Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
Hey guys, Bobby Here Sunday Sampler time.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
So let's do some samples from some of the podcasts
on the Nashville podcast Network. Mike D's Movie Mike's Movie
podcast takes us on a journey.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
Of core memory movie moments.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
That live in his head, in his life, and then
he also reviews the comedy Bottoms Caroline. Hobby talks with
one of my favorite new artists, Tiera Kennedy on the
Bobby Cast. Though George Burge stopped by the house Love
this Dude. He talked about his first Top twenty single,
mind on You, his journey to success, and a fun
fact about his parents that I didn't know.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
George's friend of mine. So let's get going.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
Here's a clip from this week's Bobby Cast with George Burge.
You're playing golf in college and then but when when
does music become an actual heights were tangible, but it
starts to be a tangible thing again that you can
actually do.
Speaker 4 (00:57):
It was the biggest support. Nod was more surprised than
me that I got to play music for a living.
So finished college, got my degree, I went and got
a job in Austin. They this company that hires a
bunch of young kids fresh out of college to do,
you know, busy work.
Speaker 5 (01:15):
Live downtown.
Speaker 4 (01:17):
It's awesome. And that was a cool culture because it
was a bunch of people that were moving new to Austin.
And I was a guy from Austin, so I was,
you know, getting into all these people and taking them
out and showing them the city. And I met a
guy that played guitar, and you know, same thing. I
was like, well, we should, you know, start jamming. And
so once a week he'd come over to the house
and we kind of jammed together, play mostly cover songs
(01:38):
right a little bit. And then I'll never forget one
of the guys that worked with us, his brother had
just bought the Lucky Lounge downtown Austin and redid it
and they were having an open mic, and I went
and did the open mic at Lucky Lounge and our
whole office came which was like, oh, you played it why,
which was like two hundred and fifty people because he
was they knew that I played guitar, and they're like,
(02:00):
hop up and play two songs.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
So they kind of pressured you too.
Speaker 4 (02:03):
Yeah, And it was I mean I was in like
khakis and a button down shirt. It would like, you
know not so okay, So you didn't plan this that
way way ahead of time? No, it was like popped
up on stage that night.
Speaker 2 (02:15):
Okay, so wait, so when did when do you hear
about the open night night?
Speaker 3 (02:21):
That day?
Speaker 4 (02:21):
They were like, Hey, our buddy's brother just opened the
Lucky Lounge. She's going to have an open night Mike night.
So you we're all going to go down there. Will
you pop up and play one? So and you said,
I said yes, yeah, I said, you know, I still
enjoyed playing, like it's something that I've always loved. And
so I popped up and I played two songs.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
Gosh, I wish I could remember security. I hope it security.
It was probably security.
Speaker 4 (02:42):
But uh then it was you know, people were like, well,
we should start doing shows, and you know a lot
of the people I was working with were encouraging me to,
which was cool. And so a few of us from
the office started this band. We started playing, and it
was we played Friday or Saturday nights at the Rattle
Inn in Austin, and that was it.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
How'd you eat the gig? Cold called him and said,
we'd like to play what does that pay.
Speaker 3 (03:07):
Zero dollars tips, tip jar.
Speaker 4 (03:10):
Yeah, and by the end of it they were paying
us because we were starting to draw a crowd. But
then it became a thing. Every Friday night we were
playing the Rattle in and it was sold out. It
wasn't a big room. It was three or four hundred people,
but it was kind of a cool factor of like, hey,
we're selling out this club every time we play it.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
What was the sound at the time were you guys doing?
Speaker 1 (03:28):
It was country?
Speaker 4 (03:29):
Oh yeah, it was country and it was covers, but
it was like fifty percent originals.
Speaker 5 (03:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
I had a steel guitar player, had a fiddle player.
The name of the band it was called Waterloo Revival. Yeah,
that's the first version of that.
Speaker 4 (03:41):
It's the first version of Waterloo Revival.
Speaker 5 (03:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (03:43):
And the cool part was we all played for free
and then we split the tips at the end of
the night and we started ended up getting to take
a cut of the door, and it got bigger and bigger,
and then local radio station kind of caught on and
invited us to play blues on the Green.
Speaker 3 (03:58):
Kgsr uh huh.
Speaker 4 (03:59):
And so we went out there and played that had
a huge crowd and I didn't know at the time,
but a big label executive and a big manager flew
in to see us play and ended up pulling us
aside after the show and asked me if I wanted
to fly up to Nashville to meet them. And this
is all coming at me like a million miles an
hour because I've never, you know, had any contact with
(04:22):
a record label in my entire life.
Speaker 2 (04:24):
How they watch your show or were they there to
watch somebody else and then see you.
Speaker 4 (04:27):
So the guy that owned the radio station sent them
my music, wow yeah, which was really cool. Bob, Bob Sinclair,
yeah wow yeah yeah. Sent my music to Scott Boardshetta
and TK Camberrell.
Speaker 6 (04:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
That's I mean, it all makes sense now when I
start to lay it all down in my head.
Speaker 3 (04:46):
Yep, that's how I know. I mean, I know Bob too.
Speaker 5 (04:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (04:48):
So I gave Bob a burn CD with the one
song that the producer agreed to cut on me in Austin.
He was like, I'll do one song, I won't do
a full record, And I will say that he put
everything into it and it was the best sounding song
I had at the time. But I had one song
on a burn CD, and I gave it to Bob
and he mailed it to Nashville.
Speaker 5 (05:05):
Yeah, it's crazy.
Speaker 7 (05:07):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (05:08):
So when you talk about like less than one percent
chance of any of this stuff happening and the stars
aligning like they did, I just like I never in
a million years thought that I could play music professionally.
I did it because I loved it and it was fun.
But then people are talking about record deals and you
need to get a lawyer, and do you have a
publishing deal and you know royalties and I have no
(05:28):
idea about any of this stuff.
Speaker 3 (05:30):
Who are they looking at though?
Speaker 2 (05:32):
You obviously were they trying to go, okay, Zach attack,
we just want Zach Morris, or were they going we
want the whole Waterloo Revival.
Speaker 4 (05:39):
They came to me independently. And then I had a
very close friend that I wrote a lot of my
songs with, Cody Cooper, who was the part of Waterloo
Revival with me. We were a duo, and I asked
if we could come to Nashville as a duo and
they were on board for it, and so that's what
we did.
Speaker 3 (05:57):
We signed as a duo to Nashville.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
That's crazy, Yeah, And that's about where I started to
know you guys a little bit, because Eddie and I
we consider ourselves from Austin, even Bettie's from a different park
textas enough Markansas. We are very much Austin Heights, like
in our blood. And then you guys would come and
we like you guys, and we'd be like, oh, yeah,
they're from Austin. But I knew you guys had a
relationship with Bob. Yeah, but I didn't know that's where
all that.
Speaker 4 (06:18):
That's that is wild, which is crazy because he didn't
even own a country station in Austin, and Bob Sinclair,
you know, owns stations all over America, you know, big
powerful radio guy. And uh, you know, I never burned CD.
He called me back the next day. He said, I've
never called back anyone that's given me a demo before,
but I think you might have something. And just from
that phone call, I was like, I've made.
Speaker 5 (06:39):
It, like we've done it, like we've taken over the world.
Speaker 3 (06:42):
I'll never forget.
Speaker 4 (06:43):
We were opening for Reckless Kelly the next week in Austin,
and I called my wife after I got the call
inviting me to open for Reckless Kelly, and at that
moment in time, I was like, we are famous, we
are opening for Reckless Kelly, and this is like our.
Speaker 5 (06:54):
Lives have changed.
Speaker 3 (06:56):
That's little did I know?
Speaker 5 (06:57):
You know what?
Speaker 8 (06:57):
What?
Speaker 1 (06:58):
What the what?
Speaker 3 (06:59):
The real pay looks like? That's so cool. That's such
a good version of that story that I mean that version.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
I didn't.
Speaker 3 (07:04):
I didn't know that. So wait till Eddie finds out
your parents were Portuguese? Does he know this?
Speaker 4 (07:10):
These people don't know.
Speaker 3 (07:11):
Eddie and I thought we knew George. We don't know.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
We didn't know George, Like we have hung out with
George a lot, like like we are like friend friends,
but I guess we're not.
Speaker 4 (07:20):
That's what the Bobby cast does, a deep dived.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
Cass up little food for yourself life.
Speaker 5 (07:41):
Oh it's pretty bad, it's pretty beautiful.
Speaker 4 (07:44):
Beautiful A little more.
Speaker 3 (07:50):
Said he.
Speaker 9 (07:51):
You're kicking with full with Amy Brown.
Speaker 10 (07:56):
Hey, it's Amy Brown from Four Things with Amy Brown.
And here's what we talked about this week on my podcast.
As we're trying to become a orry free parent or
a worry free person. Yes, I know in the book
you talk about uncovering the roots of our own anxiety.
What does that look like? Obviously means we have to
(08:17):
face some stuff.
Speaker 11 (08:18):
Yes, yes, I think I have a sentence in there
about past hurts and present pressure dictate future fear, and
I think we just get into the voice that again,
past hurts, which we all have them, present pressure, which
I've never seen parents feel as much pressure as I
do today, makes me crazy.
Speaker 12 (08:36):
What do you think is attributing to that?
Speaker 11 (08:38):
I think social media is a huge piece of it,
and the families that we see that we only.
Speaker 13 (08:43):
See their highlight reel that whole idea.
Speaker 11 (08:45):
And I mean, honestly, I think parents are following too
many experts, which is funny to say when I'm kind
of putting myself out there a little bit like that.
But you know what I mean, you have thirty different
people telling you thirty different things.
Speaker 13 (08:56):
Of course you don't feel like you can get it right.
Speaker 10 (08:58):
Yeah, follow at raising Boys and Girls on and also
at Sissy Golf. Those are her accounts, You're the best baby.
Speaker 12 (09:06):
Are good experts to follow.
Speaker 10 (09:08):
But you mean when you're getting so much information it's overwhelming.
Speaker 11 (09:13):
Yes, all those things then spin us out into feeling
like I'm not doing it right, or my kid's not
measuring up, or they're all these things that have to
be doing. I mean even the whole there's that movement
right now about.
Speaker 13 (09:24):
You have fifty two Saturdays a year.
Speaker 11 (09:26):
And you have you know, however many days in their
life before they leave your home.
Speaker 13 (09:32):
You know all those things here, This is.
Speaker 10 (09:33):
Like one summer out of only eighteen. Yeah, you get
so make it count.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
Yes, Stuck.
Speaker 11 (09:38):
Whoever's saying that, please stop saying it, because I think
it's just increasing anxiety and all of us.
Speaker 13 (09:43):
Like, oh, I gotta make the stump coun and I'm not.
Speaker 11 (09:45):
I'm distracted for a minute or I miss something and
just feel so so much pressure.
Speaker 10 (09:49):
Yeah, I've seen those and they haven't gotten like Okay,
well maybe it's because I became a mom later and
my kids were older when they got here, and it
took us five years to get them. So I know,
I'm thankful to have them right now, and I'll be
fine when they spread their wings. I'm actually excited for
them to have opportunity. That's why they came from Haiti
(10:13):
to America. I feel as though that's what their birth
moms want for them, is they want to see them
have a chance at something. So I guess that's probably
why those didn't impact me that way, but I could
see how those that's causing some pressure. But I love
you need to do one of those tiktoks or do
(10:34):
the video or the green screen where you get in
front of one of those videos and you're like, hey
to see you go off here this video right here.
Speaker 12 (10:42):
Don't fall for it. It's a trap. It's a present
pressure trap.
Speaker 13 (10:47):
I'm not on TikTok, I'm not that cool.
Speaker 12 (10:48):
Well, Instagram, yes.
Speaker 10 (10:49):
You can do it as a real I know you're
very active on Instagram.
Speaker 12 (10:53):
I mean you have over one hundred thousand followers.
Speaker 13 (10:56):
Well trying to help as much as I can.
Speaker 10 (10:58):
I mean that just shows that you're ability. That shows
the people that are trusting what you're saying and you
deliver it in a digestible way. And that's why you
have thirteen best selling books. And I know another thing
that you touch on in addition to that we need
to uncover our own anxiety and work through that is
healthy ways to process it so we don't pass it on.
(11:23):
With one or two examples of processing in a healthy way.
Speaker 11 (11:26):
Okay, two I would give one is I want every
family to have a code word, a word that means
we're going to pause, right, here because they're in their
survival brain, you're going to flip right into yours. I mean,
parents say they're like to me all the time office
they're like a crazy person and all of a sudden,
now list too. And so if you have a code
word that is watermelon or whatever it is, that means
(11:47):
when anybody in our family says that we're going to pause, stop,
and we're going to separate, even if that means we
can't talk it out right now, like you said, we're
not going to get to a healthy conversation when we're
operating out.
Speaker 13 (11:58):
Of our MAYD list.
Speaker 11 (11:58):
So watermelon, and I'm going to go back to my space,
think about who I want to be in this moment.
And while I'm doing that, I'm going to take some
deep breaths and whatever I need to do, whether it's
square breathing, that's one of my favorite ways.
Speaker 13 (12:11):
I love breath prayers.
Speaker 11 (12:12):
Where we're breathing in a statement and breathing out a
different one that reminds us of truth in that moment,
even of who we want to be.
Speaker 12 (12:19):
And then Okay, I am a good mother.
Speaker 10 (12:22):
Yes I am capable of handling this situation with peace.
Like that's beautiful, beautiful, or maybe I have I just
haven't yet learned how to handle.
Speaker 12 (12:33):
This particular situation.
Speaker 10 (12:35):
Exhal, but I am capable of doing it, and we're
pausing until I figure it out.
Speaker 11 (12:39):
Yes, something like breathing in Sissy and Amy say I'm
a good mom.
Speaker 13 (12:44):
Okay, Yeah, I mean.
Speaker 12 (12:46):
Just sending square breathing is four four four four.
Speaker 13 (12:49):
Yep, exactly four five five.
Speaker 11 (12:51):
Yes, Because when we do that, the blood vessels in
our brain dilate, and it shifts the blood flow away
from the amygdala that's the survival part and back to
the prefrontal cortex that helps us think rationally and manage
our emotions. So when we're all in the survival brain,
no one's brain that thinks rationally is even working. It's offline,
and so we can't get to a helpful place until
(13:11):
we can calm our bodies back down.
Speaker 13 (13:13):
So do you.
Speaker 10 (13:14):
Thing it's more fun to have a code word? Like
you said, it's like watermelon or just can we just
say pause? Or is there something cool about it's a
more unity routine?
Speaker 12 (13:23):
Yes, this code word.
Speaker 11 (13:25):
Yes, your kids are in on coming up with what
it is. Maybe it's even a funny thing. Yeah, I
mean you can definitely say pause, but.
Speaker 10 (13:32):
No, no, I'm definitely going to adopt this because at
our house we just say, hey, I need I need
some space, and my kids are now good at expressing that.
My son did it just the other day. He said
I just can't I can't talk right now, I need space,
and I was very proud of him. So of course
I acknowledge that that's very awesome. You were able to
(13:52):
identify you needed that space. Space granted, and you know,
I walk away, but it would be way more fun.
Speaker 13 (14:00):
To have fun work. Y'all come up with.
Speaker 12 (14:02):
Yeah, like SpongeBob, Yeah, Sungebob, SquarePants.
Speaker 9 (14:05):
Yes.
Speaker 11 (14:05):
I think one of the biggest traps for parents with
anxiety is anxiety feels like good parenting, and so I've
got to be vigilant because you do as a parent.
But we cross over into hypervigilance too much. I always
talk about it with kids, like the one loop roller
coaster at the fair. Anxious thoughts just circle around and
around and around. That's how we know what they're anxious thoughts.
So we want to start with calming our bodies down
(14:27):
and then move to our thoughts because our thoughts are
where we get in trouble. You remember the stop drop
roll thing.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
Let's do alive.
Speaker 8 (14:49):
We are the word.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
You're very sore losers.
Speaker 5 (14:54):
What up, everybody? I am lunchbox. I know the most
about sports, so I'll give you the sports facts sports
opinions because I'm pretty much a sports genius.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
What up, y'all?
Speaker 14 (15:05):
At his scison. I'm from the North. I'm an alpha male.
I live on the West side of Nashville with Baser,
my wife. We do have a white picket fence at
the apartment complex. Soon I'm gonna have two point five kids,
and yes, sadly, I will die of a heart attack
when I'm seventy two years old.
Speaker 1 (15:20):
Here's a clip from the last podcast.
Speaker 5 (15:24):
It was very nice to get those new fifty six
degree wedges in the mail another dame, and so I decided,
you know what, I'm gonna go to the chipping green
at the local MUNI try it out. I roll up
to the local MUNI chipping green closed ours, yes, no less,
So I'm like, okay, I guess I'm here. Might as
(15:45):
well play some golf. So I walk into the clubhouse
and let me tell you, they got new signs up
at the local Muni beautiful, new signs advertising and no
no just telling you, oh, this is the front nine,
this is the back. You know, just beautiful.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
Probably was confusing for out of towners before.
Speaker 5 (16:02):
Very much, so, so they upgraded. I was like, all right, cool,
and I was walk in. I said, hey, man, I
would like to play eighteen holes. They said, oh, yeah,
you can go over there. There's two guys tea and
off right now if you want to jump in with them.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
And don't forget about the nineteenth hold.
Speaker 5 (16:15):
I said, no problem. So I walk up to the
tea box. There's two guys about to tee off and
I stand there. They look at me, and I'm like, hey,
how's it going. They turn back, they tea off and
they take off walking. So you're saying, you don't want
(16:36):
me to play with you guys?
Speaker 8 (16:38):
Cool?
Speaker 5 (16:39):
So I stand there and this guy walks up. He's like, hey,
you want to play together? No problem, dude. And he's like,
what's your name, Gibbles? What's your name Reggie? All right, Reggie,
let's play some golf. He goes, I'm new to golf,
but I've got the itch.
Speaker 7 (16:57):
Man.
Speaker 5 (16:58):
I just got my claw was downside because I bought him.
They were a little too tall, and I was hitting
them too far. I was hitting them way too fast.
Shut up, and I'm like, here we go. There we
got this again, right, we got the I hit it
too far. I had to get smaller clubs. Like I
was cool. He was just letting me know that he
hits it a long ways and he just started golf.
(17:20):
So I'm like, all right, Reggie, let's see what it's
all about. He steps up and what he whacked it
out of it? He whacked it?
Speaker 1 (17:30):
Was it part three or part four?
Speaker 5 (17:31):
Part four? Yeah, and he hit it pretty far so
he could hit the ball far. I noticed as we played.
I was like, dang. He was like, yeah, I think
it was. I played tennis growing up, so I think
my tennis swing really helps with the golf swing. The
erotic I said, okay, and that's pretty cool. Then it
(17:53):
got weird because because we're walking, we're both walking and whoa,
no cart, no cart man. It was like eighty degrees,
a little breeze. It was a great day.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
Yeah, me and Boomer we always go kart.
Speaker 5 (18:11):
I know, and we're walking between the second and third
hole and he says, so, what's your favorite movie of
all time?
Speaker 15 (18:21):
Oh god, one of these guys no personality.
Speaker 5 (18:25):
And I said, oh, you know whatever, I don't know, braveheart.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
No, please tell me where I have you this conversation.
Speaker 5 (18:31):
And he tells me, oh, man, my favorite one is
what did he say? He said, stepbrother I would hope
you don't remember. Stepbrothers was his favorite movie of all time.
It's like, oh, that's cool, you know, t off on.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
Number four, that's my blanket, that's my bunk bed.
Speaker 5 (18:49):
Step Brothers, don't play my drums, don't play my drums.
Great movie, great, fantastic movies.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
You hit him with a quote.
Speaker 5 (18:57):
No, I didn't hit him with quote. I was like,
all right, cool. And then he's like, man, where's the
best vacation you've gone on in your life?
Speaker 8 (19:06):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (19:06):
No? What is this an interview?
Speaker 5 (19:09):
I think it might have been a dating interview because
I'm starting to think this dude's like trying to get
to know me. Get to know me.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
Oh so is Red Jay.
Speaker 5 (19:17):
I don't know. But he's asking these questions. I'm like, huh,
and I mean these questions continue through the nine What
do you mean, like, Pa, are there any dreams you
haven't accomplished yet?
Speaker 8 (19:30):
No?
Speaker 1 (19:30):
Yes, I would have refused to answer that. When next
question asked.
Speaker 5 (19:33):
Me, if there's any dreams I haven't accomplished.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
Yet, you should have told him I'm just here so
I don't get fined.
Speaker 5 (19:39):
And he was excited about taking up golf because it's
keeping him out of the bars. He's been going to
the bar too much, so this.
Speaker 1 (19:46):
Is better recovering alcoholic.
Speaker 5 (19:48):
It's what it kind of sounded like. And he asked me.
Speaker 15 (19:51):
So, like, well, good thing, I was there with my mickeys.
That's not going to help with his problem. And wouldn't
have help he's riddled with in a diction.
Speaker 5 (19:58):
But he was ripping the cancer sick.
Speaker 15 (20:02):
Vaping, no less, no cancer sticks.
Speaker 5 (20:07):
And he asked me, do you think your life has
success so far?
Speaker 7 (20:15):
Like what?
Speaker 15 (20:16):
Oh, man, dude, this is not a relaxing day on
the golf course.
Speaker 5 (20:21):
And I'm like this, dude, I don't know. He might
be hitting on me. He might not be, but he
is trying to get to know me way too well.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
But what did you answer? Well?
Speaker 5 (20:29):
I just was like, I guess it's going pretty well. Man.
Speaker 7 (20:32):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (20:32):
Then we're walking to number nine. We're walking to the
T box at nine, and he asked me, so do
you ever go to Broadway. He goes, it's just crazy down.
I don't really like Broadway anymore, never heard of it.
And I said, man, I got three kids. I don't
really have time to go to Broadway, right, And I
think that turned him off because after nine, he goes,
(20:54):
I'm my head into the clubhouse. Man, I'm done.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
Oh, So that was it. We're only halfway through that
podcast interview.
Speaker 5 (21:00):
And I was like, oh, okay, interesting. So was he
getting to know me? And once I mentioned my kids,
he was like, oh, I think I may play another nine,
but uh, I'm gonna wait for my buddy.
Speaker 8 (21:12):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
You think that's what stopped it.
Speaker 5 (21:14):
I think that's what stopped it because it was on
number nine that I said, oh, I have three kids. Man,
I'm just too busy to go to Broadway. And that
was it. So then I go to the back nine
and this guy pulls up in the cart Red Jay. No,
not Red Jay. This was Henry Derek, not Derek and Hunter.
(21:35):
Nice guy, very quiet. He drove his cart. Fine, did
you guys cart together?
Speaker 7 (21:40):
No?
Speaker 1 (21:40):
I walked, oh, because sometimes they make you double up
in a car.
Speaker 15 (21:43):
That's where I draw the line. I bought the cart
he's not getting in my cart. I don't know him.
Speaker 5 (21:47):
I don't want to spend the next four hours with
him because I don't know him.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
I rented the cart, I get it. Marshall back off.
Speaker 5 (21:54):
But Red Jay, me and him, we got to know
each other even without the cart. So I mean, didn't
matter if we're going to cart.
Speaker 15 (21:59):
No, that's when you almost want to purposefully duck hook it.
Speaker 5 (22:02):
So this guy, Henry was quiet, didn't say much.
Speaker 1 (22:06):
Perfect.
Speaker 5 (22:07):
But then we get to a par three. I t off,
he tees off, he grabs my crank. I walk all
the way up to the green. I look back. He's
still on the tea box.
Speaker 1 (22:20):
Well, didn't you wait for him to hit?
Speaker 5 (22:22):
Yeah, he'd already hit his balls up on the green?
Are walking, boy, he's driving drive.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
I don't give it.
Speaker 5 (22:28):
Damn, he is walking all over that tea box. I
chip on, putt it in for a bogie. Two putt
for a.
Speaker 1 (22:38):
Bogie, unnecessary for the story.
Speaker 5 (22:40):
And I look back and he's still on the tea box,
and I'm like, what is this.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
Dude doing here? We welcome to the local MUNI.
Speaker 5 (22:49):
And I mean, it's been six seven minutes since we've
teed off because I've walked all the way down chipped
on two putted, you know what I mean, Like I've
done it all.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
I already know. The last was an alcoholic. This one's
a pill head.
Speaker 5 (23:00):
No, he drives up and he goes, man, I don't
know where my tea went. I was looking, I couldn't
find it. Go on this thing called golf Galaxy dot
com and order more our dicks. He spent a total
of eleven minutes looking for his tea that cost three cents.
Speaker 1 (23:20):
I hope there was nobody behind you.
Speaker 5 (23:21):
Guys, nobody behind us. But I hit walk to my
ball and he comes driving up. Man, I just couldn't
find it. I guess that's a goner.
Speaker 15 (23:30):
Well, I'd like to have him and nom. He'll never
leave a man down.
Speaker 8 (23:40):
At Caryl, she's a queen and she's getting really not
afraid defeat episode so just lived sound.
Speaker 12 (24:07):
Hey, y'all, it's Caroline Hobby.
Speaker 16 (24:09):
I am so excited about this week's episode of Get
Real Podcast with Tiera Kennedy. She has always been destined
for greatness. She was born to be seen. She's practically
the next Beyonce. She's known. She's wanted to be a
singer since she was little. We talked about all the
sacrifices her parents made to help her achieve her dreams.
Her whole family moved to Nashville from Alabama. She started
(24:29):
singing when she was nine years old to only her
parents in the crowd. And look where she is now
on the Grand Old Opree stage, chasing her dreams, opening
up for people that she always loved. Tiara is truly
an American dream story come true and this episode is
so great.
Speaker 9 (24:43):
Check it out.
Speaker 12 (24:45):
You're just a bright light.
Speaker 17 (24:46):
Everyone has their own gifts, and everyone has their own unique, special,
wonderful things that they're supposed to share with the world,
but like you're supposed to be seen by the world.
Speaker 8 (24:54):
Thanks.
Speaker 5 (24:54):
I mean, I try.
Speaker 7 (24:56):
I try to be happy on a daily basis.
Speaker 9 (24:59):
How do you manage that?
Speaker 17 (25:00):
I try to be happy on a daily basis too,
Sometimes I really fail. I liked it you put a
crying video up one time and you're like, if you're
having a croppy day. That Honestly, that was so hard
for me to do because I was literally having You're.
Speaker 12 (25:13):
In the middle of the cry.
Speaker 7 (25:14):
Yeah, yeah, And you know I hate those videos where
like you see people crying and it's like, Okay, you
set up a camera and like.
Speaker 13 (25:19):
Film yourself crying.
Speaker 7 (25:20):
But I just like I never have vulnerable moments like
that because I try to be happy. I try to,
you know, show people the good in the world. But
I do have bad days, and my husband sees those
bad days every day, and I just want to share
that because I loved it, you know, I loved it.
Speaker 17 (25:37):
I feel like that's sort of become my mission, is
to show what's good and well in the world. Yeah,
but also like overcoming and how to overcome, and like
when you hit that moment.
Speaker 12 (25:49):
How do you overcome?
Speaker 17 (25:50):
So I sort of like to start with like origin story, Yeah,
like tell me about how you grew up, what was
really great about growing up, what did you have to overcome?
Speaker 5 (25:58):
And then when did you hit.
Speaker 17 (25:59):
That moment when you're like, oh my god, I am
going to be a world famous singer.
Speaker 7 (26:05):
Yeah, oh my god, how did it all happen in
your childhood? So I'm originally from Birmingham, Alabama.
Speaker 17 (26:10):
And you have a song Alabama Night such a jam Banks.
Speaker 12 (26:15):
I like you dancing with your parents too? Yes, Yes,
they're so fun.
Speaker 7 (26:22):
They actually they like kind of used to be like
mom and your daddager at the beginning, so you regardon
style here. Yeah, I mean listen, I'm a nex fiance.
Speaker 8 (26:32):
You are. I Yeah.
Speaker 7 (26:34):
They like they were very involved in like my music
and my career and now they just get to enjoy
like the music, and you know, they let me do
do my thing and they just get to have fun
with it. So that's that's really cool and I love
having them be a part And I mean they have
been so supportive of my career from the very beginning.
Speaker 6 (26:54):
Like tell me about that.
Speaker 7 (26:55):
When I told him I wanted to do music and
be a music they put me in voice lessons guitar lessons,
and their kind of philosophy was like, we're gonna let
you try what you want to try. So I you know,
I did dancing, I did I took acting classes and
it just didn't work for me. And then I fell
(27:16):
on singing, and they were like full on support me,
you know, in any way they can. And so I
started like performing around my hometown and I would do
like festivals and I'd play a restaurants literally anywhere I could,
and I mean some of them were so boring, like
I was doing like an hour set, two hours set,
and just playing covers.
Speaker 12 (27:37):
And I remember like being on.
Speaker 7 (27:40):
The Buffalo wild Wings patio, nice singing a set and
like nobody was out there except for my parents, you know,
and like that happens a lot. And they've just they've
always been there from the very beginning.
Speaker 17 (27:52):
What a blessing, Such a blessed are their names?
Speaker 7 (27:55):
Natasha and how well I was about to say mom
and dad, but that's our name to me, Natash and
how Yeah, they're squishes.
Speaker 5 (28:02):
They're squishes.
Speaker 12 (28:03):
Yes, oh you just squished into them. You're just like
deep hugs.
Speaker 5 (28:07):
Yes, I love them.
Speaker 7 (28:08):
I love them so much, and like even more so
now that you know I'm older, I feel like older.
Speaker 12 (28:15):
Yes, what they how much they love you exactly?
Speaker 13 (28:17):
I'm gonna start.
Speaker 12 (28:18):
Crying, Like family love.
Speaker 5 (28:19):
It's just so special, I know, I.
Speaker 7 (28:21):
Know, and you know, I know a lot of people
don't have that. Like my parents moved to Nashville for me,
like really packed up moved to Nashville seven years ago.
Speaker 6 (28:32):
And I mean a lot of parents wouldn't do that.
Speaker 7 (28:35):
And you have I know, you at least have one
more sister. I have two younger sisters and an older sister.
And my two younger sisters moved here with y'all. Yeah,
so or were they on the on the train? They like,
what in the heck, whey are we moving to? Yeah,
it was a little it was a mixture of both,
Like I think we're from Birmingham and I love Birmingham,
(28:56):
but like at the time it was a little boring,
you know, we were running out of things to do.
So I think they were excited for a change of scenery.
But also it was like they had friends, you know.
But they love it now they do.
Speaker 6 (29:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 18 (29:23):
Hey, it's my d for Movie Mike's Movie Podcast. So
this is a clip from my latest episode where I
shared ten of my core movie memory moments and explained
exactly what that is. If you want to hear this
full list, get a full deep dive into my brain
when it comes into movies in my life, check out
this entire episode, but right now, here's just the clip
of Movie Mike's Movie Podcast. A core memory is a
(29:45):
specific memory that holds some kind of emotional value in
your life. They are the building blocks of what make
you a person. I feel like as a human being,
I can trace back several things to very specific tis
in my life, and these little moments that have, whether
have been traumatic or been joyful, have shaped the person
(30:06):
I am today. And I'm going to take not my
human life, but my cinematic life and share with you
the top ten core movie memory moments that have changed
or altered my well being or my mental state, or
just moments that I have not forgotten and have stuck
with me in film throughout my entire movie watching life.
I think even for me, sometimes it is easier for
(30:30):
me to speak about my feelings when I can relate
them to a movie. Sometimes I just feel like it's
hard for me to open up about emotions or to
express exactly how I'm feeling.
Speaker 5 (30:40):
But if you throw a movie.
Speaker 18 (30:41):
In front of me and something emotional happens, I'm able
to open up so much more by relating to that
character and speaking about the film and speaking about their
development that I in turn and able to look into
myself and think, oh, I relate with that because there's
something I experience. I think that is why I love
movie so much. And I think at the core of this,
(31:02):
that is why I do this podcast, because if I
didn't have movies, I probably wouldn't be able to work
out all of these things.
Speaker 9 (31:09):
Inside my brain.
Speaker 18 (31:11):
And I think where I got the concept for this
episode was from the Pixar movie Inside Out, which the
entire movie revolves around core memories and what they are
trying to do for Riley in order for her to
have the best childhood ever and look back on it
with only these bright, colorful memories. And the entire plot
of that movie is, well, not everything can be super
(31:31):
bright and positive and joyful. That sometimes you have to
experience the sadness because it's all those experiences that really
shape you as a person. So I think my list
will reflect that. If you haven't seen Inside Out, here
is just a little clip from that movie explaining the
core memory process.
Speaker 10 (31:49):
These are Riley's memories, and they're mostly happy, you'll notice,
not to brag, but the really important ones are.
Speaker 13 (31:54):
Over a year.
Speaker 17 (31:55):
I don't want to get too technical, but these are
called core memories.
Speaker 10 (31:59):
Each one came from a super important time in Riley's life,
like when she first scored a goal.
Speaker 5 (32:04):
It was so amazing.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
So that is what I have for you.
Speaker 18 (32:11):
So I'm going to do these starting back in my
childhood and working up to my adult life. So let's
kick it off with number one. My first Core movie
Memory Moment was from nineteen ninety four and it was
Mufasa Dying.
Speaker 1 (32:23):
Star, Help Me.
Speaker 8 (32:36):
Long Li Fucking.
Speaker 18 (32:47):
And even listening back to that scene now as an adult,
it still very much hits me on an emotional level.
And Disney did us all dirty with this movie, but
I felt it served a very specific purpose to teach
is about death. Essentially the worst thing that could happen
to you as a kid, losing your father like this
in such a tragic way. But this was the first
(33:09):
time I learned about death, So to be a kid
four or five years old learning about death through a
Disney movie is pretty intense. So that is my first
movie Core memory at number two from nineteen ninety seven,
Leave It to Beaver, And maybe I'm the only kid
who was excited about to Leave It to Beaver movie.
Speaker 9 (33:29):
But there was a time in my life where I.
Speaker 18 (33:31):
Got really into forties, fifties and sixties television, and Leave
It to Beaver was one of my favorite shows, mainly
because everything in.
Speaker 9 (33:38):
That show was so perfect.
Speaker 18 (33:40):
They had the perfect house, the perfect life, the perfect family.
Speaker 9 (33:44):
And I thought to myself, what would it be like
to have a life like that? And then in the nineties.
Speaker 18 (33:50):
It got the movie treatment, which was a lot different
than the original show. But there was just something so
wholesome still about this movie that I loved, and I
feel like this is a movie from the nineties that
was It's one of my favorites, but really isn't regarded
as a great movie from the nineties, but it came
out in nineteen ninety seven. The core memory moment for
me from this movie was the scene where Beaver gets
(34:11):
his bike stolen by the bully, and he had this
amazing bike that he got for his birthday. It was
a red GT with the pegs and the tires. It
was a beautiful bicycle, and growing up, I wanted a
GT bike just like this. I think that was the
height of this type of bike. They were so cool,
and I just thought that if I had it, I
(34:32):
would be the coolest kid in the trailer park. I
was also a chunky kid, so I couldn't run very fast.
But I thought if I had a GT bike that
was so light and so quick, that I could suddenly
be the fastest kid in the trailer park, even though
I couldn't run, I could maybe out bike somebody. So
I think it was the appeal of the bike, but
(34:53):
also the story in this movie of Beaver kind of
being an outcast kid, the smallest kid, not being good
at football, him lying to his parents. But the ultimate
moment is this bike he's been dreaming of wanting for
his entire life, even though he hasn't been around that long.
He finally gets it. Let's a bully do some tricks,
(35:15):
and then the bullies last trick is to steal the bike.
And I remember watching this moment on the big screen.
It was like the first movie I ever went to
see in theaters. And I think it was because of that,
but also the fact that he had his bike stole.
And I will never forget this moment. And like I said,
maybe I'm the only person who cared about Leave It
(35:35):
to Beaver from nineteen ninety seven. And maybe that's true
because I couldn't even find a legit clip of this moment.
It was just somebody recording their TV. But here is
that moment from Leave It to Beaver.
Speaker 2 (35:46):
I got a few more tricks?
Speaker 5 (35:47):
Really cool?
Speaker 12 (35:48):
Can you show me?
Speaker 1 (35:49):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (35:50):
Sure, I got one. You'll never forget. Don't worry.
Speaker 1 (35:58):
I just need to whip up a little.
Speaker 18 (35:59):
Cork baby and then the entire movie is him trying
to get his bike back. The other memory I associate
with Leave It to Beaver from ninety seven was, like
(36:19):
I said, it was the first movie I remember going
to see in theaters at the Buffalo Creek six in Watsahatchie, Texas.
And this was back at a time where you had
to call to hear the movie times. It was either
this or the super old school way of looking it
up in the newspaper. But I remember I would just
call the movie theater. I still remember the number. It
(36:41):
is nine seven two nine. I'm not gonna say the
whole number because probably somebody else has it at this point,
because now that theater is gone. But you'd call the number,
it would be the movie theater manager in this case,
who would record a new message every single week.
Speaker 9 (36:56):
And there was just something special.
Speaker 18 (36:57):
To me about hearing the new movie out that came
out that Friday that everybody wanted to see, that I'd.
Speaker 9 (37:03):
Been seeing on TV.
Speaker 18 (37:04):
And even though I didn't go to the movies a
whole lot as a kid because we couldn't afford it,
I would still call it every single week to hear
what was playing. But the core movie memory here is
leave it to Beaver getting his bike stolen.
Speaker 2 (37:22):
And that was this week's Sunday Sampler. New episodes out weekly.
The Bobby Cast comes out on Tuesdays. Four Things with
Amy Brown comes out on Thursdays. Store Losers got a
few episodes a week, Movie Mike's Movie Podcast, and get
rolled with Carolina Hobby all up there. Make sure you subscribe, rate,
and review them. It helps us out a bunch. Thank
you so much.
Speaker 8 (37:39):
Have a great week.