Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hello, hey everybody,
welcome to another wonderful
episode of Hanging with Humansepisode 11, I believe it is and
today I have very, very, veryspecial guests.
I'm in San Antonio, texas,texas, texas, with my dear one
of my bestest friends, mybrother, alfredo Boconegra, and
(00:26):
my other brother, the greatestmedic to ever live, andy Fisher,
and his big pythons.
Yeah, dude, hey.
So check this out, that picturewe took today.
Which one?
The one with S3.
It would have been the sickestone of all time.
(00:46):
If Fish Hold on.
Where's that picture?
Oh, fish doesn't show his arms.
Oh, man, look.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Does he give no arms?
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Well, look like every
one of us sleep to the max,
even his leg and everything like.
How rad would that be?
Speaker 3 (01:06):
Yeah, well, the
podcast now shows that I do have
problems solved.
That's true Problem solved.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
That's why we have
you around here.
Problem solved, Andy.
So usually on podcasts Iinterview people.
I let people sit down and I askthem a bunch of questions about
their life, where they comefrom, about their family, their
friends, things they do.
(01:32):
So this is a very cool momentfor me because these guys are
like my brothers and we did alot of rad shit together and I'm
very pumped to be here.
So, Fisher, it's so good to seeyou.
Dude, You're too bro, I was,You're too.
Oh yeah, Freddie's here, but ohyeah, and Freddie's lovely wife
(01:56):
, Jasmine, she's over there.
If you want a pan, does thatthing move the whole fanbams up
there?
We got more upstairs.
Speaker 2 (02:08):
Oh, ladies, they're
like oh, who's that guy Take?
Speaker 1 (02:12):
it, take it.
And Freddie got me a hat.
Check that out.
Mashing hats Same Z's Goodfriend, right?
That's what I'm talking about.
And also I have a new obsession, and it's Aspen.
(02:32):
Oh, aspen, aspen, come here,you little baby, come here.
Oh, my goodness, you're justgonna walk around there and
commentate.
Yep, I'm gonna be commenting,but if you guys have oh my
goodness Stripes, oh my goodness, how do you feel about Aspen?
Speaker 2 (02:52):
Aspen's good man.
I never wanted a dog.
I used to be a dog.
I thought we'd say it's smalldogs, yeah, they don't defend
her today, yeah, yeah, but he isso easy, so cool.
He uses puppy pads yeah, I sawhim as a cat, 12 weeks old, he's
.
Speaker 1 (03:05):
I mean, it's okay, I
have a.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
Rottweiler that
doesn't defend either.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
So I mean that's what
he said.
Also, that's a new fact thatyou taught me.
Today.
I learned something AspenRottweiler shed a shit ton,
apparently, right, fisher?
Yes, how old is your dog?
Four, three, and some changeThree and a half.
Damn, look at me.
In my memory I'm on the gun.
Okay, so are we playingcutthroat or what are we doing?
(03:31):
Looks like we're just playingregularly.
Well, fisher, where were youborn?
Memphis, tennessee, memphis,tennessee.
How did that become the thingof San Antonio's home?
Speaker 3 (03:45):
So my dad was going
to medical school up there.
He had just married my mom andthey graduated college.
He got accepted to dentalschool up there.
So they moved up there and mybrother and I were both born
there and once he graduated wemoved to Arkansas, which was
where he's from, and then hejoined the Air Force, and then
(04:08):
it was every two years until wehit San.
Antonio, where we spent fouryears, which was amazing to me
because that was the most time Iever spent one place that I can
remember, damn, and so this iswhy I call this place home.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
Okay, okay, I kind of
fell in love with San Antonio a
little bit today.
I know the Riverwalk's kind oflike touristy and whatnot, but
it really was super rad, like itwas nice.
It was it was very, very nice.
Yeah, it's very fun.
I don't drink anymore, but if Iwas me a couple of years ago,
(04:43):
me and this guy will be turnedto the max and then Fisher would
be right there behind us andnobody would ever want to mess
with us because because this isthe whole Fisher over here, this
is still our toast zero.
Speaker 2 (05:01):
Still have you want
to sponsor us Two years over?
Speaker 1 (05:05):
Oh yeah, you have two
years over.
Congrats on that.
Me, I'm like half of that likea year, and some change
something like that Fisher drankthree glasses of wine like a
boss today.
I love that I was livingthrough you for a second,
because I just love I missed thetaste of wine.
You ever just like have a nicejuicy steak with some red wine.
(05:26):
Oh yeah, that's that's all Iever do.
Dude, that's a jam.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
That's a jam.
I go to Longhorn it's.
It's a eight ounce fillet witha glass of red wine this guy
gets it.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
Bro.
Speaking of state, this dudecan barbeque his ass off.
This guy could cook some shitup.
This is true when I came last.
Last year was the first time wesee each other in what how long
(06:02):
Since you're living in mybedroom, yeah yeah, back in the
back of the house.
That's what homies do, bro.
Yeah, dude, we we all deployedtogether and shit 2012.
Speaker 3 (06:31):
Yeah, we were at Bond
and showed up there with
nothing but just like emptytents and empty water bottles in
the Polish special forces andempty promises.
Tower guard.
Speaker 1 (06:54):
That's true dude.
We were the prettiest dudes inAfghanistan.
Hands down.
Speaker 2 (06:59):
There's no wide open.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
No, wide open, that
is.
That is.
Podcast is over.
Push the cork down, do you thatleg?
It looks sick.
How long did that take fish,that leg?
Speaker 3 (07:12):
Oh, let's take this
took multiple sessions, like the
outline, the coloring, theshading hours, you think I'm not
talking dollars, I'm talkinghours.
So just Ready, ready to go.
Speaker 1 (07:28):
I was tempted to
instinct was like my head Whoa,
this dude almost threw his lifeaway.
You see that Got it.
Wow, You're on it.
Whoa, Uh-uh.
No, just kidding Dang, that'swild.
What if he like fell off thewagon?
Like instantly he had that lick.
He's like I can't stop.
Oh, he opens the fridge andstarts chugging.
(07:50):
That'd be hilarious.
What?
What happened to Freddie?
He got his eighth DUI this year.
Like what?
All because of a little bit ofwine splash.
That's nuts Fish you want?
No, I can do it.
What's the most wasted you'veever been?
Do you remember?
Speaker 2 (08:07):
No, my stomach is
seeping through my skin and my
pores.
Speaker 3 (08:10):
I know it's because
the cork gets clogged, so you've
got to push it down until itturns upside down and then it
goes to the bottom of the bottle.
Fish is an extra alcoholic.
Yeah Well, I mean, alcohol isgood meaning.
I'm a drunk.
Speaker 1 (08:21):
You see, there's a
big old difference between them.
Things.
I'm proud of you, fisher.
Oh dude, how about cheers to?
Fisher Just got his master'sdegree, yes, what.
Speaker 3 (08:35):
Master's degree in
fish Business administration.
Speaker 1 (08:38):
Wow, taxi, whoa,
we're both entrepreneurs, you
know.
And then check out, we got thebusiness guy here now.
Huh, I'm gonna sit behind thedesk, kind of dude.
There we go pushing pencils,that's right, that's what we
like, yeah.
Speaker 2 (08:55):
How do you feel about
the economy Fish?
Speaker 3 (08:57):
Well, I mean, it
depends on what you're like.
So inflation is not good, notgood.
Well, how do you feel aboutdoordash?
It's expensive.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
You told me you spent
a G.
Speaker 3 (09:11):
Yeah after I broke it
down to look at my bank
statements almost a G a monthjust in doordash alone.
I mean, don't get me wrong.
The convenience is great and Ilove it.
Speaker 1 (09:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (09:21):
But I mean, that's so
wild.
It's like my phone bill fromAT&T is like here's your
surcharge, here's what are yougonna do about it charged.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
Like do you want it
or not?
Yeah, and then I know You'renot gonna turn it off.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
Here's my P5 full
phone charge.
Like what is this this?
After I looked at my statementand I was, like what is this
charge?
This is ridiculous.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
You ever use like a
rocket.
I think a rocket money there'slike a programmer app or
anything like that.
They should be like a blue birdor bill or some shit.
You ever tried one of those?
Speaker 3 (09:50):
Yeah, I've done the
rocket money.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
And it's pretty good.
Speaker 3 (09:54):
It shows you what
you're spending on where you're
spending it.
If you can, you can close somethings, not all things, because
big companies like AT&T, stufflike that, you can't just cancel
it from rocket money, you haveto actually contact them, yep.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
Rocket money.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
I feel good for
sponsors Dude, we're just
fucking cash and checks, I meanbut it's good for tracking
budgets if your bank doesn't dothat, bam, because they'll track
every dollar you spend.
The first time we downloadedrocket money, we saw our
expenses for the previous year.
It was like $20,000, dying out.
What that's ridiculous, it sureis.
Yeah, it breaks it down likeExcel spreadsheets, like once
(10:34):
you break down an incomestatement, balance sheets,
profit margin sheets, like itcould be kind of complicated to
look at, but rocket money doesthat, from what I saw and then
broke it down and broke it up inthe sections for people who
can't read those things they dopie charts and shit.
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (10:49):
And they're just like
you got some free marketing
yeah.
Just sad, I love it.
Speaker 3 (10:53):
I think it's great
and I have a master's in
business so you hear it herefirst.
Speaker 1 (10:57):
You guys got a
master's in business.
Numbers and numbers, numbersand numbers.
They'll never lie.
Yeah, they'll never sleep withyour sister.
You know what I mean?
Nope, very true, they don't dothat.
Yeah, no, dude, I'm proud ofyou.
Fish, that's fucking awesome.
Thanks, man.
That's hard ass work and youdid it like not straight from
high school to college, thatfour years and then the next.
(11:20):
You know like you fucking went,did life, jumped out of fucking
planes.
Injury Can we talk about injury?
Speaker 3 (11:30):
What happened with
that?
Your back's all fucked up,right?
Yep, so my lower back.
So I had a jump out of a Sherpawhich, as opposed to the
regular C-17s and C-130s, youboth know, you come in, you hand
off your static line, you turn,jump out, you the door, but
Sherpa, so you hook it up to theback and they open the back and
(11:52):
then you just walk off and youdon't have to hand it off to
anybody, you don't even have to,you just let go and then you
just walk up the back and falloff a plane.
You know, pretty easy, right?
So I did that.
And then I had a parachutemalfunction, partial malfunction
, and you know I was sittingthere, it was all twisted up and
you know, by the time I got it,I was pulling it apart.
(12:13):
By the time I got it undone, Ihad fallen too fast and you know
I was like maybe 100 to 200feet from the ground, I look up
and everyone else is above me,and then I just smashed right
down on my back and thendefinitely didn't PLF correctly,
right, yeah, right.
Like when you hit, the windknocked out of you like oh Damn,
(12:35):
and I felt this tightness in myback.
I was like this doesn't feelright.
And the doctors, like in the PA,was like, oh, you're fine, just
do your stretches.
You're fine, just touch yourtoes.
I was like I can't, can't, bendpast that.
And they're like that's notright, right.
And they're like no, you'refine, you're fine, don't worry
about it.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
And I was like okay.
Speaker 3 (12:51):
So I just kept going,
kept going.
One day my leg just gave out.
All me went completely numb.
And then I went and talked tohim.
They're like that's bad, youneed to go get MRI right now.
So if you want to get MRIreally fast, you'll break it
back Fastest I ever got an MRIin army.
It was a bad day, really, yeah,they told me I had a cracked
vertebrae and three blown outdiscs in my lower back my L4, l5
(13:17):
and S1.
And then my L5 disc or not discwith vertebrae was cracked and
all that disc fluid leaked outonto the peripheral nerves on
the left side and that's whatcaused my leg to go numb,
because they were like sofreaked out and in danger being
damaged that they just turn offand that's why the leg is numb.
(13:38):
And then three years later, Igot spine surgery to try to fix
it.
They said they were gonna fuseit.
They didn't want to because Iwas still, I was 28 or no, I was
29 years old.
So they didn't want todefusions that young Cause.
Once you do a fusion on a lowerback, then it just starts the
timer for possibly herniating orbulging another disc.
(13:58):
It takes away that cushion.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So he brought the equipment out.
He showed it to me, dr Jackson.
He was like I got this stuffhere, I'll fuse it if I have to,
but I won't do what I can notto.
I was like okay, cool.
And then he gave me thepropofol.
He was like count down from ahundred.
I was like nine, nine, nine.
(14:19):
Next thing, I know I'm wakingup and post-op he's like I
didn't fuse it, but I tried toclean it up as much as I can.
I was like awesome, cool.
And I saw the PA, I think amonth later after I was
recovering and he was like sorryman.
He was like they took anotherMRI and they're like sorry man,
(14:43):
we can't do anything.
You can either change your MOSbecause you can't be a combat
medic with this injury.
You can't go to an officer'sschool because of this injury
he's like you can change to.
Was it 42 alpha like the S1?
Speaker 1 (14:54):
He's like or you can
medically retire.
Speaker 3 (14:56):
I was like I'll
medically retire Because nothing
against 42 alpha is the S1peeps, was that not?
That's not what we did.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like we were in FDAS, sam, likeI was a combat medic, that's
what I was trained to do and Ididn't want to go sit up in an
office, maybe never deploy again.
Yeah, and also, I was also alittle bitter because I guess my
dreams of going to PA schooland Ranger school.
Yeah, like the PA captain, billTran.
(15:20):
He was just like oh, I was fine, a waiver for you to go to PA
school.
I will write a letter for youto go.
It's not guaranteed, but I willhelp you as much as I can.
I was like so it's notguaranteed, sir.
He was like no, and I was likeokay, I'm done.
I signed that paperwork and gotmedically retired.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
Speaking about being
like a medic in Afghanistan.
Do you remember that one timewe were in that competition, the
Foxtrot competition?
Oh yeah, and I was in a raceagainst Hardy and I stuck a
nazis brunjol in this guy's nose.
Speaker 3 (15:54):
Those are always fun
to do.
He's just like all right, thisisn't going to hurt.
And you're like are you sure?
Like yeah, you're fine.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
Was that like the
last stretch?
Speaker 2 (16:01):
Dude, imagine him
like doing that for me, me doing
that to you.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
You letting me do
that to you.
You volunteered.
Oh yeah, dude Fucking, I'm verycareless about my life.
You know this.
Speaker 3 (16:16):
That was a fun
competition, though, yeah.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
I lost because I
couldn't get the rucksack.
I had my straps.
I came back and crazy.
Speaker 3 (16:27):
I wasn't even
competing, I was just like
grading the medical part,because I was also only medic.
Well, not your only medic, butthe one who was there at the
time.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
Oh, my goodness,
you're so fast.
I was just a jesus of the meat.
Yeah, oh no, oh no, oh no.
Um, where are you, dude thatKorean barbecue today?
No, I mean, it was good, Ithought it was in comparison to
(16:56):
what that place outside with theline.
I don't know, maybe it'skilling me.
Speaker 3 (17:05):
Well, I mean, in all
fairness, that was the first
time I've had Korean barbecue,ever, ever, ever, ever, and it
blew my mind, it blew my mind.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
I got to cook, I got
to eat and everything was
awesome.
Some of the stuff in there wasfired, like the chicken, was
super juicy, tender, luscious.
Speaker 3 (17:21):
I had to let Freddie
take that.
I was like dude I can't cookchicken without a thermometer.
Speaker 2 (17:25):
I was like is it done
?
Speaker 3 (17:26):
yet Is it done?
Yet You're like no, don't eatthat.
He's like that's why you wouldget some and all.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
Dude, remember, in
that watch tower freezing our
asses off, fishing, yeah, forlike 12 hours, yeah, yeah, yeah,
we're like doing this guardwatch tower and me and Fisher
like we're doing switchies, like, hey, stay up, you go to sleep,
vice versa which neither of usshould be sleeping.
(17:55):
But you know it is what it isSome solid day and I take a
shift, I pass out and then Iwake up and I look over and
Fisher's passed out and Fisherhas this beautiful bald head, as
you can see, and we have theselike ninja silkies is what they
(18:15):
call them, but I don't know,they're like kind of like an
under armor type.
Yeah, it's for a leg, yeah,yeah, yeah, but it was like,
yeah, like pant legs.
So you know, I don't know heneeded to keep his head warm and
he didn't have a hat orsomething.
So I wake up and then I justsee like looks like pantyhose
are like hanging off of his headand I'm just like what the fuck
(18:36):
?
Speaker 3 (18:36):
is going on Cause I
don't have these luxurious locks
, like you guys, to keep my headwarm.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
The story that he
says behind your back is that
you're under armor.
Speaker 3 (18:44):
Yeah, yeah, that was
the hang.
Yeah, they're the long johnsthat we had.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
I thought you were in
like white tiny, no, no.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
It was that the
second thing that Fisher said.
Speaker 2 (18:55):
It's funny Cause I
recently, like last week, when I
went hunting I was in the blindand I was talking to my friend
Juan about it.
I was like dude, the worstthing I did in the army was to
sit in that watch tower forAdmon and he 12 on 12 off, 12 on
12.
And he just felt like it wasnever going to end and it was
just constant in there for 12hours.
On getting out, making a phonecall with the MWR and one sweep
(19:17):
waking up and doing, I didn'trealize we were on Admon too,
are you?
Yeah, we were.
Speaker 3 (19:23):
We were put together
cause both of our names start
with this.
Yeah, it was the worstexperience, bro.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
I was terrified of
staring out of the scope all day
.
Speaker 3 (19:29):
And then RJ started
using.
He got bored and started usinghis robot voice over the call
and I called and checked in andhe was like Roger over, oh man.
And then the NCO in chargewould be like who said that
let's be professional.
Please, let's be professional,please.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
Okay, you got it over
, Roger.
Speaker 1 (19:48):
Roger that yeah, oh
man, oh dude.
You know what was sick, though,in those in those convoys how
we used to you can get your youriPod and get the headphones and
you can splice the wire andsplice the wires into the truck
and then everybody can bump youriPod while you're driving
around.
Yeah, I remember Anderson didthat.
(20:08):
Yeah, we were like bumpingMetallica when you're driving
through these villages and shit.
Speaker 3 (20:14):
I remember he used to
get so mad at us cause we'd
just sit there and make jokesthe whole time on those long
gags.
You know to Serrano, yep, we'djust sit there and make jokes
and he's just like all rightguys, you know, stop, there's
nothing to stop.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
Anderson used to get
mad.
He used to get real mad causewe were just a couple of hours.
Speaker 3 (20:31):
Yeah, oh, when he
does, he'll know.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
He'll know what we're
talking about yeah Well, you
got to bring Morale up somehow,right?
Yeah, I mean there's like sixhour drives.
Speaker 3 (20:43):
Like sometimes eight
Fish, you're kind of baller.
I used to play a lot of pool.
Speaker 2 (20:49):
Well, obviously, just
pull table sticks on your hand
and cue Check this out your leg.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
Yeah, see this one
here.
Oh, you got one too Nice.
Speaker 2 (21:00):
I'll see your picture
.
What?
Speaker 1 (21:03):
They're all three
Japanese to get out of town.
What a coinky bink.
And then this one is and thisone is not.
That one is how cool.
Huh, same Z's, same Z's.
You know what I do?
I really do think we all needmatching sweaters, though For
(21:25):
girls.
Exactly Like what is it that?
Dr Sears was like thing one andthing two, but it's like bro,
one, two and three, somethinglike that, or the three
brosketeers or something.
Maybe the brosketeers?
Speaker 3 (21:41):
Yeah.
I was thinking about making alimb biscuit cover band.
Yeah, call ourselves thebiscuit tears, the three of us.
And then we have the backupdancers.
They'd be the biscuits, thebiscuits.
Speaker 1 (21:55):
I like that.
I can get behind that.
You do got a Fred Durst thinggoing on with it.
Yeah, I'm trying.
We go to red like St Louis,back red, back backwards, and
then go top a lot of theirs,something like that.
Speaker 3 (22:08):
So close.
Yeah, here we go, clean it up.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
Ooh, let's talk about
soon this is good because you
want to know what a healthyrelationship looks like Right
here, right here, bingo thesetwo.
I'm so happy to do that.
So we took this huge breakapart from seeing each other for
a hell of a year, and I moveall over the place and we go and
(22:33):
we do our own thing, and I comeback and your family is so
beautiful, dude.
Speaker 2 (22:42):
Your family is the
most beautiful, true, true.
A family where there's a bunchof chicks watching this.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
I was like dude,
she's right there.
Did you hear me talking aboutyou and how cute you are and
stuff it's better.
Speaker 2 (22:57):
Just a little secret.
Good game brother.
Oh, she Call us pocket.
Yeah, yeah, I pointed at it.
I pointed at it.
Speaker 3 (23:07):
I mean it's on the
camera.
I pointed at it.
Yep, In your court.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
Dude, he destroyed
you.
I was.
He should even shake his handor something I'm going to rack
up, and, but now I'm going todestroy Fisher, though.
Speaker 3 (23:19):
My dad boo.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
What?
The blue one?
Well, you want to get there.
You go Right there.
Brother, do you have that stuffin here?
Speaker 2 (23:30):
For the record, this
is the second podcast I've ever
heard of, aren't they?
Speaker 1 (23:33):
Oh yeah, this one
just never got released because
it was so inappropriate, butlike one day dude, like when
Tupac dies, like when I die,like same thing.
Tupac still releasing musicforever.
I'll be releasing my podcastfor days on it and I also want
to recreate some Tupac photoswith, like, the bandana twisted
in the front and then he'swearing a Detroit Red Wings
(23:56):
jersey and he's spitting on thecamera like this.
It's a sick.
It's a sick pic.
Let me show it to you.
No, all right.
Speaker 2 (24:03):
You know how full
ourselves, though, when we were
buffering up gas and filling outword one in our funeral what we
wanted to be buried in yeah,what's happening?
We were like we'll walk redbands with skinny jeans and a
V-neck white t-shirt with abasically like a fitted cap.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
Yup, it was so stupid
, very stupid, you said.
Speaker 2 (24:21):
I'm being like.
I want to be buried in myuniform.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
But okay, there's
that.
I wanted to have my ashesspread.
It was like someplace in likearound, like San Diego or
something.
But I also have a sick playlistfor my funeral that I put on
there and then I'm going to putbeers under everybody's seats
and then everybody has to shot abeer when everyone Don't really
.
Don't matter, don't matter.
(24:46):
I'm really like what, bro?
I thought we were like tight,tight, dude, all those muscles
for nothing.
Look here, you take this.
All right, let's see how.
Do I want to win by the solid?
(25:07):
Do you want a nail the choices?
What are you?
Your profession?
Speaker 2 (25:11):
Well, I'm a real oh
yeah, you're a professional, I'm
a realtor.
Speaker 1 (25:16):
Oh yeah, yeah, I'm a
realtor.
Okay, you do a lot of differentthings, though.
Honestly, what a man like you.
All these different feats.
Where do you find the time you?
Speaker 2 (25:25):
know what I did.
All I do is hustle.
I'm talented at sort ofpropagating.
It's like left right, left,right, left right, and I stick
to it and I hyper focus on mydaily tasks.
Speaker 1 (25:37):
And I do something
called money balling.
What's money balling?
Speaker 2 (25:39):
I'm just doing it for
all those words.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
Tell me more.
You got me hooked to the moneyballing thing, though I know
it's just a movie with Brad Pittabout the other planes, he's a
fantastic.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
Watch it every
morning.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
As well.
Throw on some Brad Pitt andfucking get after it.
Speaker 2 (25:59):
Do you want to have
it?
Speaker 1 (26:00):
all yeah, oh, have
you ever seen Snatch?
Yes, not like.
No, I get what you're saying.
The movie, I got it.
The movie, I got it the firsttime.
It's a great movie with BradPitt.
He shredded, he shred dog tothe max in that movie.
Is it my turn?
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
Is he in flight club?
Yeah, he's like equally asshredded in that movie.
(26:22):
Mum, mum, mum, mum, mum, mum.
Speaker 2 (26:28):
What's your?
Speaker 1 (26:28):
favourite Tarantino
movie.
Ready to set go?
Kill Bill Full Fiction.
Speaker 3 (26:32):
Oh no, I forgot the
one, the spaghetti western he
made.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
Western.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
Sukiaki western.
Yeah, it's.
Speaker 1 (26:43):
The hate plate.
Hmm, hate plate.
Speaker 3 (26:46):
No, the sukiyaki
western Jango.
Oh, jango and Jane.
No, this is another one.
Tarantino did it.
Yeah, it's called sukiyakiwestern Jango.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
Stop it Really.
What do I not know about this?
Speaker 3 (26:58):
It's a great movie.
It's about like a bunch ofJapanese immigrants that come to
an old Western town.
What?
Speaker 1 (27:05):
Dude.
Speaker 3 (27:05):
One of them is a
gunslinger, the other one wields
a sword.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
Are you sure he
directed?
Speaker 2 (27:08):
it yeah of course I
was right.
Speaker 3 (27:12):
I mean I can consult
the orca.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
Was there a large
theatrical release?
Speaker 2 (27:15):
I feel like I would
have heard about it.
No, it's one of his lesserknowns.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
You're not slipping
those by me, fish.
I am a huge Tarantino guy.
I'm just saying, also speakingTarantino, tarantino's pizza and
bozeman Slam dunk, babyDelicious.
Speaker 2 (27:30):
Tarantino pizza and
bozeman movie for Mark and Kelo.
Speaker 3 (27:34):
Yeah, I liked it, boi
.
Okay, no, he didn't direct it,he produced it.
Boom, same thing.
Speaker 1 (27:39):
Close enough.
What Don't make it look thatway?
Oh wait, I did make one right.
Yeah, I didn't make one?
Speaker 2 (27:45):
I haven't even shot.
Speaker 1 (27:46):
Yet that's my deal.
That's what happened.
I thought you would do Alright,alright, alright, because I'm
all mixed up about which way Iwant to win.
I'm like, ah, we still, youstill listen to a lot of hip hop
, right, yeah, your favoritealbum of this last year,
favorite, or who is the most?
(28:06):
Who is the artist you bump themost?
Who is the artist that I bumpthe most?
Hmm?
Speaker 2 (28:15):
For sure.
It's always interesting whenyou like actually think about it
on the spot.
They'll always go and I'll goto one artist and then, like now
, I just kind of remember.
But what I do listen to a lotis the rap life playlist that's
on Apple Music and it's alwaysjust like the newest hit song.
So right now it's Red.
Speaker 1 (28:34):
Brunker by 21 Savage,
and it's a banger.
It is a banger, I agree, fisher.
What about you?
What bangers Metallica?
Speaker 3 (28:43):
Well, if I'm going to
stay with the rap genre, I'm
still stuck in the Houston rapera.
You know there's nothing wrongwith that.
Yeah, still a little fat.
Pat Pamp C, pamp Sui, yeah,kiki.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
Kiki, that was like
my favorite thing when we'd be
partying and he'd be like yo putSipvin on some scissorbon and
I'd be like I got you FisherSipvin on some scissorbon.
Speaker 2 (29:05):
And I'm like, hey,
I'm the Skilbert Kendrick Lamar
in your bariturn.
I feel like it was you, likethe memories I meet going in
there and doesn't play in yourlaptop, but it might have been
something.
Speaker 3 (29:16):
I'm just sitting
there drinking King Cobra's a
listen to 90's rap music.
Bro, time's a change, you know,you can venture out.
Speaker 1 (29:23):
Time's a change.
Speaker 3 (29:25):
You don't have to
drink stillers.
You always come to the clubwith us, man, you know things
are different now.
Speaker 2 (29:30):
Things are different
now.
What are you, did you making?
All right, you tell us aboutwhen you had further got to Fort
Bragg.
Speaker 1 (29:38):
Ooh, let's see.
Well, I left Airborne schoolbefore Bandy Georgia got on a
bus.
Oh, check this out, was it whenthe grab?
Okay, so the bus from Georgiato North Carolina.
Speaker 2 (30:01):
I got a hand job From
this one year he released the
last podcast.
You said those two link thisthere.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
What that's hilarious
.
Sorry, all right, I didn't geta hand job on the bus from one
place to another.
I'm not sure, yeah, but enoughabout that.
Speaker 2 (30:24):
Once I send this out
to you.
Speaker 1 (30:25):
It's going to be cut,
Bro.
I'll do the editing, Don'tworry about it.
You know you move along, He'llzoom down himself.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
You'll be like I got
a hand job, you know what, you
know what?
Speaker 3 (30:40):
I love you, even
slowing down a little bit.
Speaker 2 (30:43):
It's funny yeah he'll
put a little emoji in my hand.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
He represents me as
the worst human being to ever
live.
I promise you that I'm achanged man, freddie.
I'm not even as bad as you sayI am or ever was that bad?
You're probably the worst.
No, no, that is not true.
Speaker 2 (31:09):
I'm really a tenor.
Robbie Can't talk about that.
Pretty well, we don't talkabout Are you hitting balls?
Speaker 3 (31:21):
Yeah, I'm hitting
balls.
It's still open Is it, no way.
Speaker 1 (31:25):
Yeah, it is.
I haven't made anything either.
Hey, edit this out, but I will.
Oh, actually I can.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
I'll edit this whole
part last two minutes out, my
man, because I don't want peopleon my Facebook to be like yo.
Speaker 1 (31:40):
What are you going to
do when you're talking about
hand jobs?
I never said that.
Speaker 2 (31:44):
What you've been seen
.
Speaker 1 (31:46):
No, I'm agnostic.
There's a big difference.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
I mean once you get
into religious talks.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
That's when the heat
fires up Agnostic, a lot of
anger, maybe like oh, I loveSatan.
That's kidding, I'm not kidding, those are separate things.
Yes, I do.
Speaker 2 (32:06):
But yes, I love Satan
.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
No, no, no, no, no,
no, dude, it's all about and
action, yeah, and then nextthing, you know, just fighting
them all off, you know?
Well, it's just he said action,so I was going to like it came
in at a really good story, youknow, but you should have seen
(32:30):
the other guy, no, hey?
So tomorrow, what gun are youusing to shoot this deer?
Speaker 2 (32:38):
I'm using my friends.
I think it's a Romeo 27.
Hondo, yeah, I have my AR, butI don't have school money, is
that?
Speaker 1 (32:45):
red dot, or you're
probably still hit it with some
agonist, agonist.
Yeah, that's gonna be reallyfun.
Speaker 2 (32:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:54):
Portugal, you guys.
Oh, fish already told you yougot to come visit the crib in
Portugal and oh, you know whatYou're.
So, since you can that, that,that last gal.
Now you've been like chilling,like not not really out there
(33:16):
playing the field and whatnot.
European lady, that's what youneed.
I'm not afraid of anything,european lady.
I don't know.
Fish, I don't have any commentson the other one.
Oh yeah, you're right, dude,you're such a stand up guy.
But oh yeah, dude, europeanladies, that's where it's at,
(33:38):
not for me.
Speaker 3 (33:39):
I'm taken, but Every
time I was in Europe it was like
work, work, work, militarystuff and then no time for any
of that.
So I never met it.
I did meet some Romanian ladies.
They were very nice, ReallyBack to.
Speaker 2 (33:52):
Romanian yeah.
Speaker 3 (33:54):
And I totally regret
not buying those super sweet
Dracula bobbleheads they had intheir gift shop.
Gosh, I kicked myself aboutthat all the time.
Speaker 2 (34:02):
You were like
exploring Romania more there, so
busy.
Just like a bit of wifi andgood wifi, yeah.
Just like being on social media.
Speaker 3 (34:10):
Beautiful country
though Very tall green trees,
castles and stuff.
Speaker 2 (34:14):
Where did we stop
before I was in Kyrgyzstan?
Speaker 3 (34:16):
Yeah, that was our
first one In Minas, Kyrgyzstan.
That was cool.
Yeah, very, very cool.
We got there in RJ, stepped inthe ice and yeah, we had to wear
special shoes so we didn't tripand fall.
Speaker 1 (34:29):
They made it yeah.
Speaker 2 (34:32):
They were like a
bunch of people fall, yeah, ice
patches everywhere.
Speaker 1 (34:37):
I know, I know it's
ridiculous.
You should have been there,actually.
No, you should have been there.
No, you shouldn't have.
How's that katana working outover there?
I'm solids, by the way.
Nice, yeah, I know You're oneof the most solid dudes I know.
I know.
I know, yup, would you everwear a toupee?
No, I was really hoping youwere.
Speaker 3 (35:00):
Maybe a party toupee,
you know it's like hey, we're
going to a party.
I'm like give me a party toupee, Hold on, Nobody here knows I'm
bald, Let me get my partytoupee.
Let's try something real goodguys.
Oh no, this is going great.
Speaker 2 (35:16):
Fish in 60 seconds or
less.
Give the advice that you wouldgive to the 18 year old.
Very nice yourself.
Speaker 3 (35:27):
Pay attention in
school.
Take school a lot serious, likea lot more seriously.
If you're gonna join a military, go to college first.
If college doesn't work for you, then totally join, that's
totally fine.
But if you don't wanna do that,go to trade school.
Nice, nice, is this?
Speaker 1 (35:45):
lights turned off, or
did you turn it off by a
nightstand?
Oh, the lights died.
That's a good 60 seconds.
Yeah, 60 seconds.
Speaker 2 (35:56):
All right and RJ.
What was the?
Speaker 1 (35:58):
question.
What was the question?
J-8, 57.
What was the question?
Speaker 2 (36:02):
J-6, 55.
Speaker 1 (36:03):
Fish.
Help me out.
What was the?
Speaker 3 (36:04):
question Advice you
would give yourself when you're
18 years old, okay?
Speaker 1 (36:13):
Umm, pull out every
time, every single time.
Umm, what else, what else, whatelse, what else, what else?
Tight football, play football,play football.
Read books, reading books.
And if you're not a good visuallearner, audio books work just
(36:34):
as good.
Podcast, really good.
Use your time wisely.
Get good at multitasking.
You know I'm running out oftime.
Is that good?
Nailed it, freddie.
Go 60 seconds.
Speaker 2 (36:53):
Yeah.
So I would say the biggestthing is just slow down and
savor every second, because asyou get older, you start
realizing that time goes by.
It's kind of like there's anend to it, like we're not going
to live forever.
You start feeling that theolder you get and if you do have
a family, I would say to bethere as much as you can,
(37:14):
because you always have thatmentality when you're young that
I can grind now because it'llbe worth it.
Well, guess what?
You never stop grinding becausethere's always a new goal to
hit and I wish that I hadunderstood that, like I'm never
going to stop grinding and Irealized that a year ago and
I've already neglected my kidsfor like seven years and that
(37:36):
was tough and also to actuallybe goal oriented.
And I'll plan and stick to it,because if you're just like I'm
gonna grind, grind, grind.
It's not really a plan, it justnever ends.
And also to make smartinvestments.
You don't need materialisticthings when you're young,
because if you're wise with yourmoney, you can save and you
invest it.
Speaker 3 (37:55):
You can retire early,
earlier, and I've been more
kind to spend with your family.
I'm successful.
I enjoy true happiness, whichis financial freedom.
Speaker 1 (38:04):
I love that.
Financial freedom is always key, and I love that because that
takes me to a topic that I legitwanted to get into when we were
going to record a podcast isbecause I was absent of your
life, from you know, when youleft to Italy and then I dipped
out and then all these yearslater, um shit, I lost it.
(38:29):
Oh sorry, Sorry about that,we're blinding me real quick.
Speaker 2 (38:37):
Oh, where'd it go?
I'm getting it.
Speaker 1 (38:42):
Oh yeah, okay, no, no
.
So you're very successful.
You've done so.
I'm so successful.
I'm successful for the rightwords in life.
Before you, I'm going to saythe words I want to say, but my
Facebook haters I'm like he'snot very successful.
I want to clarify real quick,you helping me In my opinion.
(39:03):
I got it.
Freddie and Jasmine are very,very successful and I'm very
proud of you and so I meanyou're doing better than me,
which is awesome and I love that.
I truly love that.
(39:23):
But so I guess what I'm tryingto say is through that period of
time, what were the steps?
Where did you start?
And to get where you're at now,which is you guys have some
Airbnb's right.
That's the part.
You have a roofing business youwere doing I work, okay, you
(39:46):
did solar, thank you, stuff likethat.
What is the maincharacteristics and traits that
tie all those things?
in together that you were goodat all of those things to make
it to the top, Because the creamalways rises to the top,
Freddie Well it was just mainlyjust being disciplined.
Speaker 2 (40:09):
I learned in the
military because before the
military you get into themilitary, they instill it inside
of you Okay, beyond time, bewhere you're supposed to be, do
what you say you're going to do,which a lot of civilians they
don't have.
They're never on time, they'renever what they're supposed to
be.
They say they may do somethingand they never do it.
(40:30):
And I learned to honor mycommitments and I also.
Most of what I've done has beensales and fishes blocking the
camera.
Most of what I've been doing issales and I don't really try
and be a salesman because I know, like in this day and age,
people get turned off.
If you're trying to be salesman, you know I'll be out of your
(40:51):
hair quicker than a favoriteshampoo.
Thank you, what is this guytrying to do?
He's about to try and close me.
I can provide a stellar orexceptional experience by
providing a stellar customerexperience.
Right Like, I'm going to tellyou the benefits of this product
and how they can apply to yourlife, rather than trying to sell
it.
And if you turn that as not agood fit, you can just shake
(41:12):
hands and be friends at the endof the day, thank you.
That's what I've done andbecause I do what I'm saying I'm
going to do, they're on time,usually early.
I've done really successful.
While I was in the car businessI managed to become a new car
director within two years, whichis pretty awesome.
I left during COVID and I gotin.
(41:33):
I recruited in solar and I didexceptionally well.
I got hired as manager afterthree months and did really well
for the RGV and I got hired forCalifornia and I opened up the
entire state of California andwe brought a lot of records
there, nice.
But I'll always be hyper focusedand, to be honest, a lot of
micromanaging and being involvedevery second of the day, and
(41:56):
that's when I was like analcoholic and neglecting my
family.
So a lot of it.
I wouldn't recommend to do itagain.
I'd be a lot more lenient andunderstanding.
I wouldn't be working all day,every day, but I would come up
with a new plan to makeeverybody still work as hard to
make them happier.
I realized that the discipline,the leadership that I had in
the military, I kind of expectpeople to handle it well because
(42:19):
they didn't go through the samebasic training and they weren't
climatized I think that's theword to use to that kind of
energy leadership.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah
, you know stuff.
No, that makes perfect sense.
Discipline, that's the answerto your question.
That's a really good answer tothe question.
I agree with that.
I think that's a thousandpercent.
Fisher, yes, what's yourfavorite exercise?
(42:48):
I'm just kidding.
What are the keys to yoursuccess of how you blasted
through college, which is not aneasy task to do?
They say it's harder for adults, for whatever reason.
Maybe it's because our learninghabits are what they are and
(43:10):
whatnot.
But what do you attribute yoursuccess into?
You know, just blowing throughcollege after you got out of the
military.
Speaker 3 (43:21):
Oh, definitely hard
work and determination and time
management.
Time management, becausethere's been weeks when I was
going through my master's so Iwas like it's not that hard of a
paper, I can do that.
I started that on Thursday andfinished it on Sunday.
It won't be that hard, right,wrong, wrong.
If you've got time, work on it.
(43:43):
If you're burnt out, take thetime, but not too much time, and
then get back to work.
I mean, even if it's hard andyou know it's terrible and you
feel burnt out, even if it takesyou all day, take breaks.
Just take some breaks.
And you know, if your thoughtsare becoming muddled and they're
becoming, you know it's hard tolike form a thought, to write a
(44:05):
30 page research paper then,just, you know, take your break.
And if you come back and thatbreaks not working, take another
break.
And if you know you up to threebreaks and it's still not
working, take the rest of theday.
Go, do something that makes youfeel good.
You know whether it's likegoing shopping or walking around
or exercising, whatever ittakes to get your head back in
(44:26):
the game.
Because you know you are payingfor this.
Yeah, and it costs money.
And if you fail, you fail andyou have to do it again and do
you want, and then you have tothink, do you want to do this
again?
That also helped me, like, doyou want to do this again?
Speaker 2 (44:43):
Absolutely not I
think that's super important.
What you're saying about thebreaks, too, like any aspect of
life.
You know like in this culturenowadays, everybody is like
glamorizing the hustle, hustle,hustle, hustle kind of mentality
and life and a lot of peoplefall victim to that and they
find that they're not happy,that they're miserable and a lot
(45:04):
of them get into depression andthings like that.
Yeah, because that's what I'mtrying to do when they don't
make time for it to everythingelse, it's actually important.
I feel, like the older, thatI'm bothered.
I realize that the three mostimportant things you know are
like religion, like believing insomething right.
It doesn't have to necessarilybe religion, but believing in
(45:24):
something, yeah, my health andmy finances.
Right, I found this in there.
Of course they're there at thetop, but, like for myself, it's
like believing in somethinghealth and my finances.
Sorry, my health, my finances.
So in that order, you know.
(45:44):
Like the finances are at thebottom for me now Because, like
no one's ever on your deathbed,I wish it would have been more
money, right, like I wish itwould have spent more time on
family and I wish it washealthier to enjoy with my
family and they're like, well, Iwish it was more money, you
know, because that's not how Iwant to get on with my deathbed.
I'm like, nah, I'm a millionaire, but I've been like through my
family Like it's the last thingI would do, and now you're in a
(46:06):
bed all alone.
Yeah, and lately I've beenfeeling like a little unhealthy,
just kind of everything fromthe arguing, like my neck and my
shoulders Feet have beenhurting a lot and I started
going to the doctor when thefloor went in.
I was put into the VA becauseof all four stories I heard and
I one more time had a bedexperience that I'm never going
to go back.
But if I finally started going,taking care of myself, spending
(46:26):
way too much time with myfamily and me and Jevin are
together pretty much all day.
Every day I'm exhausting.
Yeah, I'm just kidding, but likeit kind of helped me feel like
like this is what makes me happy, you know, like the hustle and
the hyper focus.
As soon as I achieve the goal,instead of getting happy, I get
(46:46):
depressed Because I was sofocused on the journey.
When the journey ended I justcrashed Because I was caught up
on the success of reaching thegoal.
When I reached the goal, it wasmassive, mean Like.
I was like I'm a double, andthen I was like something else.
I was like I never end.
I was going to do a cheese,something.
You want something else.
Speaker 3 (47:04):
That finish line
wasn't a sunny sunny show.
It was a dark cloud you want toextend the finish line.
Speaker 2 (47:10):
Yeah, that's what I
feel a big one to do.
So it's faith, family fitnessand then finances One, two,
three, four.
Speaker 1 (47:25):
When it comes to
fitness, you have suffered a
bunch of injuries prior militaryinjuries and stuff like that.
Do you think your workouthabits and routines have changed
since, like the time that wewere working out together, going
hard in Afghanistan and theMWRs and all that, Like this
(47:47):
month I started focusing a?
Speaker 2 (47:49):
lot on stretching and
yoga type of things, because
that's why I neglected after thearmy and the army they make you
bend and read I've alwayswarm-ups.
I was like I'm not going to dothat.
When I first got out, I wasstretching for like an hour, but
then I was like this is thelast time Almost a billion hours
to work.
So I used to stop at work outand leave once every stretch.
So now it's cut off right on.
(48:11):
My hamstring is always hurting,I'm cramping, my shoulder is
always hurting.
So I was like I got a side inyoga, so I started doing yoga
and my back is up.
But now, as soon as I startmaking it a habit, I'll get
better.
I still like I have to researcha little bit more about
aesthetics and pull, push legs,pull, push legs and I'm like,
hey, I'm going to do 100 curlsbecause by the time I hit the
(48:33):
50th curl it's useless.
Speaker 1 (48:35):
There's no point in
it.
It's muscle with jam.
My muscles aren't buildinganymore.
So yeah, galo is smarter.
So what are your short-term,long-term goals for what you're
doing, health-wise, fitness-wise?
I want to hit 200 pounds.
Speaker 2 (48:55):
I'm like 215 right
now.
I just want to lose those 15pounds of fat at muscle, but
just mostly in the midsectionarea.
This last few months on thestage, I got to do yoga in the
hospital.
We just lost control over ourdiet.
We even have like meal prepevery month too.
So we get a meal prep lunches,but it's when we're so busy
(49:16):
we're like, oh, just go get fastfood and that's not going to
help us Right, that is it.
Speaker 3 (49:22):
Do you process this
fish?
It depends on what you considerby process foods, because I buy
I buy like Keto foods andpotatoes, organic stuff like
that but then I want to make achicken sandwich and I'm not
going to make it myself, so I gobuy one that's already
pre-fried and then I just stickit in the air fryer and I'm good
(49:46):
with that, which I'm prettysure is processed.
Speaker 2 (49:50):
Sorry, my process is
like, sorry, fast food.
Speaker 3 (49:54):
No, not.
I do on Tuesdays on my cheatday.
Yeah, other than that, no, Ihave a pretty strict diet plan.
Speaker 2 (50:00):
Yes, do you have a go
to on your cheat day.
Speaker 3 (50:02):
Chick-fil-A.
Speaker 2 (50:03):
That's not going to
be 10 times.
Speaker 3 (50:06):
Nice, that's helpful.
It is when you get, when youdouble size it, you know, with
the large fries and the creamysalsa.
Yeah, how's your?
Speaker 2 (50:15):
fitness menu oh man.
Speaker 1 (50:18):
Okay, I'm glad you
asked Fitness pizza, fitness
pizza.
I think I love pizza Pizza.
Don't love me, though.
I got a gluten thing.
Kind of Okay, it's going great.
I just finished a six day fast,probably about a week ago,
about a week ago, and I feltrejuvenated.
(50:44):
I feel rejuvenated now.
I feel fantastic.
I did a water only fast.
I think I lost about probably12 pounds, I think I didn't.
I mean, it's all, it's all juststraight body fat.
So it's you know which isexcellent, yeah, excellent, very
much so.
And yeah, so after the 72nd hourcause it sucks.
(51:08):
You have hunger, headaches, yougot stuff like that going on.
But then you wake up thatfourth day and you get up and
it's, you feel better thanyou've ever felt in your life,
almost.
Thank you, and it's the mostclear thinking you have.
It's weird, it's like you feellike you're on like a sort of
spiritual wavelength.
(51:28):
Thank you, and yeah, it'scrucial for me.
Actually, I do one big one ayear which is like up to seven
days, and I try to be like threeor four day ones at least twice
a year, just to give, you know,my body a break and and just
detox, just pound waters andflush myself out.
(51:51):
Thank you, I find that to bevery beneficial, so I'm really
glad I did that.
I'm not sure that I'm pumped forit to not be winter anymore,
because I like running outside.
I live out in Montana and Ilove running in the mountains
and I love hiking, taking JJ outto the mountains, and I love
(52:12):
hunting, so that's like a bigpart of what I do.
So I'm very pumped for that.
Grabbing the rucksack andhitting some trail runs and shit
, taking it back, taking it backyeah, like that's what we did
in our free time?
We were just beast mode all thetime.
Those are always the worst,always the worst.
Speaker 3 (52:34):
Let's go run.
Oh, here's 40 pounds.
I didn't sign up for that.
I didn't sign up for that.
Speaker 1 (52:39):
That sounds awful.
How are your knees?
Speaker 2 (52:42):
My knees are fine.
How are your knees?
My right knee is messed up.
My left knee is pretty solid.
Speaker 1 (52:48):
You heard the knees
over toes guy Patrick.
Something Do you like all thosevideos now, yeah, he does a lot
of videos of basicallyrepairing your knees without
doing any surgery, walkingbackwards, yeah, yeah.
And so I started doing that.
I have his book here too.
(53:09):
I started doing that like ayear ago probably.
My knees are like look at that,no pain, well, pepping your
step there, yeah.
I'll have spring chicken alittle bit, it's easy now, easy
Do you see this no pain, nocracks, no nothing.
Look out now I swear no, I usedto have a lot of knee pain,
(53:30):
especially when I squatted.
And Show me your foot, show meyour foot, get more.
Oh, I'm telling you.
Oh, he's referring to a time inAfghanistan where we almost got
into a fight because I wasbeing my voice probably wasn't
what he wanted it to be and Iwas telling him that he was
working out wrong.
And, mind you, we're both, oh,we're having this again.
Speaker 2 (53:54):
What, Bro?
You're the best taken.
Oh, that's not even illegal.
Speaker 1 (54:02):
Yes, it is Super.
We're going to go back in timeand arrest us from this tape.
Come on, oh man, unfortunately.
All right, we'll cut that partout.
We have like five minutes.
All right, we better make itgood.
Okay, actually, it's me Allright.
So we have five minutes.
So we're going to close with anice closing statement, summary
(54:24):
thing from me, and I'm going toask a couple of questions before
we send this thing off.
What are you most thankful forin your life right now, freddie?
Speaker 2 (54:38):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (54:41):
Fisher, what are you
most thankful for in your life
right now?
Speaker 3 (54:43):
I'm going to say my
family too, not because, you
know, like we talked about itearlier, like every Tuesday we
have like a family get together,which I immensely enjoy, which
I hadn't had in like 10 years.
Speaker 2 (54:56):
Most families only
get together and things give me.
Yeah, and I see them everyTuesday.
Speaker 3 (55:00):
I see my nieces and
see my brothers.
I see my sister, I see myparents.
Speaker 2 (55:03):
I'm not going to.
I'm a little shocked that youdidn't see the me and RJ.
We're the best thing in life.
Speaker 1 (55:09):
I mean you are, but
yeah, we haven't seen you in six
years.
Speaker 2 (55:11):
Six years.
Speaker 1 (55:11):
Right, you haven't
seen him in six years.
Speaker 2 (55:15):
Me and Fisher used to
live in San Antonio.
Yeah, with our other friend,chris, who unfortunately passed
away.
Speaker 3 (55:21):
Yeah, rest in peace
and my other friend, Jason, also
rest in peace.
Yep Start calling Most gratefulfor.
Speaker 1 (55:32):
RJ and your life.
I am, I'm most grateful that Ihave breath in my body and live
today, because I got through alot of hard things in the last
year and a half and I learned somuch.
(55:54):
It's been the biggest learningexperience of my life and it's
changed me for the better andyou haven't been around me for a
while but like I've beenchanging.
Like this touch here that's adate and it says reborn, because
on that day I I heard twopeople so badly that I've never
(56:18):
seen pain in like someone's eyesbefore like that, and that I
did that and I was so destroyedby that that I could hurt
somebody that bad that I just Iwanted to like remind myself
every day that, like you'renever going to be that person.
So, uh, finally changed yourmindset.
(56:38):
Yeah, very much so Good for you, brother, and uh, that you know
led to a lot of other things.
Like I don't drink anymore.
You know it's been over a yearand whatever months it's been
what.
Two years for you about to beon the 15th, about to be two
years, and me and this dude usedto go hard Frank the tank, yeah
(56:59):
, and uh, but not anymore.
And I'm just not an alcoholic.
Yeah, and I were just a coupleof couple of days Just hang out.
Speaker 2 (57:11):
Mark, before you hit
us up.
Speaker 1 (57:13):
Exactly.
But uh, first, uh, I want tosay thank you for once again
flying me out here.
He does this because I know heknows all return the favor
because I'm going to be rich notlong from now, so everybody can
come on my yacht no big deal.
So that's why we yeah, I knowyachts are fun, um, but thank
(57:35):
you for having me, jasmine,thank you so much for having me.
I look forward to this everyyear going forward.
This is the last year, bro.
We've been meaning to tell youthis is the last one, uh, but no
, I want to get a Tegan andStetler and have them come out
here and and these so big I know, and do some stuff.
(57:57):
I still got pictures of you.
Hold on, I actually like herage.
I was going to take a pictureof her.
I know I'm going to go see themright after you guys.
Speaker 2 (58:09):
So that'll be good.
Yeah, Cool guys, If you guysare trying to be influencers
like us, all we recommend isstaff audio books meditation.
Speaker 1 (58:20):
True, oh, hey, those
little and those still is, those
are really good, um, oh, okay,yeah.
So, closing, um, let me see, uh, yeah, Um, I want to dedicate
this podcast to, uh, all thepeople that we lost, all of the
uh, our brothers, uh, soldiers,um, close friends, um, the list
(58:45):
would be too long to go on to do.
But, uh, these, this thing thatI'm doing has a lot to do with
that.
So so, yeah, thank you guys,thank you, and we'll see you
later.
Yeah, cut, okay.