Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The Morning mixed with Ben Harris and Liz Luda and
it is the eighteenth, yeah, eighteenth of.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
November and Morning XS Birthdays powered by marxpane Real Estate.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
We had a few days of Scorpio season left and
Christian Siriano is forty years old. I love Christian Siriano.
He won season four Project Runway. He was so fabulous
on the show. He has since gone on to develop
his own clothing brand. He's designed for tons of people,
but he also designs for like regular people. And for
a while he had a line at Payless before Payless
(00:34):
went under. And now you can buy him from like
QVC and the Home Shopping Network.
Speaker 4 (00:39):
And it's beautiful.
Speaker 3 (00:40):
But this is all the way back to his humble
beginnings of reality TV.
Speaker 4 (00:45):
Pierce and I'm kind of celebrity in my own head,
and he's not.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
Benky.
Speaker 4 (00:50):
I sleep on the floor at home, so I get
I'd rather buy clothes than buy.
Speaker 3 (00:57):
So like his big thing is he was so young
on his and everyone kind of looked down on him
a little bit, and like he would literally say things
like I would rather buy clothes than have a bed.
Speaker 4 (01:06):
So I don't have a bed at home. I just
sleep on the floor.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
But he was also like twenty, so right, he wasn't
dealing with any lower back pain at that point.
Speaker 4 (01:14):
I'm sure now he's got a.
Speaker 1 (01:15):
Mattress, especially if he was sleeping on the floor for sure.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
Also celebrated to day is Damon Wayne's junior who was
forty three. He was coached on New Girl and you
know his family has made a lot of.
Speaker 4 (01:26):
Money over the years.
Speaker 2 (01:27):
I went to be an animator initially, and then I
accidentally opened one of my dad's checks.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
And I was like, wait a minute.
Speaker 4 (01:39):
Time he said, I'm not going to.
Speaker 3 (01:42):
Be an animator. Now I'm going to follow in my
family's footsteps.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
Mart He was an underrated show, Happy Endings, go check
it out.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Oh yeah, that was a funny show. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:51):
And then bringing it back for the millennials. Here Fabulous
is forty eight and.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
This was just one of those songs that was that
was big in the club days. I'm just like a
go back for some millennials and you don't understand the
nostalgia that.
Speaker 4 (02:08):
Hits with that song.
Speaker 3 (02:10):
Also celebrating Duncan Chic is fifty six.
Speaker 4 (02:12):
He's the guy that had that song.
Speaker 3 (02:14):
I am the breathing absolutely Owen Wilson's fifty seven, which whatever.
Speaker 1 (02:19):
Wow, what do you mean whatever?
Speaker 4 (02:22):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
He's pretty big.
Speaker 4 (02:23):
Yeah, I mean he was lighting McQueen.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
What is that?
Speaker 2 (02:27):
Wow?
Speaker 1 (02:28):
Really discounting his career. Wowow wow wow Wow.
Speaker 4 (02:33):
That's all I got from.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
And then Oscar Nunia is sixty seventies, Oscar Martinez on
the Office, Let's spin off the paper, and I just
really like his character, so happy happy birthday to him.
Dennis Haskins is seventy five. Who is mister Belding from
Saved by the Bell five? And then finally, I'm going
to include this as our national holiday. But one of
the biggest American icons Mickey Mouse. I guess you call
(02:56):
him an international icon. Today's ninety seventh birthday. He looks
the exact well, so looks a little younger.
Speaker 2 (03:05):
One Swiszerland days. Yeah yeah, well, happy birthday.
Speaker 4 (03:08):
Make hot dog, hot Dog, Hot diggity dog.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
It is the morning mixed in the morning.
Speaker 5 (03:14):
It's the morning mixed with Matt Harrison, Liz Luda mix.
Speaker 1 (03:18):
Oh, good day, Luda morning and TJ good morning.
Speaker 6 (03:22):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
This isn't a new trend, but things have really changed
when it comes to Christmas. Trees that are real versus
artificial serve by you by the American Christmas Tree Association.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
Fake trees are now the norm, and it's not even close.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
Eighty three percent of people they say are doing it
fake one.
Speaker 1 (03:39):
Oh yeah, it's just seventeen percent by a real one.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
That is a huge difference from what it was even
ten years ago. Yeah, they've become the standard now by far.
So I don't think that there's that because even ten
years ago there was that battle, Oh how dare you
with this?
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Right?
Speaker 2 (03:57):
It was you know, it might have been. I don't know,
they don't know the exact scess as they've just grown,
but yeah, I bet it was closer to fifty to
fifty to fifteen years ago, right, don't you think, Oh.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
Yeah, something like that.
Speaker 3 (04:05):
I mean, obviously I support like local Christmas tree farmers.
Speaker 4 (04:08):
I think that's a huge thing. But at the end
of the day, the fake tree.
Speaker 3 (04:12):
Now that we keep pushing the holidays back further and further,
less of a fire hazard because you can set it
up the day after Halloween and not have to worry
about it drying out.
Speaker 4 (04:20):
Right, and then it's reusable.
Speaker 1 (04:22):
Yeah exactly. I mean North Carolina, I think North Carolina
is number two right in the country.
Speaker 4 (04:27):
I think it's Oregon and then it's North.
Speaker 2 (04:29):
Carolina, so they don't have to crank out as many.
But it probably I would imagine it means they're going
to be more expensive. If you can't sell as many,
it makes sense you get to raise the price. Oh yeah, right,
sure about eighty three percent.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
So you have a fake one.
Speaker 3 (04:40):
I have a fake one, and it's because I kept
up the the I must have a real tree for
a really long time and then I came home on
time and had a nest of spiders in my tree.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Ah about you, and.
Speaker 4 (04:53):
They just love me. They just want to be near me.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
And that's how you change your mind about anything. I think.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
Yeah, once you and owner a Neesta bugs, you're you're like,
I'm done.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
I'm done.
Speaker 3 (05:04):
So it could happen in a fake tree, but the
real one, I oh, gosh, my hand, it was a
I don't even Oh.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Yeah, you hear all kinds of stories.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
Uh, it weren't very many, but the stories jump out
and like we've had them before, where there's like a
squirrel in it, right, Yeah, there's all kinds of something
that you know, like a spider thing that the heat
activates and then all these bugs.
Speaker 1 (05:23):
Come flying it, right, that sort of thing.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
But they again the rare end of a spider, big
whop you do, but not a spider.
Speaker 3 (05:30):
Until it's like Charlotte's web and they're all putting their
little little parachutes on and flying off the tree.
Speaker 2 (05:36):
Like I think, if your kid had a bunch of spiders,
will ever be to get rid of him too? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (05:42):
No, I would. I would get them off. But we would,
we would, We would leave wherever we were dwelling. We
would be done with it.
Speaker 1 (05:49):
You'd be done with it dwelling.
Speaker 4 (05:50):
Oh my gosh, Yes, I move out.
Speaker 3 (05:52):
I moved out one time in an apartment because another
neighbor moved out and I got I got there bugs
and I.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
Was like, how many?
Speaker 2 (05:58):
Like, it's not an infestation? Probably I don't like it? Yeah,
for you anything is it? Because aren't you getting a
You're getting one of your shrubs cut down or something?
Speaker 4 (06:07):
I already did because there was I thought there was
a thought. This is even was wow, I thought there
was a spiders. I mean there might have been. He
didn't tell me if there was, there wasn't. But there's
been a lot of like cop is a cobweb, spider,
webs whatever, going from the bush to the house.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
That's normal.
Speaker 4 (06:22):
Yeah, but I didn't like it called it's the outside.
Speaker 1 (06:25):
I know you need to you just don't need to
leave your home.
Speaker 4 (06:28):
I like the lizards that were eating them.
Speaker 2 (06:31):
Okay, Well, then don't get to the spiders, and spiders
do too.
Speaker 1 (06:34):
You have the spiders eat all the bugs.
Speaker 4 (06:36):
Well, but the lizards, you know, but now.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
You're gonna have lizards.
Speaker 2 (06:39):
If you get see, you're ruining the whole anyway, ruders,
we're going.
Speaker 4 (06:43):
To stay through the winner, and the lizards weren't.
Speaker 2 (06:45):
Okay, you got to embrace these. I hope you're not
fasting this along to your child. I am, oh right,
morning mixed Matt Harris, Liz Luda, The Sweetish Dude Martin
Stroby forty two told the Guinness World Records that his
kids love the edition of the organization's book and told him, Dad,
you got to break a record, man, you got to
(07:06):
do something.
Speaker 1 (07:06):
It'd be so cool.
Speaker 2 (07:08):
So he says, at first, I thought I'm not good
enough to do anything to be the best in the world.
So he went through with his kids and he said,
maybe I can find something here, because some weird ones
in here. So he kept looking and looking. He landed
on the record for the most matches held in the
nose oh, which stood at sixty eight after doing the
(07:28):
trial run with nostrils.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
Yep, after doing.
Speaker 2 (07:32):
The trial run and discover I could both stretch my
nostrils a lot, oh and also ignore the pain from
putting all those matches in there, So I'd say I'm
a natural.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
I did that.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
We're trying to find a good technique because matches kept
falling out of my nostrils. Three inserted matches meant one
or two falling out. So I did some more trial
runs that eventually found a technique where I could utilize
the minimum number of matches falling out.
Speaker 1 (07:57):
Ended up eighty one matches in his nose.
Speaker 6 (08:00):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
Yes, that is like dad to look up to.
Speaker 3 (08:04):
Oh now, I'd be so crazy'd stretch it out and
it wouldn't go back.
Speaker 1 (08:09):
Yeah, a small price to pay for your kids. You'd
be in the big book.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Come on, I think I could do half that. Yeah,
it's like maybe forty and you know the long hard
one right right? Oh my gosh, that's what you want
to use?
Speaker 1 (08:23):
Is I got pretty big nostrils.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
Yeah, I think I can, even now that you mentioned it,
I think I could.
Speaker 7 (08:30):
I think I could get it quite Maybe not a
full match book, but you know you're talking the ones
that are solid right right right?
Speaker 1 (08:37):
Yeah, yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 4 (08:39):
Exactly matches work.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
But I feel like somehow you would sneeze and ignite
your mustache.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
Oh, that would actually be awesome. That would make me
take took famous. It would make you ticked top fame.
And I think, let me look at this guy's pictures
a mustache. Oh okay, all right, all is safe.
Speaker 4 (08:55):
Maybe that you wouldn't like.
Speaker 1 (08:56):
To see a picture just to get you could you
see from.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
The Oh god, that doesn't look Yeah, I definitely can't
do eighty, but let's see, could you do forty?
Speaker 1 (09:06):
Maybe holding him in is the whole. I think I
think that would be the hardest part. I think you
could get him in. I don't think you.
Speaker 7 (09:13):
I think putting him in one at a time like
that would be the hardest part.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
You got to just go like shove him up there.
Speaker 2 (09:20):
Yeah yeah, yeah, and then he should have lit him
when he was done. Yes, absolutely, a little bit like
a big blad finish. Yeah, but I guess does that
make the kids proud?
Speaker 1 (09:32):
I guess it it should. Yeah, it should.
Speaker 7 (09:35):
I mean when you're a kid like you, you're amazed
by the long fingernails.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
And yes, I just love to get us every year.
Speaker 7 (09:43):
I love all that, like man the shortest person, all
that stuff.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
Yes, and then another record.
Speaker 2 (09:49):
Dedicated gamer broken a record that stood for ten years.
He shook his groove, thing and hungry Uh. He played
Dance Dance Revolution for one hundred and forty four hours.
Whoa longest video game marathon? Longest video game marathon on
one of those titles, the rhythm game title Dance to
(10:10):
over three thousand songs? Whoa burn more than twenty two
thousand calories? It took him from the twenty third to
twenty ninth of October. The previous record was an American.
Speaker 1 (10:22):
Damn It USA fell behind.
Speaker 2 (10:25):
Cherry Swidwick had the record. She broke it on Just Dance.
He's an IT engineer. He'd already broken some other records.
He played one game for twenty eight hours, he played another,
How did a puzzle game for thirty two hours?
Speaker 1 (10:38):
He did tetris hours?
Speaker 3 (10:42):
Or like somebody just like throwing food at your face?
And you're catching it in your mouth while you're still dancing.
Speaker 1 (10:46):
Like, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (10:49):
I tried to get into it and see how long,
did how many breaks they get because she has to
have bathroom breaks at minimum. You definitely eat and dance
right right, definitely actually that game.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (11:01):
He also did ninety hours of Grand Turismo seven and
twenty twenty three.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (11:07):
Wow, I think I'm okay. Not accomplishing these things. I
think I'm right.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
The matches I would like to do that, Well, there's
way less investment there.
Speaker 3 (11:16):
Yes, except for maybe disfiguring your face.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
No, come on, matches aren't that dangerous.
Speaker 4 (11:22):
Like come on, I mean you're stretching it out.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
No, that's not gonna your body goes back. Yeah, because
you see people gain you lose weight.
Speaker 3 (11:29):
Yeah, but like it's like when you well yeah, and
it didn't work out well for me.
Speaker 4 (11:32):
Gravity kept it down there, some of that skin. But
the nostril.
Speaker 2 (11:36):
Reduction fix for starting your day with The Morning Miss It's.
Speaker 5 (11:40):
The Morning mixed with Matt Harris and Liza.
Speaker 4 (11:42):
You know, here's your latest pop.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Update and it's powered by Mark's Queen real Estate. You
got okay?
Speaker 3 (11:49):
You know, if you're gonna start with your man crush there.
He seems really excited. So Bucky's better stand aside. Because
Dolly Parton is entering the market with truck stops.
Speaker 4 (11:59):
Yes, this is genius. So it's gonna be the Dolly's.
Speaker 3 (12:03):
Tennessee and Travel stop in Cornersville, Tennessee is gonna be
the first one they open in and they promise modern
amenities and curated dining.
Speaker 4 (12:11):
And I feel like Bucky's kind of built the brand.
Speaker 3 (12:13):
Model for this because imagine if you just swapped all
of that out with Dolly Parton.
Speaker 4 (12:18):
That is an event you drive out of your way
to go to that.
Speaker 3 (12:21):
Instead of that beaver statue out front, it's a Dolly
Parton statue. Instead of all of that merchandising with the
beaver space on it, you just change it over into
Dolly's face.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
And she is known for you know, she.
Speaker 3 (12:34):
Has her cornbread brand and she's got her cakes and
everything that she sells at Walmart.
Speaker 4 (12:39):
You're not having that crossover into the food.
Speaker 3 (12:42):
I would stop and eat there because I'd be like, Oh,
it's Dolly's food, and her food at Dollywood.
Speaker 4 (12:46):
People like do review videos on it. So I think
this is absolutely genius.
Speaker 2 (12:51):
And as she's older, she's got a lot of gas,
so I think it'll work perfect. Ye yep, Glenn Pal,
you know I love the guy and he was the
bits I saw on SNL.
Speaker 1 (13:02):
He was good.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
He is. At the time of COVID nineteen, he was
supposed to be on Saturday Live but he got canceled
and he his family were celebrating the news on a
porch when a UPS driver delivered a package that said,
you know, he's going to be on the SNL Christmas
episode he'd be hosting, and they celebrated that moment four
(13:25):
years ago with a selfie, Pal said, displaying the image
during the Long Wait at SNL monologue Saturday.
Speaker 1 (13:30):
So it's him and this UPS guy four years ago, Like.
Speaker 2 (13:33):
Yeah, yeah, So it didn't happen because Top Gun didn't
come out because of that Da Da Da da, so
it didn't reach the movie that He's still twenty twenty two,
so he was back on SNL finally. Native of Austin, Texas,
he was finally able to prove to Mitch the UPS
Guy that I'm not crazy, so he and his sisters
(13:53):
tracked Mitch down. The UPS Guy flew him New York City,
so he could witness.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
The moment from stut Udo eight.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
H even called Mitch to stand with him on the
stage for another selfie. As his monologue concluded, he said,
I had to wait my entire life plus four years
to be here. I'n't learned anything. It's the best thing
in life. Don't happen overnight.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
And knows that.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
No one knows that better than UPS, which is that
that is a cool, fantastical thing. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (14:20):
Yeah, because I had.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
To take a little effort to figure out what the
UPS guy was right. Definitely at the time, you're not thinking, right,
I'm gonna bring you back four years.
Speaker 3 (14:28):
They have all that track though, like who drove the route?
Speaker 1 (14:32):
I mean, you have to do some effort, like they
can easily not done it.
Speaker 3 (14:35):
And are they even that season they want to make
sure you're staying UPS.
Speaker 4 (14:39):
No, oh, Miles, you wouldn't have to do.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
That, Yeah, Miles glen val O, sorry, same person. They
didn't have to do that, you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (14:47):
They went the extra effort to get oldps and find
out two four years ago.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
That's cool. That's a cool, cool thing.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
And the guys looks, you know, he's the regular dude
up there on stage, cause you're mad because you always
to be. Imagine someone calling you and say, hey, do
you want to be on that stage?
Speaker 3 (15:04):
Absolutely to make these Well, that's because I can't tell
him in.
Speaker 4 (15:08):
Miles teller apart, and I don't know why.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
I'm the same way. I'm on board. Yes, would know
where he was. That's not a big deal.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
I'm sorry this ordinary dude who didn't expect to come
and see it coming on stage amazing.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
If she would flip out.
Speaker 4 (15:24):
I would, I would cry. I'd still be crying. I'd
still be sitting on stage. Security would have removed me.
Speaker 1 (15:29):
Yeah, that's probably what you downplated. You were jealous.
Speaker 4 (15:31):
I'm very jealous.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
One more so, Eminem is going after a beach brand
called swim Shady.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
Oh, come on child.
Speaker 3 (15:40):
A petition to cancel the US trademark of an Australian
beach brand called swim Shady. And he said he's afraid
that people will be associated that it's with him because
he's swim Shady, the real swim Shady, of course, and
all swim Shadies are just imitator. And so the company
came back and they basically said swim Shady is a
grass roots Australian company that was born to protect people
(16:02):
from the harsh Australian sun. We will defend our valuable
intellectual property. But they sell umbrellas, towels, swim bag shorts.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
They knew what they were doing. Yeah, absolutely they were doing.
And sometimes you know, the artist doesn't even know that's happening.
There's people in charge of their true thing that just
pops up. But he might want to say, all right,
in the.
Speaker 5 (16:23):
Morning, it's the Morning mixed with Matt Harrison, Liz Luda.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
Game Time with the ever competitive Is Luda and producer TJ.
It's time to blurt. So as for those who don't know,
but I would say things in the sky starting with
s seagulls, Yeah, something like that.
Speaker 4 (16:43):
There you go the sun.
Speaker 2 (16:45):
This is yeah, that would be good. Okay, Okay, here's
for real. This is a crimes round.
Speaker 4 (16:51):
Oh gosh, okay, jeez. I will do the true crime.
Speaker 1 (16:56):
That's you.
Speaker 3 (16:56):
That's your specialty with the Impact Influence Podcast.
Speaker 4 (17:00):
Check them out everywhere you get your local podcast.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
Crime a Crime, starting with M murder. See, I knew
you'd be on top of it. I knew you know,
the murder one. Yeah, starting with F felonies. There you go.
Get He'll give you that a arson. There you go.
Speaker 4 (17:20):
I almost want a salt.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
Sorry, I worked and pepper. Uh B burglary, there.
Speaker 2 (17:27):
You good, bribery, bank ruad. This is the last one
in the crime round r robbery. There you go.
Speaker 3 (17:41):
I didn't know that was gonna be like because like
I can't remember the name of what different lawyers are.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
And you're up four to one.
Speaker 2 (17:47):
Here we go. This is a little tougher. Okay, this
is the bring it round.
Speaker 4 (17:52):
Bring it All.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
The answers are phrases starting with bring. Okay.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
If you do a great show, you brought it.
Speaker 4 (18:02):
Bring it.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
Bring the hammer getting close, getting close, Bring the noise
getting close.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
Oh man, bring down the house. Oh okay, okay, okay.
Speaker 2 (18:15):
If you want to challenge someone, you say, bring it on.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
There you go, Liz ludic stomping TJ here five to one.
Speaker 4 (18:22):
It's because I watched the movie.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
Right consider it Broughton.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
Uh April showers, bring me flowers.
Speaker 1 (18:30):
Oh, look at hERG is sleeping through it. It's just
better at blurting.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
She is practice like okay.
Speaker 4 (18:38):
A lot of restraint on keeping these words in last.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
One, even though it doesn't matter onions or a sad
song bring Bring the Tears. Yeah, okay, that's good man Harris,
the super quirky Liz Luda looks at social media forty
eight hours a day so you don't have to.
Speaker 4 (18:52):
And the gravy is a lie. All right.
Speaker 3 (18:54):
I was gonna save this and talk about it in
Foody Friday, but I am so I'm getting all myself.
Speaker 1 (18:59):
This needs to be addressed now.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
Needs to immediately be addressed. There's this whole thing going
around that Hines and Walmart have teamed up together and
they are putting out a squeezable gravy that you can
use for your leftover holiday sandwiches. And they reference the
whole Friend's thing with the Moistmaker where there's the extra
layer of gravy in the middle from the episode where
Ross is upset because the sandwich was stolen from the
(19:21):
work fridge, like a whole deal, right, And I was like,
squeezable gravy, why have.
Speaker 4 (19:26):
We never had this before? This is genius?
Speaker 3 (19:28):
But then the next thing in my brain goes, but
isn't it gonna congeal? Because whenever you go to reheat gravy,
it's never quite as good because it's gonna get.
Speaker 4 (19:36):
A little chunky. You gotta have a whisk to be
able to make this happen.
Speaker 3 (19:40):
And so I was thinking, I need to see what's
in this. Is there some type of an emulsifier, like
what is happening? And so I go to Walmart, which,
by the way, you can't get in stores. You can
only buy it online, and you're still more than welcome
to do so. But I see the pack that everybody
is talking about, and they're talking about this squeezable gravy.
And in the box comes what looks like an empty
(20:01):
ketchup container, but instead of saying hines ketchup, it says
squeezable gravy that is empty empty, and then a glass
jar of their gravy. And so the idea is it
tells you how to heat the gravy and then put
the gravy in. So now it's not easier. Now you're
getting a funnel involved. You're putting a hot substance into
(20:23):
a plastic bottle, trying to squeeze it without burning your fingers.
And if you do have leftovers to get stuck in this,
I'm gonna call it an empty ketchup bottle.
Speaker 4 (20:32):
It's gonna congeal. Yeah, it's not gonna come out smoothly,
and I feel like.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
This should have been Reworse series a few.
Speaker 3 (20:39):
Different times before we decided to launch the product. I
am sure scientifically there's a way we can make some
smooth flowing gravy.
Speaker 4 (20:46):
Yes, all right, maybe you might have to after.
Speaker 3 (20:48):
You make the sandwich pop it in the microwave. But
I don't think we should be putting hot gravy in
what looks like a recyclable container to.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
Me, right yeah, because you think it'll be too hot.
Speaker 4 (20:59):
It was too high. Phil likes seen me in there,
and then I just you're making more work. It's not
even it's not working. I don't understand. I'm so sorry.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
You can't you put the cold gravy on it and
then nuke your sandwich.
Speaker 3 (21:12):
You can, but to get the gravy to be able
to go into the jar, you've got to be able
to heat it so that it thins out so.
Speaker 4 (21:18):
You can pour it.
Speaker 1 (21:19):
You don't think you can get it in there. You
think it's thicker than barbecue saws or something.
Speaker 3 (21:23):
I mean, if you want to leave remnants behind, I
guess you can, but I don't want to be wasteful,
but left behind.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
Nuke your sandwich. Probably maybe, as.
Speaker 4 (21:30):
Long as you haven't put the cranberries on yet. Sure, yeah,
you gotta keep those cool. I just say the gravy
is a lie, all right, Like I think it's cool.
I'm glad they're doing this collaboration. I eat Heinz gravy.
I'm not hating on them. I'm hating on the packaging
and the idea that all.
Speaker 3 (21:45):
These different things, yeah, that I saw on TikTok. It's
all these people that are like, oh, it's referencing friends,
it's the moistmak girl. Not a single one of them
showed me the packaging. I do my due diligence on
my own to look up the packaging.
Speaker 4 (21:58):
To then be.
Speaker 3 (21:59):
Appalled to say I could have been doing this at
home with my own empty ketchup bottle.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
You are?
Speaker 1 (22:03):
You are? We're going to storm the castle. You're very outraged.
Speaker 3 (22:05):
I mean, we've all used them to ketchup bottles to
do the pancake batter, right, I understand that theory, But
the pancake batter is not going to congeal the same
way that a gravy will.
Speaker 4 (22:14):
It's a meaty product.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
Well, maybe you don't know. Maybe let's give it a shot.
See what happens.
Speaker 4 (22:19):
I could be wrong about everything. You're right.
Speaker 2 (22:20):
I absolutely Mornings Maharris, Liz Luda.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
We've got horns tickets for Saturday afternoons game to get Away.
Speaker 2 (22:30):
Around seven forty five fish, you saw this thing about pay.
Speaker 4 (22:35):
Yeah, should your babysitter have to clean? Seven oh four five,
seven one oh seven nine. There's this lady on TikTok.
Speaker 3 (22:41):
Her name is Ali K Jackson, and she's talking about how.
Speaker 4 (22:44):
For her sitter she paid.
Speaker 3 (22:46):
I think it was thirty dollars an hour for the
sitter to come and after the sitter.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
Left, two kids by the way, two kids.
Speaker 3 (22:53):
After the sitter left, she was upset because the sitter
didn't do any cleaning and there were dirty dishes and
like the sitter had cooked dinner for the kids and
those dishes were still in the sink and that they
were dirty. And so she was like when I was
younger and I was babysitting, like we had.
Speaker 1 (23:09):
To clean, Like that's what you weren't put away?
Speaker 2 (23:12):
Yeah, And she said also that the kids were only
wake for two hours while she was.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
There, then they went to bed.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
Yeah, I thought she even said that they weren't I
don't even know the place or even in the sink.
Speaker 1 (23:23):
They're just kind of like laying there. But it doesn't matter.
Speaker 3 (23:27):
But yet we'll think worst case scenario. Let's say that
they are all sitting on the counter all the dirty dishes.
I think that if you want your sitter to clean,
you have to have that talk ahead of time.
Speaker 4 (23:37):
I don't think it should just.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
Be assuming, so you should be assumed.
Speaker 3 (23:40):
And I in this video specifically, they're toddlers, and the
entire time, the one little toddler is destroying everything in
the background, which as a mom I'm used to I
know how to chase my child around like you've got it.
But if you're a sitter who's coming in, even if
you've been babysitting for years, some kids are overwhelming and
(24:02):
maybe you just have overwhelming kids.
Speaker 2 (24:04):
But if she's telling the truth, they were in bed
for most of the time she was there, so you
have It's not like I get it. If you're doing
it during the day, it is hard to keep up
one hundred percent. But if the kids go to bed,
After kids go to bed, it is straightened up time.
Speaker 7 (24:18):
I mean, I can understand cleaning up the mess that
you or the kid made while you're there.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
Yeah, that's basically what we're talking about. Yeah, not like
you're doing their dishes for them.
Speaker 3 (24:29):
Well, she did say back when she was a babysitter,
and she doesn't seem that old to be like back
in my day. But as she's saying it, she was
like I did, even if they weren't dishes that I.
Speaker 4 (24:38):
I'm out and I'm going to do it.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
I would do it. I told my daughter to do it.
Speaker 2 (24:41):
I said, if you want the job and you want
to keep doing it, go above and beyond the kids
in bed, clean up, make a place look presentable. When
you would they come home, toys are away, dishes are
you know, maybe in the dishwasher or you know, in
most cases a dishwasher. So it's mainly rightly just you know,
rinsing them off and putting them in a dish.
Speaker 4 (25:00):
I actually it's a conversation that needs to be hot.
Speaker 3 (25:01):
And maybe as if I were the babysitter, I.
Speaker 4 (25:04):
Take less money. I take less money to not have
to clean the dishes, honestly, So I'd be like.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
I'll find with a cando that's all.
Speaker 4 (25:11):
Oh for like a pay cut. I mean thirty dollars.
That's a lot.
Speaker 1 (25:15):
That's a lot.
Speaker 2 (25:16):
It's I mean two kids, two toddlers, and there are
two toddlers.
Speaker 1 (25:20):
I don't know where they are too, toddlers.
Speaker 2 (25:22):
It's it's a bit, it's a it's it's a lot,
but it's not an amazing amount, right, Yeah, I don't know.
I leave this shop for that. Yeah, now that you
mention it. If I didn't dislike kids so much did
my duty, you.
Speaker 4 (25:38):
Would actually probably be like, why don't the kids just
go to bed? I'd like to do the dishes in stuff.
Speaker 3 (25:43):
What's your little base buddy out the thing that cleans clean?
Speaker 1 (25:47):
Except watch TV? Watch TV.
Speaker 2 (25:49):
I'm gonna clean, except I like to clean naked, so
I can't do that seven four five seven one seven nine.
I expect it to be when they say clean. I
don't expect them to clean the toilets to be tidy.
But then I don't want to like a bomb went elephant,
because it's what I would do when the kids could
have been but everything away best you can, then that'd
be perfect.
Speaker 4 (26:08):
I guess they'll show up and it's a mess.
Speaker 2 (26:09):
Though.
Speaker 3 (26:10):
Okay, so let's say she did leave the dishes out
from when she cooked in er right, what if the
sink was filled with dishes that were already dirty dishes,
because then you know you have to do both.
Speaker 1 (26:19):
Of them definitely.
Speaker 4 (26:20):
And now you're like, I, I don't want.
Speaker 3 (26:22):
To do their dirty dishes from yesterday that they've been
letting soak.
Speaker 4 (26:25):
Like no, I would.
Speaker 1 (26:26):
I would do them if I wasn't getting paid.
Speaker 2 (26:29):
If you said, hey, you watch my kids for a
couple hours, I'm doing them.
Speaker 1 (26:32):
Let alone be bad.
Speaker 3 (26:33):
Oh, I'll be there, I'll watch my kid.
Speaker 1 (26:38):
You just do the dishes for me.
Speaker 2 (26:40):
Morning minutes Matt Harris, Liz Ludo and Hornets tickets in
about a minute and a half.
Speaker 1 (26:44):
We want to revisit this question.
Speaker 4 (26:46):
Should babysitters have to clean?
Speaker 1 (26:47):
Seven? Or four or five? Seven?
Speaker 6 (26:49):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (26:49):
Want to seven? Nine? Who's this? This is Connie? Connie,
what do you think.
Speaker 8 (26:54):
As a parent who used to hire babysitters? I agree
with Liz.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
If you want them to do certain.
Speaker 8 (26:59):
Duties others babysitting, you need to tell them that really
too many years ago, used to be a babysitter, I
would do everything I could to make sure I got
that job again. Right, So even if they didn't ask
me to.
Speaker 1 (27:11):
Do the dishes, I would probably do them. That's my thinking.
Speaker 2 (27:13):
Yes, yes, that's why I told my kids when she
was babysitting.
Speaker 3 (27:18):
But I feel like you're also setting that precedent too though.
If you do it the first time and you haven't
had that conversation, they're going to be like, oh, we
should have them come babysit again, and the house is
going to get progressively messier and messier and the next
time you know, you're vacuuming stairs and it's just turning
into a giant struggling toilets.
Speaker 4 (27:34):
The kids are just watching SpongeBob.
Speaker 2 (27:37):
I think there should be an expectation to pick things
up at the very least put all the plates in the.
Speaker 8 (27:42):
Sink, yes, exactly, and as far as all the extra
duties the next time I came. That's when teenagers learn
how to stand up for themselves and ask for what
they want and do.
Speaker 1 (27:52):
It in an appolite way.
Speaker 8 (27:54):
I mean, they're gonna have to have that feel with
another employer later down the road.
Speaker 4 (27:57):
Yeah, that's true.
Speaker 8 (27:59):
That's a not a bad time.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
Startler, that's right.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
I mean, just you know, don't have your boyfriend over
and while you're doing it on the couch, can you
at least put it something in the sink? Hey?
Speaker 4 (28:09):
And flip the question. If you had somebody to come
clean your house better.
Speaker 8 (28:11):
Than you found it, and they'll always invite.
Speaker 2 (28:13):
You back, that's right, that's right, that's leave it better,
that's right, Thank you very much.
Speaker 5 (28:18):
In the morning, it's the Morning mixed with Matt Harrison,
Liz Luda.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
Elas and I are polar opposites on this.
Speaker 3 (28:25):
Okay, This grandma gives me the rage. I found her
on TikTok, and she is basically saying that it should
be acceptable for her to go on vacations and trips
with just her child, not having to bring it a
spouse with.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
The other not her children. That's why I just said it.
There's more than one, right.
Speaker 4 (28:45):
I don't know if she specifies if she has more
than one.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
But here's some of her stuff.
Speaker 6 (28:48):
Let me say something a lot of parents are afraid
to admit, Yes, it's absolutely okay to take a vacation,
a family vacation without your son's.
Speaker 4 (28:59):
And daughter in law.
Speaker 6 (29:01):
And it doesn't mean you don't love them, right, It
doesn't mean they're not welcome.
Speaker 4 (29:06):
It doesn't mean there's drama.
Speaker 2 (29:09):
Yeah, yeah, like yeah, absolutely not yeah, I mean, uh again,
I'm I don't know all the details here, but I'm
assuming it's more than one kid because he kind of
said sons and daughter in law, right right. Also, what
I say with vacation, I'm going to assume we're not
doing something like a trip to Europe or something. Right
(29:30):
even then maybe, but uh but if it's a weekend
away or a three day weekend or something.
Speaker 1 (29:36):
In fact, I've known people who have done.
Speaker 2 (29:38):
It with the sons and the dad or the daughters
and the mom.
Speaker 1 (29:44):
They don't bring the husbands or wives.
Speaker 3 (29:47):
That should be the husband or the wives decision, or
the sons or the daughter's decision.
Speaker 4 (29:51):
No, okay, I'm going to start this off here.
Speaker 3 (29:53):
First off, her name on TikTok is Grandma Camp trademark
by Grandma jan all right, so I already know.
Speaker 4 (29:58):
Everything I need to know, just self for user name too.
Speaker 3 (30:01):
You do not get to just say I just want
my son there or I just want my daughter.
Speaker 4 (30:07):
I don't want to bring.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
I want the core.
Speaker 4 (30:09):
Group to go with. We need to have our time together.
Speaker 3 (30:12):
Because you are now putting a wedge in some capacity
between your.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
Child person's normal.
Speaker 4 (30:19):
Well maybe I'm not normal.
Speaker 3 (30:21):
But if my mother in law came to my son
or came to my husband and said, we're gonna take
a vacation just my son and I.
Speaker 1 (30:27):
What if she said I want a weekend alone with
my son.
Speaker 4 (30:31):
I still feel like I don't know. It's the way
you approach it.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
If you what I just said, I'm gonna. I want
to take my when it take Jimmy away this weekend. Uh,
I want to. I want to go away and we
spend three days with him.
Speaker 3 (30:47):
That's not acceptable. I should be invited to it's acceptable. Yeah,
not but I can't.
Speaker 2 (30:51):
But I couldn't. You couldn't your friend do it to you?
Your friends say to you? Uh, Liz, is a girl's weekend,
not in Bye Jimmy. I've ever gone on a girl's Okay,
but no.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
No, But I'm saying, is that acceptable?
Speaker 4 (31:04):
I know, I know. I just feel like it's like,
I mean, there's like girls.
Speaker 3 (31:10):
Trips or whatever, the guy's trips whatever. I like, I
get that, but I feel.
Speaker 2 (31:14):
Like a concept you're not inviting everybody. Not everybody's invited
on everything.
Speaker 3 (31:18):
It's the idea that she's kind of referring to her
family as like the original family, the core family, the original. Yeah,
but you're leaving out that other person who is now
part of that family. And she goes on to talk
about how there's different branches in the family tree, but
your child is now on a branch with that other person.
Speaker 1 (31:35):
But for whatever, a weekend or a three day weekend,
even I'll give.
Speaker 3 (31:39):
You, Like if you're saying, hey, just come visit them,
that's different.
Speaker 4 (31:43):
If it is a vacation, maybe I want a break too.
Why would my husband go and do a vacation without me.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
He can do another one with you.
Speaker 4 (31:52):
You only gets so much time off a year.
Speaker 1 (31:54):
It's a three day weekend.
Speaker 4 (31:56):
I don't like the way it feels.
Speaker 2 (31:57):
And if I if I invited the other doubt she
would inviting all the in laws. But you right, that's
like I want to get my kids together and me
to hang out. I would not take any offense to it.
If both times I was married, if they had said,
in fact, they did do things without me on occasion
because I would do the working or doing whatever. But
(32:19):
because you were working, we're the one that said, like,
I would not have been taking the least bit offense.
Speaker 3 (32:24):
No, I'm not saying that they can't go off and
do their own things. But it should be between the conversation.
Speaker 4 (32:29):
Should be between you and your partner, not your partner
and their mom.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
How about this, I like my I would like to say.
Let's say, I would I want my brother and sister.
I want my brother and sister.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
To go away for a weekend. Nobody bring their wives
or husbands. I can't. If that's not a I.
Speaker 4 (32:45):
Would never do that. I would always make sure everybody
felt included. I would my feelings would be really hurt.
Speaker 3 (32:50):
Wow, A seven or four or five seven on education
that that implies overnight at least overnight.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
Yeah, overnight, so what?
Speaker 5 (32:59):
No, I don't like it.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
I don't like seven o four or five seven one
oh seven nine. I do not see.
Speaker 2 (33:05):
I would not take any no exception to it. None,
zero is zip because your decisions.
Speaker 4 (33:13):
Four trips should be between you're and your you and
your spouse, not you and your parents. Once you reach
you certa name.
Speaker 2 (33:18):
Oh he's either you're in your parent or it's you
and your friend, or you and your brother, or you
and your anybody. You can make trip to your individual people.
I want to do something. I want to do something
with just my mom, or want to do something with
just my dad?
Speaker 4 (33:30):
Whatever, No, not a trip or vacation applies that it's
a vacation.
Speaker 1 (33:36):
A week, a week and away.
Speaker 4 (33:37):
Even if it's just like going to get a cabin
in the mountains, that's still.
Speaker 1 (33:41):
You would not do that. What does happen?
Speaker 7 (33:43):
Wow?
Speaker 1 (33:44):
Matt Harris, Liz Luda the seven or four or five? Seven? Oh?
One of seven?
Speaker 2 (33:50):
Nine?
Speaker 1 (33:50):
The mini version?
Speaker 4 (33:51):
Can grandma invite just her core family on the vacation?
Speaker 3 (33:56):
In laws?
Speaker 1 (33:56):
Yeah? Who's this?
Speaker 3 (33:58):
Hi?
Speaker 1 (33:59):
This is Courtney the Accordney.
Speaker 4 (34:01):
I guess for me, I feel like I would probably
feel a little offended.
Speaker 8 (34:06):
But it's just because I grew up in Foster Care.
I didn't have family. So my husband's family is my family.
Speaker 1 (34:15):
So I would feel kind of offended if I didn't
get invited.
Speaker 2 (34:19):
Okay, because you's your only family. But if it were
how many people are his family? Oh, he has a
huge like brothers and sisters.
Speaker 1 (34:26):
I mean like, oh, he has just one brother and
one sister.
Speaker 2 (34:30):
Okay, So if the mom said I just want to
I want to spend a week and alone with my
son and daughter, you would be heard, but you'd be
like Okay, yeah.
Speaker 8 (34:39):
Because I love my mother in law, she's amazing, But
I think I don't think she would invite.
Speaker 1 (34:45):
My husband without me.
Speaker 4 (34:46):
Yeah, you don't have it because it's in bad taste
and it's rude.
Speaker 1 (34:49):
No, because it doesn't matter.
Speaker 4 (34:50):
Doesn't it any situation.
Speaker 3 (34:52):
You can invite the kids and their spouses, and the
spouse has the right to say no.
Speaker 2 (34:56):
Morning mixed matters Luna seven or four five seven one
o seven nine?
Speaker 4 (35:02):
Does grandma not have to invite the spouses of her
kids on vacation?
Speaker 1 (35:06):
Okay? Who's this? Who's this? I'm sorry? I got you now?
Who is this? Who is this?
Speaker 7 (35:13):
This is Ronda Houstin I mean Ronda, excuse me?
Speaker 1 (35:17):
And I got my name? Change all right, Ronda.
Speaker 2 (35:19):
So the mom says she wants to take their the
son and daughter away for the weekend.
Speaker 1 (35:25):
Are you offended if you're the in law?
Speaker 7 (35:28):
No?
Speaker 1 (35:29):
Like, did she be able to go?
Speaker 2 (35:31):
Even with this?
Speaker 8 (35:33):
Cancers and brothers?
Speaker 1 (35:34):
You don't need just spouses one hundred percent. I agree
with you.
Speaker 2 (35:38):
Not everything has to involve everybody. Nope, yep, you want
it to do you want to bond a little with
your the.
Speaker 1 (35:46):
People you grew up with or something yep.
Speaker 2 (35:49):
Even if it's our friends trip.
Speaker 8 (35:51):
You should be able to do that without their spouses.
Speaker 1 (35:54):
Yes, yes, yes, Liz does even once you going on
a friend's trip, and.
Speaker 4 (35:57):
I've never gone on a friend trip.
Speaker 3 (35:59):
I'm not saying that that's not a I just don't
think that the in law should be able to say, Hey,
the rule is they're not common on a friend's trip.
Speaker 1 (36:05):
You say, it shouldn't even be a rule that they
can't take their spouses.
Speaker 8 (36:09):
You don't have to take your spouse. You don't have
to take your in law.
Speaker 1 (36:12):
It's up to you. Yep, I'll have to take your kids.
That's true too, That is true too. All right, thank you.
You've never been on a girl's trip.
Speaker 2 (36:21):
No.
Speaker 3 (36:22):
I mean, like, I've done things about my husband, but
it's been like short stuff like a wedding, and it's
because of work schedule. It's not because he wasn't invited
or not allowed.
Speaker 4 (36:29):
I think it's the idea.
Speaker 3 (36:30):
If my mom came to me and she said, hey,
we're gonna go on a trip, but your husband's not invited,
that would immediately put me in a weird place.
Speaker 4 (36:37):
So I'd be like, if he's not invited, I'm not invited.
I'm not going like you and.
Speaker 1 (36:40):
Your sister says I want it.
Speaker 2 (36:41):
She goes, I wanted you and your sister and we're
going to go do go to the New York and
do some shopping for the weekend.
Speaker 4 (36:46):
I would never do that without bringing my husband or
inviting my husband.
Speaker 1 (36:49):
Wow, my gosh, that's amazing to me. Wo wow, that
is amazing to me.
Speaker 2 (36:52):
Your little would you rather Wednesday? We got distracted a
minute ago. Okay, would you rather Wednesday?
Speaker 1 (36:59):
People?
Speaker 2 (36:59):
All whole food is healthy and nutritious, where all your
food is free. Now, I assume this is just for you,
not for the whole world.
Speaker 4 (37:09):
Okay, so my actions are selfish no matter what.
Speaker 2 (37:12):
It doesn't affect anyone else, right, because I think if
we I think if we went for the world, we
want the food to be free.
Speaker 1 (37:19):
Yeah, so this is just for you.
Speaker 2 (37:20):
You can eat pizza, but it's gonna be healthy, nutritious.
You can eat ice cream, it's gonna be healthy and
nutritious or whatever. You know, the rest of your life,
your food is free, and again, just your portion, not
the whole family.
Speaker 3 (37:32):
Okay, I'm gonna go with everything I eat is healthy
and nutritious because I understand.
Speaker 4 (37:37):
Like the groceries are expensive, don't know they are?
Speaker 3 (37:40):
Like, I understand that argument, but I feel like if
everything is healthy and nutritious, even if I wound up
eating out of a dumpster because I couldn't afford groceries,
it would still be healthy and nutritious dumpster trash.
Speaker 2 (37:52):
Okay, how about I made all your your whole family
gets food free for I made it for your family.
Speaker 3 (37:58):
Yet again, change things, doesn't it because dumpster trash food
would still be technically healthy.
Speaker 4 (38:03):
So yeah, the idea that like all food.
Speaker 1 (38:06):
Is giving you the well that surprises me because you
do eat pretty healthy do you do?
Speaker 3 (38:11):
That's because I have to if I didn't have to,
But you do it be nothing but hot wings and
mashed potatoes.
Speaker 1 (38:19):
You can't.
Speaker 2 (38:19):
I mean you can eat, but you have to have
regular figure read to get out of dumpster you're eating.
Speaker 1 (38:24):
It's just anything you get a restaurant.
Speaker 4 (38:26):
I can't eat out of a dumps.
Speaker 1 (38:28):
I know I'd love to. I already do it changed
your mind?
Speaker 4 (38:32):
No, Oh my gosh, I only eat healthy because I
have to eat healthy right free.
Speaker 1 (38:37):
Imagine I listen.
Speaker 4 (38:39):
I I have had food issues my entire life.
Speaker 3 (38:41):
I've been to so many nutritionous. I was addicted to
diet coke and snack wells in the second grade. Like
the idea that I could just sit down with an
entire sheet cake, the entire thing that's meant for forty
people at a party, and just eat it and it's
the equivalent of eating a carrot.
Speaker 4 (38:57):
That's the dream.
Speaker 1 (38:59):
I used the drink that way. But the more I
think about it, I think I might go all food
is free. Here's why.
Speaker 4 (39:04):
Gotta say for retirement.
Speaker 2 (39:06):
Yes, yes, yes, I'm closer new than you are, but
I also get an expensive healthy food.
Speaker 1 (39:14):
Okay, all right, I guess can I this is.
Speaker 4 (39:17):
Gonna taste like delivery?
Speaker 3 (39:18):
No, because you're still got paid the drivers, You're still
having to get it.
Speaker 2 (39:23):
I know, I know. But yeah, to be able to
pizza every day, to frozen pizza, yeah that's true. It
could be cheap, like a frozen pizza every day.
Speaker 4 (39:30):
And it's healthy.
Speaker 2 (39:32):
Okay, right, Yeah, that's hard to be But a few
hundred bucks a month picking up.
Speaker 1 (39:35):
On ramen noodles every day, how cheap you could eat?
Oh that's a weird way to think about it. She
went to a dumpster. We can just go right, Yeah, yeah, Okay,
I got a creepy one for you.
Speaker 2 (39:47):
Okay, you find out that your neighbor has a wax
museum in their bedroom of you and your entire family alight,
or your neighbor has a three D printed mask if
you her entire family, and they host a family game
night with strangers every week where the strangers wear the
mask of the family.
Speaker 3 (40:07):
Oh wow, the the statues, Huh, I don't want them
impersonating me.
Speaker 1 (40:12):
Well you don't, necessarily, it's gonna have a mask of you.
Speaker 4 (40:14):
Yeah. I don't like it though.
Speaker 1 (40:16):
Yeah, but the three D figurine, they really went all
out at that. Both weird. It's so, I think I'm moving.
I think I'm taking number three, but changing. Look they
always follow. Oh if you try to move, they move
in with you. Yeah, I think I'm going statues.
Speaker 7 (40:31):
Yeah, I'm less likely to see that it's in their
bedroom too, right, I'm less likely to see that.
Speaker 1 (40:36):
No, they're gonna let you know. Oh and there's gonna
be videos there. Okay, Well, I think I'm gonna go
with the masks. Yeah. I don't want the.
Speaker 2 (40:47):
Idea of the they why do they get through the
trouble to make my family in their bedroom.
Speaker 1 (40:52):
No, God knows what we're doing with the wax. What
are the what are they doing that the wax is watching?
Speaker 3 (40:56):
Yeah, but your biggest fear is being framed for a
crime E didn't commit.
Speaker 4 (41:00):
So now there's a mask out there that looks exactly
like you. That's you and your family, So now they're
all being implicated.
Speaker 7 (41:05):
Mask is a little flattering too. What do you mean,
It's like you want this whole family to look like
my family?
Speaker 1 (41:14):
You know what I mean? That's even more scary. They want. Oh,
it's all scary because they want to. It's all terrified.
Speaker 2 (41:20):
They bring in people to pretend to you because they
really want to be part of your family.
Speaker 1 (41:23):
It's so bad. Yeah, it's all scary.
Speaker 4 (41:28):
I'm choosing the wax figures.
Speaker 1 (41:31):
I'm going with a mask every time.
Speaker 4 (41:34):
But I just don't want someone impersonating me with a
mask of me on their face.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
But I know what you how about it? They had
a Van Tiloquist dummy of you.
Speaker 4 (41:44):
I don't be the worst of all of them. I
don't do puppets. Maybe that's why I don't like the mask,
because it feels like a real life puppet to me.
Speaker 1 (41:50):
Does Okay? So you would take the.
Speaker 2 (41:53):
They have a brand Twilquist dummy of you and Jimmy
and your son and they sit around at dinner and
have conversations or or.
Speaker 1 (42:03):
Yeah, that's way worse.
Speaker 4 (42:06):
That's the worst. That's the worst case scenario for anything.
Speaker 1 (42:09):
You can feel how uncomfortable are Like?
Speaker 3 (42:11):
What?
Speaker 1 (42:11):
I hate that?
Speaker 4 (42:12):
Don't you don't like that at all?
Speaker 3 (42:13):
I'm still choosing the wax figures, like we're right back
from to.
Speaker 1 (42:17):
Look as dummies, I think the most.
Speaker 4 (42:18):
Yeah, I think taking you on the go entertainment.
Speaker 2 (42:23):
Thanks for starting your day with The Morning Miss.
Speaker 5 (42:26):
It's The Morning mixed with Matt Harris.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
And here's your latest pop up power in real estate.
Speaker 3 (42:32):
And there's a beaver that should be scared of Dolly
Parton and that's the Buckeyes beaver. Because Dolly Parton has
entered the truck stop game. And I think this is
genius whoever is doing this in her marketing. They have
come up with a great idea. Starting next year, they
are opening a Dolly's tennesseean travel stop in Cornersville, Tennessee.
And they said it will have modern amenities and curated dining.
Speaker 4 (42:56):
And I know that they're gonna use I mean, I
don't know.
Speaker 3 (42:58):
This is based on a gut feel here say whatever, no, no, no,
But it's gonna be kind of based on a BUCkies
model where it's got like the really big clean bathrooms
you go in and it's an experience.
Speaker 4 (43:08):
It's not just pulling over on the side of the
road like you're going to go there.
Speaker 3 (43:12):
And Dolly could do that, because what would be better
than taking a picture with a statue of a beaver,
but taking a picture with a statue of Dolly Parton
all that themed merchandise and somewhere to just sell it all.
Speaker 4 (43:23):
And she's known for her food.
Speaker 3 (43:25):
She's got her cake mixes or corn bread mixes, all
that stuff that's selling in.
Speaker 4 (43:29):
Walmart right now. They could take that to a whole
crossover thing with it. And if they had people there
preparing the food, Oh, Dolly's gonna win. She's gonna win.
Speaker 3 (43:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (43:37):
I support that. They could do it. So it's in Tennessee.
Speaker 2 (43:40):
It's a Tennessee the first place, because that would make
sense like Elvis could do in your graceland.
Speaker 3 (43:46):
Oh right, I don't think there's any celebrity though that
If you're like in the general masses, it's like I'm
going for a road trip.
Speaker 4 (43:56):
I'm gonna be traveling in my RV.
Speaker 3 (43:58):
Dolly appeals to that audience like no one's business, because
I am that audience.
Speaker 2 (44:02):
Nate Bergazzi wasn't joking about open up a theme park
in Nashville.
Speaker 1 (44:08):
He's spoken about at a conference in Florida yesterday.
Speaker 2 (44:11):
He's production company, Nateland, is partnering with an entertainment design
for him to quote explore the concept and feasibility of
Nashville based theme park. He wants to park this over
one hundred acres focused on good, clean, family fun like
his act.
Speaker 1 (44:24):
And yes, it's called nate Land. And when you're on
your way you can stop by Dolly's.
Speaker 7 (44:29):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (44:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (44:29):
Then when nate Land opens, it will be the first
theme park to come to Nashville since Oppy Land USA
closed in nineteen ninety seven. So there isn't one there
the place for it. You know, he's huge, So everybody's
braking out on these things.
Speaker 4 (44:43):
Nashvill's a giant tour assassination.
Speaker 3 (44:45):
Even just in the last ten years, the difference in
going to downtown Nashville versus now is massive. One more so,
Martha Stewart is basically helping Doctor Dray and Snoop Dogg
come up with cocktail recipes.
Speaker 4 (44:57):
Yes, so she's been released different ones.
Speaker 3 (45:00):
I guess they have like their own alcohol line, which
I feel like tons of celebrities do, but Martha she's
helping promote it by creating different flavors. One is called
Watermelly and it's using watermelon juice and cucumber bitters and
then you use there there's like a gin and juice
one because of course there is.
Speaker 4 (45:21):
Yeah, with your mind on your money and your money
on your mind. But so I don't know, I like
that for Martha.
Speaker 2 (45:26):
You know there's one, there's a there could be the
the truck stop, the BUCkies slash Dolly type thing, the
Martha Snoop oh, yeah like that.
Speaker 1 (45:37):
They could do a lot of things in there.
Speaker 2 (45:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (45:39):
I guess we haven't really thought about how we should
be advancing truck stops for years, and now all of
a sudden that the idea is.
Speaker 4 (45:45):
That we're like, yes, please put a celebrity face on it.
Speaker 5 (45:49):
In the morning, it's The Morning mixed with Matt Harrison, Liz.
Speaker 2 (45:52):
Luda, some of the Christmas Show is going on, and
you're gonna be there two days for now Friday Friday for.
Speaker 3 (46:00):
Girls Night Out. I'll be there from four until nine pm.
I'm super excited because I went every single year growing up.
It's kind of got the jumpstart to the holiday season.
Speaker 2 (46:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (46:09):
I even still have some of my novelty verses I
bought from in seventh grade.
Speaker 1 (46:15):
So from seventh grade, senth grade.
Speaker 4 (46:17):
Yeah. Also I'm a border yeah. But so I'm excited.
And I've been working on a craft project of an
outfit to wear.
Speaker 3 (46:24):
Because since I'm going, you know, I'm a mixed one
oh seven to nine person, right you are.
Speaker 4 (46:28):
Our logo is gorgeous.
Speaker 2 (46:31):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (46:31):
It's hot pink and teal and black, but it's not
it doesn't scream holidays teal and So I was there
last year and I just had a hard time finding
like a holiday cardigan that I could match with it.
I just I wanted to make sure that I had
my best holiday sweater on point. And so I came
to the conclusion the only way to do that was
to make it myself, all right, And so I saw
(46:52):
a TikTok video and then I saw one on Instagram.
I saw a couple of different people doing this where
you make your shirt a wreath, which sounds silly, but
you go and buy like the tinsel, the sparkly, shiny kind,
and you put it on your arms, going up your
your sleeve across your chest, and then you clasp your
hands above your head and it makes it look like
(47:16):
your your arms are a wreath on your shirt.
Speaker 4 (47:20):
I mean, I I don't have the upper body strength,
but I think I get to it. Rubber arms.
Speaker 1 (47:27):
Put my shirt.
Speaker 4 (47:28):
No, I mean I can do it like for extented,
but not for all five hours.
Speaker 3 (47:33):
No, But I'm super excited because I went and found
pink tinsel and then I did some green tinsel.
Speaker 4 (47:37):
Because it's got to have the wreath base, right, of course.
Speaker 3 (47:40):
And I did it initially, and I did mess it
up because I forgot that when you put your arms
above your head, they move, so you have to like
move the garland so it kind of goes under your
arm pit almost at one point, and it can't go
on top of the arm. Yeah, I sure did, shirt did.
We're only down two T shirts. It's fine, our long
sleeve tease and so I had to redo it. And
(48:01):
so I haven't been able to put it on yet
because it was still drying last night. But I think
we are done. It's got tinsel, it's got ornaments.
Speaker 4 (48:07):
And it's even got lights so I can help my
shirt when I make it red. Yeah, I'm really excited.
Speaker 1 (48:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (48:17):
No, I am one of those people that's terrible with instructions.
I'm not very good at crafts, and so I usually
just try to like wing it. I say, I see
that I can recreate that, and so I might have
burt myself while trying to wear it on the shirt
while applying it, which did not work.
Speaker 4 (48:33):
We had to turn to safety pins.
Speaker 3 (48:35):
And then I also did melt my holiday tablecloth with
the hot glue gun. Okay, it was like one of
those plastic key ones. Yeah, but it was worth it.
I put a candle over the burnhole. You know what
I'm talking about. Yeah, hot today looking ones. Yeah, it
belongs there.
Speaker 4 (48:51):
That works cable scaping and.
Speaker 1 (48:54):
You're gonna are you?
Speaker 2 (48:55):
Are you to? Will it hold up through that? And
then the office Christmas party? I believe so, Okay, Okay,
I got.
Speaker 4 (49:02):
A lot of faith in it. There was a lot
of glue that was used, A lot of glue.
Speaker 1 (49:07):
Morning makes Matt Harris, Liz A Luda, and there are
five things that make your dog feel respected. According to
some animal behaviorist.
Speaker 4 (49:19):
I mean I agree, I agree with this.
Speaker 3 (49:20):
I think you need to make your animals feel respected
number one on the lists. I am guilty of not
doing it, though, And it's giving them choices. And the
example they gave is if they have like toys, having
two different toys and letting them pick which one they want,
all of them are lamb chop. Anything I offer her
is going to be lamb chop. So I never really
(49:42):
think to do anything other than just give her a
lamb chop. But moving forward, I will let her choose
between the varying state of torn apart.
Speaker 2 (49:49):
Okay, And they also say it's a part of that
is what route they want to walk or they want
to walk slow?
Speaker 1 (49:55):
You walk slow?
Speaker 4 (49:57):
I mean she chooses the pace. She doesn't, you know,
But I don't let her choose the route.
Speaker 1 (50:03):
Yeah, I think most people don't.
Speaker 9 (50:04):
We got it right, We just got places to be
We're the master, right. Next one let them sniff? Guilty
also of this, probably be like, come.
Speaker 1 (50:14):
On, we all need to be allowed to sniff a
little more.
Speaker 4 (50:18):
But the things that she wants to sniff, I don't.
Speaker 3 (50:20):
I don't want to hang out around, so like I'm like,
come on, let's just let's I'll let her pick the route.
Speaker 4 (50:26):
If she doesn't want to sniff too much.
Speaker 2 (50:27):
Sometimes it takes forever because they want to smell so much.
But it's mentally stimulating and reduce the stress. So let
them sniff freely and you understand it. Sometimes you don't
have the time, but blah blah blah, but if you
can let them do it.
Speaker 3 (50:42):
Number three is give them consent based handling that I
agree with.
Speaker 4 (50:47):
That I agree with. And it's not the you look
at your dog and you say, do you consent to
being petted?
Speaker 3 (50:52):
It's all in the way that you approach them, like
you let them know, like, hey, this is what's about
to happen, Like the way you use your hands, you
move slowly, and you you read their body language and
their signals before you do something.
Speaker 4 (51:03):
Okay, I think that's I think that's right.
Speaker 1 (51:07):
Sure you don't.
Speaker 7 (51:09):
I I just tackled my dog. Yeah she loves it.
Oh I got hug tackle out of.
Speaker 2 (51:15):
But they're saying, like, for instance, being to trim their palls.
You pick up their pall for a second, let them
look at it. Now.
Speaker 4 (51:21):
With that one, we have to muzzle her. She doesn't
get a choice.
Speaker 2 (51:25):
And all right, So against that one. On that one,
no respect you're not respecting them.
Speaker 3 (51:29):
The next one's communicating clearly. I think that's important in
any relationship. You know, let them know where you stand.
Speaker 2 (51:34):
It's consistency and structures what they're talking about. Yeah, at
the same time, eat, same time, walk, same time by.
Speaker 3 (51:40):
And then make sure they know when they knock over
the trash can we don't do this. This is not
what we're supposed to be doing. We are not eating
trash today. And the last one is respecting social boundaries.
Yet again, I think this is important.
Speaker 1 (51:51):
If they like other dogs or don't like other dogs.
Speaker 3 (51:54):
Don't try to force them to hang out, right, you know,
And I mean I could take that as like a
human too. You know, i'body forcing me to hang out
with people?
Speaker 4 (52:01):
Yeah, I don't want to.
Speaker 1 (52:03):
You had to do you have in life? You to
get forced?
Speaker 2 (52:06):
Well, yeah, I got social jobs, social norms, things like that.
Speaker 4 (52:11):
Well, my dog's like a freeloader. She doesn't bring home anything.
Speaker 2 (52:14):
Once you realize that the dog doesn't like other dogs,
not much you can do, yeah, right, unless you do
some extreme training.
Speaker 1 (52:19):
I guess.
Speaker 2 (52:20):
But other than that, just you can't really force them
right or snap or bark or whatever.
Speaker 4 (52:25):
My Wiener dog climbs a tree like a squirrel.
Speaker 1 (52:28):
H really, so literally.
Speaker 3 (52:30):
I didn't know that they could do that. The first
time I took her to a dog park, she was
pretty young, like she had her shots and stuff or whatever,
but she was young, and the first time she saw
another dog that wasn't like a dog she was familiar with,
she literally ran away and went up a tree. I
did not know that dogs could climb trees and show
and I had to go find someone very tall to
help me because I can't climb a tree.
Speaker 4 (52:50):
I couldn't get her down.
Speaker 1 (52:51):
My Wiener's in a tree. My Wiener's in a tree.