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June 12, 2025 55 mins
Mauler stands up for the guy who created fire, Rush cosplays as Rush from the Morning Hot Tub, Jenni's family weighs in on her "disappointing" Facebook posts, and Brady gets served at a clothing store by an army of helpful clones.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Four people in a room talking about everything or talking
about really nothing at all. You decide welcome.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
This is the Hot Top podcast with Lawler, Rush, Jenny
and Fredy.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Do you know what?

Speaker 4 (00:15):
That's a good reminder everybody drink water.

Speaker 3 (00:17):
Stay hydrated.

Speaker 5 (00:18):
I feel like every eighth podcast because by drinking water.

Speaker 4 (00:23):
But it's a good reminder.

Speaker 5 (00:24):
This is good.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
We should we shouldn't hide podcast.

Speaker 6 (00:26):
Have to wet your whistle?

Speaker 5 (00:28):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (00:28):
I hate that?

Speaker 4 (00:31):
How about that on the list of things you hate?

Speaker 6 (00:35):
Question your whistle?

Speaker 7 (00:37):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (00:37):
Do we as a show have a question from a
wonderful listener podcast?

Speaker 4 (00:42):
What your whistles? Already on the list?

Speaker 6 (00:45):
That makes sense?

Speaker 5 (00:45):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (00:46):
Between Tater and.

Speaker 5 (00:47):
Backed up again?

Speaker 4 (00:50):
All right, okay, question from old Brittany and I have
to play this hang on, not prepared.

Speaker 5 (00:55):
Oh there's some audio. No, no, it's you've got all right?

Speaker 6 (00:59):
Yeah, it's important.

Speaker 4 (01:00):
Brittany says you can teleport, but only to places you've
sneezed before. How useful would it be?

Speaker 5 (01:06):
What?

Speaker 6 (01:06):
Huh?

Speaker 4 (01:07):
Yeah? Pretty good from Maller and Jenny because they have allergies.
So you guys have sneezed a lot of places when
I walk outside, so.

Speaker 5 (01:13):
That wouldn't be really good.

Speaker 4 (01:14):
I don't get you can teleport, but only you.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
See, So if you've sneezed in Japan, if you've never been,
if you never sneeze in Japan, you can't.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
You can basically travel anywhere. Then I've sneezed.

Speaker 6 (01:23):
Everywhere you haven't. Have you sneezed in Japan?

Speaker 3 (01:26):
Well on in Japan?

Speaker 5 (01:27):
But I know then you can't.

Speaker 6 (01:28):
Teleport to go to places you've been.

Speaker 8 (01:29):
You've been to Hungry No, But but I have been
to Edinburgh and I liked it there so and I've
sneezed there, I'd go back there.

Speaker 5 (01:37):
He's a pretty good See.

Speaker 6 (01:37):
I can't go and say that you can go anywhere, well.

Speaker 3 (01:40):
Anywhere that I've sneezed, Yeah, it was anywhere that I've been.

Speaker 4 (01:42):
Then everywhere you go you just carry like pepper or something,
and then you sort of place like a little landmark,
you know what I mean?

Speaker 6 (01:47):
Really like you'd save so much on travel expenses.

Speaker 5 (01:50):
If I have to jump in here. There's so many
questions of this. You guys are just getting involved so fast. Yeah,
first of all, I'm sneezing, but my wife is just
magically still here or she with me in.

Speaker 4 (02:01):
That sneeze assume it's just you, okay, and.

Speaker 5 (02:04):
Now I am going with like no luggage, like no, no.

Speaker 6 (02:07):
I think if you're holding luggage, it goes with you.

Speaker 4 (02:10):
With you Okay, No, even if it doesn't, who cares
you just sneeze. You go back to where you are,
changed and I.

Speaker 9 (02:16):
Don't have my passport, don't teleporting telephone, You're not.

Speaker 6 (02:21):
Going to the border.

Speaker 4 (02:22):
You just boom exactly every day you just go home.
You don't need a hotel even.

Speaker 5 (02:26):
But like home, if I'm approached by you know, cops
wherever it is, let's see your passports.

Speaker 4 (02:31):
Then he's your out of there.

Speaker 5 (02:32):
I can't force the sneeze.

Speaker 2 (02:35):
Yeah, yeah, you have a little pepper and then like boom,
you're gone.

Speaker 4 (02:39):
What are you getting about?

Speaker 2 (02:40):
It doesn't even matter if you're handcuffed, just wait, boom
you go.

Speaker 5 (02:44):
Well, genius, I don't want to be somewhere where I
am alone, would.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
Travel alone, I'm not.

Speaker 4 (02:52):
You can go back and yeah, I think we nailed it.

Speaker 6 (02:55):
I think this is exactly what who asked this question
was Brittany. Brittany, this is exactly what she was looking for.

Speaker 4 (03:00):
Yeah, I think is the contest she wanted.

Speaker 5 (03:04):
Because she got what you want from you, guys. I
think I like Britney down.

Speaker 4 (03:09):
Would it help you if I read off some of
the other words that Jenny hates no dogs and I
don't sucking face the bowl, defecate.

Speaker 3 (03:18):
Boss, I hate all of these.

Speaker 5 (03:20):
I also feel like this is in every podcast.

Speaker 6 (03:22):
It is pissed you guys hydrated.

Speaker 5 (03:28):
Let's begin the Hot Tub.

Speaker 4 (03:31):
Podcast, The Hot Podcast.

Speaker 5 (03:35):
Jenny Brady, you do you guys like your job? Here?

Speaker 3 (03:41):
What's happening?

Speaker 5 (03:42):
You know the pink slip. There's three pink slips and
only four of us. No, I guess a lot of
people are have a lot of time on their hands
and maybe don't have real jobs. And I don't know.
We're gonna go over to China for this story with
which is the most bizarre work story I've ever heard,

(04:03):
And it feels like Brady would, I think you would?
All right? All right? So a Chinese newspaper called Beijing
Youth Daily thanks for bringing in rush. They did a
story about how young people in China are paying five
dollars a day to pretend to have a job. Okay,

(04:23):
so this is real. Now, everything I'm to tell you
is all real. You go to a shared office, but
you don't actually work. It's all a ruse so you
don't have to tell your friends or family that you're unemployed.
Oh okay, not everyone is pretending. A lot of the
customers are just people who freelance and need coworking space.
But the ones who don't, you're paying for a desk,

(04:44):
Wi Fi coffee and theatrics. They'll assign you fake tasks,
so if anyone asks you what you did at work today,
you can show them an email saying, well, they just
put me on a big project, so I'm buried in paperwork,
so that's real. And some places even have big bosses
that you can pay extra for fake fights with. Wow,

(05:05):
Like maybe they're rooting an email so you reply like
oh shove it, and they actually apologize. But it's all
pretend and you can show people you're killing it. All
is wild and well, it sounds like most customers use
their time to search for real job. Yeah, but it's
become a long term strategy for some One woman who's
been doing it for months says it's cheaper than sitting

(05:27):
at a coffee shop all day.

Speaker 4 (05:28):
Yeah for five bucks and you get free coffee.

Speaker 5 (05:31):
Yeah, that's right, you get free coffee.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
It's it's yeah, if you're actually shared work space, take
that aside. Some people are actually working the yeah, but
if not, this is a great thing to do in
between jobs. You spend your time trying to find a job.
Nobody knows you're actually unemployed.

Speaker 3 (05:45):
I just can't imagine.

Speaker 5 (05:46):
I'd rather be at home.

Speaker 1 (05:50):
Work.

Speaker 4 (05:51):
But it's also it's the pressure. You don't want people
to know you're unemployed. Maybe there's some shame with that.

Speaker 3 (05:54):
I just can't imagine lying to people I care about, like,
so it.

Speaker 6 (05:57):
Is kind of like going to work. Going in there,
you're on one You're trying to find a job.

Speaker 3 (06:02):
I'm lying about having a fight, but that doesn't exist.

Speaker 4 (06:06):
But some people don't care. Like I agree, I wouldn't
be able to do that, but put that aside. For
other people, some people can lie about it. And I
think this is a good alternative for you know what,
you said that this is something I would do. I
don't want to be the person that goes there. I
want to be the boss. I want to be the
fa You don't like the fake coworker, you know what
I mean. Maybe I go to like a like a
family event with you, and I'm like, oh, hey, I'm

(06:26):
I'm Brady from from work.

Speaker 3 (06:28):
You want to act this out.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
But I totally get this, the idea that people also
really like.

Speaker 6 (06:33):
Routines and stuff.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
And I think if I lost my job and I
didn't have anywhere to go, and so that's gonna feel really.

Speaker 6 (06:41):
Like getting up leaving work.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
At the same time you're stopping, it's yourself a coffee
on the way, you should go into your desk. And
then that's when you spend your time trying to find
a job, Whereas if you're at home, you're going to
be distracted, you're doing all these other things you're not
getting You're not going.

Speaker 4 (06:54):
To be are you saying when we get pink slipped,
you're gonna go do a fake radio show?

Speaker 5 (06:58):
Absolutely does put headphones on. Talk to a microphone that's
not plugged in. Good morning, everybody, be like on your
traffic everybody else.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
It's a podcast, that's all it is.

Speaker 4 (07:10):
It's one of those kids microphones.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
Yeah, I totally get this, get totally get this.

Speaker 6 (07:19):
Yeah I don't.

Speaker 8 (07:20):
I'm far too first of all, far too lazy to
actually follow through with me. Yes, and I would figure
something I could scroll TikTok imagine.

Speaker 5 (07:26):
How bad life would be that you call in sick.

Speaker 8 (07:31):
Like.

Speaker 6 (07:31):
I don't get the fighting with the bost thing. I
think that's too much.

Speaker 5 (07:34):
Now, Brady, you said the other thing is you said
you'd be the boss right that it's just make believe
all day. I also think that you're also playing with
people's who emotions are going to be up and down.
Some people think, oh I love this. Then they have
the breakdown at work and now you're the big boss.

Speaker 4 (07:50):
That okay, but I would take my position very seriously.
I will come for them as a real boss would.
Maybe we go take it.

Speaker 5 (07:57):
But you're not real.

Speaker 4 (08:00):
Am I getting paid yet?

Speaker 1 (08:01):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (08:01):
I'm getting paid in that moment you are.

Speaker 4 (08:03):
Then we're gonna go walk down the hall to fake
HR and we're gonna talk to a fake counselor and
make sure that this person gets the fake help that
they mean.

Speaker 5 (08:11):
My god, maybe it's fake coffee. I have no idea.
This is one of the dumbest things.

Speaker 3 (08:16):
I've ever heard ever, But.

Speaker 5 (08:21):
Rush, honestly, like, I know you're joking, playing bark. There's
no way that you would legally sit he kids goodbye
for eight hours and going.

Speaker 6 (08:28):
To going to work.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
So again, like, so she's gonna work, I would want
to have the routine. I would not want to sit
at home. I would then feel like.

Speaker 5 (08:37):
She's bringing paycheck.

Speaker 9 (08:39):
You're bringing, but I'm on my way to getting a
new job.

Speaker 4 (08:45):
Rush is the kind of guy that complains if the
font changes on like them we get and he is
very change of verse. He doesn't like it when things change.

Speaker 5 (08:52):
I get it.

Speaker 4 (08:53):
You just want to be in your routine. I want
to get and for that reason, I'm gonna scold you
via emails.

Speaker 5 (08:58):
But he hates like meetings And now he's going to
go to meetings for eight.

Speaker 4 (09:02):
Hours of the day, meetings he doesn't want to go
to me.

Speaker 2 (09:06):
I'm gonna stay at my desk and do my work.

Speaker 4 (09:11):
Check your email.

Speaker 5 (09:14):
Tasks.

Speaker 2 (09:14):
Again, I've spent all my time there actually trying to
get a job, and so do I go somewhere else.
But that's in that time between my new job and
losing my job. I have an office to go to
where I feel like I'm still working. Like, I totally
get this.

Speaker 5 (09:27):
Well, you can search for a job at home in
your pajamas.

Speaker 6 (09:30):
Ye, that's what I would.

Speaker 2 (09:31):
I would absolutely hate that when we when we worked
from home, during the pandemic.

Speaker 6 (09:36):
I hated it. I couldn't stand not being able to leave.

Speaker 2 (09:40):
I almost wanted to get up, drive my car, go
in the morning and have a commute. So I even
drive back home because I didn't like not having a commute.
I didn't like the idea of just walking to a
different room. I hated that it's just me.

Speaker 4 (09:50):
And rush in like a conference room somewhere playing pathetic
mall are fun. It's a game of joy day.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
With maller brush, Jenny and Brady.

Speaker 5 (10:14):
Well, we've had fun over the last couple of days
exploring Jenny's old Facebook again.

Speaker 3 (10:21):
Right, We're good, We're good, You're tapped out.

Speaker 5 (10:23):
Well, sorry, Jenny. In well, let's say two thousand and eight,
two thousand and nine, you were just you were doing
what a lot of people were doing.

Speaker 6 (10:35):
A vague book.

Speaker 3 (10:37):
Yeah, trying to be funny every.

Speaker 5 (10:38):
Day, almost the status to day.

Speaker 4 (10:40):
Yeah, it was a lot.

Speaker 5 (10:42):
Brady, you sent me a whole bunch more that we
never even got to do. You want to read a.

Speaker 4 (10:46):
Few of them or sure, Yeah, just just to like
give you an example of some of the things. This
is one.

Speaker 5 (10:50):
Can I read this one? This is my favorite? You
wrote my name Jenny and Capps. You wrote Maller says
the Saint James grade six, graduating from way back. We'll
never see the time capsules we buried. I believe we will.
That's what you said.

Speaker 4 (11:07):
The world needed to know that it was.

Speaker 3 (11:09):
Important that you got some track.

Speaker 1 (11:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (11:14):
The world also needed to know when you posted what
is the burning smell question? Our question mark question? Jenny
investigates that, don't post that.

Speaker 6 (11:23):
I don't know that that's going to help you.

Speaker 5 (11:24):
Oh, Jenny, you forgot the BlackBerry at home? Feel very
lost and out of touch.

Speaker 3 (11:30):
That makes sense that.

Speaker 6 (11:32):
You told us.

Speaker 4 (11:33):
Jenny also posted Jenny wishes she could be more excited
right now dot dot dot just so vague, But you couldn't.

Speaker 5 (11:41):
I guess you would hang on, Rush, did you know
Jenny asked this question of all of us? Am I
really the only person on the planet who hasn't seen
the Rudolph Christmas Special double question?

Speaker 4 (11:52):
You are.

Speaker 5 (11:55):
All right? So we've had fun, we've played.

Speaker 8 (11:57):
Games, yes, and it's time to put it to bed.

Speaker 5 (12:00):
But you know, as much as myself, Rush and Brady
have enjoyed this. Yeah, I think, Jenny, I don't okay,
your family has been deeply affected by this. Did you
know that? Oh my god, your family, I don't want
to say wants to disown you.

Speaker 4 (12:17):
Yeah, that's too strong one.

Speaker 5 (12:19):
But they're really questioning a lot of things about it.

Speaker 4 (12:23):
I think they like necessarily remembered that side of you,
or at least.

Speaker 5 (12:27):
They only know the Jenny of today, who's bubbly and
kind and everything. They didn't realize she was so cringe
and unbearable in two thousand and.

Speaker 6 (12:36):
Eight, but she was what's happened?

Speaker 5 (12:38):
She was, Brady, What do you have for us?

Speaker 4 (12:40):
Well, I mean, certainly, Derek, you know your your husband, Derek.
He wasn't he didn't know you then, you know anyway,
he's online one, oh no, what is happening?

Speaker 5 (12:51):
Hello, Derek?

Speaker 10 (12:53):
Hey, good morning, guys, Good morning.

Speaker 5 (12:55):
We'll keep this brief. Derek, go ahead and say your
peace please.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (13:00):
I mean I've been listening this week and I heard
all the cringey posts. I mean, I mean, I didn't
know you back then, so I'm not I'm not like upset,
maybe just a little disappointed, you know, liking it on
the floor like, uh.

Speaker 4 (13:15):
Yeah she didn't post that.

Speaker 10 (13:18):
Still I still loved you know, but yeah, you know,
just a little disappointed over the cringe posts.

Speaker 5 (13:23):
Yeah, well maybe later on you guys can sit down
and talk.

Speaker 3 (13:29):
It's over, isn't it, nobody.

Speaker 4 (13:34):
It's just you know, I'm gonna talk disappointed that.

Speaker 5 (13:41):
Happened. Tell me a love love you love you? All right,
So that's obviously uncomfortable and we didn't want to do that.

Speaker 3 (13:50):
I'm sure you did it.

Speaker 4 (13:51):
We should go to line too.

Speaker 5 (13:52):
Okay, who's that Ryan? Oh? Hey? Your your brother? Hi?

Speaker 4 (13:58):
Right?

Speaker 7 (13:59):
Good?

Speaker 5 (14:00):
I know it's embarrassing to be on the air with
us right now.

Speaker 6 (14:03):
Yeah, brave of you. Let me appreciate it.

Speaker 5 (14:06):
Is there anything you want to see?

Speaker 7 (14:09):
I look used to look up to her, but now
I just I really don't know.

Speaker 5 (14:13):
I get it.

Speaker 4 (14:14):
I know, I know, we get that.

Speaker 7 (14:16):
It really confirms why I never got social media wild.

Speaker 5 (14:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (14:23):
Is it true?

Speaker 5 (14:23):
Ryan, You've been stopped on the street this week and
it's just been overly embarrassing being stopped by strangers six time.

Speaker 6 (14:33):
Yeah, I mean it's rough.

Speaker 3 (14:34):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 6 (14:35):
This isn't just a you prob everybody around you.

Speaker 5 (14:38):
I know.

Speaker 3 (14:39):
Sorry, I love you, I love you brothers later.

Speaker 6 (14:44):
I mean that's nice.

Speaker 5 (14:46):
It must be hard for them to say they love.

Speaker 3 (14:49):
Yeah, I deserve all of the.

Speaker 5 (14:53):
Three. Yeah, Hi, is this uh this, this couldn't be
big mama.

Speaker 11 (14:59):
It is good morning, small, good morning.

Speaker 6 (15:04):
Yeah, how do you feel in this morning?

Speaker 11 (15:08):
Well? You know, I had really kind of hopefully close
this chapter of your life of posting, Jenny, but I
just can't believe you used to post some face.

Speaker 3 (15:23):
No, I surprise myself.

Speaker 8 (15:24):
Mom.

Speaker 3 (15:25):
I'm so sorry.

Speaker 5 (15:26):
I understand now all the eary you mentioned something about disowning. No,
we're not talking about that.

Speaker 3 (15:34):
I understand the post.

Speaker 9 (15:36):
If you can tell your mom you love her, we
gotta thanks for love you.

Speaker 5 (15:44):
Okay. You can tell when they're saying I love you
they're doing it through their TeV.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
Well, I guess this this ends it for.

Speaker 4 (15:55):
Hello.

Speaker 5 (15:56):
Hi? Is this Dan? This would be Jenny's father, Dan.
Is there something you'd like to say to everyone listening
around the world?

Speaker 7 (16:10):
Yeah? There is? Uh, Jenny, you know, I think the best,
always have, always will. But you know what else? I
thought your Facebook statuses were weird back then, and today
I think they're even more.

Speaker 4 (16:30):
Dad, I'm sorry, I love you.

Speaker 5 (16:33):
I love you to Dad, and this is the man w.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
He freezes as hamburger.

Speaker 5 (16:45):
I love you, Dad, I love you we.

Speaker 4 (16:48):
Have someone to lie to you.

Speaker 5 (16:51):
Hello, O hate Yeah, I.

Speaker 10 (16:55):
Just wanted to pile on. I just I just Jenny,
I'm I'm just a little hurt as well, you know,
and uh, you've come a long way. You've come a
long way, and I just anyway, I love you.

Speaker 3 (17:09):
I love you to Brady, thank you.

Speaker 6 (17:10):
You can get off the phone that break.

Speaker 5 (17:14):
Brady improvised that last bit.

Speaker 6 (17:17):
We're going to do that. He just said it looks
like a lot of fun. It's different when you say
it on the phone. I understand that.

Speaker 5 (17:24):
Now, Jenny, who's your grade six teacher?

Speaker 4 (17:26):
No?

Speaker 5 (17:27):
Who was it?

Speaker 3 (17:28):
Missus de labio?

Speaker 5 (17:29):
All right, let's bring o'kay. We've run out of phone line.
That was tough.

Speaker 3 (17:39):
Tell me about it.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
It was tough for us, Jenny, Yeah, dealing with what
you did back in two thousand and not proud guys.

Speaker 6 (17:46):
If we just close the chapter, I'd like to thank God.

Speaker 4 (17:50):
No, like we're deleting your Facebook.

Speaker 5 (17:51):
I can't really not join us next time. For twenty
eleven twenty.

Speaker 1 (17:57):
Twelve, the Hot Tom Podcast with Moller Rush, Jenny and
Brady f'm a gang on their socials. Follow at Maller
Maller at One True Rush, at Hot Last Jenny and
at Brady Jones Radio.

Speaker 5 (18:14):
Oh boy, this is gonna make a lot of people
early in the morning have the he b GB like genies.
What sound the internet was asking this? So I thought
I would ask you, guys, because if the internet's asking
it must be pop.

Speaker 4 (18:28):
Of course.

Speaker 5 (18:29):
What sound do you hear instantly that makes you angry
for no logical reason?

Speaker 4 (18:33):
Okay, alrighty, I get so angry at really loud sounds
when I'm like enjoying a day and it's just like aggressive.

Speaker 5 (18:41):
Would you like to hear what's on the list that? Maybe? Okay,
one of yours will be on Yeah, sure everybody does.

Speaker 4 (18:49):
Yeah, can Jack guess one of Jenny's almonds?

Speaker 6 (18:55):
It will not be on the list? No, I mean
maybe maybe a vague version.

Speaker 5 (19:00):
I will tell you there is a variation. Yeah, okay.
One of the top ones was styrofoam rubbing against styrofoam.

Speaker 6 (19:08):
Oh, that's mine.

Speaker 3 (19:10):
From the time I was a kid.

Speaker 6 (19:11):
Jenny's uncomfortable already just hearing I can't.

Speaker 3 (19:13):
I literally have goosebumps.

Speaker 8 (19:14):
The idea anytime I get a package, I have to
leave the house or I have to like plug my
ears and a hum. So I can't hear anybody take
anything out of a box that's mature.

Speaker 3 (19:25):
That's literally what I do.

Speaker 4 (19:29):
Terrible with toys.

Speaker 8 (19:30):
I'll never forget getting a CD player as a kid
and it had to come out of the box and
I had to leave the room. I was like seven
or eight or something, and I couldn't like from that's
the time.

Speaker 5 (19:39):
Did you ever chew on any packing peanut? No, not
a protein? Oh, this is the worst, especially when you
can't figure out which one it is. The chirp of
a dying battery and a smoke detector.

Speaker 3 (19:56):
Yeah, the worst.

Speaker 5 (19:59):
Yeah, that's the three in the morning.

Speaker 6 (20:00):
Does it ever happened at four in the afternoon?

Speaker 4 (20:02):
No?

Speaker 8 (20:03):
Never, ever, Ever, when you change the battery and yet
it still keeps chirping, Like, I have no idea what
to do now. I remember my mom had that happened
and they had it wrapped in fourteen blankets.

Speaker 4 (20:12):
Oh my god, you can still hear this thing.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
Yes, I didn't realize and I found this out because
I did that once and I changed the battery and
he kept going, and then I didn't realize that after
like ten years, a lot of them will just do
that because it's time to replace it, right, so it'll
do it. It'll work for ten years and then it
will just beep incessantly.

Speaker 6 (20:30):
Yeah, for the rest of your life.

Speaker 4 (20:31):
That happened our Occonnic buildings built in twenty fifteen and
ten years was like a few months ago, and so
everybody's in the building was beeping and it was like this,
like everybody was losing their minds. You'd be walking on
the way.

Speaker 5 (20:43):
Yeah, we we We shouldn't be that mad at I mean,
it's trying to say exact Brady, you might experience this
more than the three of us because you're in a
lot more meetings during the day. The Microsoft teams alert
the sound of the incoming tames call.

Speaker 4 (21:01):
Sometimes I'll be recording something and and that'll pop up
and it'll ruin my recording and I have to restart.

Speaker 6 (21:08):
No, no, but it's annoying.

Speaker 5 (21:10):
Yeah, all right. Next on the list, Jenny, sort of
what we were teasing about your lovely husband smacking when eating.

Speaker 3 (21:17):
Yeah, I'm there.

Speaker 8 (21:19):
I have I definitely, like I'm diagnosing myself, but have misophonia,
Like when when somebody is chewing loud, if you have
thin cheeks, I can hear you chewing even though your
mouth is closed and you can't unhear it. Once I
start hearing it, I can't in the rage I feel
inside is like unlike anything.

Speaker 6 (21:34):
Else, less and less time for the rage to get
to the nation.

Speaker 8 (21:37):
Oh my god, it's but now I just I literally
stand up and walk out. I am angry when I
do it, but I try not to let on. And
and Rory got braces like a few months ago, so now,
especially when he gets his braces and he asked to
chew with his mouth open, I'm like, I need to leave.

Speaker 3 (21:56):
Yeah, it is a thing.

Speaker 6 (21:56):
I'm telling you.

Speaker 8 (21:57):
Derek has the thinnest cheeks of anybody ever in the world.
And everything he eats from the room, from the.

Speaker 5 (22:04):
Other room, I really want to take a flashlight to Derek.

Speaker 4 (22:06):
And it's not a thing.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
It's not that I'm telling I guess people's jobs, so
if you have so, if you have thicker cheeks, nobody
can hear.

Speaker 5 (22:21):
The best comeback to anybody who's doing that. You go,
you're chewing something.

Speaker 9 (22:25):
There, something passive, aggressive, but you want to get your
point across. It's pretty aggressive aggress inside when a scrapes
a plate.

Speaker 4 (22:36):
Yeah, yeah, there are.

Speaker 3 (22:38):
Loud eaters to with the knife.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
And foresee, I have an issue to like. My hearing
isn't great, and especially one of yours, it's bad. It's
my here's a lot of high pitched things. I don't
hear a lot so and my wife hears everything and
that is very sensitive. So sometimes if I if I
am scraping a plate with my fork, I hear it,
I don't hear you. I don't know that I'm doing it,
and she like, can you stop? And I'm like, I didn't.

(23:01):
I didn't know.

Speaker 6 (23:02):
And it took us a while to realize that that's
what was going on.

Speaker 4 (23:05):
Hearing it.

Speaker 6 (23:05):
But I can't even I can't hear the sound, but
she does.

Speaker 8 (23:08):
Don't be so hard on yourself, because when you're the
one doing the scraping, it's not bothering you.

Speaker 3 (23:11):
It's somebody else who's not.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
But we stopped in silent, had me do it to
try to do the sound, and I couldn't hear it.

Speaker 6 (23:17):
And so yeah, and.

Speaker 3 (23:19):
It's the people that get every last piece of rice.

Speaker 5 (23:23):
Where it's just.

Speaker 4 (23:28):
Cheeks.

Speaker 5 (23:30):
Oh my god, poor guy, we're only halfway done the
last Derek go back to bed man that oh no, no, no, no,
no song on TikTok. It's been it's been well they
say here, uh so many years, for blanking years. The
trend is long dead. Stop using I get it.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
I'm with you.

Speaker 5 (23:52):
Yeah, there's a lot of things on TikTok that annoy
mean this one.

Speaker 8 (23:55):
Yeah, although I do sometimes like the.

Speaker 5 (24:02):
Yeah yeah, yeah, I still liked it. Yeah, me too.
Never annoyed. That's fine because something good.

Speaker 4 (24:12):
Yeah, it's a good video.

Speaker 5 (24:14):
How about a cat about to bury.

Speaker 3 (24:17):
Anybody or anything good?

Speaker 6 (24:20):
They make that sound right, hacking if you can guide
them off the carpet.

Speaker 5 (24:25):
At least with my wife's doing it. I know she
at least go to the toilet and burf there the
cat who.

Speaker 6 (24:31):
Knows where everywhere?

Speaker 5 (24:34):
Oh my god, I'm brady. I don't know how fast
you you can come home with this one. Yeah, people,
I guess are really annoyed. This is a funny one.
Cotton Eye Joe by the band The Redneck.

Speaker 4 (24:48):
I'll just hit the cotton Eye Joe button. Oh this
is horrible.

Speaker 5 (24:54):
Fine, I heard it every day.

Speaker 4 (24:57):
Yeah, it's so rare to hear it. Yeah, I mean
I don't love it.

Speaker 3 (25:01):
I think it's off the wedding roster now. Isn't it?

Speaker 5 (25:03):
I think so?

Speaker 6 (25:04):
Oh yeah, is it?

Speaker 1 (25:05):
I think so.

Speaker 5 (25:06):
I think they still play it sports.

Speaker 4 (25:08):
Yeah, you're right, game like elementary school dances for some reason.

Speaker 5 (25:14):
How about hearing bruh, bro broh doesn't bother me?

Speaker 3 (25:19):
No good, I say it too, sometimes I.

Speaker 6 (25:21):
Don't say it.

Speaker 5 (25:22):
But what does Jenny Cullis rush every morning?

Speaker 4 (25:25):
Dudes?

Speaker 6 (25:26):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (25:27):
I love what girls say, dude.

Speaker 6 (25:28):
And but she doesn't. She says it's such a weird one. Okay,
see you later, dudes.

Speaker 5 (25:32):
But she says that like we're Rory's friend.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
Yeah, yeah, by sunglasses on, ready to leave him? See
you later, dudes.

Speaker 4 (25:40):
Oh so you're literally the girl from full House.

Speaker 6 (25:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (25:44):
She walks out of her honestly, with the purse as
big as luggage and seven Stanley's sunglasses on that are
bigger than j Lo and by.

Speaker 4 (25:52):
Dudes, I'm like, okay, are we Michelle Tanner?

Speaker 5 (25:56):
All right? Two more here? This this is for jin
rush and I hear this all the time. The reason
I keep saying that is because Brady's in a different studio.
He doesn't get all the wonderful sounds that Russian I guess, yes,
the sound of someone rummaging through their per that is
full of way too much stuff and receipts.

Speaker 3 (26:15):
Sorry, guys, I do do uh clean like purse clean out,
you know, once every six months.

Speaker 5 (26:20):
Yeah, during the show.

Speaker 3 (26:23):
If I have a little bit of extrat time and
I know it is annoying, I annoy myself with it,
I'm sorry.

Speaker 5 (26:28):
And Rush you might not even realize you're annoying the
hell out of everyone you work with. You already. Yeah,
the sound of flip flops walking walking past an office door.
You can.

Speaker 6 (26:40):
I guess you can tell when people are like, oh,
I knew it was you. That's the way I'm saying.
I'm irritated by.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
That.

Speaker 4 (26:48):
I knew it was you.

Speaker 5 (26:49):
Yep.

Speaker 1 (26:53):
Yeah, some of the noises that are driving in the
podcast with Moller, Rush, Jenny and Brady.

Speaker 8 (27:01):
Most people have probably had sort of a love hate
relationship with their names at some point in their lives.
Maybe you've wished your name was something more common or
less common, or more simple to hear and spell like,
whatever the case, But overall, people generally like their names.

Speaker 3 (27:16):
In a new polls, only six percent of people said
that they don't like their name.

Speaker 4 (27:20):
That's good. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (27:21):
Forty two percent of people love their name, thirty one
percent like it and nineteen percent are neutral.

Speaker 3 (27:26):
Men are more likely to be cool with their name,
especially younger guys.

Speaker 8 (27:29):
Sixty three percent of people in the polls say their
name is common well, thirty three percent would say theirs
is uncommon, and twenty four percent of people say they
generally prefer names that are more common, while thirty nine
percent prefer names that are less Thirty seven percent aren't sure.

Speaker 5 (27:42):
I would love for anybody to call in on the
Banana phone and tell us that they hate their name.
Will judge your name for you?

Speaker 4 (27:48):
Oh yeah, we'll tell you if you should hate it
or not.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
It's interesting too, because we won't be able to see them.
Some people very much look like their names. But you know,
I don't know if anybody's going.

Speaker 4 (27:58):
To call in though, to get real kind of brave
about it. Jenny, I'm curious about your name because you
have an eye when and Jenny, do you like that?
Did you do that you was a kid because he
couldn't get like key chains?

Speaker 8 (28:08):
Yeah, I always wanted the key chains when I was traveling.
That sucked, but no, this was I like my name.
I like that it's different that it's about with an
eye that it's not Jennifer. My name is actually just your.

Speaker 6 (28:17):
Middle name is fur Yeah, Jenny fer Jennifer Jennifer.

Speaker 5 (28:24):
So all right, we got people calling in on the
banana phone this morning. Let's go to line one. Good morning,
good morning morning.

Speaker 1 (28:33):
Hi.

Speaker 5 (28:33):
Who's this.

Speaker 10 (28:35):
It's Chrislin.

Speaker 5 (28:36):
Chris, Chris, say it again, Chrislin.

Speaker 11 (28:39):
It's got two capitals and a hyphen.

Speaker 6 (28:41):
Okay, so hitly is it with a.

Speaker 4 (28:46):
Okay, so you're Chris and Lynn with.

Speaker 3 (28:48):
A hyphen with a hyphen one end and you.

Speaker 8 (28:52):
I like my name, but you can never find key chain.

Speaker 6 (28:58):
C h R I is dash l y N.

Speaker 11 (29:00):
But I go more towards like the more unique names,
like my daughter is Oakland.

Speaker 5 (29:07):
It's Chrislin. I want to make sure I'm saying. All right,
we'll go around the room see if the majority likes
your name or not. Chrislin.

Speaker 11 (29:13):
All right, let's hear it.

Speaker 5 (29:15):
You only choose one way or the other. I no,
no offense. I'm not a huge chance, So no for me, Rush.

Speaker 6 (29:25):
I like the name. I like the right away.

Speaker 3 (29:27):
Yeah, I love it.

Speaker 4 (29:28):
It's sorry I missed how it was Chrislin.

Speaker 5 (29:30):
Oh does it matter?

Speaker 10 (29:31):
C h R I s you like that, Simon Cowell.

Speaker 1 (29:34):
You know.

Speaker 4 (29:36):
I would spell it differently, but I like your name.

Speaker 6 (29:38):
Would you spell it the k Okay, you.

Speaker 5 (29:41):
Guys are just being nice.

Speaker 8 (29:43):
I want to do it hyphenated.

Speaker 6 (29:45):
I would just have it all together Brady spelling.

Speaker 5 (29:47):
Okay, all right, Well, thanks for calling, and you're wonderful
for being here. All right, another line here, good line
two two? Okay, good morning, good morning? All right? Are
you ready for the honest the game with the morning
hot tep will be honest about your name if you
want us to be.

Speaker 4 (30:04):
Oh, I'm a little bit nervous, but yeah, let's try it.

Speaker 5 (30:06):
Okay, here we go. What's your name?

Speaker 4 (30:08):
My name is Sally.

Speaker 6 (30:10):
Look at that well, I mean you know what we're
doing in this one?

Speaker 4 (30:14):
Oh yeah, it is Sally.

Speaker 1 (30:16):
You know, Sally in the gramma category. I'm always in
the grandma.

Speaker 5 (30:22):
Hey. You know what. I'm married to a Ruth, so
you know their grandma vibes c Yeah, no, Sally. I've
got to tell you I've been doing radio for like
a bunch of decades. Here, i gotta tell you, any
time I've ever had to use a fake name on
the radio, it's Larry and Sally.

Speaker 4 (30:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (30:40):
So I have a connection to South. So I'm gonna
say I like your name.

Speaker 6 (30:44):
Yeah, Rush, it's an absolutely, it's not a real name.
Like I don't believe that. I don't believe that your name.

Speaker 2 (30:50):
I think you just called and you want to do
on the radio because I don't believe that's it.

Speaker 1 (30:54):
You like it?

Speaker 6 (30:55):
Yeah, absolutely, Jenny, and I love older names.

Speaker 8 (30:58):
I love sounding names exactly step four, Sally, I love Sally.

Speaker 3 (31:02):
I love your name.

Speaker 4 (31:05):
It's not I've never really thought about it.

Speaker 5 (31:06):
I do put it in the rule you have to
think about Okay.

Speaker 4 (31:08):
Then I'll say, yeah, I like it. Sam her name, Well, yeah,
you're good.

Speaker 6 (31:12):
Sally, which I'm sure.

Speaker 5 (31:14):
And there's a great new song Sally. Have you heard
the new song of my role model?

Speaker 6 (31:19):
Yeah? No, oh my god, Sally. When the I think that's.

Speaker 4 (31:25):
When when the wine runs out.

Speaker 5 (31:27):
Yeah, it's so good Sally. You'll love the song. In fact,
listen to that Sally song today and then Texas back
and tell us what you think. Okay, here, oh there
it is, will do hang on there it is.

Speaker 4 (31:37):
Listen Jenny Arena like the song.

Speaker 5 (31:43):
Yeah. I played it for them on Fresh Ma Oh yeah, yeah,
they liked it.

Speaker 4 (31:47):
Okay, that's great. I wanted to be a bigger hit
me too.

Speaker 5 (31:50):
Yeah, Okay, Sally it's coming.

Speaker 4 (31:54):
Oh yeah, I've heard this. Yah, it's a great song.

Speaker 2 (31:57):
I usually got my saying Sally though that.

Speaker 5 (32:00):
Yeah, oh this great song.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
Uncle.

Speaker 5 (32:06):
All right, Tally, thanks for calling me that you want
more college by all right?

Speaker 4 (32:11):
Alright?

Speaker 6 (32:11):
Which one you want to go?

Speaker 4 (32:12):
Song? Whichever one you want?

Speaker 5 (32:14):
Hello there, hello, Hi. Would you like us to be
super honest about your name? Okay, you know I'm scared,
all right? What's your name?

Speaker 1 (32:30):
La?

Speaker 5 (32:31):
Lana? Lana? Do I like Lana.

Speaker 11 (32:36):
Backwards?

Speaker 5 (32:37):
Yeah? Oh yeah yeah?

Speaker 4 (32:41):
And that was that an issue in your childhood?

Speaker 1 (32:43):
Like?

Speaker 4 (32:43):
Did that come up a lot?

Speaker 11 (32:46):
Yeah, a school bus when I had my name on
my jacket. I never had to point it out to
me before.

Speaker 5 (32:54):
Yeah, careful around me, I understand, mirror, all right, do
I like? I'll be honest. I don't love the name,
so I'm gonna politely pass. I mean, it's a lovely

(33:15):
you sound lovely, but it's just not for me. Rush.

Speaker 6 (33:17):
I've known several Lana's and I like them all though
they've all been very nice or.

Speaker 2 (33:21):
Atlanta though felt the same way different, it's probably the
same I've actually I've owned I know Lana's Atlanta's and
uh yeah, I've always had Yeah, They've always been very
very very good people.

Speaker 3 (33:34):
So I'm going to say, yeah, my cousin's name is Lanta. Yeah,
and so I love it by default.

Speaker 5 (33:39):
You're just doing this.

Speaker 4 (33:40):
I don't just like anybody, Brady, Yeah, I mean like
indifferent to it. I get like your your frustration though. Yeah,
I didn't realize. I was like, why I is Lanta calling?
And that's a perfectly normal name. And then now that
you say backwards, okay.

Speaker 2 (33:56):
Again Yeah, yeah, I mean kids can be mean, and
that's that's an easy one for them to to go to.

Speaker 5 (34:01):
You should have thrown an H on the end or something. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
it's just our suggestion. Thanks for being here The.

Speaker 1 (34:09):
Hot Podcast with Lawler, Rush, Jenny and Brady.

Speaker 8 (34:13):
Guys, it's it's a national egg Week, of course, a
big week for eggs. Here's some egg related fun from
our friends, you know at the internet.

Speaker 5 (34:26):
Thank you friends.

Speaker 8 (34:28):
A pool asked, when you buy eggs, do you generally
buy white eggs or do you buy brown eggs?

Speaker 5 (34:33):
Well, now we get fresh farm fresh eggs. Got it
so good? That's our and I buy for and really
are amazing.

Speaker 4 (34:41):
They teas different, They really may look different, and I
like that they're all different sizes too. It's kind of fun,
you know. Sometimes you're on a big eggs sometimes you.

Speaker 5 (34:50):
Can choose well, Rush, by the way, you haven't jumped
on this, Yeah, sure, why aren't you want fresh eggs?

Speaker 2 (34:56):
So I don't know, we don't have a lot of eggs,
and so if we have them, we'll have them like
as an ingredient, which which case I'm not really going
to worry about the different cholesterol.

Speaker 4 (35:05):
Is that what's happening?

Speaker 3 (35:06):
I mean that's an old wives tail, I think.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
Yeah, yeah, I mean again, cholesterol is a thing, but
you can you can eat cholesterol healthy for an entire
year and you may not.

Speaker 6 (35:15):
Change your level at all. Right, but I mean no,
we just don't. I just don't eat a lot of eggs.

Speaker 5 (35:20):
Are you guys? By the way, do for Uh?

Speaker 4 (35:22):
Definitely?

Speaker 5 (35:22):
Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (35:23):
We're kind of in open house mode though, so our
house has to be like no what, So we were
just literally eating like like the Costco pre made meals
because we can't cook. Yeah, places clean at all times.

Speaker 5 (35:35):
You have the place smell or smell.

Speaker 4 (35:37):
It's just clean, like every single day again, people come in.

Speaker 8 (35:40):
Yeah, well, by the way, sixty seven percent by white eggs,
twenty percent said brown.

Speaker 6 (35:44):
I buy brown.

Speaker 3 (35:44):
If I'm buying eggs, that would buy brown as well.

Speaker 6 (35:47):
Is there a difference? I mean, do we think the color?
But is there a thing like?

Speaker 2 (35:52):
Because a lot of the time people, you know, if
you look at you know bread for example, Yeah, brown
bread is better for you than white bread stuff, So
people have the same belief.

Speaker 6 (36:00):
So brown eggs, But I don't think they're better for you.
I think there you can get.

Speaker 4 (36:04):
There's no nutritional value difference or taste difference.

Speaker 3 (36:07):
I just think they're fun.

Speaker 5 (36:08):
I like getting.

Speaker 6 (36:10):
But again, I don't think there's a difference, but it
feels as though they are.

Speaker 5 (36:13):
Chocolate milk's not better than white milk. Not think it is.

Speaker 4 (36:17):
I don't think it is a brown cow.

Speaker 3 (36:21):
Okay, So how do you guys take your eggs?

Speaker 8 (36:22):
Forty six percent scrambled, twenty five percent said fried, seven
percent had hard boiled, six percent said poached.

Speaker 3 (36:29):
Poached is nice in theory, but it's a lot of
working there.

Speaker 6 (36:32):
Yeah, not great.

Speaker 8 (36:34):
No, and four percent said soft boiled. Because we're just
getting into the oh yeah, I.

Speaker 4 (36:40):
Do love scrambled, but then I feel like a child
every time I ordered at a restaurant. Yeah, of course
it's a it's a kid's order, but it's good.

Speaker 3 (36:47):
Okay, I get it. Okay. Pull asked, how do you
usually crack an.

Speaker 5 (36:50):
Egg on the side of the frying pan?

Speaker 3 (36:53):
Right, No, I need the counter.

Speaker 2 (36:55):
Yeah, really, just a lot of the counter because you
you we're less likely to get shells.

Speaker 4 (36:59):
Yeah, so seven that way, if don't you goog just
on the counter, just no, not at all, just yeah.

Speaker 5 (37:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (37:06):
Fifty seven percent they do what you do on the
edge of a bowl or a pan.

Speaker 8 (37:10):
Yeah, Twenty three percent said on a flat countertop, and
ten percent said some other way countertop.

Speaker 5 (37:16):
Yeah, we're in the majority already.

Speaker 4 (37:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (37:19):
So you like knock out knocking? Yeah, I gotta try that. Yeah,
yeah you will.

Speaker 2 (37:24):
I mean, I don't know how often you get shells
and things, but you won't get shells this way often.

Speaker 3 (37:29):
Okay. Now, which came first, guys, the chicken or the egg?

Speaker 6 (37:33):
Chicken?

Speaker 5 (37:34):
Chicken?

Speaker 8 (37:34):
Forty four percent said chicken, thirty two percent said the egg,
and twenty four percent aren't sure.

Speaker 5 (37:40):
They proved it didn't they No, it had to be
the egg.

Speaker 4 (37:43):
It had to be the egg. Well, where did the
chicken come from?

Speaker 5 (37:46):
An egg?

Speaker 6 (37:47):
Yeah? But where did the egg come from?

Speaker 3 (37:49):
Right?

Speaker 5 (37:49):
Chicken?

Speaker 2 (37:50):
I mean the idea is I mean, if you want
to go all the way through it, like if you
go with an evolution thing. At one point, let's say
it was a chicken, was like reptilian before, let's just
say it was that more. At one point it was
born to be different than its mother was. So in
that case, then the the egg would have come first.

Speaker 4 (38:09):
Right, it had to be the egg because accord, it
had to be the egg.

Speaker 2 (38:12):
Because again, if if if the reptilian thing that wasn't
very chicken like a work or something that was more
chicken like enough that we call it a chicken, then
that would be the.

Speaker 4 (38:21):
The chickens are other animals that were laying eggs and
then eventually it turned into a chicken. But for the
first checond to be a chicken, it had to be.

Speaker 5 (38:28):
So like I don't really follow the animal kingdom as
close as like like where did the first dog come from?

Speaker 6 (38:35):
Again, this is just an evolutionary thing.

Speaker 5 (38:37):
Yeah, yeah, but where the wolf wolf come? Like any
animal that doesn't come from an egg, where did it
first come from.

Speaker 2 (38:44):
Did they all come from eggs, whether or not they're
born live? Like even like humans have eggs, whether it's born,
the egg is insider born live.

Speaker 6 (38:54):
It's the same thing. But you know what I'm saying, like, yeah,
it's it's the exact same thing.

Speaker 2 (38:58):
It came from millions of years of something that was
more wolf like, and the wolf came from something was
more whatever it came from.

Speaker 5 (39:05):
You know what I get freaked out about? Or are
we still talking eggs?

Speaker 3 (39:08):
Or we can talk about anything you want.

Speaker 5 (39:10):
Okay, because the week is almost done. You know what
freaks me out? Maybe we've talked about it before and
maybe I'm once again the dummy. The other day I
was thinking about it, freaks me out. Where did the
first fire come from? Like how did the first fire,
like the first caveman or wherever that whatever that was.

Speaker 6 (39:29):
I would say the first one probably came natural.

Speaker 5 (39:31):
And then they how they know you recreate it though,
That's what I'm saying right, Like like a lightning bolt
made a tree catch on fire, I get that, But
how did some guy know to bang rocks together whatever
it was to create I.

Speaker 3 (39:45):
Get it would have been an accident.

Speaker 8 (39:46):
They probably saw the sparkle went oh, that looks a
lot like that fire that happened or whatever they called it,
you know, and I think, yeah, I think it's just
trial and error, like mistakes, like just by accident.

Speaker 5 (39:56):
Is that freaky? The guy who he gets like no
recognition at all? Yeah, soccer bird gets face fired.

Speaker 2 (40:04):
I mean, there are so many different things like that
that it's weird that people realize that that was the
right thing to do. And some of them makes sense
because they're in a nature as like you know, like
mating and stuff.

Speaker 6 (40:15):
The idea that someone thought, okay, we did this, I
did this with a baby, and.

Speaker 2 (40:19):
Then the idea that you know, forty weeks later we
had a baby for someone to correspond that that moment
the baby.

Speaker 6 (40:27):
I ate a melon is baby?

Speaker 4 (40:30):
Like who knows it's true? But then even like like
cooking meat, why did they think I'm going to kill
an animal and then I'm gonna yeah, and that's gonna
be healthier for me. Things like that, But over you know,
even like like think all the things we eat and
the things we don't eat that can kill us.

Speaker 5 (40:42):
We lost a lot of good people along the way.

Speaker 8 (40:45):
Thinking about that the other day, who was the first
person to eat like a bad whatever that grew must room.

Speaker 5 (40:51):
And that's what was so cool about these kings back
in the day. They had like all these these guys
are dying by the dozens every day. Is that gig?
No exactly, And especially we'll try I'll try the apple. Yeah, apple,
the unwashed apple.

Speaker 3 (41:09):
I'll take that.

Speaker 6 (41:10):
And some poisons might take three days to kill you,
so you don't even.

Speaker 1 (41:14):
Know what it was.

Speaker 5 (41:15):
Yeah, oh my god, you cough after that, you're like,
oh god, oh god. Anybody have DIBs in the chocolate cake.
I'll try with chocolate cake.

Speaker 1 (41:24):
The Hot Podcast with Moller Rush Jenny, I'm Brady.

Speaker 4 (41:29):
You ever noticed this change when you walk into a store.
Do employees still say welcome or do they say welcome in.
I haven't noticed anybody saying welcome in kind of like
welcome in it. It feels like, I don't know, it
feels more.

Speaker 6 (41:42):
I also, if I into a store, I never hear welcome. No,
I hear hi.

Speaker 5 (41:46):
Hey, here's the drug stores where where they're like perfumes
and all that stuff. When you first walk I feel
like they have people are saying well, yeah, you know, experiences.

Speaker 4 (41:58):
But welcome in feels more homie like, it feels more yeah, hey,
welcome in.

Speaker 5 (42:03):
What you feel sat there?

Speaker 10 (42:05):
Look at you?

Speaker 5 (42:05):
Yeah, your face, it's here, it's here now?

Speaker 6 (42:10):
Yeah. I always just you're high hi hi?

Speaker 5 (42:13):
Oh okay, okay.

Speaker 4 (42:14):
Well, the Wall Street Journal did this weirdly in depth
article about how welcome in has become the new go
to greeting at a lot of stores. Maybe this is
more of an American thing, American thing, but they don't
know why it's become more popular. But it is a
lot more popular than it was like five or ten
years ago. Some people say it's fine, other people say
it sounds dumb and like you're trying a bit too hard.
The Wall Street Journal writer thinks that maybe some like

(42:35):
Big Corporation put it in their training manual and it
kind of spread from there. They also think that maybe
it comes from German. The word for welcome is wilcome in. Yeah,
but that seems a little far fetched. I don't know why,
you know, America, Yeah, yeah, okay.

Speaker 2 (42:50):
The more somebody throws you a curveball when you walk
in and they say something like that you don't expect,
the more likely you are to say something stupid.

Speaker 6 (42:57):
In fact, like I was. I was golfing not long ago,
and even I was just I was just paying for
the round.

Speaker 2 (43:03):
Yeah, and uh, you know, the the guy said have
a great round, but I said you too, because he
started early, because I thought a good day, and I
said you too. And then I walk away feeling like
an idiot because he said have a good round.

Speaker 5 (43:19):
I said you do.

Speaker 6 (43:20):
We're standing there and we're looking at each other and.

Speaker 4 (43:23):
Yeah, that now he has to join you and play golf.
It's just like a montage, a bunch of pictures of
him playing.

Speaker 6 (43:30):
Yeah, but again, welcome in is something that could do
that to you. Yeah, you don't expect it.

Speaker 5 (43:37):
Welcome in? Thank you you too? Sorry, I have a
good day. Can't we just go with hello and high?

Speaker 4 (43:43):
It's not just I think that's great everybody, Hi, good morning, Hey,
good afternoon.

Speaker 5 (43:48):
You're going it's just a lot of dialogue. We just hi,
smiling enough, Hi?

Speaker 6 (43:54):
Hello, you know it's I think Hi is great? Walk
in the short this is high. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (43:58):
And then if they want to follow up, can I
help you find something shure? That's fine, you can do that,
but just start with a.

Speaker 4 (44:03):
What about the smile and head nod? Is that not enough.

Speaker 6 (44:06):
Well, if I'm not necessarily looking at them.

Speaker 2 (44:08):
I mean, this also says to me if someone says, hi,
I know for sure that they're staff, right if someone
just nodded you, probably, but you don't necessarily know.

Speaker 6 (44:16):
I could just be somebody who's there. Yeah, and then you.

Speaker 2 (44:18):
Don't want to ask them a question and they're like
and then the embarrassment of asking I don't work here.

Speaker 4 (44:23):
And that's that happened to be over over the most
recent weekend. Why what is it about me that makes
it look like I'm staff everywhere? But I was moving
like a table were some people joined us at a
at a restaurant. I was just so I just grabbed
a chair and then someone immediately came up to me
and was like, hey, are you staff?

Speaker 5 (44:44):
Like can we sit over there?

Speaker 4 (44:45):
And I'm sorry, I don't work here.

Speaker 5 (44:47):
This happens to me like once a week.

Speaker 4 (44:49):
So often people think I'm staff.

Speaker 5 (44:52):
I don't know the places you go, Like the way
you're dressed right now, is this that is staff would dress?
I guess that's very And you've never been have to say, yeah,
I know you can't move your table, sit down?

Speaker 4 (45:02):
Yeah, I kind of I should, you should shift depending
on exactly, depending on how big the restaurant is.

Speaker 5 (45:08):
Maybe they wouldn't notice. Maybe suddenly this is when you
go in and they go hello, and you go hello,
and then you walk by, and then the next person
comes in. They're having like a full on conversation. There's
so much friendlier about me. Yeah, I want to have
the cart for them. It doesn't seem right.

Speaker 4 (45:27):
But then sometimes it's it's the opposite, where like if
the person chatting a lot is in front of me,
say it like the grocery store, then I feel like, oh,
this person's already had their long conversations.

Speaker 5 (45:36):
Person that works there.

Speaker 4 (45:37):
I don't want to like throw.

Speaker 5 (45:39):
It up a whole new conversation and.

Speaker 6 (45:41):
The same thing over and over again, talk the weather
again exactly.

Speaker 5 (45:44):
So you shut it down right away.

Speaker 4 (45:46):
Just shut it down, you know. I'll let the person
behind me pick it back up. Yeah, okay, I don't
want to overwhelm these people.

Speaker 5 (45:51):
Yeah, no, I agree, you know what I mean. I
like human interaction. I want to get rid of it. Yeah,
just can be brief human interactions, sure, yeah, sure quickly
to the poor.

Speaker 6 (46:00):
So we're down on welcome in, No thanks, one word too.

Speaker 5 (46:04):
Many, Although I do like clothing places. I do like
the help.

Speaker 4 (46:09):
You know what I mean. I do want you to
get me another size. Thank you, okay, because I want to.

Speaker 5 (46:13):
Ask you as you walk in. Yeah, I don't like
what are you looking for? Let me walk you know,
let me see what what? What's here?

Speaker 2 (46:21):
I don't even Yeah, A lot of the A lot
of the time my answer is yeah, I don't know,
but I'll know what I find it.

Speaker 6 (46:27):
Leave me alone, you know.

Speaker 5 (46:28):
I sometimes I don't hate it right away. For what
are you looking for?

Speaker 4 (46:33):
So I'm looking for pants that are gonna be a
little bit like that. What do you recommend? And then
they go and they take me around, and then you know,
you just get right to it.

Speaker 2 (46:39):
As long as they stick with you too. I don't
want somebody to just going to help me like that.
And then they go and they're working with two different
people at the same time.

Speaker 6 (46:46):
I know, I don't I don't like that.

Speaker 2 (46:48):
Like if you said you're going to help me and
somebody else bring and you're like yeah.

Speaker 4 (46:53):
And then suddenly you're working with another employee and I
feel like you're cheating on the first one.

Speaker 5 (46:57):
Good And then you go to the cash and they
say to you. Okay, So who is help me? Mandy?

Speaker 1 (47:01):
I go, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (47:02):
I wearing I wasn't think. Yeah, you have to describe
a person.

Speaker 6 (47:07):
I feel like he witnessed to cry and I don't know.

Speaker 5 (47:12):
What time one of the girls that does she look
like me? And I went, I don't want to answer
because I don't know you. I don't know you know
who is helping you today? It wasn't you have been talking.

Speaker 1 (47:31):
With Maller, Rush, Jenny, and Brady.

Speaker 4 (47:33):
Maller's really really fun facts so fun.

Speaker 5 (47:40):
Yeah, okay, interesting. Interesting. I don't know if my friends here, Rush, Jenny,
and Brady have ever experienced this. I'm gonna say one
or two of you may have.

Speaker 6 (47:59):
Okay, gives us an advantage.

Speaker 5 (48:02):
What percentage of people of all the people in.

Speaker 6 (48:05):
The whole A lot of people, at least a few hundred.

Speaker 5 (48:09):
What percentage of people who have locked themselves out of
all uses a different way? What percentage of people who
lock themselves out of hotel rooms? Or women?

Speaker 3 (48:19):
Oh, based on my own research, guilty of this?

Speaker 5 (48:26):
Yeah, And of all the people that have locked themselves
out of a hotel room, what percentage are women? And
therefore we would have the answers to what percentage are men?

Speaker 4 (48:35):
Yeah, that's interesting.

Speaker 5 (48:36):
I have the stat here for the women.

Speaker 8 (48:39):
Okay, so we know that the percentage men and women
is what you're saying. Yeah, yeah, yeah, well I guess yeah,
this is never mind.

Speaker 3 (48:49):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (48:50):
You guys have to talk it out as to what
the situation see arguments on both.

Speaker 3 (48:56):
Here is my thing so often now this is not
the case.

Speaker 6 (49:00):
Do we want to be doing this or should we?

Speaker 2 (49:01):
Because you were helping each other, you're right, never mind,
I mean we're competing.

Speaker 4 (49:05):
I am so conflicted on this. I don't know where
to go.

Speaker 3 (49:07):
I have my guess.

Speaker 5 (49:10):
Yeah. Maybe once you guys all have your guests circled
and underlined, uh, you can then say what your logic is,
because I'm curious to see where your brains well in
this one.

Speaker 3 (49:18):
I don't want anybody piggybacking off of my theory. Oh
I'm going to wait.

Speaker 5 (49:22):
Yeah, you're so spicy, you know it's not gonna it's
not gonna change the boys guesses.

Speaker 1 (49:30):
No.

Speaker 5 (49:30):
How many times have you been locked out of a
hotel room?

Speaker 3 (49:35):
Probably once a trip? Oh yeah, I'm the worst.

Speaker 8 (49:41):
Like I think I have a key, or I think
somebody else has a key and then you walk out,
I don't have a key, or I sleep walk and
I wake up in the hallway, right, yeah, but that's
been a long time since I've done that knocking.

Speaker 6 (49:53):
With can Okay, I have an answer, it's underlined.

Speaker 5 (49:59):
Yeah, okay, I don't hate mine, all right, Okay, so
everybody's locked in now before we reveal, let's discuss first
of all, Rush, have you ever been locked out of
your hotel room?

Speaker 1 (50:11):
No?

Speaker 5 (50:12):
Never, No, not one.

Speaker 4 (50:13):
You never lost the key in your life?

Speaker 5 (50:16):
No.

Speaker 2 (50:18):
But the thing is, see, I see so different, so
many different sides of this. I mean, I would say, uh,
men have pockets more often than women do. So sometimes
the keys in your pocket, it's it's hard to forget
when it's in there. A woman who was thinking, I'm
just gonna run out and I didn't bring her purse,
and you know that there also men are idiots, so
you think men would be more likely. Also, a lot

(50:40):
of the time, if you're going to be stereotypical here,
a lot of the time the man get checks in
and has the keys, and she may he may not
have given her a key, so she may not have one.

Speaker 5 (50:51):
The opposite and the checker in her everywhere, so's my wife. Yeah, wow, no, Rush,
sounds like you're running the sho I will. And then
there's the key.

Speaker 2 (51:07):
I was saying stereotypically, sure, and again but you go
back to she allowed to drive, but the pockets.

Speaker 6 (51:15):
Are a big thing too, Like this is I mean,
I see both sides of.

Speaker 8 (51:19):
This very my logic is and I'm going very stereotypical
as well as far as just what I saw growing
up and whatever. Women tend to be the organizers. They've
got the stuff for the kids, They've got the you
know whatever, and the purse and or the baby bag
or whatever. So I feel like the keys automatically go
in there, and therefore they're the ones organizing and walking into.

Speaker 3 (51:36):
The hotel room, they would have the key.

Speaker 8 (51:38):
The men, it's easy to just walk out because you
don't grab a purse, you don't grab your stuff.

Speaker 6 (51:42):
But if you're going out to go get some ice,
you're not going to bring your purse.

Speaker 3 (51:46):
And if that doesn't put the locky thing.

Speaker 6 (51:47):
In there, people don't know walked down. Like there are
so many different sides to this.

Speaker 5 (51:53):
When you check in rush, do you insist on separate beds?
Why would we do that because no, no, No, the room.

Speaker 3 (52:03):
We'll do. Adjoining we do.

Speaker 6 (52:04):
We do get there with the car that we power
with their feet.

Speaker 5 (52:09):
All right, Brady, what about you? First of all, have
you ever been locked out the hotel?

Speaker 4 (52:13):
For sure? Like I've lost my key and had to
go and ask for a new key first, Like who
hasn't you know? I'm raised on that. That was is
mind blowing. The most recent resort we went to was
the bracelets, which was so nice, leave your room nothing, yeah,
on your phone, you have to have the key, even
nothing is great. I think men are probably more forgetful
than women, and also I think and more back in

(52:35):
the day than now. Certainly more back in the day,
but I think men were traveling more for work, and
I think they were probably more likely to be in
that situation where they had hotel keys. So I think
it's definitely more men than women.

Speaker 5 (52:49):
All right, So let's get your actual answers, now, Rush,
what percentage of women lock themselves out of hotel rooms?

Speaker 6 (52:56):
Fifty A lot.

Speaker 4 (53:02):
The board?

Speaker 5 (53:03):
No mine, thirteen percent, thirteen percent only just way more
men than women.

Speaker 4 (53:08):
Oh yeah, I said thirty percent women.

Speaker 2 (53:11):
Okay, okay, yeah, I only went a little higher with
women because of the purse factor.

Speaker 3 (53:18):
Okay, right, and going to just the opposite that you
always leave with your purse.

Speaker 5 (53:23):
Okay, well we'll go from low to high here, Jenny
at the low and only thirteen percent of women, almost
just one in ten forget their keys.

Speaker 4 (53:33):
That's I think that's too much, Jenny. That's like if
you're working at the front desk, ten people come in
to get a key, nine of them are men.

Speaker 5 (53:39):
Yep, thirty percent. Well so one in three people for you, Brady,
are women that are forgetting their key, and rush you're
fifty to fifty.

Speaker 6 (53:50):
Five point two are women.

Speaker 5 (53:52):
Okay, let's see what the answer is. And of all
those surveyed those who lock themselves out of hotel rooms
or women, the percentage would be hmmm, it's a surprising number. Yeah,
it is seventy.

Speaker 2 (54:19):
I think it has to do with going out and
not actually leaving the hotel, just leaving the room without
a purse.

Speaker 6 (54:25):
That's just totally where I think it is.

Speaker 4 (54:26):
Okay, maybe, yeah, Like the key is in the purse
so that you don't even think about it, you.

Speaker 6 (54:30):
Don't even think it, like I didn't. Guys. The key
goes in the pocket, so we have it.

Speaker 4 (54:37):
Right on the table, right and you see it.

Speaker 5 (54:39):
Maybe.

Speaker 8 (54:40):
I think for guys, that's in the wallet, and the
wallet's always on you, you're not taking it out all
the time, so you're not forgetting.

Speaker 3 (54:45):
It as much.

Speaker 5 (54:46):
I never bring a wallet when I leave the resort.
I just have my key, yeah, and my phone. That's yeah.

Speaker 4 (54:52):
Are usually just a couple of bucks for for tips
and and then okay.

Speaker 6 (54:55):
When you go, you both key. You just have to
key both. Yeah, we.

Speaker 5 (55:02):
The room, you know, like whatever.

Speaker 8 (55:04):
The last resort we were at two I had the
first time I've ever had. The bracelet is a game change, Yeah, because.

Speaker 4 (55:09):
Then you you don't even need the phone, like you
just don't have anything on you at all and you
just feel free.

Speaker 5 (55:13):
Yeah. Rush is the winners.

Speaker 6 (55:15):
Well, actually it was not a strong win, very strong,
very strong.

Speaker 5 (55:19):
It was pretty high up this pretty high and you
were way.

Speaker 1 (55:24):
There. You go.

Speaker 5 (55:25):
Mall a fun facts, really really fun facts, fun.

Speaker 4 (55:35):
O like what you just heard, friend, little friend.

Speaker 1 (55:39):
They can listen to the Hot Tub podcast.

Speaker 4 (55:40):
With Maller, Rush, Jenny and Brady wherever podcasts are found.

Speaker 1 (55:44):
Follow the Gang on socials for more fun at Maller
Mauller at What True, Rush and Hot Flash Jenny, and
at Brady Jones Radio.

Speaker 5 (55:51):
The Hot Tough Podcast, a part of the sting Ray
podcast network.
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