
they were alive they are no longer with us, it
would have been Neil Armstrong's birthday.
Speaker 4 (06:12):
I am here man from the planet Earth except for
the moon alive nineteen sixty nine.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
They've got the flag up now and you're can do
the stars. And I just want to say, as a
clear signal, a better service than I've had on my
cell phone occasionally, So I don't know what that's about.
Speaker 4 (06:37):
Everybody's just streaming at the radio.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
Lawyer. Fun fact, when I first met you, I annoyed
you so bad because I tried to I was like,
I think the moon landing's fake, and then I got
bleeding you. Yeah, And so it was like every day
I would drop a moon reference for about a month
and a half. And then I was like, oh, he's
not on the joke. No, I should really tell him.
Speaker 4 (06:59):
I'm just likeous well at this day and age.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
The Morning Mixed. That was a clear signal though Morning.
Speaker 4 (07:07):
Mixed man heirs Liz Luda and there's like thirty almost
forty million views on this content. Creator Body Build Alison
Doyle tism pump the horrifying situation she had to deal with,
at least for some people. She said, my day's we've
been ruined, and she holds the camera while explaining how
she walked into the downstairs bathroom and found a baby
(07:29):
bat in her toilet. Oh which, wow. I tried to
touch it to see if it was alive. Oh no,
not the move, she said, explaining that she would have
been down to fish it out and nurse it back
to health because she likes animals and stuff. Right, I
don't that right, and you know, got a little baby bottle.
I would have done that and feeded milk and whatever
(07:51):
I had to do.
Speaker 1 (07:51):
But uh, yeah, I would not even taken it that far.
Speaker 4 (07:55):
No, what she did, she didn't do it. She said
she would have, but she was poking with her finger, which.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Again, yet again, would not have done that. You close
the lid and you call someone already just flush. Oh
that sounds like a problem that would come back to
the old one.
Speaker 3 (08:10):
But she was dead.
Speaker 4 (08:12):
Uh, she said, this is like the one time I
needed a man. She joked. Alone and overwhelmed, she called
her mom, and mom called a friend to find somebody
whew something about bats, but instaid she was a plumber
guy who said, yeah.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
I just flush it down.
Speaker 4 (08:24):
Uh, it's because it's she said, it's smaller than other
things she has left to the toilet before. Right.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
Yeah, I guess I'm not imagining this the correct size.
I'm I've seen Batman movies and so like, they always
have the big bats in the background. I don't know,
I didn't realize they were that small.
Speaker 4 (08:38):
That's gonna be pretty small even I like a oh
big mainly wing.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
Yeah, and I don't like this anymore, Like you don't
like that, like not happy, cheerful wildlife.
Speaker 4 (08:51):
She said.
Speaker 3 (08:52):
She well, she ended up in the emergency.
Speaker 5 (08:53):
Room because she touched the bat.
Speaker 4 (08:55):
Yeah, well, she said, there's comments rolling in how she
could have gotten raby or whatever, even though she remember
and this is so because we had just had this
come up a couple of weeks ago in the show.
If you find no, if you find a bat in
your house, you're supposed to go to the.
Speaker 6 (09:12):
Doctor because they can bite you without you know, you
know that's what things.
Speaker 3 (09:16):
I've never done that, and I have found bats, right.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (09:19):
So she said, well she put the thing on. People
are saying, well, you might have a bit not known it.
Uh And so she said, all these people are coming in,
so you need to go in and get a raby
shot or whatever. She tells the nurse. And so she
did indeed go in there. She's doing fine, and she
decided to opt out of the anti Raby shot.
Speaker 3 (09:40):
She clarified two things.
Speaker 4 (09:41):
The bat was already dead before it was flushed, and
what she had mentioned in the video that she was autistic.
But she said the clarification's like, that's really nothing to
do it. I just we're going to tell you that
I get overwhelmed with stuff sometimes, but it wouldn't right.
Rabies is the viral disease, does me?
Speaker 3 (09:59):
Does he?
Speaker 4 (10:00):
He's transmitted through saliva and bites, and once you start
seeing symptoms it could be very fatal, more than likely
will be.
Speaker 3 (10:06):
But she said I'm fine, don't worry about everybody.
Speaker 4 (10:09):
We're good. And then commenters were like, I would never
even sit on that toilet ever again. Come on.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
I would have first thought close the lid and call
like some type of person that does like type of
person like animal control, animal removal, and I would ask
questions and then they would be like, you need to
take it in so you don't have to get a shot,
and I'd be like, all right, send somebody over.
Speaker 3 (10:30):
She didn't take it in. She just plus I know
that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
I would have handled this very.
Speaker 3 (10:33):
Would get I don't know if they would have.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
If not, I would have paid like a pest removal
or something. So they put it in I don't care
put it in a ziplock baggy. It's so would have
been cheaper than getting rabies shots or having a cheer.
I'm not getting the shot and going to bed every night.
Speaker 4 (10:51):
It doesn't say anywhere in the article whether you could tell,
like I guess you could have taken it and got
to test it.
Speaker 3 (10:57):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (10:57):
Yeah, I don't know a little, but I would have done.
Speaker 3 (11:00):
I wouldn't already far enough.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
In medical debt at this point, let's just add some
pest control debt as well.
Speaker 4 (11:05):
Prior to these stories, I would not even have thought, well,
I've seen bats in houses i've been in before, and
a fraternity house back in the day, and the houses
that I have been since. Never in a million years,
but I go to a doctor. I guess I have.
I guess you're supposed to.
Speaker 3 (11:19):
Would you have?
Speaker 6 (11:19):
No, definitely not been around bad definitely not before knowing
all this, and I'm still not sure. I'm still probably
not going. Let's be honest, I'm going, Yeah, there's like
twelve things I need to go to the doctor for now.
Speaker 4 (11:30):
I'm not going to Matt Harris Liz luteaus Is on
social media forty was today and find things like this.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
If you had three liquids that came from an unlimited tap,
what three liquids would you pick? And so this is
a question that's floating around on social media. I specifically
saw it on TikTok from at Claude and they were
thinking small. They were thinking real small. They were like, ah,
doctor pepper coke, fruit punch, like they were thinking a
little too beverage.
Speaker 4 (11:57):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5 (11:58):
And my initial reaction is gasoline.
Speaker 3 (12:01):
Big money, so smart, the big money one.
Speaker 1 (12:03):
I mean, at the very least, that would save me
well like one hundred and some bucks a month, you
know what I mean, that's.
Speaker 4 (12:08):
The way to go if you if your house is
heated by Oh.
Speaker 1 (12:13):
Should have been the second choice, I think, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (12:16):
I guess it's a liquid count. Yeah, I don't know,
so liquid gas gas. Yeah, so that's a little that
falls on the weird one on that.
Speaker 1 (12:24):
But it's liquid when it's in the tank.
Speaker 6 (12:26):
It could have a I don't have a spout either way, you.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
Have okay, okay, we'll just go back to gasoline. Just
keep that very simple. I personally, you know, have a
car that runs on gasoline.
Speaker 5 (12:38):
So I feel like that would be really helpful.
Speaker 4 (12:40):
Liquid diamonds, liquid gold, But I think I was I
didn't think about this till later. It's like, what are
my kids? What can I save money? On the kids
and the older one always drinks that alani uh energy drink. Okay, yeah,
so that would save me something right there, because it's
stuffing cheap after a while, right, because you do that.
Speaker 6 (13:01):
Yeah, yeah, sugar free red Bull, that's yours. Yeah, sugar
free red Bull. It gets expensive after a while.
Speaker 5 (13:06):
Yeah, and how many years have you even drinking that?
Speaker 6 (13:08):
I don't want to talk about that.
Speaker 1 (13:11):
God or might outgrow that. But you know what, TJ
didn't so.
Speaker 4 (13:14):
Well if it was a full blown habit at this point, right,
and if if it's free, you're going to stick to
that and a row switches somebody. But that if it
was free, Yeah, coffee would be great. I'd love that.
And I went with a really expensive wine that I
could resell.
Speaker 3 (13:30):
Okay, I like that, but I try it.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
Yeah, model yourself.
Speaker 5 (13:35):
I want chocolate.
Speaker 1 (13:39):
Chocolate fountain like you see on TLC when they do
those wedding specials. You know, the people that are all
fancy and bougie. I don't like the fountain park because
I'm afraid someone's going to stick their hands and it.
If it's coming just straight out of a tap, there's
less contamination issues.
Speaker 3 (13:54):
By the way, it's not fancy and bougie a chocolate fountain.
Speaker 4 (13:57):
You and I have different drinks, all right, I can
find it at the Old and Crowd. Yeah, yeah, it
stops being fancy and ucy. You wanted cheese a thing.
Speaker 6 (14:06):
Yes, the specifically like the white cheese you give from
a Mexican restaurant.
Speaker 4 (14:11):
Yeah, okay, that's what I want one. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
I can't trust myself with that. I would be putting
cheese on everything.
Speaker 3 (14:17):
Yeah, in the morning.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
It's the Morning mixed with Matt Harrison Liz lud.
Speaker 3 (14:24):
Play along at home and play a little game here.
Speaker 4 (14:28):
Also, I should lets you know that it is raining
today and we're gonna get to a couple of inches
seventy two for your high. This is still bitter because
the Winshield wipers didn't work this morning.
Speaker 5 (14:36):
There's just one patch.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
And why does it look so smeary not when the
windshield wiper goes up, but when it comes down.
Speaker 4 (14:41):
And now I don't know, well, I do know that
you're competitive, so we'll see how this goes.
Speaker 3 (14:47):
So it's a witch came first game.
Speaker 4 (14:48):
All right, So I need you so you can write
down your answer that and then show it to me
rather than oh, okay, right, yeah, so witch came first?
Snickers or Eminem's okay, alright, write down your answer? Are
you done? And over there? Lock it in, show me
your answers. Snickers from TJ, Snickers from Liz. Snickers it
(15:10):
is yes, it's night after a horse nineteen thirty, Snickers
nineteen forty one, M and MS named after a horse.
Speaker 3 (15:17):
I won't note. So we're even there.
Speaker 4 (15:18):
Chess or checkers? Chess or checkers? Which came first? Liz
says chess and TJ says checkers Checkers sixteen hundred BC,
two thousand years later.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
Yes, all right, I'm gonna just skip back to the food.
Speaker 4 (15:38):
Wow, all right, white wedding dress or tuxedo? White wedding
dress or tuxedo? Which came first? And there's s. TJ
went with tucks, Liz went with white wedding dress. The
answer is, oh, wait a minute, did I think I
wrote this down? Rock? Oh gosh, I believe it is
(16:01):
a white wedding dress.
Speaker 6 (16:02):
Okay, Yes.
Speaker 1 (16:04):
The problematic the passing of the purification.
Speaker 4 (16:06):
It's very close, very close. Mickey mouse or bugs bunny? Oh,
which came first? Pick your mouse?
Speaker 3 (16:17):
They both say bugs and they are both wrong.
Speaker 4 (16:19):
Oh Mickey nineteen twenty eight, Bugs nineteen forty Oh wow,
well all right, Uh Titanic sinking or Hiddenburg disaster.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
Oh okay. I had to stop and think.
Speaker 3 (16:38):
They both said Titanic and you're both correct. Yeah, all right.
Speaker 4 (16:42):
Uh Saturday Night Live or Sesame Street.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Oh oh nope, my god. Okay, it's close though, they're
very close to each other.
Speaker 4 (16:52):
You're not that test to me and you said test
to me, and yes, yes, yeah, very very close. Or
within three years Sesame Street, no Wax nine and then
I least Saturday In a livey two.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
Because they just seventy seven or something. No, they just
celebrated their fiftieth. That's why there was that big thing.
And then Sesame Street celebrated their fiftieth when my son
was younger because we had themed apparel and merchandise. All right,
we got it on Clarence.
Speaker 4 (17:15):
I gotta get to since we're like a tie ballgame here,
I gotta do a couple more. Oh gosh, all right,
all right, all right, back to the future released in
theaters the Challenger Space Shuttle disaster.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
Oh my gosh, okay, why do you make me I'm
a slow writer.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
You don't break the whole thing.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
Well, I gotta make sure you know both went.
Speaker 3 (17:38):
Back right, Yeah, back to the future. Back to the
future is correct?
Speaker 4 (17:41):
Yeah, by difference. Okay, I gotta get somebody to win here.
Elvis Presley died or the debut of night Rider?
Speaker 1 (17:50):
What came first? Yeah, I don't know when night Rider
premiered with Elvis?
Speaker 3 (17:58):
You're both are correct with Elvis. God, it's a tie.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
Games been to like Elvis Week in Memphis, Tennessee at Graceland,
and I know that we're we're kind of getting kind
of far up there in the numbers because they celebrate
his death week.
Speaker 3 (18:12):
Well, there you go. I gotta I gotta break this time.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
Very some dog millionaire thing right now where I just
have a personal experience for every answer.
Speaker 4 (18:19):
Yes, that's it, that's it, This is it. This isn't
all the marvels.
Speaker 5 (18:32):
I read oscars?
Speaker 3 (18:35):
That is correct. Yeah, all right, y'all. Stake for starting
your day with.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
The Morning, Miss It's The Morning mixed with Matt Harris and.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
Now here's your latest pop update. Yes, teaches kids resilience.
So there's a new study that came out that says
blue teaches kids to be resilient, which helps them manage stress,
regulate their emotions, build better relationships, and perform better at school.
There's kind of a little bit of a divide though.
Some parents love Bluey, some hate Blue. No. No, we
(19:07):
had we had some years that we dabbled in Blue
and Blue did me wrong.
Speaker 5 (19:11):
So uh, it was so silly.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
We had just moved cross country with my cnthio.
Speaker 5 (19:15):
He was young. The new episode that was coming out
was going to be about.
Speaker 1 (19:19):
Moving, and I was like, this is great, It'll help
him manage these emotions. Right.
Speaker 4 (19:23):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
I go through the whole episode and I was like, oh,
he understands this. Leaving your home, leaving your memories, like
where you've had all this stuff happen, and you know
the episode ends, they decide not to move. No, no,
we watched it because it's an episode of Bowie. I
didn't think it was gonna take that turn. And then
my son had this light. He's like, so can we
go back? And I was like, no, nobody, no, no
(19:47):
where in North Carolina now. But look at how great
it is and all the new memories will make and
like that was literally the last episode of Blue I
watched it. I was like, I'm done a lot.
Speaker 4 (19:57):
Yeah. What what's more is it? Is it like pepa
pagan or ignored?
Speaker 5 (20:02):
No, no, no, it's not annoying like that.
Speaker 4 (20:05):
It's just like I know, adults sometimes watch it, they
say to calm down or something.
Speaker 6 (20:08):
I I like the soundtracks.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
It's the idea that they're like so good at emotions,
Like you know what I mean, when somebody's like a
little too good and you're like, oh, I'm sorry, judging
making judge. Yeah, yeah, some of us aren't breathing through
our stress right now. Let me go ahead and try
and maybe if I had watched it as a kid,
I wouldn't be having these feelings.
Speaker 3 (20:28):
All the issues you have now. Yeah, No, Bluie.
Speaker 4 (20:31):
People refer to the two thousands as the sort of
a new golden nat of TV.
Speaker 3 (20:34):
I've never heard that, but that's what they're saying. But
the nineties.
Speaker 4 (20:38):
So the screen ran website did ten shows from the
nineties that really changed things.
Speaker 1 (20:44):
Anything that was on a Thursday on NBC. First sitcom,
right that was that.
Speaker 4 (20:48):
Was late late eighties, early nineties.
Speaker 6 (20:52):
I don't know, it was all not Oh no, that's
like friends and all that idea.
Speaker 4 (20:57):
Grace. Yeah, So there's so I'll start with Twin Peaks
was on there, Okay, it was like, you know, artsy
kind of thing. Sure, Beverly Hill in Nino two one,
Oh I Was Too Young, set up the teen drama
and became a genre there, right Yeah yeah, basically, Uh,
the so they're you know, they're saying that these things
had this impact of creating.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
We wouldn't have had Dawson's Creek without it. I get
that Dawson's Creek some Corey years there.
Speaker 4 (21:22):
Charmed with the female led genre, TV magical mainstream law
and order procedural storytelling, and then all the spin offs
er turned medical dramas into high stakes, character driven epics. Okay, true,
the X Files bringing in paranoia and science fiction to
the mainstream.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
I think paranormals, which you meant not paranoia.
Speaker 3 (21:45):
Paranoia too.
Speaker 6 (21:46):
Yeah they're out there smoking out there.
Speaker 4 (21:50):
Yeah yeah, paranoida. Yes. Seinfeld changed TV comedy, of course,
turned nothing into something. Buffy The Vampires Layer elevated teen TV.
Uh provided genre that could be emotionally profound. You had Friends,
Global phenomenon and The Simpsons. The Simpsons and we shaped comedy, animation,
(22:12):
pop cultures.
Speaker 3 (22:12):
We know it.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
I'm a little angry that Fraser didn't get a mention.
Speaker 4 (22:17):
I mean didn't say these aren't like the best shows.
These are things that like reworked. Surprised Ellen didn't get
a mentioned.
Speaker 6 (22:24):
Yeah, because that's huge, like the talk show or the
show just the sitcom. Yeah came out, Yeah, I mean
they can't. That was such a big, like I don't know,
moment and cultural history.
Speaker 4 (22:36):
Yeah, yeah, it's true, true, but it didn't change like
TV per se or did it.
Speaker 6 (22:41):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (22:42):
Yeah, I came after that, true, yes, yeah, yeah, yeah,
so maybe yeah, maybe that that is not on the
list call your that's a good call though. That should
be on there. And we started the day with let's
putting her hand in something sticky on the counter.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
We can only guess it was syrup, and we can
only hope it was, sir, you taste it.
Speaker 6 (23:01):
No, give it a smell at least, No, you didn't
even smell it.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
No.
Speaker 5 (23:06):
I immediately cleaned it.
Speaker 1 (23:08):
I was, oh, I don't like it. I don't like
sticky things on my hands, and I don't there's somebody
else that uses my space, which is fine, it's it's
a shared space, but I didn't know it was there,
and my papers were on top of it and I
picked it up and it just got all over my hand.
Speaker 4 (23:22):
And yeah, there's in our the way this big business
works whatever. There's the board they call it where everybody
presses the bike. TJ stands back there right, presses all
the buttons. And it's not a place that cleaning people
would ever touch. No, they're probably instructed not to test it, right, yeah, right,
And so it can get pretty filthy, yes, And it
(23:44):
doesn't take long, no, not not long at all, just
collects dust and whatever. And then you know, there's a
bunch of radio stations in here, and some are worse
than others. Oh yes, because people a lot of times
don't clean there if it's just a shared space or
like somebody else on somebody else, right, and so it
can get ridiculous. I am pretty much of a cleaner
(24:05):
of the entire space or area. If I've always down today,
I know I did that was new, that was new.
I don't want to touch your space over there, please
please to do it. But there are places where you're
dust is just insane.
Speaker 6 (24:19):
It's yeah, like especially on these boards, like there's so
many like little nuts and crannies they true you know,
it's like while I'm working, I'll grab a rag or
whatever and just kind of like pick while the show
is going on, right, And if you don't do that,
that builds up really quick.
Speaker 4 (24:37):
Right Like at break rooms, like I if I am
in there, I always wipe off the counter, even if
it's not my stuff. It's just it's just my natural
way of doing that. But some people just leave like
a spill that they don't care. Yeah, that's wild too.
But when I first started in radio, one of my
first jobs we had to rotate. There was a bathroom
(24:57):
in the studio. One that's wild and sometimes salespeople come
in like like that. The top ones were all out
in there or whatever. Yeah come on man, Yeah, and uh,
but you would rotate like two weeks of cleaning, cleaning
the as the jock, oh cleaning, cleaning the board and
cleaning the everything else. Uh come on, could we not
(25:19):
we find twenty this is yeah, But.
Speaker 1 (25:23):
So it worked many places where they just didn't have
a cleaning schedule. They didn't have someone that came and cleaned. Oh. Really,
There's one radio station I worked at which they had
we like paneling on the walls. Ours is smooth in here,
but the one that I worked in, it was like
chunky for lack of a better way, Oh yeah, it
was textured. And we lived in or lived basically lived
(25:43):
worked in this older building and mice and rats would
climb down the wall and they could use that because
they're a little fea, so they would.
Speaker 5 (25:52):
Just be walking sideways on the walls.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
And one time I was sitting there and I was
convinced I was breaking a chair because I kept hearing
this click click noise, and I thought, oh no, this
chair is about to break, This chair is about to break.
What is this click click noise? And it was a
humane trap, and there was a they called it a
roof rat that had gotten into it, and its tail
was as thick as a horse's mane, like it was appalling,
(26:19):
and it was just clicking it's it's swoshy tail back
and forth. So, honestly, while I did stick my hand
in syrup this morning, not as bad as no, No,
a giant rat with a tail bigger than my labradors.
Speaker 4 (26:34):
Now, I know that there are real dirty jobs like
the micro thing, right, But I'm talking about do you
work at a place that's you know, it's not like
a pig slaughterhouse. But yet there's dust and filth everywhere
because you don't have cleaner's in right, have to clean.
If you've seen some really crazy dirty things, that's your workplate.
TJ is back had some days off part of it,
(26:57):
he stated, air it.
Speaker 6 (26:57):
Was an Airbnb or yeah, it is a erbo.
Speaker 4 (27:00):
Yeah, And what was the shock surprise whenever you went.
Speaker 6 (27:04):
Up for a little getaway up in Hendersonville for just
a little quiet up there and it was a tiny house?
Was you know it was advertised as a tiny house.
I saw the pictures. You look in the bathroom, there's
a tinier space for the toilet.
Speaker 4 (27:20):
You know, it's one of those that's like has.
Speaker 6 (27:22):
The little partial wall, okay thing where you know, it's
just kind of closeted in there a little bit gotcha.
And I was like, all right, that's gonna be fine.
I have really bad claustrophobia, that's right. So I was
like trying to I can deal with this. You know,
I have decided I can deal with this. We get
there and you know, I'm a I'm not a small guy,
(27:45):
but I'm not like a huge guy either, right, And
I walk in and with one shoulder touching one wall,
like an inch and a half two inches won't fit
into this little closet of the bathroom.
Speaker 3 (28:00):
Your shoulders will fit in.
Speaker 6 (28:02):
My shoulders won't even fit in to use the bathroom,
my gosh. Yeah, So I'm having to like you know, aim, oh,
my gosh, yeah, and can't sit down, No sitting down
at all. Like I had to drive fifteen minutes to
go to the ingles to go to the bathroom. There
should have been definitely, there should have been a sign.
(28:23):
And then like we go and look afterwards, look at
the reviews, and almost everyone is like, yeah, my husband
is six two and he's not fitting in this bathroom
and all this stuff. It's like what you can't, like
if you designed it, regular human cannot sit in there, right,
Maybe they're trying to make sure you can't or.
Speaker 4 (28:44):
Whatever, maybe, but oh it was, Yeah, it was uncomfortable.
Speaker 1 (28:48):
That's horrifying. That's gotta be one of the worst things
to walk into. I mean not the.
Speaker 6 (28:52):
Worst, because like I was having panic, like a panic attack,
like because because I attempt it, because you're claustrophobia, right,
and I attempted to like squeeze myself in there, and no,
that was not happening.
Speaker 4 (29:05):
You so fell you felt really a panicky just even.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
Like and even just like door on it.
Speaker 6 (29:10):
No, not like into the bathroom, but like it's next
to the shower kind of thing where like the shower
wall and then the like bathroom wall is in between it, and.
Speaker 4 (29:22):
There's no way a regular size dude is squeezing in there.
Speaker 6 (29:26):
No, I mean it's gonna be tight regardless.
Speaker 4 (29:33):
I increased myself up and got in there. You'd have
to have some stuff.
Speaker 1 (29:38):
I'm not like snobby against like a tiny house at all.
I'm a person of large stature, and I've been in
some tiny houses before where it's like the pots and
the pants are in the bathroom because the kitchen you
can almost reach the stove for a shower.
Speaker 2 (29:51):
And it's the morning mixed with Matt Harrison, Liz Ludo, you.
Speaker 4 (29:57):
Don't like it.
Speaker 5 (29:57):
I don't like this at all.
Speaker 4 (29:59):
It's a the zoo in Denmark. They have put something
on their website says they will take your animals to
be fed to the lions and other apex predators.
Speaker 3 (30:12):
It's Northern Denmark.
Speaker 4 (30:14):
They put the appeal on Facebook saying did you know
that you can donate smaller pets to us.
Speaker 3 (30:20):
They're not talking about sick pets. They have to be healthy, healthy,
healthy pets.
Speaker 4 (30:25):
According to zoo's website, they only accept rabbits, chickens, guinea pigs,
small horses, and they'll be euthanized before it's given to
the wild animal. They should be eating animals, they say.
The apex predators should be eating animals, whole, fur and all,
because it simulates what they'd have in the wild. And
(30:46):
this way, they say it's a win win because nothing
goes to waste. You can only donate up to four
animals at once, and they say, well, help the animals
that are at the Albourg's Zoo because it'll get them
used to you know, have them back to the roots.
Like what would they like it?
Speaker 3 (31:05):
No, no matter dog.
Speaker 1 (31:07):
By the way, I feel like science has come far
enough we can figure something out.
Speaker 5 (31:10):
You should not be donating our healthy pets.
Speaker 4 (31:13):
Well, I mean they were not all of these things,
but they could.
Speaker 3 (31:18):
Be old and healthy.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
I still like this, And also I don't like it.
Speaker 4 (31:23):
Like if you have a you know, like guinea pigs
or a diamond dozen, right, so why not.
Speaker 6 (31:29):
The same with rabbits?
Speaker 1 (31:31):
I mean, yeah, absolutely not if it's ever been a pet. Nope.
Speaker 4 (31:34):
If you're trying to give it, like you can't find
a family for it, no one want, no, absolutely not.
Speaker 1 (31:39):
That is your social responsibility if you do so.
Speaker 3 (31:43):
The circle of life. Circle.
Speaker 1 (31:47):
Understand the circle of life. I understand if an animal
has been in the wild that that is what their
ultimate demise is going to be. Probably, but that's not
the same if you have an animal that's been domesticated.
I don't know. I don't like it.
Speaker 4 (31:59):
I know you don't. A lot of most people probably don't.
Speaker 1 (32:01):
But I'm okay with science has come fir up.
Speaker 4 (32:03):
We can't make the animals yet. That no.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
I mean they've got a lot of synthetic stuff they
do in labs. I'm sure we could come up with.
It's not like they're going to return the tigers to
the wild and they do what.
Speaker 4 (32:14):
You're supposed to do with your rabbit, or like I
had rats, no one wanted the rats took me a while,
like forever, Like what are you supposed to do? If
you have a guinea pick and no one wants the
guinea pig, it doesn't matter. You have to keep it
until you go.
Speaker 6 (32:25):
There are situations where you just can't keep moving.
Speaker 4 (32:29):
You're moving.
Speaker 6 (32:31):
Allergies, your kid has allergies or something.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
Yeah, head on is a social responsibility that you see
until the end. I don't know, I don't like it.
Speaker 5 (32:38):
I'm just not saying I think that.
Speaker 1 (32:40):
The tigers are not going to be reintroduced a wild
So if we change it up in they're eating like
tiger baby food, you know what I mean, like where
it's just like mushy bananas, we're gonna be fine.
Speaker 4 (32:49):
What if? But there there could be many reasons why
they these these animals. For whatever reason, some aren't good
at being with people, and so instead of wasting them
or taking them to things get euthanized, they're probably healthy
either just old, right or whatever.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
Then you also have to say, well, if we're worried
about what we're feeding the tigers, if there's those chemicals
inside of the pet that the tiger is going to eat.
Speaker 4 (33:13):
Well, I think they're smarter than us about they know
they can euthanize something with that's not gonna hurt the animals.
They're not they're not gonna they're not gonna trail their prize,
does zoo animals.
Speaker 5 (33:22):
I'm just saying I don't like it.
Speaker 4 (33:24):
I know, you know, I don't like it at all,
And I mean know, I think it's it's a circle life.
Better than just burying it. Yeah, definitely hitting it over
the head with a shovel and burying it.
Speaker 1 (33:35):
Oh my god, who's doing these things?
Speaker 4 (33:37):
People do that?
Speaker 6 (33:38):
What? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (33:40):
Are you crazy?
Speaker 1 (33:41):
Yeah? I think so.
Speaker 4 (33:43):
You don't know people that have had like a small
thing and the kid did and why whatever was it?
Speaker 1 (33:47):
What?
Speaker 4 (33:48):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (33:49):
Like people do that.
Speaker 4 (33:51):
Yeah, Like you know, they have a for whatever reason
they can't get rid of it or da da da
da da.
Speaker 1 (33:56):
And I understand, like I've grown up in farming countries,
it's hurt or something. I understand there's different things that
go into that, but not just well.
Speaker 5 (34:05):
We got bored with Fluffy the bunny.
Speaker 3 (34:08):
You know, it's a little more to it than that.
Speaker 4 (34:10):
But you know, maybe it's expensive to to get it
back to health or something.
Speaker 3 (34:14):
And you're like, it's just a hamster.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
What am I gonna do with this?
Speaker 6 (34:17):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (34:18):
And well, and I'm not saying it's a you know
seven four or five seven on a seven eye for
failing to recognize his own baby during to switch through
prank on TikTok Uh the Both the kids at this
party were you know, like a year old something like that,
and the parent prank made the video what they did with.
The mom came over and handed the dad the friend's
(34:41):
baby somebody else's child, and the dad was kind of
was grilling in at whatever. It wasn't really pay atention.
She's like, hey, yeah, you're doing baby, and blah blah,
and they you know, kept filming until he's like, what
are you guys all talking about or whatever, before he
realized yeah, indeed it was the wrong baby, and he's like,
well I didn't really. He says, I'm a dirt bag,
I'm a her beg father. Dudes others are saying, you know, yeah,
(35:03):
give yourself a prey, you know, and they do kind
of look pretty close if you're not really staring at
and your mom, i mean, your wife hands you the baby.
Speaker 3 (35:10):
Right, So there was so there's.
Speaker 4 (35:12):
This context clues, but you think it would be ridiculous.
Speaker 1 (35:17):
It's not necessarily. I one don't like that the baby
is near the girl. I would go ahead and treface
with that. That actually is the first thing I see.
Speaker 5 (35:25):
But what did you just tell.
Speaker 4 (35:26):
Me the first thing or the second thing? The second
thing oh that went on my on memories. You're like
your photo pops up on your everyone or whatever. When
I see a picture of one of my kids, I
assume it's one of my kids as a baby. I
am like, I'm not sure which one that is.
Speaker 1 (35:43):
How how would you not tell them apart?
Speaker 3 (35:45):
I was gonna send a time with that. I know,
I was gonna send one to Addie the other day.
Speaker 4 (35:49):
I'm like, I'm not sitting because I'm not sure that's her,
but it's a baby, I am.
Speaker 1 (35:54):
I don't.
Speaker 5 (35:55):
I don't know like that. I don't know how that happens.
Speaker 4 (35:58):
I don't think if you gave me, like, you know,
fifty white babies just that, and one of two of
them were my kids, I'm not I'm not one hundred
percent sure I could pick out the two.
Speaker 1 (36:08):
Oh my god, wow, that is I'm not talking.
Speaker 4 (36:12):
About When I say baby, I'm not talking. I'm not
gonna be within the first month or two or whatever. Yeah, yeah,
for sure.
Speaker 1 (36:18):
I am shocked by that. I still look like aliens.
Speaker 5 (36:21):
I can't believe that.
Speaker 3 (36:22):
Like I, I don't are shocked by that.
Speaker 1 (36:24):
You're like facially blind or something like you don't recognize
faces like I mean.
Speaker 4 (36:29):
I could figure out once I stare long enough, maybe I.
Speaker 1 (36:33):
Give t J. I give him some grace because he's
got nieces that are twins. Like I can understand if
they're twins and they favor each other a lot and
that that I can see. But when they're two separate
like faces, like, how do you not?
Speaker 4 (36:47):
Well, they have the one angle out. You get a
thing on her head, a little mark in her head
if I can, that'll help, Okay.
Speaker 1 (36:52):
Yeah, yeah, that's what everyone does.
Speaker 5 (36:54):
Like so you want to do baby up like.
Speaker 1 (36:56):
You're like, oh, that's my kid because it's got this,
this and there.
Speaker 4 (36:59):
But but but when you move, remove that little mark
or whatever, or if I can't see it in the
angle of the photo, I don't know. I picked up
it was a rainstorm and like a little picnic thing. Yeah,
and this was like three or something, and somebody's just
scurrying because it's rain.
Speaker 3 (37:12):
I mean it came out of nowhere, one.
Speaker 1 (37:13):
Of these kind of down Yeah.
Speaker 3 (37:15):
So I scooped up.
Speaker 4 (37:16):
What I thought was my daughter and ran to my cabin.
I'm like, whoa wrong?
Speaker 5 (37:20):
Daughter was probably terrified.
Speaker 3 (37:23):
Oh yeah, well at first it was a boy too,
But they.
Speaker 1 (37:26):
Were like this is the same color code or they saw.
Speaker 4 (37:30):
It happen and they said they just were like, but
not long before he figures out.
Speaker 1 (37:35):
Your child to safety, and they're like, well, I'm a
little worried for my own I did not tell the difference.
Speaker 4 (37:42):
Is the same thing whatever?
Speaker 1 (37:44):
Yet, like I can understand, like if it's raining so
badly and they have like the same.
Speaker 4 (37:47):
Color code, really pretty similar, I mean.
Speaker 1 (37:50):
Like maybe, but no match.
Speaker 4 (37:54):
But okay, am I the insane, especially when they're baby me?
Speaker 1 (37:58):
Wonder could he swapped me out somebody and you just
come in one day or you have a whole conversation
and you have no idea that it's just another person
sitting in a room with you.
Speaker 4 (38:07):
Problem of recognizing my surrounding because I've been told before
knowing what's going on, Yeah, like this, but I mean,
a baby's a baby, right, Yeah, I'm with you.
Speaker 6 (38:16):
I'm with you.
Speaker 3 (38:17):
It's a guy thing or.
Speaker 1 (38:18):
Something maybe because I don't understand this, or you only
have one.
Speaker 5 (38:21):
I only have one, but like.
Speaker 1 (38:25):
Babies what no, But like, how do you recognize like
my nephew, Like if it's the first time.
Speaker 4 (38:29):
Meeting the baby, all right now and your nephew, Well,
let's let's get them older, because my kids are like
a teenagers, you know, so they're their team. So you
haven't seen you know, I give you one hundred babies
and one of them is your nephew.
Speaker 3 (38:41):
You think you'll pick it out?
Speaker 4 (38:43):
Yeah, wow, it's probably. I mean you're probably in the majority.
I would guess seven four or five seven?
Speaker 1 (38:50):
Recognize babies?
Speaker 3 (38:52):
Yeah, I have a problem.
Speaker 1 (38:53):
Can you recognize your own children? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (38:56):
You think it's crazy?
Speaker 1 (38:57):
Yeah, I think this is crazy.
Speaker 3 (38:59):
It might be right. I don't know.
Speaker 6 (39:00):
No, I think most babies look so similar.
Speaker 5 (39:04):
I'm scared baby.
Speaker 1 (39:05):
Actually right, that's the problem. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (39:07):
And when i'm again, I'm talking baby, I'm not talking
one year. I'm like, I'm talking month or two something
like that, three, four years, five years. The Morning Mixed
Matt Harrison, Liz Luda. How do we ask this question?
Speaker 6 (39:18):
Liz?
Speaker 1 (39:19):
Can you recognize babies? Can you pick out your child
in a group?
Speaker 4 (39:23):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (39:24):
Seven four or five?
Speaker 4 (39:24):
Seven?
Speaker 3 (39:25):
One and seven nine? Who's this? And and you think
I'm crazy?
Speaker 1 (39:29):
Yes, I worked labor and delivery for sixteen years. I
see hundreds of babies. Did you not look anything alike?
Speaker 4 (39:37):
Look alike? Well? But then again, my two kids might
look similar, right, my two kids as babies.
Speaker 1 (39:43):
And you picked up a stranger child in a ring storm?
Speaker 4 (39:47):
Why didn't look I just grabbed. Yeah, I've never seen
two babies that weren't identical twins that looked alike. Ever,
I look at babies just like i'll see at the
grocery store, and I'm like, that baby looks a litter
of that baby? Yes, and I have ties and nose
that I'm out. Yes, yeh.
Speaker 1 (40:07):
That's like saying, oh, that forty year old over there
looks like other forty years old. Like everybody looks different.
They don't look really don't look like.
Speaker 5 (40:14):
When they're four.
Speaker 4 (40:15):
Well, yeah, that's true. I'm not saying they're identical, but
it's close enough. Fish rights maybe, and then that's it.
I don't know what.
Speaker 1 (40:25):
I'm so thankful for you.
Speaker 5 (40:26):
And I thought I was the crazy one.
Speaker 1 (40:28):
I was like, what what do you mean?
Speaker 4 (40:30):
Morning mixed Matt Harrison, Liz Luda producer TJ does not
have kids. I've got a couple of them, and uh,
are they all yours? I don't know, but I don't
know if I can't identify them. So, yeah, it looked
like me as I can identify them now I should
casse you just doing it, but as a baby, like
a baby baby baby, like a month old or whatever,
(40:52):
a couple months old, that kind of that range. When
I see a picture pop up on you know, memories
or whatever, I'm like, which one that is? I think
about it?
Speaker 1 (41:01):
Well, there exclusive like the year that it was posted.
Should probably let you know who it was. But no,
I can't believe you can't recognize them, like this is
this child, this is that child? Like all babies, they
look different.
Speaker 4 (41:13):
I mean, if you let me like, I haven't. I
don't look back at the baby pictures, right, so it's
not like I and they're one's fifteen, one is twenty.
So when it just like it was just the other day,
it bobbed up. I probably I don't see their baby
pictures very often, so I'm like, who twin it is?
Like I had, I mean at fifty six shots, so
(41:33):
I didn't look up who.
Speaker 1 (41:34):
I imagine there had been more than two children.
Speaker 3 (41:36):
If you have seven kids, I don't know, you probably
don't know who the hell is.
Speaker 4 (41:39):
Yeah, you don't know. You can't even keep their name straight.
Speaker 1 (41:43):
I know they do. You know exactly who they are
because their face looks exactly like their face.
Speaker 4 (41:47):
I know, apparently I'm the only one what DJ But
you know, we can excuse him maybe because they could say,
I don't have kids. This dunk like a jerk. I
don't know what.
Speaker 6 (41:55):
Yeah, kids are I love them though, it just their
faces that's all they count.
Speaker 1 (41:59):
I think we can take a check for, like facial blindness.
I think there might be an actual issue underlying it.
Speaker 3 (42:05):
It's very very welcome.
Speaker 1 (42:06):
There's a lot of issues, but yeah, but I think
this one we today just really It's.
Speaker 2 (42:11):
The Morning Mixed with Matt Harris and here's your latest
pop up teams.
Speaker 1 (42:16):
George Clooney is on the Adam Sandler train. He does
not think he's just some goofy comedian. He said, quote,
he's actually a really beautiful, wonderful actor. So they did
a movie together for Netflix called Jay Kelly and so
Adam Sandler's in it. And he says that Adam has range,
and this film, more than any film Adam has done,
(42:37):
shows what a beautiful, heartfelt, soulful actor he is. And
he just kind of keeps going on and on about,
you know, because of you know who he is, and
he does these big goofy comedies and he does those things.
It just reminds you that he is a good comedian,
but he's so much more.
Speaker 4 (42:51):
Ok. He wants people to watch this movie, but I mean, yeah,
I mean, acting's not that hard, so it doesn't surprise me. Right,
People hate when I say that's what my dad really
hates it. New music from Gaga Lady Gaga her new
song a Dead Dance, will be featured in the upcoming
second season of Netflix's Wednesday, according to Variety. The sources
(43:14):
have confirmed the song and music video are expected to
release next month to coincide with Gaga's debut because she's
gonna be in the show. Oh Rosalind Rotwood, a legendary
never More teacher who crosses pass with Wednesday played by
Jenna Ortega. H part one of season two of Wednesday
(43:35):
hits uh.
Speaker 1 (43:36):
Good mornekend Yeah Yesterday? Oh Tomorrow? Yeah, okay, because the
Wendy's meal dropped. Yeah, it drops on a Wednesday.
Speaker 4 (43:44):
Yeah, yeah, we'll get a guy. It starts tomorrow Wednesday. Yeah,
Tomorrow Wednesday will be on Wednesday. See what they're doing there.
Part two premiere September third, and that's when Gaga will
make her arrival. Of course, if you remember from the
first season of Wednesday, she had a song Bloody Mary
that Jenner or Takes danced too, and that that little
TikTok dance.
Speaker 6 (44:02):
I went, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4 (44:04):
Speaking of TV, you guys were huge fans of Kicking
the Hill when it first came out.
Speaker 1 (44:08):
Yeah, And it's one of those shows that I think
nobody ever really said like, hey, I really like this
show until recently and I'm like, oh my gosh, you
did too. And they did a reboot. They put a
brand new season out yesterday. It's got episodes, so you
can like binge it, which I like. I made it
through the first five. And if you watched the show
before the first episode, how did you describe a TJ.
Speaker 6 (44:29):
It's kind of like they're resetting the show, like you
reintroducing all the characters and that kind of thing. So
if you're you've been a longtime fan, you kind of
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (44:39):
You're like, oh, that's very rebooty.
Speaker 6 (44:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (44:41):
Yeah. So when I watched this episode last night, at first,
I was like, that's not doing much for me.
Speaker 1 (44:45):
Right, Yeah, By the time you get into the second
and the third, it kind of turns into what it
once was.
Speaker 6 (44:50):
Okay, good missing.
Speaker 1 (44:51):
Some characters, obviously they're no longer with us, but.
Speaker 4 (44:55):
It's good and uh, we're gonna give a little tips
on what to watch both DJ. I watched it over
the weekend Final Destination, Bloodlines. Yes, it was so fun.
It was way better than I expected. Maybe I just
had low expectations. I don't know, right, but critics liked it. Yeah,
if you liked any of the old ones, you'll like this.
Speaker 1 (45:12):
And I was.
Speaker 4 (45:13):
I watched maybe a couple of them. I didn't watch
all of them, so I'm not a big and I
really thought I'll put this on and then help me
fall asleep or something.
Speaker 1 (45:20):
Right, Oh yeah, some easy watching for bed? Yeah? Why not?
Speaker 3 (45:24):
Yeah, that is easy watching.
Speaker 4 (45:25):
That's kind of thing.
Speaker 6 (45:26):
Oh my gosh, you like to fall asleep while depth
lets you down?
Speaker 3 (45:30):
Yeah, but it was, it was It was funny and
it was good.
Speaker 4 (45:35):
I'm about a fifty thousand dollars tattoo. TJ gets is
back from vacation. You have tattoos? Yes, you've ever spent
fifty grands? No? But these uh, the articles about athletes.
But I'm sure others do it and they get full
anesthesia and go on close.
Speaker 3 (45:52):
Go under for it.
Speaker 4 (45:54):
This Justin Simmons is an NFL player played nine seasons
and and his latest tattoo was a leg sleeve stretching
his left need. It was upper thigh and instead of
multiple sessions, goes in for hours under anesthesia and he
comes out fully in this one place, Lakimi Tattoo in LA.
(46:21):
They specialize in high end body art and they have
the clinical setting, you know, they put them under all
that sort of things that he anesthesia ologists.
Speaker 1 (46:28):
Okay, I don't have any tattoos. All right, I'm gonna
go ahead and preface with that. But I thought a
lot of why people like to get tattoos is it's
almost like the pain makes you feel like you earn it, right,
like the therapy of it.
Speaker 6 (46:40):
A lot of people are like that, Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4 (46:42):
I talk to some people in this and they're like,
I don't need that part of it. To each their
own and said, but yeah, I okay. But I think
the thing is for these the athletes talk about and
they talk in this article is that which is, by
the way, started thirty thousand dollars, but they go higher
than that. They don't have time because of training and
whatnot to be do multiple sessions and all the healing
(47:06):
and all the healing and the pain and all that
stuff where they can get it done in one session
and they have multiple artists working on you at one time.
Speaker 1 (47:13):
I mean, I'm not gonna put judgment out there. Whatever
you want to get done. It's the equivalent of a
cosmetic procedure, right yeah, I guess yeah, a little pricier
than your typical cosmetic procedure.
Speaker 3 (47:22):
I think what you haven't done?
Speaker 4 (47:23):
Yeah, LaMelo ball our guy you know here in the
for the Hornets, much of his body is tattooed. It
says with this fashion label La France. He also the
UFO and alien motifs.
Speaker 1 (47:38):
Did he go under for it? He?
Speaker 4 (47:40):
Let's see they said that. Yeah, what they should have
got done in three days, they got done in three days,
which takes people years to get They did six artists,
team behind balls, twenty thousand dollars back piece, three six
hour days.
Speaker 3 (47:56):
Oh ucidation at all? Wow?
Speaker 4 (48:01):
So three six hour sessions. I got of like a
life still for six hours.
Speaker 1 (48:04):
Right again. I am not in any way like I'm
putting this in the same category as a cosmetic procedure,
but for me personally, I don't want to. I don't
wanna have to undergo sedation. That scares me.
Speaker 4 (48:14):
Uh. This one place in Florida, clients can be under
general anesthesia for a maximum of eight hours, usually five
to seven Dak Presscott of the Cowboys Quarter. But I
spend eleven hours sedated for a legs leave in twenty
twenty three.
Speaker 1 (48:27):
Wow, I mean that's longer than most surgeries.
Speaker 3 (48:31):
It's a long time to be under yeah.
Speaker 1 (48:32):
Yeah, Like that's a lot of time to have an
anesthesiologist there and monitoring all of your stuff, Like that's
a host a lot.
Speaker 6 (48:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (48:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (48:40):
And you've got to trust that.
Speaker 1 (48:41):
Artist too, like you're gonna show you part way through.
Speaker 6 (48:45):
Like right exactly, like yeah, or like make sure they
don't spell something wrong.
Speaker 4 (48:50):
You know that's already done.
Speaker 3 (48:51):
It's done, even if you are awake.
Speaker 6 (48:54):
True, that is true.
Speaker 4 (48:55):
I mean it's on your back now, you're right, you're right,
see until it's over anyway.
Speaker 3 (48:58):
Right, and then once it's done, it's done.
Speaker 6 (49:00):
No, you're right.
Speaker 4 (49:01):
And if they're paying, if you're paying fifty thousand, you
probably check this person out better.
Speaker 6 (49:04):
Yeah, that's for sure.
Speaker 1 (49:05):
You probably have like a three D model of your
body or something showing you all angles like I would hope.
Speaker 4 (49:11):
Yeah, it's a lot of being fifty thousand. It's all
relative money wise, but I guess like the idea of
let's say one six hour session versus three two hour
sessions and you're Outah.
Speaker 6 (49:23):
Yeah for sure.
Speaker 1 (49:25):
Yeah, this sedation is just what makes me nervous for
that long.
Speaker 4 (49:28):
Morning makes Matt Harris Liz Luda. Did you go to
a camp when you're a kid? Yeah, like for a
week or so you worry. Were you a camp person?
Speaker 1 (49:36):
Yeah? Like girl Scouts and stuff.
Speaker 4 (49:38):
So there's an article in the Most Street Journal about
mom and dad using these sophisticated techniques to slip band
snacks by the long arm of the summer camp. Oh uh.
You look at these packages and there's a Harry Potter book,
but then you open it up and it's hollowed out
and the people were putting, the parents are putting like
(49:58):
candy and stuff. Ever one had a flashlight at it.
All these items. Uh, you know, we're smuggling food into
the camp. They had oh like uh lady products, but
inside were like candy and stuff. Okay like that it's
they say, it's become a tradition, and so that's why
(50:20):
some of these people do like a uh pringles tube,
but inside it you have candy or tissue boxes or
one they found some sliced open tennis balls where they Yeah, yeah,
so many things.
Speaker 5 (50:33):
One that's how you get ants.
Speaker 1 (50:35):
Yeah, absolutely, you're sending them into the wilderness and you
are now just calling the bugs to them. You know,
I bet you they'd be a lot happier if you
were hiding a cell phone or a device in there.
Speaker 4 (50:45):
Maybe true. Uh So the administer is this camp Westmont
and PA and the Poconos, uh said, as you said, Hey,
you know, first of all, you're sending things. You're sneaking
in things with nuts, cads. There's some people allergic, right,
and we live in the in the wilderness because yeah,
and whatever animals. So you can go they say on
(51:05):
Amazon and Etsy, and there's all kinds of cheap and
easy things like hollowed out sunblock, hairspray.
Speaker 1 (51:13):
But people have you different.
Speaker 4 (51:17):
Of course, Yes, they're putting out probably illegal substances.
Speaker 3 (51:22):
So yeah, so they're they're apparently this is like this.
Speaker 4 (51:26):
One person said she picked up the kids thing, you know,
box or whatever, and there was a book that weighed
like a ton. Yeah, and she's opened it up and
inside it was all these these treats.
Speaker 1 (51:38):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (51:38):
Airheads were in the one of the books. This woman said, us.
Speaker 5 (51:44):
Candy, are these children eating?
Speaker 1 (51:46):
Go a couple of days with this is like a
whole summer?
Speaker 3 (51:49):
No, I don't know. Probably this is.
Speaker 5 (51:51):
A weekend camp.
Speaker 1 (51:52):
We can go a couple of days.
Speaker 4 (51:54):
She removed all the pieces and boards from a monopoly
board like it looks like a new box and wrapped it,
used to hair dryer.
Speaker 3 (52:00):
Seal it again.
Speaker 4 (52:01):
Uh yeah, yeah, that's the time, right, get me out
of here.
Speaker 6 (52:07):
My parents would have never done any.
Speaker 5 (52:09):
Of this, never, never, you know what they would have said.
Speaker 1 (52:11):
They would have said, it's probably good if you take
a break from candy, Yeah, exactly, while you're there, try
to walk some more.
Speaker 3 (52:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (52:19):
The one tried to get two burner phoners into camp.
Speaker 1 (52:23):
Yeah, so that's what really want.
Speaker 4 (52:25):
Except the counselor was like, uh, I can see on
Instagram they took a picture of them at camp.
Speaker 3 (52:32):
And so uh.
Speaker 1 (52:34):
Well, the parents were sending because they were like, in
case you need me, just go ahead and call, and
the kids were like, I'm not doing that right.
Speaker 4 (52:40):
Yeah. The one person said they saw the mom on
Instagram talking about how she was sneaking stuff. Oh, come
on out. But the parents, the couple of parents need
to be in the article, are like, it's just a
you know, fun tradition. My parents did it with me.
They sneak some Gurshey Bars in or whatever, and so
we do it with them.
Speaker 1 (52:55):
But it's all fun and games till you get a bear.
Speaker 4 (52:58):
Morning Mix