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July 22, 2025 61 mins

Liz reveals a secret she kept from everyone yesterday, the disappearance of quirky personalities, PLUS the most dangerous way to relax outside. 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Thanks for starting your day with a Morning Mix with
Matt Harris and Liz Luda.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
Oh, good day, all it looks like we might not
hit ninety today.

Speaker 3 (00:09):
Ninety nine it was yesterday.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
We've so far had one day in July where it
wasn't ninety and today and tomorrow could be more of those,
because supposed to be eighty eight, eighty nine the next
couple of days.

Speaker 4 (00:21):
All right, amazing, Yes, that's my favorite weather, right.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
Yes, well i'd look a little cooler. But good morning, Luda, morning,
and good morning to you Jay.

Speaker 3 (00:30):
Good morning.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Yet a due point they say it might be in
the sixties today.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
Wow, it could be good.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
But enjoy those two because then it goes.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
Back up right, And I don't know how abnormal that is.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
But only one day this month that wasn't ninety I
didn't really it was ninety nine yesterday.

Speaker 3 (00:47):
No it was not.

Speaker 4 (00:48):
But that's pretty warm, man.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
And then you got on ran Yeah I did, like
come on, I know, I don't know what I was doing.

Speaker 3 (00:55):
It was just like oppressive. It was so bad. It
was not a great time, and I was near the end.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
I'm like, I don't think I'm gonna make it right,
Like my body started to give it. It wasn't even
that far. But normal person will just blow through it.
But whatever, we're here today and we're good to go.

Speaker 3 (01:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:12):
Yeah, and if you're flying soon, you know there's new things.
You don't take your shoes off. Okay, so at least
that's what they're saying. The TSA is doing another thing.
Two weeks after the no shoes off policy, they've announced
they're adding dedicated new family lanes at security checks points.

(01:32):
There's only a few airports are doing it right now,
including Charlotte Douglas, Orlando, Charlotte Douglas, Hawaii, Orange County. More
will be added in the coming months, but Charlotte's right
on the cutting.

Speaker 5 (01:47):
Edge from the single travelers can get through quicker or.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
They're supposed to help mitigate the unique challenges family's basement
traveling and minimize stress while maintaining the highest level security.
Probably you could take a group right like kind of
helped them, have you a little extra hands on.

Speaker 3 (02:05):
To get the kids through or whatever.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
Parents don't have to stress as much as about holding
up the line because they know it's other kids and families, right.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
And then part of the thing, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:16):
And then if your kid's young, they don't have a
driver's license, so you're like, here's a birth certificate.

Speaker 4 (02:21):
Does this suffice? Does this work?

Speaker 5 (02:23):
You're like pulling out random government documents and then you're
doing it like secretly because you're like, but nobody's steal
his identity. Now, COMMU, let me put this back on
the folder.

Speaker 2 (02:31):
And it's just when that kid decides that they're gonna
not cooperate.

Speaker 4 (02:35):
Oh gosh.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
So at least if you and most people are cool
with it.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
But still, if you were own family only, at least
everybody over there would be like super understanding, right, you
would think, right.

Speaker 4 (02:44):
You can't travel with a kid without multiple bags?

Speaker 3 (02:47):
Oh yeah, true, true.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
And they are offering just kind of TSA pre check
rates for families fifteen bucks off. And they've been adding
honor lanes for military too, so they're doing things. But yeah,
I would the kids only that when when I had
the kids, that would have been good just to I
wouldn't feel as rushed, I wouldn't feel as as panicked.

(03:12):
And uh, I try to give grace too, but sometimes
you're like, come on, kick right, right, we should have
separate lines for a lot of little if you know
you're a dummy.

Speaker 3 (03:21):
You haven't fought yet.

Speaker 4 (03:23):
I don't think people are good at self identify.

Speaker 3 (03:25):
That's the big one they have that guy there. Uh
dummy Lane, No, you're dumb. Dumb, You're dumb. You need
your SA How dare you? It's the twenty second of
Juli and one of the birthdays powered by Mark Strain
Real Estate.

Speaker 4 (03:45):
And Selena Gobuziness thirty three. Happy birthday to Selena.

Speaker 5 (03:48):
She spent most of her life on television. You grew
up with her on Barney all.

Speaker 3 (03:52):
The way up through Wizards of Wayne.

Speaker 5 (03:55):
Yeah, her and Dummy both were Oh yeah, they go
way way back.

Speaker 4 (03:59):
And on her that Let's let's celebrate her music.

Speaker 3 (04:02):
Love song Baby.

Speaker 5 (04:10):
I mean it's an older song now, but yeah, still
pretty solid, right.

Speaker 3 (04:13):
He's a great and Murders in the Building.

Speaker 5 (04:18):
Yeah, I mean she's done a lot of stuff since then.
She's got her cooking show.

Speaker 4 (04:22):
She's been very successful.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
Only Murders. I think it just released a new season.

Speaker 4 (04:26):
How many seasons are there now, it's.

Speaker 3 (04:27):
Like four, four or five?

Speaker 4 (04:29):
Yeah, yeah, my mom's a big fan of that show.
Also celebrating today is David Spade. He is sixty one.

Speaker 5 (04:36):
I love David Spade for multiple reasons, but the main
one is that he is in my favorite Disney movie
as a lama.

Speaker 4 (04:44):
Wait a minute, I remember you.

Speaker 2 (04:46):
I remember telling you that I was building my pool
what your house was, and then you got mad at me.

Speaker 4 (04:53):
Then you turned me into a lama.

Speaker 5 (04:55):
And I because he doesn't even try at first new group.
He doesn't he try to change your disguise's voice.

Speaker 4 (05:02):
It's just David Spade as a lama.

Speaker 5 (05:04):
And even now when I see him, I'm like lama
vibes energy.

Speaker 2 (05:08):
I didn't used to like him, and I've really come
around on him because he is so self deprecating.

Speaker 3 (05:13):
Yeah, yeah, so self deprecating.

Speaker 2 (05:15):
Because I don't even know why I'm amongst all these
people really really cool.

Speaker 4 (05:19):
Yeah, I like David Spade.

Speaker 5 (05:21):
I think he's funny. I think he's super funny. John
Leguizamo is sixty five. Yeah, William Dafoe is seventy.

Speaker 3 (05:28):
Very unique looking fella.

Speaker 4 (05:30):
He scared me when he was the Green Goblin in
Spider Man.

Speaker 5 (05:33):
Yeah, that's like the last time I think I went
to a superhero movie. And then Don Henley is seventy
eight from the Eagles, and I'm gonna be very honest,
I hate the song Hotel California. If there were ever
a song that would haunt me in my dreams, it
would be that one. So I will keep all my
promises and instead I'll play a different song. That's right.

Speaker 3 (05:56):
Do you want to do it? You want to do
your career? Yeah, well of all of a long, long career.

Speaker 4 (06:05):
I'm not hating on the Eagles.

Speaker 3 (06:06):
By the way. Music is music.

Speaker 4 (06:09):
One of those things.

Speaker 5 (06:10):
I haven't been to karaoke night where someone hasn't gotten
up there and tried to just.

Speaker 3 (06:16):
Hotel California.

Speaker 4 (06:19):
Oh my gosh, that's got to be one of the
biggest karaoke songs out there.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
It's six and a half minutes. Yeah, I know from
when I used to have to play it when I
had to go potty.

Speaker 4 (06:28):
Yeah, that's six and a half minutes.

Speaker 5 (06:30):
That's people that are up there, and I'm gonna I
I apologize if anyone feels called out, but that's the
type of person. It's like, I'm going to be on
that stage at karaoke for six and a half minutes
and you're gonna look at me and it is.

Speaker 3 (06:42):
You got to keep it around three ish. Definitely under four.

Speaker 4 (06:46):
Also celebrating today. Danny Glover is seventy nine.

Speaker 5 (06:49):
Oh yeah, and then they're no longer with us, But
today would have been Alex Trebek's birthday from Jeopardyday, Alex
is dead for four hundred yeah, sadly. And then our
national holidays. It is National Mango Day. It's also National
hammock Day. And you and I had a whole conversation
and hammocks are Actually you should always learn hammick safety.

Speaker 4 (07:10):
I'm gonna take this as a moment though.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
To educate people to make safety.

Speaker 4 (07:14):
Hammick safety is very important.

Speaker 5 (07:15):
If it is not properly anchored, the injuries that can
result from it are horrible.

Speaker 3 (07:21):
How about a banana hammock.

Speaker 4 (07:23):
That is a different kind of hammock and different kind of.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
Injury for yourself.

Speaker 2 (07:28):
Oh okay, just checking, I want to make sure you're clear.
It's the morning and TikTok has blessed us with another
you guys are dummies beauty hack. It's the dey sharpy lipliner.
Oh no, yeah, one TikToker said it's so great, even
tagged the company requesting more shades. Beauty influencers and actual

(07:52):
experts are not exactly lining up to co sign the trend.
One user admitted her lips spelled dry and she gets
smelled the chemical. Another chimed in with a not so
reassuring observation that her lips weren't burning, but they didn't
really feel right. It's just not about weird taste or
temporary dryness. Permanent markers like sharpies are made with chemicals.

(08:13):
I lean to leine, I don't know a bunch of
different ones, and according to poison control experts, and haling
the fumes is already harmful and playing that stuff for
l likes at your mouth probably not good. Sharpie's official
stance yes, because they had to make a statement said.

Speaker 3 (08:28):
Hugh's markers only has a intended right.

Speaker 5 (08:32):
I that's a really unless they're using like one of
the little tiny, tiny tiny sharpies that has like the
little ball point thing on it. I'm imagining like a
regular size sharpie, and that is that is some intense little.

Speaker 3 (08:46):
Love was equipment.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
A dermatologist said, if you did it once, probably not
too bad, but.

Speaker 3 (08:51):
Just don't do it again. Yeah, just just just ghet away.

Speaker 4 (08:55):
I used to get in trouble a lot when I
was a kid for drawing on my body. Shockingly.

Speaker 5 (08:58):
I don't have any tattoos now, but I used to
write with my pens like gel hens, yeah, and notes
on my hands, and I remember getting lectured constantly about
how dangerous it was.

Speaker 3 (09:09):
And I used to drawing my arms all of the time. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
I never't lectured them about being bad, but they would
have the right on their arms and stuff.

Speaker 4 (09:16):
Yeah, I feel like, but I never took the sharpie
of the face.

Speaker 3 (09:19):
No, didn't get that far. But you do want to
face tattoos, so they really do.

Speaker 5 (09:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (09:23):
I know the thoughts that are happening right now and.

Speaker 2 (09:27):
On X out of Austin that we're having these these
floods recently in some of these waters, and this ex
user said, this is a scary sight. He called it
a floating ball of pure hate. What it is is
excuse me, uh, these fire ants, No, I've seen this.

(09:48):
They get together and and and form like a giant
ball and then they float down the water.

Speaker 3 (09:56):
It's terrifying looking.

Speaker 5 (09:58):
Are they like sacrificing the ants on the outside of
the like sphere that they've made so that the ones
on the inside can.

Speaker 4 (10:03):
Survive and they just float through?

Speaker 5 (10:05):
Because that's even more appalling that that's how they're working together.

Speaker 2 (10:07):
They sink their teeth into each other, oh gosh, interlock
their limbs and create rafts to stay alive. It's called
a self organizing or self assembling process, and it's something
only social insects do some some sort of expert There
are a lot of other structures that ants make in
similar ways. For example, army ants make bridges across rivers.

(10:31):
But these guys are getting together.

Speaker 4 (10:33):
Oh I see those.

Speaker 5 (10:34):
Yes, I didn't realize exactly what was happening that.

Speaker 4 (10:37):
Yeah, no, that's terrifying.

Speaker 3 (10:39):
That's maybe right.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
It doesn't look that intimidating like from a distance, But
then when you realize that it's ants fire ants specifically,
it's like.

Speaker 5 (10:48):
Oh no, it kind of looks like when they make
their little homes and the grit and like the dirt
and the way the dirt bubbles up.

Speaker 4 (10:54):
Oh yeah it does. Yeah, it looks like they're homes.

Speaker 6 (10:56):
So it's they just move it to the water and
now it's floating through the water. Well, why did they
even need to be in the water. Where are they
trying to go flooding?

Speaker 3 (11:04):
Oh have a choice?

Speaker 4 (11:05):
Oh, they're doing it like out of preservation.

Speaker 3 (11:07):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, or maybe it's their next evolution.

Speaker 4 (11:11):
No, I just want to know.

Speaker 5 (11:12):
Are they like vacationing? Are they like I've heard really.

Speaker 3 (11:14):
Where is this at Texas? Somewhere?

Speaker 5 (11:16):
I've heard really great things about Arizona.

Speaker 4 (11:18):
Let's roll like I didn't know what was happening.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
It's crazy what animals could do, right, Yes, let's hook
our arms together.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
We can do this.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
And it had to be people going like, no, yeah,
that's I'm staying right here, perf. You're just trying to
get a feel, right, But can you imagine're floating in
the water.

Speaker 3 (11:35):
You wouldn't know what that is. No, right, so you
bring it over and put your hand on it or something.

Speaker 5 (11:40):
Then the other thing, too, is like imagine as a person,
like if you try to approach people with.

Speaker 4 (11:45):
That same concept. And I was like, all right, guys,
let's link arms so.

Speaker 3 (11:47):
That we could like float. I've got to bite your
butt real quick.

Speaker 1 (11:50):
Sure we can.

Speaker 4 (11:51):
Yeah, I don't think we'd work together like that.

Speaker 3 (11:53):
No, not at all.

Speaker 6 (11:54):
Am.

Speaker 3 (11:55):
I'm going over to the Hyahoga here a little bit.
I go all the way to Eyoi. I don't know,
I'm gonna try it.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
Morning MIxS Mad Harris The quirky one Liz Luda and
her lunacy from watching social media forever.

Speaker 4 (12:10):
And I just found out everyone doesn't do communal brownies.

Speaker 5 (12:12):
So I saw video on TikTok and this lady who
was talking about how some people they make brownies and
then they cut them into squares or pieces and then
you just put them in like ziplock baggies or something
and you get a brownie. I thought all of us
out there made a pan of brownies. You put the
communal knife in, you cover it with foil, and you
leave it on the counter.

Speaker 3 (12:31):
Yeah, definitely.

Speaker 5 (12:31):
And every time you walk by, if you want a
little sweet tree, you just get a little bit. You
never actually eat the whole piece of brownie. It's just
kind of in passing. You're just going by and getting it.
And I think the same thing about cake too, So
rarely do I ever actually eat a piece of cake.
You just go by, and sometimes it could be a
communal fork, but typically the knife is a little cleaner.

Speaker 2 (12:51):
But in my house, the cake never usually gets finished. Yeah,
the brownies will make it, but you got some hard
pieces there at the end.

Speaker 5 (12:59):
Yeah. I'm kind of same with the cake because I
always overthink I can. I always overestimate myself and I
think you need that one from Sam's Club that'll.

Speaker 4 (13:07):
Feed forty people. There's only three people in my family.

Speaker 3 (13:11):
But so you know, we're not putting in a nice
little individual thing.

Speaker 5 (13:14):
Oh it was doing that right, And so apparently if
you go through the comments section, a lot of people
are real we're just monsters that are running through the
kitchen sharing a knife. And people were like, what do
you mean you just you share the knife. Yes, you're
liking the knife, of course, and even if you were,
I mean, I don't personally like germs are sharing drinks.

(13:35):
But at the point that you're living in the same house,
I mean, it's already getting shared and carrid somewhere.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
The knife gets a little hard to clean by the
end because everything's kind of crunching on.

Speaker 3 (13:44):
It, right.

Speaker 5 (13:45):
Yeah, more than anything, I was amazed though that they
last a week, because, like, I can understand if you've
ordered a cake for forty people and there's only three of.

Speaker 4 (13:51):
You, like get thrown out a box of brownies.

Speaker 3 (13:54):
Thinking a champion brownies are not lasting a week.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
Sure, they're last at our house, like, and the even
not a big giant cake, you know the cake you make,
Oh yeah, that's gonna.

Speaker 4 (14:06):
You have no idea how you make funfetti. And I'm
going through that house.

Speaker 2 (14:10):
For some reason, the kids they would always eat like
the first day, maybe the second.

Speaker 6 (14:14):
But then it was like, eh, wow, yeah, well then
you got to teach them to go for bigger portions.

Speaker 4 (14:20):
Give them these these eating issues young.

Speaker 5 (14:23):
Then the other thing that I saw that I just
think it's funny. Everybody's always posting about different side hustles,
things you can do to make extra income.

Speaker 7 (14:30):
And it's like post on social media, has a book,
put it on Amazon, with in an Etsy store, and
all these things involve a lot of work.

Speaker 4 (14:38):
And I finally found someone. Her name is Melissa Burrows,
and I can get behind this.

Speaker 5 (14:42):
Her side hustle is she's training the ravens in her
neighborhood to find dollar bills and bring them to her.

Speaker 3 (14:47):
That doesn't seem much.

Speaker 2 (14:48):
There's a great ROI on that, the amount of ties
and train and how many dollars are the act.

Speaker 4 (14:55):
But I do know with crows you can train them
to find shiny objects.

Speaker 3 (14:59):
And bring them to you.

Speaker 4 (15:00):
But I mean, I think at this point you got
to teach them.

Speaker 6 (15:02):
To bring you a whole credit card, right, and at
that point it's still fast, and now you're it's problematic.

Speaker 2 (15:07):
Yeah, you know the coins out there now, there's not
many dollars out there now.

Speaker 4 (15:11):
So the return is not as much.

Speaker 7 (15:13):
But hey, if you need a little little side hustle,
this lady she's she's teaching the ravens.

Speaker 4 (15:17):
If there's just random money blowing around.

Speaker 3 (15:19):
I can't imagine how long it takes to do train ravens.

Speaker 5 (15:22):
Oh. I started to create a relationship at one point
with some crows that I had, but then they got
jealous of my wiener dog and started swooping her, and
so I had to I had to end the relationship
with the crows.

Speaker 2 (15:34):
That would not surprise me, they tried to have a
relationship with birds. Yeah, I wanted them to bring me
things that's to steal for you. No, no, no, no,
just like things they find. But they'll bring shiny things.
I just wanted to see what they were. They're gonna
build nests with it.

Speaker 3 (15:48):
Anyway. They are super smart that I'm not telling them
to like, I don't know, mugs somebody.

Speaker 5 (15:56):
Yeah, they don't know how to unclasped a necklace in
the back and.

Speaker 8 (16:03):
In the morning A Morning mixed with Matt Harrison Liz Ludo.

Speaker 3 (16:09):
I'm not sure we got here. Oh, I know what
it was.

Speaker 4 (16:11):
I am already uncomfortable by this conversation. I would like
to go and preface that, but go ahead.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
We were talking about the community knife, which led to
somewhere you know, when you make brownies and just leave
it there for the week, same knife went from community
this or that, another community knife story, but then too,
like when you're growing up, you have the bowl that
you're when you get sick stomach. Yeah, I would that
you could throw up in, which I never had that in.

Speaker 5 (16:38):
My family, And when I learned that there were people
that had that, I think that's one weird, but two
the same bowl.

Speaker 4 (16:45):
Some people use it as their popcorn bowl too, which.

Speaker 3 (16:47):
Is discussed to make cookies or whatever.

Speaker 5 (16:50):
I not have multi purposes to that extent. I feel
like if we're using it to get sicken, it needs
to be something that's just thrown away to which you
are shocked to find out.

Speaker 4 (17:02):
Like in my in my like nightstand drawer.

Speaker 5 (17:05):
Yeah, I have always just kept like a roll of
trash bags and it comes in handy for lots of things.
Like say you're cleaning the room, or you're emptying the
trash upstairs, or if you have a moment, you just
pull out a trash bag, trash brea.

Speaker 4 (17:17):
Then you go to the restroom. And I I'm trying
to be because people don't want to hear it.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
Full trash bag doesn't make any sense to me. That's
that's a waste of a full trash bag.

Speaker 5 (17:27):
And I would rather be out the thirteen cents on
the trash bag than to be eating my.

Speaker 4 (17:33):
Popcorn a week later and be like, hey, I guess
what was in this last week guys?

Speaker 2 (17:37):
Plus what's in the plus all the space you get
to take up and your thing with trash bag, you.

Speaker 5 (17:42):
Don't put the whole box and it's like the little
thing where they're rulled up and there's like six or
seven of them left at.

Speaker 4 (17:46):
The end, and you just put them in there.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
The regular grocery store one that's in a like a
bathroom waste paper can.

Speaker 3 (17:53):
Yes, that's a perfect throw up catcher. Yep, that that
that makes sense right.

Speaker 5 (17:57):
Now, keeps those in the car, Yeah, but like I
have a trash can, but I am not I am
not reusing a bucket.

Speaker 4 (18:03):
And then you were talking about using a bucket. No,
when y'all are talking about like, well, you got to
have the bucket because that way, in case you're too
sick to go to the bathroom, you can and you
keep reusing it like in the same.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
Yeah, if you're sick, you have like you've never been
so sick. You can't get up from the couch, you
can't get up from the bed. It's like this is
gonna be a while. I may pass out after this.

Speaker 3 (18:28):
I don't even have the energy to go dumb riches
or anything.

Speaker 4 (18:32):
No, because it's in a trash bag, it's contained, it's it.

Speaker 3 (18:35):
And then I'm a bucket.

Speaker 4 (18:37):
I am crawling to the to the bathroom, a little
tad like the.

Speaker 3 (18:41):
Waste paper basket that's in the bathroom.

Speaker 2 (18:45):
That's perfect. Yeah, yeah, that's the one that's someone's usually probably.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
And then when you have the energy, as soon as
you have the energy, you clean that up for sure,
like like right, but it is contained in the bucket.
She's so disgusted right now, I heard.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
Of anyone carrying a full trash bag ever for that purpose.

Speaker 4 (19:03):
I'm not carrying it like it might but you have it.

Speaker 3 (19:06):
Next to your bed side, like.

Speaker 4 (19:08):
I don't have to use it often. It's just there.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
But I would never even think of it to what
I'm saying, I don't. I've never even thought of a
full trash bag to have it there just in case.

Speaker 3 (19:17):
Right, I don't have anything there just in case. Right,
They're just things that already exist that I use.

Speaker 6 (19:24):
Well, how's the popcorn bowl there? Then you're just keeping
a bathroom when you're a kid and the parents rush
up and bring it to you.

Speaker 5 (19:30):
Well, so now though, if you're getting the waste paper
basket from the bathroom and you're putting that by your bed,
why wouldn't you just stay in the bathroom.

Speaker 1 (19:38):
I don't want to stay in the bed. No, no, no,
you put the bucket or trash can next. What Like
when you're feeling sick.

Speaker 4 (19:45):
I feel sick, I'm just gonna lay on the floor
of my bathroom.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
No, no, because you know how long it's gonna be
a laying in the bed until it's especially a kid.
I'm not gonna make a kid go lay in the bathroom, right,
I'll put that. Here's your here's your bucket next.

Speaker 5 (19:57):
Sea you feel you're the one that's them the bucket,
but you it's your own individual If you feel that
this is going down and you're not gonna go and
just like stay there until it's no I mean I might.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
Try and if didn't happen, and I'm just gonna have
something there next to me in case it happens, and
it's gonna usually usually at this point it's going to
be a waste paper basket from the trash can or something.
I don't have an official bucket or anything. Even my kids,
it was usually just a I think a couple of
times we brought up one of the big bowls so
they could really get their hands around it.

Speaker 3 (20:30):
May not miss it right.

Speaker 4 (20:31):
This is a horrifying conversation that I'm sorry that I'm
wash it out.

Speaker 3 (20:37):
Who's with us?

Speaker 5 (20:38):
You know the other day when we were talking about
how like what age we thought we peeked, it was
before this conversation.

Speaker 4 (20:44):
It's all down, all down here.

Speaker 3 (20:47):
It's something you gonna consider.

Speaker 2 (20:49):
Seven oh four five, seven oh one oh seven nine
full trash bag, waste paper bag?

Speaker 4 (20:54):
Did you have the family the communal popcorn bucket?

Speaker 5 (20:58):
I can imagine in it is those big tins Christmas
that they filled with the three flavors of a.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
Home on the my was ceramic as I recall, I
mean that one actually makes sense because it has a lid. Yeah,
it's a better yet. Yeah, we're Morning Mix. Thanks for
starting your day with the Morning Miss.

Speaker 8 (21:18):
It's the Morning Mixed with Matt Harris and Liz Leader.

Speaker 3 (21:21):
Here's your latest pop updat Super Sad.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
Malcolm Jamal Warner from The Cosby Show and Other Things
uh died in a tragic accident during a family vacation
at Costa Ricae.

Speaker 3 (21:33):
It was only fifty four.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
He of course played Bill cosby son Theo Huxtable, drowned
after getting caught in a strong current. He was also
on the FX show America Crime Story, The People Versus OJ,
where he played a j callings Malcolm and Eddi, which
TJ said he loved. He was in suits community, played
a cool role in Sons of Anarchy, Dexter Residents, a

(21:58):
lot of really cool shows, directed episodes of The Fresh
Prince of bel Air and Sesame Street. Survived by a
wife and daughter. He was a very secretive about his family.
It's not even clear if they were with him, but
it seems likely since it was a family vacation. Bill
Cosby was portally devastative the news of Warner's death. His

(22:20):
rep says it reminded me of getting the call when
his own son, Ennis was murdered in ninety seven, and
Warner used to play together when they were young. He
had to quote Bill was on the phone with Felicia
Rashad reminiscing about Malcolm. So, Malcolm Jamal Warner dead at
the young age of fifty four years old. Reminder that

(22:43):
those currents can be strong out there. There was just
a guy in Pauley's Island in South Carolina, former baseball player,
cop went out and I rescued three or four people
and lost his life this past weekend, caught of the
rip currents.

Speaker 3 (23:01):
Rip currents are brutal. You got to be very aware
of water safety.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
I'm not saying I don't know what happened in this
particular case, but you know, if you can, you swim
horizontal to the beach, trying it to panic, but it is.

Speaker 3 (23:14):
You got to take that water safety very seriously. Liz
okay Well.

Speaker 4 (23:20):
Moving on to Dolly Parton.

Speaker 5 (23:21):
So she's got her musical Dolly, a true original musical
that's going to be coming to Broadway, and she did
a preview in Nashville. But she did have a warning
for the crowd, and they said to turn off.

Speaker 4 (23:33):
All the stuff, including you. They said, every time you hearself,
you know, did you learn to sing alone?

Speaker 6 (23:40):
You say no?

Speaker 5 (23:45):
And I love that they got Dolly to say that,
because it's so hard because sometimes you know all these
songs when you go and see stuff, and there's always
that one person that sings along and you're like ah,
and like a concert is one.

Speaker 4 (23:57):
Thing, but even like Wicked, I'm so glad they opened
up musical versions of it. You could go and see
the theater.

Speaker 3 (24:04):
Because I paid to see this.

Speaker 4 (24:06):
I paid to see that person sing not you.

Speaker 2 (24:09):
Mariah Carey's the sixteenth album esficially on the way. It's
called Here for It All comes out the twenty six
of September. Made the announcement yesterday with the Clipper's singing
the words I'm here for It All, which is likely
the title track. She released the album's lead single last month,
type Dangerous. She's been testing another song called Sugar Sweet,
but hasn't given released a yet. First album since twenty eighteen,

(24:31):
the first of a new label called Gamma. She says
quote the next chapter is about owning my narrative and
creating freely on my own terms.

Speaker 3 (24:40):
I love that and what are you?

Speaker 5 (24:43):
Also, we're at the thirty year anniversary of Clueless, which
makes me feel ancient. Yeah. But so this past weekend
I kept seeing the video of Alicia Silverstone where she
has it she recreates the iconic scene where like a
dude approaches her and she goes as f and it's
her son and she pushes them away and it was
really cute.

Speaker 7 (25:00):
See.

Speaker 5 (25:01):
But in honor of that, there's all these different fun
facts that are coming out, and so Alicia Silverstone she
got to play Chaer. But apparently Reese Witherspoon, Carrie Russell,
Tiffany Theeson, and Britney Murphy all auditioned to play Share
and then Paul Rudd's character Ben Affleck and Zach Braff
both tried out did not get it similar And then

(25:23):
Alicia Silverstone did sixty three costume changes throughout the movie.

Speaker 4 (25:28):
And then this is very believable, Paul Rudd mostly just
wore his own clothes. Yeah, that showed up to set
and they were like.

Speaker 3 (25:35):
That works, that works, that's the role.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
Oh, I don't want to tell you that drowning at
Paully's Island the thirty at Your guy's name was Chase Childers.
He saved five people from a ripper. Isn't that incredible?
It's Chase Child's name, So for him, he's, you know,
can send five swimmers cross his own life. It is
the morning makes Matt Harris, Liz Ludibriuser TJ and what

(25:59):
were you cool for a minute.

Speaker 4 (26:00):
My eight year old was shocked that I knew.

Speaker 5 (26:02):
The young the young the youth slangs out there. And
we were in the car on Friday, so this was
a few days back, and my husband asked me a
question and I was like, I don't know.

Speaker 4 (26:13):
I'm cooked. My brain's cooked. I don't know.

Speaker 5 (26:15):
And my kids just like turned and looked at me
because I was riding in the back seat with him,
and he just kind of like dropped his mouth open
and he goes, Mommy, what did you say? And I said,
my brain is cooked. I can't do that math right now.
I'll have to do it later. And he was like,
how do you know that word? And he got very
defensive with me, and I.

Speaker 3 (26:31):
Was like, because that's oil.

Speaker 5 (26:35):
I used that my whole childhood, long adult like That's
just a phrase, buddy, And he was like, no, that's
a roadblocks phrase. And I said, okay, they might be
using it in there, but mom has known this for
years and so he was like okay, and he seemed
a little irritated, but he sat with that. And so
yesterday we were having a conversation and I had seen

(26:58):
this like sweatshirt that said profetal yapper on it, like
a professional talker.

Speaker 4 (27:03):
And he goes, how do you know that word? And
I was like, yeah, it means yeah. I was like,
it means to like talk. I said, is that what
it is? That what it means to you?

Speaker 5 (27:11):
And he goes, yeah, but there's a different version we use, and.

Speaker 4 (27:14):
I got audio. I'm talking about it because it's so funny. Yeah, Pacino.

Speaker 5 (27:18):
No, other people that are in like higher grade than me,
and sometimes people that are lower grades.

Speaker 4 (27:25):
Than me even say it.

Speaker 5 (27:27):
Yeah, it's a yappuchino, not a yapper, not a yap yeah, butino.

Speaker 4 (27:33):
So they have the word, and I just think it's
the cutest thing ever.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
That's good for you too, You're a yappachino.

Speaker 4 (27:38):
Yeah, So now I know, I'm delightful. It's like coffee talk.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
But evolved, you know what I mean, it's funny that
he thought that what was the word word for you
used a cooked cooked, which is yeah, it's like it's something.
Well they do that with I was watching this. They
it's clocket. He's the one they want to say because
I guess Justin Bieber said it is a mean with him,

(28:03):
but that you just you need to clock it. You're
not clocking it, you're not understanding it. But I think
that's been around, like, yes, not clocking, but that is there.
They're claiming that is their new clocking thing. Also, uh, tough.
Your outfit is tough. I mean it's good.

Speaker 3 (28:19):
Okay, you heard that. Okay, there you go. You outfit
is tough for that, you know with something is good,
it's tough, all right.

Speaker 5 (28:25):
So when I go back to school shopping with him,
I need to tell him that one from you need
to clock it.

Speaker 2 (28:28):
Okay, it's been around a little bit, but it's still
going strong. They say, is are a forming are farming,
which is you know you're trying to appear cool and
get your farm or yes, yes, and glazing, Oh that's
over hyping.

Speaker 3 (28:47):
You're over hyping. You're glazing it like like like a donut.

Speaker 2 (28:51):
But you're like, you, come on, you're glazing that whatever
basketball player, glazing that team.

Speaker 3 (28:56):
You're glazing going to the park, learning about you see
from you. Thank you.

Speaker 2 (29:01):
I like to I love looking him up on various tiktoks.
So I can say to my kid the twenty years
always that you know, she's in college, so she hers
is always like that, that's middle school stuff, right, I
never bring it up, but the fifteen year old is
always like, how do you know that? Or don't say
that around my friends. And as soon as I see
our friends, they start dropping them left over course.

Speaker 3 (29:22):
Yeah, yeah, she's cooked that. Yeah, she won't be so
tough anymore. She's not clocking it.

Speaker 2 (29:31):
Yeah, Morning mixed Matt Harris, Liz Lue to producer TJ
and we went to chime in on the tech that'll
be gone in fifty years seven oh four or five,
seven oh one, oh seven nine. One thing about it
is you want to even forget how fast things happen.
Right right the other day was thirty years ago that
Amazon opened up their first bookstore delivery thing.

Speaker 3 (29:53):
Wow, in thirty years, look what is happening? They're living
things in the same day.

Speaker 4 (29:56):
Barely buying books from Amazon at this.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
Point, everything else, we're barely buying books. Yeah. Right, so.

Speaker 2 (30:05):
Someone made up a list as people chimed in on
the internet charging cables, Yeah, definitely.

Speaker 4 (30:11):
TJ said earlier. All cables.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
Yeah, I don't think any power chords or anything that'll
be interesting if no power cord, no electrical cords, right.

Speaker 3 (30:19):
Yeah, just charge.

Speaker 4 (30:20):
They'll just get their power from something else.

Speaker 2 (30:22):
Because I've heard for years that you'll be able to
walk into a place, a room or whatever and your
phone will just charge, like it'll be the signal will
be in the world.

Speaker 5 (30:29):
Kind of like how you have Wi Fi. As long
as you're connected into it, it'll just start charging. Things
like that would be really cool, and especially as somebody
who has the mounted TV.

Speaker 4 (30:38):
It's so hard to hide that chord coming down the wall.
I hate that. I hate that whole thing because you
got to do like a thing where you drill a hole.

Speaker 5 (30:46):
In the wall, then you got to drop it down.
I've got an electrician, right right.

Speaker 3 (30:50):
I hate power cords.

Speaker 2 (30:51):
I could see like the other chords like the mouse
and connecting to why hard wire to Wi Fi?

Speaker 3 (30:57):
Right, need need to do.

Speaker 5 (30:58):
I can see that you know what I think it'll
be and I this is not like what you would
normally think of a technology. I'm amazed at what will
be done with hair care because it used to be
like hot hombs or my mom, I know when she
was younger, to get her hair straight, she would use
like an iron you would use on your pants to
get the wrinkles out.

Speaker 3 (31:16):
Oh wow.

Speaker 5 (31:17):
And like even when I was a teenager in the
early two thousands, flat irons were terrible. And now it's
so easily readily available to get the different curling ones
and like they're there's the heat protect and spray, Like
I think.

Speaker 4 (31:31):
I think hair care is going to go somewhere.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
Okay, I could accept that someone said dental work, that
today's dental work will be seen as barb feric.

Speaker 3 (31:41):
Oh, I hope.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
So this did it for chemotherapy, it says, but some
medical devices all be different. CT scan machines will be different. Yeah,
I mean as quickly as medical things are happening. Yes,
I like you said, grow your own teeth kind of thing.

Speaker 4 (31:53):
There's there's like trials happening.

Speaker 5 (31:55):
I wanted to say it was China where somebody has
created something and.

Speaker 2 (31:58):
They're there's ording to like do it, but then you
have said somebody, but maybe just pop them in on
your own. Yeah, just a bunch of different things, just
pop them in. Loud engine noise, internal combustion engines, so loud, cars, chainsaws, mowers. Hell,
we haven't done anything with a leaf blower in a
one hundred years. Well, no, you do have the like

(32:20):
battery ones that are pretty sounded. Yea, it is still
pretty loud, still pretty loud. Yeah it's not. I mean
it's yes, it's it's a little less loud, but leaf
blowers are still pretty loud.

Speaker 3 (32:29):
You're right, pretty loud. I want you to know.

Speaker 4 (32:32):
I'm putting work in in the yard.

Speaker 3 (32:33):
I want you to okay, look at me.

Speaker 5 (32:36):
Even vacuum cleaners they're so loud too, Like I want
a vacuum cleaner.

Speaker 2 (32:40):
The dog can't hear, but the rooma's not very loud,
So it could be. I saw I ran by a
house the other day and they have the robe like
a rumba lawnmower.

Speaker 3 (32:49):
Yes, says it's so cool. It's pretty crazy. Yeah, yeah,
I don't.

Speaker 4 (32:53):
It's got blades. I don't know some about it.

Speaker 5 (32:54):
It could go rogue, rogue, I don't know, like the rope,
but it's a robot that can pull a knife.

Speaker 4 (33:02):
It's pulling a blade.

Speaker 2 (33:04):
Yeah, someone said trash. There will be a solution to
existing waste. It'd all be reusable, maybe like cone thing.
Everybody eats thing out of a cone.

Speaker 6 (33:13):
So every all the all the paper plates and everything edible. Everything,
there's a wrapper that is edible.

Speaker 3 (33:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (33:23):
Thing one time where it was a cup made out
of a cookie and you point the milk into it
and then when you were done drinking the milk, you
ate the cookie. It was soggy because not everybody drinks
as quickly. But I feel like we really could get there,
Like those little Waifer disc candies.

Speaker 4 (33:34):
We could turn that into a plate and.

Speaker 3 (33:36):
Then when you're they're not very good. But we'll work
on this flavor.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
Game consoles, I don't game, but say it will replaced
with streaming services.

Speaker 3 (33:44):
Yeah, that's kind of.

Speaker 5 (33:46):
A kind of been that way since Blockbuster, even where
you can rent the Super Nintendo game and you.

Speaker 3 (33:52):
D the weekend. True, but you still need the console,
the joysticks and everything. What do you call those things?
The controllers? Controllers? Controllers controllers? Yeah, what are you playing guitar?

Speaker 5 (34:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (34:05):
Yeah, I am still playing guitar. Oh crap, I just
oh glasses, yeah, yesses. And I know there's lasik, Yes,
I get that, but that everybody's eligible for it. And
then there's readers that lasik doesn't necessarily work forwards, that
that could be a day when there's no glasses.

Speaker 1 (34:21):
Everyone I know that got laysak still wears reading glasses,
still reading.

Speaker 4 (34:26):
No, that's not true.

Speaker 3 (34:27):
Oh you don't, Okay, I don't wear glasses. Okay, some people,
most people.

Speaker 4 (34:30):
I some You don't feel like you're just making numbers.

Speaker 3 (34:34):
You've got some technologies that will be gone in fifty years.

Speaker 8 (34:38):
In the morning, it's the Morning mixed with Matt Harrison,
Liz lud.

Speaker 3 (34:44):
Oh, good day, my friends. It's gonna be maybe maybe
not ninety today.

Speaker 2 (34:50):
Yeah, ninety nine yesterday, and only one day in July
so far has not been ninety. The next two days
could not be ninety. But then we're gonna get super
hot again. But that's pretty cool.

Speaker 4 (35:01):
You. I kept a secret.

Speaker 5 (35:02):
I kept a secret all day yesterday, which is really
difficult because I am I'm chatty. I I do not
have any secrets because they all just tumble out of me.

Speaker 4 (35:15):
And yesterday I had a goal.

Speaker 5 (35:18):
I had an aspiration, and it was I wasn't gonna
divulge my secret until I had successfully gotten away with it.
And at the end of the show, I revealed that
I was in fact wearing pajama pants.

Speaker 3 (35:32):
And that's my goal in life.

Speaker 5 (35:33):
My goal in life is to just reach the point
where you wear pajamas and nobody notices.

Speaker 3 (35:40):
Well, if you're reach that is not goals?

Speaker 4 (35:45):
Yeah, No, Do I need to have a healthy retirement Nope, nope, nope.
Do I need to be able to always pay my
bills or be a homeowner?

Speaker 5 (35:52):
Nope?

Speaker 4 (35:53):
But did I successfully wear pajamas to work with no
one noticing? I surely did.

Speaker 2 (35:57):
Well are you sure knowing? Just because no insanitything? So
I did not many people saw you.

Speaker 1 (36:05):
Also, if we didn't notice, that doesn't mean that everybody
didn't know.

Speaker 3 (36:09):
That means nothing.

Speaker 4 (36:10):
So I did do a video. I posted it up
on my social media, which is les Luda.

Speaker 5 (36:15):
And you were like joking in it, and when I
revealed that they were pajama pants, you actually did seem shocked,
like you had a genuine responsor like, oh oh.

Speaker 2 (36:25):
But all your pants could go either way? True, and
so like if you were wearing jeans every day or whatever.

Speaker 3 (36:31):
I don't wear buttons, I know, but if you did,
let's just say you did that and then were our
dress pants whatever?

Speaker 5 (36:37):
What do you you?

Speaker 3 (36:39):
The person would be like, WHOA, what do you?

Speaker 2 (36:40):
It would throw you off, But right you always wear
something that could be pajamas, then it it's easier to
slide it in.

Speaker 5 (36:48):
So what happened is I leopard print is like really
big right now, and there's all these cute, trendy leopard
print pants, and there's like these barrel jeans that are
even made with leopard print on them. And I have
one pair of real dress pants that have leopard print,
but they kind of cut into my belly if I
feel a little bloated. And I felt a little bloated.
And so I saw these pajama pants and I thought

(37:08):
they could pass. They absolutely could pass as real pants,
and so that's what I wore. But today I have
dress pants on. Even TJ said they feel like curtains.

Speaker 3 (37:17):
They don't look like dress pants.

Speaker 4 (37:19):
No, they're place pants. They have a fancy French name.

Speaker 2 (37:22):
They don't look like dress pants, No they don't. I
would not say there's a dress like those are curtain
pants pants, you're going they're anytime I can.

Speaker 4 (37:38):
Get away with an elastic ways though, I'm gonna.

Speaker 1 (37:40):
Go for it.

Speaker 3 (37:41):
I can't truly believe they're dress pants.

Speaker 5 (37:44):
I do.

Speaker 4 (37:45):
They came from Nordstrom.

Speaker 2 (37:46):
Oh so pajamas and right the dama section. Maybe it's
the top part that makes it.

Speaker 3 (37:53):
This is a graphic. Yeah that that is parky.

Speaker 2 (37:56):
But still it's hard to imagine those's dress I guess.
I guess maybe with someone.

Speaker 5 (38:04):
That wasn't now in your defends they are ne on, yellow, orange, red,
and pig.

Speaker 3 (38:08):
Right, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's a color thing. Yeah, maybe,
like some if I thought hipster if.

Speaker 1 (38:13):
Those were black pants in the same pattern or not pattern,
but like if they were black but the same material,
maybe they would not look like.

Speaker 3 (38:25):
Or like a Lady Gaga walked out in everything. There
you go, then maybe.

Speaker 2 (38:29):
But if it's you.

Speaker 4 (38:31):
Pants, I'm fashionable like Lady Gaga. You already said it.
You can't retract it.

Speaker 5 (38:35):
I just know what dream came true yesterday, and that's
that I even in front of our like bosses, boss,
she saw.

Speaker 2 (38:40):
My pants doesn't mean she didn't know, Oh she didn't know.
You're just assuming. Most people aren't gonna call you out.
They're just gonna make a mental note.

Speaker 3 (38:48):
No, I will be fair to you. They are not
like the people you see at Walmart pajamas.

Speaker 4 (38:54):
They hookie monster on them, and they they did have
a fake buttonfly.

Speaker 3 (38:59):
So it wasn't like didn't really notice that that would
you'd be good, happy to know U buttons.

Speaker 4 (39:05):
We're just there for decoration.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
Okay, so comfy paint. I don't even want to wear
but job too hot? Yeah right, yeah, so I was
gonna say DJ and I'll start wearing them. But yeah,
that's it's just too hot. So we'll wear some Uh,
what can we do? We'll just do some box of
briefs tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (39:20):
Already done.

Speaker 4 (39:21):
That's a lot of skin.

Speaker 1 (39:24):
Not the way I wear yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, the
correct way, the modest way.

Speaker 3 (39:31):
Okay, they're not much different than my shorts.

Speaker 4 (39:33):
That's true. You do we sorts.

Speaker 3 (39:35):
They are not sure you're noticing anything.

Speaker 2 (39:37):
It's your short shorty seven inches, ah, you're you put.

Speaker 4 (39:41):
Your hands by your side, and it doesn't even pass
the school test. The like dress code. You down lower
than your shorts are on your.

Speaker 3 (39:48):
Lege, A lot of things lower than never mind, it's
a morning.

Speaker 2 (39:52):
Gosh, it is the Morning mixed Matt Harris, Liz Luda
and producer TJ and I.

Speaker 3 (40:00):
I did not write down who wrote this article, but
I will find it anyway.

Speaker 2 (40:04):
This woman wrote this article young about nobody has a
personality anymore. As a headline, therapy speak has taken over
our language.

Speaker 3 (40:14):
She says, we're.

Speaker 2 (40:15):
Losing words for who we are. It's a therapeutic culture.
Every personality trait has become a problem to be solved
and a thing too human. Every habit, every eccentricity, every
feeling too strong is to be labeled and explained. People
young people making their disorders their whole personalities.

Speaker 4 (40:36):
Or is the whole personality their disorder?

Speaker 5 (40:39):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (40:39):
Seventy two percent of gen z Girl said that mental
health challenges are the most important part of their identity.
And you know, the upside, obviously is you get help
and realize you're the only one, and that sort of thing.
Her argument is, we've lost the sentimental way to use
to describe people late to things. Now it's not because

(41:01):
you're just lovably forgetful. It's because you're secretly have your
ADHD and never found love. You're shy and you stare
at your feet when people talk, it's not because you know,
you're your mother's child.

Speaker 3 (41:16):
It's because you're you know, some sort of autism or
whatever the case may be.

Speaker 2 (41:20):
You know, I went through I mean I got diagnosed
way later in lifetly change anything to me, you know.

Speaker 4 (41:27):
Okay, So I'll say this. I have always been what
people described as quirky.

Speaker 5 (41:31):
I've always had collections, I've always been late to everything.
I've always been a lot of different things that I
thought were me. And when I got a little older
and like they can make the argument that on TikTok
they're like.

Speaker 4 (41:45):
Everybody thinks they have ADHD.

Speaker 5 (41:47):
Whatever, I thought it was actually reassuring to all of
a sudden be like, oh, thank god, I'm not alone.
I'm not the only one with a giant tub of
beanie babies in the garage, like all these different things,
and suddenly things started clicking and making sense. And it
did make it easier for me to communicate with people

(42:08):
that were less like me, because I suddenly understood that's
what I'm doing.

Speaker 4 (42:12):
That's frustrating them, right right, Oh, definitely gonna be. I
learned how to like navigate that.

Speaker 5 (42:17):
But I was also later in life. It wasn't like
when I was a kid. You not to say that
those diagnosies aren't.

Speaker 3 (42:23):
Important, very important, very important.

Speaker 7 (42:25):
For me.

Speaker 4 (42:26):
It was a journey I went through in my twenties
where I.

Speaker 5 (42:28):
Was like, oh, yeah, suddenly everything makes sense. That's why
I'm so literal, that's why I oh my goodness, yeah.

Speaker 2 (42:37):
That's why I'm blunt and all these things. Yeah, but
she gives an example. There are no generous people anymore,
only people pleasers. There are no women who met are
women who wear their hearts and their sleeves. They are
just anxiously attached or codependent. There are no hard workers,
only traumatized, insecure overachievers.

Speaker 5 (42:58):
You know it.

Speaker 3 (42:59):
It's one of the those things.

Speaker 4 (43:00):
It is.

Speaker 2 (43:01):
I get what she's saying about in for therapy and
learning and all that sort of thing.

Speaker 5 (43:11):
I can even take anything too far though, Yes, And
it's also the same sense, and I am in no
way comparing different journeys for people to like the zodiac.

Speaker 4 (43:19):
But it's also the same thing where.

Speaker 5 (43:21):
It's like, oh, it's not that Liz cries a lot
because she's overly emotional.

Speaker 4 (43:24):
It's because she's a Pisces.

Speaker 5 (43:26):
Like I'll make a joke like that. But I think
it's all so easy to just start being like, ah,
put this.

Speaker 4 (43:30):
Label here and that label there, and if you get
the label, that's accountable.

Speaker 3 (43:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (43:35):
Once you get the label, sometimes you're it makes it okay.
And sometimes still that doesn't make that behavior.

Speaker 5 (43:42):
It's still weird to see me crying underneath the desk
on a Wednesday because I saw a commercial that move.

Speaker 4 (43:46):
Me and I to be accountable. That that will make
others feel weird.

Speaker 2 (43:50):
Yeah, you don't have a crush, you have attachment issues.
Why do you up the mosab?

Speaker 3 (43:54):
Yeah? Maybe that that person reminds you of an early caregiver,
who wo did you?

Speaker 5 (44:00):
You know?

Speaker 2 (44:01):
It's always something instead of just for it's a little
quirky and that's cool. I understand what she's saying. And
it is a hard that balance because I don't want
to make it sound like I am not in favor
of diagnosis or getting help or figuring that stuff out,
because I did kids did all that sort of thing.

Speaker 3 (44:17):
But there's some something to be said also about just
it is who you are. Yeah, it is who you are?

Speaker 1 (44:23):
Right?

Speaker 5 (44:23):
You got to accept me and my tub of beanie babies,
my collection of barbies that I never opened that I
received because they were the Christmas ones that are.

Speaker 4 (44:30):
Going to be worth money. One day, I come with
a lot of baggage literally and figured.

Speaker 2 (44:34):
It doesn't make you less hoitter light. That doesn't make
a person, you know, yeah, you know you you were
okay for it because you were a half hour late,
just because you you have ADHD. But it doesn't make it.

Speaker 5 (44:44):
I followed a coyote through a neighborhood and I wanted
to see where its home was.

Speaker 4 (44:48):
I'm sorry I was late today.

Speaker 3 (44:50):
It shouldn't be any nothing like that should be your
whole identity. It's just a part of you. Yeah, like you.

Speaker 4 (44:56):
I don't follow the coyote every day.

Speaker 3 (44:57):
No, no, I mean, but those things that make you
that way.

Speaker 2 (45:01):
Yeah, it's a little quirky, a little different, what's right,
you know, it doesn't have to be Yeah, come with
this long list of Yeah.

Speaker 5 (45:09):
One thing I see love, though, is when you have
some people that are of older generations and they're like,
back in my day, we didn't have this. And every
single time there's a specific family member I have, I
say go eat with a big spoon, and they go, no.

Speaker 8 (45:24):
Just.

Speaker 3 (45:26):
Around. Yeah, you've been around.

Speaker 4 (45:28):
I have a whole room for your salt and pepper
shaker collection. It was here, It was here the whole time.

Speaker 2 (45:33):
Without a Yeah, we just made the kids even was
ever their plates? Yeah, exact where I really paid off
grade for some of the because of that.

Speaker 4 (45:42):
Look at me thriving now in obesity.

Speaker 3 (45:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (45:46):
You know why you didn't have that stub dad, Because
you never spoke.

Speaker 3 (45:48):
A word about emotions.

Speaker 2 (45:50):
Right, Yeah, morning mixed Matt Harris, Liz Luda and Bruser TJ.
I keep a running list, and I probably forget things
of things Liz is afraid of, not afraid of.

Speaker 4 (46:01):
I'm cautious.

Speaker 2 (46:02):
Here we go, Kiosk car released from a carrier truck,
driving on the interstate, driving any weather, drone, space heaters,
snakes falling from the tree, tubing, conversion table falling backward,
the jungle, stepping on snakes, QR codes, bugs, lunch meat, carrots, robots, rollers, coasters,
being strengthed in a car, high top table, silence, not
talking to a husband for more than seven minutes, and

(46:25):
has a lot of weird fears.

Speaker 3 (46:26):
And now we have put on there today hammocks.

Speaker 4 (46:28):
It is National Hammock Day.

Speaker 5 (46:30):
And I didn't want to highlight it, because if we
are going to highlight it, I think we need to
highlight the dangers of hammocks. And you laughed, and you
were like, how dangerous could a hammock be? Every year
in America there's three thousand injuries up to death that
happened involving.

Speaker 4 (46:44):
A hammock, and there's been some really brutal ones.

Speaker 5 (46:47):
And it's because if you don't know how to properly
hang a hammock, if you're doing it from a tree,
you don't know how much weight.

Speaker 4 (46:52):
It can sustain.

Speaker 5 (46:53):
Unless you're out there as an engineer doing the mathematical
equation of what the hammock can hold. There's a chance
that one of those trees or whatever you're tying it
two can collapse and it can end in death or paralysis.

Speaker 3 (47:06):
But it's still super slim.

Speaker 2 (47:09):
So in fact, I keep looking through the numbers and
it always says like three thousand injuries or death. Okay,
an injury, you hurt your finger or something. Now I
saw one thing. One guy was trying to do research
from eighteen sixty five to twenty twenty five.

Speaker 3 (47:26):
He found one hundred and four deaths.

Speaker 5 (47:29):
The problem is is because you're in that resting laying position,
your reflexes. If you try to get out of it
as it's falling or to upright yourself, you can sustain
a spinal cord injury.

Speaker 3 (47:41):
I would say in the.

Speaker 2 (47:41):
Last from his list, and there's nothing to back. That's
just some random dude in the light. I looked at
the last, like twenty five. There's about one, maybe one
a year in the last ten years or something like that.

Speaker 5 (47:54):
No, there was a really big one that took place
in twenty seventeen that had two girls on it.

Speaker 3 (47:57):
Well there's two. No, I'm just saying the average.

Speaker 4 (48:01):
That's some random dude. But I'm also some random lady
who's throwing that no one has.

Speaker 2 (48:07):
But imagine how many people are on hammocks, right, That's
what you have to consider.

Speaker 1 (48:12):
Also, it's very rare these days that I see a
hammock tied to a tree. They're on the frames. Most
of them are on the metal frames that are stand alone,
and they're made. You know, you were talking about getting
an engineer involved. They already did, and.

Speaker 4 (48:29):
You have to make sure that you know what the
weight capacity is. You got to I'm the.

Speaker 3 (48:33):
One that's full as a full unit.

Speaker 2 (48:36):
You're talking about the ones that go from a tree
to a tree or cement columns, because a couple of
these were the columns collapse.

Speaker 5 (48:44):
Right.

Speaker 2 (48:44):
But if you're talking about one, as they say, hammock
that is self like it's not stuck to anything but.

Speaker 3 (48:51):
The bars that it comes with, right, that's not going
to happen.

Speaker 4 (48:54):
How properly was it staked into the ground though.

Speaker 3 (48:57):
It's a base, it doesn't need it's the same thing.
Things will never happen.

Speaker 5 (49:01):
Like you shouldn't stand under a tree when it's lightning.
How many people have actually been struck by lightning?

Speaker 3 (49:07):
How enough?

Speaker 4 (49:08):
How enough?

Speaker 5 (49:08):
Exactly enough people have been injured in a hammock that
it's just kind of a tail. You let everyone know, Hey,
hammick safety is important. Don't stand under a tree when
it's lightning.

Speaker 2 (49:17):
You could get hammick safety if you are putting one up,
like to two trees or two cement pillars.

Speaker 3 (49:25):
If you're not doing that and it's not high off
the ground.

Speaker 4 (49:28):
I just think enough people don't know about it.

Speaker 3 (49:30):
Also, the lightning strikes.

Speaker 1 (49:32):
Approximately two hundred and seventy people are struck by lightning
each year.

Speaker 3 (49:36):
That is not anywhere close to hammock.

Speaker 5 (49:39):
Three thousand injuries a year of hammock, and that means
it has to be reported, So you have to at
least like have to go to like an emergency room
or a doctor.

Speaker 3 (49:47):
Yeah, maybe I do, so that is what I don't know.

Speaker 4 (49:50):
Math twenty seventy and three thousand, it's like ten times more.

Speaker 3 (49:54):
Like I don't know, well, how many people die of
lightning strikes? Oh, I didn't know. Let's do that.

Speaker 4 (50:00):
Oh this is a morbid twist.

Speaker 5 (50:01):
But I'm just saying you don't really ever suspect anything
from a hammock.

Speaker 2 (50:05):
Twenty people die each year from lightning strikes, so it's
way more than the hammocks.

Speaker 3 (50:11):
We need to get some more lightnings now.

Speaker 4 (50:13):
No, I'm I know that it's something that you and.

Speaker 5 (50:17):
They teach the children this, And I feel like most
people don't teach hammock safety, Like who put the hammock up?

Speaker 4 (50:22):
How long has it been there has been an inclement weather?
How strong is that tree? Based? Like there's a lot happening.

Speaker 2 (50:28):
I will you do want to be safe when you're
hanging a hammock from two trees or cement killers.

Speaker 3 (50:35):
Or if you're hanging off of a mountain. You should
probably hanging off of a mountain would be a good one.

Speaker 4 (50:40):
You know, the risks going with that. I feel like
people don't know the hammock griss.

Speaker 3 (50:43):
I had one in my kid's room.

Speaker 2 (50:47):
Oh my gosh, I know, but you know it was
into the dry wallah, but we had you know, special
screws whatever. But even if it come out, it was
not going to pull the walls down right, and it
wasn't for high off that so it just been plunked. Yeah,
at the in my building, the way I am able
to make stuff probably would have happened.

Speaker 3 (51:07):
But what first kid wasn't gonna die right now?

Speaker 4 (51:10):
Moving forward, you know, to do a little bit more
research for him.

Speaker 3 (51:13):
Really, No, I'm not gonna too much. Thanks for starting
your day with The Morning Miss.

Speaker 8 (51:19):
It's The Morning mixed with Matt Harrison Liz Loudo.

Speaker 3 (51:21):
Now here's your latest pop update. Oh this is super sad.

Speaker 2 (51:26):
Malcolm Jamal Warner from The Cosby Show died Sunday in
a tragic accident during a family vacation at Costa Rica.
He was only fifty four. He played Bill Cosby's son,
Theo Huxtable. He drowned after getting caught in a Strong Current.
Winner also played a g Callings in the FX show
American Crime Story The People Versus OJ who was in

(51:47):
Malcolm and Eddie.

Speaker 3 (51:49):
TJ loved It.

Speaker 2 (51:50):
He was in SuDS Community, Sons of Anarchy, Dexter Resident
The Accused, directed episodes of The Cosby Show and Fresh
Prince and Sesame Street. Survived by a wife and daughter.
He's very secretive about his private life. They were on
a family vacation, so we assume they're there but do
not know. Bill Cosby was reportedly devastated by the news

(52:11):
of Warner's death. His rep says it reminded him of
getting the call when his son Ennis was murdered in
nineteen ninety seven. Ennis and Warner used to play together
when they were young. He had to quote the Bill
was on the phone with Felicia Rashad reminiscing about Malcolm
one of us.

Speaker 5 (52:28):
There you go, Liz, Okay, really sad stuff, but moving
on to to some happier things. We are at the
thirtieth the anniversary of Clueless, and as a result they
put together like a whole list of little known facts
about the movie, which, by the way, one of my
favorite movies.

Speaker 4 (52:45):
Of all time. I even have a friend and we
always say we're friends because we know what it's like
for people to be really.

Speaker 5 (52:50):
Jealous of us, which is a quote from the movie,
and it's one hundred percent not true if no one's jealous.
But I still love it. But back in the day,
Alicia Silverstone, we know, got the role, but Reese Witherspoon
went out for it, and so did Carrie Russell and
Tiffany Theeson and they had said, you know what, we're
giving this to Alicia Silverstone and she was, I mean,
I assume she was. She was in that Aerosmith video,

(53:12):
like she had done some stuff, but that was I
think her big breakthrough, breakout role.

Speaker 4 (53:17):
And then the other thing is, you.

Speaker 5 (53:19):
Know, we have a history of making high school teenagers
and movies actually substantially older actors. Because Stacy Dash was
twenty seven when she played Dion had a six year
old kid, but Lauren Hill auditioned for that role.

Speaker 4 (53:33):
Oh and Stacy Dash ended up getting it.

Speaker 5 (53:36):
For Paul Rudd's role, Ben Affleck and Zach Braff went out,
but Paul red was so perfect that apparently almost the
entire wardrobe he wore the for the entirety of the
movie is just what he showed up to work in.

Speaker 3 (53:49):
It was just his actual close And the movie's a
little problematic looking back.

Speaker 5 (53:52):
I mean there were parts of it, yeah, but guy
right and her stepbrother, no, he's in college and her stepbrother.

Speaker 4 (53:58):
I think the step right there part is where we're
really there's there's.

Speaker 3 (54:02):
Some trust me, yes, but everything does it's in a
different time.

Speaker 5 (54:06):
I just remember wanting to see that movie so badly,
my oldest sister that she wanted to see it, and
we ended up buying it at a grocery store when
you could still buy VHS's at a grocery store, and
we went back and we.

Speaker 4 (54:18):
Watched it, and we didn't watch it with my parents around,
and we watched it like three times.

Speaker 5 (54:21):
In a row.

Speaker 4 (54:22):
They were like obsessed with it. And to this day,
yellow and black Plaid is.

Speaker 2 (54:26):
A like, it's a whole mood i'd like to see.
I haven't seen The Clueless the musical or how good
it's supposed to be.

Speaker 4 (54:31):
But I didn't see that. Yeah, I just kind of
stick to the original.

Speaker 3 (54:35):
But yeah, yeah, there you go.

Speaker 2 (54:37):
All right, let's uh, let's check out a little Love
theo Huxtable son, Hey, I know you know what.

Speaker 4 (54:46):
What's she gonna say? And it's under control, So no problem.

Speaker 3 (54:52):
How do you expect to get into college with grades
like this?

Speaker 4 (54:55):
See, I'm not going to college, damn right.

Speaker 8 (55:00):
I am gonna get to high school and then get
a job like regular people.

Speaker 3 (55:05):
Regular people, yeah, you know, who work in the gas station,
drop a bus, something like that.

Speaker 2 (55:11):
So what you're saying is your your mother and I
shouldn't care if you get these because you don't need
good grades to be regular peoples.

Speaker 8 (55:21):
In the morning mixed with Matt Harrison.

Speaker 2 (55:23):
Liz Luda, Oh happy not ninety degree day, only the
second one if we make it of July?

Speaker 3 (55:34):
And what do you have over there, Liz Luda.

Speaker 5 (55:35):
So they came out with a list of the best
animated couples on TV, and uh, I mostly was drawn
to this because we have the reboot of King of
the Hill coming out, and that was like one of
those shows I never loudly said I love this show until,
you know, the last few years I realized there are
so many of us that love that show. I never
did it, And the reboot is coming out. It's like

(55:56):
August fourth or fifth fourth, I think, is that it Okay,
I'm super excited for it.

Speaker 2 (56:01):
When you say best couples, are you saying the anti
they you know, they showed off a good yeah, like
a good relationship, or like, well they're hilarious.

Speaker 3 (56:09):
They're the best to watch you enjoy their relationship.

Speaker 5 (56:13):
Okay, it doesn't necessarily mean the best.

Speaker 1 (56:16):
They're not necessarily relationship goals like fre and Wilma might
not be a that's actually number one on the list.

Speaker 5 (56:22):
And so that's why I said, you know, it's not
who you necessarily want to model yourself. I don't work
for them, right, and the Honeymooners and yet again, still
don't want to model yourself after that. But I was
excited to see Hank and Peggy Hill made seven on
the list for King of the Hill, and I recently
found out that Peggy was like my favorite character on
that show.

Speaker 4 (56:40):
I did not know that people hated her. I had
no idea.

Speaker 3 (56:43):
I didn't know they did. I never heard anybody comment
like that.

Speaker 5 (56:46):
I had this like self realization that all of my
favorite characters are the most hated characters on every show.

Speaker 3 (56:53):
Like you feel like annoying people, annoying women.

Speaker 5 (56:56):
I think because Kelly on the Office, my favorite character
on the Office Charlie Brown, Peanuts, Lucy. I thought everyone
that loved Lucy like I thought she was such a
strong character.

Speaker 4 (57:08):
Apparently people don't like her.

Speaker 3 (57:09):
Charlie Brown all the time.

Speaker 4 (57:11):
She's the only person that's like honest with him. And
when they she built him up in ways that you
weren't watching to shore him down.

Speaker 5 (57:20):
Wait a second, when they were in the Christmas special,
who said Charlie Brown should be the director of this
Christmas pageant?

Speaker 3 (57:26):
She did? Who took the football away every time? Every time?

Speaker 5 (57:29):
And you know what, and a loser that football is
going to be taken away from him a lot in life.

Speaker 4 (57:33):
And so she was teaching him a lesson.

Speaker 2 (57:35):
All right, you tell that when the neighborhood girl keeps
taking the ball away from theo.

Speaker 3 (57:38):
Right, I'm just saying she was a bully. You're supporting
the bully right now. And then she was rubbing people
off with her five cents to come on, she's not licensed.

Speaker 4 (57:48):
She was giving good advice though, you know, she was
a stronger all those people.

Speaker 5 (57:52):
But yeah, well, anyways, I just recently found out people
don't like Piggy Hill. But so number one of the
list is Fred and Wilma. Number two is George and
Jane Jet, which is problematic if you do the math,
because he based on the age of their daughter versus
it's that one.

Speaker 4 (58:06):
We don't want to model ourself study, yeah, google their ages.
It's gonna be.

Speaker 3 (58:12):
But then third place, different time it was the future.

Speaker 4 (58:15):
Oh gosh, Oh, that's even worse. Scooby and Shaggy though
they made number three.

Speaker 3 (58:21):
That's a relationship, I guess of swords for.

Speaker 4 (58:23):
His Homer and Marge Simpson.

Speaker 5 (58:25):
Yet again, not the relationship you want to model yourself after,
because Marge is a saint, a flawed saint, but a saint.

Speaker 4 (58:30):
Nonetheless, work for them.

Speaker 2 (58:31):
I mean, you know, a dupest guy harmless and she
kind of runs the show.

Speaker 5 (58:37):
The love triangle between Cyclops Jean Gray and Wolverine and
x X Men the animated series.

Speaker 3 (58:43):
Do know nothing about that one? That's bad?

Speaker 6 (58:45):
Is it?

Speaker 5 (58:46):
Yeah? Yeah? Lewis Lewis Lois and Peter Griffin from Family Guy.
Now this one I'm not old enough to get, but
I think you might. Adorra and Katra from Sheira and
the Princess of Power.

Speaker 2 (58:58):
That's my fifty you know watch that? Oh yeah, that's
that's a new version. Oh that was just out and
she loves it. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, I've watched it
every episode of the of the New Thing, And yes,
the relationship is has some issues, but it pans out
in the end.

Speaker 4 (59:14):
All right, I think I'm too old for that one.
Then I didn't know. I didn't know.

Speaker 3 (59:17):
Yeah, it's a Newish show.

Speaker 7 (59:19):
I thought.

Speaker 4 (59:20):
But it was around in the eighties. Isn't that where
Shira came from?

Speaker 2 (59:22):
Yeah, I mean, yes, the she Rah. I believe it's
been around for a very very long time. But Netflix
redid it just a couple of years ago.

Speaker 5 (59:28):
Okay, all right, we do have in twelve place Bob
and Linda Belcher. They should have been a little higher
on no idea, who is that Bobs?

Speaker 3 (59:35):
Okay?

Speaker 4 (59:37):
Yeah, the watch How are you knowing the Sherah reference.

Speaker 3 (59:41):
Has been Yeah, that is balance.

Speaker 4 (59:43):
It's been going for like two decades almost.

Speaker 3 (59:45):
I have a prom watching animated.

Speaker 4 (59:48):
Is she Ra not animated?

Speaker 3 (59:49):
No, it is animated. I watched it, kid, I didn't
watch it from myself.

Speaker 4 (59:52):
Yeah, yeah, kid's not watching Bobsburgers either.

Speaker 5 (59:55):
No.

Speaker 3 (59:56):
Oh is it a kids show? No, but that's it.

Speaker 5 (01:00:02):
And then Kim Possible when we'ren stoppable from Kim Possible.

Speaker 3 (01:00:05):
You're fair with that they were a couple. I didn't
know they.

Speaker 4 (01:00:08):
I think there was a will they won't they?

Speaker 2 (01:00:10):
Okay, those deals Morning Mix and Ashville's up man running
and uh it's you know, I'd mentioned it's not going
to be ninety here the next couple of days, but
then it's supposed to crank up again in the mid
nineties over the weekend.

Speaker 3 (01:00:23):
But if you went to ashville'll probably be ten degrees cooler.

Speaker 5 (01:00:26):
At least it has that mountain air, you know what
I mean. It just feels cool, a little breezier, just refreshing.

Speaker 3 (01:00:32):
So we got a little giveaway going off.

Speaker 5 (01:00:33):
Yeah, so we've teamed up with Explore Ashville and we
are doing a great gas up and go music getaway.

Speaker 4 (01:00:40):
And so for your chance to win, you go to
Mix one oh seven nine dot com.

Speaker 5 (01:00:43):
But the prize includes two nights at a hotel, which
is the Restoration Hotel Ashville. You get two dinners Hemming's,
Hemingway's and a cappella on nine, a coffee gift card,
a lunch, You get a tour of Citizen Vinyl. You
get a gift card to the record store. You get
to go to the Move Synthesizer Museum. I have Potential

(01:01:04):
New Boyfriend, which is a high fi listening bar. You
get a gift card there. You just get all sorts
of stuff and so it's just gonna be a great,
a great way to just get away and you have
all these fun things to do, and it's you're you're
gonna win the stuff paid for pretty much.

Speaker 3 (01:01:18):
Very very simple to do it. Just you go to
the website.

Speaker 4 (01:01:22):
Yeah, I got a little overwhelmed reading the list. That's
how many things you win?

Speaker 3 (01:01:25):
Yes, with this one. I just looked it up.

Speaker 2 (01:01:28):
So Ashville weather, let's see if you want to go
this weekend Thursday, it's eighty five beautiful, Friday eighty six,
Saturday eighty seven. The low's in the sixties. All right,
how about that? So you go to the website Mix
one oh seven nine dot com Mix one of seven
nine dot com for all the details

Speaker 3 (01:01:47):
And you and get a little trip to Ashville from
the Morning Mix
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New Heights with Jason & Travis Kelce

New Heights with Jason & Travis Kelce

Football’s funniest family duo — Jason Kelce of the Philadelphia Eagles and Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs — team up to provide next-level access to life in the league as it unfolds. The two brothers and Super Bowl champions drop weekly insights about the weekly slate of games and share their INSIDE perspectives on trending NFL news and sports headlines. They also endlessly rag on each other as brothers do, chat the latest in pop culture and welcome some very popular and well-known friends to chat with them. Check out new episodes every Wednesday. Follow New Heights on the Wondery App, YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to new episodes early and ad-free, and get exclusive content on Wondery+. Join Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. And join our new membership for a unique fan experience by going to the New Heights YouTube channel now!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

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24/7 News: The Latest

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