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November 11, 2025 105 mins

We swap school-lunch lore and mustard hustles for deer-stand stories, spice catastrophes, and early-ice plans, all while sorting out what counts as “real hunting.” Comfort, patience, and good company win more than pain and swagger.

• cafeteria rules that never added up
• fifth-grade mustard resale as supply meets demand
• capsaicin science, milk vs water, and safe spice habits
• eating contest strategy, pacing, and aftermath
• deer watching over deer blasting, buck fights, wind, and restraint
• cold-weather gear, insulated stands, and staying in the game
• early-ice Red Lake for numbers, Devils Lake for giants
• live scope threading spoons through flooded timber
• waterfowl setups, brushing blinds, spinner skepticism
• thermostat wars, comfort vs cost in winter and summer
• AI as a tool for polish, not a replacement for judgment

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_02 (00:17):
Jay's really rocking out to the new intro song here.
Not the new, but the intro song.

SPEAKER_01 (00:22):
Kind of like, what are you doing?
Oh, I'm trying to get the dog tojoin the show.
Oh, the dog from uh Simpsons.
Come on.
Oh, there he is.
Mr.
Smithers?
He looks like Mr.
Smithers.

SPEAKER_02 (00:38):
Is it Smithers or is it Mr.
Burns?

SPEAKER_01 (00:40):
Burns.
Smithers.
Mr.

SPEAKER_02 (00:41):
Burns.
No, it looks like the boss wasBurns.
When he has a haircut.

SPEAKER_01 (00:47):
When he has a haircut, when he has a haircut,
he looks like Mr.
Smithers.
No.
Or Mr.
Burns.
Or Burns.
He looks like a dog version ofMr.
Burns.
But now he looks like Oscar theGrouch from Sesame Street, but
he's got black hair instead ofgreen hair.
Yeah, Kaida.
Yeah, I can see that.
If he was in a garbage can, hewouldn't know.

SPEAKER_02 (01:04):
He wouldn't know.
No.
He's not very big either.

SPEAKER_01 (01:07):
And then if he what did he eat cookie?
That was cookie monster.
But didn't he?
Who did he always hang out with?
Was it Big Bird that always cameto saw him?
I think a lot of people came tosee him.
Why did they why was he livingin the trash can?
Because he's Oscar the Grouch.
But he wasn't really thatgrouchy.
He was always Danish.
He collected it.
But we're how we're how big wasthat trash can though?

(01:29):
Because he had a lot of shitdown there.
I know, it was like a basement.

SPEAKER_02 (01:32):
Yeah.
He'd go down, he'd go in andlike go downstairs.

SPEAKER_01 (01:34):
I used to go in the garbage can at home because I
thought he and then it wasn't,it was just the size of the
garbage can.
Like I would go in and like togo down like where he was in.
You tried to get into the likethe metal garbage can?
Yeah.
And then he it was just the sizeof the garbage can.

SPEAKER_02 (01:48):
So it never you couldn't you couldn't find it?

SPEAKER_01 (01:50):
No.

SPEAKER_02 (01:51):
Did you weren't on Sesame Street though?

SPEAKER_01 (01:53):
No, no.
Never been on that.
No, it was on HollywoodBoulevard.

SPEAKER_02 (01:57):
Oh, in Hollywood.

SPEAKER_01 (01:57):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (01:59):
Mm-hmm.
In uh Tum Guy Town?

SPEAKER_01 (02:02):
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.

SPEAKER_02 (02:03):
Hollywood Boulevard, Tough Guy Town?

SPEAKER_01 (02:05):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (02:06):
Not the California version.

SPEAKER_01 (02:09):
No, no, no, no.
That was not.
No.
That was no.
Not that fancy.
Actually, you ever go back toyour old uh neighborhoods when
you were a kid?
I have, yeah.
You go back there and it looksway different.
Everything looks like smaller.
It does look different.
The hollers, when you were therea kid, you thought the houses
were huge and like the treeswere so big and everything was

(02:31):
go.
Now you go back and like a houseis.
There was there wasn't a lot oftrees when I where I grew up.
Well, we had the boulevard tree.

SPEAKER_02 (02:38):
They all had I was out in the country a little bit,
so there wasn't a lot of treeslike I knew a development.
Like we had like one block.

SPEAKER_01 (02:46):
Well, and it always just seemed like it was such a
long walk to school.
And when you drive it, now it'sreally close.
It's like a it's like twoblocks.
I never had a walk to school.
Well, I didn't say that.

SPEAKER_02 (02:57):
I peeled both ways.
Yeah.
I did I take a cab sometimes.
A cab?
Yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (03:06):
Take a taxi.
You had taxis out there.
They don't have taxis on thecountry.
That wasn't when I was in thecountry.
Oh, when you're in the city.
Yeah.
Why would you take a taxi?
Because it was faster.
Are you kidding me?
It was like five bucks.
You'd paid money to go toschool.

SPEAKER_02 (03:25):
Some days, yeah.
They could sleep in.

SPEAKER_00 (03:27):
Alright.
Take a timeout here.
Timeout.
You're telling me you went toschool in the city and we're
talking high school age thatwe're talking here.

SPEAKER_02 (03:34):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (03:35):
Was there not a bus service that was offered to you?

SPEAKER_02 (03:39):
I never took the bus.
I don't know.
You took the city bus.
They didn't have a school bus.
You take the city bus.

SPEAKER_01 (03:46):
No, they did not.
They have school buses in thecity.
No, you were not.
They do too, because I knewpeople that drove buses down
there.
I don't think I was I don'tthink I got a city bus.
I think I was a I think.
Then you live too close.
Then you live too close to theschool, you had to be a walker.
Right.
Maybe.
That's probably why.
And you could too.
See?
That's why you walk now, right?
Because you don't didn't walkback then.

(04:09):
I did walk back then.
What, to that front stoop?
To get the cab?
Sometimes.
Faster, it was easier.
I didn't do it all the time.
That's a lot of money back then.
It was.
It was.
He probably thought he was cool.

SPEAKER_02 (04:26):
Getting out of the taxi cab?
I don't think so.
Because it wasn't, it wasn'tthat uncommon.

SPEAKER_00 (04:32):
So you get your license when you're 16, correct?

SPEAKER_02 (04:35):
Yes.

SPEAKER_00 (04:36):
And that equates to about 10th grade year, sophomore
year.
Yeah, why didn't you drive?

SPEAKER_02 (04:42):
I was it was my between my junior year.

SPEAKER_01 (04:44):
So you would have been 16 for sure.

SPEAKER_02 (04:46):
You would have been 16.
Why didn't you drive?
Yeah, did you not have a car?

SPEAKER_01 (04:50):
Not when I was uh No, I was like, I was always
this story sounds like it'sgonna be made up.

SPEAKER_02 (04:56):
No, no, no.

SPEAKER_00 (04:58):
You're telling me you're 16, you have a driver's
license.
Did you or did you not haveaccess to a car?
I did not.

SPEAKER_01 (05:05):
Oh, well then that's okay.

SPEAKER_00 (05:07):
Then that can that could add up.

SPEAKER_01 (05:08):
But I wasn't 16 yet.
You could have maybe rode abicycle.
I wasn't six.
I wasn't sixteen.
I was fifteen.
Oh.
I wasn't sixteen.
Well, you could have rode abicycle.
You could have made friends withother classmates that did drive
and they would have picked youup.
I did, I could.
I did.
I feel sad for you.

SPEAKER_00 (05:27):
Yeah, that doesn't sound too great having to pay to
go to school.
Five dollars and have to?

SPEAKER_02 (05:34):
That's a lot of lunch money.

SPEAKER_00 (05:35):
That is a lot of lunch money.

SPEAKER_02 (05:36):
Yeah, but we actually had like we had like uh
Pizza Hut and shit like that inthe in the in the school for
like lunch.
You could actually go together.
We could not leave it.
Were you the first pan pizzas?

SPEAKER_00 (05:46):
During lunchtime, were you guys allowed to leave
for lunch to go get outsidelunch somewhere?

SPEAKER_02 (05:52):
Not technically, but we could still could.
Yeah, yeah.
Some of the people I knew thatthey knew the the the big guy at
the door, and he'd like they'dbuy they'd buy some some those
uh slim fast drinks.
He liked those every once in awhile.
And we'd let's walk out the doorand go to lunch.
We could not leave school.

SPEAKER_00 (06:14):
Yeah, and we oh we could not leave school.
Well, you they you couldn't.

SPEAKER_01 (06:18):
The doors were locked.
You couldn't you'd have to go tothe house.
We could go out the front.
Was it you couldn't or wasn'tmore you shouldn't do it?
We couldn't.
We couldn't even go outside atlunch.
And we had like a little like ayou couldn't even go out and
play hacky.
No, because we'd always want fora while their hacky sack, we
played a lot of hacky sack.

SPEAKER_02 (06:35):
Wait, what grade we what grades are we talking about
here?

SPEAKER_01 (06:37):
High school?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, because we wanted to playhacky sack because they had like
a little when they got the newmy senior year, they made an
addition on, and then they hadlike a fancy new lunchroom.

SPEAKER_02 (06:48):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (06:49):
And I had like a patio outside, like a cement
area.
And so when we would get doneeating, we'd want to go play um
hacky sack.
Right.
And they wouldn't let us even goout there to play hacky.
They didn't want us play in theschool either.
It was stupid.
You couldn't play, you couldn'tdo that.
It was weird.
I don't know.
I think back now, I was like,no, we couldn't leave.

(07:11):
You couldn't leave.
I'm pretty sure we wouldn't.
The only way that you couldleave is if you had a note to
leave and to get back in, youneed a note.
So you couldn't you had to havea note to get out the school.
I mean, I suppose if you it'sjust out of the house, the front
doors weren't locked back then.
The front doors were, but youcouldn't you had to go by the
office, they would see you goout.

SPEAKER_00 (07:31):
Like I know nowadays, now that's 2025.
I mean, you if you leave thebuilding to get back in, you
have to uh hit that button.
There's a camera right there.
Yeah, nowadays there is, butyeah, back when you yeah, you
guys didn't have that.
No, there's no camera.

SPEAKER_01 (07:44):
No, they had all the doors were locked except for the
front doors.

SPEAKER_00 (07:47):
Yeah, the front doors were always open.
If I think if I was in yourshoes, I would interpret as as
you shouldn't, but it wasn'tthat you could.

SPEAKER_01 (07:53):
Well, I don't know if you wanted.
Well, first of all, we didn'thave money to go out to eat.
That's fair.
Number two, and number two, allyour friends were in lunch in
school.
Right.
So nobody did want to leave.
And the lunches were actuallygood.
Yeah.
No, not always.
I was just telling you a kid theother day we used to have long
dog roll-ups, they're awesome.
Is that just a hot dog or isthat a corn dog?

SPEAKER_02 (08:14):
Used to be awesome because they were you liked them
then.
I bet you if you had one now,you wouldn't think it's this
good.

SPEAKER_01 (08:19):
Their hamburgers were great.
They were like soybean burgers,they're so good.
What is a long dog roll-up?

SPEAKER_00 (08:23):
Is that a corn dog?
Is that a hot dog?

SPEAKER_01 (08:25):
It's like a it's like a hot dog, a big hot dog in
a croissant.

SPEAKER_00 (08:28):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (08:28):
But it's like this long.
It's like a foot long.
Oh, yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (08:32):
Did you guys ever have to deal with not having
access to condiments, meaningmustard or ketchup?
No, we always had that.
So why was it why I was in theelementary school?
Michelle Obama.

SPEAKER_02 (08:42):
Yeah, she didn't.
It was like a healthy thing.
It was like there's a waste.

SPEAKER_01 (08:45):
But it didn't make any sense because mustard was
better for you than ketchup.

SPEAKER_00 (08:48):
Yeah, they oh yeah.
Mustard.
They would say if oh youketchup, ever all the students
can have that, but mustard,that's where we draw the line in
the kitchen.
It was probably a school thingjust to save on money.

SPEAKER_02 (08:58):
Because if they don't have to buy mustard.

SPEAKER_00 (09:00):
I guess not many elementary kids are rocking
mustard.

SPEAKER_02 (09:03):
Yeah, there's not a lot of them that do the mustard,
so why buy it?

SPEAKER_00 (09:06):
That's fair.

SPEAKER_02 (09:07):
For for one or two kids.
That's fair.

SPEAKER_01 (09:09):
Hmm.
That's a whole other topic.

SPEAKER_00 (09:11):
You know what?
I never thought about that.
That's that's the thing.

SPEAKER_01 (09:13):
You're saying that he's saying that they don't do
things for one or two kids.

SPEAKER_02 (09:18):
I'm not saying that.
Okay.
I'm saying that that's probablythe reason behind it.

SPEAKER_01 (09:23):
Well, it didn't matter.
He had a little side businessgoing in his locker.

SPEAKER_00 (09:27):
In the entry.
Yeah, this is back in fifthgrade.
Back in fifth grade.
25 cents.
My grandpa, he worked for uhMcDonald's um for many, many
years.
Uh, he was able to give me likea big like um five-gallon bag
with uh just full of mustardpackets.
So then what I would do withthat- Did he just take them from
the store?
I'm sure.
He probably did.
He probably didn't care forthem.

SPEAKER_02 (09:48):
Not you, he probably did.
He probably did, actually, yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (09:50):
Anyways, with it, I'd be uh outside my locker.
Not many kids like mustard, butfor the ones that didn't, I'd
sell each packet for 25 cents.
So that was my first hucklehustle was back in fifth grade,
was selling mustard packets outof my locker.
It's better than selling.
Did you ever say anything?
No, no one ever.
I mean the teachers knew aboutit, they just laughed at it.
Did they did they ever buy itfrom you?
No, they didn't.
They weren't much mustard fans.

(10:11):
But there's a couple studentshere and there that I made I
made a couple sales on it.

SPEAKER_02 (10:16):
Well, you got the materials for free, so I mean, I
mean, everything was profit.
Yeah, it was straight profit.

SPEAKER_00 (10:23):
Granted, then after that, I mean, you'll you know,
they had the school store, youget like a package or something
like that.

SPEAKER_01 (10:28):
I think I had some influence on that whole
business.
You might have.
You were probably upset aboutthe whole thing with No Mustard.
I remember that actually.
It didn't make any sense.

SPEAKER_02 (10:35):
Yeah, you're you were you because you argued
that.

SPEAKER_00 (10:37):
I think they took away ranching.
I argue they took away ranch atlunch as well.
I remember it.
Go all the way up to fourthgrade.
All the way up to like fourthgrade.
I mean, you had access to allthese things.
Then every single lunch you'dalso get a dessert with it, like
ice cream or some sort of likecookie or something like that
that they included.
And fifth grade came around andthey took all that away.

(10:58):
We just figured you're too old,you don't need that shit
anymore.
Yeah, but how about the youngerkids though?
Oh, the younger ones stilldidn't get anything.
It just completely got rid ofall the desserts that we used to
get in that was because we uhwas probably more of a the
healthy thing.
Right, because they used to belike ice cream, they were full
of like Oreos.
They they kept that chocolatemilk?
They always had chocolate milk.

(11:18):
We always had in the cardinal.
Well, that's not good for you.

SPEAKER_02 (11:21):
I mean, that's not it's you're they're looking at
healthy stuff.
I mean, that's why get rid ofmustard and not chocolate milk.
What are the rules?
I don't know.
What are the rules?
I don't know.
That's dumb.
I think there's I think there'ssome other stuff going on there.

SPEAKER_01 (11:36):
Yeah.
What was worse is how much timethey used to give them for
launch, is what drove me nuts.
How long?
Like two minutes?
I went to have lunch with them,and I almost got in an argument
with his sister.
Like we literally sat down, andwhen we sat down and started
eating, they were alreadyexcusing the end of the table
that we were at.

(11:56):
I look, I go, what are youdoing?
And the lady's like, you gottago.
I said, We ain't going anywhere.
We just sat down and she'seating her lunch.
Really?
Yes, it was bad.
Well, they fixed it, they fixedit since then.
What and I had a lot to do withthat because I've told the
principal uh Sperling.
No, it was pre-himp.
It was pre-Sperling, youthought.
No, it was after he came in.

(12:17):
I talked to him.
I said, This is ridiculous.
I I get it.
I go, you guys want the peoplethat eat and not, but that's a
time for them to socialize.
So and it doesn't need to be anhour.
You want him to do it in class,or do you want to?
And I said, it doesn't need tobe an hour.
I said, it doesn't have to be anhour or whatever, but when I'm
sitting down and and now I knowwhy they don't eat their food

(12:40):
because they don't have enoughtime.
They literally had take twobites, and we weren't screwing
around, and as the ladies like,you gotta go, gotta go, and then
they just throw it away.
So what was the whole point ofthat?
They they didn't want peopletalking, and they don't want
they want to.

SPEAKER_00 (12:54):
No, I don't I think it was more along the lines of
trying to get the kids out torecess sooner, getting them more
recess time.
I think that was more of theirthoughts.

SPEAKER_01 (13:03):
It was less than 10 minutes to eat.
It was like 10 minutes, max.

SPEAKER_02 (13:07):
Well, how long does it take you ever see those
YouTube videos or those those uhreal videos of a when you a
chick will like startvideotaping herself trying to
like eat like like a lot of herboyfriend or husband and trying
to keep up?
Yeah, the guy's trying to eathis.
Yeah, the guy just there's a guysitting there just read looking
at his phone, he's eating hishamburger and fries and drinking
his, you know, drinking hisdrink, and she's like watching

(13:27):
and she's like, and then then hegrabs her gonna fries, he tries,
she's like done chewing.
This is kind of funny trying towatch trying to watch women keep
up with guys eating, too.

SPEAKER_01 (13:37):
It's just and I didn't have a problem so much at
just sitting around because theydon't want them to sit around
for two hours.
I get that, but it wasridiculous.
I was not happy because I'm likethat and you went right in the
principal's office.
Not that day later, and youKevin did later.
No offense to the Kevin, weknow.
I was there at a for a differentmaybe like an event or

(13:58):
something, and I brought it up.
Not I didn't specifically gothere to sit down and talk about
it.
I was talking about we werethere for some other reason, and
I brought it up.
I'm like, this is stupid.
I said, I didn't even get achance to eat.
What did he say?
He goes, We've begun a lot ofcomplaints about we're gonna
look at making some changes.

SPEAKER_02 (14:15):
Oh, so it wasn't because of you.

SPEAKER_01 (14:17):
Well uh you just said a little bit ago it was
because of you.
Well, I helped.
I helped.
I was one of the people thatcomplained.
How's that?
All right, all right.
I didn't like maybe I thoughtyou had like influence on it.
They don't, they don't, theydon't say it's the Jay lunch
hour.
Why not?
They don't name they don't namelunch after me.

(14:38):
I it wasn't like groundbreaking,and I was don't have to give me
all the credit.
They should have, right?
I mean the Jay lunch hour.
Yeah.
It's time to go have the lunch.
Jay's extended lunch hour?
I think they what they did isthey added like five more
minutes or something or tenminutes.
If you have five more minutes,you probably would be enough.
It probably was, yeah.
But you go there and I'm like,so the one lady was like, Well,

(15:01):
we don't want them sitting thereyapping.
I said the same thing.
Well, why not?
Why don't you want them yapping?
Right.
That's kind of part of learningin school is socialising.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (15:11):
Right.
She was like, they probablywanted to get him out to the
they wanted to happy.

SPEAKER_00 (15:17):
Was she the one that had her hair way up high?
She was not way old, uh, yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (15:21):
Like they're probably trying to push her out
there, push the kids out toreach this to social.

SPEAKER_00 (15:25):
I that's what I think it was more about.
I think that's what they'retrying to get across.
But you still gotta eat, right?
You still need to eat, yeah.
Anyways, um, how did we get onthat topic?

SPEAKER_01 (15:34):
I don't know.
I don't know how the shit didthat come from.
That took a side loop.
We were talking about you andyou driving, not having your
driver's license when you're 18and you were going to cab until
18 then and we started talkingabout lunches.
It wasn't 18 then.
Because we cannot leave schoolfor lunch.
Yeah, we could.
Well, not technically.
Did you know that when you eatspicy stuff goes on your

(15:56):
fingers?
When you eat spicy stuff?

SPEAKER_02 (15:58):
I don't eat a lot of super spicy stuff.

SPEAKER_01 (16:01):
Well, other than Tabasco today, I mean Tabasco.
Before we went on the air, Irubbed my eye and I had that hot
stuff that was on my fingers.
It was f funny, but it wasn'tfunny.
It felt like there was a knifein my eye.

SPEAKER_00 (16:16):
Isn't this like a new topic that we're discovering
here?
That if you got something hot onyour fingers, you don't rub your
eyes.
Yeah, when you use it, it's nota new thing.
I'm just gonna do it.

SPEAKER_01 (16:25):
It doesn't happen very often.
I did it by mistake.
After touching stuff called ringstinger.
Well, I didn't I washed myhands.
Pepper's flakes, right?
It's made from Carolina Reapers.
I washed my hands first for therecord.
So it got done immediately.
Did you use soap?
Yes, and it was a long time ago.
Yeah, I did.

SPEAKER_02 (16:44):
That's there.
That's a little thing we cantell people use soap from now
on.
Just put a little CarolinaReaper uh ring stinger on the
street.

SPEAKER_01 (16:52):
I think it's still, I don't think it gets off here.
I think it doesn't just come offlike that.
It's oils, right?
Isn't it the oil?
Probably.
I mean, that's just oil.

SPEAKER_00 (16:58):
It's uh seasoning, though.
It's dried up.
Does that so have oil in it?

SPEAKER_01 (17:01):
No, I don't know, maybe not.
It's maybe when cut when youcut, like I did it before when I
cut uh habaner once and I didit.
I thought I had to go tomerchants.

SPEAKER_02 (17:08):
Oh, I've done it with touching like fresh
peppers, like jalapeno.

SPEAKER_01 (17:12):
It's not fun.
It felt fun.

SPEAKER_02 (17:14):
No, it's not.
It's not good.

SPEAKER_01 (17:16):
No, but we had some good food tonight.
That was good.
Some potato thoup.
Throop.
I had throop T-H-O-O-P.
I had too much.
Yeah, you guys were hurting.
I had two.
I had two bowls.
It was so good, though.
It was so good.
I call it you one bowl because Iburnt my mouth the other day.
The other day I did some onpizza and chicken wings?
Maybe.
I'm I was full, so I only hadone bowl.

(17:38):
And I was and probably I wantedto save some for another day.
There's a lot left.
There's a lot left, yeah.
It was a triple batch.
Yeah, there's a lot left still.

SPEAKER_00 (17:46):
That's so good.
No, we we put a good intent init.

SPEAKER_01 (17:50):
There's only like probably I would say five or six
bowls left.
Really?
Yeah.
I thought there was still quitea bit in there.
You each had two big helpings.
I didn't have a second bowl wasnearly as full as well.
And then the first bowl was likethe other guys had a couple
level.

SPEAKER_02 (18:05):
Yeah, the boys probably did.
Anyway, yeah.
But I'm not sure.
No, so don't touch your eyeswith uh when you have if you're
touching the colour.
Well, that's the thing.

SPEAKER_01 (18:12):
I know that I did that that one time when we were
um I couldn't figure out what Idid.
We were camping.
I think you were a baby.
And we were with your it yourgrandma and grandpa, and then
they ended up getting-camping?
No, they they lied.
They said they wanted to gocamping, and I'm like, we're not
campers, right?
But I'm like, well, if they'regonna do it, we'll go.
What the heck?

(18:33):
For one night.
It was at a state park, first ofall, which is boring because we
got in trouble for sneaking beerin there.
Well, I state parts.
No, we're getting right.
I'm sorry, but there's aburning.
They're terrible.
And I'm like, well, where's Igo, I brought fishing?
Like, I go, well, I'm gonna godown a fit.
Where's the fishing?
Trainal lake.
No.
Yeah.
I'm like, well, what are wedoing here for?

(18:53):
Yeah.
And then and then turn come tofind out her your grandma and
grandpa, they had a hotel room.
So they laughed and they weren'tabout it.
I'm like, well, what a second.
We got a kid that's a baby.
So why did they want to get awayfrom the camp?
And we had a town then.

SPEAKER_02 (19:08):
Was was the was uh was Nags' sister there too or
something?
Yeah.
So they wanted to go camping.
No, because they're big camping.

SPEAKER_01 (19:16):
No, it was with uh their family, the other family
that they're that they don't seeanymore.
It was uh uh her mom's I thinksister and their kids, like it'd
be Nags's cousins.
Not really, they'd never wedon't see him, we only see him
like once or twice.
Yeah, but Nags's sister likes tocamp.
Yeah, they were there, theyenjoyed it, but I'm like, what

(19:37):
are you gonna do in a field?
Yeah, there's a lot of people.
And then a guy like comes overthe state part of the city.
I think he had a badge on, butthat's it.
Probably.
And he's like, Well, there's noalcohol in here.
I said, What are you talkingabout?
Yeah, you can't alcoholic.
You can't have beer in here.
I'm like, Well, I mean, I guessI guess not having glass.

(20:01):
I said, I said, I guess you'llhave to throw us out, wink wink.
Right.
And then they said, just keep itdown.
We don't want we don't want nocomplaints.
Yeah, they get they get I lookaround, there's not anybody else
camping in this whole place.
We're the only ones there.

SPEAKER_02 (20:15):
They come around and start yelling at you for drinks
talking like they're justsitting around the campfire
talking.

SPEAKER_00 (20:19):
Would you guys agree?
P personally, if I'm goingcamping out in the woods, I
would have to either be doinglike a fishing or some sort of
hunting excursion.
I could not just go out to somepark and just camp up and that's
what I thought.
Correct.
I could not be doing an sort ofhunting or fishing.
We agree with you.

SPEAKER_01 (20:39):
We we powered through and it was hot out, and
you were a baby, and we had alittle dog, and a little dog.
I think it was Tyler, maybe.
No, he was a little dog.
He was a big dog.
Okay, we had a big dog.
I thought he was a puppy.
No, because we got him in NorthCarolina.
It must have been Tyler.
Tyler was older by the time heused her.

(21:01):
I don't know, but it was it wasa it was kind of we tried to be
gamers.
It was alright for a while.
So then the whole point of thestory was I had bought some
fresh habaneros.

unknown (21:11):
Right?

SPEAKER_01 (21:11):
Oh, yeah, I forgot what talking about.

SPEAKER_00 (21:13):
You're not a habanero guy.
I heard we're talking abouthabanero.

SPEAKER_01 (21:15):
No, I don't like the flavor of habaneros.
But I wanted to.

SPEAKER_00 (21:17):
Did this event have something to do with your
thoughts on habanero?

SPEAKER_01 (21:22):
No, it had to do with uh what happened was I cut
it up and I was there and I wastrying to be like polite.
I was more polite back then,probably.
While you were camping?
We were getting something wewere cutting up for supper.
Right.
And I was cutting up a habanerofor like a on the dish you could
have extra hot stuff orwhatever.
And so we're all talking, blah,blah, blah, and I rubbed my eye,

(21:42):
and I didn't think of anything.
And I and then the light bulbclicked in my head, and then I
walked away, and then your momand I goes, What's wrong?
And I'm like, This ain't good.
She's like, What?
I go, I rubbed my eye with it.
I said, but don't make a bigdeal of your parents, but I
think we might have to go to thehospital.
And she's like, What do youmean?

SPEAKER_02 (21:59):
I go, it feels like he did it on purpose to get out
of camp.

SPEAKER_01 (22:02):
No, it was ten times worse than what happened today,
tonight.
Oh, ugly, man.
It was so bad.
It like you said, I we ended upgetting water and trying to
flush it.
That didn't help.
There's I don't think there'sanything in, I think it's just a
time tank.
And then finally they were like,Do you flush it with milk?

SPEAKER_02 (22:17):
The whole thing works for drinking.

SPEAKER_01 (22:19):
The whole thing I was like just gushing, and
they're like, What's issomething wrong?
I'm like, no, no, there'snothing.
Why?
Oh.
It seemed to be crying.
It was the it was a 10 out of10.
It was one of the most painfulthings ever happened to me.
But you're right, there wasnothing I could do.
It just took time, and theneventually it just slowly,
slowly went away.
But oh god, that was terrible.

SPEAKER_02 (22:42):
Speaking of that, we gotta get you in that one chip
challenge thing.

SPEAKER_01 (22:44):
Rewatched that.
We should try that.

SPEAKER_00 (22:46):
I don't want to do it.
I my buddies have done it.
Some are spice guys, some arenot.
And both of them, they wait.
Some are better than others?
When it comes when it when itcomes to handling spice.
Oh, okay.
But the one chip challenge isall the same, right?
Yeah, no, yeah.
The one chip is just a one chip.
Yeah, right.
It's just a hot.
It's just one flavor, but everysingle one of them, they said,

(23:08):
not worth it.
Do not do it.
There's no need to put yourselfthrough that game.
It's that hot.
They, yes.
That's what they said.
This is this, I could see youknow, from like the non-spice
guys out there, I'm like, Icould see how that would be too
hot for them.
But for the people that do likespice, they even then like did
you see that one when you'regonna do it.

SPEAKER_01 (23:27):
Friend from high school and his brother did it,
and their dad videotaped it andwe saw it.
His the dad was he was in tearslaughing so hard.
Yeah, the kids were almost, theywere crying out.
Yeah, they were crying.

SPEAKER_00 (23:38):
They're like, help.
And what I've heard is not onlynot only is it hot coming in,
but it just like sits in yourgut in just hours to where it's
just constant just flames goingon in your stomach.
Oh, yeah, that's it.

SPEAKER_01 (23:49):
It just doesn't go away.
It's just too hot.
That's why I can't eat a lot ofspicy stuff.
Well, that's what happened to mewhen I told you this story when
I was in New Orleans with Dr.
Maddie Ice.
Yeah.
And it had like a thing therewhere it just like we're we were
in New Orleans and it was a shopthat had hot sauces for sale,
and I'm like, I always like toget that hot sauce.
And I had a challenge that youyou can try this, and he goes,

(24:12):
It's the hotter, you can't getany hotter.
This is the hottest on earth.
I was like, whatever.
I go, I'll try it.
And it was like an eyedropper,and I had a sign uh waiver.
Was it was it like a like an oilthen or what?
No, it on that it was like uhCarolina Reaper and um but if
it's in the if it's aneyedropper, I mean so it's gotta
be a liquid form.

SPEAKER_02 (24:32):
Yeah, it was a liquid, liquid form.
So is it like an oil like thebasically it's all ground up to
probably liquid in there?

SPEAKER_00 (24:37):
I'm but I'm assuming I'm guessing it's just like a
pot sauce where they put theCarolina Reaper in there and
then a bunch of the other, youknow, the top one.
Where do they put a concoctionin the case?
They probably do their ownbreeding, whatever, and then
scale growing to get it evenspicy.

SPEAKER_01 (24:52):
Whatever that scale is, what they have for that.
Skullville.
Yeah, it's highest one, he said.
Um there's nothing hot.
What's that called?
Skullville.
Scullville.
That's the the best measurement.
Measurement for spice.
Yes.
Yeah.
I didn't know that.
And so I took it, I'm like,what's an eyedropper gonna do?
So it's a little hot.
Just one drop, right?
Yeah, it was I was almostcrying.

(25:13):
People are laughing.
I was like outside, I had myhead in my hands praying.
And I had all I had was a warmbeer.
Oh that made worse.
They didn't have milk in there.
No, I was and they're alllaughing.
Even the people there werelaughing.
I had my hand, I was like, I'mnever doing this again.

(25:34):
Ever.
It was kind of like at a timewhen me and you went to did that
eating contest.
Remember how m awful I feltthere?
Yeah.
This was worse.
It was so hot.
Oh, that would be a differentpain, though, wouldn't it?
That's yes, it's different.
That's like but it wasuncomfortable.
It's very uncomfortable.
And I would, I would, I don'tknow if I actually that that
that hamburger challenge was toobad.

(25:55):
It was awful.
What was that one again?
It's the size of his hat, thebun.
Yeah, it was a big hamburger.
It's a big hamburger.

SPEAKER_02 (26:01):
It was a one pound one pound, what, beef?
It was one pound hamburger andone pound of uh potato jojo's
and uh the bunches and the bunand a beer.
And a beer.

SPEAKER_01 (26:09):
Well, I'm guessing it's probably a tall beer.
No, it was just a bottle.
No, I had a couple beers.
He was so he was like done, heselecting set the record.
It was like I think he was donewith it in like 13 minutes.
He had 30 minutes to eat it.

SPEAKER_03 (26:20):
Sure.

SPEAKER_01 (26:20):
He's done in like 13 minutes, and I made the mistake
of just eating a hamburger rightaway.
Whereas he was doing a bite ofhamburger, a bite of Jojo's,
bite of hamburger, potatoes.

SPEAKER_02 (26:30):
So he did pretty quick.

SPEAKER_01 (26:32):
I I couldn't finish the potatoes.
He had a I think he had to grabone.
I I might have grabbed more thanone.
I walked around the table.
I had to get up and walk around,and they were like, oh, here it
comes.
And it was miserable.

SPEAKER_02 (26:47):
There was one guy that did like some crazy
motivates.
That was I didn't get therecord.
There's one guy that lay likedown like eight minutes.

SPEAKER_00 (26:52):
You ever seen the videos of people trying to or
like complete those challenges?
They don't attack and just likeeating one fry, then a bite of
burger.
They go from like the burger,they'll start with a top bun,
either lettuce, they work itright through.
They'll do a top down, and rightit seems that they can do it
quicker for the five.
I did it that way.

SPEAKER_01 (27:10):
I ate the hamburger a fairly decent amount of time.
I had plenty of time to eat therest of the potatoes.
I had like a good 15, maybe 20minutes.
I think I got done in like 10minutes.
I look over and his plate'sempty, and he's like, Did you
just get another plate?

SPEAKER_00 (27:25):
Would you like dip the fries like in any sauce?
Or you just you could have.

SPEAKER_01 (27:30):
I couldn't finish the last potatoes.
And all this was before all wegot was a t-shirt.

SPEAKER_00 (27:36):
Did you at least get it for free?

unknown (27:37):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (27:38):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (27:39):
And our name got on the wall, too.
Yeah, we got a name on the wall.
We got the burger for free, andwe got a t-shirt.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I made it to the truck, andI closed my eyes, and an
accident, I was in a coma sleep,but I didn't wake up to each
other.
Yeah, it was in the came righthere.
45 minutes away.
I was out cold.
Like I was like a coma, like afood coma.
I was crying.

(28:00):
I think I laid down the backseat.
You wouldn't lay down when youwhen we got back here, you went
back and still laid down.

SPEAKER_00 (28:05):
I mean, at that point, why didn't you just go
pull trigger before you got inthe car?

unknown (28:12):
What?

SPEAKER_01 (28:13):
Pull pull trick.
Pull trigger, puke.
Throw up.
Oh, nah, I'm not a puker,really.
Yeah, but wouldn't you have feltbetter?
Probably would.
Probably would have.
That's principal, though.
That's principal.
I said, if we ever go somewhereand they have an eating contest,
I'm never joining the.
And I bet you I would.
Yeah, why not?

SPEAKER_02 (28:32):
That one wasn't as bad as it could have been.

SPEAKER_01 (28:34):
The bun is bigger than your cat.

SPEAKER_02 (28:35):
It wasn't like the the old 96 or great outdoors,
John Candy.

SPEAKER_01 (28:41):
It was that tall and it was this big.
And it was big.
It was gross.
It wasn't gross.
The Jojo's were ever since then,I don't eat Jojo's.

SPEAKER_00 (28:50):
Jojo's are good too.
I like Jojo's.
I don't get them all that often,but they're good.

SPEAKER_01 (28:54):
They're too many.

SPEAKER_02 (28:56):
It was like two pounds of food.

SPEAKER_01 (28:58):
It used to be a pound of hamburger, a pound of
Jojo's, and the all the bread,and shit.
I think I dropped one or two onthe floor, didn't I?
I know.
I think I ate them.
I just took them off your plate.
Yeah, I because I wasn't gonnafinish.
No, you were not gonna finish.
I was so mad because I went thatfar and I'm gonna get it.
I had like six fries left.
And then people are like, like,he's not gonna make it.

(29:19):
Like you get kind of a littlebit of an audience because
there's other other hunters inthere and stuff.
Right.
And then like, he's not gonnamake it.
And I get up and walk around andtry to get find some more room
in my belly.

SPEAKER_02 (29:28):
And I'd steal a JoJo for him.

SPEAKER_01 (29:30):
And then uh, and then uh, yeah, and then he would
take one or two and help me alittle bit when the bar
tettered.
Because yet they had a watch.
Otherwise, they weren't gonnagive you t shirt.
I like that t shirt too.
And I I used to like thatt-shirt.
I don't know if I have anymore.
Oh my mind's it disappeared.
Anyways, it was kind of fun.
I'd like to watch somebody elsedo it.

SPEAKER_00 (29:49):
Would you say that's something that you need to do at
least once, at least attemptedonce?
Oh, yeah.
I think everyone has to try it.
Well, have you done the blazingchallenge?
Yeah, we did it.
Is that me and him did it theBuffalo Wild Way?

SPEAKER_01 (30:00):
I didn't do it.
We did it together.
You did it.
I was with you.
Oh, I thought that was hot.
I wasn't gonna eat it.
That was hot.
No, no, you did it.
I was there with you, but Ididn't I didn't eat it.
That is not as bad as thateyedropper.
Those are hot.
And I don't like having a lot ofsauce.
So that time it wasn't a lot ofsauce.
Right.
When it's too much sauce, Idon't like it.
Right.

(30:20):
But this was especially when itcomes to vinegar.
It gets too vinegary when theyeat it that much.
That blazer John's, those arehot.
I'm not gonna lie.
Those are definitely hot.
You you didn't eat all of them.
I did pretty good though.
Yeah.
You didn't do it?
I don't think you didn't.
I think you had a certain amountof time too on that, didn't you?
I don't remember.

SPEAKER_00 (30:36):
Isn't it just like 12 wings and like a 24-ounce
beer?
You gotta do it.

SPEAKER_01 (30:41):
I think I came close and I was like, no, I can't
finish.
They were hot.
Yeah, they were hot.
At that point, you finished.
I think we did finish.
Did you?
I think you helped me with andeat like one or two.
And I ate the rest.
I don't remember.
Because I think we got our nameon all you did, we did all you
did is you got like a name onthe wall or something.
We didn't like win anything.
I think we did.
What wingles was that?
Well, we might have cheated tooat the end, I think.

(31:02):
That wasn't a year.
That was a random one.
It was like or Elk River, Ithink.
What was it?

SPEAKER_02 (31:07):
Was it there?

SPEAKER_01 (31:08):
No, it wasn't there.
No, because it was during a uhuh uh K-fan thing.
Oh wasn't it?
Rose was it Roseville?
Wasn't PA and Dubai there orsomething like that?
Which one were they at?
Was it the Ogre?
But it wasn't during the day, itwas like at night.
I thought it was like the yeah,I don't think it was.
Well, they were doing like afootball show at night there.
Oh, it could have been.
Because they used to do likesomething like on a Monday night

(31:30):
or a Tuesday night or Wednesday.
I don't care what day we playit, Monday night, Tuesday night.
That was PA and Dubai.
That was back in the day.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think we did it.
And I think we didn't.
Maybe we did do it.
I think we might cheat.

SPEAKER_02 (31:43):
I'm sure we did cheat.
We didn't cheat.
We creatively problem solved.

SPEAKER_01 (31:47):
That's right.
We creatively powder found them.

SPEAKER_03 (31:49):
That's right.

SPEAKER_01 (31:49):
But I think I didn't eat them.
I did eat a lot of them.
I know that.
I can't do them.
They're a little too hot.
I don't even get those.
I don't.
It's kind of fun ones.
I can't do them.
And I can't do them anymore.

SPEAKER_02 (32:00):
Well, I can't.
So there's always certain kindsof things.
I mean, I like spicy food, but Ijust it doesn't like me.
And I thought I figured out afew different ones I can
actually have, like Tabasco.
I can I can I can drink that seton the well it's not that spicy.

SPEAKER_01 (32:11):
Tabasco's not that spicy.
It's not, but that's it.
Makes your bloody Mary's tastebetter.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (32:16):
We did we made bloodies today with Louisiana.
That was not good.

SPEAKER_01 (32:20):
I have we have uh the the zing zing at home.

SPEAKER_00 (32:24):
Yeah.
Yeah.
In the bloody mix we use.
It wasn't zing zing out.
No, it was it was a very okay.

SPEAKER_01 (32:30):
I don't think it was the mix.
I think it was that saucy part.
It was a sauce in the in theseasoning.

SPEAKER_00 (32:35):
We didn't, yeah.
We didn't have any celery salt.
We didn't have any wart cider.

SPEAKER_01 (32:38):
You need the seasoning.
We made one last week.
It was good.
That was awesome.
Yeah, it always tastes betterwhen somebody else makes them
too.
The seasoning bag helps.

SPEAKER_00 (32:45):
We didn't have any pickle juice, neither.
It was beer bones.
We were living off the land tomake that one.
Seeing what we had.
Living off the land.

SPEAKER_01 (32:52):
Yeah, let's make another one.
Let's go make a week one.
Let's make a weak one and thenwe'll uh then we'll get in some
topics.
All right, we'll be right back.
All right.

SPEAKER_00 (33:17):
We should have been.

SPEAKER_02 (33:18):
Yeah, I think we I gotta do a quick uh shout out to
Buzz Sprout.
Or you can do that already.
Yeah, you guys want to do yourown podcast?
Go check out Buzzsprout.
It gets it on the line, it getsall the all your content out
there, it helps you get it onthe the Apples and the Googles
and the Spotify's and all thatkind of stuff.
And it can help you get you knowmake some money from that too.
So go check out Buzzsprout anddon't forget to mention Eddie

(33:40):
and J and Brady's BS.
Anyways, we just did like a likea extra long brain break there,
but not on the air.

SPEAKER_01 (33:47):
Yeah, I don't want to repeat that story.
We could probably get sometrouble off of that one.
We can or you can.
Well, I didn't do it anyways.
Number one, and number two is alot of years.

SPEAKER_02 (33:57):
You throw them under the business.
Yeah.
That's that was that was alittle bit more aggressive.

SPEAKER_01 (34:06):
That was a little aggressive.
We only did it like once.
Jesus Christ.
That thing was a yeah, whatever.
I don't ever want to hear aboutbiking taxi again.
Hey, that's that new stadiumthat you were at.
They have it, they have it, uh,uh they have it, the basketball
there and the hockey there.
You were just there, you said.

SPEAKER_02 (34:24):
Uh I don't know.
I was never there.
Not me personally.

SPEAKER_01 (34:29):
Oh, I thought you were.
No, no, no.

SPEAKER_02 (34:31):
Anyways, but anyways, oh, and we also figured
out during a break that Hollandis a province of the
Netherlands.
It's not its own country.
And and they speak Dutch.

SPEAKER_01 (34:38):
And Holland is a good thing.
I don't remember what I wassaying.

SPEAKER_02 (34:42):
Oh, oh, oh, and uh Martin Van Buren speak Dutch as
his his first language.
Yes, English as a secondlanguage.
Yes.

SPEAKER_01 (34:49):
See, we're we got hard-hidden facts up there.

SPEAKER_02 (34:51):
We did a lot of like uh AI in it here in the middle
of this break.
AI.
I did, it was AI.
Did we call it something likethat?

SPEAKER_00 (34:59):
Most of it was more off the top of our head though.
We knew we we covered it withoutthe use of Google for the most
part.
Well, for the most part.
For the most part.
But we had to verify it.

SPEAKER_02 (35:09):
Yeah.
Anyways.

SPEAKER_01 (35:15):
I texted Buff.

SPEAKER_02 (35:16):
Yeah, I know.
Jay texted him.
I'm assuming he's he's uh deerhunting.
He didn't, he didn't respond.
He might be having a fewcocktails.
You know, you gotta relax, yougotta cut loose.
But oh, here it is.
I did get an accident there.

SPEAKER_01 (35:32):
You're right.
It was on the news.
I told you about that.
Oh, I didn't see it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was bad.
Oh wow.

SPEAKER_02 (35:41):
Anyways.
Well, shout out to Buff.
I hope you guys get some uh nicedeer up there.

SPEAKER_01 (35:45):
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, that's deer huntweekend.
I had that written down.
We didn't talk about it.
It was deer hunt weekend.
Yeah.
We uh we the turdy pointer.
We like to watch a lot of deer.
We do, we watch a lot of deer.
Yeah, I don't know if it wasdeer hunting weekend.
It's deer watching weekend.
We don't hunt.
I don't even know why we have agun.
Let's see.
I think we'll get a look thepart.
I think I've been coming up.
Well, we're wearing orange.

(36:05):
We do wear one.
We probably don't even need tobring a gun up there.

SPEAKER_00 (36:08):
No, not this.
Not on the opening morning, no.
Not to watch.
I was gonna say, I think I'vebeen deer hunting now with a gun
for the last 13, 14, 15 yearsnow.
Right.
Come here.
I can't recall one time we'veonce shot a deer opening
morning.
I know we have.

SPEAKER_02 (36:23):
Yeah, you just look at the thing.
But come.
I know we have, but it's notthat often, you're right.
Because the morning is liketoday.
And to be fair, we don't know,we don't want to we don't want
to start shooting, and we havewe could have we have all these
little bucks running around.
Well, we had three fighting,three fights.
Yeah, that's at first.
They're all got a good video oflike all three, all three going
at it fighting.

SPEAKER_01 (36:45):
Like a hundred yards out in first.
We've had two fights before.
Yeah, we had two.
They were like six pointers.
Yep.
And then we had one fightingfight the decoyers and things.
We had one fight the decoy,yeah.
Mess with the decoy once.
Yep.
Then we had one lay down.
Yep.
We've had a couple lay down, laydown, yeah, nap all.
And then today we had three, athree-way.
Three bucks all going at it.

(37:05):
Yeah, but a hundred yards, overa hundred yards away.
You were getting kind of excitedtoo, so it's kind of weird.
Who was?
Huh?
Who was what?

SPEAKER_02 (37:14):
Who was getting excited about the bucks
fighting?

SPEAKER_01 (37:17):
You were getting a little bit.

SPEAKER_02 (37:18):
That was pretty cool.
I got a doggy.
And then we saw we saw we sawsome does.
We well, I think we saw wedefinitely saw more bucks than
does, I think.

SPEAKER_00 (37:27):
We did.
We definitely did.

SPEAKER_02 (37:29):
But there was just nothing.

SPEAKER_00 (37:30):
It seemed like they were outbetting.
All the bucks seemed like theywere betting though, out on our
land there.

SPEAKER_02 (37:34):
Yeah, there's a lot of them around.
And it's the one big one, maybe,maybe a bigger one up there on
top of the hill.
We couldn't shoot that way bythe road.

SPEAKER_00 (37:40):
I couldn't get a good look at it.
Maybe.
It looked, it was a it wasn't abasket rack.
It was out wide.
Could have had a shooter.
But it looked like it was like Ididn't see that one.
It looked like each individualantler was like six inches long,
but it was like a fork, though.
It was still a young.
It was just a fork, but it was abig, big fork.
That was way up by the road onthe top corner.

SPEAKER_01 (37:59):
You're degrees daring cheap.
I wasn't sleeping that much.
You were just resting youreyelids.
You're reading your readinginside your eyes.
It was cold.
It was 59 degrees in the stand.
It was cold.
Yeah.
It should be 70.
No.
No.
This morning?
No.
It was 59 though.
It went getting across 60.

SPEAKER_00 (38:21):
It might help if you do zip your jacket up.
Usually that keeps yourinsulation in better than it
blocked all the way.

SPEAKER_01 (38:26):
I just had the shell on.
That's the problem.
I need to wear the undergarmentpart of the room.
You gotta wear the bibstomorrow.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (38:32):
It's gonna be cold.
On the walk over here, or rightover here, just getting into the
truck.
It was cold.
It was like it was yeah, it was25, 26 out.

SPEAKER_02 (38:39):
Did you count the Hollywood seconds it took you to
drive down the road here?

SPEAKER_01 (38:42):
Oh, that it was warm enough.
It was smart enough where ourseat got hot.

SPEAKER_02 (38:46):
It was it's like 15 seconds, or is it like 20
seconds?
I went slow.
Oh, you drove slow just to dragit out.
So you maybe got 30 seconds outof it.

SPEAKER_00 (38:53):
Yeah, maybe.
It was warm.
It was warm.

SPEAKER_02 (38:56):
It was cold getting out.
So so Jay, to drive to drivedown to my place for the podcast
today, to do the studio overhere.

SPEAKER_01 (39:03):
I had the truck running.

SPEAKER_02 (39:04):
Is it over or under 500 feet?

SPEAKER_01 (39:06):
Yeah, it's over 500 feet.
It's gotta be less than 100yards.
It's gotta be 100 yards.
It's probably less than 50yards.
Yeah, about the four lengths.
Our lot's 300 feet wide.
We're at the far end of thislot.
No, it's not.
It's 100 feet wide, because it's300 feet.

(39:27):
It's 100 by 300.

SPEAKER_02 (39:28):
Each lot.

SPEAKER_00 (39:29):
So it's unless test your knowledge here.
How many feet are in a yard?
Three feet are in a yard.
There you go.
Right.
So but it's not, it was ahundred feet.

SPEAKER_01 (39:40):
So then you gotta add in between us.
400 feet?
No.
500 feet?
I think it's less than that.
I think it's 100 plus maybeanother 100.
It's probably 250 feet.
I bet you like but you can't.
You're right.
It's probably 100 yards.
It is probably 100 yards.

SPEAKER_02 (39:59):
So you let your you let your truck warm up until it
shut off.
So 20 minutes.
Well, it's because you guyswouldn't get up and go.
And then he restarted it.
And he got in the truck.

SPEAKER_01 (40:09):
It was cold.
I wish you got it.
And then you I was gonna parknext to the house too.
You probably could have.
I was gonna drive in your inyour ass?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But whatever we what do youthink?
We do on the deer stand.
We drive right up to the nextdoor to it.

SPEAKER_02 (40:25):
You drive right up into it, and then we get we have
the heat on in there too.
We keep the heat on all night soit stays nice and yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (40:32):
But the problem is there's a gap on my one window,
so that's where I get cold from.
The wind comes through the gapon the window.
Well, you should move to theother seat and sit by the by the
heater there.
I'm not.
I like sit and rice sit.
Well, then could you bitch it?
I wasn't bitching.

SPEAKER_00 (40:44):
You said I was I said I was cold.
This kind of reminds me.
I got some buddies out there,specifically a guy named Sweet
Potato.
He doesn't think they were realhunters because of their deer
stand setup.
No.
He thinks because it wasinsulated and we got a heater in
there, and then that's not realhunting.
That's exactly what I would tellyou.
We did, we did we did already.
We did already.

SPEAKER_01 (41:03):
We took you up there once.

SPEAKER_00 (41:04):
I would have been in there.
I've been there, done that.
You've made me sit out before.
We had a little bit when youguys are up in the yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (41:10):
We wrapped in like 400 blankets, we wrapped in like
400 blankets.
Remember it was like 90 milewinds.
And I finally said, I had hejust had to give me his gloss.

SPEAKER_00 (41:19):
My hands are did you bring your old uh video camera
out there on that one?
I think I remember that.
I think you're I think Iremember that out there.
Yeah, whatever we get.
Do you have any videos of it?

SPEAKER_01 (41:27):
Oh, yeah, I got them all still.

SPEAKER_00 (41:28):
Oh, really?

SPEAKER_01 (41:29):
Yeah, nice.

SPEAKER_00 (41:30):
Yeah, you may then you I think you guys maybe put a
harness on too.
I think.
Oh, yeah, we put a harness onyou.
You're you're little then.
You're like, God, you have whatare you third eleven?
No, I was three.
Yeah, I was way younger.

SPEAKER_01 (41:41):
Five, five, maybe.
Five?
Five, yeah, because we carry himup the ladder.
Yeah, he was pretty little.
Or you handed them to me, or Ihanded them to you.
One of the two.
It was walking behind him.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was cold that day.
And that's why I said, we haveall this land.
Why are we sitting on herefreezing?
Why don't we make a damn?

SPEAKER_02 (41:57):
Well, we're gonna put sides on that stand we
built, and then we like asked.
Well, we did one here.

SPEAKER_01 (42:03):
We did.
We put like this burlap.

SPEAKER_00 (42:05):
Yeah, you just had burlap on there.

SPEAKER_01 (42:07):
Yeah, but we had a heater up there, I think, one
time.

SPEAKER_00 (42:09):
Because my hands would just be a little cold.
Yeah, and the heater wouldn't domuch.

SPEAKER_01 (42:13):
No, my hands would get so cold up there.

SPEAKER_00 (42:15):
You're top of a hill in the middle of a field.
Yeah.
So I mean it was like I rememberonce I there was snow.
It was there was a lot of snow.
We had like a foot of snow, andthen during Deer Weekend that
year, it would just blow rightthrough you.

SPEAKER_01 (42:25):
Yeah, you were cold one time.
My core was cold.
Your core was cold.
I said, And you haven't stoppedsaying this since then.
I know.
I think that was good because itit just makes when you say that,
that's what it makes the mostsense.
Because I I always was cold, andI just he would have to warm my
gloves up.
You'd have to switch with them.
Yeah, because his hands werelike, I go, can I put them in
the oven?
So then I'd take his glove andI'd make his instantly cold.

(42:47):
And then he'd give him my backand they'd be hot.
And then he'd like, you'd belike, it's almost like you put
you put these in the fridge.
How do you get them cold sofast?
I'm like, I don't know.
I wrecked my hands when we wentforward in that time.
That's probably why it happened.

SPEAKER_02 (43:01):
It worked, it was it's awful.
Then he'd give me this frozengloves, and I'd put them on for
a little bit.
And then I'd finally get themwarm.

SPEAKER_00 (43:07):
Yeah, and he's like, Man, we got switch gloves again.
You know what's bad?
What I think I was probably 16years old, all duck hunting with
him, and I had to do the exactsame thing.
Really?
And I was like, All right,Daryl, can I see your gloves
quick?
My hands are cold, man.
We need to start switching.

SPEAKER_01 (43:21):
I wrecked my hands when we put it through the ice,
I think that time when we wentthrough the ice at that 65 and
the four wheel and had to go inthe water to get it out.
I think my hands got too coldthat and I screwed them up.
They got frosted or something.
No, that frost.
Well, they weren't they werecold.
I was really cold.
And ever since then, my handsare always wimpy, they get cold

(43:44):
quick.
But I like wearing those when Ihave those things, those hand
warmer things, my hands staypretty warm.
No shit.
That's what they're that's whatthey're there for.
But they don't get hot, theydon't get hot.

SPEAKER_02 (43:58):
But I have the hot hand warmer thing is that my
hands stay fine.

SPEAKER_01 (44:02):
My feet stay warm today.
Was it because it wasn't coldoutside?

SPEAKER_00 (44:05):
It was 59 degrees in the stand.

SPEAKER_01 (44:07):
That's too cold.
We got with boots.
Yeah, they're one very they'rethey're rated for like 50 below
or something.
Are they?
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know.
We got two nice ones.

SPEAKER_00 (44:20):
Yeah, minor like a thousand grams.
Well, yeah, that's what theyare.
Miners 800s, and I've still yethave yet for my feet to get
cold.
Well, I will say if you'relaying on like the layout blind.

SPEAKER_01 (44:28):
I don't like when my hands get cold.

SPEAKER_00 (44:30):
If you're laying in the layout line and there's snow
on the ground and there's ablizzard on geese, they get
chilly.
That will get a little cold.
Yeah.
But then your core also getscold at the same point.

SPEAKER_02 (44:39):
The hand warmers are going.
The toe warmers.
Yeah, I know.
I was gonna get socks.

SPEAKER_01 (44:46):
Yes, I have those.
Yeah, I do I if it's reallycold, I'll put them on and we're
gonna go snowmobiling.
Yeah, but I haven't had that toobecause my feet don't get cold.

SPEAKER_00 (44:54):
I would argue you don't snowmobiling.
I wouldn't, yeah.
I was saying not snowmobiling,you wouldn't need your stay warm
snowmobiling.
Like, even if it's 20 below,I'll take my gloves off on my
snowmobile because my I did thatonce, but my hands my hands get
too hot, especially if theheater's gone.
The heater's going.
It's like it's like a reactionwith my glove that it gets just
gets too hot.
Yeah, yeah, they get hot.
No, you can I'll tell you nogloves.

SPEAKER_01 (45:15):
I love those things.
My hands, my hands do not getcold when they snowmobile.
And I like when I have theheater on in my helmet.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Oh, it's so nice.
As I was trying to tell my dadabout going, I'm like, you know
what, you should try becausethey have all this geared off.
I said, you can buy a snowmobilethat has a heated seat.
Yeah, right.
I said, and they have theshocks, and it's so much, it's
not like the old machines.

(45:36):
You it's like comfortable.
I like my old machine, just soyou know.
It's not old, like a 60 old.

SPEAKER_02 (45:41):
No, no, but I like my old one.

SPEAKER_00 (45:43):
I got an old one.
I got a 1991 Yamaha Phaser 2.
That's actually older bite.
Got the electric start on it,too.
It's pretty fancy.
That is pretty good.
It's pretty fancy.
Yamaha.
Yeah, Yamaha.
That was cream of crab back inthe day.
Yeah, I like the old ones.

SPEAKER_02 (45:56):
Yeah, mine's nice.
I like mine.
Mine, mine's at touring.
Mine's at old school touring.
They have them for some newones.
They have new ones touring atthe at the with the cup holders
and the TV screens.
Yeah.
That's what they all have TVscreens now.
But yeah.
All the new ones do.

SPEAKER_03 (46:11):
Yeah.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (46:12):
But like the TV screens like mine where I can
watch like movies.

SPEAKER_00 (46:15):
Is it too early to start talking about ice fishing?
No.
It's getting to about that timeof the year.

SPEAKER_01 (46:21):
It's getting there.
Yeah.
We should go walk on the ice.
See who can walk on the you gofirst.

SPEAKER_00 (46:27):
You go first.
That's not really fair.
Why?
Because Daryl's like half thesize of me.
I am 190 pounds.
Well, there you go.
It's not less than half.

SPEAKER_01 (46:41):
No, it's like 10 pounds less than me.
I got you by a few, but nothalf.
Not half.
Well, then we go first.
Anyways.
Walk on the lake or on the pond.
Well, I'd go first.
You'd fall in.
No.

SPEAKER_02 (46:53):
Because then you guys have to walk in the same
path.
And then you fall in too.

SPEAKER_01 (46:57):
I don't think we can make it one step out there.
It's probably just a layer ofthin ice.
There's no ice out there.
I'm not walking out there.
There was ice out there.
I mean, there's just froze over.

SPEAKER_02 (47:06):
Like not over, over.
Yeah, it was.
The whole thing?
Yeah.
Really?
Yeah, it's all the whole thing'sfroze over.
I didn't go out there and look,I guess.
Yeah.
Well, it'll start building thenprobably.
Tonight.

SPEAKER_01 (47:16):
Yeah.
But it's supposed to warm upnext week.
I think today was supposed tobe.

SPEAKER_00 (47:19):
Today was the first snow I've seen.
We had a little bit of flakescome down.
Next week is supposed to be inthe 50s, though.
Yeah, we had some flakes.
Just on the way over here,there's not much football game
on the flakes, yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (47:29):
Down in Iowa?
No.
It was uh um this this teamright here.
They were playing some sayThomas?
They were playing some Iowateam.
Like I don't know, it was likeDrake or something.
I don't know what the name of itis.
In foosball?
Yeah, yeah.
They had uh the the um they hadsnow down there today, and the
field was cut all white.
That's how much snow they got.

(47:49):
Oh, really?
They're playing in thesnowstorm.
I think I saw it.

SPEAKER_00 (47:52):
And for the listeners, today is November 8th
as well, so that's a littleearly.
A little early.
I mean, years passed.
We've had snow.
I mean it's probably right ontime.
We had two snows.
It's probably right on time.

SPEAKER_01 (48:02):
1031 uh Halloween Blizzard 1990.
1998.
No.
I was no, I was a software one.
1981.

SPEAKER_00 (48:12):
Was this the same year that Grand Force felt?
Is that the same year that thathappened?
The flood happened in GrandPorth.
No.

SPEAKER_01 (48:18):
No, that was in uh when I moved down to North
Carolina, which was in 1990seven.
Seven.

SPEAKER_00 (48:27):
It's kind of cool.
Now they got all these systemsyou saw them, they got all these
like floodgates up there just uhmitigate floods happening again.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's nuts.

SPEAKER_02 (48:36):
It was it was crazy.
I remember that.
I remember that happened.
But I never went up there thatmuch then, so I don't I really
didn't didn't really do anythingto me.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The sugar beet harvest was bad.
Uh there.

SPEAKER_00 (48:48):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (48:48):
But anyways.
I mentioned ice fishing.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
So what do you want to get inice fishing?
It's uh it it's early, but notby a lot.
I mean, it's it's it's rightthere.

SPEAKER_00 (49:03):
I mean, we're in November.
I mean, every not every year,and the last couple years I was
fortunate enough to go out to umearly ice out on Red Lake.

SPEAKER_01 (49:10):
Yeah, right.
I've done that.
That's fun.

SPEAKER_00 (49:12):
It is fun.
I mean, I went last year with uhJ Lo.
Uh Sweet Potato wasn't able tocome with us.
He was busy, but we put a goodnumber down.
I think, you know, we just gotout there at probably 9 a.m.
stayed till four.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (49:25):
I think it was well, it was one of those we get you
can only go on certain paths,and you have to be you can't be
out after dark.

SPEAKER_00 (49:31):
It was nice too because we went out of JR's car
corner, and they uh had a guyout there in the side by side
with trailers, so we didn't haveto walk out there, which that
was nice.
Well, there's a drape likeputting people out, and then
he's like, he just he's like,All right, boys, here you guys
go.
We're gonna drop you off on thisspot.
Good luck.
And sure enough, I mean, I thinkwe both caught close to 12 to 15
fish each, and we caught we keptour limit out there.

(49:52):
We we went out there, I went upthere with Q.

SPEAKER_02 (49:54):
And we had uh snowmobiles, and we weren't
gonna go cruise, we werecruising along, and it's like,
okay, I have this this shittyhand-rawn map, you know, from
JR's.
Like, don't go past here.
Yep.

SPEAKER_00 (50:05):
They got their markers out there.

SPEAKER_02 (50:06):
So we went out there, we were cruising along,
and we're getting towards theend of there, falling a thing.
You can't go past there becauseit's freaking open water.
Exactly.
It was you and these idiots arestanding on the edges of this
casting.
Oh, yeah, yeah, exactly.

SPEAKER_00 (50:18):
That's what I was gonna say.
You'll see people out therestanding right on the edge with
their open water rod and castinginto the open.
I'm like, hell no, I ain't doingthat.
No, yeah, what the shit you guysdo it?
Like, no shoe, you can't go pastthere because there's no
freaking ice.

SPEAKER_01 (50:29):
Great.
No thanks.
I'll pass.

SPEAKER_02 (50:31):
The ice where we were at was fine.
There's there's five, six inchesice to be there's plenty for
snowballs and stuff.

SPEAKER_00 (50:37):
But I do got a question for you as well on top
of this, Eddie.
What if there's any listenersout there that would love for us
to be up to their fishing shackand go ice fishing with them and
possibly do an on-site podcast?
Would you be interested in that?
Yeah, I think for sure.
I'd love to do that.
Yeah, that would be sweet.
So sign me up.
I'll be I'm in.

SPEAKER_01 (50:58):
So well, if you're a listener, shoot us, shoot us,
drop us a line.
I'll do an on-site podcast.

SPEAKER_00 (51:02):
It'll be that'd be awesome.
That'd be a hell of a time.
I don't care if hunting,fishing, we can find it.
Yeah, let's go.

SPEAKER_02 (51:07):
Let's get it up.
Set it up.
I'm in.
Yeah.
I'm inways, but yeah, so icefishing, though.

SPEAKER_00 (51:13):
It's uh are you gonna try and get red lit?
Are you gonna do that?
Yeah, I'll do some red lake thisyear.
I'll go out there early again.
Then uh also there's Devil'sLake as well.
There's I still never fished.

SPEAKER_01 (51:24):
So I taught that was.

SPEAKER_00 (51:26):
It's good, it's good.
I would say you almost need youdon't need it.
It makes it a hell of a loteasier if you have a live scope
out there.
Because what we're doing whenwe're fishing, you're using big
spoons, a lot bigger than whatyou usually use, and we're
vertical jigging just um inbetween, there's flooded trees
out there just from flood backwhen that big flood happened.
There's trees that are flooding.
So you need that live scope justin order to make sure that

(51:47):
you're not getting hooked on thebranches and that you're
actually perfectly in betweenthe trees, which you can see on
your grab.
And once you do that, if you'renot catching that many where
we're fishing at, but if you docatch them, the smallest you're
catching is a 26.
I know I think the biggest thatwas caught out of there a couple
years ago was a 34-inch walleye.
Oh, really?
So, yeah, I mean, then everysingle fish, too.

(52:07):
I mean, they're all so fat.
I mean, there's it looks likethey like someone put like lead
in them, but just how big theirbellies are, but no, it's it's
good times.
So it's not it's not it's it'snot a numbers thing, it's a big
fish.
That's where you're going.

SPEAKER_01 (52:19):
I've got I've got life skills.
I'd like to go let's go get itdone.
I know that we talked aboutdoing that instead of going up
to Lake of the Woods to go andtry and that right.
So, but uh, but uh uh what's hisname?
They did they did it last year,they didn't have any luck on up
there on Devils.
Who did?
Um somebody I know, yeah.
The one that always puts on theum trips, fishing trips.

SPEAKER_00 (52:43):
Oh, we're was this a year that we went out there
about five years ago?
Five, six years ago?

SPEAKER_01 (52:49):
No, they went to Devil's Lake last year.
They wanted to try out.
We were invited, but we didn'tgo, and they didn't catch.
I think they caught one fish thewhole time.

SPEAKER_02 (52:56):
Did they do guided or did they just go out?

SPEAKER_00 (52:58):
No, they just different fishery out there.
But North Koroda compared toMiddle, it's just this you gotta
fish it just a little bitdifferently.
There's it's just the baits Iuse, like we're used to all
using you know the smallerspoons.
Not all the time, most of thetime, you know, you're using
like your three-eighths ouncespoon.
Right, right.
And you got your you know, yourbobber, your dead stick going,
but out there it's you alwayshave your dead stick going, but

(53:21):
we've always had better luck onusing jigging with big spoons,
big, bigger than what you'dthink.
It's almost like using like likeyou know, number seven size wrap
off.
Right.
It's you're using stuff big, bigbaits in the wintertime, whereas
mini lakes in Minnesota, you'renot necessarily always going
that big.

SPEAKER_02 (53:38):
Yeah, yeah.
Well, you typically don't, yeah.
You typically want to go asmaller presentation in a lot of
places.

SPEAKER_00 (53:43):
What the hell is that?

SPEAKER_02 (53:44):
Is that supposed to chair?

SPEAKER_00 (53:45):
I think it's a dog.

SPEAKER_01 (53:47):
Oh Oscar.
Oscar the Grouch.
Damn.
Damn Oscar.
He hears something.
What's he here?
Here the bear's back.
Is the bear back?
I hope not.
Why?
Because I'd have to walk outsidestill.
Oh, that's fine.
Hey, black bears are scared ofus.
Yeah, they are.
They are they are, but uh uhwhat's his name?

(54:09):
I'm not gonna say his name, butthe guy that worked for me, his
brother, was out there lastweek.
Duck hunting and fishing.
Where?
And that's late, that's aterrible ducks.
They got like anyone that's abig duck hunter 14 ducks and
they got no fish.
Yeah, don't be and he was outthere for a week for a way.

SPEAKER_00 (54:26):
I will say for any listeners out there that's big
in the duck waterfowl hunting,late October is the toughest
time to hunt North Dakota, 100%.
That's the time we get invitedto go out there.
Weird.
Yeah, it's it's and it dependson the year.
It all comes down to weather.
The problem that we ran intowhen you guys came up was that
we didn't get any, there wasn'tnot any, there's not many

(54:49):
northwest winds, and we didn'tget much snow, or there's no
snow in Canada, so we never gota new push of birds, and the
birds that were here were thesame birds that have been
getting shot at for three weeks.
And on top of that, um, a lot ofthe farmers didn't take their uh
seed corn out either.
They didn't take their seed cornout, and then so there's just
smaller fields that they canland in, and those people, I

(55:10):
mean the farmers are gettingcalled every single day.
You'll be out scouting, they'regetting called every single day
by scouters, doesn't matter ifthey're in-state, out of state.
Right.
So they're kind of getting sickof it that way.
So you almost have to knowsomeone in order to get
permission out there.
But if you do get it and it's anice feed, you're mean you're
gonna have a health.

SPEAKER_02 (55:27):
I hope that spot that had that one spot we
wouldn't set up on.
Because we saw a lot of birdsout there the day before.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (55:32):
I was changed.
I would argue on that one.
I think we almost needed moredecoys.
Maybe.
Well, on top of that, we didn'tbrush your blind it.
We did not brush or blind inwell enough.
No, no, we didn't.
I mean, we had a dog blind outthere that was not brushing at
all, and then right.
We might have had one too manybrandies the night before and
got up to the field too late.
Maybe, maybe.

(55:53):
It might have happened.
It might have happened, butyeah.

SPEAKER_02 (55:55):
I had some high hopes for that property.
I thought it was be good.
I went and talked to that guy,got it in there, and he's like,
Yep, yep, no problem.

SPEAKER_00 (56:01):
Yeah, that's that I would say that's the biggest
thing if you're doing it.
When you're using your blinds,you have to make sure you're
brushing in.
No, no, no.
Jay Jay says you don't.
Tanner, are you gonna listen toJay that has been hunting there
a couple times?
Or uh Daryl was goes to collegeout there and my room is damn
near a guide.

SPEAKER_02 (56:20):
And Snacks was giving him shit too, but so
snacks like he's just like he'snot dressed in.

SPEAKER_00 (56:25):
Yeah, you're not.

SPEAKER_01 (56:25):
It's just isn't any different than all your other
ones?
I looked at it, I took a pictureof it.
They all look bad then.
Because when I walked away andlooked over, they all were like
they looked the same.

SPEAKER_00 (56:36):
And that's what's gonna happen when these birds
have been getting shot at forthree weeks.
They're gonna be able to pick upon what a blind is where you
know they've been shot atbefore.
Another thing is too, like yourspinners, like your mojos, your
spinners.
That I've think for the lastworked and they don't work.
They do.
I'd say 50 for the last 15years, I mean up until maybe the

(56:58):
last five years, but beforethat, you know, there are new
technology out there.
Right.
Yes, that would just more newmotion, they haven't seen
nothing like that.
So yeah, they'd go into that.
But now, since I mean, everyonethat you know that goes out
hunting, they all use spinners.
And you use like five of them.
Right, they use five of them.
I'm almost to the point now.
I think you need to go on water.
No, you don't hunt water no.
Yeah, you do.

(57:18):
Yeah, I hunted water.

SPEAKER_01 (57:20):
The guys that the guys that were remember that we
were at Snowden and we gotblizzard and those guys across
the street, they had theirlimit.
Yeah, every day.

SPEAKER_02 (57:27):
Yeah, every day they use a lot of work and it's cold,
and then but it's on water.

SPEAKER_01 (57:30):
Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (57:31):
I have a boat.
I got a mud motor.

SPEAKER_00 (57:33):
I can get in anywhere.
I think we needed a boat thisweek time.
You just we need to getpermission on a field, and we
need to get out there.
We gotta wake up way before thecrack ass is done, get out there
and make it.

SPEAKER_02 (57:44):
So basically, what you're trying to tell me is none
of the locals want to hit thewater, so that's where you
should go.

SPEAKER_00 (57:48):
No, because that's where all the out of state
people go to, then they blast itup.
Then that screws you for huntingthe field because they're gonna
go to a different spot or notfly at the same time.
And they're already been shotat, so they're gonna be finicky.

SPEAKER_02 (58:01):
So they're worried about the people hunting the
water because you'll screw uptheir hunt.

SPEAKER_00 (58:06):
Yes and no.
Yes and no on that.
I would say yes, that's a factorthat goes into it, but also
there's a good chance that youdo shoot up a roost, they're
going to fly to a differentroost after that, and they just
or they'll just migrate south.
So pretty much when you do that.
Anyway, that's pretty much a bigthing on it.

SPEAKER_01 (58:26):
At the end of the day, I'm interested in also um
going up ice fishing and doing auh caster on on location.
So line it up.
Uh Buff just got back to me.
Oh, did he?
Not hunting this year.
And law sold the land in Sabika.
What you guys get any?

(58:49):
He's done hunting.
This is the first year he's inhunting.
I should almost invite him uphere.
When's the last time he didn'thunt?

SPEAKER_00 (58:55):
He's always hunting.
It's been a for the last coupleyears.
That's been a tradition just tosee how Bob's doing on deer
meeting.
Yeah, no, for sure.

SPEAKER_02 (59:01):
It's been like that for 15 years.
Sorry.
No, yeah, yeah.
Text him out.
Uh oh, I didn't know they that'stoo bad.
Is this is this the first year?
Did he hunt there last year?
What's the we gotta get him onthe line?
Huh?
We gotta get him on the line oneof these days.

SPEAKER_01 (59:22):
I know.
And I was so bad because then Ifeel like I should invite them,
but then I think about all theseother people that I don't
invite, and then they're gonnaget mad.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Right, right.
And it's like, well, how manypeople do you want to invite out
there?

SPEAKER_00 (59:36):
We have deer, but it's not a crazy amount of deer.

SPEAKER_01 (59:40):
Right.
It's quite a bit of deer.

SPEAKER_00 (59:43):
It's good.
Some years is dead.

SPEAKER_02 (59:45):
Yeah, but it depends.
I mean, if you start shootingthem all up, they're not gonna
stay.
They're not gonna keep seeingthem all.

SPEAKER_00 (59:50):
But I mean what you guys call it that one year when
you had uh what the neighbor upand uh Wesie?
Yeah, and when you had Wesie uphere, what you call it?
Murder murder capital, murderink, murder ink murder ink.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (01:00:04):
Well, they shot like seven deer or five deer, and I
had to get them all.
Well, we we had permits.
We had to use every single oneof them.
You use all mine too.
I don't know.
And the bonus tags too, yeah.
And then we found one later thenext day.
I was like, Whoa, what are youguys doing?
What are you guys doing?
Slow down.
Right.
You can't just shoot.

(01:00:25):
They did.

SPEAKER_00 (01:00:26):
It's like they didn't know they got in the
fever.
They got in the fever.

SPEAKER_01 (01:00:30):
Screw up.
They shot at they missedeverything.
And then the next one, they wereshooting and they weren't
watching that they wereshooting.
And I'm like, okay, stop.
Well, then the one was injuringand it kept running, so I didn't
drop that one.
I was like the guide.
I remember I got up there andthey're like, Yeah, we may, we
need you take.

(01:00:53):
I didn't know what to do.
I said, What are you guys doing?
You why are you shooting?
It's not like they thought itwas like a carnival game.
They just kept coming.
I think they reloaded.

SPEAKER_02 (01:01:05):
They had to up.

SPEAKER_00 (01:01:07):
They missed if they missed a whole herd of them
early, and then they camethrough again and just shut up
that might have been my firstyear being able to deer hunt.
Were you up with them?
I think that was my first deerI've ever shot was that same
year that that all.

SPEAKER_02 (01:01:27):
I must have had something going on.

SPEAKER_00 (01:01:29):
Right.
I mean, because I know I shotmine the Saturday morning.
It was like it was pretty late.

SPEAKER_02 (01:01:33):
I was there when you shot your deer.
When you shot your first year.
I know I was there.

SPEAKER_00 (01:01:37):
Yeah, because I remember it uh This is way
before he was old enough tohunt.

SPEAKER_01 (01:01:42):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (01:01:42):
Are you sure?

SPEAKER_01 (01:01:43):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (01:01:44):
Because I remember for my first year, Jay Jay was
trying to tell me, he's like,all right, make sure you take
your time, get breathing in andout.
You know, you gotta aim in thisbutton, and as he's all
explaining to me, I just go bangand just drop it.
Yeah, right there.

SPEAKER_01 (01:01:55):
Wait, so Wesson was in high school.
He was like a sophomore in highschool.
Okay.
Because he, even though theyhave all kinds of land, he
didn't want to have to, they hadalready people already had their
spots, and he didn't want tohave to fight for his spot.
Yeah.
Even though it says they'reland, but yeah, cousins are like

(01:02:15):
they've been hunting.
So I said, You can come up here.
And then I brought my neighborup.
Yeah.
I brought him up twice becausehe was up with my other neighbor
once too.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (01:02:24):
And then I brought he cooked for it.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (01:02:27):
And then I don't want his.
I asked him the next year tocome and he didn't want to come.

SPEAKER_02 (01:02:32):
Because he shot all the deer?

SPEAKER_01 (01:02:34):
Um, what?

SPEAKER_02 (01:02:36):
No.
Which one?

SPEAKER_01 (01:02:38):
Uh my neighbor.
Yeah, yeah, okay.
He did I don't know whathappened.
I don't know, maybe I don't knowif he liked gun hunting.

SPEAKER_02 (01:02:44):
After shooting 20 deer?
Not 20.

SPEAKER_01 (01:02:47):
He bought a new gun just for the come up deer
hunting, and then um he used thecooked pot roast.

SPEAKER_02 (01:02:53):
Yeah.
That was really good.
Yeah.
I actually enjoyed that.

SPEAKER_00 (01:02:56):
Was that the same year though?
Was that Pheasant Pot Pie year?

SPEAKER_02 (01:03:00):
No, that was the same year for Pheasant Pop Pie.
Pheasant Pope Pie is becauseyou're because Jay Jay went to a
game farm like right beforehand.
Yeah.
Little Falls.

SPEAKER_00 (01:03:17):
No, I remember my grandpa.

SPEAKER_02 (01:03:18):
Or bought a pheasant pot pie.

SPEAKER_00 (01:03:20):
He might have got one too many brains that night,
and I was young as well duringthis.
I didn't even get that try thepot pie.
It was just gone.
It was just gone.
It was pretty good.
Yeah, that was good.
Well, I think that was the yearthat your grandpa was up here.
I think that's when you were uphere, or your grandpa was up
here, Arnie was up here, andthen they were getting into the
homemade wine.
My grandpa wasn't up here thatyear.
I just brought him up.

(01:03:40):
He gave me a couple of things.
Yeah, you just gave me a wine.
You had Danny line in there,too.

SPEAKER_01 (01:03:44):
Jerry wine.
The Danny Line was not good.

SPEAKER_02 (01:03:49):
We brought up a lot of we drank a lot of wine.

SPEAKER_01 (01:03:51):
Oh, you know what I was gonna tell you guys?

SPEAKER_02 (01:03:54):
We need to bring Grandpa Jerry from like he
started walking the wrong waydown the wrong hallway.
We had to turn him around andbring him back into this room.
What?
It's kind of funny.

SPEAKER_01 (01:04:05):
He was.
Yeah, he went the wrong way.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
All right, one more week, oneand I'm gonna talk about some
serious good topics.
Ooh, serious topics, though.
Well, surely.
They can't be serious.
Can't be.
All right.
I am serious, and they'll callme surely.

(01:04:32):
By the way.
Yeah.
By the way.
This is a long break there.
By the way, we gotta talk alittle sports.
I know, you know what, we kindof get it, we get away from
sports a little bit.
We we kind of have to because Ilike talking about sports.

SPEAKER_02 (01:04:52):
Do you know what I haven't watched though so far
really?
Is any of the Timberwolvesstuff.
I really haven't gotten into it.

SPEAKER_00 (01:04:57):
I've seen a couple games.

SPEAKER_02 (01:04:58):
I know I know they're back on, and I just I
haven't got I haven't gottenback.
We had Anthony Edwards out for acouple weeks.

SPEAKER_01 (01:05:04):
They came back the other night and they lost.
They blew it like I guess in thelast quarter.
They got outscored in like four.

SPEAKER_00 (01:05:09):
But I don't I I will still confidently say the
Timberwolves will be back in theplayoffs.
I mean the Goph, the Gophers.
Football, yeah, not bad.
Not great.
We'll go to uh they're the same.
We'll go to the Oscar hockeyOscar Mayo.

SPEAKER_01 (01:05:24):
We'll go to that hockey hockey, Gopher hockey.

SPEAKER_00 (01:05:27):
Yeah, super hockey's looking decent this year.
What is UND?
Yeah, but we're not.

SPEAKER_01 (01:05:32):
I'm not into UND.

SPEAKER_00 (01:05:34):
We're looking pretty solid coming at number eight
right now.

SPEAKER_01 (01:05:38):
Probably gonna go to the Super Bowl this week.

SPEAKER_00 (01:05:39):
But the series are ranked last right now.
After that last week's gameversus the Lions, we're going to
the Super Bowl.
We're going to the Super Bowl.
Get or take it.
Let's go.
We we we're we beat the Lions.

SPEAKER_01 (01:05:50):
Sorry.
The Lions lost to us.
I don't think we beat them.
I think the Lions are prettygood.
The Lions now.
Everything the Lions could do totry and get them to get the
first downs and get it.
Our defense didn't good.

SPEAKER_02 (01:06:04):
Our defense did better, but the Lions helped us
on it.

SPEAKER_00 (01:06:06):
I'll tell you what, we got Tom Brady.
Tom Brady's on our side.

SPEAKER_02 (01:06:09):
He was on his side.

SPEAKER_00 (01:06:10):
He's one of us.
Granted, he might have gone toMichigan and JJ McCarthy might
have gone there, but he's on ourside on our side.
And he was and his grandparents,his mom's from the area.
He's from here.
Yeah, they are.

SPEAKER_01 (01:06:19):
He's one of us.
He's one of here.
I know he rented what I boughtout in this lake from my grandpa
when he was a kid.
I know because he told thestory.

SPEAKER_00 (01:06:26):
Did you see that post when he posted about the
town up here?
No.
Browerville?
Yeah.

unknown (01:06:31):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (01:06:32):
Yeah.
He posted a this is Barry abouta year ago.
Yeah, he made a post on the oldInstapot about uh uh the town up
here and how he always lovedcoming up as a kid, this small
town.
Yeah, yeah.
And he loved coming out fishingand just hanging out with mom's
from here.

SPEAKER_01 (01:06:46):
They're gonna be.
They used to land boats for mygrandpa on this lake, period.
And he was on this lake, and sohe needs to get back.
So before him and Giselle got uhdivorced, he was supposed to
come out here to go fishing withthis gazelle or giselle.

SPEAKER_02 (01:07:01):
She's just gonna say anything.
Gazelle's like you know, you'renot gonna get her to come by
calling her a freaking animal.

SPEAKER_01 (01:07:07):
No giselle and her were supposed to come out.
He was supposed to come out andgo on the lake and go, hey, this
is where I go fishing when I wasa kid, and then we're gonna be
on the dock and we're gonna havebags out, and then we're gonna
come in and play bags, and thenwe're gonna get invited to
Thanksgiving.

SPEAKER_02 (01:07:20):
That was the old way now.
It's another one.
Now we have to get bags and getthem up there to go play some
pickle.

SPEAKER_01 (01:07:25):
I want to start playing bags more.
We didn't play enough bags.
We didn't play any bags thisyear.
It's all about pickle.
Yeah, we're not, we're gonna doboth.
I like pickle.
I know you do, but I like bagstoo.
Who's your favorite pickler?
Kelly?
Kelly Pickler?
Isn't she on um America's gottalent?
What was that one called?
I don't know.
Kelly Pickler, right?

(01:07:46):
Isn't that she's a countrysinger now?
I don't know who's KellyPickler.
She was America's most modded.
Oh, yeah.
I do remember that.
She always played like a dumbditzy blonde, but she really
wasn't.
Was that like the old uh KerryUnderwood days, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Kelly Pickler.
She was on there with KerryUnderwood.
Is it Kelly Pickler or KerryPickler?
Kelly Pickler, I think.

(01:08:06):
I'm pretty sure it was KellyPickler.
She was a blondie, and shealways acted like she was kind
of dits Ditzy, but she's not.
She's like super wealthy now.
She's famous.
I think she's got a couple hitsongs.
What's it see?
Like a blondie.
Kelly Pickler.
American.
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
Oh yeah.
Hey.
She goes on images.
Oh, hey now.

(01:08:28):
Hey now.
She's still kind of she'sfamous, right?
Well, look at all her pictures.
Well, she's a singer now, right?
She's she's an attractive younglady.
Does she still sing for money?
Like, does she?
That's what I don't know.
What's her uh what's her mostfamous tune?
I don't know.
That's what I'm trying to figureout.
Well, why don't you look younotice how you're lugling it and
you're not binging it?

(01:08:49):
And no, I mean it is bing.
It is bing, by the way.
Oh no.
Get that off.
Kelly Pickler.
Picklers.
I was right.
Number.
Oops.
She had a hit song, I think.
I think she did.
Oh my god.
Best that is an 08.

(01:09:11):
Best days of your life.
I don't know.
I don't know if I'm too familiarwith it.

SPEAKER_02 (01:09:16):
That's an upbeat breakup at the end of it with
Taylor Swift.
What's T Swift?
She's so smart.
So T Swift is working with her,getting the lyrics, but she
hasn't you haven't got a hold ofher to work the lyrics for our
intro song.

SPEAKER_01 (01:09:28):
She actually left a message and she's gonna be able
to do it.
She will work with she will workwith Taylor with Pickler, but
you haven't got her to work withyou yet.
No, and and and that's partlybecause she has she has gotten
back.
We've we've touched bass.
I was supposed to get back toher, but I'm kind of playing a
game with her because she mademe mad.
I was kind of sassy when sheresponded back to my email.

(01:09:49):
She's basically trying to actlike she was too big time for
us, but then she didn't.
She's like, Well, send me whatyou want, the parameters.
And I said, listen here.
Well, you don't you work for us,we don't work for you.
Okay?
Just because you're all rich andyou're dating a football guy and
all this, we don't she is now.

SPEAKER_02 (01:10:07):
I mean, she wasn't before, right?

SPEAKER_01 (01:10:09):
I mean, when we started talking to her about
this, she was there actually, wehad a lot to do with that to get
them getting together.
Because we did.
Because he's an avid listener ofthe show.
Oh and then they knew that sheknew that we were trying to get
her to do our theme song.
We were working with the themesong.
So it kind of basically we gotso they all worked out.

(01:10:29):
Basically, you can either dankus or you can boo us because we
had a lot to do with them Kelseyand uh T Swift getting together.
Well, you know, that's that wasthat's nice of us.
Well, I don't know.
It might have been bad of us.
Uh why?
Who gives this shit?
Because they shore too much onthe TV when they're playing
their.
They don't anymore, I don'tthink, do they?

(01:10:50):
I don't like that.
Anyways, I don't think they Idon't think they shore as much
anymore.
Remember when they used to showthat god dang guy from the Rams
wife all the time?
Oh uh Kurt Mortar's wife.
Oh god.
Didn't she have she had likeshort hair?
Yeah.
Is that is that why, or did shehave was she does like a
survivor of of you know I don'tknow if she was a survivor.
She must have been.

(01:11:10):
That's probably why they showedher a lot.
That's what I'm wondering.
She had a lot of short hair.

SPEAKER_02 (01:11:14):
We have to like look at that.

SPEAKER_01 (01:11:15):
I don't remember.
But anyways, the Vikings areprobably the best team of the in
the NFL right now.
Can you name one team betterthan the Vikings ever?

SPEAKER_02 (01:11:24):
Do you know this one though?
It was it was it was I Wonder byKelly Pickler.
That was her number.
That was in 2006.

SPEAKER_01 (01:11:31):
Yeah, she hasn't had a lot of recent hits.

SPEAKER_00 (01:11:34):
I don't think she she made it, but she didn't make
it.
I don't think she ever.

SPEAKER_01 (01:11:40):
Who's the guy from the good-looking guy from uh
Save by the Bell?
Not the blonde button.
But Zach Morris?
Not Zach, the other one.
The guy with the muscles.
Doesn't he host like some likeHollywood show?
Like doesn't he host like a likea like what does he host?
Doesn't he host it with KellyPickler?
Like on one of those type ofshows?
It's like a I I don't know.

(01:12:02):
What do you call those shows?
Sitcoms?
No, not a sitcom! Those TV showsthat nobody watches.
Tabloid TV?
Tabloids?
No, they talk about famouspeople, nobody watches them.
Tabloids.
Is this like a tabloid TV?
Infomercial?
Infomercial?
Not info.
Maybe it's tabloid.
I don't know.
It's like Hollywood.
Like Hollywood inside Hollywood.

(01:12:24):
Something like that.
Like nobody cares and nobodywatches it.
Kind of like something like avanity fair, something like
that.
Yeah, and he's he's been it'slike a game show.
He's been milking that thoseshows for years and just making
big.
Well, see what he son, picklethat.
Or not pickle that, Google that,or Lugal that, or bing that.
Yeah, I was just trying tofigure out I'm trying to figure
out what I wonder is by KellyPickler.

(01:12:45):
I don't remember this song.

SPEAKER_00 (01:12:46):
Because it wasn't a hit.
I know a lot of country music.
I'm not I'm not familiar withKelly Pickler.

SPEAKER_01 (01:12:51):
What do you mean?
She was on American Idol and shewas like always playing like
Ditzy Blonde, like, oh really?
And then she like hooked, shewas like she became friends with
like Dolly Parton and stuff.
I don't know if you can do this.
I don't like it.
Alright, next.

SPEAKER_02 (01:13:10):
This is like that's like a number one song.

SPEAKER_01 (01:13:12):
Well, good for her.
I mean, I don't have any numberone songs per se.
Not quite yet, not per se.
Yeah, we're a little bit beyondthat.
That was like last year.
That's uh whatever.
Okay, I was just curious.
But can you say that show thebest?

SPEAKER_00 (01:13:26):
Was that Eelpow Fest years?
Oh, those are good days.
2006.

SPEAKER_01 (01:13:31):
Was that Eelpow years?
Google that.
Look uh Tippy Cup at Tippy Cupat Eel Pow.
We come up on there, we're onthere.
We are on there.
No, don't do that.
Don't tell our listeners that.
I don't want you guys seeing ourfaces because we're you'll see
us when we get out on the redcarpet at some point.

(01:13:51):
But anyways, can you see what wegotta get on?
We gotta get out of the um likethe YouTube videos.

SPEAKER_02 (01:13:56):
Yeah, we gotta get the YouTube video.

SPEAKER_00 (01:13:58):
Well, they were here that's been a while since we've
done it, but that can be the notthe next project because Deer's
town, that's the next project.
One after that studio, possibly.

SPEAKER_01 (01:14:08):
We're gonna put studio in the basement at the
office.

SPEAKER_02 (01:14:11):
Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (01:14:12):
I need some help getting that done.

SPEAKER_02 (01:14:14):
No, we gotta get that going.

SPEAKER_01 (01:14:15):
Well, I'm in my last year of vacation after that.
I got and the guy from the citysaid they come get it out.
We just gotta get it done.
They they're ready to do it.
They want to they have a tow, heworks for a tow company now.
Oh really?
Yeah, so he's got the tow truckhe's in.
I'll use the winch and get itout.
But I need help.
What are you doing next week?

SPEAKER_02 (01:14:33):
You do it next week?

SPEAKER_01 (01:14:34):
I could.

SPEAKER_02 (01:14:36):
I'm trying to find that one video.

SPEAKER_01 (01:14:37):
What does AC Slater do?
What is the inside?
Is it inside edition?
Didn't the guy from Fox Newsthat is up not well Bill
O'Reilly used to host InsideEdition?
It's Hollywood Squares.
No, holl inside Hollywood.
Let's take a guess.
Slater.
You know what AC Slater is?
Why do we care about Hollywood?
I don't know.
That's my point.
That's my point.

SPEAKER_02 (01:14:58):
I asked, I asked AI.
I said, what does AC Slater donow?
And it says, Mario Lopez, bestknown for playing AC Slater and
save by the bell, is a thrivingcareer in entertainment media
since his days.

SPEAKER_01 (01:15:11):
And Access Daily.
That's two shows.
He hasn't he's aged well, by theway.
I don't know what he looks like.
I mean, I know what he lookedlike back in back in the day.
He he's aged well.
He's kind of like RichieCunningham.
Is it because why do you RichieCunningham?
You know, like the Fonz?
Defons didn't age well.
Not Fonz, but the other guy, theRon Howard.

(01:15:33):
He didn't age well.
Yeah, he is.
He looks the same as he did likein 1965.
Yeah, I don't know about that.
Well, AC Slater does.
Look at him right now.
He looks the same as he did whenhe was on the damn show, and
he's like our age.
They are, he's probably olderthan us, actually.
He probably is.
Well, he's I'm not quitefamiliar with Saved by the Bell.

(01:15:53):
Best show ever made.
Best show ever made.
You've never seen Saved by theBell.
Best show ever made.
Are they in school now?
Yeah, he's 52.
I told you.
He is older.

SPEAKER_02 (01:16:03):
What was what was the show?

SPEAKER_01 (01:16:05):
They were in high school.
Baside.
It was Bayside.
They had they had like good.
They had Mr.
Belling and he had to be like,yeah, they always did like there
was always a plot like, don'tbully people.
You know, the whole the thatstory was, or that was like,
this is why we don't bullypeople.
It was like there was always amessage underlying message.

SPEAKER_00 (01:16:22):
Kind of like a dare almost.

SPEAKER_01 (01:16:25):
No.
No.
No, but it'd be like picking onthey always picked on Screech,
but then they always liked him.
And then they would Screech waslike Zach's best friend.
Yeah.
He's no longer.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
He died.
Yeah, he died like you gotcrazy, right?
Yeah, he did.
Well, because they didn't theyyeah, he had some problem.
He was like martial arts, likedude too.
He died of cancer, I think.
Are you sure it was cancer?

(01:16:46):
Yeah.
I thought it was something else.
No, he was doing bad things andhe had a bad thing.
Look at him.
He looks the same.
That's that's that's the olddays, right?
But look at the new ones.
He's not that much different.
No, I'm telling you, he's agedwell.
Yeah, yeah.
That that's that's he looksolder here.

SPEAKER_02 (01:17:04):
I mean, oh yeah, he's still looks he looks good
for that.
Yeah.
He's he's got if you're 52.
What is he?

SPEAKER_01 (01:17:17):
He does look the same.
I told you he's aged reallywell.
He does look the same.
You know who else is aged well?
Who?
You remember uh Pancharello fromChips?
Eric Estrada?
Yeah, look at him.
He looks the same as he did whenhe was back when we were kids.

SPEAKER_02 (01:17:32):
Is it is it just because they're Mexican?

SPEAKER_01 (01:17:36):
No, I don't know.
Maybe.
I don't know.
Maybe they eat good food.
Beans.
Can you see that?
I don't know.
Can you take it all?
But I'm serious, you eat beans,right?
Mexicans eat a lot of beans.

SPEAKER_02 (01:17:51):
I I've been eating more Mexican food lately.

SPEAKER_00 (01:17:53):
I eat one thing.
Birilla.
Oh, birra?
Whatever you say.
Oh, that's the best meat,Mexican meat out there.
It's great.
It's like never heard of it.
Oh you're messing out if youhaven't ever had it.
Oh my god.
I've never heard of it.
Where do you get that at?
It's like a Mexican beat.
It's like pulled beef.
It's almost like pot or what'sthe case.
But they give it to you withsoup.
Yeah.
It's like an aju, but like aMexican version of aju.

(01:18:16):
You just sneeze?
It's really good.

SPEAKER_01 (01:18:19):
It's good.
Where do you get that at?
Some fancy.
I get it at what taco.
Well, you go to fancyrestaurants.
I can't afford it.
No, it's like a fast food bySacco.

SPEAKER_00 (01:18:28):
You can go to any Mexican John.
They're gonna.
Like Chipotle?
Ah, they got carnitas.
Carnitas is the closest you canget.
No, that's the same.
That's not the same.

SPEAKER_02 (01:18:36):
Not the same.

SPEAKER_00 (01:18:37):
No, we got it.
We got a Mexican John up inforks.
You get the beer from there.
Ooh, it's good.
Then you tell them to make itextra spicy, then they get like
the hammers.
We can buy some right now.
I do want to make some.

SPEAKER_01 (01:18:47):
Then it comes with you changed.
No, no, no.
I like that meat.
It's good.
Yeah, because it's not a goodidea.
I finally well, he had to gothrough a hundred pages of
freaking menus.
Why do they have so many thingson the map?
They don't need that many thingsin the middle.
It's not the thing.
They don't need that much.
I said that last time.
It's the exact same thing, butit's deep fracking.

(01:19:09):
Yeah.
Yep.
And it's the exact same thing,but it's it's got extra beans.
What's that place in our tonguecalled?

SPEAKER_00 (01:19:14):
Or the red sauce.
Or the red sauce.
I'm not a fan of the red sauce.
I don't like it.
I just want the burilla.
Burilla.
I got I I learned how to say itthe other day.

SPEAKER_02 (01:19:23):
Because I kept saying burilla, burrilla.
That's what I call it as.
No, it's birilla.

SPEAKER_01 (01:19:27):
Baria.
I learned it.
I was calling it birra too.
Como se dice.
Burilla.
I kept calling it burilla.
Como se dice burilla.
Do you have a mirror?
Birilla.
That sounds like burilla.
My burilla.

SPEAKER_02 (01:19:41):
What's it?

SPEAKER_01 (01:19:41):
No, but it's really good though.

SPEAKER_02 (01:19:43):
I never had.
And you get the it's it's uhthey call it consume, but it's
like an a jus.
Yeah, it's it's like a spicy.

SPEAKER_01 (01:19:49):
It's making me hundreds.
Look how young he looks.
He does look like he doesn't beyoung.
He's gotta be like 75 by now.
76.
Is that right there?
You don't remember that show,Chips.
They came a movie after that.

SPEAKER_00 (01:20:02):
I've seen the movie, I've never seen the show.
Yeah, there we go.
Same with like Starskin Hutch.
Never saw that one.
I saw the movie.

SPEAKER_01 (01:20:08):
I never watched a show.
Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (01:20:09):
I never watched a bunch of shows.

SPEAKER_01 (01:20:10):
I watched, I used to watch Chips back in the day.
Chips was awesome.
Yeah, I used to.
That was always nice.
They always played that songwhen they go out and pursue it.

SPEAKER_00 (01:20:19):
I've seen uh Married with Children, seen a couple of
those episodes.
Great shows.

SPEAKER_01 (01:20:24):
There's not one bad.
I don't like the new uh saltparks.
You do two political?

SPEAKER_00 (01:20:32):
You can't say it's too political.
It's a cole and I watched theBeavis and some ways you might
agree, in some ways you mightdisagree.
Because when it goes one way,you think it's funny, when it
goes the other way, you don'tthink it's funny.

SPEAKER_01 (01:20:45):
Probably.
Maybe that's what they think.
That's what I guess.
That's that's what you think.

SPEAKER_00 (01:20:48):
I've got into it for a while.
But I watched it.
I would think that you thinkthat they rip on one side more
than the other, and that'sprobably where your mindset's
that's what they made theirmoney out.
That's what they made theircoin.
That's how they made their coin.

SPEAKER_01 (01:20:59):
The new Beavis and Butthead, they're old now.
And they had this girl knock onthe door, and they're just like,
Yeah, I'm here for the Airbnb.
And they're like, hey, baby.
Hey, baby.
And then he's like, What?
Yeah, baby, yeah, yeah, yeah,baby, yeah.
He's like, that's pretty good.
Spot on.

(01:21:20):
Spot on.
I love that show because mybrother used to watch it
probably.
I never used to watch it.
It was like I used to hate it.
It was on MTV.
When he used to watch it, Ihated it.
I'm like, what do you watch?

SPEAKER_00 (01:21:29):
Did you watch uh the movie that they had like
probably two years ago when theycame up with like a it was like
a special, like an hour-longepisode?
No.
That was pretty funny.
Like two years ago?

SPEAKER_01 (01:21:36):
No, they had a movie on the ball.
They had a movie like a longtime.
No, no, they came up with anewer one.

SPEAKER_00 (01:21:45):
I thought that was from like two years ago.

SPEAKER_01 (01:21:47):
No, no, that's like nice.
And they're they're always likealmost getting caught and they
just don't, and they just misseach other.
And as they go across the wholecountry and they finally find
them, and then and then they'reheroes because they end up at
the White House, right?
Yeah, I think so.
Is this the one that's beenyears?
There was a grandma on the bus,and they're getting there.

SPEAKER_00 (01:22:01):
I thought this is when they're at the college and
they're talking about all like,oh, you got white privilege, so
then they were able to go tolike the uh the lunchroom, and
like, oh, we got right whiteprivilege, so then we're able to
go steal everything we want fromthem.
That's not the same one.
That's the one I'm talkingabout, but they're still on a
bus on that one.
They're still going on a bus onthat one.
That one's from like two yearsago.
Did they redo it?
They did they try to update it?

(01:22:22):
I think they updated it withmodern modern.
I know they didn't.
This was like a year old.
This is like a year old theyjust came out with it.
I used to hit the movie like the90s.

SPEAKER_01 (01:22:30):
It was a long time.
I couldn't even watch it backwhen it first came out.
It just did not watch it back.
Because I hate it.
I'm like it was funny as shit.
And I'm like, I can't even.
Is it cornhole?
Yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (01:22:40):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (01:22:41):
It was on it, it was like it was in between movies.
That was funny.

SPEAKER_02 (01:22:44):
It was like you watch music videos, and it was a
little bit watching musicvideos.
They'd be watching it.

SPEAKER_01 (01:22:48):
Kind of like that.
Uh that's how it started, Ithink.

SPEAKER_02 (01:22:51):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Is that you would be watchingthem watching music videos?

SPEAKER_01 (01:22:54):
Yeah, it was kind of like that mystery theater.

SPEAKER_00 (01:22:56):
King of the Hill come from Beavis and Butthead.

SPEAKER_01 (01:22:59):
It's the same people.
I don't remember.
Same people, right?
Judges?
Judge?
Maybe.
Mike Judge.
I think it did.
I don't know, but this one now.
I don't think new ones now andthey're older.
It's so funny.
I'm watching.
It's so funny.
Is it on is it on the MTV?
No, it's on um the ComedyCentral.
Comedy Central, yeah.
Oh, they bought it.

(01:23:20):
I think it's so funny.
They've had this hot chick showsup.
Yeah, I'm here for the Airbnb.
She's like, check, chick.
She wants to do us.
We're gonna score.
And they always do so.
Then they're just they're likedrinking and smoking and doing
stupid things, and oh my god,it's so funny.
The stuff they say.
Is it like the Dumma Demmer 2?
No, it's better.

(01:23:41):
I like it better.
No, I you could not stand itwhen it first came out.
I hated this show because mybrother watched it all the time.
I'm like, how do you understand?
All they're doing, all they'redoing is laughing the whole
time.
It's boring.

SPEAKER_02 (01:23:51):
Look at Podge back in the day.

SPEAKER_01 (01:23:53):
Oh, yeah.
Badass.
Look at Baker.
Oh yeah.
Is he a ginger?
Did you see that new commercialwith the Dukes boys?
The Duke of Hazard Dukes ofHazard guys.
I don't remember Baker have thatkind of haircut.
Yeah, that's kind of not socool.
They used to get a lot of womenthough back in the day.
Can you imagine them growing upin Hollywood?
They probably got the ladies,didn't they?

(01:24:13):
I know it's Strata Dad.
Oh, I stride it for sure.
I don't remember Boncha.
I think that's a good thing.
He could write a book, probablylike Will Chamberlain.
How many ladies he host?
I see that new commercial withuh the Dukes of Hazard guys, and
they're driving like uh newChallenger.
Those guys are pretty cool.
They look pretty good.

(01:24:33):
Tom Wolpat and John Schneider.
Really?
They look good.
John Schneider's been prettysharp.
I didn't see Wolpat for a while.
They're still friends.
They were just at a commercialfor like a like a do you
remember?

SPEAKER_02 (01:24:45):
Do you remember when they they got cut from the Dukes
of Hazard for a while?
Like a season?
And they brought the cousins in.
Yeah, it was horrible.
Terrible.
Horrible.

SPEAKER_01 (01:24:52):
Terrible.
Remember that one we watchedwhen we started doing this uh
podcast?
And remember we watched one onhere and they were in the they
went swimming naked together.
We were like, we got we're gonnalike we were like, we gotta
watch an old episode of Dukesand Hazard because we wanted to
watch the fish.
It starts off then swimmingtogether.
They're cousins.
What version of Dukes and Hazardare we getting into?

(01:25:16):
And they're swimming naked.
And then I think he like tookthe other guy's pants or
something.
They thought it was funny.
I'm like, wait a second, whatare we watching here?
I don't remember watching everyepisode.
I remember when Bo and Luke Dukewent skinny dipping together.
I go, how did that come up?
Because we'd always watch likethe boars in this when they had
the good concert.

SPEAKER_00 (01:25:34):
It was like Boss Haas, was that Boss Hog.
Boss Hog.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (01:25:40):
Look at this version of your old Poggarella.
I don't want to look at dudesfrom that with their shit.
With karate.
Yeah.
I'm talking about the karate.
Oh, by the way.
By the way, yeah.
I had it on my notes.
Um about you know how you knowhow it's cold outside right now?
We were talking earlier todayabout the temperature in your

(01:26:01):
house.
And I gave it some more thought.
And so my theory is when you'rein the wintertime, you want it
68 degrees in the cloud.

SPEAKER_02 (01:26:09):
You gotta give a little like background to what
we're talking about here.

SPEAKER_01 (01:26:12):
Yeah, so it's always cold where everybody's at.
No, no, no.
It's always hot or cold.
No, no, no.
It can never be just right.
And what just right is 68degrees.

SPEAKER_00 (01:26:22):
You keep it year round.
You keep it year round at 68.

SPEAKER_01 (01:26:25):
68 in the winter, 72 degrees in the summer.

SPEAKER_00 (01:26:28):
No, 72.
Why would you you got it theother way around?
If anything, in the wintertime,it's cold outside, so you want
to come in and it's warm.
I can see you having it a littlebit warmer in the wintertime
because it's cold outside.

SPEAKER_01 (01:26:39):
No, 72 is too hard.

SPEAKER_00 (01:26:40):
In the summer, you want to be able to come in after
being outside all day long orwhatever.
It's you're gonna want to beable to feel that cool, that
cool air coming in.
You can't beat that.
You can't beat that feeling.

SPEAKER_01 (01:26:50):
No, it's not.
No.
When you come in from 98 degreesoutside and you come in in 72,
you're like, oh my god, thisfeels so good.
68.
No, 72.

SPEAKER_02 (01:26:57):
How come 68's okay for the winter, but it's not
okay with some?

SPEAKER_01 (01:27:00):
Because you don't want it that hot.
It's too hot.
72 is too hot for the winter.
No, it's too hot for the summer.
Because you don't want it cold,you want it just nice.
You want you want to be eight isright all the year wrong.

SPEAKER_00 (01:27:12):
That's right.
Because if it's 73, it's 99.9%of people would agree.
They like sleeping.
They like sleeping.
Everyone likes sleeping cool.
Everyone likes to sleep cool.
No one likes getting nightsweats.
That's the worst thing ever.

SPEAKER_01 (01:27:22):
No, I never sweat ever.
So put it in there and say, whatdoes the average person have
their temperature set at in thewinter?
It's gonna be 68 or 69.

SPEAKER_00 (01:27:31):
Oh, do I might AI big in this thing again?
Is everything on the internettrue?

SPEAKER_03 (01:27:37):
Mm-hmm.

SPEAKER_00 (01:27:38):
Yeah, it's always true.
I mean, what do I say?

SPEAKER_01 (01:27:43):
Average temperature people keep their homes at in
the wintertime.

SPEAKER_00 (01:27:45):
Put US, put U.S.
in there.

SPEAKER_01 (01:27:47):
No, in our state.
Because that makes a difference.
We're not down in Louisiana.
I can understand keeping itmaybe a little bit cooler in the
summer in Louisiana because it'sa little bit stickier.
Mel McDaniel?
Um, it'll be Saturday night.

SPEAKER_00 (01:28:03):
That wasn't Mel McDaniel.
That's um Louisiana.
No, Louisiana Saturday night.
That's Mel McDaniel.
You're thinking of uh leavingLouisiana in the broad day
light.

SPEAKER_01 (01:28:13):
You know what was coming to the Medina in
December?
Who?
Take a guess.
In Minnesota, the winters can'tget extremely cold.
I see.
With outdoor temperatures.
I don't have my glasses on, Ican see 68.

SPEAKER_02 (01:28:25):
With outdoor temperatures from 30 to 30,
residents typically keep theirhomes between 68 and 72 during
the winter months.

SPEAKER_01 (01:28:32):
Okay, now do summer months.
And by the way, I'm in boththose ranges.
Even if I if you guys want anargument, I'm in those ranges.

SPEAKER_00 (01:28:41):
You're not in you never ever put the thermostat
above 70.
There is no reason to ever putit above 70.
I don't put it above 70.
You keep it at 72 in the summer.

SPEAKER_01 (01:28:51):
Because I don't, I just want to take that humidity
out of the air.
I want the weakness.
You know what?

SPEAKER_00 (01:28:55):
It costs you more money with electricity bill to
fluctuate the temperatures thanis just keep it at a solid
temperature the entire time.
I knew it! It's yes, but it hasmore to do with energy
efficiency and keeping it.
I knew it.
And why is that?
Because people keep the windowsopen.

SPEAKER_02 (01:29:16):
Because people are yeah, people don't want to like
pay to keep their house cool andcomfortable.
So yeah, that's the one.

SPEAKER_01 (01:29:23):
It's nothing to do with pain.

SPEAKER_02 (01:29:24):
They don't want to keep their they don't want to
they want to do the pain for me.

SPEAKER_01 (01:29:26):
It has to do with comfort.
They don't want to be shiveringin the winter summertime.
I'm right, and you're wrong.
Just face it.
You just said you even went toBing, that thing, the holy grail
of search engines.
That's not.
That's what you think it is.
It's co-pilot.
You think it's the best thingever?
You you you'd like to talk dirtyto my co-pilot photo.

(01:29:47):
She's kind of play it on theair.
She's got a nice voice.
I can.
Why?
Is it copyrighted orcopyrighted?
I don't know, but I don't thinkI'm gonna play it on the air.
What are the rules?
I don't know what the rules are.
She sounds pretty good.
That's why he does that.
He put a sexy lady's voice onhis search phone.
So when he talks to her, he'spicturing some smoke show.

(01:30:10):
Oh, I did.
You did that.
You didn't have a guy, some oldfluffy dude.
You got some hot smoke showthat's got a foreign accent
because you think that she'ssitting there in her little
bikini and she's like talking toyou.
You think she actually likes youpersonally?
I know you do.
What's wrong with you?
Who are you talking about?
He's got that on that.
How do you because you can pickyou can pick what kind of a like

(01:30:32):
voice you want to have?
Exactly.
Imagine you want a man or awoman?
I'd rather talk.
Why did you pick some have afemale voice on there if it's
assisted, right?
Do you talk to her on the wayhome in the car a lot?
Do you have like a conversation?
I do not.
We should get her on the show.
We can ask her some questions onthe show, and she can probably
carry it in tune.
I actually do not talk to her.

SPEAKER_02 (01:30:50):
I only think I do is use her for the stuff that we
use it for.

SPEAKER_01 (01:30:55):
Did she ever send you a picture?
I don't.
I never asked.
Well, let's ask her right now.
Get her on there.
You've asked her enough.
No.
You've asked her enough.
What if she said, yeah, I will.
And it's actually a real person.

SPEAKER_00 (01:31:07):
You never know.
It's not a real person.
How do you ask if you're onesand zeros?
We're talking the ones andzeros.

SPEAKER_02 (01:31:13):
But people really do.
You've seen some of this, likethe people like some guy was
some guy was convinced.
He came up with a new math.
And they found out thatsomething's gonna happen to the
country.
And he spent like the AI keptgoing on the travel with him.
And so he thought he had thisnew math, some some new thing
figured out.
He's trying to warn thegovernment.

(01:31:34):
And he's trying to get a hold ofthe government for like it.
It was like a 60 minutes thing.
It was like on 60 minutes?
AI convinced him.
He came up with maybe it wasn'tmath.
But AI convinced him he came upwith some kind of conspiracy
theory thing.

SPEAKER_01 (01:31:46):
Oh, okay.

SPEAKER_02 (01:31:47):
And he and it and AI kept like reaffirming him that
he was like, right.

SPEAKER_01 (01:31:53):
Like, there's just like it looks like a Did you
hear about that too?
Like a thing.
They just had that on the newsthe other day where this guy was
like trying to call it, tryingto get a hold of the F.
No, no, right.
He's trying to get to the highFeel.
They have a lawsuit right now.
But people have the high schoolkid done this shit with these
kids.
The high school kid committedsuicide because of this.

(01:32:14):
Same exact thing.
Yeah.
He's he was going on hiscomputer asking, should I go
talk to my parents about this?
They're he's like, No, no, youdon't need to bring just go
ahead and do it and don'tthey'll find out, you know.

SPEAKER_00 (01:32:25):
And it was like re they went through, they they
went just and now they're suingthe AI company because it was I
had a well-known speaker come toup to my college to give a
speak, yeah, or at a good event,whatever, intended it.
He said he was working on AIsince the 90s.
He wasn't even close to what itwas nowadays, obviously, but you

(01:32:47):
know, this is just the verybeginning.
The biggest lesson that he toldall of us is make sure you treat
AI as a tool, do not see it asanother person.

SPEAKER_02 (01:32:56):
Right.
Oh no shit.

SPEAKER_00 (01:32:57):
Well, that's the problem.
Guess what's the you know for usfor us, you know, people run the
podcast right here, YouTube,then I'm just a guest, but and
for the listeners, we're the comwe have common sense, we have
common sense that are listeningto this.
I've heard I've heard stories,I've had stories where people
they you know they give it amedical question, oh what drugs

(01:33:20):
do I need to solve this righthere?
They'll say, Oh, you need this,this, and this, and they ended
up, you know, sadly passing awayfrom it because they listen to
the computer from it, not goingto a doctor.
Yeah, they'd rather go to thedoctor, right?
They're just listening to AI,and they ended up passing away
from it, sadly.
So the biggest thing, yeah,there's that and other things
that go into it, but he wastelling us, make sure you treat

(01:33:42):
AI as strictly only as a tool,do not see it as a fret of the
tool.

SPEAKER_01 (01:33:49):
Why do you think he felt the need that he had to say
that?
Wouldn't everybody know that?
The guess.
No, because people are dumb.

SPEAKER_00 (01:33:55):
What do they say?
Nine out of nine out of tenpeople are idiots, something
like that.

SPEAKER_01 (01:33:59):
There is, there's there is there's there's a few
of them.
It's seven out of ten.
But I mean, I didn't.
I didn't even I didn't even knowthat thing until I could watch
that.

SPEAKER_02 (01:34:04):
It was like a 60 minutes thing.

SPEAKER_01 (01:34:06):
I watched a thing lately.
They had it on the morning,national and morning show where
they had the parents on there,they're willing to talk about
it, and there was a son.
I I heard about that one too.
And I didn't, it was they had itwas on uh the one show in the
afternoon, and uh they're like,Yeah, we didn't had no idea.
We had no idea, and then theywent back and read all of them.
Yeah, because I mean they'rereally keeping it.
Like he was he was like reachingout for help, and the AI was

(01:34:28):
like, No, no, no, no, you needto go through with this.
Like it was telling like he washaving a conversation with it,
yeah, and he was believing it.
It's just like that guy who wastrying to get hold of the
government because he thought hecame up with some new conspiracy
theory thing or something.

SPEAKER_00 (01:34:40):
We all know there's whack jobs out there, but but
it's that's the especially withnow.
I mean, fortunately enough, Ididn't I graduated out
throughout high school withouthaving it.
Without having what?
Without having access to AI.
I AI wasn't a thing when Igraduated.

SPEAKER_01 (01:34:59):
I mean boyfriend.

SPEAKER_00 (01:35:02):
There you go, there you go.
I'm kidding.
No, I was gonna say with thewhole AI thing is we didn't have
access to it, but um it's notit's not gonna be the same for
the new generations coming upafter I was one of the last to
not have it.
I guess it's gonna be it's gonnabe weird.
Who knows what's gonna happen,you know, in 10, 15 years from
now.

SPEAKER_02 (01:35:23):
Oh, it's gonna be ridiculous.

SPEAKER_00 (01:35:24):
People, I mean people's jobs, that's number
one, but just how everything'sgonna operate.
The stuff you can do with it nowis is ridiculous.
Right, because we all see we allhave Facebook, Instapot, I mean
all these apps and everything,all these reels that we see.
I mean, it's all half more AIthan if I have to write down
your real.

SPEAKER_02 (01:35:39):
If I had to write an email to somebody that
eventually like worried abouthow it's gonna sound, I want to
make it sound right, like makesure it sounds uh yeah, it helps
with that.
Right.

SPEAKER_01 (01:35:48):
I I'll just I'll I'll type it up the way I want
to.
I'll copy paste it and say fixit.
It's great for that.

SPEAKER_00 (01:35:53):
It's great for that.
Like, ah, I do that with myprofessors, but it's great.

SPEAKER_01 (01:35:57):
But is it really great for us to do that?
It reads it, but I think it Imean why what is that?
Some of it's just grammatically.
Really, really, is it reallyhelping us out, or is it just
making us all lazier?
I yes.
Both yes, because you can argue,yeah, well, it gives me more
time to do other things that aremore protective.
I get that.
But you're not, you're not,you're thinking what the problem

(01:36:18):
is gonna happen with theseyounger kids is they're not
gonna have these things.
Like they got rid ofhandwriting, right?
They don't even hand they don'teven do cursive writing.
They don't do handwriting.

SPEAKER_00 (01:36:26):
Well, I know they don't do cursive, they don't do
handwriting stuff.
Cursive, yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (01:36:29):
I call it handwriting.

SPEAKER_02 (01:36:31):
My kids' grandma had to try to struggle to write in
print for like the birthdaycards, because they could never
read their birthday cards.

SPEAKER_00 (01:36:38):
Right.
Because that's because she wroteI would say perfect cursive.
Yeah, cursive.
Once you I would do remember wedid it in third grade in third
grade, we got taught cursive.
Fourth grade was keyboard,right?
But then third grade, it wasalmost once you got the hang of
it, it was almost easier writingcurse because it's just a
continued, you don't ever haveto pick your pen off.
You never have to.
I did it.
We did our keyboard on atypewriter.

SPEAKER_02 (01:36:58):
Yeah, well, on that we had a PC, but it was like a
PR.

SPEAKER_00 (01:37:01):
I'm also not nine, I'm not 90 years old.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (01:37:04):
In ninth grade, we had a lot of people.
They're called word processors.
In ninth grade, I was the lastfloppy discs.
I was the last class in ninthgrade.
We're typing true.
Typing class was uh ontypewriters in ninth grade, and
I was the last.
After that, they got computers,but I was the last class that
did typing on a typewriter, andI still remember a class, the

(01:37:25):
cords were super long when theyplugged into the ceiling.
Yeah, yeah, and I love thatnoise.
It was always dark narrow, too.
Ours was a the noise.
The typewriter was uh I could dosix.
It was word processed, theyweren't like typewriter.
Ours was a typewriter, it wasthe last year of it.
Not like a clink, clink, clink.
Yes, it was a real typewriter.
Oh, really?
Yes, and if you made a mistake,you couldn't fix it.

(01:37:47):
You had to take white out and goback and then line it up.

SPEAKER_00 (01:37:49):
Perfect.
There was no there was no suchthing as a backspace on that one
or a delete button.
No, we were real typewriters.
They had like the little screen.
No, no, no.

SPEAKER_01 (01:37:57):
We had no screen.
Well, I'm a little bit olderthan you.

SPEAKER_00 (01:37:59):
And they had uh I think mine was kind of it was uh
I don't know.
Mine was a computer.
I mean, it wouldn't printnothing like that.
No, it wasn't.
Did yours did yours print onpaper ever?
Yeah, I was.
Oh, yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (01:38:12):
When you hit that ours is printed, ours is every
letter printed and paper, andthen you had to line it up.
No, we're the last class.
What?
SQ he was in that class.

SPEAKER_00 (01:38:20):
Well, we had in third in third grade or no
fourth grade when we got thetypewriting or just when we got
the keyboards, it was it was alittle computer, then it
wouldn't print on paper, but ityou just have like you know,
screen those.
And you couldn't shoot.
Yeah, like a two by two screen,yeah.
Super small, but you know what'sgreat?
You get you get taught on that,but the the one you got really
fancy, they come by and theygive you like a mat to put over

(01:38:41):
the keyboard so you couldn't seewhat it was, right?
Then it give you a prompt onthere, and then it's like, oh,
you gotta you gotta write thissentence.
So once you got that, then itwas like a competition for the
classic.
Who can write out the fastest?
Right.

SPEAKER_01 (01:38:51):
So like so, like in this typing class, when we would
do the you would have one minuteto say up on the words per
minute, yeah, and you had astopwatch, you couldn't cheat
because you would hear it.
Right.
Because it was loud, so you'dhear and stop.

SPEAKER_00 (01:39:04):
And if you went it'd be great, and everyone would be
able to look at you and you'relike, Yeah, it cheated.
So smart.

SPEAKER_01 (01:39:11):
That is smart, yeah.
Sometimes we need to go back tothe way it was, right?
Not every new technology isalways better.

SPEAKER_00 (01:39:18):
No, not every I would say new technology is more
efficient, but it's may not bebetter.

SPEAKER_01 (01:39:23):
Yeah, but but you don't, you guys don't have you
lose the thing.
You guys don't have to be.

SPEAKER_00 (01:39:27):
I'm telling you, I can't spell for shit.
I can't spell at all.
Really?
My spelling is terrible.
That's if I didn't haveautocorrect, it would be it'd be
bad.
I can spell it'd be well.

SPEAKER_01 (01:39:36):
I I I I want a spelling bee.
Do you want a word?
See, I'm assuming you got one.

SPEAKER_02 (01:39:42):
Oh if you want a spelling bee.

SPEAKER_01 (01:39:44):
Are you going to the mall today?
No, I did win a spelling bee inan elementary school.
I did.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (01:39:49):
I think I wanted geography ball.
I was pretty good at geography.
I could do states and capitals.
I mean, we get an argument aboutit.
What's the capital of this?
Oh, is this, that, or this?
No, it's this.

SPEAKER_01 (01:40:04):
I didn't get arguments.
I don't know.
I think AI is very useful for alot of things.
That's all you ever do is AI.
I don't use that.
I'm gonna call it A not I.
What's the opposite ofintelligence?
I really don't use it that much.
How about A uh A U?
What's that mean?
What's that?
Artificial unintelligence.
That was a smart one.
There you go.

(01:40:24):
Because we're not reallysmarter.
Like cancer and shit diseases,what they should do.
Hey, I'm sure they got programsout there that are trying to do
this.

SPEAKER_02 (01:40:38):
Wait, let's go back up here.
What is it?
Ask it for uh wasn't about theactor say by the way.

SPEAKER_01 (01:40:47):
No, it was the how the average it's I would by the
way.
I know somebody skipped by.
I said we went real quickly, butI have it written down and I was
right on both of them.
I said, what does AD AC Slaterdo now?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,no, no.
I know.
No.
When you said you asked AI whatthe average temperature in the
summer in our state would be,I'm right there.

(01:41:09):
And then when you said thewinter, I was right there.
So both of my answers wereright.
I have it written down, so Ican't, I didn't cheat.
So I think you guys both owe mean apology.
I'm waiting for them.

SPEAKER_02 (01:41:20):
This just says that during the summer months, most
residents make eat their own.
That's what I said.

SPEAKER_01 (01:41:24):
That's what I said, and that's exactly what you're
doing.
That's exactly what I said.
Do you keep it at 1776?
No, 76 is way too hot.
You can't have it.
That's ridiculous.
72 is fine.
68 is perfect.
No.
In the sun in the winter.
Yeah.
I don't understand why you makeit anything different.
I try to explain it to you, butyou don't listen with your big
head there.

SPEAKER_00 (01:41:43):
So what do you do when it's not you don't have a
big head, by the way.
What do you do when it's 100%humidity day though?
Then you might go to anti-AC onthat then?
But it also I would probably goto 70.

SPEAKER_02 (01:41:52):
But it also says some people may set their
thermostats a bit higher whenthey're away or at night to save
on cooling costs.

SPEAKER_01 (01:41:59):
It has nothing to do with costs.

SPEAKER_00 (01:42:02):
I would argue that's more.
I would say majority of peoplewould say cost is more of a
factor.

SPEAKER_01 (01:42:07):
I'm pretty sure it's comfort.
Auntie M would probably disagreewith that.

SPEAKER_02 (01:42:13):
She probably watches every penny that goes Auntie M.

SPEAKER_01 (01:42:17):
Auntie M.
Auntie M.
Uncle A's and Aunt M.
Them?
Yeah, M.
Way too hot.
Oh my god, I was over the otherday.
It was warm in the winter.
It's warm at 77 now.
Right.
In the winter.
Yeah, it's a little bit more.
Wait, wait, what?
77?
I went out.
What the hell is this?

(01:42:38):
You gotta I go, do you realizeyou have a set of 77?
Yeah?
I go, no, it's too hot.
You cannot have it at 77.
Oh, well, you just blew my wholething out of the water because I
was trying to say she's shecould be cheap and watch
everybody.
Oh no.
But she's gonna be able to doit.
I don't think she can see the Ithink it's included in the
house.
Is it okay?
Yeah, maybe when she had thehouse.
All right.
Well, like 60.
Yeah, yeah, probably.

(01:42:58):
Yeah.
She shivering had like fourlayers of clothing on it.

SPEAKER_02 (01:43:01):
Right.
Oh, so heat's included now, soyou take advantage of it.

SPEAKER_01 (01:43:05):
We get time for one more and then we gotta go.
One more, and that's it.
And then we gotta shut it down.
We gotta get up and do it.
Alright, we gotta get going.
All right.
One more break.
Well, wait, wait.
Are we gonna finish the show?
Yeah, we could probably justwrap it up here if you want.
We can just wrap it up here ifyou want.
Did we talk about anything?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, pretty much.
We didn't oh wait.
Squatch?
They're 10-0-1-1 right now, andthey're doing really good.

(01:43:28):
Oh, yeah, the goalie fight.
Yeah, I haven't seen that.
The goalie's came out.
And then Wild The Wild aredoing, they're starting to get a
little bit better now.

SPEAKER_00 (01:43:37):
You know what?
It's only up from here.
When you're at the bottom of theleague, you can only go up.

SPEAKER_02 (01:43:42):
It's just like the Vikings.
We're too much.

SPEAKER_01 (01:43:46):
I'm real willing to um have a uh average to uh just
a slightly above average regularseason for all our sports teams,
and then get hot at the end ofthe season and go deep in the
playoffs.
I'm tired of having a great,great regular season and then
crap in the bed in the firstround of the playoffs.
So maybe this is a sign thethings that come that we're

(01:44:08):
gonna be actually the other way.
What were you talking about?
Okay, hockey or something.

SPEAKER_00 (01:44:11):
I think it's so pretty much uh the recap it
pretty much the Timberwolves aregonna win the uh they're gonna
win the finals.
They're terrible.
Vikings are gonna win the SuperBowl, they're bad.
And while they're gonna win theStanley Cup and the twins with
the Palings.
No, with the Poll ads.
With the poll ads.
Until they get rid of the poleads.
Until we get rid of the poleads.
Yeah, don't be twins.

SPEAKER_02 (01:44:32):
Several teams, several teams of several teams
of people who actually go watcha team.
What was that shit?
I don't know.
What was I showing?
Alright, we're gonna wrap thisone up.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
We're good.
We're gonna put it on the linetoo.
We'll get it on the line, andwe'll see you guys later.

SPEAKER_01 (01:44:44):
And good luck, all your uh good luck to all our uh
fellow deer hunters.

SPEAKER_02 (01:44:48):
Yeah, yeah, get up.
Good luck out there.

SPEAKER_01 (01:44:51):
Shoot them up.
Yeah, I'm gonna get a little bitof a little bit of a little bit

(01:45:13):
of a little bit of a little bitof a
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