All Episodes

September 15, 2025 50 mins

Talk to us! Leave us a message, or ask a question?

What happens when a passenger experiences a medical emergency at 35,000 feet? Who's really there to help when seconds count? This raw, unfiltered conversation pulls back the curtain on the reality of flight attendants as first responders – trained professionals who must act decisively when medical crises unfold in the confined space of an aircraft cabin.

The truth about flight attendant responsibilities extends far beyond drink service. When a passenger begins showing signs of distress, the immediate response involves medical equipment, vital sign monitoring, and critical decision-making that can save lives. As one crew member explains, "You've got to get started because you're going to talk to MedLink, you're going to talk to a doctor online, but you're going to need information like oxygen level, blood pressure... and we're trained to do that."

From the absurd to the serious, we explore aviation's wildest stories – including a passenger demanding flight attendants "shut up" during mandated safety demonstrations, pilots spilling coffee on critical cockpit electronics, and the dire consequences facing a law student caught with drugs in Dubai. Each incident reveals the complex interplay between passenger behavior, crew authority, and aviation safety.

The conversation doesn't shy away from controversial topics like proposed "standing room only" seats on budget airlines and military actions against drug trafficking vessels. These stories highlight how aviation continues evolving while fundamental tensions between safety, commerce, and passenger expectations remain constant.

Whether you're a frequent flyer or aviation professional, this episode offers essential insights into what really happens when things go wrong at altitude – and why respecting crew authority isn't just about politeness, it's about survival. Join us for an eye-opening journey through the realities of modern air travel that will forever change how you view those safety demonstrations.

Subscribe now to ensure you never miss our weekly deep dives into aviation's most fascinating stories and controversies!

Support the show

🎙️ Thanks for flying with Cabin Pressure with Shawn & G! If you enjoyed today’s episode, share it with a friend who’d love a good laugh (or a good story). Got a question or topic you want us to cover? Shoot us an email at cpwithsg@gmail.com—we’d love to hear from you!
Come join the conversation on Facebook:
👉 Cabin Pressure on Facebook
And if you’d like to help support the show, check out our brand-new merch shop:
🛍️ Cabin Pressure Merch
We appreciate every listen, every share, and every laugh you share with us. Until next time — keep the cabin cozy and the pressure just right! ✈️💙

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Cabin Pressure with Sean and Gee
.
Before we start, we pause toremember September 11th and the
brave crews who served that dayTo everyone in our aviation
community and every familytouched by the loss.
Our hearts are with you.
We will never forget.

(00:21):
So, gee, what's worse?
Finding a cricket in the showeror being told airlines are
testing stand-only seats like weclap when we land, or just
stretch?

Speaker 2 (00:36):
A cricket in the shower, man hands down.
That's not a bug, that's a rockconcert you didn't invite.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
At least standing seats won't sing to you while
you're shampooing.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Coming up.
We'll also hit pilot spillingcoffee in the cockpits, a fake
Chinese space station and, yes,even dog poop etiquette.

Speaker 1 (00:55):
Plus a cruise out of Miami, medical emergencies and a
UK law student who learnedDubai.
Prisons are not as glamorous asthey sound.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
This is Cabin Pressure with Sean and G.
Buckle up, we're taking off.
Hey, everyone welcome.

(01:32):
This is cabin pressure seanding dong.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
Baby, here's sean every week.
Man, what's up?
Man, what's been going down?

Speaker 2 (01:46):
we've had so much going on this week.
Yeah, it's crazy.
It's been crazy.
I mean, we started off, uh,this week medical emergency you
did medical emergency.

Speaker 1 (01:56):
What was the situation?

Speaker 2 (01:57):
this lady comes to the back and, um, she, she looks
like she's gonna pass out.
She wanted to go to the, shewanted to go into the bathroom.
We don't let them do thatbecause we know something's
wrong.
So I thought it was bloodpressure right away because she
started sweating, got her on theground.

Speaker 1 (02:14):
She didn't want to hang on the ground, because you
know like galley floor.
Yeah, it's nasty.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
But you got to get on the ground because I told her.
I said, listen, either lay downor you're going to fall down.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
Yeah, head trauma is better than being nasty.
Yeah, or no, not as good.
You don't want head trauma.

Speaker 2 (02:28):
You're going on the galley floor one way or another,
either on your own, or you'regoing to go down because of
whatever's going on with you.
But anyway, we looked for somemedical personnel.
No one actually called.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
I mean they didn't answer right away.
No, you, you weren't playing,you weren't on spirit that day,
were you?

Speaker 2 (02:47):
no, and you think you know, usually with the clinic
we always have, we have doctorsand nurses on all yeah, we
always have people on, butanyway someone yeah, didn't
respond right away, but had herlaid down.
I got her feet elevated, gotthem up overhead, so, um, her
heart's not, you know, workingso hard.
But um, uh, took her, uh,oxygen level already had that,

(03:07):
was getting ready to take herblood pressure med link.
You know how that goes.
But uh, long story short.
Then a nurse decided she wantedto come and help and she was
like well, you already got allthis stuff hooked up and she, oh
, she took off her headphonesand figured out something else
was happening.
She came in but I mean it was.
She came back there and she waslike no, her oxygen level,
because oxygen level was like 98.

(03:29):
So I mean, yeah, no, she wasgood and we had go through the
procedures you know MedLink andall that fun we have to do and
all the paperwork but she endedup being good.
Good, I mean medical emergencybut the funny thing about it,
her husband's back therewatching us and other flight
attendant Chris, he's talking toher and he's like you guys are
amazing.

(03:49):
She goes we're not just prettyfaces and that's the funny thing
about.
When people's perception of aflight attendant is a drink and
snacks right yeah.
But when a medical emergencyand we talk about this all the
time on the podcast and youdescribe it as first responders
because we are I mean thisperson comes to the back and

(04:10):
they're looking for help.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
Yep, they are the first responders, there's no
doubt about it.
I mean, we are there to getyour asses off the aircraft and
take care of you in any type ofemergency.
And so what people don'trealize is that, like the second
, an airline says you know what?
Uh, we don't have to do thatanymore.
Like you know, they some lawschange, whatever, and we don't

(04:35):
have to do that.
Guess what?

Speaker 2 (04:36):
you're on an empty plane with no flight attendants
right because they'll take usout there in a split second but
you know, the one thing thatI've learned over the years that
, through all these medicalemergencies, is that you can't
depend that there's going to bea doctor on there.
You've got to get started,because you're going to talk to
MedLink, you're going to talk toa doctor online, but you're
going to need this otherinformation like oxygen level,

(04:59):
blood pressure, stuff like thatand we're trained to do that.

Speaker 1 (05:01):
Yeah, you can't wait Like and we're trained to do
that.
Yeah, you can't wait Like.
Oh, I hope there's somebodyelse here that could step in
instead of me.
Like, time matters in a lot ofthese situations.
So you know you got to respond.

Speaker 2 (05:13):
And that's why we do Well.
You're just not a pretty facethere, buddy.
Well, some people think so hey,question for you Do you ever
have a problem with somebodyputting trash in your can?

Speaker 1 (05:25):
your trash can no, do you mean?
Do I have a problem with peopleputting trash in my trash can?

Speaker 2 (05:30):
yeah, it's called a trash can to put trash in it but
you don't have a problem ifsomebody walking by sticks trash
in your trash, can oh, you'retalking about.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
Are you talking?
You're not talking about theplane, no, you're.
I'm like why are you in?
Like a neighbor walking downthe street and they put trash in
my trash.
Can you need to?

Speaker 2 (05:47):
tune in because I was already done with the medical
emergency.

Speaker 1 (05:50):
I jumped right into a trash can.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
I asked you a question Did you ever have a
problem with somebody puttingtrash in?

Speaker 1 (05:55):
your trash can?
No, I don't have that problem?

Speaker 2 (05:56):
Really no, but would you have one?
No, you wouldn't.
No, did somebody just walked by?

Speaker 1 (06:01):
No, okay, you know why.
Here's my reason.
Because now it depends on whereyou're.
You know how you're, how you'reset up with your trash and
stuff.
Like some people pay per canand all that stuff, like that's
their.
They actually that's a cost totake your trash, right, but my
trash is unlimited.
Like I could put my freakingyou know car on this and they're
supposed to take my car.
Anything that puts the set outthere.

(06:24):
It doesn't matter who sets itout.
Whatever it's out there, theytake it all and I don't get
charged.
It's just one fee, so I don'tcare.
Put stuff there as long as it'sgone.
When I'm getting ready to takemy cans back inside, Well,
you're generous.
Yeah, you know, that's how I am.
You're such a nice person.

Speaker 2 (06:39):
I'm a, not me.
They put okay, and I'm gonnahave this person walk over to
your neighborhood and put inyour can that's okay.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
They put their dog poop in my, in my can oh okay,
yeah, oh, people do that here alot yeah they put your their
yeah you know, they bag it upand they're walking around and
especially on garbage day,they'll just lift up a can and
throw it in there.
But here, here's.
The thing is like there, youknow, doesn't I know this
neighborhood it's a flat fee.
So everybody got a flat fee andboom yeah, well, my can stunk

(07:08):
like dog crap no, my can stinkseven all the time all right.
Well, you know what I don't do.
You know you're talking aboutcans and stuff like.
This has been on my list, likeI've been literally
procrastinating to do.
This is like clean the garbagecan.
Like, do you, do you pressure,wash out your garbage?

Speaker 2 (07:24):
yeah, I do, I see, so my my can smells like dog shit.

Speaker 1 (07:28):
Now yeah, well, you know, shit happens.
Poop etiquette it's all rightman don't be wound up about some
dog poop man shut up.
I'm just glad that they youknow they could have just threw
it in your yard, be like tossedin your lawn now.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
I'd be pissed right, I'm gonna come do that in your
lawn, but if they threw it in mygarbage can like, so they can
maybe take away, you'd be likegee, use a bathroom.
And no, you said it was okay Ijust come do this on your lawn,
all right dog poop trauma.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
What's been going on with you, dude?
You know what?
I had this?
Uh, I had this sound the otherday in my in my bathroom.
And I'm sitting here in theoffice I'm doing my you know my
shit and, uh, all of a sudden Ihear this and I'm like what?
What the heck is that?
And I get up from my seat hereand I walk in my bathroom and I

(08:21):
get over there and I'm like Ijust replaced, like my faucet in
my bathroom.
So I was like is theresomething going on like this
pressure builder or what'shappening?
And then all of a sudden itstops.
So then I walk out and I getback to my office and all of a
sudden and I'm like what thefuck?
You know, I'm like what'shappening here?
So then you know one yeah, ittakes a little while for me to

(08:44):
figure it out that every time Iwalk in, the sound stops and
every time I leave, you know, itstarts back up.
So I'm like there's somethingalive in my bathroom because
it's seeing me right, and so I'mlike what the heck is this?
And I can't figure it out.
I'm thinking is there somethingcoming up my drain?
Like is it something like youknow, I don't know what kind of

(09:07):
creature could be in there and Ididn't want to look either.
So I was like you know what?
I'm going to spray down myshower.
So I spray down my shower andall of a sudden I see this
little shit, little cricketjumps out of nowhere and he's
like jump around.
I'm like like damn, it is acricket.
And I mean this thing is likeno bigger than like about two
pencil head, you know racers.

(09:29):
Like he was tiny.
But he could, I could.
He's making noise all the wayto my office here.
I could hear him.
So I sprayed him down andkilled that son of a bitch damn.

Speaker 2 (09:38):
All that little thing was doing is in the corner.
Go man, I'm gonna jack withthis dude.

Speaker 1 (09:41):
Watch this yeah, man, he was jumping around trying to
avoid and everything.
I turned the water up to hot.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
Well, you would avoid that too.
A big-ass person like youtrying to flush him down the
drain.
Yeah, yeah, I'm like sprayinghim.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
He's jumping all around.
I'm spraying him, spraying him,I'm like I got you, bitch, I
got you, and Squirrels down thedrain.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
You big scary-ass self.
You couldn't pick that littlecricket up and put his ass
outside?

Speaker 1 (10:05):
Oh man, I'm the Black Panther of killing crickets.
I'm the cricket killer.

Speaker 2 (10:12):
Get you a t-shirt.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
Dude, that was annoying shit.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
I mean, I hate you know like I had one of those in
the garage and every time, everysingle time that I would walk
out there, you're, you're,you're just hurt him and then
you're like where in the hellare you at?

Speaker 1 (10:25):
Yeah, it was like three or four days and they
could hide in like the tiniestcracks and they're still like
they got their little legs goinglike crazy.
Come on man.
Yeah, jiminy, cricket, itwasn't that annoying.
At least cricket killer, rightPer people, anyways.

(10:45):
But the other thing, you know Igot my what projects going on?
And did you, do you ever runinto this?
Like you get a guy that comesover to your house or whatever,
even if you're in like a storeor whatever, you get this
salesman that he's.
He's, you know, this guy'strying to sell you something
right commissioned and he's anannoying son of a bitch, like he

(11:06):
just everything on his mouth.
He was just like talking pastand everything, blah, blah.
He's trying to tell me like youknow, people don't remember
this and you know you're notgoing to remember this and blah,
blah and all that stuff.
And you know people don't dothis.
And I'm like I'm just listeningto him.
I'm just like I'm just let himgo, let him go, let Let me go.
And I'm like, listen, I saidall these assumptions that you
made.
That's not me.

(11:26):
I said, and um, I'm old schooland yes, I do get three quotes.
He's like you don't have to dothat anymore.
You can research on Google.
I said, listen, I don.
Whatever you're, you know allthat.

(11:46):
I don't need to remember yourwhole procedures because if I
need to do that, then I'll do itmy own damn self.

Speaker 2 (11:52):
Right, I'm trying to hire you.
Some of these guys don'trealize, though, is guys like me
and you used to do a lot ofdifferent jobs, and one of the
jobs that we used to do is salesis sales.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Yeah, we did sales.
I mean I'm like I'm listeningto the guy, I'm like just listen
, listen, get to the bottom linealready.
I, I know what the procedure is.
No, this did.
But he was so fucking annoying Iliterally like almost didn't go
with this guy because, justbecause, he was knowing but I
went with him because heactually the product and the uh
company and all the stuff thatbehind him and all the stuff was
the most professional out ofall the people that came here.

(12:26):
So everybody else was like kindof a ma and pa thing.
And so when you're thinkingabout doing something in your
house, you like want to getsomebody that's going to be
established so that like thoughtthey give you a 15-year
warranty but five years down theline they go out of business.
So where you at right, right,you got nothing.
So this company is nationwideand you know they got protection
and all that good stuff.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
But they got a sales guy that's killing sales.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
Yeah, hey.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
He might have got yours.
But let me tell you, you knowthat man, you can kill a sale
easy.

Speaker 1 (12:52):
Yeah, just by personality, but I mean he was
super friendly, so that was good, and it was just his old like
he couldn't stop himself fromtalking, like just stop Telling
you what you didn't know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, but youknow, it is what it is.
The other thing, man, I've beentrying to listen to other
podcasts and I came across thispodcast the other day and they

(13:15):
were talking about the subjectabout micro romances micro
romances micro romances and Iwas like what, what is that?
You know what a micromancer is?

Speaker 2 (13:28):
I'm about ready to.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
You're getting ready to know exactly yeah, it's like
a micromancer is like you know,you're sitting around and an
unexpected you do an unexpectedlike thing for your loved one.
That is like something caringor thoughtful for that person
and it's just that one specialthings.
Like you know, if I was sittinghere in my office and out of

(13:52):
nowhere my wife brought in a cupof coffee for me, I'd be like,
damn, she never does that, butthat's a micro romance that's
bullshit.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
Listen, you know something isn't that funny.
They, they just put, they, theyput little bitty tags on what
that is right.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
Yeah, make up it.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
Okay, before it was like I love you, I do something
for you, right?
It's sweet.
You did something for me.
Now it's a micro-romance.
You don't do anymicro-romancing anymore.
What the?

Speaker 1 (14:20):
At least like what cracked me up about it is that
Could you?

Speaker 2 (14:23):
imagine no wait, I couldn't ever.
Could you imagine you goingupstairs right now To Carol and
go?
You know something?
I'm thinking I need to be moremicro romantic.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
No, it doesn't work that way.
You don't tell them.
That's the whole point behindthis.
In the past they just didn'tcall it Micromancers.
It was like oh, I just did aloving thing For my spouse, you
know.
Or you know, just like I didsomething to care, you know it's
?
It's, it's not, they're justlabeling it.
They're just coming up withlike labels for you.

(14:54):
It's bullshit.
It's bullshit.
We've been, we've been doing it, we've been doing it, but they
just like decided they want tolabel this a mic romance, yeah
try to make a movement.
We're gonna do a micromancer.
That's bullshit just do a nicething gee, be a lover, whatever
be a lover yeah, a micromancerthe other thing that happened

(15:18):
too, man, you know, because I'min school and everything, uh.
So we get in this thing wherewe're doing this exercise, we're
on Zoom and have you Zoomedwith you?
Yeah, yeah, so Zoom.
It cracks me up that peopledon't know how to Zoom by now
since COVID, because throughCOVID, the whole entire time I
communicated with my familythrough Zoom.

(15:40):
Zoom blew up because of COVIDBecause everybody because
everybody's like this is theyhad the tool right there for you
ready to go and people jumpedon it and they started zooming.
So you know they FaceTime wasdoing it, the iPhone and all
that stuff.
But zoom for like businesses andbig groups and all that stuff.
But it cracks me up that peopledon't like zoom.

(16:00):
Super easy to use.
It has like a little likecontrol panel at the bottom.
It has like a speaker and ithas a little movie camera and it
has a red slash going acrossand you click it and it goes on
or it goes off.
You can see yourself.
You can't see yourself.
I mean like it's pretty simple.
It's made so that anybody, evenlittle school kids and stuff,
use this right, so it's not hard.

(16:25):
But last night I get into thiswhole group and we're supposed
to like be sharing some thingsand we're supposed to get like
in a round robin type of thingand just like take turns doing
this and this one dude comesinto the room and he doesn't
have his camera on and he's likelike literally like right in
the middle of one of the galstalking and they give us all
these rules, right, the dudejust jumps in hi, I'm jose and I

(16:47):
want to tell you that my amnula, you know and everybody in the
room they had told, giveninstructions, like not to
respond to things, like justlisten was the whole part of the
listening exercise, type ofthing, and then just like like
not listening whatsoever, andthis motherfucker just like
jumps right on this middle ofthis girl, like you know, and he

(17:09):
just keeps going on and on andon and I'm like at the end of
him talking, I'm like jose, uh,yeah, kaya was talking now, when
you look at the screen, is thatlike multiple pictures?

Speaker 2 (17:21):
yeah, yeah, you have a whole screen like a checker
come up like a black screen.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
Yeah he, he has just a black box.
In the beginning we're likeJose, your camera's not on Jose,
and it was like you know, itwas quiet, nothing and
everybody's waiting.
Jose, is he there?
Like none of us knew if he wasthere or not there.
So I was like okay, so we havefive people in the room, but one

(17:49):
is blank and then you're likeokay, let's start the exercise,
let's you know, we can't waitfor this.
So we start going and then,right in the middle of the
second girl, she's he's like hiI'm jose and I get it from
nowhere, and then he then thenhe leaves his uh like mic on and
you can tell like there's kidsin the room and there's all
kinds of other stuff happeningand he's like talking in the
background and I'm like JoseJose.
I'm like turn off your mic.
Like, turn off your mic, likenobody else.
We're trying to do exercisehere.
Dude, like people withtechnology cracks me up and it's

(18:13):
as simple as possible.
So I'm like just come on,listen, get with it.
This is not If you can run youriphone or you run any type of
phone.
These days you can run freakingzoom.
So did he ever put his mic?
Did he ever put?
Literally?
He disappeared after that.
Like that was it.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
We got him to shut the mic off and then he
disappeared like I'm not playing.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
Yeah, he didn't want to participate, so like we would
come back to him.
Well, jose, do you havesomething to say?
And we're all sitting therequiet.

Speaker 2 (18:41):
No, nothing so jose became the joke of this.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
Yeah and we were all cracking up about it.
But you don't want to like saysomething because he's on there
and probably listening, but hewasn't participating.
It was crazy anyways, but uh,yeah, that was an experience to
do.
The other thing too, man, likeout of this whole thing, we got
to talking and we were rappingabout this and it was really um
cool to identify with all thesepeople that were like all over

(19:07):
the united states, with peopleon the west coast, east coast,
north, south.
All these different people.
And when we started talking atthe by the end of this exercise,
it was really amazing to seethe diversity in the world and
how there was liberals andconservatives on there, there

(19:28):
was male and female, but nomatter what, all our stories
connected, no matter what wetalked about, no matter what,
all of us were able to connectwith each other.

Speaker 2 (19:39):
That's respecting each other, though, yeah.

Speaker 1 (19:41):
Respecting but also identifying that we're not so
different.

Speaker 2 (19:45):
Right, it was respecting each other, because
you probably had differences.

Speaker 1 (19:49):
No, we had differences, but the exercise
wasn't focused on thedifferences.
The exercises were focusing onlistening to the other person to
see, to hear and listen to whatthey experiences, their
personal experiences, withoutany judgment whatsoever.
I mean, you can be judging them, but the exercise kind of just

(20:12):
made you see this.

Speaker 2 (20:13):
You judged Jose.

Speaker 1 (20:15):
Well, Jose, that's some bitches.
He started on the wrong footwith me.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
Sorry, jose, I'm going to tell you he started on
the wrong foot with me.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
Sorry, I was like I'm gonna tell you, but anyways,
man, you know that that, that's.

Speaker 2 (20:29):
That's what's been going on, man.
Hey, did you see what happenedwith the us military this last
week?

Speaker 1 (20:34):
oh yeah, you're talking about them like blowing
that damn boat up.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
Yeah, what'd you think of that?

Speaker 1 (20:39):
excellent about damn time like, for I know everybody
out there there's like the one.
There's two sides of the story,right oh those innocent people
and all this stuff.
But you know what?
Us getting back to that, um,you know, taking it to them
outside the us, I don't wantthem to be here in the us.
First of all, I don't get herebecause they're killing people,

(21:02):
right and uh, so their drugscome in the country and they're
they're.
You know, people are dying andwe have friends that have been
affected by this.
They've lost their kids andstuff.
But you know, I thought it wasawesome, I mean, for our
intelligence to be ahead of it,to like be able to identify.
These are drug trafters.
This is a boat loaded withdrugs.

(21:23):
Take it out.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
So if you guys are wondering what we're talking
about, this was a vessel thatwas transporting drugs from
Venezuela.
It was one of those high-speedboats and we completely
destroyed this thing and it wason video and you could actually
see the guys that were on theboat.
You could see the bales of ofdrugs.
That was uh, I think it was.
They said methamphetamines,they they didn't know exactly

(21:48):
for sure, but they knew that wasbales of of all kinds of uh
well, I go drugs.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
I think there was, um , there was a boat that came in
to like do the recovery andthere was a bunch of high fish
out there.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
Yeah, like the.

Speaker 1 (21:58):
Like the fishes, were little dolphins.
They're nuts.
They were flipping in.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
I don't know, oh, you're killing me.
But anyway, going back to thisvideo, it was probably in a long
time the most intense videoI've seen, because you actually
see these people and you're likethese pieces of crap are
bringing these drugs into ourcountry.
These pieces of crap arebringing these drugs into our
country and we have a lot offlight attendants that they've
either had family members, kids,spouses, someone that they know

(22:28):
had died of drugs, yeah, andthese pieces of crap have been
bringing drugs into our countryand for the first time, it
wasn't about because, okay,first of all, international law
is completely different right, Imean international law is
different.
When you enter into the space ofthe United States, it's our law
, yep, and if we are engaging,it's our law.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (22:49):
And then before we would always go and intercept,
right, yep, and we'd take thedrugs, take the people, and then
they'd end up doing what Cycled.
They'd come back.
They ain't coming back thistime, arthur, sean.
No, they lit their ass up andthey blew their ass up.
They ain't coming back.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
Well, that whole thing with declaring all the
cartels and stuff as a terrorist, terrorist yeah.
So declaring them as terroristsand reclassifying them, that
gives us that authority to beable to just do whatever we need
to do to put them in check.
And here to you know, just dowhatever we need to do to put
them in check.
And here's the most amazingthing out of all this stuff, all

(23:25):
the facts of all this stuff, isthat you know, any country out
there, right, right, like I mean, this is this to me is like
iran, right, right, we went inthere, bombed the shit out of
iran, took out their freakingnukes and all that stuff, and
what was the response?

Speaker 2 (23:40):
nothing yeah, crickets, yeah, and what was?

Speaker 1 (23:42):
the response Nothing Crickets.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
Venezuela's was the same thing, crickets.
Well no, they sit there andsaid well, venezuela will
retaliate with any response.
I'm like yeah, whatever.

Speaker 1 (23:50):
Yeah, they did the little flyby thing yeah exactly,
yeah, good on you.

Speaker 2 (23:55):
But you know, let me tell you something.
When I was seeing this video, Iwas thinking of the next boat
that was leaving and the guysthat were on that boat and them
telling them listen, don't worryabout it.
They were going this direction.
You guys go over in thisdirection.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
Yeah, right, not a good idea right if you were
working that boat I'm notworking, first of all, and I'll
never even be considered to workthat boat, because I'd never be
my ass, no, this ishypothetical like I said.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
I said if you were one of those guys that were
getting on that boat and you'djust seen that damn boat blow up
, yeah, yeah, there's no way.
No, it was a clear statement.
It's finally.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
Here the smart people aren't going to work that boat.

Speaker 2 (24:32):
No, but it was a clear statement by the United
States saying we've had enough,right, right.
We've had enough of youbringing drugs in our country,
we've had enough of you killingour people and and if you do it
again, you see exactly what'sgoing to happen.
You know, and what I love aboutthis none of our taxpayer
dollars are going to fund thesepeople, right?

Speaker 1 (24:51):
yeah, they ain't here yeah it's just a cleanup
process you ever see that movieabout.
I can't remember the title ofthe movie, but but it was.
John Travolta was in it and thewhole point of this movie was,
like the US had this specialtask force Was that face-off,
nope, it was like a black opstype of situation and basically

(25:15):
they would just go in and takeout whatever If you did
something wrong.
Boom, it was like lethalretaliation and they were like
not connected to the unitedstates, but they were type of
thing it actually kind ofconnected, I think, worldly, and
they would just go in and justlike just annihilate them.
Yeah it was, it was awesomemovie, it was like it was a

(25:35):
really old movie, but, um, it'skind of like what?
Happened here, you know becausethat those video to me was like
, reminded me of, like the GulfWars and you know all that stuff
.

Speaker 2 (25:46):
But it's the first time that we actually seen where
the United States, instead ofactually apprehending him, we
just blew him up.
Yeah, that was phenomenal.
And then did you also see whatthey're actually using the F-35s
to?
Do Awesome F-35s.
They they're actually deployingthem to Puerto Rico.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
Yeah, I mean they sent down 10 of them down there
and they are freaking amazing.

Speaker 2 (26:13):
Those aircrafts are ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (26:15):
Well, US Air Force is amazing period.
I'm not trying to pat myself onthe back, being a veteran, but
it's like the technology that wehave at our disposal is the
best in the world.

Speaker 2 (26:26):
There's nobody that beats us right, I you know, I
didn't tell you.
Actually dalton's going back tokorea too.
I just talked to him the otherday.

Speaker 1 (26:33):
He's gonna go to do a tour, uh, tour over there yeah,
well, he already did one yeahso he's going back.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
He's going back back, actually, for his second tour
over in Korea, right?
So yeah, my son, my son Dalton,is Air Force crew chief on the
F-16 and he's returning back toKorea.
Cool, yep.
What do you think about that 23year old wannabe lawyer?

Speaker 1 (26:56):
23 year old, not so smart wannabe lawyer.
When I think about her stupid.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
It's amazing, isn't it?
I mean, you're a lawyer, right,know the law and supposedly a
little bit intelligent, right,right.
And then you're in Dubai andyou're found with 50 grams of
cocaine.

Speaker 1 (27:21):
Yeah, that ain't smart.
You know what?
There's book smart and there'scommon sense smart, and a lot of
those people that are booksmart don't have the common
sense smart Her common sense isstraight out the freaking window
.

Speaker 2 (27:35):
You know we talked about this all the time.
The laws in the United Statesare different, but when you go
into another country, man, their, their response is quick, right
, and there's there's really alot of times you, you don't have
much of a defense.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
No, no, I mean, listen, when you go abroad, it
doesn't matter what countryyou're in and who's who's going
over there.
It's kind of like you know.
It's kind of like the uhsigning up for a rental car or
something like that.
You know who reads the fineprint.
You know nobody's reading thelaws or anything like that.
But if you go over there andyou break their laws, believe me
, the wrath of those laws aregoing to come down very sharply

(28:10):
and very heavily on american.
We were just talking about thatin this, uh, like the little
class, because we had anotherclassmate that she was a
military brat as well and you,you know, being a military brat,
you know one of the things theydo with.
I don't know if you know this,but when are they?
If you go abroad, like yourson's getting ready to go abroad
, so he's married, yeah, so oneof the processes, what they do

(28:33):
is when you go to Korea, whetheryou've been there or not been
there, the whole family has todo an in-doc, which is a class.
So you have to go over thereand the military is going to
brief the family kids, wife,everybody and teach them the
culture.
It's kind of like what we gothrough with flight attendant

(28:54):
training, All these culturaldifferences, what's right,
what's wrong, and they point outthings that are common, like
mistakes, with Americans to thatculture.
So you get like anunderstanding of how it works
and all that stuff you know, andyou know what's what's polite,
what's not polite.
All that stuff, how to blend inand not be confrontational with

(29:14):
the local and they hadsomething different with his too
.

Speaker 2 (29:18):
And she, she's ended up, she's going to stay home.
And the reason why is because,either if he just went by
himself, it was a year, but ifyou he went with her is three
yes.

Speaker 1 (29:28):
Yes, if you take your family, why is that?
Because they're movingeverything like you're.
They're going to pay for you tomove okay, that's what I
thought.
It's a transplant thing okay soyou it's a three-year tour, or
then you can do a short tour andif they don't always have an
option?
So sometimes it's an option,sometimes it's not.
Sometimes you'll get like, okay, you're going for three years,
right, um?
Or like many of my brothers,sisters and all that stuff did

(29:52):
we?
You know, you get orders andit's just like a uh, short
combat, 10-month tour orsomething like that.
Okay, that makes sense.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
I, I thought that.
I mean I thought it was becauseof moving.
But going back to this person,this girl actually was.
She's very pretty, I mean, youknow, I mean, if you've seen the
picture, very pretty, but shewas going to a place, okay,
first of all, the amount ofmoney was only about $3,400.
So your whole life.

(30:26):
Now, your whole life.
You're going to be a lawstudent, but your whole life.
You just got sentenced to alife sentence in Dubai, that's,
it's a 20 to 25 year term, okay,and that prison.
Now that person is known forrape every day.

Speaker 1 (30:34):
Dude.
Here's the thing is she?
She's thinking like so manytypical Americans when they go
abroad that like the shit I dohere in the united states I can
do it elsewhere.
And like she probably goes toparties that there's coke
everywhere and all this stuffyou know, like that's like a, a
fun, you know thing to do.
But it's like you know you goabroad and like certain things

(30:56):
it you can't.
You can't do those things andthe penalties are so much
harsher like other countries.
Like you know you go to themiddle east and a female commits
a crime, like you're gonna getstoned to death right, you know,
I'm like there's, there's youjust got to be aware where
you're going to

Speaker 2 (31:12):
and understand you're the foreigner right, but this
is the first time.
Going back to what we talkedabout, that video is the first
time the united time, the UnitedStates, has said we're done
with your shit too.
We just blew shit up Becauseall these other countries do the
same thing.
I mean $3,400,.
You get a life sentence and 25years in prison, but stupid.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
It doesn't make any sense.
They'll be fighting it andlawyers and whoever's paying for
her lawyers or trying to thinkbut she's going to do some time,
that 15 to 25 years.
I don't think she'll probablydo the whole thing, but she's
definitely going to do a bigchunk.
Yeah, she's going to do a hardtime too Right?

Speaker 2 (31:51):
And yeah.
I'm going to go there, but hey,you know what's?
Dumb and funny at the same time?
What's that?
That Chinese space station?
The space station Did you see,that no, they had this picture
of the Chinese space station.
They were acting like they werein space, like China got the
space and they're like, oh yeah,they're showing the space

(32:14):
station and everything.
And then immediately someonedebunked it.

Speaker 1 (32:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (32:19):
There is a glass of water sitting on the table.

Speaker 1 (32:23):
On the table.
On the table, yep.
So it should be floating around, should be floating normally.

Speaker 2 (32:27):
They're all floating around that person that was
responsible for putting thatvideo out is in some chinese
prison too.

Speaker 1 (32:33):
For life yeah, but they just made china look stupid
well, you know, here here's theuh.
So, being my uh photographybackground, all that stuff, and
you cannot believe picturestoday like that.
That's, that's.
There's so much fraud inpictures and with ai it's even.
It's even worse, right, because, like ai can create people now

(32:56):
that look like people, soundlike people, all this stuff and
they're.
They don't even exist.
So I mean the belief in the uh,the authenticity of any image
now is like getting less andless credible.
Right, you know, like peoplelike show me the video.
Like you know, take a video andthey're doing that video.
Like you know, on the plane orany situation, you do the video.

(33:20):
Even videos can be altered,everything can be altered, like
the power of the computersnowadays to be able to recreate
a situation.
And you know, you see it everyday, even on the news they're
talking about like how theyaltered like an interview.
You know a politician andpoliticians like they said this,

(33:41):
here's what they, she said, andthen you, they show it on
another station and then it'sbeen altered.
You know, like that's, that'scriminal as far as I'm concerned
.
But I mean, you just can't putany type of.
You know, what I see today.
I always kind of like questionlike in the back of my head I
don't care what I see, itdoesn't matter what picture it's
like.
Is that really real or reallynot?

Speaker 2 (34:01):
well, in the united states, you, you get it.
Oh you, you screwed up a littlebit in china.
Nah, you're going to prison.

Speaker 1 (34:06):
Yeah, you're going to prison on that one man.
You just made china looksomeone.

Speaker 2 (34:12):
Yeah, making you look stupid now, so you're gonna
love this next one.
Okay, what do you think aboutthis one?
Reality coming soon on thelow-cost carrier standing room
seats?

Speaker 1 (34:21):
no way you'll, you would never ever, ever.

Speaker 2 (34:27):
How taylor say never ever ever yeah, I can't even
imagine me on there like thesaddle seats hooked up to a pole
, basically yeah, no way.

Speaker 1 (34:38):
There's no way.
That's like uh, you know, whenyou go to the amusement park and
you see those stand-up rollercoasters and stuff like that,
that's basically what they'redoing.

Speaker 2 (34:46):
So are you going to have a whole stand-up section?
Because there's no.
Could you imagine having astand-up row and then a sit-down
row?
Your face is in somebody's ass.

Speaker 1 (34:56):
Here's my question, going back to last week.
Now, what do you do for thelarge-sized person?
Exactly yeah, when that assdoesn't fit in that seat, like
you can't even buy two seats,like their legs don't stretch
over two seats, right?

Speaker 2 (35:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (35:12):
Like I don't even know how they accommodate that.

Speaker 2 (35:15):
It's a little bike-style padded seat.

Speaker 1 (35:18):
This is stupid.
Did everybody out there hear me?

Speaker 2 (35:22):
this is stupid could you imagine they'll look back in
the airplane, see like thefront part of the plane sitting
down?
Uh, excuse me, anybody that isstanding.
You can't move to any seated uh, open seats.

Speaker 1 (35:33):
So now we have standing seating and then we
have, uh, no, jet bridges, we'regonna do pull up jet yeah, pull
up jet bridges.

Speaker 2 (35:41):
No, no more, no more jet jetways yeah and stand up.

Speaker 1 (35:44):
Seeds, yeah, no no, this is stupidness.
This is all, uh, theoretical atthis point because nobody's
flying this yet, but I knowthey've been talking about it?

Speaker 2 (36:00):
we're gonna see it.
They got an approval for it.

Speaker 1 (36:02):
I know that right, we're gonna see it yeah, no I
won't see it because I'm notgonna be on those damn planes at
all.
They like if I sit in the sunbut stand up standing room only
no, I said we see it.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
I didn't say we'd be on the plane.
Oh my god.
Okay, let's go around the globe.

Speaker 1 (36:21):
Around the globe man.
So a plane returns to the gateand a passenger tells a flight
attendant that they need to shutup.
Did?

Speaker 2 (36:31):
you see that?
So they're doing the demo, okay, yeah, and this woman's on her
phone and she tells the flightattendant hey, listen, tell them
to shut up, shut up.
I can't hear them, I can't hearthe people on her phone.
And she tells the flightattendant hey, listen, tell them
to shut up shut up.

Speaker 1 (36:43):
I can't hear, I can't hear them on the phone.

Speaker 2 (36:46):
Tell them shut up.
Well, we're doing the demo, Idon't care what you're doing.
Tell them shut up.

Speaker 1 (36:50):
I can't hear them talk you know every airline out
there in the united states.
Once that door closes, it'sagainst the law of faars that
you have your phone on period.
You're not supposed to becommunicating with anybody,
right?
So I mean for the audacity forthese people to be like shut up.
I'm on the phone.
You're interrupting me.

Speaker 2 (37:13):
And she was claiming that the flight attendant was
being racist with her after theykicked her off the plane after
she, on video, was telling themto shut up.

Speaker 1 (37:21):
Yeah, it always goes back to race.

Speaker 2 (37:24):
You're going to get kicked right off the plane.
It doesn't matter, you could bepurple, you're going off the
plane.
You tell a flight attendant toshut up.
There's your ticket out.

Speaker 1 (37:31):
Well, I'm racist too, to ignorant people, Exactly.

Speaker 2 (37:36):
Anybody tells you that, any person tells you to
shut up, it doesn't matter ifit's a man, woman, kid, family,
everybody's going back to theterminal.

Speaker 1 (37:48):
Yeah, well, here's the technical reason why we're
going back to the terminal,outside of all the emotional
stuff, is that they'reinterfering with our job.
This is our job.
We've got safetyresponsibilities to do, we've
made several announcements tothat point and you are
interfering with our procedures.
And if you are so belligerentand ignorant to tell us to shut

(38:11):
up, it's a phrase and they usedit and I loved it.

Speaker 2 (38:15):
Even in this circumstance they used that it
was interference with the crewmembers duties.
So remember that phrase becauseif you tell a flight attendant
to shut up, they're going totell you the reason why that you
were moved off that aircraft isinterference of a crew member's
duties.

Speaker 1 (38:33):
Yeah, you can.
You can probably say shut upone time, and then we like in
trying to explain to you whatwe're trying to do, and then you
still tell us to shut up, yeah,and then you piss sean off.
So you're like in trying toexplain to you what we're trying
to do, and then you still tellus to shut up, yeah, and then
you piss Sean off, so you'regoing to go sit in the terminal.
I always tell everybody, like Ialways tell her listen, you
don't want me to walk away, Okay, I say the same thing.
I'm like you don't want me towalk away.
If I walk away from this, it'sdone.

Speaker 2 (38:55):
Right, you're done.

Speaker 1 (38:56):
If you see the back of my head, the plane's going to
start moving in a differentdirection, yep.

Speaker 2 (39:00):
We turn them back around, and as soon as it turns
around, it's too late.

Speaker 1 (39:03):
Yeah you're too late.
Right and listen.
I learned a long time ago,early in my career.

Speaker 2 (39:15):
I career, I had this guy you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (39:16):
This is the same situation.
I had this guy remember, uh theum, when we tried to do the
low-cost carrier thing and wewere we were oh yeah, you know
okay and they had made the justthe seats in our cabins where,
like the pastors, we were likelocking knees with the pastor,
right, right, and so we only had, like, like this plane held 120
people or whatever, and if Ihad 15 people, you know that was
amazing in those days.

(39:37):
And so this guy gets on and helike sits right in the thing
where we're like locking seats,I'm like you're going to have to
move a couple rows back or arow back.
You know you're not going tosit here for this flight.
So then he moves right and hegoes in and we're getting ready,
I'm getting ready to close thedoor and I'm like flight
attendants, you know, preparefor departure.

(39:58):
And the guy stands up and hesays he looks straight.
I mean he stands up in thecabin in front of everybody and
he's like you are an asshole.
And I just looked at him and Isaid, and you are not blind
today.
And I opened back up the doorand I was like get off.

(40:20):
And he's like what?
I'm like get off oh my you know,like I'm like this is this it.
And then so what, what ends uphappening is like that, you know
, everybody comes down andthey're trying, trying to calm
down the situation and all thisstuff, and they're like he's
going to behave, he can get backon and all this stuff, right.
And so I decide, you know what,I'm going to let him go.

(40:42):
I'm going to be a nice guy.
He's real in it, are youserious.
This is early in my career right, oh, my God, so I let him back
on captain's like he's it seemslike he's me be nice.
He was apologetic, all thisstuff, and so we fly him to his
point and he gets up at the endof the flight and he's like you
are an asshole you're still anasshole and listen.

(41:05):
It was, you know.
Fyi for everybody out there.
Like I don't give, I don'tchange my mind either.
Once and Once my mind's made,that's it.

Speaker 2 (41:15):
And that's exactly what I was going to say.
Is that with me and you?
Now it's follow through?
Yeah, I don't care if I said it, it's going to happen, Because
there's no way I'm taking youback at 30,000 plus feet and you
got that kind of attitude.
There's no way I'm not dealingwith that.

Speaker 1 (41:30):
Well, you already displayed that you do not
respect our authority and ourunderstanding of us, because we
have to control the plane, wehave to be in control.
That's why we're there.

Speaker 2 (41:42):
Do you get mad?
I don't get mad.

Speaker 1 (41:43):
I don't get mad.
I don't.

Speaker 2 (41:44):
I mean I really don't .
I don't take it personally, butwhat it is is that— when I was
young.

Speaker 1 (41:57):
No, just take I just take them off, right.
When I was young I did get mad.
There was like some point I'mlike I'm gonna punch you in the
fucking face like that's.
You know that's what was myattitude back, right, but now
it's.
Now it's like you know little.
I just know, hey, I made thatdecisions done.

Speaker 2 (42:03):
Yeah, they're gonna have a bad day yes, that's the
same I don't get mad, I justtake them off.
Yeah, you just remove theproblem easy, right?
If you can't them, havesomebody else come and remove
them.

Speaker 1 (42:13):
Yeah, I don't have zero tolerance for all that
stuff.
But I mean we don't get thatanymore.
It's so ultra rare.
But they did on theHouston-Nashville one.

Speaker 2 (42:22):
They diverted to Austin after a passenger created
a disturbance on board Flightwas met by the law.
Ready for bracelets, yeah.

Speaker 1 (42:30):
They bring them, if ready for bracelets yeah, I mean
you, they bring them if youdivert, it is on like yes, now
captain's made the decision, thewhole entire crew's made the
decision that you are gettingoff costing the airline a lot of
money a lot of money a lot oftime.
You do some convenience toeverybody.

Speaker 2 (42:45):
It's so stupid yeah, you know another thing stupid.
What's that when you dump yourcoffee in the cockpit?
Oh no, yep, chicago hadhappened on one of those A321
Neos.
Yeah, yeah, right over theelectronics.

Speaker 1 (43:00):
Dude.

Speaker 2 (43:01):
Mm-hmm.

Speaker 1 (43:01):
That's why the like I know all the, at least our
airline like when we servecoffee they have to be served
with lids, just for the point oflike accidentally spilling and
stuff over the you know avionicsup there.
But uh, yeah, that happens, ithappens.
I mean people like think about,like a coffee, you spill coffee

(43:22):
on a laptop meant to toast onyour iphone, right, I mean the
iphones now are like.

Speaker 2 (43:28):
So like they're mostly you're still grabbing
them.

Speaker 1 (43:30):
I mean, you're still grabbing them yeah, you're
grabbing them because of thelike we're remembering old days
like if they did get wet, likeyou killed your iphone but,
nowadays, like the iphones can.

Speaker 2 (43:39):
They can take a beating pretty much and splash
right on there and uh, you'regood to go but when you're a
pilot and you're looking at thethe coffee actually you know it
was puddled up on electronicsand then it disappeared you're
not.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
That plane's not going anywhere for a while, not
for a long time, for a long time.

Speaker 2 (43:57):
But hey, how about being this pilot, this
Australian plane that wasreceiving a direct radio warning
from a Chinese warship that wasconducting live fire drills in
the Tasman Sea?

Speaker 1 (44:13):
Yeah, that will pucker you up.
I'm going to tell you right nowI received something like that
and I'm the pilot flying inclose to their airspace.
I'm definitely going to beobeying whatever they got to
tell me.

Speaker 2 (44:29):
He replied if we go missing, you know what happened.
That shit ain't funny.

Speaker 1 (44:34):
No, you know what?

Speaker 2 (44:35):
happened.
Yeah, there's nothing, nothingfunny about that.
Get your ass out of that areayeah, get out, move divert
quickly.

Speaker 1 (44:42):
Yeah, but I guess the um it also, like it, infected
all these other aircraft too, soit wasn't just one one got it
and they pass it on, and soeverybody started like diverting
.

Speaker 2 (44:54):
You don't even have to hear that one time, right?
I mean, that little comment belike yeah, we want a diversion
route, please.

Speaker 1 (45:01):
Yeah, dude, I'm going to tell you right now.
There's some crazy countriesout there, really yeah.

Speaker 2 (45:09):
A couple.

Speaker 1 (45:09):
Yeah, some of them you want to take seriously,
china being one that has a fakespace station and you know what
A couple.
Yeah, some of them you want totake seriously, china being one
that has a fake space station.
And you know what?
Guess what US as well?
Yeah, we tell you the samething.

Speaker 2 (45:23):
I'm sure some people are going to be Well, now we
blow your shit up, so you bettertake it serious.
Yeah, all right man.
How about that flight attendantthat he pled guilty to?
He was he pled guilty to thecharges, this dude, do you
remember him?
He was, um, he was found nakedin the toilet.
He was.
He was high on drugs.
Yeah, we talked about thatright, he was just, he just

(45:44):
pleaded guilty.
Yeah, oh well, he was guilty, Iknow, but a lot of you know how
they go naked boy they plead,they plead innocent, there's no
question.
Your own crew finds you naked.

Speaker 1 (45:54):
Yeah, I don't know.
There's a lot of stuff going onthere.
A lot of stupid stuff this week, right?
Yeah, A lot of drug talk, Likethese are all drug issues, Like
people are like doing stupidshit because of drugs.

Speaker 2 (46:07):
It all started with one boat coming across from
Venezuela.
Get your ass blown up.

Speaker 1 (46:12):
Yeah, you know, andy, we were talking about drugs and
that's funny.
This week I've talked aboutdrugs a lot, like outside of
this podcast, and like one ofthe things we were like talking
about the other day I wastalking about like remembering,
you know, my youth and all thisstuff and how drugs were dealt
with back in the old days andstuff.

(46:33):
And I don't know if, like, alot of people probably don't
know this, that listen to ourpodcast, but you know, if you
were an alcoholic or a druggieback in, like, say, the
seventies, like where did you go?
You know where you went.

Speaker 2 (46:45):
I'm not a druggie.

Speaker 1 (46:46):
I understand, but where did we send them?

Speaker 2 (46:49):
What to rehab.

Speaker 1 (46:55):
Yeah, send them.
What the rehab?
Yeah, yeah.
Did we send them in rehab in70s?
No, yeah, where did we sendthem?
I don't know exactly.
There was no fucking rehab,right, there wasn't.
None of that.
Stuff was even invented.
Everybody went to the crazyhouse.
Do you remember like the, thefreaking one, flew over the
kooking ass?

Speaker 2 (47:06):
yeah, that was everybody that was druggies well
, that's like that's what thedrugs did your brain right.

Speaker 1 (47:11):
So everybody it didn't matter if you were
alcoholic or a drug likeeverybody went to a crazy house
back in the day, like we didn'thave, like you know, specialties
, like broken down into like wedo now, where you have drug
rehab and alcohol rehab and yougot all these different.

Speaker 2 (47:24):
You know, uh, ptsd, and you know like well, because
after all those drugs, you'reseeing flying pink elephants
well, well, yeah, but my pointis that we didn't have all this
diversity of clinics.

Speaker 1 (47:37):
It was just one big pile of people going into it.
It was amazing to me that weevolved in our medical solutions
to breaking up.
Now we have rehab centers anddifferent stuff that we're
grouping Second chance, soyou're not in with an alcoholic
that's not sitting right next tosomebody.
That's completely fucking crazy.

(47:57):
You know like that's dangerous,you know so, which is kind of
like one flew over the cuckoo'snest.
If you haven't seen that movie,it's a great movie, but, um,
that's how it was back then, buttoday different.
But we kept talking about drugsthis whole week.
I don't know what that why wewere at that subject was always
up well again.

Speaker 2 (48:16):
It all started with I seen a video and finally in the
united states, that they blewup a damn drug boat right
instead of instead of bringingthem and and and uh and put them
in in a jail in the unitedstates and us pay for their ass?
We don't have to pay for thatanymore so hey, listen, I listen
.
I hope you learned your lesson.

Speaker 1 (48:33):
I'm so tired of tax dollars paying for stupid stuff.
Yep, all right, man, what'squoted day?
So the quote is do somethingtoday that your future self will
thank you for.

Speaker 2 (48:48):
Don't do drugs.
Just say no just say no, man,because you could tell all this
shit, today was not a good thing.

Speaker 1 (48:59):
Dubai girl.
She wish she would have said.

Speaker 2 (49:01):
Isn't that kind of ironic Dubai right, yeah, she's
bye.

Speaker 1 (49:08):
She's gone, yeah, bye-bye.
She's the bye-bye girl, yeah.

Speaker 2 (49:12):
Anyway, you guys don't do drugs, seriously don't
all right.
And and other people, don'tbring them in our country, right
?

Speaker 1 (49:20):
you know, all that shit is bad.
Bad news they don't make goodchoices, yep all right guys.

Speaker 2 (49:25):
hey, we had a great time.
You guys have a good week andwe will see you next week on
Cabin Pressure Next week.
See you guys Later.

Speaker 1 (49:35):
Thanks for flying with us today on Cabin Pressure
with Sean and G.
If you laughed, learned or justenjoyed hanging out, don't keep
it to yourself.
Tell a friend, share the loveand help us grow this crazy ride
.
Want to support the show andhelp us reach our goal of
launching video by the end ofthe year?
Check out our official merch atcabinpressuremerchshopifycom.

(50:02):
From teas to travel goodies,every purchase helps the cabin
pressurize and banter flowing.
Until next time, keep yourseatbelt fastened, your tray
tables up and your sense ofhumor on standby.
Bye.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Ruthie's Table 4

Ruthie's Table 4

For more than 30 years The River Cafe in London, has been the home-from-home of artists, architects, designers, actors, collectors, writers, activists, and politicians. Michael Caine, Glenn Close, JJ Abrams, Steve McQueen, Victoria and David Beckham, and Lily Allen, are just some of the people who love to call The River Cafe home. On River Cafe Table 4, Rogers sits down with her customers—who have become friends—to talk about food memories. Table 4 explores how food impacts every aspect of our lives. “Foods is politics, food is cultural, food is how you express love, food is about your heritage, it defines who you and who you want to be,” says Rogers. Each week, Rogers invites her guest to reminisce about family suppers and first dates, what they cook, how they eat when performing, the restaurants they choose, and what food they seek when they need comfort. And to punctuate each episode of Table 4, guests such as Ralph Fiennes, Emily Blunt, and Alfonso Cuarón, read their favourite recipe from one of the best-selling River Cafe cookbooks. Table 4 itself, is situated near The River Cafe’s open kitchen, close to the bright pink wood-fired oven and next to the glossy yellow pass, where Ruthie oversees the restaurant. You are invited to take a seat at this intimate table and join the conversation. For more information, recipes, and ingredients, go to https://shoptherivercafe.co.uk/ Web: https://rivercafe.co.uk/ Instagram: www.instagram.com/therivercafelondon/ Facebook: https://en-gb.facebook.com/therivercafelondon/ For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iheartradio app, apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

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

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.