Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Alright, respecting
perspectives.
Come on now.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Thanks for being here
.
Oh yeah, dude, Thanks forhaving me.
Man dude, you and I hit it off.
From the very beginning I'vebeen trying to come on here for
a while.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
I think we talked
about this months ago, I think.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Dude, I remember the
first time we met you at the
Greasy.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
Oh, at the Greasy
Hands Pig Roast and you know you
looked so good I thought what'sthe first thing I asked you?
I was like I know you playsomething.
Speaker 2 (00:46):
I play it myself.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
I know a musician
when I see one.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Right, uh-huh, uh-huh
, nice dude.
You know what?
It was funny, because I didhave the overalls on, uh-huh, so
it looked like I was a part ofthe greasy hands.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
Oh, you looked good,
man, nice, appreciate it.
I mean like, I mean, ever sincethen I was like I gotta get my
style up a little bit.
And I've been working ongetting my style up.
Dude, you are a style dude.
Well, I remember like, Iremember back in like, um, like
like high school, like my thingwas, you know, because I was
waking up at 6 am every day, Iwas like okay, I was like I'm
just gonna wear sweatpants andsweatshirt, I don't I don't give
(01:19):
a shit, I'm just gonna.
I'm like I'm, I'm, I'm showingup to school and what I wore to
bed last night.
There you go right.
But then once I went to collegeI was like all right, maybe I
should wear pants, yeah pants,you know like maybe, maybe,
maybe.
The gray sweatpants, you know,with holes all down the legs
stains yeah, like a coffee fromlike sixth grade I don't know if
(01:40):
that's a good idea.
So then college, I started likewearing pants and then I was
like all right, maybe I shouldstop wearing t-shirts eventually
.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
So I was like all
right and started wearing like
button downs yeah I startedappreciating looking nice as you
get older, I think that'ssomething that you start to have
an appreciation for, is kind ofjust like, you know, you're the
energy that you're bringing tothe table, you know, and, uh,
yeah, you know, I love it.
How, like there's some peoplewho, like I kind of know how
they're going to show up for thenight or for an event or
(02:10):
whatever, and it's cool to beable to like kind of depend on
that, that vibe itself.
But then there's also somepeople who, like you, never know
.
You never know what you do, youknow you never know, so it's
like.
It's like a box of chocolatesyou never know what you're gonna
get.
Yeah, right, and it's like abox of chocolates you never know
what you're going to get.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Yeah, right, and I
love those people that will show
up one day and they're lookinglike a little skater boy.
You're like, all right, I seethe vibe.
And the next day they show upand they're wearing a flowy gown
and you're like I can'tpinpoint this person.
I can't pinpoint it.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
It's cool to be able
to, you know, keep, keep people
on their toes with, with thingslike that.
But, man, dude, okay, so,respecting perspectives guests,
we are here with the one andonly mr wyatt graham, who is a
world renowned bassist.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
Okay, dude, dude,
he's slapping this thing
everywhere, okay, global, allright actually he's universal.
There's other planets that knowabout you, dude I would say so
yeah, I mean like I've beendoing a little bit of my, uh, a
little bit my telekinesis.
You know, I'm sending somebeams out out out in space.
You know what I?
Speaker 2 (03:20):
mean he's also a uh,
a father figure.
Okay, yes, he is all right, he,he's got the energy of um jim
morrison, uh-huh, okay, he'sbringing that.
He's bringing that doors energyin.
And you know what?
I don't even really need tointroduce him.
Tell him a little aboutyourself for the people who
don't know you out there, and,uh, just give them a little bit,
(03:42):
get some backing oh, where do Ibegin?
Speaker 1 (03:44):
uh, I'm just, uh, I'm
just a musician, musician
delinquent, who, uh, I just uh,I kind of, just, you know, go
with the flow and I, I I'malways searching for, you know,
better people to talk to andjust better.
And I'm always, I'm alwaystrying to grow, you know, and I
don't know what that looks like,you know, so I'm always taking
risks of moving places.
I didn't think I'd be orplaying instruments.
(04:07):
I didn't think I'd play or dothings I don't think I would do.
It's my first podcast.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
Is it?
Yeah, man Taking your cherry,you're popping my cherry, you're
popping my podcast cherry.
And then what Mandolin?
You do a little Mandolin,mandolin.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
I went from nobody
thought I would go from bass to
the complete opposite, smallestinstrument you know.
I mean, like I always tookpride in my bass fingers and
having these big bass fingersyou do, dude, and then I went to
you know right.
And then I went to mandolin andit's just like looks weird man.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
Oh, it's probably
actually a little bit more
difficult to play because.
Speaker 1 (04:42):
It looks illegal, it
looks.
It looks like I'm takingadvantage, looks like I, you
know.
I mean, I don't know, man,somebody needs to call child
services because I am molestingthat mandolin.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
So he is a molester
of mandolins.
A molester of mandolins.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
I am the aggressor to
, I'm the breaker of strings.
Oh my goodness.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
Man well, I'm so
excited to have you here and so
is everybody else out here.
There's like 8 billion peoplewatching this right now.
Oh yeah, I'm sure, and I'm sureyou know them all by name Dude
first names.
Yeah yeah, and nicknames,that's just too many last names.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
Do you?
Speaker 2 (05:19):
have any nicknames.
Speaker 1 (05:21):
Do you have any
nicknames?
I got a couple nicknames.
I got a couple that are kind oflost in time.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
Okay, hit them with
some.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
Back in high school,
all my friends.
And this is not given by me,this was given by observations.
That's what a nickname is Right, right, but they all called me
and I didn't like it then.
But they called me thedestroyer, the destroyer.
Yo Okay wait yo, okay, wait,where does this come from?
(05:49):
What did you destroy?
Well, okay, so started off with.
I would just uh, I, you know, Ilove, I love partaking in the
mary jane, I love the marijuana,you know, so like so I'd always
take, I'd always love going outand getting a nice, fresh,
clean glass, you know like youknow, but it would always last
me, probably, like like jimMoore's, like 27.
It would die at 27 days in youknow, I'd.
I'd I'd kick it, I'd break it,I'd something would happen and I
(06:12):
just would break every singlepiece that we ever got.
And then it just turned intolike every time I'd break, like
something they'd be like oh,there he is again.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
Breaking something
Destroy.
I feel like there should belike like some background music,
every time somebody says thatLike doon, doon, doon.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
Yeah, like walking
into, like my WWE, like to the
ring, I just break everything.
I don't know my own size.
I break everything.
I mean, like, I love thesepants.
You know, I broke these pantsthis morning.
You broke them in pants thismorning.
You broke them in.
No, I broke them, I broke them.
Alright, I don't know whathappened.
Actually, it reminds me Ibrought you something.
(06:49):
You did, I did bring yousomething.
Yes, oh, my goodness, yeah, Idid.
It's really good, Dude, sothoughtful of you.
It's from my heart.
Oh, thank you.
It's the reason why my pantsbroke.
Oh, it's the reason why I carryit around with me whenever I'm
stressed out.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
Oh my gosh, this is,
this is my first gift.
Yeah, on the show.
Well, I love your, I love yoursetup here.
I thought I could add, Ithought I could add to it dude,
this is great.
You know what, gosh, I mean,you know what?
Speaker 1 (07:12):
let's put it on the
couch with us it's a little,
it's a little side guest, it'sour little buddy here, but I man
, those things are like I waswalking around this morning and
I got caught on like uh, like astairwell okay, and put a little
little rip.
You know what it adds somecharacter, right it does kanye
would take these and sell themfor a thousand dollars.
That would increase the valueof those pants, I mean have you
(07:35):
seen all those girls in, likeyou know, fed hill and they're
that all take their take theirjeans and put their little cuts
in their jeans yeah sign me up.
Speaker 2 (07:43):
You're trying to be
holy.
That makes them holy.
You know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
I'm trying to be holy
, yeah.
Yeah, my pants are quite holy.
Quite holy, quite holy yeahyeah, yeah, man.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
So tell everybody
your last name is Graham.
Let's dig a little bit into.
So, wyatt, here is part of theOne Graham Band, part of the one
grand band who, uh, matthewgroovy, who is the uh producer
of the respecting perspectivespodcast, who every episode is um
(08:12):
live switching in in his um inhis uh profesh studio back there
we're at the watermelon roomhere and, uh, the space man, I
couldn't be more grateful tohave tripped, you know, and
fallen into into thisopportunity and, uh, you know, I
knew you, you had a liverecording here with the band
(08:34):
right, yeah, and groovy, youknow groovy being, uh being
being the drummer, you know heuh he, he's, he's been right
here, you know he's spot this istake.
Take a look up, oh yeah, thecamera.
We got one there.
Give it a second.
Let him switch to it.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
Oh no, you did not.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
Yeah, you hit him
with this, hit him with that.
No way, how cool is that?
Who's on the set?
You got that.
Okay, we got that one there.
We got this one here we go Seethat one.
Then we got our back shot there.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
Man, I feel like I
can't pick my nose anywhere.
Man.
Speaker 2 (09:07):
You can pick your
nose everywhere.
You can't dude.
You can double pick if you want.
Speaker 1 (09:11):
I'm tired of people
looking at me weird for picking
my nose.
Speaker 2 (09:15):
Dude listen, man Go
for a winner.
I got a big schnoz man.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
You do have a big
schnoz in a good way, no.
I mean, you don't got to benice in the worst way possible I
have a large nostril in theworst way possible.
I'm sitting there and it isfair game.
People know that if my nostrilis hanging out, they're sticking
their finger up there.
Speaker 2 (09:37):
So if I fart, it's
hitting you instantly, it's
hitting me instantly, instantly,boom.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
But I'm tired of
people looking at me like I
shouldn't be picking my nose.
Everybody does it.
Yeah, everybody picks theirnose.
Speaker 2 (09:49):
Remember when you
were a kid and you just dude,
you just picked, yeah, youdidn't even care what you were.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
My diet was a healthy
mix of mac and cheese and nose
candy and bugs dude.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Yeah, man, remember
when your diet was just bugs,
bugs, dude, bugs.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
Come on, man Right,
it's like parents talking about
you need more green, ma.
Yeah, ma, I'm getting a healthydiet of bugs.
Come on, dude.
Speaker 2 (10:13):
I got the bugs Go
back to.
Let's talk about the band alittle bit.
Oh yeah, yeah.
And who else is part of theband?
Speaker 1 (10:22):
So we got a couple
members so we started off with
me and my drummer, jake KunkelCool, so that's kind of where
the name came from.
It's Uncle Kunkel's One GrandBand Gotcha.
It's not just a reference todrugs.
Oh I know, I remember the firsttime I heard that I'm like, oh,
I know Everyone thinks that andlike I gotta tell them like no,
(10:44):
no, no, we are, we are clean.
My last name is graham, that'ssimply how I put.
Besides, we're smoking muchmore than a graham right, tell
them, dude.
Speaker 2 (10:52):
Tell them, what about
golden grams?
Speaker 1 (10:53):
golden grams, oh, I
love golden grams, yeah so, like
, so there's a thing like I,like I don't know, you know,
like I, my, my instagram handleis a white graham cracker and
like.
There's like for a thing.
For for a period of time Ithought I had to like graham
crackers.
Oh right, you were forced.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
I hated graham
crackers.
Hey, yeah, I'm not even.
Should we say that?
Speaker 1 (11:14):
I mean now.
Now I like graham crackersbecause I had a.
I had to eat it a lot.
Yeah, it was a healthy diet ofmac and cheese, burgers and
graham there you go and I ate alot of graham crackers, trifecta
, oha, oh yeah, oh yeah, becauseit's like you know, I got to
preach what I'm.
Yeah, I got to, you know.
Speaker 2 (11:31):
Yeah, what's your
favorite cereal?
Speaker 1 (11:34):
Oh, fruit, fruit,
Fruity Pebbles, fruity Pebbles,
fruity Pebbles.
Oh my gosh, there craving that.
That show, we got some, we gotsome.
Uh, we got some, uh, fruitypebbles in the back here.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
I know, I know
exactly what I'm hitting after
this dude, we should, I shoulddo a podcast where it's just
like we just eating cerealuh-huh, uh, yeah, lots of cereal
right or we'd like test, likedifferent seals and like we kind
of like, you know, we just talkabout them, you know, do you?
Speaker 1 (12:03):
ever?
Are you ever?
Are you ever mixing cereals?
Oh yeah, that's when shit gotreal in my life.
That's when things kind ofturned a page in my life, right.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
That's the next
chapter.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
It's when I realized
that you don't got to
monogamously eat cereal.
You're right.
You're so right, you're soright, you can be a polyamorous
cereal eater Polyamorous cereal.
Speaker 2 (12:21):
You know what I mean.
Shout out to all ourpolyamorous cereal.
You know what I mean.
All them, captain Pebbles youknow what I'm talking about, so
is that the mix.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
Oh, you can mix
whatever you want, baby.
So what I like doing?
Speaker 2 (12:32):
is.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
I like putting a nice
little foundation of chocolate
you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (12:36):
Oh, okay, so the milk
.
Speaker 1 (12:45):
So maybe like some
cocoa pebbles, maybe a little
bit of cinnamon toast crunch ohmy god I taste it now, I kind of
have that dude healthy, ahealthy diet of mac and cheese,
boogies, graham crackers andmixed cereal.
There you go.
That's the four you need so far.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
we might find more.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
I don't know, man,
that's all you need.
Speaker 2 (13:09):
All right back to the
band.
Let's see here.
Yeah, how long has the bandbeen.
And you got to mention Luke.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah,
luke, I forgot about that guy.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
Yeah, Luke's that guy
.
Speaker 1 (13:22):
You know, he's a
guitar player, a mother figure,
Mother figure, mother figure,got to have both sides of it.
You got to know who wears thepants.
You know For sure.
You got to know who wears theripped pants.
Right, you had the ripped pants.
Speaker 2 (13:35):
I'm sure his is a
little maybe straighter, a
little bit, yeah, possibly.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
He takes a little
more care.
I see him just walking aroundwith the.
He has just iron on his backand he's also a part of and he's
on tour right now with NatalieBrooke.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
Natalie Brooke Shouts
out to Natalie Brooke.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
She has been working
her butt off, oh my God, man,
that group is just one of thebest groups Baltimore has seen
in a while.
It is, it is.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
And what their
drummer is?
Nate Shulkin, yep, nate Shulkin, nate on the drums.
We can just forget about thatguy.
Speaker 1 (14:09):
Yeah, for now, for
now, Unless he watches that.
I love you, nate, we do.
No man.
All those guys are just likeindividually, such dedicated and
talented musicians at the craftFor sure.
They're so good, and it's justthat determination to want to be
(14:33):
a better individual musician issomething that we've all been
really focusing on.
We're trying to make sure theband all stays close and keeps
the band goal in mind.
But you've got to want it foryourself too.
Speaker 2 (14:51):
Man, that's a great
point.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
You've got to have
that drive, that
self-determination that is goingto then get reciprocated over
to the group project that you'reworking on.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
I was talking to
Groovy about this a little bit
earlier today.
There was a point in my musicalcareer where I really had to sit
with you know, am I going tomake it a group effort or is it
just going to be, you know, awol, as you know the face, and I
(15:25):
really had to kind of sit withthat for a while and you know,
ultimately my decision was thatyou know I was going to, this
was going to be a solo thing,you know, and I could.
I can definitely see therebeing, you know, pros and cons
to being a part of a groupeffort, pros and cons to being a
part of a group effort,everybody trying to make sure
(15:47):
everybody's on the same page.
And I'm sure that's a littlebit of a challenge because
you're all going in differentdirections and life itself kind
of takes you guys in differentdirections.
But you know what?
I think it's amazing to see agroup of people kind of come
together and really just knowthat, and the beautiful thing
(16:09):
about it is the fact that musicis at the heart of it.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
And that's what leads
you.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
Oh yeah, and it's
like deeper than all of our own
desires is.
We know that we must.
The music is in charge, it's incharge.
We can bring egos in, leaveegos out, but none of that
matters.
The music, the song, is whatmatters.
(16:37):
Right, it's just Good point,it's more important than
anything, and that's one thingas a musician that I've been
realizing is like I don't got tostand out, I don't got to be
this like crazy, going all overthe place like everyone listens
to me, bassist, or likemandolinist.
I just got to do justice to thesong and that's what I've been
(17:01):
doing and that's what I seeyou're doing.
I mean, I see you just put outa single.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
I did.
You want to tell me about thata little bit more?
Yeah, you know what you are toogood.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
I'm keeping up boy, I
did my research.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
He's too good to me.
Yeah, so I did just release asong called that's On you,
available on all streamingplatforms, got visualizers for
it and um, yeah, gosh why I havebeen really trying to release
(17:33):
music on a bi-weekly slash,monthly basis or, yeah, basis.
Um, and, and really it's kindof like I feel like one of the
most important things for noteven just like a musician, but
like any, uh, let's see here,you know, any field is
consistency, yeah you know howhow important is is consistency.
You know how important do youfeel consistency is to life
(17:55):
itself?
Speaker 1 (17:56):
it's everything I
mean.
You know, everyone talks aboutthe micro versus macro
aggressions, like research.
You know, like it really islike you just gotta, you just
gotta hit it every day.
You know, yeah, you just gottahit those microaggressions like
as much as you can and like justknow that like, if you just
stick with something like over aperiod of time, you know
something's going to come out ofit.
(18:17):
You know, someone's going tohear it, like you know, and like
there's like situations where,like you know, like I'll write a
song and I write a song becauseI know I have to, not because,
like I'm, you know, particularlyfeeling inspired at the moment
but I just know that, like I,you know, I some someone's gotta
, someone's gotta come up.
So then, like sometimes I writea song.
Sometimes I'll write a song andI won't even really like it.
(18:37):
You know, right, I'll write itand I'll finish the whole thing
and then, once I listen back tothe whole thing, I go you know,
I don't even really like thissong, yeah, but I know that,
like you know, somebody mightthat's a good point or maybe in
five years, I, I might, right.
So, you know you, you gottajust, you gotta just stay
consistent and do it and youknow, trust that it's you and
(19:01):
that you don't have to worryabout impressing.
You know, obviously you have tolike it more than anyone else,
of course, but it's still goingto be out there, it's still
going to be, uh, a part of yourdiscography.
It's still going to be a partof who you are.
And if you just keep, you knowand it's all about, just like,
you know, is the first one goingto land, yeah, which is not
usually not usually no that'scrazy, you know, unless you're
(19:23):
on, like you know, tiktok doing,like you know, serial
challenges.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
Oh, my gosh.
You know what that's soimportant.
I think that's a great messagefor everybody out there.
Is that like it's really notabout the overnight success or
that one song?
You know if you're chasing?
Speaker 1 (19:39):
that one overnight
song or the one thing.
You know it's just like you'regonna get so disappointed when
it doesn.
One thing you know, it's justlike you're gonna get so
disappointed when it doesn'twork because god, it's not gonna
work, yeah it's just not gonnawork and it's just like I love
the saying like it takes 10years to become an overnight
sensation oh wow, I love that.
You know takes 10 years tobecome an overnight sensation,
(20:01):
right, because they say what ittakes 10 years to, or 10 000
hours, right to master something, right, right, and you know,
same with like, if you're, ifyou're putting out art, you know
it's just like, it's nobody'sgonna recognize the, the
importance and and there's justa group and there's always.
You know the majority of peoplelike to hop on things because
more people, you know, becauseother people are on.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
Yeah, you know what I
mean.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
So that that that
could just take a while.
You know, and especially youknow even when, like you know,
your thing is good, even whenyou know people need to hear
this, like this is this is.
This is groundbreaking,meaningful.
This is true to me.
This is you know, people won't,people won't even listen to it,
and then then it's easy to getdown and to think like, all
right, I guess I got to findsomething else, right?
(20:45):
But if that's truly what youlove, at some point you got to
recognize, you know, consistencyand microaggressions, that's,
that's what's gonna, that'swhat's gonna, over time, shine
light on on your, on your art,versus just that one thing that
you think that is gonna make it.
You know, because gosh, man,I'm.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
I'm going through
something right now, personally,
and I really mean yeah yeah,let me, let me tell you about it
.
So, basically, as I'm writingall this music, I do feel like
there's this transformationthroughout all of these tracks
and, as an artist, I'm goingthrough that in real time.
(21:30):
So, like I said, I have about60 tracks that are in the vault
and I'm on about like 15 thatI've released, and so the public
you know, my listeners are atlike this fit.
They see where I'm at at track15, you know.
(21:52):
So like, but but where I'mreally at is track 60.
Right, yeah, right.
So it's like conveying thatenergy of track 15.
Yeah, that's been one of thebiggest challenges is bottling
that track 15 energy up, andthen, when the release comes out
(22:14):
, I got to open that jar upagain.
Oh, that stank, take a again.
Oh, that stank, take a smell.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
Ooh that stank, ooh
that stank baby.
Speaker 2 (22:24):
So we got to get that
stank out there.
You know we got to get it atthe end with your nose being so
big.
Oh yeah, you really took thatin.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
I smelled that before
you, even unscrewed it.
I knew that was in your pocket.
Right, I'm like a dog man.
Right, like a dog, I'm a damndog.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
Dude gosh.
So with that track 15, andthere's part of me, though, that
needs to understand that the 45that are still in the vault in
(23:03):
the vault, you know I have tounderstand that everyone is only
on that track 15 and that, like, I think in my heart that all
these six you're out like, oh,you've made all these tracks and
you, you know, as artists, welike with numbers, these-
freaking days, you know, andyou're like paying attention to
instagram and youtube and like.
Sometimes maybe you feel like Imean, I guess we're.
It's kind of like thecorrelation between like money
(23:23):
and like number.
You know like social medianumbers, you know like there's,
you know we get greedy, oh yeah,right, and like you and like
even.
You know you'll hit thathundred mark and you're like man
.
Is this what I expected thatfeeling to be like?
So, not really setting too manyexpectations with the numbers.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
Yeah, and those
numbers, the art you put out,
it's always going to be thereand you never know what it's
gonna take off, right, you know.
So like there could be, therecould be, and also like people
see your track number.
You know people see tracknumber two of yours and they
(24:06):
think that that's like whereyou've been at the past and
you're like no, I recorded thatyears ago.
Yeah, it's like.
So that's the whole thing withlike taking 10 years is like
people will see you after 10years and think that that's like
oh, this is like a new personthat just came out Right.
It's like dude, I've beenhitting this.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
I think that's a
beautiful 10 years fan kind of
hops on board.
You know the cons back toconsistency and you know having
all of your, your stuff outthere in a catalog can really
(24:44):
you know you should, we shouldtake pride in all of those
things that that really do kindof uh, make, make it a part of a
greater good right, right, youknow right yeah, and just like
appreciating having those 10years to, uh, to like help you
figure out who, who you are,like, what your sound is.
Speaker 1 (25:06):
You know, like, if
people like you know, if people
listen to the stuff I wasputting out five years ago, they
, they fucking hate it.
It sounds awful.
But you think that though, yeah, that's true, but like compared
to like how I were to unveilmyself to a new group of people
now like I'm like, don't listenback to me yeah, playing bar
gigs at salisbury five years ago.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
Listen back, listen
to it now, after five years of
me working on myself you knowwhat, though, dude, let me tell
you something that's beautifulabout that is the coolest part
about that is that people canlisten to that second song and
then listen to the one that youhave out now, and they can
actually hear the progression,right, right, you know, and,
(25:47):
like dude, I mean how, how coolis that?
That, like we are, I, I like totreat art as a way to prove to
the world that we were here.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
Yeah, you know doing
your thing, you know like, like
it's like a footprint, it is youknow great way to think of it,
right, and also it's it's.
What's interesting to me isthat like, uh, a lot of bands I
listened to like I really digthere.
I, I really dig their.
I prefer first albums of bandsa lot of the times, me too.
(26:19):
Like what bands can you think?
Speaker 2 (26:21):
of Like Fantagram
yeah, I mentioned that one to
you before.
Their first album was somethingthat really inspired me to want
to make music myself.
Speaker 1 (26:35):
Oh yeah, you were
talking about that, yeah.
Speaker 2 (26:37):
And it really like
that connection that was made.
Man, I love, I love being ableto like revisit those things oh
yeah you know, and it's like a,it's like a moment in time it is
, it's like a time capsule, youknow, and I'm hopping in, I'm
hopping in the capsule, you know, and I'm like you know, and the
coolest thing is too like itcan.
(26:57):
Sometimes it can take mesomewhere I've never been, or it
can take me to that exact spotthat I think it's going to take
me to right back in summer camp,back in back in 2005 back in
summer camp.
Tell me, tell me a little.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
Oh man, I was a
remnant oh man, I man, I was a
4-h-er, I was having to get downand dirty.
I was.
I was milking, I was, I wasgrooming, grooming.
I was, I was teething, teething.
I don't think it's a word, butI was.
Oh man, I was.
It is now.
That was that was the uh.
I did a 4-h summer camp for along time, man, that was the
(27:34):
shit I love that dude, oh man.
I would look forward to everysingle summer being five days
away from my parents and justlike out in the woods just doing
man, we were doing some of thedumbest shit.
We were out there, likecollecting sticks, yes, like
analyzing the sticks and stufflike that, but like, oh, it was
so fun, man, and uh, oh, I didthat so long until I was like 16
(27:56):
and they wouldn't let me be acamper anymore.
I had to be like a counselor.
Speaker 2 (28:00):
Counsel at the time I
was like all right, no problem.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
I got to move up in
the world.
I showed up.
I showed up to the first day oftraining that we had to do.
We had to do training to watchkids, which I didn't realize was
so important, because thesefamilies are just dropping their
kids off to these random 17 oldkids.
I have no idea how to take careof children.
Yeah, and so first year you'reyou're a rookie, oh so so they
(28:22):
wanted me to go through like 30plus hours of training.
I was like fuck this.
I was like I was like 30 plushours just to go, just to go
tell kids to collect sticks.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
Yeah, right.
Speaker 1 (28:33):
Yeah, you're right,
right.
And then I saw it from theother perspective and I was like
maybe 4-H camp was all aboutwhat I thought it would be.
No, no, I love 4-H camp.
Shout out to 4-H camp.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
Yeah, shout out to
our 4-Hers out there.
Just doing their thing, justdoing their teething.
Doing their teething, dude, youknow what, something that kind
(29:01):
of resonated with me when youmentioned that was when I was
younger, like 16, I was alifeguard.
Oh yeah, dude, who the fuck?
Speaker 1 (29:05):
was letting you,
letting me who was letting any
16 year old be a lifeguard?
Yeah, what the hell?
I know, like just the nameyou're.
You're you're asking this thisgd high school dropout
17-year-old kid to guard yourkid's life, Life, no.
Speaker 2 (29:22):
Thank you, Dude.
And I remember, dude, therewere times I had a gig that was
a rooftop pool, oh yeah.
And it was at the CarlisleHotel, oh nice.
Speaker 1 (29:35):
And I— I love how you
say gig by the way, like you're
taking gigs, yeah um, I love, Ilove you say gig by the way,
like you're taking gigs, yourmanager's giving you a call.
You're like, hey, uh, some kidsface down and uh, and the and
the upstairs pool we might getup here.
Speaker 2 (29:46):
The two foot, the two
foot we need.
We need your help, stick and uh, your big old pool noodle.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
That's like for, like
very inconvenient, I feel like
for, like you know, like likethey're running out there with
these giant red noodles and it'sjust like it looks like.
It's like.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
Leave it at home,
leave your noodle dude, I left
my noodle at home that day, I'lltell you, and I had my whistle
and all but dude, I remember Iwould have.
I would just like invitefriends to the pool.
I'd be like like yo, rooftoppool party man.
It was like half of my friendsand then half of the guests, but
(30:24):
you could tell who my friendswere.
We're cannonballing, dude,we're going crazy, and I
remember shout out, though letme tell you I did pay attention
to class and training and stufflike that.
And, dude, I actually did haveto save a life, did you?
I did, and it was the only timethat I actually needed to.
(30:46):
I had to give someone CPR, didyou?
I had to do it?
Were you singing a song?
I, what we will.
We will rock you, rock you.
What's the song?
Isn't there a song?
Oh, wouldn't it be Okay?
There it is.
You know what.
Shout out to all our lifeguardsout there just with the track
(31:09):
in their head, guarding thosekids' lives.
Man and I do remember that andgosh, you know, yeah,
reminiscent about that.
Oh man, yeah, oh man, yeah,camp man, camp days, guys, what
else do you miss from yourchildhood?
Speaker 1 (31:24):
Well, speaking of
lifeguards, I remember one time
when I was a kid I was at thebeach.
Oh man, I was watching a bunchof like Beach Patrol, like
reality TV, back when that wasout, back when they were
allowing the people who aresupposed to guard your kids'
lives to be celebrities on this.
(31:44):
Doesn't that seem so backwards?
Whenever they have cops right,they have this big camera crew
with them, right, and the cop'sjust like.
You know that cop's going tochange his whole attitude.
Speaker 2 (31:55):
That is not how that
police officer acts with his
cameras down or when they pullthe guy over and he's like I've
been smoking my whole day Likethey're showing off.
Like they're talking abouteverything they're doing.
They're probably incriminatingthemselves like crazy.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
Because they're like
get me on that, because they're
saying get me on that TV show,you know.
So, back when I was at thebeach, when I was probably like
10, I don't know, I remember Ireally wanted to be on that show
.
Oh, did you?
I really wanted to be on one ofthose shows.
Speaker 2 (32:21):
You're looking at the
TV like I'm going to be on
there.
Speaker 1 (32:23):
One day I was out in
the water like, oh, I can't swim
, I can't swim.
I definitely did not pass theswim test back when I was three,
so I'm out there like somebodysave me wendy pepper of corn,
help me please.
All the big kids are all aroundme like what are you doing?
What's this guy doing?
I'm like I need help little.
So life card obviously came out, did his job, did his job,
(32:45):
saved a life that day.
But then, uh, I get back on thebeach and and I think my mom
knew I was full of shit, she'slike she's up by an event, but
uh, I think she really knew whenthe first question I asked was
am I gonna be on tv, am I?
And they're like no kid, that'suh, that's not how this works,
that's not how this.
Speaker 2 (33:03):
I'm like, all right,
I'm fine I'm good, but get off
me right.
Never mind, you're like thecamera crew.
I they were.
They were not visible for this,but I'm sure they had it on
their.
Uh, the b-roll I'm sure there'sb somewhere it might make a TV
show later on in life.
It might Never know.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
I mean, I probably
looked so ridiculous.
There was probably some personfilming me like this fucking kid
.
Speaker 2 (33:25):
If you were to start
a TV show, if you were to be on
other than this obviously a TVshow or start a TV show, what
would it be about?
That's a good question.
Speaker 1 (33:42):
I don't know, I I
really love, uh, I really love
all those, all those shows ofjust like, uh, it's just
following around people who justhave absurd lies like uh, and
that's not what I would have,but I'd probably find someone
you know.
Yeah, you're like like I lovedwatching.
Keep keeping up with theosbournes oh my gosh oh man, oh
dude, that one.
Shout out to Ozzy, shout out toOzzy.
How's that guy still alive?
Speaker 2 (33:58):
Dude, let's just take
a second, yo, yo, if Ozzy
Osbourne is still out theredoing his thing, yeah, riding
four wheelers, dude, riding fourwheelers.
Let me tell you something,there's no reason why you out
there, can't, can't be doingyour thing.
(34:19):
I know like, right, like, butyou know what really, though,
like gosh, that shows you, I waswith.
I was with a friend the othernight and, uh, she showed me
some ozzy music that I've neverheard before from from back in
the day, because obviously hisdiscography is just is nuts and
dude, his songwriting ability isjust top tier and man, I, I,
(34:45):
dude, I put that on repeat andjust took notes of, of of how to
write a track and just like theemotion that went through it.
And, man, you know, gosh, I'mso grateful for I mean as absurd
as like that show is you know,and like his life, you know uh,
took my, went to my room andtook my beer for my room.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
Yeah, yeah, like.
And then she goes.
Ozzy, who's the beer thief?
Who's the beer thief?
Who's the?
Speaker 2 (35:16):
beer, thief, ozzy,
you, you're the beer thief.
Dude, and it shows you thecohesion and the balance that it
takes for a musician and also alet's see here life, Just
living life itself.
Oh yeah, man, the balance.
Speaker 1 (35:37):
Life's crazy man.
Life is short.
I remember a little quick story.
One time I knew life wasfragile because I was driving my
car around.
I hit a guy so hard in my carone time I smacked the guy so
hard.
Dude, is he okay?
I don't think I'm okay.
(35:58):
Oh, I think he's all right.
He's all right.
I didn't I, I, I didn't, Ididn't, I didn't, I didn't kill
the guy, but uh, okay good oh,man, I remember, I remember back
in, uh, back in high school Iuh we were on, we used to go on
these little heinous, heinous,little little rides doing our
little thing.
You know, you're driving around, you know, had a little called
an l ride back then.
Oh, I don't know, I don't knowwhat, I don't know what.
(36:20):
I don't know what an l was for.
I guess it was the shape of anl, but yeah, yeah oh man, every
one time.
and then and then, and then wefinished it up.
So we finished up the wholeride and you know, I get back to
my parents 20 like 2008, likeold shit, like suburban, big,
big suburban breaks, awfulbreaks, just, I can see that
(36:42):
that's your.
There's rust just crawling overthe car.
So, you know, I, I get in thecar, my, uh, my buddy's
following me, we're leaving,we're leaving our neighborhood,
and uh, and I'm, and I'm gettingready to turn right onto this
main road.
You know, when you're turningright, you're looking left
because you're worried about thetraffic coming from the left.
(37:03):
But I'm not worried about thetraffic coming from the right
side because I'm turning left,so I'm not going to have to
cross those cars.
So I'm just looking left andlooking left.
Cars are coming.
Cars are going fast, they'regoing like 50 miles an hour.
They're flying.
Speaker 2 (37:18):
I see a little gap.
I'm like, all right, I can makethat.
Speaker 1 (37:20):
I got this.
I gap comes, I floor it.
Now that car is an old car, theacceleration on that thing is
not that good, but I full.
I put that, I floor that thing,man and, uh, and, and and.
I remember uh, the, the.
I was my ex at the Okay and shescreamed louder than I've ever
heard her scream.
She said, oh my God, I look upand there's this guy riding his
(37:44):
bike from the right side andhe's coming on our side of the
road, a cyclist.
A cyclist, he's just riding hisbike in front of my car.
He's going to cross my car.
I look up and I slam on myawful brakes that take 30
seconds to a complete stop and Ibump.
I hit this guy way out oh my,oh man I I, I shot the guy
(38:10):
across the road.
Oh my goodness almost into theditch, oh goodness.
And and I'm sitting there justin a in la la land yeah, because
I just ptsd, oh my gosh.
And so I, and so I turn my car.
I remember I turned my car.
Speaker 2 (38:23):
I don't know why I
turned the car right away, but
you're like, I don't trustmyself in this thing for any
much more time.
Speaker 1 (38:28):
I didn't want anyone
else getting hurt.
Yeah, so I turn my car off andI, uh, I get out.
I'm like, I'm like what?
I'm so sorry I didn didn't seeyou.
I didn't see you.
Did he get up?
I was expecting this guy to sitthere and say don't touch me
until the ambulance gets here.
Yeah, I was ready, I was, mywall was already coming out,
right, he, uh, he just kind ofstands up, you know, and uh, and
(38:48):
I hit him hard, man, I didn't,I didn't love tap, I bourbon hit
, oh my god and I.
So I get up and he, and hestands up off his bike and he
just kind of he just says like,don't touch me, I'm fine, just
kind of limp.
And he started riding his bike.
He starts limping off on hisbike, just like pedaling.
It looks like walking away and,and I'm just standing there,
(39:09):
cars are piled up both sides ofthe road.
I'm just standing there with mysuburban in the middle of the
road, just like like what.
What.
Speaker 2 (39:16):
Just have it.
Speaker 1 (39:18):
I my life, I couldn't
believe it.
And then and then I rememberlike I was going to like see if
he's all right, and and then myexit time was like fuck this,
get the hell out of here, let'sget the hell out of here, and I,
I got out.
Speaker 2 (39:33):
What do you have
coming up in the future?
Or, actually, where do you seeyourself in 10 years, wyatt?
Where do I see myself?
Speaker 1 (39:42):
in 10 years.
Yeah, how old am I?
Speaker 2 (39:46):
24?
No no.
Speaker 1 (39:51):
I'm 25.
25.
Oh fresh, 26 is rotation oflife, oh shit.
So where do I see myself in 35?
I don't know man.
Music is my passion.
Oh fresh, 26th rotation of life, oh shit.
What was it Something?
35, I don't know man.
You know I, music is my passion.
I love music.
More than anything I can tell,you know, and I I'm glad I'm
doing it now.
You know, I'm glad you know Istarted Back when I was like 16
and I, I had the opportunity Tostart young and I'm just gonna,
(40:15):
I'm gonna keep pursuing that aslong as I can and, uh, you know,
hopefully in 10 years,hopefully I'll be able to be on
the road and just, you know,making, supporting, you know, a
family if I have one by then and, of course, just like kind of
making enough, making enough tobe happy and be happy doing it
you know, um, obviously I wouldlike to have money.
oh, of course I went to schoolto study business.
(40:36):
Obviously I have a couple ofpolo shirts, okay.
I have a couple of polo shirtsPop the collar, so you know
medical sales is always anoption oh shoot, all right, if
we got any connects out there.
Uh-huh you know, no, no no,that's high dollar.
That's pretty good.
You know, I think I could sell.
I could sell, dude, you're asalesman.
Speaker 2 (40:57):
No, no, it's a good
thing.
Yeah, oh, just don't call me.
You got the gift of gas.
Speaker 1 (41:01):
Just don't call me
used car salesman, no no, not at
all so we're going to talkabout nicknames.
Got Destroyer and used carsalesman.
Speaker 2 (41:08):
Yeah, no, you hear
that Ring, ring, ring, ring,
ring, ring.
Yes, who is this?
Oh, this is Wyatt from back inthe day, is it?
(41:31):
Oh, where are you right now?
Oh, you're at the zoo.
Okay, let me talk to him.
The zoo, I love the zoo.
What animal are you right now?
Oh, you're at the zoo.
Okay, let me talk to him.
The zoo, I love the zoo.
What animal are you?
What animal?
What animal?
Wait a second.
What?
What dude?
You're at the gorilla.
I'm at the gorilla, dude.
You're interacting with thegorilla yes you are.
(41:51):
You're do you know what here?
I got somebody here who reallyneeds to talk that's like the
animal I most associate myselfwith.
Speaker 1 (41:57):
Let me talk to him.
Let me talk to him.
Talk to him.
Hello, wyatt.
Oh my god, wyatt.
How are you what?
What?
You do not?
This guy's angry.
This guy's pissed off right now.
What is going on?
Man, I did, in fact, I did,take that from the house.
(42:18):
Yes, I did take that.
This guy's trying to say that Istole the semen samples, the
semen Checks out, it checks out.
Speaker 2 (42:29):
I mean Is this why?
Is this why?
Speaker 1 (42:34):
so do you have a
child with him?
You do not.
That is not my fault, man, youare.
You were there.
You were there 10 years ago.
All right, this is, this isyour problem.
Just go to.
Speaker 2 (42:43):
Just go to some bank
you know know, just go to some
bank.
Speaker 1 (42:46):
That's all you need.
We're what we're with an f.
No dude, I refuse to be fertile.
I refuse to be infertile.
This guy's.
This guy's talking full of shithe's full of shit dude, is it
because we hit the guy in thecar?
It is, it's because we hit theguy in the car.
Yeah, all right, all right, gofuck yourself, tell him.
(43:07):
You, tell him you love him Ican't dude.
Speaker 2 (43:09):
Okay, it is, it's
because we hit the guy in the
car.
Yeah, all right, all right, gofuck yourself.
Speaker 1 (43:11):
Tell him you love him
.
I can't dude, I can't thisguy's giving me shit.
Speaker 2 (43:13):
Give me this thing.
I love you and listen.
You end up being a freaking,amazing human being and you have
a lot of charisma and energyand you bring so much to the
world.
Lies you, you really?
Uh, you should be veryappreciative for the young man
(43:34):
that you become.
Okay, yes, let's okay.
Get back to what you're doing.
Listen, I'm a father all right,all right that guy's not a
father figure okay, next segmenthere all right oh oh, we got
the cards out.
I got the cards out.
Okay, are you ready?
We're gonna put 20 seconds onthe clock here, okay all right
(43:58):
so these are rapid fire, okay,so you got to answer these as as
quick as possible off the domeall, all right, all right.
All right, okay, go for it.
I'm ready.
All right, here we go.
What's your biggest fear?
Awkward silence.
Would you rather spend thenight in a museum or a zoo?
(44:18):
Zoos.
I love gorillas.
Yes, duh, I'm already there.
Yeah, you're there.
You have $1 million.
What's the first thing you'rebuying?
Speaker 1 (44:26):
Penis enlargement
pump.
Speaker 2 (44:27):
Oh, don't you already
have one.
Speaker 1 (44:29):
I mean, you could
never have enough pumps dude,
You're wearing one now.
Speaker 2 (44:34):
All right.
If you could turn the oceaninto a different liquid, what
would it be?
Speaker 1 (44:39):
Fucking the mix
between cocoa pebbles and fruity
pebbles, Yo oh, the fish wouldthrive.
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 2 (44:46):
If it were raining
anything other than water, what
could it be?
Speaker 1 (44:52):
If it was raining
anything other than water,
wouldn't it be chocolate milk,chocolate milk, because when the
ocean evaporates up into theclouds, it's going to have to
come back down to chocolate milkAll one cycle.
Speaker 2 (45:08):
Man, there you go,
dude, okay, have you ever
pictured your future self?
What do you?
What do you actually look like?
What do I look like?
Speaker 1 (45:16):
yeah, oh, dude, I'm a
hunk, oh man, I'm.
Speaker 2 (45:20):
I'm a hunk moving
junk there you go, johnny, bravo
, better watch out my boy, I'mgonna be full head of hair, full
head.
Speaker 1 (45:28):
More than this, more
than this.
I know you see a lot of hairright now, but there's going to
be much more in 10 years.
Speaker 2 (45:32):
That's one of your
best features, just so you know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, just at thezoo all day.
What about you got facial hair?
Oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (45:39):
Of course, oh my God,
storing some, some cocoa
pebbles in there from for lateron, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (45:47):
yeah, part of the
diet, baby.
All right, are you for oragainst pickles?
Speaker 1 (45:52):
oh, I hate pickles oh
right, god.
Oh, I had a buddy.
I went to the bar last nightbut he was like, hey, can I buy
you a shot?
I was like, yeah, man I waslike anything you want, anything
you want I like.
Brought me back a pickle shot,dude.
Speaker 2 (46:08):
Dude, I was in the
same boat last night.
Same thing, you know.
Request a drink and pickleshots.
Speaker 1 (46:15):
I'm like what.
I'm like, what do you, what doI look?
Like to you, Hop off hop offthe, the, the listen hop off the
pickle boat.
Yeah, what the fuck.
Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (46:23):
All right.
Which emotion do you experiencethe most during the day?
Speaker 1 (46:32):
Tummy aches.
Speaker 2 (46:33):
Tummy aches, there we
go.
Speaker 1 (46:34):
Butterflies in your
stomach, a lot of tummy aches.
Speaker 2 (46:36):
All right, tell us
your ideal packed lunch.
Speaker 1 (46:40):
My ideal packed lunch
Yep Mac and cheese, a little
bit of boogies.
I knew Some graham crackies andsome mixed cereal yo, you're
too old for that wait.
I want to ask you one.
Let me ask you one goodthinking.
How about this one?
Would you change your name ifyou could?
(47:02):
If so, what would you changeyour name to?
Speaker 2 (47:05):
I would change my
name to Chance.
Really, yeah, would you takeone on me?
I do, of course, many chance.
Yeah, I, I can see you as achance where you go.
Speaker 1 (47:15):
I can see as a chance
how does what's your?
Oh, this is a good one.
What's your favorite movie line?
Speaker 2 (47:20):
oh, um, uh, uh
through the park into the
gymnasium, old school, I don'teven old school baby.
Speaker 1 (47:31):
I, I was certain I
was gonna know it, and and I
don't yeah, all right.
How about this name?
A personal possession that youwould never sell, no matter how
much money you were?
Speaker 2 (47:40):
offered.
Oh, okay, so it's a great one.
I have a big tub that has 300notebooks in them that are all
lyrics that I've writtenthroughout my whole life.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And if there was a fire or aflood or something like that no
(48:02):
disrespect to the familypictures, I mean, we have those
on our phones now, but I, but Iwould I would definitely take
that tub.
Speaker 1 (48:09):
Man, screw all the
screw all the baby dude, all the
baby stuff.
I was a baby, I was there, youknow, I remember switch it off.
Speaker 2 (48:17):
Come on, let's do a
few more.
I got you, let's do a few more.
Okay, you find a magic lamp.
What's your first wish?
Speaker 1 (48:25):
uh, to have three
arms.
You know what I mean.
Except, if you were to havethree arms, where would you put?
Speaker 2 (48:33):
the third arm.
You're right On my back Really.
Speaker 1 (48:37):
Oh, that's not bad.
Then you can almost be likethen, like anytime that you want
to, just like sit down, justkind of like, you know, let your
arm kind of hold you up, youknow what I mean.
Speaker 2 (48:45):
Yeah, yeah, but I
guess I would need another eye
back there too to see what I'mpicking up.
All right, which animalsecretly freaks you out?
Sea urchins Ooh, what the hell,man Right, they're on too much
cookie pebbles.
They're literally just spikes.
Yeah, they're drinking way toomuch cookie pebbles.
Oh, this is a good one for you.
(49:12):
What's your favorite smell?
My favorite?
Speaker 1 (49:13):
smell other than my
farts?
Oh, because I smell a lot, man,I smell a lot.
Your farts smell pretty, pretty, pretty good, right, honestly,
that's funny I love my own fart.
Yeah, you could do this waftingman, wafting, I, I fart, and
then I kind of like do a littlecircle in the room, just so I
can really get kind of get it inthe air right, and then I just
kind of sit there little circlein the room, just so I can
really kind of get it alltogether, get it in the air
right, and then I just kind ofsit there and meditate, meditate
in it.
Speaker 2 (49:31):
Oh my gosh dude, I
could see it's pretty great man.
I could see that.
All right.
What is your favorite form ofpotatoes?
Speaker 1 (49:39):
I hate sweet potatoes
.
I don't know why Anyone likessweet potatoes the Waffle House
potatoes, the ones that are allmashed up.
Just put a bunch of ketchup andsyrup on them.
It's like the body of the elf.
Speaker 2 (49:51):
Alright, one more
question Coconut or pineapple?
Speaker 1 (49:56):
I don't get the
pineapple on pizza.
Hate man, it's ridiculous, it'schildish.
People need to grow up.
Grow up, alvin.
Grow up, jesus, you know what Imean the same people that don't
like pineapple and pizza, thesame people that are eating
booty, eating booty, eatingbooty or not eating.
(50:18):
We're not, we're not eatingarguably worse than eating booty
I love pineapples.
Speaker 2 (50:21):
Okay, okay, dude.
Well, listen, man.
Hey, I really thank you forbeing here.
We've been, I've been lookingforward to this one for a while
now.
Speaker 1 (50:27):
Yeah, it's been a
pleasure.
Speaker 2 (50:28):
And I really do love
you as a person and since the
moment I met you, it really hasbeen an awesome connection and
our musical sides are bothshining in different lights here
.
And, dude, I really do wish youthe best success and I'm here
(50:49):
for you, dude.
Okay, I'm going to help you.
We're going to help each other,you know, through this road.
Are we about to kiss?
Right now?
We?
Speaker 1 (50:59):
Do you know why?
I would not be, would not beproud of myself, we'll do that
off camera.
Speaker 2 (51:03):
I know what you did
Off camera, off camera, all
right.
I don't know, there's too manycameras, man, I think they're
really cautious, no matter wherewe're at.
Yeah, so do you have.
I want you to give everyonejust a last bit of maybe like
inspiration or motivation toleave the crowd with.
Speaker 1 (51:21):
You know just one
thing I've been really.
You know this is a very.
This is kind of a dumb thing.
Bring it, bring it, just bechill.
You know, this is this is avery this is a it's kind of a
dumb uh thing.
Bring it bring it just be chill,you know, just calm down.
Everyone just needs to calmdown.
Relax like everyone, everyone'sall.
You know, two up on theirphones and the news and just
like being, you know, feedingtheir ego and just just and just
(51:43):
talking like you know, justjust be chill you know, and like
and just know that, like every,every problem you have, every,
every you know thing you runinto in your life, it's all.
It could all be solved fromcommunication and if you just
have a calm, chill talk, youknow, yeah, nothing, nothing is,
is, is unobtainable you know,man dude, great words of advice,
(52:07):
I think.
Speaker 2 (52:08):
Uh, I'm gonna try and
live by that for the next few
days, just kind of, you know,chill, relax and everything
doesn't have to be perfect stopstop breaking bongs.
Speaker 1 (52:16):
You know, yes, great,
stop breaking bongs.
Know your size.
Stop breaking bongs.
Speaker 2 (52:20):
Stop breaking bongs
and keep picking bugs.
Keep picking.
All right, shout out to ourbook pickers out there.
Love y'all.
Thank you for tuning in foranother episode of Respecting
Perspectives.
Catch y'all on the flip sidePeace.