Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_06 (00:09):
Busted his ass for
you and me are calling up this
moon in Kansas.
You don't understand why Godmade those fly over states.
Oh, see, I can match.
SPEAKER_13 (00:29):
And you've got a
you've got this like classic uh
Willie Nelson backphrasing thinggoing on, which is I love it.
SPEAKER_05 (00:35):
Which is I think I
think you might have a whole
nother chapter to your career.
I don't think so.
Recording artists.
SPEAKER_07 (00:41):
No, no, because
what's funny is like if you
would have stopped singing and Iwould have kept going, I would
have fallen completely flat.
And I don't know why.
I've tried to figure that out.
Whenever you stop singing, Iwill hold it for a second, and
then I just Well, that's likemost artists today, so you're
fine.
SPEAKER_12 (00:55):
Most of the young
artists, they do the same thing.
SPEAKER_07 (00:56):
I was sitting in the
driveway, you know, doing the
live, and somebody got on thereclowning me because my account
got taken down and it lit a fireunder me.
And I said, the hell with thataccount.
And I jumped, I got out of thetruck, went and changed clothes,
started posting videos.
I posted like five, six videos aday for the next year and a
half.
But in that 30 days, from thatmoment that I got out of the
truck, 30 days later, I hadthree million followers on that
(01:19):
TikTok account just because thatdude pissed me off.
SPEAKER_03 (01:23):
I can't wait for the
feedback.
Both are qualified in softball.
In football, no.
SPEAKER_13 (01:28):
Hey, let the let the
women have their softball.
Let the women ump it.
Like honestly, just let us haveour stuff and I don't know.
I love you, Neil, but I don'tagree.
SPEAKER_11 (01:37):
Okay, that's fine.
SPEAKER_09 (01:42):
That's where to get
on the perfect in a small town
podcast.
Beginning.
SPEAKER_14 (01:55):
Welcome back to the
Tribe in the Small Town Podcast.
Coming here from the PatriotMobile Studios COVID.
He might have COVID.
We're powering through withoutmasks.
Yeah.
We got thrash, we got K-Lo.
The Willems.
SPEAKER_13 (02:15):
Where's Will Will I
miss you?
Yeah, maybe you went in theproblem.
Two weeks without you, buddy.
I'm good.
SPEAKER_03 (02:20):
Hey, my immune
system's built way up.
I didn't get this boost or theshot or any of it.
Did you get COVID if we had todo it like three weeks ago?
It was not in the hospital.
SPEAKER_15 (02:29):
You got rushed to
the emergency room.
What are you talking about?
Right?
When you get that thing cut andcaught in your throat and
everything, you woke up.
SPEAKER_03 (02:36):
I regurgitated my
frickin' meal from the night
before from uh acid reflux.
It wasn't COVID?
No, it wasn't anything.
I just choking to death.
That's very serious.
I regurgitated.
I know, I'm just saying you havehad acid reflux.
Acid reflux, and I was choking.
I woke up, you know, that's whatpeople simmer down.
SPEAKER_15 (02:59):
This is why you got
your heart rate elevated.
No, it's not.
Simmer down.
It's okay.
SPEAKER_03 (03:03):
When's the last time
you had a physical?
A physical?
Yeah.
Last night.
All right.
No, he didn't get back to theback.
SPEAKER_14 (03:09):
When did you get
physical back?
SPEAKER_15 (03:11):
Okay.
SPEAKER_14 (03:12):
It's probably a good
thing we're loose to that
because we got a uh a guy thatwe're gonna have to be on our
toes for.
Yeah.
Justin Nunley.
And if you don't know him,you're what you're missing out.
He's got 20 million followers orsomething.
Something just in danger aheadof us.
SPEAKER_15 (03:25):
Justin Danger,
Nunley.
Justin Danger.
We're gonna have to ask aboutthat.
SPEAKER_03 (03:28):
Danger.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_14 (03:31):
It'll be fun.
Did you know him?
How do I well?
SPEAKER_03 (03:34):
I met him I met him
at uh Gary Lavox's uh camp when
we were deer hunting one year.
How long ago was that?
Oh gosh, 22?
2022, 2000 I don't know.
I can't remember.
It was four or five years ago,maybe.
SPEAKER_14 (03:50):
And he's gotten very
famous for his TikTok videos,
right?
What's his catchphrase?
Or what's the phrase that hewhat's he say?
SPEAKER_15 (03:58):
Do y'all know?
SPEAKER_03 (03:59):
He'll have a clip of
somebody doing something stupid
and he'll go and he'll have thislook on his face like And he
breaks in with a random fact.
SPEAKER_15 (04:07):
It's somewhat
random.
Sometimes it's on it a littleand then something off.
SPEAKER_03 (04:11):
Did you know?
And he uh he sounds a littlefeminine sometimes when he
doesn't like listen, did youknow?
SPEAKER_15 (04:17):
I don't think it's
that feminine.
SPEAKER_03 (04:19):
It's not it's
sometimes it's a little
feminine.
Well, his new haircut looks alittle feminine to me.
I don't know.
He'll no, he'll love it.
It's a mullet.
It looks pretty good.
The mullet.
I don't know.
I think he's a little old for amullet.
I don't know.
If you didn't grow up with amullet, we we're the ones that
made mullets famous.
Yeah, I'm definitely in that Ihad a really killer mullet.
No, I did too.
Me too, with the perms verynice.
Jim, we'll get you pictures thatyou can post.
(04:40):
That'd be a good idea.
Um, but we we were themulleteteers.
The mulleters.
SPEAKER_13 (04:45):
We were.
I had a really bitchin' rat tailtoo back in school.
It was awesome.
Oh that thing was Did you drivean S10?
I had an S10.
You had an S10?
SPEAKER_14 (04:55):
I did.
I had an S10.
That's really funny.
That's good.
Oh my gosh.
Let's not waste any more timebecause this is gonna be a good
one here.
We're here with Justin.
Speaking of nicknames, well,what's the origin of danger?
SPEAKER_07 (05:09):
Hey man, I danger's
my middle name.
I'm a professional bomb builder,amateur gynecologist.
I can do it all.
Austin Powers.
SPEAKER_15 (05:18):
Austin Powers, the
Austin Powers movie.
SPEAKER_10 (05:21):
Yeah.
Oh shit.
SPEAKER_15 (05:23):
So did you so from
the Austin Powers movie, did you
did you take that and make thatyour your middle name or did
your parents?
SPEAKER_07 (05:29):
It's just always
kind of been a joke.
No, I it's just always kind ofbeen a joke.
You know, ever since I, youknow, signed up for Facebook
back in the day, you know, whenthey just opened it up to the
general population, you know, Ijust put my middle name as
danger and it just it's justalways been there.
SPEAKER_03 (05:43):
It's awesome.
How long's this been going on?
SPEAKER_07 (05:45):
What life?
Danger I'm about 41.
SPEAKER_03 (05:47):
No, danger.
SPEAKER_07 (05:48):
Danger, uh since
about 2019.
Really?
Yeah.
Which it took me a couple yearsto figure things out.
You know?
SPEAKER_03 (05:56):
Why is it I've
noticed that when people get
more famous and they get richer,that their beards get longer.
SPEAKER_07 (06:06):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (06:07):
And you're following
the beard, don't get me wrong.
Well, yeah.
It's it's growing perfect.
Your gray is perfect.
It's very good.
Do you do that, or is thatnatural?
SPEAKER_07 (06:16):
That's natural.
Well, you know, I tried to Itried to color my beard earlier
this year.
I don't know if y'all saw it ornot.
Well, the lady that does myhair, right?
My beautician, if you will.
You know, I go to a beauty shop,you know.
Look at this, look at this.
Hey.
This was in the front.
unknown (06:31):
Shaking that all in the
back.
SPEAKER_15 (06:32):
There you go.
Larry in the back.
SPEAKER_07 (06:33):
So, no, she she
said, I, you know, if you want
to color it, we can color it.
I've got some uh what is it,demi-permanent.
I was like, well, what does thatmean?
She's like, well, it'stemporary.
I'm thinking same thing you'rethinking.
You know, oh, I'll let you putit on, and if I don't like it,
I'll just wash it out.
She's like, Yeah, it'll wash outin about a month.
That shit don't wash out.
It's permanent.
SPEAKER_03 (06:52):
Yeah.
I guess that's why they call itdemi-permanent.
What segments you think we'retalking about here so we can go
back and look?
I want to go back and see.
SPEAKER_07 (06:59):
Oh, you'll see.
SPEAKER_03 (06:59):
Yeah.
Or you can't do that.
SPEAKER_07 (07:01):
When was out in
Bristol?
When was I at Bristol for thespring?
April.
Go to April, and shortly afterthe Bristol race, I shaved it.
I did a deal with Manscaped andshaved my beard.
Manscaped, man.
I was like, all right, but youknow, adjust your beard?
Well, I know.
I mean, I shaved my undercarriestoo.
SPEAKER_06 (07:17):
When Caleb's giving
mansion, that's interesting
because people use it.
SPEAKER_15 (07:22):
But we're still on
the mullets, though.
So when I was in junior high,when the mullets were coming in,
and then actually the perm wasin at the time.
SPEAKER_07 (07:29):
So did you ever
think you during the civil
rights era?
SPEAKER_15 (07:32):
It was it was close.
It was close.
But we had, but you talked aboutyour uh your beautiful.
I'm sorry, I don't even know youthat well.
You had your beautician, you'retalking about your beautician,
and we actually had to go.
I went to uh California ConceptHair Design in Pixon, Tennessee.
And we would get you'd get aperm and you'd have to hide.
You'd have to kind of go in theback doors kind of like I don't
(07:52):
want anybody to see me gettingthat, but everybody else had it
and it was cool.
SPEAKER_07 (07:55):
I prefer to go in
the back door.
SPEAKER_15 (07:56):
Yeah, so well,
that's a that might be another
podcast.
But anyway, so we get it.
But mine was a real natural, youknow, look.
So I only had it permed up tothe crown where it was real
natural.
It's all straight, and thenwhere it got real curved.
Okay.
You should perm your hair.
You should perm your hair now.
SPEAKER_07 (08:12):
I could it would it
take some really tiny, tiny
rollers, but I've been thinkingabout perming my hair, you know,
just for the pure shock valueold lines like people, yeah.
Hey, silence that phone.
SPEAKER_05 (08:22):
Oh sorry.
That's the amateur air.
SPEAKER_07 (08:27):
Hey, did you make
sure that mine are up?
Mine's on uh do not disturbbecause I, you know, once I talk
shit about somebody, uh no, I'vebeen thinking about you know,
just perming mine.
My oldest, my 15-year-old, hehe's grew a pretty phenomenal
mullet, right?
And he had the top of his permand it do the day after, and
then two or three days after, itlooked like a jerry curl.
(08:50):
It looked straight jerry curl.
Hey, listen, did you know themovie Pulp Fiction?
You know, you know, SamuelJackson.
He had, you know, so he wassupposed to have an afro in that
movie, and they told theproduction assistant to go get
an afro wig.
That they he had no clue whatafro was, so he came back with a
jerry curl wig, and that's whySamuel L.
Jackson has a lot of.
(09:10):
I wondered why his hair lookedlike that.
SPEAKER_03 (09:12):
I thought he got it
from like coming to America.
SPEAKER_07 (09:14):
No, man, he just he
they just said, well, he's
wearing a jerry curl.
SPEAKER_03 (09:18):
So that's and it
kind of fits.
SPEAKER_13 (09:19):
I thought that movie
with anything other.
I love that movie.
Yeah, I can't picture him in anyother.
SPEAKER_07 (09:24):
No, could you
imagine him having an afro?
SPEAKER_13 (09:26):
No.
No.
I can see Kalo having some sortof prone, though.
I've got let's go back to theManscaped.
SPEAKER_07 (09:31):
Yeah, let's go back
to that real quick.
SPEAKER_03 (09:32):
The Manscaped 500.
SPEAKER_07 (09:33):
He did try to trot
over that, didn't he?
Yeah.
SPEAKER_15 (09:35):
There's a reason for
that though.
Well, no, I mean, I don't knowhow this came up last time.
When did it come up?
We were talking after thepodcast.
We were always after thepodcast.
Yeah.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (09:44):
And then you had an
itch and you were scratching
down there.
Hey, no, let's not.
SPEAKER_15 (09:47):
The short of it is
it's an appointment for the
short of it.
No, but we were talking aboutthe Manscaped 4000, because some
buddies of mine were talking tome one day about, you know, hey,
shaving down there and all thisstuff, and and I never have, you
know.
SPEAKER_07 (09:59):
So never.
SPEAKER_15 (10:00):
Well, I got the I
said you ought to get the
Manscaped 4,000.
And so this is about a year anda half ago.
You needed a we need it,brother.
If you had never five hundredtimers.
I went and got it.
Yeah.
And and it's still in mybathroom, the plastic's still on
it.
Never took it out.
Brother.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (10:19):
That's what we said.
That's yeah and and I just hiswife's a a a a saint of a woman,
obviously.
Obviously.
And just, you know, and she, youknow, beautiful wife you have,
and I'm just wondering what kindof what kind of torture are you
subjecting her to on a dailybasis.
(10:39):
If you never, you know, uhquestion, real quick.
SPEAKER_15 (10:43):
Someone cut a
kitchen just putting the name
out there on the Her dad listensto this podcast.
Oh.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (10:51):
My name is Russell,
and I'm a wilderness explorer.
SPEAKER_15 (10:56):
You can cut that if
you need to, brother.
We don't ever cut anythingearly.
No, we don't cut anything,apparently.
SPEAKER_10 (11:10):
Oh boy.
SPEAKER_13 (11:12):
I feel like this
could be the start of a new era.
A more manicured era.
SPEAKER_14 (11:20):
Or a new sponsor.
SPEAKER_07 (11:22):
Oh, I've got the
contacts.
If y'all need it, I'll sling itto you.
SPEAKER_03 (11:28):
Not everybody.
So you're like co-owner of avitamin drink?
SPEAKER_07 (11:31):
But no, an energy
drink.
Waste energy.
Right.
Oh, we can speak about thisbecause we need to get waste
waste energy drink.
You know, we uh we'reveteran-owned, veteran-operated.
We give 10% back of everythingwe earn to military veteran
military veterans and firstresponders, partnered with the
Gary Snease Foundation and FifthSquad.
And uh it's a very clean energydrink, no sugar.
(11:54):
Uh like one of our one of ourdrinks has five calories, one of
them has ten calories.
Did you bring us any?
No, but I'll I'll have you saidthere'll be some shit.
Hey, where do you find this?
SPEAKER_14 (12:04):
Where can the people
find it?
SPEAKER_07 (12:06):
Tomorrow.
I'll I'll I'll send you backwith a bunch of sugar.
SPEAKER_03 (12:08):
No, Wednesday.
I'm on uh Wednesday.
SPEAKER_07 (12:10):
That's right, yeah.
So you can get them atwasteenergy.com.
Yeah.
Right.
And we're working ondistribution, and I'm pretty
sure we just got distribution inuh she she can correct me.
Did we just get distribution inTennessee?
I think we got Kentucky, Ohio.
Okay.
Okay.
SPEAKER_13 (12:25):
So what kind of like
flavors?
Like what's the range offlavors?
SPEAKER_07 (12:28):
We've got uh orange
cream, we've got um pomegranate
peach.
Cherry limeade's my favorite.
SPEAKER_13 (12:34):
Cherry Limeade.
Uh, dude.
Send a case of that.
SPEAKER_07 (12:37):
It is fire.
As the kids like say these days,it's absolute gas.
SPEAKER_13 (12:42):
That's amazing.
And amazing giving back to theveterans.
Yeah, that's what that's uh it'sall about, right?
SPEAKER_14 (12:47):
Which obviously
leaves us uh you were in the Air
Force for quite a while, right?
SPEAKER_07 (12:50):
Yeah, 20 years.
I just retired.
SPEAKER_14 (12:52):
You just retired?
SPEAKER_07 (12:53):
Yeah, I just retired
last month.
This month.
What what day is it?
SPEAKER_14 (12:57):
We're not sure.
SPEAKER_07 (12:58):
We're still in
September.
I just yeah, I just retired twoweeks ago.
Active duty military, yeah.
Well, congrats, and thank andthank you for your service.
Yeah, I've been I've been doingSkillbridge for the past six
months, so optics.
Uh Skillbridge is a is a programthat allows military veterans to
you know transition out of themilitary.
Um transition?
(13:19):
Yeah, not like that.
You know, you do have to clarifythese days.
Uh you really do.
Yeah.
No, it it lets you transitionout where you can go out in the
in the work world, you know, andbecause some people that have
been in like me for 20 years,you know, I hadn't worked
regularly.
Things have changed in 20 years,brother.
You know.
So I I worked with uh, you know,uh Emerald Coast Charlie
(13:40):
Davidson for the past sixmonths.
And uh when it was time for itto be up, Gus, the the owner
over there, offered me apartnership and now I'm you know
a partner there at the Parleydealership and with the uh big
Gus tractor and equipment.
SPEAKER_03 (13:54):
Oh, yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (13:56):
A little bit of
farming, yeah.
I'd like to see that.
SPEAKER_03 (13:59):
I'd love to see you
on a harvester.
SPEAKER_07 (14:01):
Well, let's do it.
Let's do it.
SPEAKER_03 (14:03):
They don't they
drive themselves, so I can see
you in one.
SPEAKER_07 (14:05):
Oh, I can program
them.
Well, I I almost flipped anexcavator two weeks ago playing
around.
Yeah, I'll send you that video.
SPEAKER_03 (14:12):
Yeah, I'll see that.
SPEAKER_15 (14:13):
Well, I thought what
what was cool uh is that most of
the people when they're in thein the service, you know, when
they're at nighttime, a lot ofthem are just, you know, some of
them with their families, butthe younger guys are just
drinking beer and stuff likethat, and you were creating this
huge massive business you're innow for three years while you're
in the service, you were doingwhat you're doing now.
Yeah, for the past, right?
For about three years.
That's pretty cool because mostpeople are not thinking that far
(14:35):
ahead.
SPEAKER_07 (14:36):
Well, I don't give
me too much credit because not I
I don't plan much out.
It just kind of happened thatway, you know.
And it you know, I was honestlykind of wondering, is this is
this gonna work?
You know, because there was acouple times where it was like,
you know, I got called into theman's office, you know, and it's
like, hey, we see what you'redoing here, and I'm like, eh.
I'm not gonna quit.
(14:57):
You know, and it's like one ofthose lines in the sand, it's
like, you know, I'm doing it onmy own time.
I never posted anything in inuniform, you know, maybe one or
two, you know, and uh I just Ijust kept the two two things
separate.
And a lot of people, a lot ofpeople were absolutely shocked
two years ago when you know Idid a transition video for a mom
that was crying about her songoing off to boot camp, and I
(15:19):
said, You're gonna be fine, youknow, he's gonna be fine, you
want to know how I know.
And I, you know, it switched tome being in uniform and it just
blew everybody's mind.
They was like, I had no clue.
Yeah, you know, I had kept itcompletely quiet, you know, that
I was in.
Not because I was ashamed of it,just because you know, not
everybody needs to knoweverything, you know, and I'm a
firm believer in that, you know.
But people want to knoweverything.
SPEAKER_14 (15:40):
They like to, yeah.
How many, so how many viewersdid you have at that point when
they started to find out?
SPEAKER_07 (15:45):
I mean, I'm sitting
right now at about 21 million
total followers, and uh Iprobably at that time probably
had about 15 million, maybe.
unknown (15:53):
Oh my god.
SPEAKER_13 (15:54):
Wow.
SPEAKER_07 (15:55):
Yeah, yeah.
unknown (15:58):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (15:59):
Where are we at?
Jim, where are we?
Are we close?
I don't know them all.
I don't know them all.
SPEAKER_03 (16:05):
Have you have you
had any um like safety breaches
at the house?
SPEAKER_07 (16:08):
Oh yeah, yeah.
We we there was a guy arrestedlast year or year before last on
four felony charges.
And we've had uh people stop bythe house.
I've had do video a couple timeslike, hey, I love y'all.
I get it, you love me.
Don't come to my house.
You know, it the the the theinteraction that me and you are
gonna have is not gonna be whatyou think in your mind if you
(16:28):
come to my house.
SPEAKER_03 (16:29):
Or some of them like
like coming there to to do you
know, to shake it up or most ofthem just make it.
SPEAKER_07 (16:36):
I mean they I mean
well, I mean anybody can, you
know, approach you in in onemanner and have totally
different, you know, so uh I'm apretty security-minded person,
if if you will, and you know, Imake sure that things are taken
care of around the house if Ihave to approach a situation
like that.
SPEAKER_14 (16:52):
So when you first
started doing all that, uh was
it TikTok mainly that youstarted on and was it uh just
more for like fun?
I'm sure you get asked this alot, but when did it turn into,
hey, I'm just gonna do this kindof thing to like, oh, this could
be a business.
SPEAKER_07 (17:07):
Well the well the l
you know, the long story short
is is I had an account um tothat when I first started out
creating content, I would justtell jokes.
You know, recycled internetjokes.
I wasn't writing anything, youknow.
And I would always just say,Hey, Crystal, do you want to
hear a joke?
And she'd say, Not really, andI'd be like, Yeah, I don't care.
And then I would tell the joke,right?
(17:28):
And some of them hit, some ofthem didn't, you know, it just
depends on the joke, thedelivery, and everything else.
But what I didn't know at thetime was that was teach, I was
learning.
Every time I would post a video,I would learn a little bit, you
know.
And uh I got I I gained a goodfollowing off that um got to
about 600,000 followers, right?
(17:48):
And and I was laying in bed onenight and you know, it just
something clicked.
I was like, you know, uh I I wasscrolling through and I was
watching a video.
I th I think it was the video ofthe girl saying, Hey, you know,
quick question, how do you throwa punch?
And it just in my head, I waslike, with your hand, you know,
and I was like, why don't I dothat?
You know, so I I got up out ofbed and I went and filmed, you
(18:08):
know, I was like, with yourhand.
Listen, did you know that theyou know typical cumulus cloud
weighs, you know, a millionpounds?
Just redirection, just totalADHD, the way my mind works
anyway.
SPEAKER_14 (18:17):
Which is the beauty
that's the beauty of what you're
doing.
SPEAKER_07 (18:20):
And uh the video
hit, you know, and I was like,
Yeah, it might have been aone-off.
Maybe it's just a great idea.
So I I did it again the nextday, and that one went viral.
And then I did it again, and itwent viral.
And probably about three or fourdays into this of me doing it, I
was like, man, I think I'm on tosomething here.
Uh my account got permanentlybanned.
Right?
So I went to TikTok?
Yeah, I went from six hundredthousand followers.
(18:41):
Well, I had gained about ahundred thousand in that in
those few days, right?
And um just from going viralover and over and over again.
And uh the account came down andI went from six hundred thousand
followers to three thousandbecause I had a backup account,
right?
It wasn't my backup account.
I had I had a backup account,but I gave it to Crystal, so I
(19:02):
had changed the name of it andas you know, Crystal Nunley or
whatever.
And uh I I said, Crystal, I'mI'm gonna take your account back
over, you know, and she's like,I don't use TikTok anyway.
So I jumped on it, 3,000followers, and I I remember, you
know, getting off work that dayand I went and did a uh TikTok
live, you know, trying to askeverybody, you know, submit some
tickets for me, help me out, youknow, help me get my account
(19:24):
back.
Because I'm thinking, I've got600,000, 700,000 followers over
here.
I'm never gonna get back up tothat.
You know what I'm saying?
Like it took me two, two and ahalf years just to get there.
You know what I'm saying?
And um I remember I was sittingin the driveway, you know, doing
the live, and somebody got onthere clowning me because my
account got taken down and itlit a fire under me.
(19:46):
And I said, the hell with thataccount.
And I jumped, I got out of thetruck, went and changed clothes,
started posting videos.
I posted like five, six videos aday for the next year and a
half.
But in that 30 days, from thatmoment that I got out of the
truck, 30 days later, I hadthree million followers on that
TikTok account just because thatdude pissed me off.
You know, and it's been kind ofnonstop ever since.
SPEAKER_05 (20:07):
Wow.
So that's impressive.
SPEAKER_07 (20:10):
Yeah, but I did
start on TikTok, so I didn't
have the the thought of you knowcross-posting videos right out
the gate.
You know, it took me a littlewhile, and uh finally I was
like, Yeah, why don't I juststart cross-posting a little
bit, you know, and then that'staken off.
So here we are.
And you know, every everyplatform, every platform has
different rules that you can goby.
(20:31):
So there's videos that I canthrow up on Instagram that would
not fly on TikTok because oftheir you know strict community
guidelines and there's stuffthat I can put on Facebook that
won't fly on Instagram.
It's just weird.
And you know, the the whole keyto it is is you know, a lot of
people when when you know theyget they get content violations
and get a video taken down, thenyou know, they they don't learn
(20:54):
from it.
You know, they just keep doingwhat they're doing.
That's how you wind up losingaccounts, that's how I lost my
other accounts, you know.
So, you know, I just learnedfrom it and I'm like, okay, you
know, I can't I can't do that onthis platform, but that video
stayed up over there, so I'mgood over here.
You know, so it's just learning,learning things, learning,
learning as you go.
SPEAKER_03 (21:11):
Everybody loves you.
SPEAKER_07 (21:12):
I appreciate it.
SPEAKER_03 (21:13):
Apparently, yeah.
Yeah, and a world is veryentertaining.
That's right.
SPEAKER_13 (21:17):
People love you,
Neil.
You learn as you go.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (21:19):
Well, I've been red
that's why I've been red flagged
like four times.
SPEAKER_07 (21:23):
It happens to the
best of us, brother.
SPEAKER_15 (21:25):
Yeah.
Well, it's not a createdcharacter either.
Like you said, you you learnfrom what you're doing, but it
but it seems like it's reallyyou.
I don't know you at all.
Yeah, and it seems like it'sjust a big part of you.
Like, yeah, it is.
SPEAKER_07 (21:36):
I mean, it's me.
I don't try to be anybody else,you know.
And they only made one of me, soI might as well try to be
myself.
You know, um I tone it downsometimes, you know.
I mean, I will I will throw somethrow some loose jokes around,
you know.
Because I mean, uh we're we'rein a part of of you know human
history where people people tendto get offended over things,
even even if it's not the wayyou intended for them to get it.
(21:58):
So you have to, you know, beingin that space, you kind of have
to understand, okay, even thoughI don't mean it like this, you
know, people are gonna take itthat way.
So I just kind of have to, youknow, you know, skirt around
things, you know.
And it's just everybody,everybody, I say it all the
time.
SPEAKER_13 (22:13):
Way too sensitive.
Everybody is way too sensitive,way too up in them in
themselves.
Screw you, I'm not sensitive.
Yeah, no, no, no, no, no.
It's true though.
You can't, I mean, people justyou you can't say anything
without uh triggering somebody.
SPEAKER_07 (22:25):
No, if you if you
say something about people
getting offended, you're gonnaoffend people.
SPEAKER_13 (22:29):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (22:29):
You know what I'm
saying?
I know you're right.
Like I it just kind of goes toprove your point that no matter
what you say, somebody's gonnaget offended over it, you know.
So you might as well just beyourself.
Yeah, you know.
And if you if you like me, youdo.
If you don't, that's fine too.
Yeah, I'm cool with that.
SPEAKER_03 (22:44):
When did you meet
Lavox?
SPEAKER_07 (22:46):
Uh Bristol, Bristol
Motor Speedway Spring Easter
race.
Was that the first year I wasthere?
2022.
Yeah, he just slid my DMs.
And I was like, yeah, onInstagram.
And I just happened, I justhappened to look at my message
request, which I hardly ever do,but I looked at him and I was
like, I was like, the leadsinger, Rascal Flats.
(23:07):
I looked at him, he's like, heyman, I'm in Bristol, you know,
uh, I seen that you're here too.
Let's get together.
And I was like, there is no waythat dude just messaged me,
right?
Because my very first concertthat I ever went to, I grew up,
you know, uh, I wouldn't saythat we were dirt floor poor,
but you know, we had carpet, ithad dirt in it, you know, we
couldn't afford the vacuumcleaner, you know.
(23:27):
Uh, but you know, that we didn'tgo to a lot of concerts when I
was younger.
We didn't take a lot of familyvacations.
If we did, we went to BurkeBurnett, Texas, you know, to
visit my grandparents that livedout there.
But uh so the very first concertI ever went to was Chris Cagle
in Rascal Flats, right?
Wow.
And uh yeah, so I thought it wasI thought it was kind of crazy,
full circle moment of, you know,stepping up in in the you know
(23:50):
the RV where where he was at andus doing the video and
everything.
But yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (23:54):
Did uh did Chris
Kagle cry at that show you want
to?
No, because he's a talk about atriggered whining man.
He all he does is cry.
I still gotta ask him Kegel.
That's kind of his thing.
Why you could quit crying?
Just no, there's no crying.
What is going on?
He's he cries for a living.
SPEAKER_02 (24:12):
Tell us how you
really feel about Chris Cry.
No, it's it's a legit question.
SPEAKER_13 (24:16):
It's a legit
question.
Like he's a professional crier.
Yeah.
On on cue, bang, tears.
Really?
That's part of his his stick.
That's what he does.
SPEAKER_07 (24:25):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (24:25):
I made him cry once.
SPEAKER_07 (24:27):
I mean, I was uh,
dude, I was probably like 18, 19
years old at the time.
I have no clue.
He might have.
SPEAKER_13 (24:34):
Yeah.
I'm sure he did.
If you saw him in in concert, hecried.
SPEAKER_07 (24:37):
It was in Tupelo,
Mississippi.
SPEAKER_13 (24:39):
He cried in Tupelo.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (24:40):
Tears and Tupelo.
That'd be a good song rightthere.
Tears and Tupelo.
Tears and Tupelo.
Let's ride it later.
Okay.
SPEAKER_03 (24:48):
Tell us never
playing on a session with him.
Well, it worked for I'm notworried about it.
SPEAKER_15 (24:52):
It did work for
Taylor Swift, though.
Like back in the day when shewas on Paisley's Tour.
Who's a woman?
She would say breaking down intotears every night.
But she would have to cry at thesame in the same part of the
show, like every night on thePlaying Tour.
And I was I was out there and Iwas thinking, God, people are
going to catch on to that.
You know, it's not going towork.
But apparently it worked outpretty good for you.
SPEAKER_13 (25:11):
That's all that guy
does is cry on cue.
He's good at it.
SPEAKER_07 (25:13):
That's wild.
But if y'all do wind up writinga song called Tears and Tupelo,
I bet my name better be on thatshoe.
It has to be.
SPEAKER_03 (25:19):
Well, I you this is
why I bring my laptop in.
SPEAKER_07 (25:21):
Tears and Tupelo.
SPEAKER_03 (25:23):
Just in case we get
song ideas from our guests.
Yeah.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_15 (25:26):
Never seen that
before.
SPEAKER_03 (25:27):
Me either.
I've never seen that before.
Ever before.
It looks official.
I'm going to start new.
If you guys don't care, I don'tthink you should be looking at
that at work.
Have you emptied your cache orcleared your history?
It looks official.
It looks like I'm prepared forthe podcast.
At least it does.
SPEAKER_15 (25:44):
Yeah.
Was that it?
SPEAKER_03 (25:50):
No, no.
I'll put I'll put the ideas inthere.
Oh.
I'll put them in there.
I just can't let him use.
Oh god.
Because he will.
He'll want like a fifth of asong.
Okay.
Yeah.
That's fine.
SPEAKER_07 (25:59):
I'll take a fifth of
anything.
SPEAKER_03 (26:02):
If you give me a
fifth, I'll be happy.
SPEAKER_15 (26:04):
Hey, you s you said
you may have him sing one.
SPEAKER_03 (26:06):
Oh, I will.
I will.
Well, that that's uh that goesback to the La Boxe thing.
SPEAKER_07 (26:11):
Oh, yeah, him giving
me voice lessons.
Yeah.
Yeah, he called me tone deaf.
Which he's not wrong.
SPEAKER_03 (26:17):
I don't I mean, I
heard you out here, you're not
tonef.
Well, no, I fall flat.
I will fall flat.
We'll find out.
It's like the first time I metyou was at La Box's farm.
SPEAKER_07 (26:27):
When you shot that
damn deer.
Yeah.
Yeah.
When we told you, hey, you'regonna see plenty up there.
We were never gonna kill a deerthat day.
Me and him were just cutting updown there and making videos the
whole time we was in theretrying to make up songs on the
smile.
SPEAKER_03 (26:40):
Literally, I'm not
kidding, y'all.
Him and LaVox had been upbecause I go to bed all night.
I go to bed early.
And when you go down to Gary'sfarm, and if you're hanging and
y'all got the camera rolling,and you just you get you got
this, you're getting content,you're doing this skit and this
skit.
SPEAKER_07 (26:56):
Oh, it's like an ADD
dream, man.
Crazy.
So you can go polling, you cango shoot archery all in the same
room.
You never have to leave the theyeah.
SPEAKER_03 (27:05):
And and Nunley's
taking full advantage of it.
SPEAKER_07 (27:09):
Oh, yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (27:09):
And I'm like, I
gotta go to bed.
I don't know, it's midnightmaybe, because I gotta get up
and go hunting.
I come back down there to get acup of coffee the next morning
after I get up, right beforedaylight.
They're still in there doingthat.
SPEAKER_07 (27:21):
Oh, we had we had
done everything that night.
We had called Uncle Cracker, wehad talked to David Spade on the
phone, we had we had doneeverything.
Like that if that night had beenrecorded, it would have been
just people are like, Y'alldidn't, y'all talked to me.
SPEAKER_03 (27:35):
I'm sure most of it
probably was recorded.
SPEAKER_07 (27:37):
And I was like, You
probably can't put it out.
Probably not.
No, you're right.
You're right.
And and some Gary'd be like,Gary be like, you know this
person?
I'm like, yeah, yeah, who whodoes it, right?
He'd be like, let's call them.
I'd be like, there Gary, do youknow what time it is?
He's like, they'll be up.
And they were, you know.
We called Cletus T Judd.
Yeah, we had on.
(27:57):
Yeah, and after me knowing him,I'm like, I don't know why
Cletus T answered the phone.
Because he goes to bed early.
SPEAKER_03 (28:04):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, you seem to be running onthe same fumes that he runs on.
SPEAKER_07 (28:08):
Well, I yeah.
Yeah.
Nowadays.
Speed, baby.
SPEAKER_03 (28:14):
What?
Gary, he's a big thing.
But when we met, when we met,you wanted to do this thing, and
we were sitting in there, we'djust come in from an afternoon
hunt.
SPEAKER_07 (28:25):
Yeah, that video did
very well.
SPEAKER_03 (28:27):
You talking about
the video where I don't think it
I didn't do well on my account.
It did did well on mine.
SPEAKER_07 (28:32):
I got paid good for
that video.
I'm joking, I don't know.
SPEAKER_03 (28:35):
I don't remember.
If I did, I wouldn't tell youanything you're cutting.
Let's give them a snippet ofwhat we did that night.
SPEAKER_14 (28:42):
Okay.
Oh, what we got?
SPEAKER_03 (28:44):
Because you came
walking in, yeah, and you, I
don't know, I don't rememberwhat you said to me or whatever.
We're over there, me and Gary.
SPEAKER_07 (28:50):
You're gonna have
to, you're gonna have to tell me
when to get I I don't do music.
You guys first class on a flightfrom New York to Los Angeles,
kinda making small talk, killin'time, flirting with the flight
attendants 30,000 feet above.
(29:14):
Hell it could be Oklahoma.
We farms, man, it all looks thesame.
Miles and miles of dirt roadsand highways connectin' little
towns with funny names.
Who all live down there in themiddle of nowhere?
SPEAKER_06 (29:36):
They never build
through it.
SPEAKER_02 (29:42):
I met the man who
plowed that dirt, planted that
seed, busted his ass for you andme by the hotest moon.
SPEAKER_07 (29:51):
I can't hit that.
SPEAKER_06 (29:53):
Squeeze your butt
cheeks together.
SPEAKER_07 (29:55):
Yeah.
Sting out of my forehead, right?
Yeah, what's that study?
I can match fantastic.
Yeah, see, I can match pitch.
When you come in, I can matchit, but then I fall off.
(30:17):
I can't harmonize.
I can't go above and below.
I didn't want you to harmonize.
SPEAKER_10 (30:20):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (30:21):
I I figured out that
I can match pitch very well.
Did you sing?
So you're not completely tonedout.
Get back up, do it again.
No, you're not toned out.
Watch this, watch this.
Go ahead.
Do it.
SPEAKER_03 (30:30):
The doors?
SPEAKER_07 (30:31):
Yeah.
Go ahead.
SPEAKER_03 (30:40):
The man who plowed
that earth planted that seed
busted his ass for you and me.
SPEAKER_06 (30:47):
Are called a hotest
moon in Kansas.
You'll understand why God madethose fly over states.
SPEAKER_13 (31:00):
Oh, see, I can
match.
And you've got a you've got thislike classic uh Willie Nelson
backphrasing thing going on,which is which is I think I
think you might have a wholenother chapter to your career.
SPEAKER_05 (31:15):
I don't think so.
Recording artists.
SPEAKER_07 (31:17):
No, no, because
what's funny is like if you
would have stopped singing and Iwould have kept going, I would
have fallen completely flat.
And I don't know why.
I've tried to figure that out.
Whenever you stop singing, Iwill hold it for a second and
then I just Well, that's likemost artists today, so you're
fine.
SPEAKER_12 (31:31):
Most of the young
artists do the same thing.
SPEAKER_06 (31:32):
Shout out to Cole
Swindale.
We love you, Kim.
Appreciate that.
SPEAKER_15 (31:42):
It's also known as
the shower effect.
You know, we sound better thanthe shower.
Get reverb in there.
SPEAKER_14 (31:50):
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great with small town stories?
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SPEAKER_03 (31:54):
You know, I've been
drinking this every songwriting
session today.
SPEAKER_15 (31:57):
Man, that clean,
crisp taste reminds me of summer
nights on the back porch after afresh mode along.
SPEAKER_14 (32:02):
And they're just not
making great beer, they're
investing in America's smalltowns.
SPEAKER_13 (32:06):
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They believe in bringingcommunities together.
SPEAKER_03 (32:09):
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invest in communities, but a
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SPEAKER_14 (32:22):
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that original glory spirit.
SPEAKER_01 (32:27):
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(32:48):
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SPEAKER_03 (33:06):
Have you had a hot
flash yet?
No, I'm not a woman.
It doesn't matter.
You're 41?
Yeah.
I've literally seriously.
The guys get hot flesh?
Yes.
No, I Googled it.
Really?
Yep.
I want our listeners to send itin.
SPEAKER_13 (33:23):
Listen to this.
SPEAKER_03 (33:26):
Are you picking up
the bigger?
SPEAKER_13 (33:28):
This is why we
can't.
This is why we can't have thedoor open.
This is how the podcast opensup.
SPEAKER_06 (33:33):
This is why we can't
have the door open.
SPEAKER_03 (33:35):
Hey, the hot flash
thing is for real.
SPEAKER_06 (33:38):
Your hair's wet.
SPEAKER_03 (33:41):
It's just hard.
The wig is wet.
But but I have had a legit hotflash.
I have.
Have any anybody in here heardof that?
Not the men.
No, no, no.
She was so.
I wasn't asked if you had a hotflash.
No.
Actual danger territory.
Does anybody know what I'mtalking about?
(34:02):
I'm sorry about men having hotflashes.
I'm sorry.
I don't think.
Because nothing good's comingfrom that conversation.
I'm not comfortable with it.
Maybe we should take a break ina second.
Well, I Googled it and it's it'sa real thing.
I'm Googling.
It's not a real thing.
(34:23):
What does it feel like?
You just freaking you feel likeyou're inside the body.
Well, you got the T sweating alittle bit and it goes away.
Really?
SPEAKER_15 (34:29):
Well, maybe you
should use the Manscaped 4000.
You wouldn't be so furry andhot.
I don't need it.
SPEAKER_02 (34:34):
That right there's
the ad.
SPEAKER_15 (34:35):
That is an advert.
SPEAKER_02 (34:37):
Why are y'all not
sponsoring this podcast?
SPEAKER_14 (34:39):
What are you doing?
SPEAKER_03 (34:40):
Maybe you're furry
and hot.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_14 (34:42):
I guess you can, but
you have to have very low T.
Do you have low T?
What does that mean?
Yeah, you are testosterone.
SPEAKER_03 (34:48):
No, I do not.
SPEAKER_07 (34:49):
Have you have you
had TRT?
SPEAKER_03 (34:51):
What's that?
SPEAKER_07 (34:52):
Uh testosterone
replacement therapy?
No.
Yeah, he's got low T.
At your age, it has to havefallen off, brother.
All right.
They say you hit your peak atwhat, 26, and then it just kind
of you want to borrow some of mytea?
I have high T.
Are you lactating?
unknown (35:08):
No.
SPEAKER_07 (35:09):
Not that I know of.
SPEAKER_15 (35:10):
Not that there's
anything wrong with that.
Not that I know of.
SPEAKER_07 (35:12):
I know a guy that
that used to lactate.
Really?
I mean, I ain't known him inyears, but yeah, he would, yeah.
Wait a minute.
Really?
This is fantastic.
Oh, I didn't know that was athing.
Yeah, it's a thing.
Really?
It's a thing, yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (35:22):
Man lactation.
SPEAKER_07 (35:24):
Yeah, man lactation.
Did he sell the milk?
That's the song right there.
Man lactation.
SPEAKER_03 (35:29):
You could bottle the
milk and sell it.
I'm surprised they don't know.
So what do you think?
Let's talk.
Let's talk some college footballhere.
Yeah, roll tide.
Yeah, I know, because you and Iboth are Roll Tide?
Yes.
Roll Tide?
You and Valls.
No.
You're a volunteer?
Yeah, we're working that way.
SPEAKER_07 (35:42):
Do you know why
there's no prostitutes in
Tennessee?
Why there's what?
Because they're all why there'sno prostitutes in Tennessee?
I do not.
Because they're all volunteers.
Who do you root for?
SPEAKER_13 (35:52):
I pull for the
Bulldogs.
I don't know.
But again, it's like uh collegefootball is a a side note to me.
So it's fine.
SPEAKER_07 (35:58):
Some minor leagues
issue.
It really is a minor leaguesituation.
SPEAKER_13 (36:01):
Not so much now,
though, that the players uh
they've got money to play fornow.
SPEAKER_07 (36:06):
Dude, that that's
ruined college football.
And I hate to say it like thatbecause it's like, you know, you
should be you should becompensated for your name,
image, and likeness.
I get that.
Yeah.
It's gotten out of control.
It is definitely gotten out ofcontrol.
I mean, Lord have mercy.
When you've got when you've gotcollege freshmen making more
money than than people in theNFL, that is wild.
SPEAKER_14 (36:27):
They're gonna have
to find a way to either cap it
or some way get it back in placebecause it's it's out of
control.
SPEAKER_04 (36:34):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_14 (36:35):
And like you said,
it's like now guys aren't even
going to go to the draft becausethey can make way more money in
college.
SPEAKER_07 (36:40):
Which is kind of
good for college football at the
same time because you know I'vealways said, I'm like, you know,
you get a couple of these guysthat come in for their for their
senior season that were aHeisman runner-up or won the
Heisman their junior year, youget them to come back.
Man, Lord have mercy.
SPEAKER_14 (36:53):
Thinking like Carson
Beck, uh, who went to Miami, he
got paid a ton of money, andpeople thought, oh, he's gonna
be trash.
He actually played pretty goodfor Miami the first couple
games.
Yeah, his draft stock now isgonna rise again.
It's a win for the stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (37:06):
Because that's my
favorite thing, is half these
guys cannot play in the NFL.
Sure.
But so they should make goodmoney.
Yeah, I mean, and so and theyrisk getting hurt, and they I I
get all that, but the other sideof it, like, it's a little weird
as an out.
I'm not, like I said, not havinga uh pure college affiliation to
anything.
It's a little weird watchingthese guys get paid that kind of
(37:28):
money.
SPEAKER_07 (37:29):
It's crazy.
SPEAKER_13 (37:29):
It's like, okay,
this is college football.
SPEAKER_07 (37:31):
Yeah.
Well, I mean, you got you gotyou got freshmen rolling up into
you know training camp on inLamborghinis and Hellcats and
everything else.
SPEAKER_03 (37:38):
Yeah, they let that
get out of hand early.
SPEAKER_07 (37:41):
Hey, do you know why
Tennessee wears orange?
So they can they can hunt onFriday, go to the game on
Saturday, or the go to the gameon Saturday, hunt on Sunday, and
pick up garbage on the side ofthe road on Monday.
SPEAKER_15 (37:53):
Are these all new to
you?
They're they're new.
Yeah, I didn't realize this isgonna be a total bashing on the
Tennessee.
I didn't warn you planned outyou shouldn't have been late.
I wasn't late.
I wasn't late.
I was seven minutes early.
I was seven minutes early.
And Tennessee did beat Alabamalast year.
SPEAKER_07 (38:11):
I knew you were
gonna get it.
So last time we played, we didwin.
You did.
We did win.
A blind hog will find a nutevery once in a while.
And it was against Saban.
It was, and that's it.
SPEAKER_15 (38:19):
So that's beautiful
to me as a Tennessee fan because
Saban's a brilliant coach.
So it's cool for them to getthat win.
Well, you know, it's I don'tknow what'll happen this year.
SPEAKER_07 (38:26):
And to give you
y'all's flowers a little bit, is
that uh I'll tell you what'sgonna happen with you here in
just a second after I say this,but I've always said that that
college football is this comingfrom a diehard Alabama fan.
I've got a tat Alabama tattoo onthe back of my calf, and I name
my oldest son Bryant.
SPEAKER_06 (38:40):
It goes pretty deep
with our fan of the roll tie,
brother.
SPEAKER_03 (38:44):
Amen.
SPEAKER_07 (38:44):
Um But I college
football is better when the
Tennessee volunteers are good.
Period.
Yeah.
Like Tennessee, you know,Tennessee being good makes
college football better.
It does.
It really does.
It really does.
SPEAKER_03 (38:55):
But where In our
world it does, for sure.
SPEAKER_07 (38:58):
Well, y'all would
have had a good season, but Josh
Heipel screwed it up this pastweek.
SPEAKER_15 (39:02):
He did mess it up.
Now, now that said, that'sthat's a big statement.
Like the season's definitely notover.
Yes, it is.
Oh, you go seven and five now.
It's not season over.
No, it's not, it's definitelynot over.
But that was a that was a huge.
I mean, there's no way I cancover it and say, hey, they
scored a lot of points.
Oh no, you had that you had theheavyweight champ on the rope,
brother.
And and they and they let it go,and I feel I feel super bad for
(39:25):
that.
SPEAKER_13 (39:25):
We were watching the
game on the road.
Uh again, no, I mean, I don'tlove volunteers, obviously.
I mean, but it's fine, it'swhatever.
But they had him on the ropes,and then they what was the score
we were watching?
SPEAKER_14 (39:41):
It was after the
turnover, they got it.
They got whatever it was firstand 15, but they were out there
40-yard line.
They ran three times down.
They ran three times out.
SPEAKER_13 (39:50):
Trying not to lose
just to play for the field goal,
trying not to lose.
And that kid came in, I lookedat Curtis said, That's not even
the problem.
SPEAKER_07 (39:57):
That's not even the
problem.
The problem is, is you try toget the ball to the middle of
the field when the linemenjumped, right?
And you get pushed five yardsback.
Now you're gonna have to kickfrom that distance anyways.
That's right.
What are the chances of yougetting another false start
penalty right after that?
You run the same play, get theball to the middle of the field,
and give the kid, you know, it'snot gonna hurt anything.
You still got a timeout in yourplace.
And have a chance, you know?
(40:18):
And and everybody knows you hadto have not watching that game.
That that game goes to overtime,George winning that game.
SPEAKER_15 (40:24):
Yeah, as a Tennessee
fan, I I knew that.
Yeah, 100%.
I wouldn't like, hey, we stillgot overtime.
I wasn't thinking that.
Right.
No.
I just think it's they if that'sthat's it.
If we got overtime, because themomentum was totally lost,
everybody and our defense, youknow, they're they're like,
well, crap, and even when wescored a field goal, you know,
oh when you scored the fieldgoal, I said it's over.
And and the kid made the fieldgoal from the same distance he
(40:45):
missed from, you know, which isgreat.
He got the points, but you couldjust tell, you could tell the
energy on the field and thestands went flat.
You know, it it was it was flat.
It was uh that was a really,really tough one.
SPEAKER_07 (40:56):
I was pulling for
y'all.
SPEAKER_15 (40:57):
I know it was.
It was a good game.
Thank you.
It was a good game.
But it was it was a good game.
SPEAKER_13 (41:01):
There were some good
moments to the to the Sunday
slate now.
Oh actual football.
Go beat.
Um you're a Bills fan.
SPEAKER_03 (41:08):
He's gonna get
ripped for saying what he just
said.
SPEAKER_13 (41:09):
Okay, why are you?
That's fine.
You're gonna get ripped.
SPEAKER_15 (41:11):
That's fine because
all those players come from
college, they don't cut comefrom home and then they just
find out.
That's okay.
SPEAKER_13 (41:17):
We never did we
never diss the NFL.
But you diss college football.
I don't.
My favorite thing is is watchingwell, this is I I love watching
the Arch Manning nuclearfallout.
That's I I do like watching thatkind of stuff about college
football.
But you're a Bills fan.
SPEAKER_07 (41:33):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (41:34):
How did that come to
be?
SPEAKER_07 (41:36):
Well, okay, so when
when I was when back in the 90s,
right?
When when the Cowboys and theBills, the Bills were going to
Super Bowls left and right, theywent to four in a row, right?
And and I like the Bills backthen.
I love Thurman Thomas, right?
I just loved I even had a Billsclock in my room in North
Alabama, right?
And everybody else pulling forthe pulling for the cowboys.
(41:58):
Maybe it was just a littlerebellion, you know, everybody
else pulling for the cowboys andpull for the Bills.
Now I hadn't watched NFL inyears and years and years,
right?
And um my my youngest son lovesfootball.
He'll sit and watch the Alabamagames with me and everything.
And uh he fell in love with theBills, absolutely fell in love
with them.
And I was like, well, I can getbehind that, you know, and it's
(42:19):
something that me and him do do.
I even took him up to a Buffalogame for a playoff game.
It was a snow game.
He had seen snow.
SPEAKER_13 (42:26):
That's amazing.
SPEAKER_07 (42:27):
Yeah, oh, and that
the at what made me fall in love
with the Bills and while I willbe a lifelong Bills fan is that
atmosphere up there in the snowwas nothing has ever matched.
SPEAKER_13 (42:38):
Well, that whole
city is built.
It's like Green Bay.
It's like Green Bay.
It's like Green Bay.
That whole that whole lifebloodof that city runs through that
football team.
It's built into the city.
So you gotta feel good about ifI'm a Bills fan, um, you gotta
feel good about your QB and ohyeah, the way that he is like
(42:59):
what you would everything you'dwant in a quarterback.
Like he's cowboy tough and he'she is he's not he's gonna carry
that team on his back.
SPEAKER_07 (43:06):
Yep.
SPEAKER_13 (43:07):
And you got and that
that's I love watching him play
football.
And like I said, the Patriots,they're you know, they're gonna
have it down a couple years, andI don't have a dog in the fight,
really.
Certainly not gonna beat JoshAllen.
I'm actually pulling for him todo it because Matt City deserves
it.
SPEAKER_03 (43:24):
They have that look,
though.
They have that look like we'renot gonna be able to do that.
SPEAKER_13 (43:27):
And I want it and I
want it for Jim Kelly too.
I want it for all those guysthat played Thurman Thomas.
SPEAKER_07 (43:31):
Well, it's a shame
that Jim Kelly didn't get it.
I mean, uh four times in a row.
Man, that has got to be.
He's in that ESPN.
Yeah, the four falls of Buffalo.
Yeah, phenomenal documentary,very sad.
You know, and well when we werein Buffalo, you know, we got
treated so nice by everybody upthere, right?
And Buffalo Bills even reachedout to me on Instagram and said,
(43:52):
hey, uh, you know, after thegame, if you and your son would
like to come on the field andand you know, play catch or
whatever.
Now it is like it's right thereon the river.
It feels like I think the thewind chill was like maybe
negative two or something.
It was so cold, and I Blake wasalready upset because we had
lost to the Chiefs, right?
It was a playoff game before welost to the Chiefs.
And uh but before the game, wewas sitting, you know, front row
(44:16):
down there in the corner of theend zone, and he got to play
catch with Stefan Diggs whenDiggs was still there.
And that was his favoriteplayer.
I was like, dude, this is likethe greatest, you know, and
getting to see it from a from akid's perspective.
Of course, it's all about had ablast.
SPEAKER_13 (44:28):
I love that place.
Well, I hope I mean you got agood shot at it.
I think I'm pulling for him.
SPEAKER_03 (44:33):
You know, I hope
they can make it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's I think they have adifferent look.
I think they're gonna go all theway.
SPEAKER_07 (44:37):
I really if we can
get past the Chiefs.
That's that seems to have beenour Achilles heel the past two
you know postseasons.
Well, it's all gonna come to wecan beat him in the regular
season.
SPEAKER_13 (44:47):
Plus, how healthy
are the Chiefs gonna get when
they get their you know, worthycomes back and I love it when
our podcast turns into a sportscast.
Which which brings me to thecase.
SPEAKER_07 (44:59):
No, you should.
Yeah, I think it'd be great.
SPEAKER_03 (45:01):
So, what do you
think about uh women refs?
SPEAKER_07 (45:06):
I support anything
they want to do.
SPEAKER_03 (45:09):
No, I don't want you
tiptoeing around.
No, I'm not I'm not I want youto be honest Don't you BS me.
SPEAKER_07 (45:15):
No, I'm being real.
I'm being real.
Here's here's the real answer.
Are they are they the are theythe best option?
Are the are the are they themost qualified or they the best
option over all the othercompetition that they have?
If the answer is yes, have atit, girl.
You know what the answer is.
And if it's not, then no.
You know why they're there.
Right.
unknown (45:34):
Yes.
SPEAKER_07 (45:35):
Oh, I know why
they're there.
SPEAKER_15 (45:36):
This particular
question has not come up on this
podcast.
SPEAKER_03 (45:38):
No, it hasn't.
And and since we were going downthat road of the NFL, I figured
it I just thought of it.
I'm like, hmm, I don't like it.
I just want everybody to behonest.
I don't like it.
Who doesn't?
SPEAKER_07 (45:52):
I think it's hard
for a female to to referee a
game that they never played.
Never played.
That's what I'm talking about.
You know, I th I think that'sthat's hard to do.
What about WNBA?
They played and they understand,you know, that you know, it may
have been pass interference, butgiven the situation, it really
ain't.
You know what I'm saying?
Those type situations, and uhyou can't just never been there.
(46:15):
Right, I agree.
I think the I think the hardest.
SPEAKER_15 (46:18):
I think well, I
think I think uh a couple
things.
Like, like to me, there are alot of women that they've
they're raised with their dadsand their brothers, and they
know as much about football andbaseball and everything else as
any of us do.
I think it would be difficult.
SPEAKER_03 (46:33):
I don't know why.
You don't think a woman couldknow as much about she could
know, she could know, but shehas no business Go ahead.
SPEAKER_15 (46:40):
I mean, so anyway, I
mean if that's all you ever
cared about as a girl coming upand and football and stuff like
that.
But no, what I'm telling you,what I'm saying is where I think
it'd be the most difficult is isthe players respecting that
because a lot of those refs, youknow, they they are they're
they're jacked.
I mean, they're big, they're bigmen, you know, most of them, you
know, so you look like theycould be played.
(47:01):
There's some big women now, too.
But well, but I'm just saying itmight be it might be hard
because some of those peoplewere ridiculous, brother.
SPEAKER_03 (47:07):
I don't know.
SPEAKER_15 (47:07):
That'd be the
hardest thing.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (47:09):
I don't I don't like
it.
SPEAKER_15 (47:10):
But I don't know why
they couldn't.
I mean, they're not playing.
I don't know why they couldn't.
They don't need to be couldn'trest.
SPEAKER_03 (47:15):
We'll we all know
why they're out there to begin
with.
It's like let the men just letthem have our stuff.
Why can't we just enjoy themen's stuff?
I agree with Neil on this.
Just let them know.
I don't know.
Even my daughter, even myoldest, even my oldest
daughter's like, she she doesshe goes as far, and this isn't
coming from me, this is comingfrom her.
She goes as far as going, sheshe doesn't like to see women on
the sidelines.
She doesn't like women sportscasters in football at all.
SPEAKER_15 (47:38):
I don't know.
I I I like that.
SPEAKER_03 (47:39):
I don't mind that.
I'm just I'm just gonna be ableto do that.
SPEAKER_07 (47:41):
Well, let me ask you
guys to reciprocate that
question.
Do you think it wasn't me?
I didn't see that.
No, right, right.
But do you think do you thinkmen should should be umpiring
women's college softball?
Bam.
SPEAKER_06 (47:54):
Uh yes.
Come on.
They didn't have one withoutonly women should be a danger.
SPEAKER_03 (48:01):
Yes, you can.
How?
You can't explain.
I think in that situation, bothare qualified.
Both.
SPEAKER_02 (48:07):
How?
SPEAKER_03 (48:08):
In NFL, both are not
qualified.
It's just all it is is slowbaseball.
Super slow baseball.
It's just money and it's themoney that's wait for the
feedback.
Both are camoufied in insoftball.
In football, no.
(48:28):
Hey, let the let the women havetheir football.
SPEAKER_13 (48:30):
Let the women um ump
it.
Like wait honestly, let just letus have our stuff and I don't
know.
I love you, Neil, but I don'tagree.
SPEAKER_11 (48:37):
Okay, that's fine.
Whatever.
SPEAKER_13 (48:39):
Like your haircut.
Yeah, that's where he goes.
He goes just personal.
He knows I love him.
I I don't the the sidelinereporters that doesn't bother me
as much.
I don't I don't want to hear uma woman do the play-by-play on a
football game or hockey game.
SPEAKER_07 (48:55):
No, neither.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_13 (48:56):
That that annoys me.
Um I don't get that.
It can do the WMBA.
That'd be fine.
SPEAKER_03 (49:02):
I got nothing
against women.
SPEAKER_07 (49:03):
I mean, I'm gonna
come across and maybe it's you
know, well, no, I mean I I thinkany anybody should comment on an
opinion.
I don't I don't think so.
I mean I I can see where you'recoming from.
I mean, you know, the the MLBput the the female umpire behind
the plate, right?
And she blew like the first fewcalls, yeah, right?
Rung somebody up on a bad callthat was like obviously a bad
(49:25):
call, you know what I'm saying?
And it's like it's like uh do wereally have the most qualified
person out there?
I know.
If you if you can't if you can'tcall it.
SPEAKER_03 (49:32):
If you look at refs
today, especially the male refs,
they're all jacked.
You don't see any tubs out thererunning with these guys.
I mean, Tyreek Hill takes off.
You I mean, a lot of these guysare doing a pretty good job.
No, but a lot of these refs aredoing a pretty good job keeping
up.
SPEAKER_07 (49:47):
You probably
wouldn't be able to get a head
start.
SPEAKER_03 (49:48):
I know I couldn't.
SPEAKER_15 (49:50):
They get a head
start because they can tell they
can see the play development,they start they get ahead of and
makes it look, they look fast,but they're like 20 yards ahead.
SPEAKER_03 (49:56):
I never did you do
you think women refs should be.
SPEAKER_15 (50:00):
I'm alright with it.
I'm alright with uh, you know,and if they're if you have the
show like uh what about likeLaura Rutledge on SEC when you
talk about college flora?
I love Laura Rutledge.
She's educated, she's not a man,she didn't know.
Tracy Wilson's always doing agood job.
Yeah.
But so would you not like wouldyou not like her?
Would you think I didn't saythat?
SPEAKER_03 (50:16):
I didn't say that
about sports broadcasts.
SPEAKER_15 (50:18):
But you just say you
don't like you don't like MBS.
SPEAKER_03 (50:20):
I'm talking about
refs here.
Yeah.
I bet you Laura Rutledge wouldagree with me.
SPEAKER_13 (50:30):
NHL.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (50:32):
No, no, not ever
gonna happen.
I don't know much about abouthockey.
I love watching it in person,right?
I I think that hockey playersare the best athletes in the
country.
SPEAKER_13 (50:42):
Oh, it's insane.
It is crazy.
Have you ever tried to skate,brother?
SPEAKER_03 (50:45):
Yeah, that is
wonderful.
You gotta remember that on on aon a little blade.
No, those dudes are those dudes.
That's an athlete right there.
Yeah, it's crazy.
SPEAKER_07 (50:53):
Absolutely insane.
What about Alabama Crimson Tide,though?
You know, we can talk aboutthat.
SPEAKER_03 (50:58):
Well, what do you
well let's let's go to Debor.
So I know the first week.
SPEAKER_07 (51:03):
Yeah, first week,
and I made some I made some big
statements online after thegame.
I was at the game.
You know, I took my my youngestson and my dad.
It was both at their birthdayweekend.
It was my retirement weekend.
Yeah, he's gone.
It was my retirement weekend,and I, you know, I I got a uh
driving service to take us overto Tallahassee from Fort Walton.
You know, I was trying to, youknow, hey, we we go and we go
(51:26):
and beat some ass.
You know, we we go and we go andyou know straight straight belt
to ass on this one.
Nope.
I even hey dude, I feel like acomplete clown because we were
sitting there and they wastalking about, you know, pregame
how many ACC championships orhow many yeah, how many ACC
championships Florida State has,and we had some Florida State
(51:47):
fans sitting in front of us andme, I like to talk some shit,
you know.
Uh and I said, I said, we've gotmore nannies than they have ACC
championships, you know.
And and they never said a word,you know.
They, you know, and the wholegame they were just very cordial
and everything.
And and then later the game got,I say, Yeah, we're about to get
our ass beat.
Yeah.
And then it wasn't even close.
Like we we got ran out of thatstadium.
(52:09):
Yep.
You know, we left.
I'd never I've never left agame.
Literally have never left a gameearly.
I mean, they didn't show up.
Yeah, I always say, Yeah, well,with the with the quarterback
can't throw a ball anywhere butthe receiver's feet, I'm like,
I'm done.
I can't do this anymore.
Like, I'm not gonna sit here andand and be miserable for the
last quarter and have set intraffic too.
(52:31):
You know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_03 (52:32):
So you catch a lot
of flack uh for being a Bama fan
on with uh from your followers?
SPEAKER_07 (52:39):
No, because I'm just
unapologetic about it.
I'm I've always been a Bama fan,you know?
Yeah.
Uh no, I don't think so.
Really?
If I do, I don't pay attentionto it.
You know, it is what it is.
SPEAKER_15 (52:47):
I figured you would.
SPEAKER_07 (52:48):
Yeah, I mean, people
gonna have shit to say about
everything.
Let them talk, who cares?
SPEAKER_15 (52:53):
Well, so you had so
you had that bad game, right?
SPEAKER_07 (52:56):
Yeah, and then I
came out that that weekend,
somebody made a video and andwas talking about us losing,
kind of rubbing my nose in it alittle bit, and me and him went
back and forth on he's avolunteer fan.
Right.
What's his name?
Gingerbilli.
And gingerbilly don't know thisyet, and you know, I can just
throw it out to him right now.
We've done a jersey bet the pasttwo years.
Hey, let's put beards on it.
Let's put beards on it thisyear.
(53:17):
Alabama, Alabama, Tennessee.
Your beard versus my beard.
Alabama wins, you gotta shaveyour beard.
Tennessee wins, I'll shave mine.
SPEAKER_10 (53:29):
There it is.
SPEAKER_15 (53:30):
There you go.
That's a little uh yeah, that'sa little harder for him to take
because they're they're inTuscaloosa this year.
SPEAKER_07 (53:38):
Yeah, I know.
It's it sucks too.
SPEAKER_15 (53:39):
So you're already
gonna have it.
Yeah, I'm not dumb.
I hope you're already gonna havean advantage.
And like any time that Alabamaor Georgia, like any anybody
that we really need need tobeat, when they have like a crap
of a game, it's like, God, whycan't we play a team like that
on that particular day?
Yeah.
You know, because every time asa Vols fan, because we've you
know, you have you know VallsBattered Syndrome, but it's like
(54:02):
yeah, like they always playtheir best, you know, so it's
it's just hard.
So even though they lost thatgame, a true Vols fan, educated.
I mean, I read about recruitinglike every morning and stuff
like that.
I read about the players' injuryreport and all that stuff.
I used to we always to me it ithelps it helps me like on
instead of saying, hey, we'reTennessee and we're gonna win.
Well, you you you don't haveenough uh uh players.
(54:24):
Now now we are getting closer towhere we have have a lot better
players.
I love it, do love our coachingstaff, stuff like that.
Love our QB, Aguilar.
I think Josh He's gonna begreat.
I think Hippel's a good uh goodcoach and good recruiter, team
builder, stuff like that, youknow.
So but anyway, I think they're Ithink they're doing good, but I
the fact that they lost thatgame makes them more dangerous
(54:46):
as the season goes on becausethey're they're all must-wins.
Look at Telly and Kurt, they arebored out of their minds.
SPEAKER_13 (54:53):
I actually love the
atmosphere of the SEC, like I
do, like when I moved toNashville early '96, I was blown
away by the like football,college football.
Because where I grew up, it wasjust wasn't a thing.
But I do love the atmosphere.
Like watching that game theother night was fun.
Oh, and and it's a greatatmosphere up there.
You know, I just it's toughfootball to watch sometimes, but
(55:15):
that's college football.
SPEAKER_07 (55:16):
You like offensive
football, don't you?
SPEAKER_13 (55:18):
No, actually I
don't.
I mean I I like I like I likelow-scoring games.
I like just a good I just likegood football, man.
I love good defense.
I just a football.
Today, Patriots won most oftheir Super Bowls with good
defense.
It wasn't like necessarily, youknow, except the time it came
back and beat Atlanta.
Dude, that was wild.
That was crazy.
Yeah.
But at any rate, I do I doappreciate the SEC especially.
(55:41):
I what I don't like is whathappened, was it last week where
the second week of the year likeGeorgia plays Austin P.
And then I hate those Cupcamps?
I wish they would get rid ofthem.
SPEAKER_07 (55:51):
If you get rid of
the Cupcake games and go
straight into conferenceschedule from the get-go, go to
a 16-team playoff everyconference champion, and then
you have, you know, uh, youknow, I th I think you'd have
like four at large andeverything, that'd be
phenomenal.
I do like the playoff system.
SPEAKER_13 (56:06):
Better make college
football.
It makes a person like myselfwho wasn't really that into
college football.
I get into it with the playoffsystem now, but it's it's the
throwaway games.
SPEAKER_07 (56:14):
If you're not
affiliated with a school, it's
like it's hard to really butit's also there's also a uh
aspect to that too that it'sgood for these smaller colleges
because those smaller collegesget paid a lot of money right
now.
SPEAKER_03 (56:27):
And then every now
and then they will win Louisiana
and get a million bucks.
Hey, y'all better watch out forVanderbilt.
Huh.
I'm not sure.
They had a big road win.
They just beat South Carolinalike a dog at South Carolina.
In Columbia.
They beat them 31.
Wasn't it 31 to 7?
Yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (56:47):
That should be a
baseball school.
SPEAKER_03 (56:49):
South Carolina was
ranked 11.
SPEAKER_07 (56:50):
Well, it's South
Carolina.
SPEAKER_15 (56:52):
I love it.
Well, they're playing they wereplaying beamer ball and didn't
work.
SPEAKER_03 (56:56):
I'm just saying.
Watch out for Vanderbilt.
Nashville is gonna come alive.
It's gonna turn into a collegefootball town.
But to go back and done.
SPEAKER_07 (57:03):
To go back to your
question, Debor.
About women refs?
No, Deborah.
We're past that.
Uh we ain't going back to that.
SPEAKER_15 (57:11):
No, we don't need
to.
SPEAKER_07 (57:12):
No, Deboer, I don't
I don't think Debore's the guy.
Don't think he's been the guy.
When you lose to Oklahoma lastyear, you lose to Vanderbilt,
you lose the first game, youlose the first game of the
season for the first time inwhat, 21 years?
Yeah.
SPEAKER_04 (57:25):
Brother.
I know.
We we I don't think he's theguy.
He might be the guy.
SPEAKER_07 (57:31):
We may be eating
Crow.
You know, if he if if he turnsit around and winds up winning
an SEC championship this yearand falls into a natty, yeah,
I'll I'll gladly eat Crow, but Idon't think he's the guy.
SPEAKER_03 (57:41):
Yeah, but you won't,
it's not like eating Crow.
It's it's everything,everybody's opinions about him
and the way the team wasprepared on that first week.
SPEAKER_07 (57:50):
They weren't even
hustling.
SPEAKER_03 (57:51):
That was legit.
SPEAKER_07 (57:52):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (57:52):
I mean, we we
everybody had a legitimate
argument.
Your team should not be You hadnine months to get ready for
that.
SPEAKER_07 (57:59):
What did y'all do
the night before?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
What were they doing the nightbefore?
Not sleeping?
Yeah, apparently.
Yeah.
What were they doing the weekbefore?
Not preparing.
SPEAKER_14 (58:23):
Hey, let's get back
to you as like a a content
creator, because that's kind offascinates me.
We're musicians, we'resongwriters, we're producers,
our whole songwriters.
Yeah, I know.
Our whole life is inundated withmusic.
It's like 24-7.
Music.
You have to do that for you.
It's like that's what you'redoing all the time is being
(58:44):
creative, trying to be a contentcreator.
In your off time, do you everjust scroll and look?
SPEAKER_07 (58:51):
No, man.
Well, no.
SPEAKER_03 (58:53):
That's so selfish.
SPEAKER_07 (58:54):
No.
I don't.
I don't have time for itanymore.
You know, uh, my screen time, Iwas I was talking to somebody
the other day and they said,Man, what's your screen time
look like?
I was like, dog, you don't evenwant to know.
It's embarrassing.
My screen, he's like, he's like,now tell me.
16 and a half hours.
Oh, god.
But I stay, I stay cooking.
Like it is a full-time job, man.
SPEAKER_14 (59:13):
Well, see, that's
the thing, it's a full-time job,
and it's not being creativeisn't like, oh, well, I'm in
wait till I'm inspired to go dosomething.
Right.
You gotta be doing it all thetime.
SPEAKER_07 (59:22):
Yeah, you just stay
inspired, man.
If you don't, you better fakeit.
SPEAKER_14 (59:25):
Yeah.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (59:26):
Right.
SPEAKER_14 (59:26):
That's like writing
a song.
It's not like, oh, we'reinspired with the thing.
Let's go write.
Yeah.
No, you show up and then it'sjust like bodybuilders.
SPEAKER_07 (59:32):
You think
bodybuilders want to go in the
gym every day?
Hell no.
They have off days, they stillgo.
Yeah, yeah, I do still go.
SPEAKER_14 (59:38):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (59:39):
You are well,
brother.
SPEAKER_06 (59:42):
He needs some TRT.
SPEAKER_15 (59:45):
Amen.
But I would say a difference isbetween songwriting and and what
you do is that is that we canget halfway through a song and
say, uh, it's three o'clock.
We got another day in a coupleweeks.
Let's just break and do that.
But you have to put somethingout.
Like every Yeah, well I don'thave to.
SPEAKER_07 (01:00:02):
We don't have to
finish it.
I don't have to, but I've alwaysput it upon myself that I have
to I you know in my mind I haveto put out at least three videos
a day.
SPEAKER_04 (01:00:11):
A day.
Three a day.
SPEAKER_07 (01:00:12):
You know, and and it
just you know the way my mind
works is I don't work good byscheduling ahead.
So and I I have for the pastfive years, I have uploaded at
least two, at least two, most ofthe time three and four,
sometimes five, every day forthe past five years.
Haven't taken a day off.
SPEAKER_14 (01:00:28):
You don't get
Christmas off.
SPEAKER_07 (01:00:30):
I don't take a day
off.
SPEAKER_14 (01:00:31):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (01:00:31):
No.
If I know that I've if I knowI'm gonna be locked up doing
something all day or whatever, Iwill I will record a head and
you know put it in the can toautomatically post or whatever,
but that's very rare.
SPEAKER_03 (01:00:43):
That's amazing, man.
That takes a lot of disciplineto do that.
SPEAKER_07 (01:00:47):
Yeah.
It really does.
Well, I mean, today, like whenwe leave here, I'll be in my
AirPods with her driving andI'll be sitting there scrolling
her editing, doing whatever Igotta do.
SPEAKER_03 (01:00:57):
Never ends.
SPEAKER_07 (01:00:58):
No.
Well, I mean, we just and todaywe just recorded four podcast
episodes.
Tomorrow we're gonna recordfour, and the day after that
we're gonna record four.
Right.
So it's just like a never-endingyou still look amazing.
Thanks.
I appreciate that.
SPEAKER_03 (01:01:13):
I'm tired.
SPEAKER_15 (01:01:15):
Well, at at your
level of success now, do you do
you look at other people doingthe same thing you're doing and
kind of evaluate them or judgethem or put them down like Tully
does?
No.
Shout out to Chris Cagle.
SPEAKER_07 (01:01:31):
There's evidence.
No, no, I don't.
You know, everybody's got their,you know, a lot of people, a lot
of people have got to where theyask me my opinion on things,
right, and and how they shoulddo things.
And I, you know, most of thetime I tell them, hell if I
know, I'm still figuring it outmyself.
But I'll tell you what I thinkhas worked for me, you know, uh
(01:01:52):
being being consistent, alwaysshowing up is is huge.
And then uh just just beingunapologetically yourself is
like the biggest thing, youknow.
Uh consistency and beingyourself.
SPEAKER_03 (01:02:05):
Then I gotta ask
you, did you uh when try that in
a small town came out, did youpost about it?
SPEAKER_07 (01:02:10):
Yeah, I think I put
out a video.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because everybody everybody hadcome out and we had known each
other for what about a year,year and a half at that point,
you know.
And people, you know, peoplewere like, oh, it's racist dog
whistles, and you know, uh, youknow, it that's such a racist
song.
And I, you know, I said, no.
I said uh the I know one of thewriters of the song very well, a
good friend of mine, NeilThrasher.
(01:02:31):
I was like, there ain't a racistbone in his body that I have
seen, you know, and I've I'vebeen around Neil enough to know
that if, you know, we've we'vebeen in spaces before that if
somebody was going to drop theword, you know, it would have
been dropped there.
You know, it was, you know,closed doors, no videos rolling.
So I I know the man's character.
No, that's not what that song isabout.
It's just about, you know, we'rewe're we're tired of the we're
(01:02:53):
tired of the BS.
SPEAKER_14 (01:02:54):
You know, did you
get hate for saying that?
I don't know.
SPEAKER_07 (01:02:57):
Maybe I did.
I don't look at it.
I am whatever.
No matter, like I said earlier,no matter what you say, people
are gonna be mad and people aregonna come at you.
Who cares?
Yeah, you know, it don't matterwhat you do, you know.
And and the fact is, here's thething with with where we're at
in society, is that if somebodyhas already made their mind up
that Neil Thrasher's a racistfor writing that song, you're a
racist.
(01:03:18):
You know what I'm saying?
Like, what are you gonna do tochange their mind?
SPEAKER_04 (01:03:20):
That's right.
SPEAKER_07 (01:03:20):
You know, it's like
why are we all arguing with each
other?
It ain't gonna do no good.
Ain't nobody changing theirminds about shit.
Yeah, right.
You know, that's kind of justwhere I'm at.
That's right.
So I'm like live and let live,man, whatever.
SPEAKER_15 (01:03:30):
Jim, that'll be a
great clip where uh he says that
Neil Thrasher is a racist.
I think that'll be idea.
I'm not trying to, and I'm nottrying to do your job, but I
just heard that Hey, so I and Iasked this out of ignorance.
Uh is there award shows yet oranything like that for for you
(01:03:51):
guys for you know the mostamount of views and uh followers
and all that stuff in theshortest amount of time.
I mean there's like there wouldbe at some at some point
somebody.
That would be so much more legitthan the American Music Awards
or any numb nut a week shows.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (01:04:06):
I probably wouldn't
show up.
You don't you wouldn't hewouldn't.
Really?
I can show you.
I wouldn't show up.
Oh wow.
SPEAKER_07 (01:04:11):
I I'm I'd stay at
home and keep grinding.
SPEAKER_15 (01:04:13):
Okay.
SPEAKER_07 (01:04:14):
You know, there's
there are some award shows, and
I've you know, I have attendedone back in the day.
There's one that some creatorsdo or whatever.
And uh, you know, I went I wentto one and won the comedy, you
know, portion of it, never wentto another one.
Um so I that's the only awardshow that I've ever went to that
I have been nominated foranything.
Uh, you know, if uh you knowPeople's Choices invited me the
(01:04:35):
past two years up for for theiraward shows up here in
Nashville, and I don't know ifthey've reached out this year or
not, but even if they do, I'mprobably not gonna go, you know,
just because uh I don't know.
What good does it do?
You know what I'm saying?
I mean I can sit and watch thatat home.
Uh that's kind of about how uhthat's when you know you're
getting older, right?
Where you're like, yeah, I cansit at home and watch this.
SPEAKER_15 (01:04:54):
Well, but then for
your fans though, that that
would be cool if they saw you.
Like if you're if you could beat that award show, you know,
your fans would like to see youthere, probably.
You know, I'm just gonna go tothe next one.
Yeah, no, no.
SPEAKER_07 (01:05:05):
Well, you know, uh
keeping it.
What was it?
The uh what what was the onethat uh Bailey Zimmerman had me
come to last year?
It was at the uh one of the bigcountry awards.
Yeah, so was it the ACM Awards?
SPEAKER_15 (01:05:18):
No, she said Big
Country.
SPEAKER_07 (01:05:20):
I think it was the
ACM Awards.
He invited me to come out and beon stage with him, which was
actually pretty cool because myuh cousin, Dustin Nunley, is uh
Luke Combs guitarist, right?
Oh yeah, so you've got DustinNunley and Justin Nunley, and I
thought it was really cool thatthat two Nunleys, you know, from
a little small hick town inNorth Mississippi and North
(01:05:41):
Alabama were all on the sameaward show stage on the same
night.
Not at the same time, but thesame night.
So that was pretty cool.
That was really cool.
SPEAKER_14 (01:05:48):
You know, on the
other side of the People's
Choice Awards, it's like yourdemographic, I probably isn't
watching the People's Choiceawards.
SPEAKER_07 (01:05:57):
My demographic's
probably laying in bed scrolling
on my phone, you know what I'msaying?
Well, and you know, TV, TVlegacy media, you know, TV and
and I would say radio uh isdead.
You know, who's who's watchingwho's most of the time people
are scrolling on their phones.
And the only time you really arewatching TV, you know, most
(01:06:18):
people is watching a sportingevent.
You know, and as soon as as soonas commercials come on, what's
everybody doing?
I even noticed it this past yearduring the Super Bowl.
I looked around.
Most a lot of people used tojust watch Super Bowl for the
commercials.
I looked around and I I lookedand everybody had their phone
out and was scrolling during thegame, you know, during the
commercial break.
(01:06:38):
And I was like, and all of thesepeople paid that much money.
Right.
You could have paid, you couldhave paid a fraction of the cost
to me, and I'd have threw avideo out for you.
You know, people would havecaught it during the halftime
show.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
So that's that's I think I thinkuh and and a lot of these big
execs are trying to figure itout.
You know what I'm saying?
(01:06:59):
Um but yeah, I think I thinklike radio spots, you know, is
dying off.
And that's not how people youcan you can be your own
advertising agency now.
You know, that's what I told Guswhen you know I went to work
with him at Harley Davidson.
He's like, So what are you gonnado?
And I said, I'm gonna turn youinto your own advertising.
I was like, he's like, well, wealready do this, this, and this.
(01:07:19):
And I said, You ain't gonna needit.
You know, give me six months,you'll be fine.
You know, and and he's prettymuch cut every bit of it out.
He's like, you were exactlyright.
You know, the rest of the restof the motorcycle industry is
kind of down right now, and andwe're doing five, you know what
I'm saying?
SPEAKER_03 (01:07:35):
You got red fin?
SPEAKER_07 (01:07:36):
Red fin.
I've got red fin, Waze, umRedfin's of uh sunglasses, yeah.
Polarized, red fin polarized.
Uh and uh big ghost tractor andequipment.
Uh Harley.
Is there anything I'm missing?
Waze energy drinks.
SPEAKER_03 (01:07:55):
I figured you'd be
like involved with the hat that
I have on.
SPEAKER_07 (01:07:59):
What is that?
SPEAKER_15 (01:08:01):
Apparently not.
SPEAKER_07 (01:08:03):
I was wondering
about that.
It's a decent logo.
SPEAKER_03 (01:08:05):
So you've never seen
the logo in your life.
SPEAKER_07 (01:08:07):
I don't know what
that is.
Birdie.
SPEAKER_15 (01:08:09):
It looks good.
SPEAKER_03 (01:08:09):
What's Birdie?
You never heard of Birdie?
What's Birdie?
Really?
I thought Jared was like one ofyour best friends in the whole
world.
SPEAKER_07 (01:08:17):
Oh, Jared, Redfin
Jared.
SPEAKER_03 (01:08:18):
Jared White, yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (01:08:19):
Oh yeah, he's
involved with another sunglass
company.
That's interesting.
SPEAKER_13 (01:08:24):
Breaking news here
on uh we're gonna go to break.
SPEAKER_03 (01:08:27):
I just knew I was
gonna break.
I just knew when I wore thishat.
unknown (01:08:32):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (01:08:32):
Yeah, we gotta get
you in some redfin shit.
Oh my lord.
Are you are you part of that?
SPEAKER_03 (01:08:36):
No.
SPEAKER_07 (01:08:37):
Oh, what are you
wearing then for?
SPEAKER_03 (01:08:39):
But but the birdie
glasses actually help me make
more putts, and it's true.
Oh, really?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, they do.
And redfin helps you catch morefish.
SPEAKER_07 (01:08:46):
Yeah, redfin, redfin
will actually get those
testosterone numbers up, really.
SPEAKER_04 (01:08:55):
Are you fixing to
keep me out?
Oh yeah.
Okay, yeah.
SPEAKER_14 (01:09:00):
You uh are a hitting
coach or were a hitting coach.
What?
Yeah, yeah.
So did you play or how did thatwhole thing start or happen?
SPEAKER_07 (01:09:07):
Yeah, I mean, I I
played all through all through
school and everything.
I never I never did anythingpast high school or anything,
but um I'm a student of thegame.
I love baseball.
I'm a student of the game ofbaseball.
I understand on the molecularlevel of hitting.
I love hitting.
Ooh, I like this conversation.
I love it.
And and you know, I'm I'm I'mgood with teaching kids how to
do it, you know, uh softball andbaseball.
SPEAKER_13 (01:09:30):
Yeah.
So what's your favorite uh MLBhitter of all time?
SPEAKER_07 (01:09:34):
Oh, of all time.
It's different.
Okay, so it's uh that's a trickquestion because who's my
favorite hitter?
What is my favorite swing of alltime?
SPEAKER_13 (01:09:43):
Maybe favorite
wasn't the real Ted Williams.
That's what I was gonna say.
Ted Williams.
SPEAKER_07 (01:09:46):
Tony Gwynn.
Tony Gwynn was a better hitterthan Ted Williams.
He was, right.
You'd have to some of his statsare wild.
Some of his stats are wild.
SPEAKER_13 (01:09:54):
They are.
SPEAKER_07 (01:09:55):
No, I'm not taking
anything away from Ted Wynn was
a great hitter.
SPEAKER_13 (01:09:57):
I will I will say,
because I I love the art of
hitting.
I love Ted Williams, Gwynn, WadeBoggs, some I love watching
those guys hit Paul Moller,those guys, old school guys,
hitters, slap hitters, Peter.
SPEAKER_06 (01:10:08):
Paul Molliter
wearing his wearing his baton
helmet over there on first days,man.
It's like that dude with thedugout and forgot to put his hat
back on all the time.
SPEAKER_13 (01:10:15):
But all but I do
love that that is a that the art
of hitting and the and the andthat that is My favorite current
player is Mike Trout.
SPEAKER_07 (01:10:24):
I think he's gonna
go down as probably the greatest
to ever play the game if hestays healthy.
Because if you look at hissabermetrics and and his war,
like it is wild, wins abovereplacement.
I think he's gonna wind up goingdown as the greatest player to
ever play the game and probablynever win a uh World Series
because being with Angels,right?
Uh greatest swing of all time,Ken Griffey Jr.
Period.
(01:10:44):
That dude got on plane, stayedon plane, and it was gorgeous.
I mean, it it was just poetryemotion.
SPEAKER_14 (01:10:50):
Okay, so nobody's
gonna be interested in this but
me.
How they're teaching the kidsnow, it's all about launch
angle.
SPEAKER_07 (01:10:56):
I don't I never talk
to kids about launch angle.
I talk about getting on planeearly and staying on plane.
You know, you wanna you wannayou wanna get on plane early,
stay on plane, you know, as faras you can out that way, right?
Without casting your hands oranything like that.
If you can stay on plane for aslong as possible, you're gonna
have success as a hitter, right?
SPEAKER_14 (01:11:15):
The launch angle,
man, I hate it, but I hate it
because it's like basketball,it's three pointers or layups,
baseball is now home runs orstrikeouts.
SPEAKER_07 (01:11:23):
Some kids, some kids
you can teach like that.
Some kids will understand that,right?
Um that you start talking aboutlaunch angle, you explain to
them what launch angle is, andthey will understand.
They're like, oh most kids willnot, right?
So you have to teach them thecorrect way to do it.
You know, get on plane early,stay on plane late, you know.
You know, you still do this, bythe way?
(01:11:44):
Uh not so much anymore.
I don't got time, man.
When I first blew up online, Iyou know, I I had I was part
owner of a baseball and softballtraining facility, and uh and
now when I blew up online, I waslike, I don't have time for this
anymore.
And uh there was a lot of upsetpeople, you know.
I think what about your kids?
SPEAKER_14 (01:12:03):
Uh any coaching or
anything with the app?
SPEAKER_07 (01:12:05):
Yeah, I coach, I
coach little league baseball
every year, but you know, I youknow, uh anything other than
that, and I probably won't, youknow, maybe one day when I'm a
little bit older, you know, I'lltry to go coach high school or
something, but not right now, Iain't got time for it.
And I don't want to do somethingand half-ass it.
You know, I'm not I'm not ahalf-assing kind of guy, right?
If we if we're gonna do it,we're gonna do it.
And if if if I'm just gonnahalfway do it, I'm just not
(01:12:28):
gonna bother.
SPEAKER_03 (01:12:29):
So well, you're a
lot more intelligent than I
thought you were.
SPEAKER_07 (01:12:33):
I appreciate it.
SPEAKER_03 (01:12:33):
Is this the longest
we've sat and talked?
It's the longest.
SPEAKER_07 (01:12:36):
Well, you can't say
that because that's the same.
SPEAKER_03 (01:12:37):
Well, you never sit
still when we're ever together.
You're right, you're right.
You're filming something.
Running here, running there,telling them we're stand right
there.
You stand.
Yeah.
Your knowledge of uh I'velearned a lot about Nunly
tonight.
SPEAKER_07 (01:12:48):
Well, I appreciate
that.
SPEAKER_03 (01:12:49):
And and I don't
respect you any more than I did.
But you are hopefully that's agood thing, right?
SPEAKER_15 (01:12:55):
Uh all the facts
that you have after when you're
when you're turning it and yousay, Oh now you know, is is
every is all of that accurate.
SPEAKER_07 (01:13:05):
I try to fact-check
everything.
Yeah, now there's sometimes thatI will I will leave little key
bits of information out, right?
And I do that for a reason.
I've always done it for areason.
I will give you just enough of aof a of a fact to where it will
make you fly.
Why why is that that way?
Go do your own research.
I I think I think you know, withwith the way things are today,
(01:13:28):
it is important to go do yourown research on things and not
just listen to some idiot on theinternet tell you.
Right?
Because something may be takencompletely out of context or
something may be completelyfalse and made up, something may
be AI generated.
Go do your own research.
You know, don't just believeeverything you hear, but you
know, sometimes I will, youknow, I'll I I won't screw the
fact up, and I have screwed acouple facts up.
(01:13:48):
But sometimes I'll leave littlekey pieces of information out to
where it doesn't fully explainwhy that's a fact.
You know, it's like, you know,listen, did you know that you
know 70% of all trees fallen bybeavers will fall towards the
water?
You know, and why?
Who the hell knows that?
Who's keeping track of that?
SPEAKER_15 (01:14:06):
You know, and then
like uh you said that the the
army has more boats than thenavy.
SPEAKER_07 (01:14:10):
Yeah, which is wild,
and not more ships.
SPEAKER_15 (01:14:12):
Hold on, yeah, not
ships.
And the reason I asked thequestion is everything true is
because I thought, well, heck,I'm just gonna come here and
listen to you and get smarter.
Because you had a lot of a lotof random things that were like
Cliff Claven.
Yeah.
Right, exactly.
Exactly.
Yeah, cheers.
Cheers.
You don't need the postman.
Oh, really?
Cheers?
He's the postman.
Postman, I'll cheers.
Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_07 (01:14:30):
Cliff Claven, he's
yeah, he's always like a little
known fact.
My parents would watch thatshow.
I was like, this is such astupid show, and as I've gotten
older, yeah.
You know, I will catch myself,you know, if if it's on, you
know, TV land or something, I'dbe like, hey, it looks like a
pretty interesting show.
MASH, I love MASH.
I hated it when I was young.
I love MASH.
SPEAKER_03 (01:14:48):
They don't make TV
like that no more.
SPEAKER_07 (01:14:50):
No, Duke's a hazard,
man.
Hey, I thought I was a Duke boy.
I I own a General Lee now.
That's when you know you made itas White Trash.
SPEAKER_03 (01:14:58):
You buy yourself a
General Lee, you made it.
And your podcast is called What?
SPEAKER_07 (01:15:02):
White Trash with
Money.
SPEAKER_03 (01:15:04):
So I'm I'm coming on
there soon.
Yeah, you're coming on the show.
Can we change the name briefly?
White thrash with money.
SPEAKER_07 (01:15:12):
We can because it
works out of the yeah.
I will introduce it as whitethrash with money.
Yes, yeah.
There you go.
That's my episode.
I like it.
That's actually a pretty goodidea.
I like it.
We'll change it for one episode.
Okay.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_15 (01:15:23):
I like the way you
said actually, that's actually a
good idea, as he wasn'texpecting a good idea.
SPEAKER_07 (01:15:29):
He wasn't.
It's actually it really is adope idea.
I like it.
That's funny.
Well thrash with money.
Hey, I'll do anything as long asyou push it out and get it to as
many people as you can.
Hey, I'll make it.
That's your job.
SPEAKER_03 (01:15:40):
No, well, you're
supposed to make us rich.
We're not we're not helping you.
You're helping us.
SPEAKER_07 (01:15:44):
I'm already rich.
Well, I'm still trying to climb.
You know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_03 (01:15:48):
Let's help each
other.
SPEAKER_07 (01:15:49):
We can help each
other.
Can we do that?
We'll hold hands to skiptogether.
All right.
Yeah, yeah, we can do that.
SPEAKER_10 (01:15:54):
Take us out, Kurt.
SPEAKER_15 (01:15:56):
Hey, first, could I
get you to do uh just a little
piece of and the reason I saythis is because I've got it, got
a little uh little baby, 19month old, me and my wife
Rachel, and every morning on theway to daycare and listening to
all these songs.
So people say, Hey, what are youlistening to lately?
Well, Sam listening to JesusLoves Me and you know and a
little shark song and thingslike that.
And I was looking you up today,and that they had that story
(01:16:16):
about the about the cocaine inthe water and everything, and
the sharks were were oh yeah,and you did the little can you
do that little cocaine cocaineshark did do to do to do,
cocaine shark did do to do todo, cocaine shark did do to do,
cocaine shark.
unknown (01:16:32):
Really?
SPEAKER_15 (01:16:32):
But it's a kid's
yeah, it's a it's uh but but
usually it'll say you know.
You're teaching your kid thatno, but it comes no but it comes
off of the song.
But it comes off the song andsay baby, baby shark doo do do,
and then it'll go mama shark ddo it'll go like that.
SPEAKER_07 (01:16:48):
But it was a news
story that that some cocaine had
fallen off the cartel's boatsand sharks were eating it.
Can you imagine sharks hopped upon cocaine?
SPEAKER_03 (01:16:57):
Oh my god, imagine a
great white on cocaine, bro,
right?
Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_14 (01:17:01):
I mean, it's like uh
the cocaine bear movie, right?
Yeah, cocaine bear.
That was a classic movie musthave seen it.
It was pretty good at sharks.
It was pretty good.
SPEAKER_06 (01:17:11):
Yeah, it's actually
a good movie.
Cocaine Bear, check it out.
It's pretty good.
Check it out.
SPEAKER_14 (01:17:15):
He was mad.
I love them.
Oh my god.
Dude, we know you're busy.
Dude, what, four or fivepodcasts a day, content all the
time.
He took the time with the mostreally appreciate.
Absolutely.
Thank you all.
SPEAKER_07 (01:17:30):
I'm glad our paths
crossed.
I mean too, man.
I appreciate having you as afriend.
I talk about you quite often.
I'm like, you know, NeilThrasher, and people just
automatically know we know eachother's what's wild.
What?
You know, yeah.
I don't know.
People would be payingattention, man.
They're like, you know that oldracist guy, Neil Thrasher?
unknown (01:17:47):
Oh yeah, I know.
SPEAKER_03 (01:17:48):
Oh yeah, no, yeah.
Oh yeah, you're a thrash.
SPEAKER_07 (01:17:50):
I told him, try that
in a small town.
You know, I've got a I've got abuddy that he he he always just
texts random, you know, sayingsand stuff, right?
And I've always thought it wasfunny that he would just just
out of the blue, he'd be like,try that in a small town.
You know?
It's funny.
SPEAKER_15 (01:18:07):
That's good.
I love it.
We love him.
And thanks for bringing yourbuddy together.
Thanks for having me in.
Yeah, yeah.
Y'all need to have him on stage.
Yeah, this dude right here.
Uh both of you.
So we checked him out.
Glad to beat both of you andthanks for coming.
SPEAKER_07 (01:18:19):
In case you didn't
already know, Nick Dylan Weldon
sitting here next to me, the theman in the pearl snaps.
SPEAKER_15 (01:18:25):
Oh, yeah.
He reps those nicely.
Yeah, he's got one undone.
SPEAKER_07 (01:18:29):
I mean, he's got oh
Lord.
You got a wide beater under themate pregnant.
SPEAKER_06 (01:18:34):
Neil's daughter's
here, man.
She's she's married, she'smarried.
Yeah.
That ain't never stopped dealingwelding before.
Thank you, Justin.
SPEAKER_13 (01:18:51):
Appreciate you,
brother.
Thanks for making it.
That's not I'm I I'm really sadthat I really thought that.
I'm like, well, that is so cool,then they adopted a special
needs Chinese.
SPEAKER_14 (01:19:01):
By the way, we're
on, so maybe you should tell
people what what's going on.
SPEAKER_03 (01:19:05):
Yeah.
I didn't prep.
I'm sorry.
It's my fault.
It's on me.
Yeah, it's on you.
Go ahead and tell no one.
SPEAKER_13 (01:19:11):
Well, I don't know
who who he was bringing, and so
the whole episode, I'm lookingat the couch, and there's like a
a really nice woman and aChinese boy.
SPEAKER_03 (01:19:23):
You thought Carissa
was his wife and his wife.
SPEAKER_13 (01:19:25):
Yeah, I thought I
thought.
Which is uh that's not me on aspecial.
That's legit.
Yeah, that's not no prep.
I thought that was his wife, andthe whole time I'm thinking, and
he's so entertaining and funny,I'm laughing, but I'm looking at
the couch and thinking, wow,that is so awesome that they
adopted a little Chinese boy.
I'm like, that is amazing.
And he's taking pictures.
(01:19:45):
He's got braces on.
I'm thinking.
I'm like, this is so they'vetaken him under their wing, and
this is amazing.
Like, what a great guy.
And I realized after theepisode, he's like, he's like
his editor.
Maybe it's famous, maybe it'sboth.
Maybe I'm thinking they adoptedthis went over and got a Chinese
(01:20:06):
boy, and I'm like, wow, this isreally bigger than, you know,
this is tough.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_15 (01:20:10):
Oh, yeller.
Yeah, I didn't that that didn'tcross my mind.
I'm so sorry.
I think his name was Andy.
I don't get to the He has aname, Tully.
SPEAKER_13 (01:20:21):
Anyway, Chinese boy.
Numley, I'm sorry if if I looklike a deer in the headlights
for most of them.
I was just really impressed thatyou guys adopted a young Chinese
boy, which is not that um rare.
SPEAKER_14 (01:20:33):
Well, and it's smart
because then you can have him do
your editing as well.
True.
Yeah.
True.
Family business.
SPEAKER_13 (01:20:40):
That is a legit
great idea.
Thank you, Kurt.
Always thinking.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (01:20:44):
Nelly's gonna pee
his pants when he hears.
SPEAKER_13 (01:20:46):
Well, yeah, he's
gonna hate me forever, but No,
he's not.
I was like, wow, what great.
No.
What great people they are.
Yeah.
Oh my god.
Am I the only one that thoughtthat?
SPEAKER_15 (01:20:59):
I didn't think.
Well, I already knew that theywere.
What did you think?
I thought he worked for him.
I didn't please.
I didn't I have no reason tobelieve anything else.
Of course, of course you didn't.
SPEAKER_03 (01:21:10):
Ian Carissa flew
over to South Korea and adopted
him.
Oh my gosh.
That's what I thought.
SPEAKER_15 (01:21:16):
Yeah, but he thought
he was a Chinese boy.
SPEAKER_03 (01:21:19):
Same thing, right?
SPEAKER_15 (01:21:20):
Oh boy.
Okay, yeah, we get him.
That's not gonna fly.
SPEAKER_12 (01:21:28):
That's fun.
That's less fun.
SPEAKER_15 (01:21:31):
Why is making your
podcast grow so hard?
What are we doing?
SPEAKER_14 (01:21:38):
We're checking all
the boxes.
We're getting unfollowed by theminute.
No.
Yeah, we may lose some of that.
SPEAKER_03 (01:21:44):
They're gonna love
us.
SPEAKER_14 (01:21:45):
Back to you, Kurt.
Our sponsors love us, though,don't they?
They do, and we love them.
Yeah, we love Patriot Mobile.
They used to love us.
Hey, throw me one of those hats,Jim.
Because Patriot Mobile.
We love our people at PatriotMobile.
Oh my gosh.
We got some ball and hats here.
Oh, those are nice.
Um Patriot Mobile to some goodpeople.
It's great service as well.
Look at that.
(01:22:07):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (01:22:08):
I I see a lot of
birdies in that hat.
SPEAKER_14 (01:22:10):
ESpaces we love, but
there's one little thing, Neil.
What are you talking about, C?
I don't know.
I'm right.
Armpit showing sweat marks.
No?
We need some air conditioning.
Sorry.
No, we will.
We'll get it.
SPEAKER_13 (01:22:24):
I think we I think
we have AC.
It's just not making it to theroom.
It's cool in the hallway.
Man, what a plug for thesethings.
We love that.
I mean, it's an amazing spot,though.
Yeah.
You can cut that, Jim.
Yeah, you can cut that rightout.
Original glory.
SPEAKER_14 (01:22:40):
Of course we love
original glory.
Nothing.
SPEAKER_13 (01:22:44):
Nothing better than
a nice flat beer and a hot
podcast day.
We might just start over.
SPEAKER_14 (01:22:52):
Well, Jim, you're
gonna have to cut everything.
You might even cut the Asian kidout.
No, I'll cut the Asian kid.
SPEAKER_13 (01:23:00):
That wasn't even my
fucking true thought.
I if my true thought was he'sretarded.
SPEAKER_14 (01:23:06):
Okay, let's finish
this, but oh my god.
SPEAKER_15 (01:23:07):
Yeah, let's open
there.
SPEAKER_14 (01:23:09):
We definitely gotta
thank eSpaces.
We gotta thank Original Glory.
SPEAKER_03 (01:23:12):
eSpaces.com.
SPEAKER_14 (01:23:14):
Oh yeah, eSpaces.
SPEAKER_03 (01:23:17):
Everybody always
remarks on that.
They do.
They're like, I like it.
It's a great voice.
Well, it's my broadcast voice.
It's pretty, it's pretty, it'sout there.
It's good.
Oh, it's out there.
SPEAKER_15 (01:23:25):
I need to work on
it.
Catches the attention, you know.
SPEAKER_14 (01:23:29):
Uh if you're by the
way, Ed comments a lot.
We love Ed.
Nobody else really comments.
We need some comments onYouTube.
Step up, let us know what youthink, even if you didn't like
it.
Or Ed, start recruiting better.
SPEAKER_10 (01:23:40):
No.
SPEAKER_03 (01:23:40):
I want to hear that.
I want to hear more hate.
I want to see more hate mail.
SPEAKER_14 (01:23:44):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (01:23:44):
Well, we'll probably
get it this episode.
I want to see a lot more hatemail.
SPEAKER_14 (01:23:47):
Uh, but seriously,
leave us a review, leave us some
comments, download the episode,do all the things.
What am I missing?
SPEAKER_10 (01:23:55):
I don't know.
It sounds pretty good.
Patriot Mobile, Eastern.
SPEAKER_03 (01:23:59):
Original Glory.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_14 (01:24:00):
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03 (01:24:02):
I mean, you covered
it, Checks Mix, and just
thanking Justin.
SPEAKER_15 (01:24:07):
Um, it was amazing.
That did really funny what he'sgone.
Yeah, hard work.
With his career and retirementmilitary.
SPEAKER_13 (01:24:15):
And you don't
realize, like, doing that stuff
like the four or five posts aday and the podcast, like, it's
mentally, it is.
I'm exhausted doing this one.
It's exhausting.
Oh man.
Yeah.
To have to do it and then youhave your little boy edit it.
It's tough.
SPEAKER_03 (01:24:31):
That's not that's
that's not hey, that's not his
kid.
Did you really think?
SPEAKER_13 (01:24:36):
I don't think I
swear to God.
You thought that was I'm sosorry, and I'm surprised I'm the
only one.
I know that you didn't know, butI'm surprised that the other two
friends.
Jim, what did you don't drag Jiminto this?
SPEAKER_03 (01:24:48):
I thought he worked
for it.
No.
No, he didn't.
There's no way.
I want to I want to let Nellyknow that Tully actually
believed that Carissa was yourwife and y'all adopted an Asian
boy with braces.
And I'm sorry.
SPEAKER_15 (01:25:05):
He honestly thought
that I think the braces came
after the adoption.
SPEAKER_13 (01:25:09):
Yeah.
But I will say I honestly, Ihonestly, I honestly thought
that was the situation, and Iwas so surprised when he
mentioned that he was theeditor.
I was like, well, I missed that.
Anyway.
He did.
He did.
SPEAKER_03 (01:25:22):
Nolan's gonna pee
his pants when he hears this.
We appreciate you guys forlistening.
Thanks for enduring throughthat.
We even though we are raisedupright, even though the things
we've said.
All right, this is a try that asmall town podcast.
We'll see you soon.