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June 15, 2025 42 mins

As the summer heats up, things are getting wet. How can we combat the bog in our swamp?

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-- Sources:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweat_gland

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apocrine_sweat_gland

https://lifemd.com/learn/how-to-get-rid-of-swamp-ass

https://www.healthline.com/health/butt-sweat

https://www.healthline.com/health/butt-sweat#what-not-to-do

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Just imagine with me, you're the scientist that is tasked with the research answering thehypothesis.
The sweat glands on the area between the butthole and the genitalia are different than thesweat glands on your hands.

(00:23):
Welcome back to privy.
Privy is a podcast about bathrooms recorded from my home bathroom.
I'm your host, Hunter Hoover, and I love bathrooms.
Thank you so much for being here.
Welcome back and happy privy summer.
It's here.
It's hot and everybody's got a little bit of sweat where they don't want it.

(00:47):
On the day that I prepared this episode, it was a sweltering
95 degrees hot.
Now, if you're hearing this and you're going, how could that be possible?
This episode's coming out or has come out just shortly after or before the first day ofsummer.

(01:07):
Due to my schedule right now, I could not tell you exactly where this episode lands.
However, it shouldn't be this hot.
Like, and it's cooled off, it's a day of record, it's actually cooled off a bit.
But still.
I got in my car and it said 101.
It's June.
That's like late July, mid August death temperature.

(01:30):
I'm not mentally or physically prepared for that.
Something my doctor let me know today.
It's not even summer yet.
You're telling me the summer sun is it's good for making my lawn brown.
It's good for making me grumpy and

(01:51):
it brings on the big summer sweatin'.
It just really puts a big sweat right on your backside.
Here on Privy, we're concerned with sweat, particularly because I'm a sweat monster.
and sweat often intersects with many of the things that we have going on in the bathroom,which is directly related to

(02:20):
how that sweat interfaces with our downstairs zone, your privates and other areas.
There's a lot of products and workarounds and tips and tricks and things that you canemploy to help fight the summer sweatin'.
And we're gonna look at a few of those this episode.

(02:42):
But before we dive in to look at how can I remedy my big wet stink,
We need to get a feel for sweat, like really get a flavor for sweat and really, reallylike just inhale, really sniff in the essence that is sweat.

(03:06):
Like really wrap our minds around and get acquainted with and really just get in over ourheads with the concept of sweat and to do so,
We need to look and dive head first into the pool that is the history of sweat.

(03:28):
Yep.
Many people would hear that sentence that I just said, that we need to observe the historyof sweat.
And they'd say to themselves, I don't think we do.
Like, I think actually we don't have to go into the history of sweat.

(03:52):
Like, I don't think it needs to be done, but these people, one, have likely never listenedto our show.
Why draw a straight line when you can create a masterpiece along?
quote it.
uh

(04:29):
Speaking of wet...
We're back.
The polar seltzer has returned.
I'm rocking that cranberry clementine.
It's pretty good.
It's not edging out orange vanilla or even Georgia peach for my top two flavors.

(04:50):
But it is good, like it is good.
And it would be reductive to say that what we're going to talk about is a history of sweatbecause really sweat's history, like the history of sweat has been around as long as

(05:12):
people have been like hot and getting sweaty.
Like pretty much like was there people and that's how far back sweat goes.
Rather, when we say the history of sweat, we're gonna stroll through the history andunderstanding of what sweat is and why we sweat.

(05:42):
Like, how did we come to understand this thing?
And with so many topics that are either directly or semi-directly related to the medicalworld and bathrooms,
We begin our look at sweat in none other than Ancient Egypt.

(06:05):
Ancient Egypt, we're back.
I got my Pokemon bucket gardener's hat.
It's a classic tourist.
It's summer sweating.
You gotta have a summer hat for summer sweating.
And we've ventured into Ancient Egypt so often on the show.

(06:26):
It's such a place that is rife with information for this podcast to sow its bathroomseeds, if you will.
The ancient Egyptian view of sweat was really complex in nature actually.

(06:46):
Some accounts seem to suggest that in Egyptian mythology, humans were created as abyproduct or from the result of the sweat and tears of the god Ra.
It's difficult to determine in this mythology and this story whether it is literally hissweat and tears or if it's like, you know, like a euphemism for Ra's hard work, like his

(07:20):
sweat and tears.
Now, either way, some accounts of Egyptian culture then because humans derive from thissweat,
regard sweat in it highly and they view it actually as a connection to the divine.

(07:41):
If that's the case, when I'm at the gym, here's what I know.
Some of us connect with that a little harder than others.
I mean, I'll come off that cardio machine just straight up looking like I took a swim withmy shirt on for real, honest.

(08:02):
It's wet out here in the gym.
In other accounts, the Egyptians believe that this sweat in humans actually made themunclean.
It was like dirty and bad and they had many rules in social customs related to how to stayclean, how to avoid getting too sweaty and if you do, how to cleanse yourself

(08:31):
appropriately and thus remain clean for the gods that you seek to appease.
We've talked in the past about ancient Egyptian bathing rituals and baths.
Go check that.
Go check the episodes out.
You can search it in the new privycast website privy-cast.com.

(08:53):
Click episodes and you can search right in there.
Just type in Egyptian.
I'm sure it'll pop up.
It does because I tested it.
But in those episodes, one of the things we learned
was that for many of these ancient cultures, not just ancient Egypt, for many of theseancient cultures, cleanliness, the idea of being clean, like rubber ducky, squeaky beaky

(09:20):
clean, is literally next to godliness.
Cleanliness is next to godliness for them.
That was very true.
If you want to appease your god, you had better be clean.
to be clean made you able to interact with that deity and please them in some way.
And it's really unfortunate, you know, to have this view and this religious system that isso, you know, worried about your sweat.

(09:52):
It's unfortunate that they lived in such a hot, desertous, sweaty part of the world.
mean, could not Ra, if he's gonna set this system up or whichever thing that they'reworshipping, could they not have plopped them down, like, somewhere like mid-country

(10:14):
Canada where it's a little drier and a little bit, like, less wet and less sweaty?
Like, I mean...
There's lots of places where I feel like, I mean, I feel like Egypt and like the desert islike the primo location.
Maybe a rainforest would be worse, but like it's like the worst spot if you don't want toget sweaty.

(10:37):
Anyway, it's just a bummer, you know, that that's where you live and then like sweats aproblem to like your whole religious thing.
This view.
related to and connected to the idea that sweat was your body's way of ridding itself ofdemonic sources and quote unquote bad humors.

(11:04):
Now,
This idea became more popularly shared in ancient Greek and Roman cultures and was putinto writing by Hippocrates, specifically the rumors, the humors.
But I want to know this idea of like you're sweating the demons out.
Like again, they probably thought that this magical moisture that just boink just appearson my arm, where is it coming from?

(11:32):
Like it's got to be the, and it stinks.
and stinky stuff is evil and you can kind of see where these ideas develop from.
But this idea that you are leveling out or that it's related to balancing your humors wasfurther written about by Hippocrates and other quote unquote physicians of their day,

(11:58):
these Greek and Roman physicians.
you know,
You know how like I can't impersonate a doctor?
I think it's either a federal or state crime.
If I impersonate a doctor, I'm definitely gonna get in trouble.
Well, like, I feel like Hippocrates and many of these other Greek and Roman blokes thatwere running around with wild medical advice and ideas, I feel like if they had been

(12:29):
around today, they would have been arrested for impersonating a doctor.
Like, I'm just saying, they called themselves doctors and they had some good ideas.
It's not called the Hippocratic Oath for nothing.
I'm just saying, it seems like, I don't know.
I feel like there's some imposter syndrome.

(12:54):
But the idea of humors, this idea that humors in our bodies, we've talked about thisbefore in the show, but it essentially says our bodies are ruled by four substances.
These substances are blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile.
Now.
Blood, yes.
I totally get where they come from that.

(13:14):
Black and yellow bile, whatever.
I'm not even gonna try to figure out where they're getting that idea.
Like poo and pee, black, yellow.
You see what saying?
I don't know.
It's just my thoughts.
I don't think that's what it was, but here we are.
But my question is how bad were the allergies in this sitch that phlegm just makes it onthe list of yeah, these are the four main liquids that our body is made of.

(13:41):
I mean the allergies had to be pretty significant.
Like we're mid allergy season.
I'm staring at the nasocort.
I'm staring at the Allegra.
I'm staring at the eye drops.
We got the trifecta.
I get allergies, but like, I would never consider one of my major fluids flim.

(14:03):
The view at this time to and put into writing around the 400s by Hippocrates.
was that the body's way of balancing these humors could be evidenced through sweating.
Now, it was kind of like the sweat indicates that your body has an imbalance of thesehumors and is working to write course inside of you.

(14:31):
That like it's trying to do work to make your body be balanced in this
around these times in these ancient periods, stretching back ancient practices of Romanbaths, Asian spas and saunas and Native American and Native peoples approaches to sweat
lodges, suggests that this idea of sweating it out is long tied to cleansing something badwithin you or resetting something about you.

(15:02):
Either way, whether the sweat or something processed going on inside you,
It was viewed for a long time that sweat is an indicator of something wrong.
It was viewed as, this is either evidence of or a sign that your body has something wrongand is trying to correct that.

(15:26):
This view would be the primary view held about sweat up until 1833.
The modern understanding of sweat only really began in the 1800s.

(15:47):
As people started to study human bodies and anatomy both out of curiosity and because likefor the first time in a long time it was not taboo to like cut up the dead people to
figure out what's going on inside of them.
As well as the invention of the microscope in which allowed them to look at theseincredibly small things.

(16:08):
The first of these scientists that began to study the skin and look at these things wasMarcello Malpighi.
Now I probably blew it.
He's Italian.
It's a me, Mario.
And before anybody asks, no I have not got my grubby little fingies on a Nintendog switch.

(16:30):
Can't find them, ain't really trying super hard, don't have time moving on.
We're just.
but Marcello Malpighi discovered sweat pores around 1833.
These were the general pores that were found on most of the human body.

(16:51):
More of that in a moment.
And like if you see, my skin is not great, but like you might be able to see some of thosepores.
Get it, get it, get it, get that.
More on these pores in a moment.
The glands that are like inside and down inside that we can't see that power these poreswere later discovered by Czech physiologist, Johannes Perkins.

(17:16):
Now, again, I definitely butchered that because there is a J.
coupled with an N.
It's tricky for me.
Sorry Mr.
Purkinje, or however.
But he discovered these pores and there are these glands inside these pores and they'refound to be tubular structures inside the skin that produce what we call sweat and are

(17:45):
known as pseudoriferous glands based on the Latin word for sweat, which is pseudor.
Pseudoriferous glands.
That's pseudoriferous.
Pseudoriferous fragilistic.
Xp-frigilistic dosage.
You know what saying?
But the gland itself is made up of a section inside the gland that secretes, man, that's atough, know, secrete is a tough word because it essentially means leak.

(18:17):
It's like controlled leakage, which I do frequently.
but it secretes the sweat in another section which then acts to move that sweat away fromthe gland and the pore.
There's a lot of science.
and anatomy and physiology and all this stuff going on around how this works.

(18:44):
And if you're here for that, just like, I don't know, just like go watch, just go likewatch this medical science YouTube video.
There's probably a flip jillion YouTube videos.
You just go on there and type in like the makeup of sweat glands.
And I'm sure that there is some AI generated something out there where you can go watchlike Miss Frizzle take all of the

(19:05):
the Magic School Bus kids just, we're gonna get just lodged inside of somebody's blackheadand then they all get set free when the teenager like, I squish and just, and it just
shoots the Magic School Bus into oblivion.
Like I'm sure that's out there.
If you are needing that, that's not this show, but it's probably out there.
I mean, there's something out there for everybody, if you know what I'm saying.

(19:28):
But the thing is, but.
in my notes but is written with two t's.
Like that's truly facts.
thing is, you sweat glands everywhere, like everywhere.

(19:49):
But what is interesting is these sweat glands, though they are everywhere, they aredistributed differently throughout the body and everybody's body is different.
Even your palms and fingies have sweat glands, though they're sometimes not as activedepending on like callus and dry skin and all that stuff.

(20:14):
and other parts of your body like your armpits and your crevices tend to have a differentfeature.
We'll talk about that in a moment.
But this different density and distribution of sweat glands and sweat pores was firstinvestigated by Karl Krauss of Germany.
Later, Henry Gray of Great Britain suggested that the concentration of these pores wasabout 370 for every centimeter on your palm.

(20:44):
and the back of the hand was about 200 per centimeter.
Your forehead has about 175 a centimeter.
Your arms, chest, and tummy, about 155 in your legs, have more than 60 to 80 percentimeter.

(21:04):
And something became evident as they studied sweat glands more and more.
Some of these sweat glands were different than the others, either in size or in output.
In 1887, the idea of sweat glands was separated by what they secrete and really thisserved to focus in on sweat glands versus more oil producing

(21:41):
The work to separate out sweat and oil glands was largely done by Louis-Antoine Ranvier,who found some to be what they call Holocrine glands or sebaceous glands, which are
related to oils and then maricrine glands, which are more related to sweat.

(22:01):
And my understanding is the difference between Horocrine and Holocrine and Maricrine islike how they output the
the stuff that they output.
So that goes on.
But then 30 years later, they further distinguished between those American that the sweatglands themselves.

(22:24):
I got to tell you something.
You got to be way in to sweat or way into science or maybe you're just a deviant.
I don't know.
to be parsing out the difference between these sweat glands to this varying degree.

(22:45):
And I don't know, because I've been sitting here talking about sweat for going on 25minutes now.
like, maybe you don't have to be, but like, it seems like a lot to have deviate this, butlike, what can you do?
It's hot outside.
Sweat's got me all worked up right now.

(23:07):
I'm sweaty.
Just.
But they further distinguished in this category of sweat glands between two, one calledeccrine glands and another called apocrine glands.
In short, eccrine glands are found everywhere except for your lips, your ear canal, thearea around the wiener, the area around the lady parts, what did he say?

(23:37):
And the cli- oh, help.
oh
Gosh.
Why does there have to be sweat in these places?
Can't we just have no sweat glands there so that way I don't have to talk about it?
These eccrine glands are classical sweat glands producing what we call normal sweat.

(24:03):
Apocrine sweat glands are a different beast.
Mostly because of the places that they're located.
They're located in a category on the body that I like to call elsewhere.
These special sweat glands are located specifically in the armpit, safe, around the nips,getting less safe, in the area between the butthole and the genitalia.

(24:29):
Colloquially called the taint helps.
help us.
Father, we have strayed far from you.
How do you study that?
dear.
Imagine.
Just imagine with me.
You're the scientist that is tasked with the research answering the hypothesis.

(24:54):
The sweat glands on the area between the butthole and the genitalia are different than thesweat glands on your hands.
And you just got this dude that's just, I mean, he's got the like, I think he probably hasa section.
But he's just got his microscope and he's just getting right up in there.
You had to study that.

(25:16):
Like you had to get up close and personal with that part.
You know what I'm saying?
Also, these are usually found around the ears and the eyelids.
And you can see why we're gonna be concerned with the apocrine gland.
mean, the downstairs zone is a big apocrine playground.

(25:36):
Like it's literally where the magic happens.
These sweat glands give off also the most stink, partially to alert or attract, oh gosh,and they're not
usually active enough to produce anything until after hormonal changes during puberty.

(26:01):
is the thing that causes teens to be so stinky.
Pubescent teen stink is so unique, so special.
Thank you, Apocrine glands for giving us stinky teens.
And this is lending to this week's focus specifically.

(26:21):
Here on Privy, our concern with crotch sweat.
Summer sweatin'.
But wait, there's more.
In 1987, a new challenger to the sweat gland arena approached.
The apoechrine gland.
These glands have characteristics which are found both in echochrine glands and apochrineglands.

(26:45):
Thus the name apoechrine.
We really workshopped that
like big workshop on that name.
These are the crotch ones.
The apple eccorins are the crotch ones.
They give off stank and high output of sweat.

(27:05):
Big sweat, big stink, big zone.
Do you know what I'm saying?
And so you have eccorin glands in the booty zone and the cracks and crevices coupled withthe apocrine and apple eccorin glands of the genitalia and other areas and it results in a
big sweaty stink.
But like, but like how?

(27:29):
Because I think the question that needs answered that maybe Egypt and many ancientcultures were struggling is like, where the flippin' heck does this sweat come from?
Like, is it demon magic coming out of my skin?
No.
Huh.
Dear listener, if I scared you, it's not.
But like, why?

(27:50):
And in short, it's the trifecta.
Heat.
friction and pits.
If you got heat, it's increased sweat.
If you got friction, it's increased sweat.
And if you have pits, like the cracks and crevices in the folds, you're gonna haveincreased sweat.

(28:10):
All three, heat, friction, and pits, perfectly describe the crotch and the crotch sweatpotential.
Or as the LifeMD article calls it, forgive my French, pardon my French, swamp ass.

(28:36):
That's Shrek's nickname in high school.
You know it was.
And they note that your diet can also bog your swamp.
Spicy foods, caffeine, dang it, being fat, shoot, having diabetes, got cleared today,we're good, can all make your butt and crotch sweat more.

(28:57):
Fat guy booty sweat.
TMTM, no.
Sweatswamp, though, if left unchecked and unattended to, can cause mad swamp chafing.
You ever seen anyone do the what I like to call the Disney waddle?

(29:22):
Where like they've been walking around in the summer sun, the California or Florida sun,and they've glad handed Mickey, they've glad handed Goofy, they've hit Splash Mountain,
Tiana, but whatever, it's Splash Mountain.
They've eaten the thing.

(29:44):
And I mean, they've been around Disney for
I mean we gotta get our money's worth.
We're there for like 12 plus hours and now we walk out to the van.
gosh, my hair.
But like, and they've got that like.

(30:08):
where they're trying to walk all bow-legged so their legs don't touch.
It's the Disney waddle.
The movement has caused what is medically and scientifically known as ultra-mega-chafe.
And when ultra-mega-chafe happens, things get fricking nuts.

(30:32):
Sometimes on your nuts.
Sometimes when you have big bog, big sweat, you get big crack stain like that just thatline of crack sweat that collects on your pants.
We know what sweat is and we know why it arrives on our body and we can even begin lookingat this brief history.

(30:58):
Not so brief, I mean we're 30 minutes of looking at it.
Of why we get so much sweat in the bathroom zone so prominently but like
That doesn't tell us what we can do about it and how we can begin to remedy the Disneywaddle and ultra mega chafe.

(31:19):
It turns out, thanks to the internet and the desire for people to make money, there's noshortage of different options for ways that you can help yourself in this area.
I want to note, some of these remedies and life hacks, if you will, are specific solutionsto sweat of really any type.

(31:46):
Like, they don't just apply to your zone and your swamp.
but they will work there.
The first and the most straightforward is antiperspirant or deodorant.
Now, the difference between these is in the name.
Deodorant deodorizes.
It covers up the odor and helps you smell good.

(32:08):
Antiperspirant actually blocks your pores and keeps them from perspiring or sweating.
Antiperspirant stops it up and it doesn't release sweat.
So if you're looking to cut down on moisture,
If you don't really care about the moisture, you just don't want to stink, deodorize.
And well, I think it's acceptable to apply either of to your crotch.

(32:34):
Shout at me in the comments.
Is it acceptable to deodorize your crotch with classic deodorant stick?
But that begs the question, even if that is, is it appropriate?
And I'm going to assume that then one is okay to yoink the stick through the swamp,backdoor swamp on the regular.

(33:02):
You gotta have a dedicated stick.
Like if you're gonna run your card, you know what saying?
Deodorant stick, running card.
If you're gonna run the card through the scanner, I feel like you have to have a dedicateddeodorant stick for that.
You can't be arming, you can't be pitting and then swamping your stick.

(33:25):
You gotta have a pit stick and a swamp stick.
Swamp stick.
And there's some out there that I've seen on the internet and they're like, oh, the thingsinside the deodorant are too aggressive for my tender butthole.
Maybe.
Like, I guess if it irritates it, don't do it.

(33:47):
Like, you don't need to yam it up in there.
Just like, I don't know.
What are we doing?
What is this podcast right now?
Another great option, moving on, is powders.
powders are good because they help absorb moisture.
They help capture the sweat that thus leads to chafe.

(34:09):
These powders can be game changers for sure.
Another solution related to powders in the category of products that you can buy is what'scalled dry lotion or drying deodorant powder, which can be used to prevent crack and no-no
zone sweat.

(34:29):
also provide like some anti-chafing drying qualities too.
I don't know.
It's weird.
There's a smattering of wipes and things that you can wipe yourself down, pads that willhelp absorb the sweat and help you not sweat.
In some cases, you just put the pad right in the underwear.

(34:50):
Sweat pad, swamp pad, maxi swamp.
Tim, tim, tim, tim, tim, tim.
Another good recommendation though,
is to use moisture wicking fabric for your underwear.
And I want to say this is I might irritate some people on this.
I'm not convinced that moisture wicking is real.

(35:13):
Like I'm not convinced of that.
We're not platypuses.
Like we're not going to wick all our moisture.
Like how is that true?
How is that true?
Science, explain to me moisture wick.
because I don't believe it.
I was told science was not real.
I think it's a bit of a scam.
I think if it's a bit of a cash grab.

(35:34):
And some of these moisture wicking solutions aren't as soft.
And so I think a better solution is breathable under undergarments.
And some of these employ like a mesh netting and other porous fabrics to increase airflow,specifically in those high swamp zones, which again, I don't know how well this does.

(35:56):
For me and my approaches to avoiding Ultra Mega Chaff, it is important to separate yourskin from your skin.
You don't want your skin to interface with other skin.
Consider this a Whovies summer anti-chaff hack, which is this.

(36:17):
As often as you can put a piece of clothing
Between the skin in any circumstance when you are anticipating big sweat You will when youput a piece of clothing in between directly decrease your chafing potential and I am

(36:37):
convinced that this is why Houchi Mama white girls wear For whatever reason long leggingsin the summer.
This is the only possible solution is Because they're trying to cut down on the Disneywall
Now seems counterintuitive, I admit, but I know it works as a fat kid, it does work.
Long underwear in summer can help, it seems backwards.

(37:01):
You would think you want to don your short shorts when the summer suns hit.
And yes, you might increase summer sweating, but if you separate skin from skin, you willcut back on ultra mega chafe.
That's facts.
Healthline recommends that you should quote, this is a direct quote, let your butt air outfrom time to time.

(37:34):
I understand the game, I'm not gonna say I respect the game.
I think you have to play the game to respect the game.
And I ain't playing this game.
But like, you're gonna air dry your butthole...
How's that gonna look?
Like really now someone just walks in and in the words of Ozzy man, you've got spread itto the gods full exposure just to air to air dry that the goal is to air dry at that point

(38:07):
just get a freaking hairdryer and just dry it off that way.
We don't you don't need to expose it.
em
think this is related, but there's people that tan that zone.
The context and the setup to tan that area is wild.

(38:31):
You have to be outside or in a tanning place, which is, I think, considered public, youcan't just expose it.
What are we doing?
while.
There is one other sweat related tip that we do need to address.

(38:54):
If it's gonna be hot and you're gonna be sweating, it's okay.
Sweat happens, but here's the deal.
Privy listener, when it comes to Sweaty Swamp, you have to check the toilet seat when youare done.

(39:16):
When you get up,
You have to take a peek at that seat.
Do you know how often I go into the men's staff bathroom at my place of work and thetoilet seat has this weird like sweaty, oily sweat stain in the shape of someone's butt

(39:36):
and legs on the seat?
Like square up brother, like figure it out.
The rules for peeing on the seat apply.
Be a sweetie.
and wipe the gal dang sweat soaked seedy pleas for the love of all that is privy.
It's not hard.
It's not hard.
No one wants to sit on your poo sweat people.

(39:59):
Please.
It's hot out here.
This is not something that we need to add to the pile that we need to take into account.
Do what you need to do to help the sweat swamp situation along.

(40:22):
Thank you so much for being here.
Thank you for taking in an episode about sweat.
I know.
Informative.
As always, we would encourage you to leave us a rating and review.
The five star options are preferred.
It takes like less than 10 seconds to do it on Apple and Spotify.
And for every rating and review you leave, we will donate a dollar to Wounded Warriors andLiving Water International as a reminder to keep pooping in the free world.

(40:49):
This free world was not always free.
And
as a reminder that we are pursuing cleaner water for all because not everybody has it yet.
Visit us on social media.
We're at privycast.
You can find me.
I'm at Al at 7.
Go check out Randy Bowles at Randy Bowles.
Follow the privies on Facebook, our Facebook group.
You can find that and all of those links are available via our website privy-cast.com.

(41:12):
There's a link to a sticker store there and we have a sticker mule store if you want.
Unfortunately, I haven't figured out how to get it.
to where you can buy a single item for cheaper.
I'm working on solutions to that problem.
Bear with me.
If you are interested in some of the stickers you see but you don't want to pay for morethan one, reach out, send me an email privycast.gmail.com or you can hit me up on social

(41:37):
media and we'll see what we can do.
I have some stickers that I've ordered and I'd love to send them to you and we can workout how that looks as far as payment.
Also, just a little transparency thing.
uh A lot of that
whatever money is generated, goes towards supporting that wounded warrior's living waterand some of the licensing things, fees and to like equipment and things that break and

(42:03):
stuff like that.
I'm not sitting on a large fortune.
Don't you worry.
As always, want to thank Kevin McLeod and Pottington Bear for the use of their music thisweek and any other music that we use.
You can find a link as always to all the music used in the show in the ding dong below.
This brings us to the end of another episode of privy.

(42:23):
Thank you so much for being here.
Thank you for listening.
Keep pooping in the free world.
Own your stank.
Do not sun dry your zone.
And careful with the sweaty swamps out there.
Just, just look alive.
You got constant digilance on the sweaty swamps.
And now, as always, and check in the seat after you do so.

(42:45):
Don't forget to flush.
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