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July 29, 2025 59 mins

The jobs that attract the most cancer scammers, asking your spouse for permission AND when is cutting in line acceptable?

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Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 2 (00:01):
It's a morning mixed with Matt Harris and Liz Luda mine.

Speaker 3 (00:06):
Oh happy not one thousand degrees day, Good morning, Luda morning.

Speaker 4 (00:12):
I put a cardigan on for the occasion.

Speaker 1 (00:14):
Geez tj oh Man. So glad it's booling down.

Speaker 3 (00:18):
It's gonna be like ninety five or something. Still feel
like over one hundred. But we're gonna break the hundred
degree track that we've been on the ninety two tomorrow,
maybe not even ninety on Thursday, low eighties, uh, Friday
and Saturday with chances of rain, but there you go.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
And Liz had short night. There were the nightmare short Yeah,
I heard for long.

Speaker 5 (00:41):
I slept really weird last night. I would like fall
asleep for two hours and wake up with a nightmare. Yeah,
And then like a child, I would like call for
my husband and then I.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
Would call back to sleep. What do you want him
to do?

Speaker 5 (00:51):
I don't know, Like I was not out of dreamy
state yet immediately, and then I'd fall back asleep and
then I would be in another nightmare.

Speaker 1 (00:59):
It wouldn't be the same, yes, and then I would
wake up like two hours later.

Speaker 5 (01:03):
And so technically I went to bed at like four thirty.

Speaker 1 (01:07):
Oh, Jane, I.

Speaker 5 (01:08):
Woke up every two hour hours and at one point
I think I was sleep eating, like I woke up
eating potato chips, like I have no idea what happened
last night.

Speaker 3 (01:17):
I do the dreams where I will have like it
feels like many one act plays. Yeah, and then I
go sleep, and then it feels like a short period
of time I don't know, another play which is not
related to the other one goes on, and if you
tried to change yours in them, like, uh, you know,
go back and sleep. Okay, I want this scenario to
be different this time. Oh, or like try to or

(01:39):
sometimes it's a good dream, so you want to get
back to it.

Speaker 6 (01:41):
If you've ever done that, I've never got I've never
been able to control any kind of thing.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
Well, it doesn't work, No, it never does. To keep
but I'm awake, think, Okay, get back to that. That
was the thing.

Speaker 3 (01:50):
Yeah, I definitely won. All right, let's let's I wonder
how that ends. Yes, and I try to get into
I try to think, and it just doesn't help.

Speaker 1 (01:59):
Yeah, I don't know. Mine was just weird.

Speaker 5 (02:01):
I wasn't trying to go back to him. I like
fell asleep watching something that had a snake in it,
and so then I was like convinced there was a
snake in my bed. I'm not even scared of snakes.
It turns out it was my wiener dog.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Well it makes sense. Yeah, and that's kind of a
fat snake. Yeah, yeah, I know. She's eight pounds, she's hefty.
I mean it could have I mean, your husband could
have been with you, and that would have been.

Speaker 3 (02:23):
I will be a dream that you would have reached
over and started to smash him right.

Speaker 1 (02:28):
Weird. But like when I woke up from that dream, it.

Speaker 4 (02:30):
Was still light out, the sun was still out. Like
I had just such a beer.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
Wow night, that's good, I think.

Speaker 4 (02:36):
So I don't feel well rested at all.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
Oh no, that I guess that m sleep is when
you dream, right, So that's a good one.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
You just hope you keep it going for a while.
I just kept waking up from it, though. You get
up and walk around.

Speaker 5 (02:48):
I told you I was like eating at one point,
and I was like, wait a minute, am I sleeping here?

Speaker 1 (02:52):
No, I'm just actually eating.

Speaker 3 (02:53):
Whoops, my pat I've done that. Got up in the
middle of the night and walked into the pantry. I
don't want to wake anybody up close the door, sitting
there in your bowl of cereal, finally naked, hiding in
the pantries, and nobody hears the noise, especially because you
have a little ones. Especially you're like come running. Yeah, well, yeah,

(03:13):
there's a sleep usually you know, write them up. But
you're probably just pounding through the house like what chips are?

Speaker 1 (03:21):
Yeah? Probably that's a very accurate.

Speaker 4 (03:25):
That's a very good impersonation.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
All right, so we're wounded better temperatures. That is good.

Speaker 5 (03:30):
The Morning.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
Twenty ninth did July and Morning Mixed Birthdays powered by
Mark Spain Real Estate.

Speaker 5 (03:43):
And starting today, if we have Josh Radner, who's fifty one.
He played ten Bosby on How I Met Your Mother.
I watched that show in its original run and I
was like everyone else where, I liked it when I
went and did a rewatch.

Speaker 4 (03:55):
He is the most annoying character ever.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
I can't let Robin go camp with this guy. So
how do I keep that from happening? Simple? I make
it rain.

Speaker 5 (04:04):
I mean, he is the epitome of like, I'm a
nice guy. Why don't we give a nice guy a chance?
And it's like because you're crazy.

Speaker 1 (04:11):
I've never really seen him interviews. Is he the same way?
I don't think so. I don't know.

Speaker 5 (04:15):
I feel bad because I don't think he's done a
lot since that show ended.

Speaker 1 (04:18):
He has to, but he's the pride of Columbus, Ohio.
I do know that. Oh sorry, Columbus.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
A couple of HBO shows like little things, but that's
about it.

Speaker 1 (04:28):
He's been kind of like background characters more or less. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
you know who he always reminded me of.

Speaker 5 (04:35):
Who's the guy from Weekend at Bernie's the other.

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Guy Jonathan Silverman? Yeah yeah, does he give you that vibe?
I just thought of that just now. I had him change, like,
uh no, I don't know, maybe, but I guess something.

Speaker 5 (04:47):
Also, speaking of actors, Will Wheaton is fifty three. He
did a bunch of stuff when he was younger. He
was on Star Trek the Next Generation, but he got
really famous when he was on The Big Bang Theory
as himself.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
One of the worst things about being a celebrity is
you never know if people like you for you, well,
thanks for letting me know.

Speaker 5 (05:08):
And so he was like a big character that kept
coming back. But the one I really want to get
to for celebrity birthdays. Today is one of my absolute
favorite people from reality TV.

Speaker 1 (05:16):
And that is Tim Gunn. Tim gun is seventy two.

Speaker 5 (05:19):
He is super famous for being the person that you
consult with on Project Runway. There is a new season
starting in two days. Tim Gunn is not a part
of it. He hasn't been a part of the last
few seasons. And if you go where they've been posting
the little things where it's like coming to Lulu on
July thirty first, everyone literally says, where's Tim gun Where's
Tim gun where's him gun?

Speaker 1 (05:38):
He's seventy two. Let the man rest right, Let the
man do what he wants to do. And we have
Christian Siriano.

Speaker 5 (05:45):
Now who fills his role, but there is no one
who will ever do it as well as Tim Gunn.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
I am quite shocked. I don't have the other quorm.
I was ready to drop in front of a bus outside.
This is totally unprecedented and make it work. He lost
his way onless It's kids.

Speaker 5 (06:02):
He's like a mentor and he goes back and he
tries to help you do well with the Runway right,
and he'll look at your item and he'll go ooh
this is oh this, oh no, and he just insults
you and cuts you down, but in the nicest way possible,
because you can tell he doesn't mean it mean he's
trying to help you from getting eliminated. And almost every
time that they don't listen to Tim Gunn, they get

(06:24):
eliminated because Tim Gun's got.

Speaker 1 (06:25):
An eye you almost make me want to not watch.
It's fabulous. He's an icon.

Speaker 5 (06:30):
And then finally it is like the best of the
best national holidays. It's a National Azagna Day, oh yeah,
which that's huge. It's a National Lipstick Day, and then
it's a National Chicken Wing Day, and all of this
is amazing. And I had mentioned this off handedly last week,
I think.

Speaker 4 (06:47):
Like the same time, maybe like twenty minutes later than.

Speaker 5 (06:49):
This, but that there's a giant collaboration for National Lipstick
Day and National Chicken Wing Day with Revlan and Guy Fiery.
So if you've ever wanted to make up advice from him,
there's collaboration.

Speaker 3 (07:02):
Yeah, and yesterday was the creator of Garfield. Yeah, why
don't have was on in the same day?

Speaker 1 (07:07):
Come on, Yeah, she's getting together here.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
Morning makes matters lose Luda and your news nut, Massachusetts,
smet at a frightening encounter over the weekend after she
was attacked by a raccoon. Catherine Vanberg skirt so she
occasionally sees raccoons in her neighborhood, but never came face
to face with him like she did Saturday. She was

(07:31):
letting her dog's Ruby and Blue out of the garden
out to the garden around one am when raccoon suddenly
jumped up at her face. How she was on the deck.
Here she is, they become monsters.

Speaker 1 (07:43):
It flew at me.

Speaker 4 (07:45):
From several different directions.

Speaker 1 (07:47):
All I could do was scream, help me, help me.
This is nightmare. I kept saying it to myself because
I couldn't find any other words. I've just encountered a monster.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
This is insane. Yeah, not a raccoon on your face,
you know. Oh that's so scary.

Speaker 7 (08:03):
Wait.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
What kind of.

Speaker 5 (08:04):
Dogs does she have that they didn't scare the raccoon off?

Speaker 1 (08:07):
Right? Well, this raccoon's obviously a badasses. Yeah true.

Speaker 3 (08:11):
And I saw the pictures. Her face was all scratched up.
Uh nod at her hands and legs. She kept trying
to fight it off. She said she would fight it
off and then it would get loose, but then it
would come back like the babies or something or who knows.
She was somehow able to escape, closed the deck door,
covered in her own blood, called nine one one. She

(08:34):
was giving raby shots antibiotics in nearby hospital, but she
was worried her one dog, Ruby, had not been seen
since the attack. Oh no, but they found Ruby cowering
behind the TV set.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
You're fired as all worst dog ever.

Speaker 3 (08:51):
Uh so, uh well, the TV reporters are out there Sunday.
She was spreading coyote orn around the garden to keep
the raccoons away.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
But that raccoon is not I've been kept away by anything.

Speaker 5 (09:01):
No, yeah, wow, because that's bizarre behavior.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
Yeah you think.

Speaker 3 (09:06):
Yeah, And I just can't even imagine how scary, right
because you don't you're not expecting any of the No,
and she's in the.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
Middle of the night. You're just trying to take the
dogs out. All of a sudden you're attacked. You don't
know what's attacking you. What part of the stale part
of the country. She's in Massachusetts. Oh okay, Yeah, we
don't know.

Speaker 5 (09:24):
I will say out west, the raccoons are the size
of a labrador, and so I get a little bit
more nervous when it's that large.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
But they're aggressive and even if.

Speaker 6 (09:33):
They are, even if it's like a squirrel, if it's aggressive,
it's going to be a lot.

Speaker 3 (09:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
Yeah, it's not like the raccoon.

Speaker 3 (09:41):
I'm trying to think about how I could get my
hands around its neck or something that'd be hard. Yeah,
it's still pretty big and yeah, so that that's a
that's a good times like wildlife. I love raccoons, I know,
which is weird because that lacfooons and possums are awful
looking creatures, especially possible. Yeah they're cute, No, no, possums

(10:04):
of not Q. Raccoons are spooky just because those little
hands a little bandits Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
Yeah too, like Disney. Disney made me want to have
that one as a kid.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
Yeah, I had one that I have mentioned before that
my fraternity house was a crap show and it didn't
have windows. Whenever it was warm enough, we just put
plywood in the winter, so when it was up, and
so there was one that would come into my bedroom
and I'd go into someday, I hope I'm broke the
door one time and that thing had you remember the
powdered iced tea could make.

Speaker 1 (10:34):
You know, I used to have that to.

Speaker 3 (10:35):
Make it because you weren't gonna put anything in a bridge, right,
you steal it.

Speaker 1 (10:39):
He had that sucker picked up and his teeth were
going around like a can opener. Hers.

Speaker 3 (10:44):
Uh, just put it down kind of like flipped me
a clall and wandered away.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (10:51):
We eventually called game wildlife, like, we're not coming any here.
You're in your own people, you don't have windows. It's
not on us. So they gave us a trap and
eventually trap the thing and then can you come get it?
And they're like no, you still got to figure something
to do with it. I don't know, So we just
open the back door and let it go.

Speaker 5 (11:09):
Probably I just kept coming back, right, Yeah, for that
powdered ice team mix was and it was ready for it.

Speaker 3 (11:15):
But I'll tell you what. You get one of those
in a cage. The sounds they make, oh angerble Oh
it's terrible. Yeah they are ang so Yeah, I do
not like them. I get a little I get a
little uneasy when I see one.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
I think they're adorable. Yeah, well, I'd be.

Speaker 4 (11:28):
Honored if they chose my trash.

Speaker 3 (11:30):
Honor, well call Cala. What this old woman's name Catherine
van Berg's skirt.

Speaker 4 (11:35):
I don't want hers.

Speaker 3 (11:37):
They're monsters, monsters, monsters, I tell you Morning Mixed man
Harris Liz Luda is quirky and looks at social media
eighty eight hours a day and find things like this.

Speaker 5 (11:47):
And what did you think was millions of dollars as
a kid, And then when you were an adult you
remember the exact moment that you broke the rule and
you're like, oh, wait a second, I can do.

Speaker 4 (11:55):
This because I saw a video by this lady.

Speaker 5 (11:57):
Her name is at who is Taylor Ham, And she
was talking about how she thought that moving companies were
millions millions of dollars.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Oh yeah, if you're gonna move, you gotta.

Speaker 5 (12:07):
Just push through it, do it all yourself.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
Oh your friends and USh.

Speaker 5 (12:10):
She said she was on the point of like a
mental breakdown, and so she decided to price it and
was like, oh, well, that's actually probably worth it.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
I could do this right, And she.

Speaker 5 (12:20):
Said it had been instilled in her when she was younger,
like if it's something you can do, you just do
it rather than pay for it.

Speaker 3 (12:26):
I think after what happens is when you move en
up and you help others move you. Finally, like, I
got to figure out how much it costs for I
can't keep asking people and I don't want to be asked.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
Yeah, and so I got to look into this. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (12:38):
And so that was the example that she gave. But
the comments section was filled with tons of things. There
was one person who said that they were going to
Europe and their friends were appalled because they didn't check
a bag.

Speaker 4 (12:48):
They just had their carry on backpack.

Speaker 5 (12:50):
That's insane and they were like, how come you didn't
check a bag? And they were like, oh, that's that's
too expensive. And it was included with the price of
their tickets.

Speaker 3 (12:58):
It comes right on there when you pay it says
you want to That would be me though, that would
be something I would do.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
It's just like, not even gonna look. I'm not even
gonna look. I'm like, yeah, that's gonna be too expensive.
I'm not adding that on that absolutely not at all.

Speaker 5 (13:09):
But so the let's just kind of kept going on wrong.
I had one of these similar where I recently got
someone to mow my lawn twice a month, and it's
made a world of difference, And I never thought I
could just give someone twenty five dollars to do it.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
But it's worth it.

Speaker 4 (13:22):
Yeah, it's one hundred percent worth it in my world.

Speaker 5 (13:25):
But so there were other things, painters getting people to
paint for you.

Speaker 4 (13:29):
I've struggled through many a painting.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
And I did that for four summers.

Speaker 5 (13:34):
So yeah, I call you, is what you're saying if
anybody needs assistance, right, And then somebody said that the
hardest thing for them to break was the mentality that
they spend hundreds of dollars to go to Disney, but
they couldn't bring themselves to rent a five dollar locker.

Speaker 1 (13:50):
They were convinced it would bend for up them And
like that's so instilled, right, Yes, I told you that.

Speaker 3 (13:56):
When I go to concerts, and I've been a gazillion
over the years, I've never bought a concert t.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
Shirt like a big show.

Speaker 3 (14:03):
Right, because I'm like, yeah, I've already spent this much
rice and that and whatever. And I kind of think
that if I had seen it outside of that place
and be like all right, I could spend fifty dollars today,
But once it's in there, I'm like, I p o
the ticket I paid for the drinks, I paid for
the parking, and maybe I can't do another fifty right, Yeah,
but which is weird?

Speaker 1 (14:22):
I mean, what does it matter? Right? Right?

Speaker 6 (14:24):
If it happens two days later, you would have bought
the T shirt, right, Yeah.

Speaker 4 (14:28):
Then you know it'll go on clearance on their merch
store online.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
Off right.

Speaker 5 (14:33):
Then. Another one of the comments I loved was I
will never order a soda at a restaurant, A fourteen
dollars martini.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
Yes, a four dollars soda. Who am I? Jeff Bezos? Yeah,
I'm a water drinker.

Speaker 5 (14:45):
The first time my husband was just like ordering.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
A drink and it was sweet tea. An appetizer and dessert?
What Absolutely no appetizer person, for sure.

Speaker 6 (14:57):
It was like once that cow was out of the bag, though,
It's like, I'm an appetizer guy and I'll skip the dessert.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
Oh yeah for sure. Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (15:06):
In the morning, it's the morning mixed with Matt Harrison,
Liz Ludam, Oh.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
Good day. All.

Speaker 3 (15:13):
There was something you saw on social media and I
am one hundred percent against Yeah.

Speaker 5 (15:18):
I sawbody on TikTok and it is she's like a teenager,
young adult and it's at a concert, and she said
her dad hates waiting in line. So what he does is,
whoever's at the front of the line, he offers to
pay for their food or whatever they're buying in exchange
for him being able to add his order to theirs.

Speaker 1 (15:35):
Okay, see what I think, because have you ever had
this happen? Because this is makes sense.

Speaker 3 (15:42):
You're in line right behind somebody, and then all of a
sudden all their friends come yeah, right, and then they
get like, all of a sudden, they're ordering you know,
ten more drinks or something whatever.

Speaker 1 (15:51):
Yeah, so you really down.

Speaker 5 (15:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
I mean, granted he might be buying one or whatever,
so it might just be one train. But I'm still thinking,
on my I think it's not it's not right. I
don't think it's a line. Is the line? Because you're
a rule follower. I am a rule follower.

Speaker 6 (16:06):
I think if it's all under the same bill, as
long as it's not like twelve different transactions with all
those friends, then I think it's not gonna take that
much longer.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
Okay, so the.

Speaker 5 (16:18):
Guy goes out if they sell out a hot dog. Okay,
so he got ten friends that come up and they
all want two hot dogs. Now you're twenty hot dogs
deeper than you once were, and now you've got the
people in the secession stand. They're having to hurry and
go from side to side to get all these hot dogs.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
And they come to you.

Speaker 5 (16:34):
And say, I'm so sorry, it's gonna be fifteen minutes now, right.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
If it's a limited item, that does change it? Well, sure,
let's just say. I mean, I guess it's not a
It really isn't a big deal. If he goes over
to he'll pay for everybody and I'm getting a beer.

Speaker 3 (16:47):
Yeah, but it just seems like it would make me me,
Oh it does.

Speaker 1 (16:50):
It seems shady, But I don't think it is.

Speaker 3 (16:53):
Like I kind of said before, like going like my
buddy was up in the line, Hey.

Speaker 1 (16:58):
Grab you a beer? Yes, yeah, which is guts? No different, No,
there's no different.

Speaker 3 (17:02):
But I guess there's some limit too, because I've been
in line where all of a sudden, there's like ten
people joining that one person and now there's an extra
ten drinks, food whatever.

Speaker 5 (17:12):
Two second in line. I absolutely despise you. But if
I'm the person who you've offered to pick the bill.

Speaker 4 (17:18):
Up for, oh yeah, yeah, that's the best day. Yeah, absolutely,
you know what I would do out of order even more.
I'd be like, Oh, I've got a big order. Are
you sure you want to take it?

Speaker 3 (17:27):
Right?

Speaker 6 (17:27):
Yeah, I'm getting a pizza.

Speaker 3 (17:29):
Can we agree that there's got to be a limit
to how much you add to that person to order?

Speaker 1 (17:34):
Can we do that?

Speaker 3 (17:35):
Like if you're just going up and adding a drink
or a drink and some peanuts or something. But if
you're going up and adding ten drinks, I do feel
it's rush the setting.

Speaker 5 (17:46):
Change the setting, though, So say we're not at a
concession stand. Say you're at a Walmart, and you know
sometimes after Sunday on Sunday after church where it backs
up and the lines are really long.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
Imagine you're the third cart back and.

Speaker 5 (17:57):
Somebody just is like, oh, excuse me, excuse me, excuse me,
and they make their way up to the front of
the line to buy I don't know, maybe three or
four items, and they just toss it on that person's order.
I'd be more angry in that Sinnario, I don't.

Speaker 3 (18:11):
Think, because sometimes somebody has to run and get oh
I forgot blah blah blah.

Speaker 5 (18:14):
Right.

Speaker 6 (18:15):
Yeah, yeah, as a kid, I feel like I did
that every time we went to the store.

Speaker 3 (18:18):
But if they came up with a if they're a
kid and there's like ten items and they dump it
onto the person's thing.

Speaker 1 (18:24):
Yeah, a stranger, it makes it different, right, Yeah, because
this girl her dad just goes up to strangers.

Speaker 3 (18:31):
But the normart scenario, if it was a stranger and
you hear.

Speaker 5 (18:35):
Them negotiating up there and it's like, hey, listen, I'll buy.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
Your groceries if you love. Yeah, that's what that is.

Speaker 5 (18:41):
Again, if you're the chosen card, absolutely I love this idea.

Speaker 3 (18:45):
Depends on how many items that is the thing? How
much is it going to slow me down? But maybe
they're onto something. I think that here's my other thing
that you.

Speaker 1 (18:53):
Can buy your way into any situation.

Speaker 3 (18:55):
What would the crowd's reaction be, Because I might be
willing to do it, but I'm afraid the crowd is
gonna be like a screw you, dude or whatever.

Speaker 5 (19:01):
Right, I've been known to start a well placed boom.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Yeah, I'll tell you that.

Speaker 3 (19:06):
What do you guys think going to the front of
the line and saying I'll buy all your stuff, throw
me on some stuff seven oh four five seven one
o seven nine did the concession stand you just jump
up there.

Speaker 1 (19:18):
Hey, I'll get all your stuff.

Speaker 3 (19:20):
I don't know how much I'm gonna buy to just
skip a line though, either Yeah, I'm really gonna spend
it some concerts, a twenty dollars beer or something.

Speaker 1 (19:26):
Right, yeah, oh man?

Speaker 2 (19:28):
Thanks the Morning mixed with Matt Harris and Eliz Ltha Banel.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
Here's your latest pop up date? All right?

Speaker 5 (19:34):
Talking about Beyonce, fiance has the highest grossing country tour
of all time. She just made four hundred and seven
million dollars for her tour that she did, and the
previous best was Zach Bryan, who made over three hundred
and twenty one million for his Quinton Time tour. In
third place now is Morgan Wallen with his One Thing
at a Time tour, which made about three hundred million.

Speaker 1 (19:57):
And I'm shocked by all.

Speaker 5 (19:59):
Of this because Garth Brooks has been a touring country
icon for like decades at this point.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
Right, but break it up by tour though, to break it.

Speaker 5 (20:09):
Up by tour, because you looked it up and it
said that Garth Brooks has brought in three hundred and
sixty million, which is still less than Beyonce.

Speaker 1 (20:15):
But is more than Morgan Wallen, so and then everybody
would argue, is that a full country? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (20:22):
Right?

Speaker 1 (20:22):
Whatever?

Speaker 5 (20:22):
Right, And part of it that goes into it is
if you think about Garth Brooks, it's like seventy dollars
per ticket. They're all the same price if it's nosebleeds
or front seat, you know, front row seats. And then
Beyonce's tickets are more expensive. So where are we taking
into account inflation? And doesn't count as country because she
just had Destiny's Child Joiner on stage and sing Booty Delicious.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
Do you have to go by a show by show basis? Yeah?
How much does she make again? Four hundred and seven million?

Speaker 3 (20:49):
Yeah, because yeah, Garth Brooks World Tour Tristia year would
three sixty four, the Taylor Swift Red Tour one hundred
and fifty million. Tim mcgrawl faith Hill looks like one
hundred and forty one mil. Kenny Chesney up towards one
hundred and sixteen mil.

Speaker 4 (21:06):
There you go, just a lot of really big numbers
being thrown around.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
Yeah, Morgan Wallen, uh and Luke Comb's are are crushing
it right now right Well.

Speaker 5 (21:14):
Luke Holms set one hundred and seventy three million for
that tour, this last one.

Speaker 1 (21:18):
Yes, wow money.

Speaker 3 (21:19):
Yeah, let's see what else do we have here?

Speaker 5 (21:22):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (21:22):
Eddie Murphy was on the Today Show and he is
back and he talked about some of the projects he
has calming up here.

Speaker 1 (21:32):
He is get ready to do a George Clinton Parliament funkadelic.
I'm get ready to do George Clinton. Started Shrek five
and I'm going to be Inspector Cluseau in the next
Pink Weit What. Yeah, I'm the new Cluis. You're the
new Inspector Cluseau. I'm a new Cluseo. Are you French
in this? Maybe? Well you have to be French. I

(21:53):
will tell you. He's black. He's black.

Speaker 3 (21:58):
Is The one he's promoting right now is action comedy
called The Pickup that comes out on August sixth and in
Prime video with Pete Davidson, Andrew days Clay and Marshawn Lynch.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
But so, yeah, another Shrek movie for you. Yeah, I
love those Shrek movies.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
I think Panther coming out. So yeah, it's got a
lot of work at things and that George Clinton.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
That should be good. Yeah, that'll be fun for sure.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
What do you.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
Oasis. I'm laughing so hard at this.

Speaker 5 (22:23):
So Noel and Liam Gallagher they're the brothers with Oasis,
right and all the everybody's trash talk each other.

Speaker 1 (22:29):
They hate each other.

Speaker 5 (22:30):
That's why there they kind of are on tour again,
but then give it time, they're gonna get in a
fight and break up again. But apparently the only thing
that unifies them is their hate for Tom Cruise. They
had a two thousand and seven documentary where basically they
both said that Tom Cruise they hate him and all
of his movies suck.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
But Tom Cruise either didn't know this or.

Speaker 5 (22:52):
Just doesn't care because he was at their show over
the weekend, so I.

Speaker 1 (22:56):
Wouldn't get right, you're like that, I don't care if
you're like my stuff.

Speaker 3 (22:58):
I like your stuff, right, And the word probably never
even got to him.

Speaker 5 (23:02):
Right, or you forgot I mean tell Tom Cruise like, hey,
did you know this band hates here? Right? But what
would have been epic is if they would have panned
over with like the little camera or whatever and they'd
be like, yeah, oh gosh, Tom Cruise is here.

Speaker 1 (23:15):
I hate that.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
One with his girlfriend a girl. I just know I
thought he was with a woman or something. So maybe
the woman's like, I don't care how much you hate him? Oasis,
The Morning Mix, Matt Harris, Lose Luda, Mister TJ. And
how many times a week do you feel like a
bad parent?

Speaker 5 (23:36):
I feel like I can break it down by day,
but I think at least three times a day, so
twenty one times a week?

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (23:42):
Right, what do you think the average person, average parent
how many times they feel bad?

Speaker 1 (23:48):
I'm going to say like twenty. I'm gonna say, like
me three times a week?

Speaker 5 (23:51):
What?

Speaker 3 (23:52):
Oh? But yeah, okay, here's what I'm gonna try. Because
buy us as they get older some you know, cause
that can change it.

Speaker 1 (24:01):
Right.

Speaker 3 (24:02):
Also, you have a lot more time because of your schedule. Yeah,
so a lot of people don't see their kids to
feel badly about parenting unless they just feel back is
they're at work and the kids at home.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
Yeah, it three seems like low. I feel bad for that.

Speaker 5 (24:14):
That's a given every day when I'm at work, which
I understand that, like I have to work so that
we can afford house and you know, food and all
the things.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
Right.

Speaker 5 (24:22):
The other thing, though, I feel so guilty when I
am at home and he's there and I have to
do something where he is not my direct focus, like
schedule a doctor's appointment or pay a bill.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
Over the level life and being adult.

Speaker 5 (24:34):
Yeah, like those kinds of things, I will feel so
guilty and I'll be like, I'm so sorry, mommy was
on the phone for fifteen minutes, and then I'm like,
I should have spent it with you.

Speaker 1 (24:42):
No, no, I know, I know you're suppot to show
them that.

Speaker 3 (24:47):
It's part of adults adult, being adult, right, that they
are not your sole focus, that they are not.

Speaker 5 (24:53):
Oh, that ship has sailed, that ship has sales, And
now I'm feeling guilty again. So we're up to four
counts today, feeling like a tear because I've also let
him down by making him think the world revolves around him.

Speaker 3 (25:04):
Yeah, I uh yeah, so I would have had a
lot more than three when they were younger, especially if
you don't even call her a kid. I mean one
is twenty, so not nearly feel as bad. Yeah, now
on a daily basis at all.

Speaker 5 (25:19):
Because you're like, whatever damage I did is done.

Speaker 1 (25:21):
You're done. Maybe therapy get in it. Uh, the you
know the other ones.

Speaker 3 (25:26):
She's fifteen, so it's a little less, but it's also like,
all right, she spent too much time in a room
or what does she do? So I'm amazed though that
three times a week that seems so low to me.
Me too, Yeah, like I especially younger, yes, especially younger.
I think you feel less and less as they get older,
you know, start read getting like teens and stuff, because
they're like, what are you gonna do? They've already right,

(25:48):
the ship has sailed kind of thing. Yeah, I can
spend so much time.

Speaker 5 (25:51):
Even this morning, I was somehow I feel so guilty,
like I let my kid down this summer.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
We've only got two weeks left, and I'm like, I.

Speaker 5 (25:56):
Didn't do all the things that we had planned on doing.

Speaker 1 (25:59):
And then out lowed. Does it sounds ridiculous? I hope
no it doesn't.

Speaker 5 (26:03):
It just makes it turn and even more, I'm like,
oh my gosh, there were so many things.

Speaker 4 (26:06):
There were so many things about that too.

Speaker 3 (26:08):
I mean not that everything like yeah, we didn't wear
seatbelts back in the day or whatever, but there's also
like there was a time when and I'm not saying
it's better, but when summer came, it didn't change my
parents schedule at all. They did their thinking, they worked,
they did whatever.

Speaker 1 (26:22):
So anything you're doing, all we do is get a
little bit better, right little Yeah? Yeah, and you'd got
to work on it. You just said you're spoiling him,
so they you know, maybe.

Speaker 5 (26:31):
You haven't bring I often say we make entirely too
little money for him to get spoiled.

Speaker 3 (26:39):
That's what my buddy just said the other day, Like,
how does my kid like nice things?

Speaker 6 (26:43):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (26:44):
Yeah, how the hell did that happen? You got like this?
You just went and bought a nice golf club or something.
It's like, I don't know what.

Speaker 5 (26:50):
How I'm wearing the same pants I bought it Walmart
seven years ago, he said, and they still feel new
to me?

Speaker 3 (26:56):
Yes, yes, yes, A forty five percent of parent hood
has been more demanding than they expected. They say, yeah, yeah,
more demanding. Yeah, I would say more. I worry more
than I thought I would. I about I'm doing the
right thing.

Speaker 5 (27:14):
I think emotionally, it's more work than I anticipated. Like
I knew you had to like clothe them, feed them,
but like making sure like I just before I had kids,
a kid, I didn't.

Speaker 1 (27:25):
Know that, Like, I mean, they're their own person. I
don't know.

Speaker 4 (27:28):
I'm gonna stop talking I'm gonna feel guilty again.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
You feel guilty.

Speaker 7 (27:32):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (27:33):
The average parent discovers two situations with their kids per week.
They do not have a hand know how to handle
only two.

Speaker 5 (27:41):
Wow, this is what I always trying to tell myself,
is like, you know how we all look back with
feelings of nostalgia our childhood. This is my kid's childhood,
and I gotta make it special, and I gotta do
little things. It doesn't have to be something over the top.
But sometimes I forget to do the little things, and
I'll be like, I got the streamers in the closet,
but you put them out.

Speaker 1 (27:57):
Why do I put the work in? But then I
didn't actual they do the thing that I was bossing.

Speaker 3 (28:01):
You're also overestimating his memory and what he will think
it's supported in childhood and estallion and all that stuff.

Speaker 5 (28:08):
He's not going to remember that much. I need to
make sure each day is memorable as I have such
a guilt complex, as I know you do. I just
love him so much. He just deserves everything and now
he's spoiled again.

Speaker 1 (28:24):
Guilt today, it waste. It is the morning mixed Matt
Harrison lose ludaj and do you have to ask permission?

Speaker 5 (28:32):
Yeah, do you ask permission or notify your spouse when
you're going to do something. I saw a video and
it was on TikTok, and I was really shocked by
the comments section because it was asking that question of like,
before you make big purchases or plans, do you call
your spouse or your significant other and do you ask
them if you can do it?

Speaker 4 (28:52):
Or do you just notify them of what's happening.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
I think there, I think.

Speaker 3 (28:55):
They should be a two separate categories, a big purchase
and a plan.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
Okay, different things, Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (29:01):
I obviously am not a mental health care provider, so
don't take advice for me. This is just on my
personal experience. I always ask permission, and it's not like
I think I need his permission, but I would want
him in the same sense to like do the same
for me. So if it's like making plans, we got
two dogs and a kid, if you're going to stay

(29:22):
out later then we anticipated, or you're going to just yeah,
I want to make sure that, like, hey, are you
cool if I do this?

Speaker 1 (29:29):
Can you pick up my slack?

Speaker 5 (29:31):
Basically, if we were already planning on that, like I
want to make sure you're cool to you know, stay
home with the kid, walk.

Speaker 3 (29:38):
The dogs, right, because of the logistic issue like that,
Well then but maybe it's more like then it's are
you going to be around this weekend?

Speaker 1 (29:46):
Yes, okay, cool, I'm leaving, going somewhere.

Speaker 5 (29:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (29:49):
I think it's different if you're yeah, if.

Speaker 5 (29:52):
You're married with no kids, or if you're single with
no kids, or I feel like kids make a difference.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
Definitely, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I think you because the
permission is that is that there's the hard word there, right, yes, because.

Speaker 5 (30:07):
It's more like he's never going to tell me no,
and I know that, but I would want him to
give me the same where I could be like, yeah,
I'm overwhelmed, I can't right now, right right?

Speaker 3 (30:18):
That makes sense because but on off the top of
my head, it feels controlling. I mean, and even though
I always and it's not necessarily on her my eggs,
like I felt like, God, I'm afraid to even ask. Yes,
I went, I'm afraid to even ask, and if I
can have permission to do this thing, but that could
be my own baggage and everything, I don't I don't know,

(30:39):
But if that that is what I'm thinking about, is permission?
Are you afraid to even it's not because you are
worried about the logistics of the taking care of the kids,
of the dog or whatever. It's like, I gotta get
approved in this one. Am I gonna get like I
can't believe you're doing that? And again that could be.

Speaker 5 (30:57):
And yeah, that's on me obviously, Like if you took
my kid out of the situation, like when I think
back to when me and my husband we're just dating
or before we had a kid, like I would just
be like, hey, gonna be late. This is what I'm doing.
And I don't think I ask permission the same way
I do now if that makes sense.

Speaker 3 (31:12):
Yeah, I'm just gonna But if it's going to be late,
then that's not really because you're you're gonna be with
the kid anyway or whatever.

Speaker 1 (31:19):
Are you cool? Everything good? I'm gonna be humble.

Speaker 5 (31:21):
Late.

Speaker 1 (31:22):
Permission just sounds like the weird word. It does, Yeah,
it really does. I think it's the word yeah, because
it's it's not.

Speaker 3 (31:29):
It's more like uh, telling the boss, Hey, I'm going
to take a day off, but is there we have
somebody to write? Yeah, it's not really permission, but I
want to make sure everything's covered.

Speaker 6 (31:39):
Yes, yeah, yeah, maybe it's a different like it's whenever
you have shared responsibility, to make sure that that responsibility
is covered while you're not doing it.

Speaker 1 (31:48):
Because what if you had to play and I had
to play?

Speaker 5 (31:50):
Right?

Speaker 1 (31:50):
Ever, Yeah, the permission is a tough tough word there.

Speaker 5 (31:53):
And then when it comes to purchases, I mean we
have a joint checking like account, like it's shared money
at this point. Like I don't want you going out
and spending some time without talking to me.

Speaker 3 (32:03):
Because that's way different to me than Hey, I'm gonna
go out. No it's with the boys.

Speaker 5 (32:09):
Yeah, Like if it's under fifty dollars, you don't have
to consult me once we get older.

Speaker 1 (32:15):
Saying that officially or you just kind.

Speaker 4 (32:17):
Of I think that's just kind of the general general rule.

Speaker 7 (32:19):
Yeah, yours is a fifty or sometimes if my if
my husband's like the one doing the grocery shopping and
he's like, I don't know what we got in checking,
but this is what about what it's gonna Is that good?

Speaker 1 (32:30):
Is that okay? More like is it going to overdraft?

Speaker 5 (32:33):
Right?

Speaker 3 (32:34):
I would say if you're afraid to ask there lies
the issue. Yeah, okay, yeah, okay, you're you're hesitant, or
maybe you sugarcoat it and.

Speaker 1 (32:46):
Say, uh, can I go out to eight when you
really know it's going to be nine or so?

Speaker 3 (32:51):
Yeah, you know that kind of thing that that is,
And that could be not necessarily on the other person. Again,
I'm not it could be something because I know a
lot of guys and again this is stereotype, but a
lot of guys who are like.

Speaker 1 (33:04):
I'm gonna go go. I know a lot of guys
who just do it. Yeah, I know, and a lot
of guys are like, hate to even ask.

Speaker 3 (33:09):
But when she says she's going with the girls, I'm like, yes,
go right, there's a reaction two when they ask yeah,
uh seven four five, seven one seven nine, And we
hung up with that word permission?

Speaker 1 (33:21):
Is that the that the the thing?

Speaker 4 (33:23):
I'm fine with the word permission. I asked for permission.

Speaker 3 (33:26):
I just it's just I'm doing it. I just want
to make sure you got it covered right. Permission's tough
for me.

Speaker 1 (33:32):
It really is for me.

Speaker 4 (33:34):
If they don't have a cover though, and they say no,
can we.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
Not this time? Yeah? But what what what is it?

Speaker 3 (33:40):
Because you're you just went out the last two weekends,
right whatever.

Speaker 5 (33:44):
It's like, Hey, our kid is been in really ridiculous mood.

Speaker 1 (33:49):
The one dog ate a shoe and she shouldn't have
like over and handle a day. Yes, all the time.

Speaker 2 (33:57):
In the morning, it's the morning mixed with Matt Harrison.

Speaker 1 (34:02):
What is your summer persona?

Speaker 3 (34:05):
According to new survey, seventy four percent of gen Z
and millennial women have a summer vibe. They're chasing. They
have the popular ones. Mine is the napping dad.

Speaker 1 (34:18):
Chasing it love it. Yeah, that sounds like optimistic.

Speaker 5 (34:21):
I thought it was gonna be like the cocker each
avoiding sunlight and people.

Speaker 3 (34:24):
Yes, yes, there is the Grand macore Gals. There's the
Coastal Cowgirls, and the Pilates Princesses and the Tomato girls.
All right, the most popular one, twenty two percent, said
the Grand macoor Gals.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
Now what does that mean? I'm gonna tell you.

Speaker 3 (34:44):
Enjoy cozy vintage inspired simplicity. They think indulgent and comforting
food flavors best reflector vibe. They like hearty meals like barbecue,
seafeed boils, and iced tea.

Speaker 1 (34:57):
So right, I got to google a day cozy Vintage
inspired simplicity.

Speaker 5 (35:02):
But you did say tomato also tomatoes also speaking to
me as well.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
But okay, Graham mccor, I'm going to type it in.
I do have a hearty appetite.

Speaker 3 (35:11):
Uh it looks like how do you I don't even
know how to describe it. It's like a shirt with
embroidery on the the collar.

Speaker 1 (35:21):
Maybe. Uh yeah, I don't know. I don't know. Just
in fashion, I thought you would know you mean to
drop the ball. This one I'm not familiar with. Vintage
is by then they have uh, coastal cowgirls.

Speaker 5 (35:35):
Now that I get, coastal cowgirl is like the the
Beacher kind of eye.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
But then you just put cowboy boots with.

Speaker 3 (35:41):
It, beechy vibes, Western rustic elements, summary drinks. Love Pool
Days host the most gathering themed around their aesthetics.

Speaker 4 (35:52):
And I feel like that is the most seen aesthetic here.

Speaker 1 (35:55):
Go go gog go go dolls, Goo goo dolls.

Speaker 4 (35:57):
You yes, I saw so many people of that.

Speaker 3 (35:59):
As saw it also at the Loving Life Music Oh
Death and my daughter I see here.

Speaker 1 (36:04):
Yeah, friends do that.

Speaker 4 (36:05):
Which, by the way, I the ability to.

Speaker 5 (36:08):
Wear cowboy boots in these in this heat, I iolate
you Yeah, those are some sweaty cat.

Speaker 6 (36:13):
It's also a big look at like college football games,
college early in the season.

Speaker 3 (36:17):
Yeah yeah, one hundred percent. U seventeen percent pilates princesses.

Speaker 5 (36:22):
That's probably the second aesthetic here because that's the people
that are wearing the sports bras and the leggings out
and public.

Speaker 3 (36:27):
Under the wellness and daily routines. They plan their rapids
to match their aesthetics. Read the most books, exercise the
most most likely not for clean, well focused options, green
smoothies and such.

Speaker 1 (36:38):
So that's not me. H. Fourteen percent tomato girls. Am
I a tomato girl?

Speaker 3 (36:44):
A romantic aesthetic? Oh and all things Mediterranean inspired?

Speaker 5 (36:48):
Oh, I do follow the Mediterranean diet for the most part.
I love olive oil.

Speaker 3 (36:52):
They are almost likely to photograph and post their food
and drink picks and social media, prefer bright, juicy, fresh flavors.

Speaker 4 (36:59):
Okay, alright, I'm a tomato girl.

Speaker 5 (37:01):
To me, I'm a tomato girl because I don't post
my food pictures. But you know, I'm taking pictures constantly,
and when I'm hungry, I just go through my camera
roll and look at meals I want have eaten.

Speaker 1 (37:13):
I'm trying to see outfits they're wearing.

Speaker 3 (37:17):
Uh, well, they're wearing thing thing red and uh you
know what, tomatos tomato. It's it's a whole uh TikTok trend.
But you know you're elderly millennial.

Speaker 1 (37:27):
So I am not a geriatric milesial smacked out in
the middle.

Speaker 4 (37:32):
Yes I am.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
Yeah, Yeah, I will.

Speaker 5 (37:35):
Get in this argument all day. You guys always want
to age me out.

Speaker 1 (37:39):
I do. I'm already old enough as it is.

Speaker 5 (37:41):
I make noises getting in and out of chairs. I
need to push this any further.

Speaker 3 (37:45):
So like it's it's it's definitely not your aesthetic clothes wise.

Speaker 1 (37:49):
Oh it almost looks coastal. It looks like somebody is
going to.

Speaker 3 (37:52):
Go in like a or something. Yeah, a lot of
run right and the grandma one. I'll show you that too.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
That is uh, I.

Speaker 5 (38:01):
Don't do the Oh okay, it's a lot of embroidered blouses.

Speaker 1 (38:07):
So you're not in that one I either.

Speaker 5 (38:08):
No.

Speaker 4 (38:08):
I'm built for comfort, like straight comfort.

Speaker 1 (38:11):
Uh and quirky, quirky vibe.

Speaker 5 (38:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (38:15):
So I mean we were just talking about this.

Speaker 5 (38:16):
I went to the Goo Goo Dolls concert last week,
and it wasn't until I went to that that I
clocked that I don't dress like anyone here. And I
remember when I grew up beause I grew up in
stand in the county, right down the road. I never
felt like I fit in clothing wise, but I just
thought it's because I was overweight and I'm plus sized.
Clothes didn't really exist. The Internet wasn't as robust as
it is now. Right and now that I came back,

(38:38):
I was like, oh, yeah, there's tons of people that
dress like me. And as I was standing at the concert,
I was like, there's not a single person dress like me.

Speaker 4 (38:45):
I guess I am a weirdo.

Speaker 1 (38:47):
It is the Morning Mixed.

Speaker 3 (38:48):
Matt Harris, Liz Luda and I talk about some scams
here in a second. But first we got tickets to
give away to see these guys.

Speaker 1 (38:57):
Here we go.

Speaker 3 (39:00):
Find today shows Saturday at PNC Music Pavilion and the
weather highs only in the eighties and the band's name
is Ajar.

Speaker 1 (39:10):
Did I not say that, I don't think you diddr?
That doesn't matter?

Speaker 5 (39:14):
So nice?

Speaker 1 (39:14):
He said it twice?

Speaker 3 (39:15):
Then, yes, so you saw this and you know we
can't one percent back up this guy's stats, but.

Speaker 5 (39:22):
Yeah, so my mind is blown So there's a guy
on TikTok called at Faking Cancer Expert, and he listed
the three professions that people work in where they're most
likely to lie about having cancer and they don't.

Speaker 1 (39:36):
And so, like we said, we can't really.

Speaker 5 (39:38):
Back this guy up. He's been written about in The
Independent and he's got a whole profile about deep dives
into all these fraud cases that have been investigated, and
he says it's like true crime without the murders.

Speaker 3 (39:50):
I think, for some reason, I'm thinking it's more women
than men, because maybe that's the ones we've heard on
that sand we heard about that big great documentary on Hulu.
Uh and some other ones and you know the munch
House and the big one.

Speaker 1 (40:03):
With Gypsy Rose. Yeah. Uh that's much as my proxy,
that one.

Speaker 3 (40:09):
But I uh so, I'm gonna think it's jobs that
so like a teacher.

Speaker 1 (40:15):
Teacher was number one on the list. Ah, Okay, I
think this might be tougher to pull out. But for
some reason, I think a nurse that was a common guess.

Speaker 4 (40:26):
I think nurses are fourth. They didn't make the top three.

Speaker 1 (40:28):
Okay, Uh, then I will go with well a stay
at home Nope, No, that was gonna be my next.

Speaker 5 (40:40):
It's also not influencer that came in like fifth on
the list.

Speaker 3 (40:43):
I think, oh really, I'm gonna also go with, uh,
what's the what's the like a rescue like a police
fireman type thing?

Speaker 4 (40:54):
Law enforcement's number two? You got one and two?

Speaker 3 (40:56):
Yeah, oh no, get a third one. Oh and then
the third one would be a clergy yep, oh wow,
you do all that my podcast Impact of Influence, get
it today.

Speaker 5 (41:10):
I just blows my mind though, so like I didn't
know that this was like a whole thing. I thought
it was just like the occasional one off case here
and there. But I started going through this guy's profile
and he has multiple like things where people have been
arrested for fraud, where this is more widespread.

Speaker 1 (41:26):
Than I thought it was.

Speaker 5 (41:28):
And it blows my mind to try to figure out
the mindset of somebody.

Speaker 1 (41:31):
That would do that.

Speaker 3 (41:32):
I mean, it's easy to figure out the mindset. I
mean some of it's easy. Some of it is pure
a mental health issue where they've got some sort of
Munchausen or something going on where they need the tension,
the attention. But the easy explanation is they want money
and things.

Speaker 1 (41:49):
Yeah, that's that's. I mean, people scam all the time,
they do.

Speaker 5 (41:54):
I just that seems like such a choice opens commit,
commit to it, to follow up to it, so much
work and all the everything like that.

Speaker 1 (42:04):
Just feels a lot of lies, a lot of lies, and.

Speaker 5 (42:07):
You have to make sure that you're lying to everyone
that's close to you or else the whole thing's gonna unravel.
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (42:13):
And it probably starts small and they get a bite, right,
and then they start like all right, I can keep
doing this and keep doing this because like in this
commanda thing, I mean, she went so far as to
have get medical supplies and stuff to look like she
was hooked up to things, and she would get into
the emergency room saying she had a stomach ache, but

(42:34):
then have pictures taken of her and she was just
in there for something else. But like like this, and
you no one can find out because of hippa.

Speaker 1 (42:40):
Yeah, so you.

Speaker 3 (42:41):
Can't find out for doctors, what do you within there for?
And then it just and then you get some support
and everybody gets a bracelet and does whatever, and you know,
it starts giving money and then you can get hooked
up with maybe.

Speaker 1 (42:52):
A church or something and they want to help.

Speaker 3 (42:53):
So then it just then you're getting cash donations, which
there's no tax on, and then you get fundraising things
to go meet people, famous people and stuff and just snowballs.

Speaker 1 (43:04):
I would feel so guilty.

Speaker 3 (43:06):
Yeah, I hope you would, all three of us, right,
I hope ninety eight percent of America would feel guilty.

Speaker 1 (43:11):
I just couldn't.

Speaker 4 (43:12):
I couldn't deal with that.

Speaker 1 (43:13):
I would immediately.

Speaker 5 (43:15):
I couldn't make it past one person without pers Yeah.

Speaker 1 (43:19):
The amount of times that they catch people doing it
multiple times, that's what's crazy, right.

Speaker 4 (43:24):
Like move from city to city up.

Speaker 5 (43:26):
Yeah, I just I don't know. You spend more time
in the true crime world. I watch a lot of
like Disney movies, you know what I mean. So there's
the difference of our perceptions of reality.

Speaker 1 (43:36):
Sleeping Beauty was.

Speaker 5 (43:38):
Yeah, but like you know, like I I guess I just.

Speaker 4 (43:41):
Don't realize all these things are happening.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
I know. I mean this is the basic news and stuff.
You see these you see these.

Speaker 3 (43:46):
Scams people get go fund me or you hear and
bet them getting a trip to Disney or something, and
you find out you're like.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
About one or two.

Speaker 5 (43:54):
But I, yeah, I didn't know it was his wide's president.

Speaker 4 (43:57):
This plus like I wouldn't want people thinking I was sick.
There's like a pity that comes from like that.

Speaker 1 (44:03):
It's not it's what, but it's more of like.

Speaker 6 (44:08):
Ah, I'd also be worried I jinx myself. Yeah, it's
like I'm faking cancer and then give myself, can't you know,
Like I don't think about the attention or the pity
you say.

Speaker 3 (44:18):
There's plenty of people who maybe even don't do it
for tons of money or even any money, but they
will be like the person who's always sick, always has song. Yeah,
we know those people who may not be as serious
as they say, but it's always it's their story, it's
who they all are, and it becomes their.

Speaker 1 (44:36):
Thing, right you know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (44:37):
People like that, Yeah, it is their thing, it's their
their their identity, and uh, you know when you talk
to them, you're going to hear about some new gut
that they have.

Speaker 5 (44:47):
Because I'm the type I've been sick, you know what
I mean, And so like I feel like every time
I have to tell somebody about that, it's like ripping
a band aid off, Like I don't want Yeah, you're
normal be scammed by a sticky seven O four six five.

Speaker 1 (45:04):
That's not my.

Speaker 5 (45:04):
Number, that's on four five seven one oh seven nine
seven O four.

Speaker 1 (45:09):
Five seven seven nine.

Speaker 4 (45:11):
Personal calls to Matt because you scam you.

Speaker 3 (45:14):
The Morning Mix Matt Harris, Liz Luda and TJ. They
gave a point to people, a bunch of choices on
what you call your significant outher, your you know, your
lovey debbie, nickname, uh and well number one was none
of the above, so people will just start I'm not
using any of them, but you may feels so weird.

Speaker 5 (45:36):
If my husband calls me Liz, I'm like, I'm sorry,
Oh yeah, does that.

Speaker 1 (45:40):
Mean, right, Liz? That is weird? Sometimes?

Speaker 3 (45:43):
Right?

Speaker 4 (45:43):
You actually never name uses my real name?

Speaker 1 (45:46):
Yeah? Do you want to guess what the I mean? Baby?
Baby's number one? Baby are going to be? Baby is
not number one?

Speaker 5 (45:53):
Why?

Speaker 6 (45:53):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (45:54):
No number one? You're close?

Speaker 3 (45:56):
I mean babe, yeah, babe, twenty percent, babe, Okay, Second
is honey, yeah, honey, thirteen percent and then baby ten percent.
Only one percent use sugar, pumpkin or angel, and.

Speaker 4 (46:12):
Then I would not want to be called pumpkin.

Speaker 6 (46:15):
I'd be like, yeah, pumpkin because me a weird one
like not to a it's not weird to a kid.

Speaker 1 (46:21):
I guess it feels weird for significant other.

Speaker 3 (46:25):
I think if you did it like it's a teasy
like oh, little pumpkin, okay your mom?

Speaker 1 (46:29):
Yeah, I know. I'm just saying I don't want you.

Speaker 4 (46:31):
To compare me to a pumpkin in your head or yeah.

Speaker 5 (46:35):
Or that they got like warts like gourds and stuff
like that out over here.

Speaker 1 (46:40):
Yeah you got a you got a lumpy gourd? Tell
me I love orange today? What's happening?

Speaker 3 (46:45):
I'm not a pumpkin, sweetheart? And love coming at six percent.
I have a person I know always calls his wife
love and maybe he's not from this because he's not
from this country.

Speaker 1 (46:57):
That tries me crazy. What would what do you need love?

Speaker 5 (46:58):
Love?

Speaker 1 (46:59):
Do you need a drink?

Speaker 3 (46:59):
Love?

Speaker 5 (47:00):
Love? It? Like?

Speaker 1 (47:01):
Yeah, too much? That may slip in Occasionally.

Speaker 5 (47:05):
We've gotten really lazy in my relationship. My husband calls
him baby. I call him baby. We call our kid bubby.
So I think it's just because it's real easy to
slip and slape on me.

Speaker 1 (47:14):
Those two terms.

Speaker 5 (47:16):
But when we first got together, he called me cupcake
and I loved that, and I the.

Speaker 1 (47:20):
Other day brought up. I was like, how come you
even call me cupcake? He's like, I don't know. You
don't give cupcake fines.

Speaker 5 (47:27):
And I called him boo bear for for years and years,
and now I'm just.

Speaker 1 (47:31):
Like a baby, all right, that's gonna work. You're not
you're a full cake now, Yeah, I'm act cake. I
am full size. I'm a sheet cake.

Speaker 3 (47:40):
At this point, no one would want to be out
with someone and they're calling him cupcake.

Speaker 1 (47:44):
I just don't want to. That's something you got to keep.

Speaker 4 (47:46):
He used to like put it in cards and stuff
like that.

Speaker 1 (47:51):
Fine, yeah, that's fine.

Speaker 3 (47:53):
As the age is a change, the numbers, you know,
change a little bit. The eighteen to twenty nine year olds,
Babe is number one, followed by baby, and then followed
by uh.

Speaker 1 (48:09):
Love, which is weird to me. Love. I don't really
hear that that much.

Speaker 3 (48:12):
No, but once you get to a certain age, you
you start just dumping forty five plus, it goes babe, honey,
there's no baby that doesn't even register. Yeah, it's not
even it's there's like one percent or something.

Speaker 5 (48:25):
I'm sure I'll hit that at that day. Rumorsm says,
you don't give baby, vibes anymore.

Speaker 1 (48:28):
You just babe anymore.

Speaker 3 (48:32):
And when you get to a certain age, it really
climbs up with none of the above becomes way number one.

Speaker 4 (48:39):
We're just lucky to remember your name at that point.

Speaker 6 (48:41):
Yeah, what about deer like de deer? I feel like
older people say that.

Speaker 3 (48:46):
Four percent overall, say dear, uh seven percent sixty five plus?

Speaker 1 (48:53):
Okay, that seems low.

Speaker 3 (48:54):
Yeah yeah, but Bay, you know, still isn't tracking too
hard eighty to twenty nine four percent.

Speaker 1 (49:02):
Nobody says that anymore though, But yeah.

Speaker 3 (49:04):
Well, and you click onto the race when it does
jump up a lot, Okay, the Bay it was up
to ten percent for African America.

Speaker 1 (49:13):
I just keep it. I keep it simple. Baby, there
we go. That's it, hey, Jark. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (49:19):
The only thing that's awkward, though, is because it's baby
and Bobie in my house. Is sometimes I find myself
wanting to call other people those names. I'm like, oh, yeah,
I shure think baby, you're not my baby.

Speaker 1 (49:27):
I'm sorry that was one. Yeah, you're just a cashier.

Speaker 4 (49:30):
I didn't mean to call you that.

Speaker 1 (49:32):
What I called Neil the other day, Oh, I don't know.
You did call him a pet think or something yeah,
and you're like, I know, babe, it was babe. It
was babe.

Speaker 3 (49:39):
Yeah, it was babe. As Neil or Boss was with us.
We were in Nashville and he did something. All right,
thanks babe.

Speaker 1 (49:44):
And who do who are you even calling? Baby?

Speaker 3 (49:48):
Oh okay, yeah, yeah, I'm allowed to have.

Speaker 1 (49:52):
A baby mill I just just.

Speaker 3 (49:54):
Because I have a couple of X wives doesn't mean
I can have out.

Speaker 1 (49:56):
A can of a babe. I'm just saying a secret
babe somewhere you don't know.

Speaker 3 (49:59):
Ye, it's my kids for starting your day with the
Morning This It's.

Speaker 2 (50:06):
The Morning mixed with Matt Harris and Liz Luden and
now here's your latest pop up.

Speaker 5 (50:10):
Fat Fance has the highest grossing country tour of all time.
She just set a record. She made four hundred and
seven million dollars. Previous best was for Zach Bryan, who
made over three hundred and twenty one million, And then
now in third place is Morgan Wallin whose tour made
three hundred million.

Speaker 3 (50:30):
And then there's always the question was she country wasn't whatever?
But there's still big a damn concert.

Speaker 1 (50:35):
Oh yeah, a lot of money. Yeah, uh no. Jim
Kramer is from CNBC you've tell you. Oh, I didn't
know who he was.

Speaker 3 (50:43):
The financial guys screams and yells blah while he screamed
and yells and uh followed it with some bad things.
It happened on Squawk on the Street and they laughed
it off and he quickly apologized.

Speaker 1 (50:55):
But he lost his mind.

Speaker 7 (50:57):
Our biggest problem is we have so much quote at.

Speaker 1 (50:59):
The FED won't cut what the Oh my god, I'm
so sorry. I get right back.

Speaker 3 (51:05):
Everybody kay that in the moment, that it's with a
cable with a tickers would take that back? That people
doing live TV, Jim to your point golden today the
most notable change.

Speaker 1 (51:22):
You're fine, You're golden, the most one. I just feel
like enough with the coms boom, let Carl talk now.
I took it back, take it back?

Speaker 4 (51:34):
Well, yeah, that's like one of the most terrifying things
I think you can do.

Speaker 1 (51:37):
Maybe not you, Matt, but for the rest of us
in our lives.

Speaker 3 (51:41):
Yes, yes, yeah, well they not on delay, I guess not.
But he's also on.

Speaker 1 (51:47):
It's like cables have different rules.

Speaker 3 (51:50):
Yes, definitely rules. Yeah, there should be no rules anyway,
but that's another story.

Speaker 1 (51:53):
So what else I'm.

Speaker 5 (51:54):
Glad the rules are there. I'm very glad the rules
are in place. The Fantastic four Galactus pop corn bucket
has now set a Guinness World record. It is now
the world's largest commercially available popcorn bucket.

Speaker 4 (52:08):
Yes, and this thing is ginormous.

Speaker 5 (52:09):
It's twenty inches wide, seventeen point five inches high, and
it holds three hundred and forty one ounces. And you
looked up how much popcorn that is and it's the
equivalent of two and a half large popcorns.

Speaker 1 (52:21):
Oh, do say how much it is?

Speaker 4 (52:23):
It's eighty dollars dollars collectible.

Speaker 1 (52:27):
Put popcorn in it. The eyes light up on it.
I mean, what's the point having it?

Speaker 5 (52:30):
Though?

Speaker 4 (52:31):
If you don't put the popcorn right, well.

Speaker 3 (52:32):
That mean that's I could say the same thing about
all your beanie babies that aren't unwrapped.

Speaker 4 (52:36):
Listen, they're in tag protections.

Speaker 1 (52:38):
But still, what's the point having if you're not going
to play with them.

Speaker 5 (52:41):
I did with gloves on. That was an investment piece, sir.

Speaker 1 (52:49):
This one isn't.

Speaker 5 (52:51):
There's a lot of the beanie babies, you know, like
one day it paid off for you.

Speaker 4 (52:54):
It's gonna circle back around. You and I both know.

Speaker 1 (52:56):
It ever in the morning.

Speaker 2 (52:57):
It's the Morning mixed with Matt Harrison.

Speaker 1 (53:02):
We've got the contract tickets for Age R.

Speaker 3 (53:05):
In a second, I put something on our kicktok and
socials and Facebook. Matt harrisco who joined the fun that
I had never had lemonade, like I'm gonna have a
sip somewhere in a lot of line, but never had
a glass of lemonade. And I've never had a full
glass of I said, vanilla milk, but plain milk like white, yeah,
white milk.

Speaker 5 (53:22):
Okay, you never had a lemonade stand as a kid.

Speaker 1 (53:27):
Uh No, I don't remember ever having a lemonade. Sein.
I do remember.

Speaker 3 (53:31):
I lived at a dead end street with a bunch
of dead end people. We'd have a yard sale once
in a while. We'd sell like Cola's out of a cooler.
But okay, I don't remember ever making lemonade, not even.

Speaker 5 (53:42):
With the powder instead of like the full on lemons
and the sugar.

Speaker 1 (53:46):
There's only like twenty cars in my street, dead end. No,
I mean you.

Speaker 5 (53:50):
You've never just bought the Country Time lemonade powder.

Speaker 3 (53:53):
No, no, never, Oh, that's my life. I've ever done that.
I had the powdered ice tea. Someone said, next thing,
you're gonna tell me you've never had a glass of
sweet iced tea.

Speaker 1 (54:04):
And I'm like, I have had sweet iced tea. I
grew up with iced tea.

Speaker 3 (54:08):
This person, Scott says he's forty three. Never had a
glass of milk, he said, he tried to you, who
wants I don't.

Speaker 1 (54:15):
Know if this really counts. Yeah, that's chocolate. It's not
a dairy product. Multiple people said, well, what do you
have dunked your oreos in? I mean nothing, but.

Speaker 3 (54:25):
Yeah, if I do, it's maybe I'll lean over and
put in somebody else's. But doesn't mean to drink the thing.
A couple of people have never had coffee in their life.
Oh wow, A couple of people have never had beer
in their life. Okay, that doesn't totally surprise me. Coffee,
I guess coffee.

Speaker 5 (54:44):
Smells so good, though, I feel like you'd be curious
at least once.

Speaker 1 (54:47):
I can understand not coming.

Speaker 5 (54:48):
Back to it unless you got hooked to the caffeine,
which's where we all are at this point.

Speaker 1 (54:53):
Lost her name. She's never had iced coffee in her life. Okay,
that's fair. Another person never had energy drink. That's why, Yeah,
and wise. Yeah, I don't think. I never had coffee
till I was like twenty two or something. Oh wow.

Speaker 5 (55:08):
When I was a kid, they told me it would
stunt my growth, so I wasn't allowed to have it.
And then I hit five ft ten in the fifth
grade and then they started giving me coffee.

Speaker 1 (55:16):
Load down.

Speaker 5 (55:16):
We need to do some to stuff this train because
it's getting out of control.

Speaker 3 (55:20):
Well, well, I certainly wasn't healthy in my college years
because it was a giant, large mountain dew every morning.
Oh yeah, that skipped the coffee right to the mountain dew.

Speaker 5 (55:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (55:32):
I mean you're getting the caffeine somewhere.

Speaker 3 (55:35):
The mountaine right right morning mixed Matt Harris, Liz Luda
and producer TJ. And Liz found some good news for herself.

Speaker 5 (55:43):
Yeah. That apparently the size of your calves can be
an indicator of mortality risk.

Speaker 1 (55:49):
And I have always had.

Speaker 4 (55:50):
Really thick calves.

Speaker 5 (55:52):
I just have it's been very difficult to find a
boot that goes to my knee. I've always had to
get the wide calf option. And when pay LUSS shut down,
and that really hurt my choices. Oh yeah, really, and
I've always just had really muscular calves, and apparently that's
a good thing because it shows like core muscular whatever
development or something.

Speaker 1 (56:13):
What is the number we're looking at?

Speaker 5 (56:15):
Oh gosh, hold on, I just went to the next
part of the siety one I think.

Speaker 1 (56:19):
I top my head.

Speaker 3 (56:20):
It's any twelve inches a little over twelve inches around.

Speaker 5 (56:24):
It says if you're below thirty one centimeters, that has
an increased risk.

Speaker 3 (56:29):
Well, oh, I don't know, man, I don't I got it.
We got to forget tape measure and find out. I'm
not going to die eventually.

Speaker 4 (56:35):
I mean, we're all going to we're slowly approaching it.

Speaker 5 (56:37):
But I usually whenever I see any of these things,
I'm like, oh, there's another reason I've got bad health
choices or whatever, you know what I mean. And I
was like, wait a second, my large calves.

Speaker 1 (56:48):
Might be a good thing, right, And it's all these
things that keep popping up, like it when it was
like sitting and standing and yeah times and yeah see
without getting help.

Speaker 5 (56:58):
And then being able to a squat like a deep
squat that apparently and then you know what, I just
found out the other day that at some point in
your life you're going to lose the ability to jump.

Speaker 1 (57:08):
I didn't know.

Speaker 5 (57:09):
This, and so they're the new thing is they say
when you wake up.

Speaker 1 (57:13):
In the morning. Now this is all from TikTok.

Speaker 4 (57:14):
I'm not a medical doctor. Yeah, that you should get up.

Speaker 5 (57:17):
You should jump a hundred times when you wake up
in the morning time, like a hundred little hops, not
a big jump. You're not jump roping or anything, but
that at some point in your life you'll probably realize
I haven't jumped in so long.

Speaker 4 (57:29):
I forgot how. You're doing a great job, Matt.

Speaker 1 (57:31):
You can still jump, I am, I mean barely. Is
that enough you think? No. I saw the other thing too, where.

Speaker 5 (57:40):
You like lose the ability to skip, where a lot
of people they don't realize it because if you go so.

Speaker 1 (57:44):
Long without doing it, it's just gone. So recently did
you relearn how to skip? I haven't skipped since I
was a teen, tod and so just starting cold right
like skip didn't It didn't go well, It's like, but
I mean eventually I got it back. You got to
find that rhythle. You got to find a rhythm. Yeah, yes,

(58:05):
it's not as easy. I consider myself relatively healthy. I
mean I can run and stuff. Oh yeah, getting the
pace of the skip. It's like, you know, even a
cartwheeler somersault again, Oh.

Speaker 4 (58:15):
I can't do that, but a skip. I still have
a skip.

Speaker 5 (58:18):
You're a good skipper, I was yea, yeah, I mean,
I'm just saying, you know, it's that one of.

Speaker 1 (58:23):
Your skills, right, I want to see it. Well, no,
there's a lot of pressure on it.

Speaker 5 (58:28):
I haven't.

Speaker 1 (58:29):
I haven't like skipped in a long long time.

Speaker 5 (58:30):
But like what, I played volleyball in high school, which
I'm not like, oh I peaked in high school, but
like whatever, I think I did, and that.

Speaker 1 (58:37):
Was like one of our warm ups. And I can
skip faster than I can run, and I have no.

Speaker 5 (58:41):
Idea why, and so I just always enjoyed it because
it was like the one drill that I wasn't in
last place.

Speaker 1 (58:46):
Every time I just got a camera without practicing, you're
going to be I can do it. Yeah, I can
do it? All right, it is on I might I
think you're in.

Speaker 6 (58:55):
Yeah, I'll try it. I don't think I got it,
but I don't think you can skip.

Speaker 4 (58:58):
I have this belief in myself that I can still skip.

Speaker 1 (59:01):
Okay, all right, everybody at home, go ound in your
hallway right now and skip. Don't tell why you're doing it. Yes,
not enough people to skip from the coffee machine, like honestly,
it would make it way fun to go back with
the don't skip with the coffee. Yeah that's not a
good idea. Yeah that's true. This is the morning makes
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