Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good Morning Bigs, Harris and Liz lud.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Mo, Morning Macfirthday's Power by Mark Swayne in Real Estate.
It's the fourteenth and.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
Noveda and we've got about a week left of Scorpio season,
so we got to celebrate it. Bag yeah for me
and starting it out, we've got Travis Barker, who is fifty.
I just feel so bizarre to me to say out loud,
but he is the drummer for Blank one eighty two,
also married to Courtney Kardashian. We'll look the other way
on that though, because he is such a good drummer.
(00:31):
He does all these different things, were whole drum upside
down while he's in concert, and I mean it's it's
just good. Give it, give it Baybe.
Speaker 4 (00:38):
You know him from this one. But here's where he
shows off.
Speaker 2 (00:50):
Yeah, you know much I hate a drum solo?
Speaker 1 (00:57):
Do you really hate it?
Speaker 3 (00:58):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (00:59):
It's short, okay, okay, I'm gonna give you like two
minutes drunk, Yeah, okay, ad minute?
Speaker 1 (01:07):
Yeah, back back to a minute.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
But they do this little stuff too. We're like, he'll
he'll be in that thing that looks like you know
when you're a kid and they're like this is how
they train the astronauts, and they like spin you around
in it. Yeah, yeah, he'll do that while he plays
a drunk it and I'm like, I have no idea
how you're holding onto those sticks, because right would be
getting the best to make sure.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
Maybe we'll go a minute. I don't know how long there.
It seemed to go on forever, so I probably tommit
teams like forever.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
Two minutes would be forever. Yeah, in your.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
World, I think fifteen seconds probably forever.
Speaker 4 (01:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
And then Josh Umel is fifty three. He's been in
a bunch of movies, but he's also a doomsday prepper.
Speaker 1 (01:41):
I'm preparing for you know.
Speaker 5 (01:43):
It started as just a little cabin in the woods,
turned into the one next door. So I two little
cabins in the woods, one with an electricity water, the
other one with just electricity but tiny. So I built
a bigger one and so I could have family and
stuff out there. So it's turned into like my passion.
Speaker 3 (02:00):
It's like a whole compound he's making out there. Sure
he doesn't tell anybody exactly where it is, because that's
the first rule of being a doomsday preppers. You don't
want everybody to come into your to your would you
call it a house, We'll call it a house, bunker,
your bunker. There you go, yeah, looking for shelter and can't.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
I'm sure that the people who have that have the
ability to keep those people at bay, right.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
Yes, yeah, they go hand in hand.
Speaker 3 (02:23):
That's part of the preparing on how doomsday is. And
then revrun from Run DMC is sixty one. Patrick Warburton
is sixty one as well. Everybody knows him as Putty
from Seinfeld. I know him though as a kronk from
a bon because he can speak squirrel.
Speaker 4 (02:42):
He did so many squeak squeaks, squeak sweak squeaks.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
Yeah, his voice is very rare.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
I liked him as the tick, the tick he was
yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:51):
And then King Charles the Third is seventy seven and
this is him trying to be funny.
Speaker 6 (02:57):
Rain will be light and patcha there were maybe a
few dry and to lose over Dumfries house inertia. Huh,
they'll be slow for the higher ground of the highlands
doing weather in ten years doing.
Speaker 3 (03:09):
The weather, yeah, and trying to be relatables.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
All those guys have always looked old. Oh, yeah, I
always feel like he was old. He's only seventy seven,
which is I mean older, but it's not just seems
like he's always been seventy seven.
Speaker 4 (03:19):
Yes, exactly.
Speaker 3 (03:20):
Yeah, even when you see like pictures of him from
when he and Princess Diana got married in the eighties,
You're like, how old is he? Sixty five? Right?
Speaker 7 (03:27):
Right?
Speaker 3 (03:28):
Yeah? Anyways, he's hilarious.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
And then finally it's a National Pickle Day and I
am a pickle enthusiast. You can pickle just about anything.
My favorite pickle is a petite baby dill. They have
that extra crunch, not to be confused with what did
you say that? I don't like gerkins. I don't like them.
I'm not a fa but I do like a corner schan.
I also like to save my pickle brine and juice
(03:56):
and then throw in califlower and carrots and make all
the pickled vegetables pickled, opra, pickled everything.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
Not pickled to day? Is it? It's pickled Day?
Speaker 8 (04:05):
Well?
Speaker 4 (04:05):
Yeah, but got them.
Speaker 2 (04:07):
I think we're just celebrating the pickle, not the act
of pickling, right.
Speaker 3 (04:11):
But a pickle is just a pickled cucumber, Like you
can't just take the whole what it does.
Speaker 9 (04:16):
It did, it's its own food. When you pickle a cauliflower,
it's pickled cauliflower. Where you pickle a cucumber and it
becomes a new food. Listen, it comes a pickle.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
Right then, that way you can't have a cookie day
because anything baked goods could all fall under Right, it.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
Is National pickled Day, and you hand me a beat
that has been pickled. I am ecstatic. All right, we.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
Were alone on that to say give me the beata.
Speaker 3 (04:44):
I'm gonna drop that carrot and pick up the beat.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
In the morning.
Speaker 10 (04:48):
It's The Morning mixed with Matt Harrison, Liz.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
Luda, Good day friends, Luda, Hello, Good day, TJ.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Good day.
Speaker 3 (05:00):
Well very formal. I don't know. I just like, are
you talking to me?
Speaker 2 (05:02):
I don't know, with your day whatever? You are on
of your Christmas sweaters? This his sweatshirt.
Speaker 3 (05:09):
Yeah, Charlie Brown in the Gang.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
I can't believe I have to look at the such
trauma from the peanuts because I can't stand him so much.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
I know, when you're the one that's got the Apple
Plus subscription, you could be watching it's a Charlie Brown
Christmas on repeat right now with Thanksgiving special. I missed
the Great Pumpkin this year, Like I can't even.
Speaker 2 (05:29):
Run right through a glass doors out of excitement.
Speaker 1 (05:33):
Yeah, T's got excitement today.
Speaker 9 (05:35):
He's got a show, right yeah, Okay, we're playing at
Tommy's Pub tonight.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
It's over at East Eastway Drive.
Speaker 3 (05:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
He's his band is called stink Bug DNK Bug. Yeah,
and so he's got the stink Bug thing on a
day earlier this week we did hobbies that were pretentious
and these disc golf ended up on the list. Yeah,
so we should salute him. Here's a little TJ song
for you.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
Jay shouts in the whole road.
Speaker 9 (06:06):
Like a boy.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
Forever.
Speaker 3 (06:24):
You need to make a T shirts stink Bug forever.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
Yeah, we'll work on that, yes. Uh.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
And they are a punk band right, yes, yeah, I
went with that theme. And so what what time or whatever?
Speaker 4 (06:34):
The show starts at like nine? Okay, uh, we're closing,
so you're.
Speaker 11 (06:39):
Oh, yeah, of course they are.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
Yeah, stink at beginning, you know, too much to handle.
Speaker 4 (06:44):
It doesn't have to do with me having to work
tonight and I won't be there until later.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
Nothing to do with that do with that.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
H when are you going to ask him to add
a saxophone, which you play to his band.
Speaker 4 (06:57):
I've already invited her. You have she's out.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
She doesn't do you say you're out.
Speaker 4 (07:01):
No, She's like, it's too late, it's late at.
Speaker 2 (07:04):
You want to be a rock star or not, lady, No, okay,
Morning Mixed Matt Harris Liz Luda News Nut. Some people
they really need to get places, so they go one
hundred miles an hour. Now, we can't imagine Luda going
one hundred never, but I can imagine Liz doing it
for the reason or one of the reasons this person did.
They were in their heads screaming pizza, pizza. Twenty one
(07:29):
year old woman Florida Yasmin Arazo caught super speeding one
hundred and seven miles per hour posted speed limit fifty five.
Speaker 1 (07:37):
Here she's talking about it.
Speaker 8 (07:38):
There's a little cheese up the streets from my house
and where I was gonna go Johnny, And so I
was speeding in a clot that's twelve. So I literally
had like fifteen minutes to get there.
Speaker 3 (07:47):
What did it even to.
Speaker 8 (07:47):
Feel like one hundred and seven? It's just like I
was driving to get so little. I was hungry.
Speaker 3 (07:53):
Yeah, yeah, no, one hundred percent. That would be if
I were going to be speeding, that would be the
reason why.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Yeah, you're trying to get to a mast.
Speaker 3 (08:01):
Or I'm trying to keep it warm on the way home,
you know what I mean, so that way it doesn't
cool down. I don't want to have to microwave pizza,
trying to turn those seat warmers on in the passenger seat,
all that pizza in and.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
Safety first pulled over at eleven fifty two am, she said,
told the officers that's what she's doing.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
They closed it, says eleven fifty two to eight.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
I think they met pa.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
I think they did because it closes at midnight. So yeah,
that's what she was doing.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
She's facing get charge of dangerous and success to speeding
at her new Florida law that went to affect July first,
so that if you are up to a certain speed
you get thirty she could get thirty days in jail
to five hundred and.
Speaker 3 (08:37):
Say if she was going for the pizza puffs, because
if so, I understand. Have you tried those? They look
like little muffins, but they're pizzas.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
I haven't been to a little Caesar and I don't
even know where there's one near me.
Speaker 3 (08:46):
Oh there's one in non Holly. Shout out to that one.
They're delicious.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
There you go. And I saw this and this story
is not important, but I have a question for you.
Speaker 2 (08:53):
So police in DC look at for nine suspects that
burglarized a vape shop. The crazy part is there's footage
all nine we're in one little vehicle. And so they're
saying it was like a clown car, which ties out
with my brother yesterday was with I think four or
five twenty somethings and maybe early thirty. He saw people
getting out of.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
A car like that. He said, Oh, it's like a
clown car. And none of them knew the reference.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
Oh wow, They're like, what do you mean the clown car?
Speaker 3 (09:20):
I think I think the young ns today when they
think of clowns, they think of it, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Maybe or whatever. Right, I don't even know if I
I mean probably when I was a kid. Kid.
Speaker 2 (09:30):
How long has it been since you've seen clowns get
out of a car like that?
Speaker 6 (09:33):
Right?
Speaker 1 (09:34):
So I mean it's more of a saying that it
is something you've write.
Speaker 9 (09:36):
With this, I feel like it was more like reference
in cartoons and stuff when I was growing up.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
True, yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
I've never actually witnessed it. Yeah, but it would have
been like in.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
A movie or a cartoon, because I think I might
have witnessed it.
Speaker 2 (09:48):
That was like one of their wacky things, you know,
right in the middle of the because it probably were
coming up from the floor, so they just keep coming out,
coming out, coming out.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
So yeah, but I was surprised.
Speaker 2 (09:56):
I'm gonna have to ask my kids, say, that's the
thing for y'all to homework tonight. I ask young people,
do you know what a clown car is?
Speaker 1 (10:02):
Your kids aren't going to know, you know, you don't
think you're not gonna know.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
You're gonna ask them later. And then one other thing
I saw that made me wonder about people. Uh, they're
the Googles, the Google. The Google sends out like the
trending things, most trending thing, And I just saw aut
Conklin on WBTV do and I was like, what are
you doing now?
Speaker 1 (10:19):
Because it's like wear a jacket today where sunglasses? I'm like,
can't people figure that out?
Speaker 2 (10:23):
Once they see the temperature top trending thing or on
Google how to dress for forty degree weather?
Speaker 1 (10:31):
Wow? Would you ever Google?
Speaker 4 (10:33):
Never?
Speaker 3 (10:34):
I mean I would look at now, what's the temperature?
Speaker 2 (10:37):
Later?
Speaker 3 (10:37):
Do I need a light jacket? A heavy jacket? How
many pairs are you paying?
Speaker 4 (10:41):
But because they're not asking Google what to wear?
Speaker 1 (10:43):
How to dress for forty degree weather if you're not.
Speaker 3 (10:46):
Used to it?
Speaker 1 (10:47):
But how is it so good?
Speaker 9 (10:48):
What?
Speaker 4 (10:49):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (10:49):
You still know?
Speaker 4 (10:50):
Right?
Speaker 3 (10:51):
You just got done with summer? You're all like shorts and.
Speaker 4 (10:55):
How to dress yourself?
Speaker 3 (10:56):
These people shouldn't have Do I need leggings? Do I
wear a.
Speaker 2 (11:01):
Thanks for starting your day with The Morning, Miss It's.
Speaker 10 (11:04):
The Morning mixed with Matt Harris and Liz lud Here's.
Speaker 1 (11:07):
Your latest pop up Power by Mark Spain Real Estate.
Speaker 3 (11:10):
And have you seen this video with Cynthia Rivo yet?
Speaker 6 (11:12):
No?
Speaker 3 (11:13):
Oh my gosh. So it was like one of those
wicked premieres Ariana Grande, Cynthia Rivo, some other people from
the cast. They were walking and it was in Singapore,
like right outside where the premiere was going to be,
and an over zealous fan basically charged it Ariana trying
to like put their arm around her and get like
a picture or whatever before security can even react or
(11:35):
move on it. Cynthia is like, well, bam, right between
her and the fan and pushing him off of her
and immediately shielding Arianna from the fan and making sure
she's okay. And then you see security, which was like
maybe a step behind Arianna finally be like, oh whoa
wait a second, we need to we should probably be
intervening and set at one of the other stars walking right.
Speaker 1 (11:58):
Yeah, yeah, powers.
Speaker 3 (12:00):
That's what it is. She used to find gravity, you know.
Speaker 4 (12:03):
Yeah, she really does get right in there.
Speaker 3 (12:06):
Yeah, yeah, you need to watch the video. And so, like,
I know, Ariana Grande before she's talked about having severe
like anxiety because you know, there was that Manchester bombing
at that WE performance she did. Ever since then, she
travels usually with with a dog that's like a security
not a security dog, comfort comfort dog or yeah the
official title dog. Okay, yeah, I can't think of the word.
(12:32):
And so you can see that Cynthia is in tune
with that and knows in the media is like are
you okay? Are you all right? And then security steps.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
November twenty first, which is a week from today, Yeah,
Wicked for Good comes out, Taylor Swift rocks harder than
ac DC and don't let anybody tell you differently whoa
The ac DC was in Australia the other night, and
Australia registered seismic activity combination to be se DC speakers
(13:01):
and fans registered in the two to five Hurtz range,
but scientists said they're the largest singles they got with
the three nights of Taylor Swift played there.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
Yeah, he's ad a quote.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
We're picking up the ground motion, We're not picking up
the sound from the air. So you've got speakers of
the ground pumping out vibrations, gets transmitted through the ground,
the crowd jumping up and down fitting the energy, and
there you go.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
T Swift over ac DC.
Speaker 9 (13:23):
When it comes to rock and roll those about to
rock Weed Taylor Swift, Police eleute Taylor Swift.
Speaker 3 (13:29):
So I lived down in the Pacific Northwest for a while,
and there's a place where you can play in Seattle,
and if you cheer loud enough, it will make seismic activity.
Speaker 1 (13:36):
Called the Twelfth Team on the air.
Speaker 3 (13:38):
Yeah yeah, And so like people go out of their
way to try to like cheer as loud as possible
to make it happen. And I'm like, what are you
trying to do right now? Let's stop this. Want it?
Speaker 1 (13:50):
No, no, you want it?
Speaker 3 (13:52):
And earthquake yeah, well you want it?
Speaker 1 (13:55):
Yeah, talking to harm anything that earth. You know, you
got it to be the stadium. That's the out of stadium.
The Panthers would pay money.
Speaker 3 (14:03):
Oh yeah, but that's it's Seattle. It's like a city
built on top of a city. Like I'm not no,
I'm not messing with that ground structure.
Speaker 4 (14:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
But another thing, Oh, I'm being ridiculous, like earthquakes.
Speaker 9 (14:16):
No, no, you don't like chat crowd cheering earthquakes.
Speaker 4 (14:22):
Yeah, that's this mythological earth thing.
Speaker 3 (14:25):
No, they're a real things. They register like.
Speaker 2 (14:28):
It's just a register, but it's not an earth. Statium
has been around for a long time. They haven't had
no Okay, people die. It could happen though, Yeah, you're
speaking of something that stinks.
Speaker 3 (14:38):
Oh, Darius. So, Charlie Brown, Thanksgetting is fifty two years old,
and I love all of the Charlie Brown holiday specials.
The one where they're eating the toast and the popcorn. Though.
It takes it to the next level. And it came
out in nineteen seventy three. It was on CBS. It
ended up going to ABC uh for a Peanuts movie though.
It's the first time there is an adult voice in
(15:00):
one of the movies, and it is this one. And
it's got Vince Giraldi singing the song Little Birdie and
that's a jazz pianist. Yeah, and so he sings in there.
So that's a big deal. Bye. This is where I
think you might think it's interesting. Initially, they had a
really big issue with Woodstock committing bird cannibalism in the
(15:23):
special because Woodstock and Snoopy cut the turkey and then
they eat a plate together. And when CBS aired it,
they said, no, no, no, no, no, we are taking this out.
This absolutely cannot grace television.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
Streaking well.
Speaker 3 (15:37):
Yeah, and then once it made it to ABC in
two thousand and one, ABC said bring back the turkey
eating bird. Yes, and they restored it and now on
Apple it's restored as well. The missing scene.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
Something that is foul. That's good.
Speaker 2 (15:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
And just in case you were wondering, the children actors
that Lucy and Charlie Brown still friends, still keep in touch.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
Oh they're lying. They just want to go to it
some sort of comic comic.
Speaker 3 (16:08):
You make that money wherever you can deserve it.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
This is The Morning Mix Matt Harris is Luda in
the Morning.
Speaker 10 (16:20):
It's The Morning Mixed with Matt Harrison Liz Luda. Nine.
Speaker 2 (16:26):
If you no longer care what anyone thinks, you've mastered
these eleven things that normal people still struggle with.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
Probably won't get to eleven. But here's the idea. One
is you keep your goals to yourself.
Speaker 2 (16:36):
No, okay, talking about your goals and bragging too early
about achieving them can actually make it harder to accomplish them.
Can see merrigant in certain situations, and you're taking away
the satisfaction of achieving something just to seek attention.
Speaker 3 (16:50):
Oh yeah, I don't want to do dis seek attention. I
don't think I'm bragging either. I think I just don't
stop talking. So if I have a goal at some point,
that is very one of the things.
Speaker 1 (16:59):
Yeaheah yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (17:00):
I'm also gonna tell you all about my favorite food
what I did yesterday, all the way down to what
grocery store I went to, Like it's just gonna all
fall out.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
Yeah. I don't think some people are bragging about it,
but it is. Uh.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
There was a you know, the thirty for thirty ESPN,
right documentaries. They did a mock one which was like
this person ran a marathon and didn't tell anyone they
were training.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
It was like, because if you a lot of times
when people are.
Speaker 12 (17:24):
Doing something they're they talk about it a lot. Oh yeah, yeah,
and that's fine. I guess that's what you're doing. Yeah, Like,
I mean, you're confident without needing attention. Na, there's a
you know, attention seeking behavior stems from foundation of insecurity,
leak on validation of other latch on the validation of others.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (17:44):
I love attention, not in a play like I don't,
but I and I think I'm confident without it.
Speaker 2 (17:51):
Uh yeah, maybe maybe I have to think about that one.
Speaker 3 (17:55):
Like I confidently sit on the couch alone and watch
reality TV. Nobody's there validating me as I'm yelling. You know,
the Sister Wives crowd.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
You embrace your weirdness. There, you go, okay, yeah, we're good.
Yeah we have good with that. We'll both up. I
mean we openly talk about it than we are.
Speaker 3 (18:11):
Yeah, you embrace that weirdness.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
Uh, this is a tough one to me. You prioritize
rest without guilt. I've gotten better, I do.
Speaker 3 (18:19):
I do, I I had to learn it, but it's
not getting.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
Better, Like you're passing on plans as part of that,
but also even taking a nap sometimes.
Speaker 3 (18:27):
Right to recognize physical limitations. It's a hard thing, but
once you start to recognize it, you start feeling better,
and then you can be more mentally present in those
other moments.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Right, you enjoy your own company?
Speaker 2 (18:38):
Oh my god, yeah, I don't do you You.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
Follow your husband around the time everywhere.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
Whole time you said you can't go you can't drive
down the street for ten minutes without talking to us.
Speaker 3 (18:48):
Just because I really like him too, but like I
didn't talk to him this morning when I drove him.
Speaker 4 (18:52):
What whoa?
Speaker 2 (18:53):
This is the first time she's ever trouble in paradise no,
sep No, it's.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
The first time we've ever heard sleep. No, because he
usually just gets up on his own. But if he's asleep,
I'm not gonna wake it.
Speaker 2 (19:09):
Since we've since we've been you've never said that, Oh,
it's the first time, okay, because every time we ask
you like, oh, I always talked over the pote as
long as he's wake. And a big thing is you
accept that not everyone will like you, and this is uh, yeah,
pretty interesting. They you know, and everybody's your comming to
your tea and you're not. Uh, being liked involves more
nuanced and just being a good person or a good personality. Right,
(19:30):
Oh yeah, you got shared experience environment. Uh it's you know,
so just maybe different tastes different things, right.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
I have to recognize that other people don't appreciate my
communication style of blurting things out. Yeah, that's that's my
biggest one that I encounter where people don't like me
is because they're like, why does she talk so much?
Or why does she interject?
Speaker 2 (19:52):
Or I don't even think about it, honestly because you
do it too.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
Yeah, I guess, man, I don't even think.
Speaker 4 (19:57):
No, I don't think about people like it, right, Yeah,
That's where I'm at.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
Like, I don't.
Speaker 2 (20:01):
It's not like I don't think. I mean, it's not
even in my like I don't think about it, and
I don't don't think about it, Like I don't worry
about it.
Speaker 4 (20:07):
I am saying, I don't worry about it cross my mind.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
Never.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
The biggest thing I worry about is not necessarily if
you like me, But I never want you to think
I was trying to be mean or make you feel unincluded,
or that I don't have time for it.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
Just I assume they're gonna love me, and I'm charming there.
I don't worry about it.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
You are and one other thing. You're fine disappointing people.
Speaker 4 (20:25):
Oh yeah, Unfortunately I've had Yeah, I've had.
Speaker 2 (20:28):
To morning Mix about Harris Liz Luda.
Speaker 1 (20:32):
Another ten fifteen minutes.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
We'll have the Southern Christmas Show tickets. But for those
who have been listening, know that list is because there
were some tough times with their dogs.
Speaker 1 (20:43):
One passed out.
Speaker 3 (20:44):
Two weeks it'll be two weeks tomorrow she passed away.
And I promise there's like some funniness to the story
I'm about to tell, so it's not all gloom. But
so two saturdays ago, I guess two weeks tomorrow, my
big dog, Gunner, she passed away, which was really really sad,
and I've been emotional. I still haven't slept in my room.
(21:05):
I've been sleeping in the guest room because I don't
want to sleep without her there. It's like a whole thing.
And so like my dogs have always been my best friends.
We do everything together. We watch TV, we snuggle, we
cuttle it's all the things. And so I was having
a really hard time with her passing. But pretty much
right after she passed, I have another dog. Her name
is Lucy, and she is a wiener dog. And she
(21:27):
looked like she ate a bumblebee. Her face was all swollen.
Oh no, And so we had to just pack her
up and then take her to the emergency vet because
it was on a Sunday, and they were like, oh,
it looks like an infection. They gave her an antibiotic.
They said, follow up with your regular vet in a
couple days. So we did that. Our regular vet looked
at her and was like, oh, this is outside of
(21:47):
my scope of specialty and what I can handle, because
since it hasn't gone down the infection, it looks like
there might be a tumor in the back of her mouth,
and that is going to open up some new conversations
that probably wouldn't be happening otherwise, you know. And so
he sent us out to a specialist. And so she's
been on an antibiotic for like a week, and yesterday
(22:08):
we went to the specialist and I have what my
sister refers to as magical thinking. Okay, okay, and I
had while we were sitting in the like the room,
like waiting for the vet and the doctor and stuff,
like I had prayed and then just like asked for
a sign, like what should I do? What do I
do in this moment? And so she comes in, she
(22:31):
takes the dog, she goes and looks and does like
a whole deal. But a little bit of background on
my dog Lucy is. Back in twenty and seventeen, we
were living in Memphis, Tennessee, and she had heart surgery
at Auburn University. And so because of that, there's more
risk whenever she has surgery because she can't do the anesthesia,
(22:51):
and so we haven't done any anesthesia since her original
heart surgery all those years ago, and that was in Memphis, Tennessee.
Keep in mind, I am from this area. I lived
in Memphis, I moved to Portland, Oregon. I'm now back
in Charlotte here I am. And so she takes her
back and she comes back and she says, the good
news is I think that it is just a really
large infection. It's not gonna get better on its own.
(23:13):
We're gonna have to go in and probably remove all
of her teeth to get to it, but we won't
know completely what it is until we do the imaging.
But because of her history, she is going to have
to get a full cardiology work up ahead of time.
And I was like, okay, And so in my mind,
I'm like, I just need to sign. I need to
sign that she's gonna one survive the surgery, like all
(23:34):
those thoughts, because like it's gonna be really expensive. I
can tell from the word like dog cardiologist to get
very pricey. And so she refers us to a doctor
and as soon as she says the doctor's name, I go, well,
that sounds familiar because he's got the same name as
a sandwich. And so that stood out to me and
(23:56):
I was like, he has the same name as a sandwich.
I feel like I've had a doctor with that name before.
And so like I'm not thinking much, and so my
husband also kind of like Cox's head to the side
and he starts like looking stuff up on his phone.
The cardiologist that she referred us to did his residency
and did her heart surgery in two thou seventeen at
Halvard and now he lives here and is a cardiologist
(24:21):
in Charlotte. And that's the exact one she was referring
to us to and thank goodness he's named after a
sandwich because I remembered his name and so like, we
looked it up her medical records and he was on
her surgery the first time, and I was like, well,
that is my magic sign from the universe to do it,
so I will be in debt for the rest of
my life.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
When does this happen?
Speaker 3 (24:44):
Uh, So we have to get her through the cardiology
in the next couple of weeks. The surgery would be December.
Speaker 1 (24:48):
Eighteenth, so you know, a little bit of time.
Speaker 3 (24:50):
Yeah, a little bit of time.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
Its teeth for now.
Speaker 3 (24:53):
Well, yeah, she's eating a lot of soft food issues.
Speaker 2 (24:56):
Yeah, but there's potential for.
Speaker 3 (24:58):
Happy there's central very happy ending is as long as
she checks out with cardiology, which I trust him because
he did her heart surgery before and then all that.
Speaker 2 (25:05):
But yeah, premix Matt Harris lives Ludum producer TJS on
the Christmas Show Tickets in a minute here. Uh, there
are some times, uh you know, probably on the weekend
where you get a little maybe stumbling around after.
Speaker 1 (25:16):
A couple of cocktails. It don't happen.
Speaker 2 (25:19):
Study analyzed emergency room visits for like the fifteen years
injuries people suffered while Amy, you already inebriated, I am
right now.
Speaker 1 (25:28):
Drunk or high?
Speaker 2 (25:29):
And where do you think the injuries happened the most
in the house.
Speaker 3 (25:34):
I'm going to guess liver.
Speaker 4 (25:38):
Which rooms? Yeah, stairs is.
Speaker 3 (25:41):
One stucking his floors?
Speaker 1 (25:46):
Bathroom bicycles they have on here, but that is third.
Speaker 3 (25:50):
I was saying, like, shower, this is weird.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
Yow, That's what I was saying.
Speaker 2 (25:54):
No, oh, yes, that's tenth. Wow yeah, uh number four.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
Check this out. Ceilings and walls.
Speaker 11 (26:02):
What what are you doing?
Speaker 1 (26:05):
I don't know. Were they on a line? Were they
I don't know, Just as ceilings.
Speaker 4 (26:09):
They're trying to do their best Spider Man impression.
Speaker 1 (26:11):
Yeah that's now.
Speaker 2 (26:12):
It's only four percent compared to seventy percent. Stairs thirteen,
but that's fourth. Windows are fifth.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
Okay, Oh that I could see?
Speaker 2 (26:19):
Uh, beds okay, yeah yeah yeah, porches and balconies okay,
Tables we've all seen the America's funniestone videos when someone's
dancing on a table.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
In a cloud.
Speaker 2 (26:29):
Oh yeah, and then chairs, bathtubs, fences and actually alcohol bottles. Oh,
the most of the drunk injuries as you would imagine
happened to stupid men. The men part, Okay, let me
tell you this. There's only one part of the body
women are more likely to injure when a pation than guys.
Speaker 1 (26:51):
Ankle, uh the kratchola?
Speaker 9 (26:56):
Really?
Speaker 1 (26:58):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (26:58):
Now, men most injured body part is the trunk or
that region down there, followed by the other head, face
in other parts. But women's number one, far and away
is the trunk or that region what yeah, do it?
Speaker 1 (27:18):
Yeah, I don't know. And they're a lot less likely
to hurt their face.
Speaker 3 (27:21):
Yeah, I mean, I don't I don't drink or anything
like that. I really thought it was going to be ankles,
because don't people always like step side the ankle?
Speaker 1 (27:30):
Yeah, well yeah, no, yeah, that's that.
Speaker 3 (27:33):
That's all on uneven ground or something.
Speaker 2 (27:35):
That's all under other body parts, but head and face,
and you know, I don't know what's happening to that.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
Well, you're most soften me, Rachel region.
Speaker 3 (27:43):
Yeah, injured on the stairs? What are you doing on
the stairs or the wall, the wall or ceiling there?
Speaker 1 (27:51):
Yeah yeah, yeah, exactly right. And by the age most likely.
Speaker 2 (27:54):
To go to the er because of alcohol related injuries
is twenty one. Oh, yeah, okay, but then it drops
in your thirties like drops, and then forty says way
back up again, oh yeah, and.
Speaker 1 (28:05):
Then fifty then it drops again.
Speaker 4 (28:06):
There well, because once you hit forty you have regular
pains and aches, and then you know, the drinking just
doesn't happen.
Speaker 1 (28:13):
In your thirties.
Speaker 2 (28:13):
You still remember the injuries from your twenties and then
you're like, oh, I also get injured early lea right, yeah, yet.
Speaker 9 (28:20):
In the morning.
Speaker 10 (28:20):
It's The Morning mixed with Matt Harrison, Liz Luda, Black.
Speaker 2 (28:26):
Meer episodes, Reality Tucking to Dead People, and AI start
up And there's a few of them, but this one
is LA called two Way the Number two WAI launch
an app I'll let you communicate with friends and relatives
after they die.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
Well not really, it's.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
An AI version of them, but they think people will
do it as long as it's close enough.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
The real thing.
Speaker 2 (28:46):
They made an ad where a pregnant lady face times
her dead mom and tells her the baby is kicking.
Skips ahead show a kid at ten months old, ten
years old, thirty years old talking to the grandma like
he's still alive.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
Here's a little clip.
Speaker 3 (28:59):
He's kidding see wonderful, kicking like crazy.
Speaker 10 (29:05):
He's listening.
Speaker 7 (29:06):
Put your hand on.
Speaker 3 (29:07):
Your chummy and hum da hi.
Speaker 1 (29:11):
Hi grandma hate Charlie. I went to school today.
Speaker 3 (29:14):
It was really fun. Who's gonna be a great grandmother?
Speaker 1 (29:16):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (29:19):
Congratulations, She says that he's been kicking a lot though.
Speaker 10 (29:22):
Tell her to put her hand on her chummy.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
See there you got it's you know, it's a picture.
They think they can do this with a three minutes
of voice. They think, they say, like a video startup thing.
Speaker 3 (29:36):
Yeah, and they're supposed to be able to not only
get their likeness, but a sense of who they are,
to recreate it so you can have conversations back and
forth with it. And this is I think we are
entering very dangerous territory.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
Some call it evil, some call it exciting.
Speaker 7 (29:52):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
There's two categories of people that do this thing.
Speaker 2 (29:55):
The first one people who lost someone who want to reconnect.
The second is people who want to immortalize themselves. So
they say, you know, I want to make this before
I die or whatever, and so so there's two different
ways to do that.
Speaker 1 (30:11):
They say, you can maybe shape your legacy or whatever.
Speaker 3 (30:14):
I understand making a video that could be played after
you pass of just like, hey, this is like a
family history or this like that is fine. Yes, it's
the interaction that bothers me. And one I would like
to go ahead and just call on my millennials and say,
didn't we learn this with Edward from Twilight? He was
not human, he was not doing.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
He.
Speaker 3 (30:36):
Was not alive and was onto a vampire. But I
think you're putting yourself in a dangerous situation where you
start to take away the humanity of what a human is.
And as much as it sucks, the life cycle is
something we all have to learn to cope and deal with.
We are born, we live, and then we die, and
we are going to lose many loved ones along the
way until we are the one ourselves that passes. And
(30:59):
I think that when you start to blur those lines.
Right now, we're in a position where we know what
a life cycle is. But if you start this with
somebody like the little boy Charlie in the Acting, he
grows up not being able to completely comprehend what a
life cycle is.
Speaker 1 (31:16):
We don't know what's gonna happen.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
I mean, obviously, but they why would they not because
you know that, Okay, this is my AI, you still know.
Speaker 1 (31:23):
They're dead today.
Speaker 3 (31:23):
I you're not gonna get blurring the lines too much
that you're like, well, I can still have a conversation
with them. It's like they're here. And the thing is
is you have to be able, I feel like, emotionally
to come to terms with the fact they're not here.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
You still can. I mean, people listen to voicemails, watch
old videos.
Speaker 3 (31:39):
But you know that they're not interacting with you. That's
the difference.
Speaker 9 (31:42):
And if you know that was from the past, yeah,
versus this is masquerading as the present.
Speaker 2 (31:48):
It could be, but it could be. Uh, we don't know, obviously,
it's never happened. And they're you know, experts have mixed readers.
One article they can tell you the pros and cons
or whatever, and some people it can help them, especially
the short term with greeting. Others can get too deep
into it like anything else, right, like this one percent
is just basically like moderation.
Speaker 1 (32:07):
Just like anything in life.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
You either get too into it or you're like, hey,
you know you to take your voicemail and listen to.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
It every day all day longer.
Speaker 3 (32:16):
Yeah, I don't think technology I am. I'm afraid of this.
I'm afraid of what it'll do to people that are
young when they're exposed to this as they grow older,
and what that will do to humans in general.
Speaker 2 (32:27):
We said that about a lot of things, pool and
pinball machines, and.
Speaker 3 (32:32):
This feels very different though, because it doesn't humanize us anymore?
Speaker 1 (32:37):
Why does it? Ai?
Speaker 3 (32:39):
But you do because you understand that, and most people
will unders.
Speaker 2 (32:42):
There's always going to be somebody on anything that has
you know, they We have people that understand and stuff,
and you know.
Speaker 3 (32:49):
Ai is AI at this point, and they're still trying
to marry Ai and that they are.
Speaker 2 (32:54):
Marrying dog and they are couches or whatever.
Speaker 3 (32:58):
But if you show this to a young child and
I think this is my grandma, well they.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
Don't because he's telling this is an AI.
Speaker 3 (33:04):
I get very nervous.
Speaker 1 (33:05):
I know you do. You're not alone nervous.
Speaker 2 (33:08):
I like, what's difference than like I go to a
seance and I believe that they're going to talk to me.
Speaker 1 (33:11):
This is even better because it's actually real.
Speaker 3 (33:14):
I think that part of the grieving process is you
have to be able to own and accept that they
are no.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
Longer both like this.
Speaker 2 (33:21):
One guy says as long as this' he's in moderation,
you can do both. They'll get you through that initial
time or whatever. You can have a little conversation. It
can help you through, as long as you don't go
too deep into that.
Speaker 4 (33:30):
I'm not not a I don't have a problem with
But it's like when you're showing your grandkids or I don't.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
Know you're in now sdeo in the video, they're just
not answering, but they're saying, hey, Charlie, hey hey.
Speaker 4 (33:44):
It's the interactive part of it.
Speaker 3 (33:45):
It's the interacting.
Speaker 2 (33:46):
If I talking Grandma, it's okay, hey Grandma, but she's talking.
Speaker 1 (33:50):
About the weather of the day, or the news of
the day or.
Speaker 2 (33:53):
The current still so she hasn't talked about anything before
she died, right, Ye, yeah, okay.
Speaker 3 (33:58):
I think gets messing with reality too too much. And listen,
we all have people we've lost that we would love
to have a conversation with.
Speaker 1 (34:07):
Most people I lost, I don't really want to talk
to who didn't want.
Speaker 3 (34:10):
To talk to them when they were here.
Speaker 2 (34:11):
But if I don't have to do yeah, not a kidding,
Yeah I would like to, but I don't yearn for
it because they were you know older mostly you know whatever.
But but if it's somebody, I'm I'm okay with Itay,
I mean, I'm in.
Speaker 1 (34:23):
I want, I want, Yeah, I'm in. Not percent.
Speaker 2 (34:27):
I'm gonna make one, right, I'm gonna make one. I'm
gonna give it to you guys. When I do, I'm
gonna force it to It's gonna pop up. I'm gonna
set it alarms and it's gonna stop up and put
it on our phones like that YouTube album.
Speaker 1 (34:38):
Yes, yes, and.
Speaker 11 (34:41):
Everybody's gonna get mad. Harris talking to them after I die. Yeah,
there's the morning makes Mat Harris, Liz Luda, who's this this? Hi, Kelly,
you're talking about the AI dead people?
Speaker 1 (34:53):
Yes? What do you think on Yeah? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (34:58):
Well you know, don't you think though, that every generation
worries about the new technology, and so far, up to
this point, it's been okay.
Speaker 7 (35:10):
The technology the part that's not what I'm worried about.
I'm worried about the people who can't handle death.
Speaker 3 (35:16):
Now.
Speaker 7 (35:16):
Yeah, and now you're going to give them the opportunity
to talk to them and.
Speaker 3 (35:20):
Just pretend it didn't happen.
Speaker 1 (35:21):
It you don't think they're doing there's people doing that now.
Speaker 3 (35:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (35:26):
But see now that you have the opportunity to talk
and they're going to communicate back with you, I think
it's gonna make their mental.
Speaker 1 (35:33):
Health way work. Well how about this.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
Why should I suffer because it's gonna, you know, make
someone else better. I'm gonna be better. I can get
through my grief easy and I can handle it.
Speaker 1 (35:43):
Somebody. We're not gonna have anything.
Speaker 2 (35:45):
Because there might be a small percentage of people that
go cuckoo.
Speaker 7 (35:49):
Uh, give me a photograph any day.
Speaker 2 (35:52):
Yeah, listen, I'm gonna photograph and I cut out the lips,
put my lips into it and talk.
Speaker 1 (35:59):
One.
Speaker 3 (35:59):
I feel like you're probably gonna do that anyways, because
you're a real weirdo. But you no, I want to
just go ahead and say the devil doesn't need an
advocate right now. All right, We've got the kids that
are going to grow up with it. That's the difference
is we we recognize and can see.
Speaker 2 (36:14):
The morning Mixed Matt Harris, Liz Luda, producer TJ. I'm
the only one, okay with my dead mom coming back
to talk to me. She's probably yelling me a lot,
So I need that. Yeah, no, thea So, yeah, you guys,
your final word on aid when they're bringing the dead
Grandmas on your phone.
Speaker 3 (36:33):
Absolutely not. I I feel like it takes humanity away
from humans.
Speaker 1 (36:39):
It was an animal.
Speaker 3 (36:40):
I still don't like it. I think you need to
be able to work through and understand that there's a
beginning of life, there's an end of life.
Speaker 1 (36:47):
What if you have it that it can only be
for a month.
Speaker 3 (36:51):
I still don't like it. I don't like the idea
of interaction. And I know you said like the idea
of getting closure, having a final conversation. I don't think
you would to have.
Speaker 1 (36:59):
It one right exactly.
Speaker 4 (37:01):
That's the whole thing.
Speaker 9 (37:02):
It's all fake, it's not and it's just like, I
don't know what that's gonna do to my brain.
Speaker 4 (37:07):
Couldn't handle that anyone's brain.
Speaker 2 (37:09):
Well, I guarantee you guys are seeing me dead talking
to you somehow some way.
Speaker 4 (37:13):
No, of course, dead side, I know you are.
Speaker 1 (37:18):
Matt Harrison is Luda and TJ.
Speaker 2 (37:22):
And this furniture needs a makeover, rebrand, a rebrand.
Speaker 1 (37:28):
It is the recliner.
Speaker 2 (37:30):
Yes, remember when my kids laughed and I asked them
to sit in the recliner for whatever reason at my house.
They're like, you mean the Grandpall chair. Yeah, they called
it the Grandpall chair. And then I asked, what are
their friends? What's that chair? Oh, it's a Grandpall chair.
Like what is happening to recliner?
Speaker 3 (37:47):
And I think, and I've seen lots of stuff of
movement on TikTok and videos of we'll say, younger people,
younger millennials. It needs a rebrand because we do all
this binge watching. Now there's the bed rotting is now
in the dictionary. A recliner would probably be more ideal
for these things to take place. And it's the comfiest
(38:08):
piece of furniture, and I feel like it gets people
just look down on it. They're too snobby. They say, oh,
I'm too good for a recliner. But I'll tell you what.
When you've had a long day and those puppies are barking,
but you still want to sit upright to feel like
you're part of the party, but you want to elevate
those feet, that recliner's there for you.
Speaker 1 (38:25):
Now. Sometimes it is space. You have limited space, so
that time is.
Speaker 3 (38:31):
The Other thing is how many recliners out there have
heated seats? You know what I mean? So many that's
hard to put into a couch. So now you've got
a heated recliner. You got your feet up. And then
some of them even do those little back massagey things.
Speaker 2 (38:44):
Oh yeah, but they but the butt heater. What are
you watching TV outside or right? Yeah, my husband keeps
the house cold.
Speaker 3 (38:51):
I usually wrapped up in a blanket like a burrito,
and I could really add some extra rooms plus the
lower back as a lady. As a lady, the seat
warmers are amazing, I will just go ahead and say
that because sometimes you get crampy. Cramp day really helps
with that. It's like put a heat and pad down.
Speaker 1 (39:07):
There you go, there you go. I understand.
Speaker 2 (39:08):
So we're trying to try to get a little too
personal on just no, it's that personally.
Speaker 3 (39:13):
I think that's why women love the heated seats so much,
is because if you're feeling crampy, pop that thing on.
Speaker 1 (39:19):
Well, okay, if I can lay down on it.
Speaker 2 (39:21):
There's some parts I need warmed one occasion, right, that's
a whole another story.
Speaker 9 (39:27):
Thanks for starting your day with The Morning Miss It's.
Speaker 10 (39:29):
The Morning mixed with Matt Harrison.
Speaker 1 (39:31):
Liz Lda No, here's your latest.
Speaker 2 (39:33):
Pop up my Mark's main real estate at the theater
is the Running Man remake getting sixty three brother critics.
My Man crushed Glenn Pales in it and the original
commund in eighty seven, both based on a Stephen King
novel about a violent game show where contenss have to
survive while the network's hunters in order any citizens trying
to kill them.
Speaker 3 (39:52):
I thought it was about the dance move.
Speaker 1 (39:56):
The history of the Running Man.
Speaker 2 (39:57):
Yeah, no, The Pals character Ben Richards volunteers to participate
on the show in a desperate effort to save his
daughter's life after against blacklisted and can't find work before
her medicine. I mean that sounds good too, But Glenda Pal,
Josh Broland, Coleman Domingo, Michael Sarah, William H.
Speaker 1 (40:14):
Macy, that's what you've.
Speaker 3 (40:15):
Got, Michael Sarah in a movie and call it The
Running Man? Though, come on, who else wasn't digging dance routine?
Speaker 9 (40:21):
I'm with you once, Michael Sarah.
Speaker 2 (40:24):
Now you see Me, Now you don't It is getting
a fifty eight in the critics. The third movie and
then Now You See Me franchise, the Four Horsemen team
up with a new generation of magicians take down the
head of a South African diamond company. Woody Harrelson, Dave
franco Is La Fisher, back Mark Ruffalo is in it.
Speaker 1 (40:43):
Morgan Freeman, Lizzie Kaplin's a good cast.
Speaker 3 (40:45):
People love those movies. And I can't remember it was
the first or the second one is Lea Fisher. She
almost died while they were filming it because there's a
scene they film where she's supposed to look like she's drowning,
and they thought her acting was so phenomenal that nobody
like was rescuing her. The last minute they pulled her
out of the tank and then it was like a
whole deal and she's like, I'm not doing it again.
I'm not doing it.
Speaker 2 (41:05):
Come on anything for your craft on Netflix. I watched
the first episode of this eight episode series, which have
all dropped last night, and I'm hooked. And I can't
promise anything after the first one, but I'm hooked. It's
called The Beast in Me. Clara Danes is in it.
Love Claire Danes. She is an ugly crier and she
cries ugly very first scene. Matthew, I think it's pronoun Freese.
(41:27):
I should know this. He's from the Americans. I love
that guy too. They face off gripping new psychological thriller.
The co creator of Homeland made this, and I'd love that.
Danes is Aggie Wiggs, one celebrated author shadowed by her
son's death, paralyzed by grief. There's a mysterious new neighbor,
and there's this whole mystery, and then Britney Snow's in
it too, and first episode look good.
Speaker 1 (41:49):
What's it called again? It's called The Beast in Me.
Speaker 2 (41:52):
Malice on Prime Video Foggy Streets of London, psychological thriller.
David Ducopany's in it. Prime Video has playdate. Uh, it
is Kevin James. There is a Brian out of work
Dad open for chill afternoon. And then enter Jeff Alan
Richon who played Jack Reacher.
Speaker 1 (42:12):
So he's just huge the effortleast cool Dad in the park.
He is dangerous secrets. You know.
Speaker 2 (42:16):
It's one of those things where it's like action meets
the playdate. Dad who gets roped into it. Yeah, you know,
even looks like he could Dad. He's actually got a
secret past and they beat people up and blow things up.
That sounds good, okay, Yeah, Disney plus Yeah, there we go.
Speaker 3 (42:31):
There's the good one.
Speaker 2 (42:32):
Barry Jonas Christmas Movie. They're trying to dash through the snow.
It's their first Christmas movie. How do we wait so long?
Speaker 3 (42:40):
Right? No idea?
Speaker 2 (42:41):
Kevin, Joe and Nick play themselves a holiday misindventure.
Speaker 1 (42:44):
Starts up with the sold off concert in.
Speaker 2 (42:45):
London, but then it's a chaotic race to make it
home to New York for Christmas and nothing goes according
to plan. Seven New Jonas originals. It's a holiday road
trip packed with laughs.
Speaker 3 (42:56):
And if at some point they do don't you like
Joe broke bro bro bro instead of ho ho, I'm gonna.
Speaker 2 (43:03):
Be very Another one for your Christmas thing, Mary Little
x mess on Netflix. They're kicking out their holiday slate
with a delightfully messy twist on the dysfunctional family formula.
Alicia Silverstone as Kate, recently separated mom determined to pull
off one of the last picture perfect Christmas and of
(43:23):
course they get a little crazy. Herre ex Oliver Hudson
arrived this dazzling new girlfriend, Jamila Jamil who was the
good place And you know it's typical And also in
case you're wondering on Lifetime or Hallmark. I mean Three
Wisest Men makes it debut. Oh, I know, I know
(43:44):
it's hard to believe. But there's a family and they're
going to sell the childhood home and they don't know
how they're gonna say the thing, and then they learn
at the end.
Speaker 1 (43:52):
That it's the best Christmas ever no matter what.
Speaker 3 (43:55):
There's the Mror.
Speaker 10 (44:00):
In the morning. It's a morning mixed with Matt Harris
and Liz Lude.
Speaker 2 (44:05):
Well, this week we gave away Southern Christmas Show ticket
because that has begun.
Speaker 3 (44:09):
Yeah, it's going on right now a Park Expo Center, and.
Speaker 1 (44:12):
You're going to be there.
Speaker 3 (44:13):
I'll be there next Friday for Girls' Night Out. I'll
be there from four until nine pm. But I'm super
excited because I grew up here and the holiday season
didn't start until you went to the Southern Christmas Show
and you walked in and it was all magical, and
then you bought all the stuff from the venders and
you got to see all the ornaments. And I love
the trees that are decorated and they have the different
(44:35):
people that did and like the room scapes. I don't
even know the fancy word to describe it, so like
a sight to see when you get there. And so
since I'm going to be there next Friday, I gotta
I gotta show out because a big part of it
is people are all wearing their best special at Tire.
Speaker 2 (44:51):
People bring all the girls together, all their relative whatever.
It's a big group trip and.
Speaker 3 (44:56):
They'll wear like them shirts together, and you know, I'll
obviously I would be going anyways because I love it,
but since I'm going with the Station too, I have
to wear a Station T shirt, which is great, except
our logo colors are pink, blue and black, which is
just not very holly jolly. And so I was like,
(45:17):
I gotta, I gotta figure out how I can step
this up because I need to bring the holly jolly
I need to. And so I have seen this video
that's been rolling around on Facebook and TikTok the last
couple of years, and I'm going to recreate it. And
it is where you take the sparkly holiday tinsel garland,
(45:37):
all right, and you take your shirt and you basically
sew and hot glue gun it across your chest and
then down the arms the sleeves of your shirt, and
I'm going to intertwine it with pink ribbon to match
the logo. Yes, and I've got blue ornaments. And the
whole point of it is that when you put your
(45:58):
hands together over your head, it makes a re so
it looks like you are a wreath. And so I
went and got the supplies yesterday. And one when did
holiday tinsel garland go out of style? Because I had
to go to multiple stores to find it was very
slim picking. So I don't know if I waited too
long in the seasoning, right, I know, but there's already
(46:20):
some Valentine's Day stuff creeping in, you know, And so
I was like, I don't know, I wait too long?
Did I did? I? But I got some and I
am super excited and as long as it all goes well,
I will wear it. But I am more than happy
to make a matching shirt with you.
Speaker 2 (46:35):
I don't want to put you out. It's you know
I would, but you know I don't want to put
you out. So I have nowhere to wear it everywhere.
Speaker 1 (46:42):
To make one for your.
Speaker 3 (46:43):
Kid, I mean, yeah, I can do that, but he's
like nine. I don't eight. I don't really need a
lot of tinsel for him.
Speaker 4 (46:49):
I've got more than enough.
Speaker 1 (46:51):
I don't think you're going to talk your husband into it.
Speaker 3 (46:53):
Oh he would do it for me.
Speaker 1 (46:54):
Oh yes, right, I forgot he's afraid of you.
Speaker 3 (46:56):
He's not afraid of me. He just loves me and
everything that I'm word is it. He's not terrified of me,
all right. He enjoys holiday shopping with me and getting
everything all decorated.
Speaker 4 (47:09):
With Matt Harris and Liz Luda.
Speaker 1 (47:13):
My friend, it is foody Friday.
Speaker 3 (47:15):
What he got Jello America's favorite food. I love it
so much. And I got excited because there's a whole
thing with Jello. It's their one hundred and twenty fifth anniversary,
and I thought, yeah, we're gonna get weird with the
Jello again. We're gonna create savory flavors like they did
in the sixties and the seventies. I've been needing a
meaty trifle suspended in gelatin with peas and carrots for
(47:38):
a sick woman. But apparently that's not what they're doing.
They're putting out limited edition Thanksgiving molds and they're calling
them quote no Thanks molds because they're shaped like divisive
Thanksgiving food. Okay, so one is shaped like Brussels sprouts.
One is shaped like cranberry sauce, which it doesn't specify
if it's the can shape, because if it is, yes,
(48:00):
I won't even be able to tell the difference. It's
gonna jiggle and wiggle just as much, and then one
shape like a pea CAMPI but I say, for all
my jello enthusiasts, let's take it a step further. Let's
use the drippin's off the Brussels sprouts and make our
own savory gelatae to then put in the mold.
Speaker 1 (48:18):
Wow, wrong with you?
Speaker 3 (48:19):
There's a lot of things that are wrong with me.
But I have you ever like gone through like one
of those old Good Housekeeping magazines or like their cookbooks
and stuff. I am always so in awe of the
jello molds that once grace the tables of America, and
I've only ever had like one weird one. I would like.
(48:40):
I would like to expand my palate.
Speaker 1 (48:42):
I'd like to try something knock yourself out.
Speaker 3 (48:44):
I need I need someone with the proper molding and
and just the expertise to help me. I guess yeah,
because I've been one.
Speaker 1 (48:53):
She wonders why people think she's old. Right?
Speaker 3 (48:55):
Another example, Well, I've been on a one person rant
for about a decade now about how we need to
have Watergate salad present on every Thanksgiving, Christmas, an Easter table,
and I feel like if we had a savory Jello,
we could offset it with the Watergate salad and it
would be great. And for anyone that's like, it's not
Watergate salad, it's ambrosia. That's different, all right. That is
(49:18):
a different dish, all right. So I mean, yeah, well,
there you go, there's a Jello. I give you one
more quickie. So do you want Harry Potter or Chick
fil make you happy? Harry Potter Coffee May unveiled their
own Harry Potter line, and so there is now creamer
and like creamer foam or whatever cold foam that is
butter beer flavored. And then in just the creamer they
(49:41):
now have cauldron cake and then white chocolate peppermint.
Speaker 2 (49:44):
Toad, Okay, Toad, you're a Potter or Harry Potter person.
Speaker 3 (49:50):
So I am a millennial. So it's it's just part,
it's just part of my genetic makeup at this point,