All Episodes

October 29, 2025 46 mins
Mauler wears galoshes so he can leave your dinner party quicker, Rush has a wandering eye for landscapers, Tina Turner's estate gets royalties anytime Jenni has a bowel movement, and Brady gets murdered in a nook and/or a cranny. Love the podcast? Leave us a review!


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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.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
You decide we'll go.

Speaker 3 (00:07):
This is the Hot Top Podcast with Muller, Rush, Jenny,
and Brady.

Speaker 4 (00:12):
Well, hello, my friends.

Speaker 5 (00:14):
Hell.

Speaker 4 (00:17):
I know Brady might have a question, but I have
a question.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Sure.

Speaker 4 (00:19):
Yeah, this is the last time, and I feel like
Jenny's been described this in the last let's say year
or two. Maybe Brady even described as this. When do
you think this is more for Jenny? And when do
you think the last time Rush was described as adorable?

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (00:37):
Adorable?

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Adorable? Oh it would have been Lisa.

Speaker 4 (00:41):
Yeah, likely, Yeah, I could.

Speaker 5 (00:43):
Say last week, but last week.

Speaker 6 (00:46):
You're adorable a lot.

Speaker 5 (00:47):
I am quite.

Speaker 7 (00:51):
I'd say early in the relationship. I think maybe he
did something like particularly wonderful.

Speaker 5 (00:56):
Perhaps even earlier today. I know I'm quite The catch.

Speaker 4 (01:00):
That is that, truthfully, is that a word your wife
would throw around?

Speaker 5 (01:04):
Adorable? Not really?

Speaker 1 (01:05):
No?

Speaker 4 (01:05):
Okay, so you probably haven't been described as adorable since
you were like seven.

Speaker 8 (01:09):
I don't even know if I was adorable. Cute I've
had cute before. Yeah, I mean adorable is is kind.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
Of it's like a step up.

Speaker 4 (01:18):
Yeah, it is, but it's also condescending.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
You can't be.

Speaker 4 (01:23):
Oh you're adorable.

Speaker 6 (01:24):
Oh I can't be like, oh yeah, I know what
you mean, like more or less, like you're an idiot.

Speaker 8 (01:28):
Yeah, that's unless you have dimples, in which case it's okay.
People just think it's fine.

Speaker 6 (01:34):
Dimples And I get called adorable a lot. What does
that mean?

Speaker 2 (01:38):
How often called adorable?

Speaker 3 (01:39):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (01:39):
No, no, no, but usually it is in that context like, oh,
you're cute, like adorable, like you're.

Speaker 8 (01:44):
Like like for example, when you were you wanted to
do a PowerPoint presentation and you asked what programmed.

Speaker 7 (01:50):
You would, Yes, that's adorable, Oh sweetie, exactly.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:56):
But if I asked that, what you guys called me adorable?

Speaker 1 (01:58):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:59):
You idiot?

Speaker 4 (02:01):
Yeah yeah, that's probably For the record, I prefer durable.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
Yeah, I get it.

Speaker 5 (02:10):
I mean it sounds better no matter what.

Speaker 4 (02:12):
Yeah, I'm not wrong. Well, I don't know how to
describe the Hot Top podcast. Maybe adorable, let's give it
a listen.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
Maybe just idiots with Moller Brush, Jenny and Brady.

Speaker 4 (02:25):
Oh, it's that spooky tom of year, Halloween about a
week away and uh. A survey of two thousand adults
revealed thirty four percent of adults who think they could
survive a horror slasher film and defeat the villain No
thirty four. Oh okay, so one in three people sure

(02:48):
believe what they could take down the villain and survive.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
I get it. I feel like they could Probably wouldn't.

Speaker 8 (02:53):
I think everybody thinks, right, I need a very specific situation.

Speaker 6 (02:58):
Yeah, I need to know what what I'm like.

Speaker 8 (03:00):
Here's the situation. Let's say I'm heavily armed with guns.

Speaker 5 (03:04):
Yeah, and I know exactly where he's coming from.

Speaker 6 (03:07):
Horror movies are different. They always have.

Speaker 8 (03:08):
Nice right, so you have to go in that case. No,
but again, if I could set it up my own way,
then sure.

Speaker 4 (03:14):
But three quarters credit their quick thinking and survival instincts
for potential success, while forty two percent admits they'd likely
be eliminated first. Yeah, either one way where you die
instantly or you survive everybody in trying to like talk them.

Speaker 7 (03:32):
Out of it, and then oh yeah, you're the cute blonde.

Speaker 4 (03:35):
So you do you do survive to the end.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
Of the movie, do I?

Speaker 6 (03:37):
Or do I die immediately?

Speaker 5 (03:39):
Well, you might die first too, It's one of the two.

Speaker 7 (03:41):
I'm not saying, Yeah, you're right, I say I think
genuine say, like Jason walking up on ourn like you're
a product if your environment.

Speaker 6 (03:50):
Your household and dead where you love? Did you feel loved?

Speaker 4 (03:56):
The study also found the fourteen percent will use logic
and reason to smart the villains and thirteen percent would
simply just run away zig zag for him for me
totally yeah, And nearly half of the response said that
the most important survival rule is never ever ever splitting
up right.

Speaker 6 (04:15):
No exactly?

Speaker 4 (04:15):
Why do they they have to?

Speaker 6 (04:17):
It's a yeah, it's the same thing where they run upstairs.
Why are you running upstairs? Run out?

Speaker 2 (04:22):
That's a bad place.

Speaker 6 (04:22):
You don't run outside, you run out the door.

Speaker 5 (04:24):
What depends is he in the house.

Speaker 6 (04:27):
It doesn't matter no matter what. They always run upstairs
so that they're trapped.

Speaker 7 (04:31):
I agree, Yeah, run outside, go to the neighbors. Just
keep running screen.

Speaker 6 (04:34):
Yeah exactly.

Speaker 4 (04:35):
I'm just run around the kitchen counter, just dodged them.
When my mom used to try and give me the spoon,
that's what we did the kitchen counter, and she's like,
would you stop, thank you? I'm like, no, you're not
gonna hit me with the house.

Speaker 6 (04:58):
That makes me sad for a little mo No, it's
all right.

Speaker 4 (05:02):
My brother was about six nine and like two hundred
and fifty pounds at like seven And he stood there
and my mom with this spoon whack and broke the
spoon in half. And I don't think she ever went
after us again.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
All right, we're done.

Speaker 4 (05:20):
Yeah, no, yeah, you can survive. I mean these guys
are also snopid.

Speaker 6 (05:24):
I would die immediately.

Speaker 4 (05:25):
Because, first of all, I always thought watching these movies,
you're in your own home, you have the advantage over
these guys.

Speaker 5 (05:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (05:32):
I don't think you do. If they have they have
a knife, but.

Speaker 8 (05:34):
They don't move quickly like that's exactly there. Michael Myers
and Jason are both very slow. They don't run.

Speaker 7 (05:39):
Even like the Scream character like oftentimes they're just fast,
are they? But they're normal people. I just have to
outrun like one person. Yeah, and if there's if it's
like let's say it's the four of us in the house,
I just have to outrun one of you again.

Speaker 8 (05:52):
And the other thing that that's big is that we
don't have a lot of guns here, but in the US,
where everybody has a gun, I mean a big atalizer.

Speaker 4 (06:01):
You can't bring that into the mix horror movies.

Speaker 8 (06:03):
We're bringing everything else in the mix that you can
do this, and you can think rotten logically, you can
do all these other things, but you can't do anything
that would help I understand, Like if you have if
you have grenades, I mean this is different.

Speaker 5 (06:14):
Sure I get that, but.

Speaker 6 (06:15):
We can't have guns. No grenades, anything like that just
knives access to what's in your house. No guns. Sure,
and they never have like a fireplace. Sure, give me
an axe like whatever, but even still I'm falling on
my own axe and dying or they even get a
chance to kill me. Oh I would I trip over
a shoe.

Speaker 4 (06:32):
And be like, but you know the shoe is going
to be left out. Yeah, Jason doesn't know that left
his shoes out.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
He never trips on the shoe.

Speaker 5 (06:41):
No, he doesn't.

Speaker 8 (06:42):
The other thing that you have to deal with in
these situations if everybody, if all you have is a
knife and Jason has a knife, you're afraid of dying.
Jason is not afraid of dying, and that gives Jason
a big edge.

Speaker 5 (06:54):
There's no fear in his part. You have fear that
is sometimes crippling.

Speaker 4 (06:58):
Yeah, but he doesn't know the layer layout of my house.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
Yes, that's it.

Speaker 7 (07:02):
Like there's like little nooks and crannies, even in like
a new place that I've been in for.

Speaker 8 (07:07):
Going yourself, or a cranny, But a nook is just
like being upstairs.

Speaker 5 (07:12):
You're trapped. You can't get out of the nook.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
But then I haven't the poker, and I'd be ready.

Speaker 4 (07:17):
You know you're in the new house too, Like you
even know where all the cracks and creeks are in
your house, right, so you could throw something over where
the crack and creaky noises and get the hell out
of there. It's easy.

Speaker 7 (07:27):
And I've set up so many motion detected like little
lights in the dark.

Speaker 2 (07:31):
I'd be fine.

Speaker 7 (07:32):
It's like a little it's like a stranger things light
up the thing where's.

Speaker 6 (07:34):
Also being lit up when he's trying to find you.

Speaker 4 (07:37):
But he's also as wearing a stupid hockey mat. I
can't see nothing.

Speaker 6 (07:41):
Man, that's like nothing child's play. He's all that is comforting.

Speaker 8 (07:46):
That's very different, I will tell you though, from what's
going on if we're if we are in a horror
movie world, which we are, Yeah, the two of you
and the way you're talking the two of us, this
is smaller and Brady, the way that they're talking. They
would be the first two to die because they are
so confident that they could live and survive, and there's
so much better than Jason would be means you're dead quickly.

Speaker 4 (08:08):
I don't think i'd be fine. Also, Jason smells and
you can even smell if he's coming towards you, doesn't matter.
Oh my god, he isn't washed now, I don't know decades.

Speaker 6 (08:16):
I'd be allergic to whatever it was that he smells like,
and tur banging in the doors.

Speaker 7 (08:27):
So that Rory left out. You're like, oh, Rory, and
you start cleaning up, and I would oh, James, all right,
So James the first to go. Then Rush is gone next,
I don't think so.

Speaker 4 (08:38):
Yeah, for sure.

Speaker 6 (08:39):
I would actually pin that Rush would last the long test.
I would die first, then Brady, then Maller, then Rush.

Speaker 5 (08:44):
I agree.

Speaker 8 (08:45):
Yeah, are you talking about yeah, because you're giving Jason
absolutely no credits.

Speaker 4 (08:50):
Yeah, No, I'm zig zagging.

Speaker 7 (08:51):
That's not helping at all. If anything, he's gotten way
closer to you. I offended that you think I'm dying
before Maller. I was dying, yeah, on the front lawn,
before Jason even enters.

Speaker 8 (09:01):
That he may die before you Jenny, Right, yeah, what yeah,
the first or second?

Speaker 4 (09:07):
Oh my god, sneeze.

Speaker 5 (09:08):
He's not gonna, I know, I know, very small.

Speaker 2 (09:12):
I'm gonna like like stub your toe and play dead.

Speaker 5 (09:14):
Yeah, you know, yes what or you'll fall down the stairs. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (09:20):
By the way, to be continued, We're going, I know,
all right, we don't normally continue. Yeah, we will continue
this one.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
A Hot Tom podcast with Maller, Rush, Jenny, and Brady
find the gang on their socials. Follow at Maller Maller
at One True Rush, at Hot Slash Jenny, and at
Brady Jones Radio.

Speaker 6 (09:42):
How long does your social battery last? Guys? According to
Hinja's new Social energy study, even with your favorite people,
there is a limit to how long you can socialize
before craving alone time. Thirty eight percent of over ten
thousand participants said they hit social fatigue that involves just
feeling drained or over stimulated for two or three hours.
Fortunately yeah so uh now. The researchers found that socializing,

(10:05):
especially with somebody new, is more taxing for introverts. Obviously, sure,
and of course, everyone's social sweet spot varies depending on
who you're with, what you're doing, and how much small
talk is involved. I get that. I will like all
of a sudden be like I need to go home,
like I'm done, Like it just doesn't sort of creep
up on me all of a sudden, I'll be like
it's time.

Speaker 2 (10:24):
Yeah, how long does that usually take?

Speaker 6 (10:27):
A couple of hours? Probably, like so not much.

Speaker 2 (10:29):
That's like not even dinner.

Speaker 6 (10:30):
Though, yeah yeah yeah, But again I think it depends, right,
if it's a dinner with like two other you know people,
or four other people, is different than being at a
big party where you feel like you have to go
group to group and you're sort of having those same.

Speaker 2 (10:42):
Conversations know the people. I get it.

Speaker 7 (10:44):
Then then it's just small talk at surface levels stuff.
That's that's what's exhausting. But if it's like close friends.

Speaker 6 (10:49):
Oh for sure, then I'm like, it's amazing when you
are with a close group of friends and you're you're
not even thinking the time of five hours will fly by.

Speaker 5 (10:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (10:56):
I find typically when a venue changes when we're going
when it's like, hey, we're doing this, Oh let's go
and do this now, the venue change is usually when
I'm saying I want I want.

Speaker 2 (11:05):
To go home.

Speaker 6 (11:05):
Yeah, you're right, I got that. I don't want a
venue change.

Speaker 4 (11:09):
Do you make it to the new venue?

Speaker 2 (11:11):
I can it?

Speaker 8 (11:11):
Just I typically don't want to, and that's one of
the feeling I want to go home happens.

Speaker 5 (11:15):
Then Yeah, it's the change of venue.

Speaker 4 (11:17):
Okay. Is it like what about like a change of
room within the venue? Oh?

Speaker 6 (11:21):
Good question, Like if you move from the kitchen to
the family.

Speaker 5 (11:24):
Probably.

Speaker 4 (11:26):
I'm more like even the Christmas party when you're in
like let's say one section where there's the bar section,
and then you go over to like the dinner section,
and then there's the dance floor section.

Speaker 8 (11:36):
No, no, really it would be but it would be
like hey, if we're oh, if you're at a restaurant, like,
let's go to a bar now?

Speaker 4 (11:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (11:42):
No, see for me, it's anything after nine pm.

Speaker 4 (11:47):
I don't think that's the case. I think it would
sort of like three or four by five or six?
You want to get the hell out of there? Still?

Speaker 6 (11:53):
Yeah, depending on yes, depending on where I am. Yeah,
in the further away from home I am, the more
the earlier I want to get.

Speaker 5 (12:00):
I get that too, get like, yeah, you need to
be home.

Speaker 6 (12:02):
I need to be close to my.

Speaker 4 (12:04):
What's now you're radius the timing.

Speaker 6 (12:06):
It's a great question. It's not more than a fifty
minute drives been pushing it, okay, Yeah, Now luckily most things,
you know, you can get to where I'm going anyway
is usually within fifteen minutes.

Speaker 5 (12:17):
But it's further more than it feels like, oh boy,
and then I have to get home. It seems like
it's a.

Speaker 6 (12:22):
Lot after nine. Are you kidding? It's dark?

Speaker 8 (12:26):
Yeah, and you never know who else is on the
road and you just want to avoid.

Speaker 4 (12:30):
It, like it's horrible again.

Speaker 5 (12:31):
Yeah, they get it.

Speaker 4 (12:32):
This time of year. You're going into your vent and
leaving it it's dark. Yeah, that's that means it feels
like you've been there seven eight.

Speaker 5 (12:39):
And that's not a good feeling about.

Speaker 2 (12:41):
My face is about to explode and listening to you.

Speaker 7 (12:44):
Three, oh my god, I get it. You don't know
who else is on the road, you know. Yeah, like
you know grandma and grandpa.

Speaker 5 (12:52):
Are on the road and it might longer to get hold.

Speaker 7 (12:55):
Grandma's crossed to course, like this should be a show
that Brady should host and just shake his head at contestants, like.

Speaker 4 (13:02):
Come on, little out of the three of us, Brady
put us in order of who wants to be there,
who wants to get the hell out of there?

Speaker 6 (13:09):
Oh my god, come on, that's a good one question.

Speaker 7 (13:12):
I think Rush could be there the most, the longest,
the longest.

Speaker 2 (13:17):
God.

Speaker 7 (13:19):
I think I can get a drink into Jenny and
like feeling okay, you know, I kind of like control
that wave until she gets until out of it, you
know what I mean?

Speaker 4 (13:30):
Could you get two drinks in the gym?

Speaker 2 (13:32):
Yeah? I couldn't.

Speaker 7 (13:32):
I think I could. And then and more your your
your one foot of the door before.

Speaker 5 (13:37):
Even in the door, before it starts it off to
be there in the first past.

Speaker 4 (13:45):
Yeah, I've taken off my shoes before.

Speaker 6 (13:50):
You bring slip on you.

Speaker 4 (13:55):
My wife is going back to your shoes, never nor
just for that. That's tough. If Brady's sitting there at
the door saying that, Jenny, okay, just like one more drink, right,
Brady might be able to convince you. What if I'm
there saying, come on, Jenny, let's hit the roade. We
gotta get going, Like what do you Sophie's.

Speaker 2 (14:18):
I put the beer mug in the freezer.

Speaker 4 (14:20):
Alright, you win, bradye My car has been warm enough
for the last few minutes, the dead of the dead
of winter warm.

Speaker 7 (14:29):
I promise we're not gonna play any board games.

Speaker 6 (14:32):
How long is the drive?

Speaker 5 (14:33):
Oh, six minutes, Then you're not stressed about exactly that longer?
Twenty she's got you long.

Speaker 6 (14:45):
Don't even know I'm at home.

Speaker 4 (14:48):
What are you talking about?

Speaker 5 (14:50):
Facetied twenty five minutes?

Speaker 4 (14:52):
You may have a been of a twenty five minutes,
twenty games, twenty.

Speaker 6 (14:57):
Five minutes, and a frozen beer mug. Have I had
anything to drink up until this point?

Speaker 2 (15:01):
Yeah, you've had You've had two other drinks.

Speaker 6 (15:03):
Okay, so the third what I mean?

Speaker 4 (15:04):
Look, Brady's sixteen friends.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
Yeah, you love Jeff and Ryan.

Speaker 1 (15:18):
Podcast with Maller Rush, Jenny and Brady.

Speaker 4 (15:22):
It's time for toilet talk. Interesting, two different stories, so
I thought I'd bring them together for toilet talk.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
Toilet talk.

Speaker 4 (15:33):
Chinese public restrooms, Oh God, toilet thanks. Chinese public restrooms
are trialing dispensers that require users to watch advertisements before
receiving toilet paper.

Speaker 6 (15:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (15:49):
The machines display a QR code that connects to smartphones,
triggering brief video ads before releasing controlled amounts of paper.

Speaker 8 (15:57):
I'm sorry, so you actually need to have your phone
to get toilet paper, you need to scan the QR.

Speaker 4 (16:01):
That's yes, correct, And it's not saying how many you
know squares you get? Yeah, right, But I guess if
you're shy, you have to watch another ad.

Speaker 7 (16:11):
You could be in there for a while. If you're
you know, having a bad day. The next thing you know,
it's like half an hour later.

Speaker 4 (16:18):
Well will this fly over here? This is in China, right.

Speaker 8 (16:21):
There are many reasons that I don't like this, but
the main one is the amount of q card QR
code scams out there. Then you scan something and then
it's you know, it downloads a bunch of stuff.

Speaker 5 (16:33):
To your phone and stuff like this.

Speaker 8 (16:34):
This is one of the things that you're gonna scam
because you need to do that in that situation, and
you know, you could be screwing yourself over and you know,
downloading all sorts of viruses.

Speaker 4 (16:44):
Would a tap on your debit card then probably.

Speaker 5 (16:50):
I mean, again, I don't like the idea of either
of them.

Speaker 6 (16:52):
I could pay for it.

Speaker 5 (16:53):
I mean, just just have ads going at all times
in there.

Speaker 8 (16:57):
If there's a screen there and there's always ads going
and I'm forced to watch some fine.

Speaker 4 (17:00):
But you're not forced to watch them.

Speaker 6 (17:01):
Yeah, you know, you be on your phone doing whatever.
I guess, So, I mean, I suppose how else could
they do it?

Speaker 8 (17:07):
Also, don't have to like you can do this and
then scan it and then the ad place. You don't
have to watch that ad either. It's the same thing.
I guess those they be scanned something to get toilet
paper from the.

Speaker 6 (17:16):
Time you sit down. It could give you every thirty seconds,
it could you know, spit out a few squares.

Speaker 2 (17:21):
It's a public pataform.

Speaker 7 (17:23):
So it's like I don't necessarily want to sit to
begin with. Now I have to have my phone out.
Like if this was in like a house and it's
like it's then it's like a kin to like reading
a shampoo bottle.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
Yeah what I mean, then the fine whatever, But in
a public.

Speaker 6 (17:36):
I don't think it'll fly.

Speaker 4 (17:37):
Ready, you were in China? How many years ago now,
got twenty nineteen, twenty nineteen or so, six years ago?

Speaker 2 (17:43):
Crazy?

Speaker 5 (17:43):
Did you you bout on the show here?

Speaker 4 (17:45):
Yeah? I don't know. Were you working for the stage
Did you notice, like does it stick out in your
mind where the bathrooms that you experienced are cleaner or
the same here in Canada? North America question.

Speaker 7 (18:00):
But probably definitely cleaner, I would say, but over there
necessarily like in restaurants, for sure, they'd always have an attendant,
which is always weird, and the attendant would like dry
your hands for you and stuff. It's like very very
literally hands on public bathrooms, I'm not sure I ever
really like like use a ton of them. Yeah, but
and I've talked about this before. Kids just poop all
over the sidewalk there, like that's the thing. And so

(18:22):
you got to watch for your step in because there's
just human fecal matter everywhere.

Speaker 4 (18:27):
Do you have to download a QR code for that?

Speaker 7 (18:31):
I get one freak kid move all right, So that's
one toilet story.

Speaker 4 (18:35):
I gotta tell you the next one I am not
opposed to.

Speaker 2 (18:38):
Before we move on, we should really hit the Yeah.

Speaker 5 (18:40):
We had to flush that last story.

Speaker 2 (18:42):
Yeah, it's toilet talk.

Speaker 5 (18:46):
There's more than a tank Cohler.

Speaker 4 (18:49):
I believe that's how you uh stay in the company
just debuted a new toilet camera that watches you go
then uses the algorithm to analyze the results in your
health view. It's called Dakota play on words with the code.
By the way, it costs six hundred dollars.

Speaker 5 (19:07):
Now.

Speaker 4 (19:07):
It fits on the side of most toilet bowls and
uses optic sensors to scan your waist. Then it spits
out the stats on your phone. Now you sign on
in a fingerprint scanner, so you know it's uh you're scanning, Yes, exactly.
It'll tell you whether you're dehydrated, what percentage of your
sessions are regular each week. It looks for signs of blood,

(19:29):
et cetera. No worries, there's no chance of your junk
showing up on camera. The sensors see down into the
toilet nowhere else. So I don't hate.

Speaker 5 (19:39):
I feel like this is going to be a standard.

Speaker 6 (19:43):
Yeah, oh my god. In the first people that you know,
they get it. It's like the people first to get anything.
You know, you go over to the woman to analyze
your poop. Yeah you know, yes, yes, use poop scanner.

Speaker 8 (19:57):
Yes, but there are so If it can screen for
like all sorts of cancers and things like this, this
is not a bad thing.

Speaker 2 (20:06):
Yeah. Is that like sophisticated though?

Speaker 4 (20:08):
Or it will it will get better.

Speaker 5 (20:11):
Yeah, a good one. It's not helpful if it did, though.

Speaker 6 (20:18):
Some applause for.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
You, Jenny. You couldn't have your like ring on. It
was messing with your sleep and every imagine it was
my god, not at all.

Speaker 4 (20:26):
Imagine you loaded up, like the voice was saying stuff like,
oh you again, I've seen you four times already today.
Stop it.

Speaker 7 (20:40):
With you, stop having hot sauce.

Speaker 4 (20:46):
I think it's a great idea.

Speaker 2 (20:47):
Yeah, yeah it works. Yeah, great.

Speaker 4 (20:49):
I'm getting more and more into the Apple Watch stuff
and the heart rates and this kind.

Speaker 8 (20:55):
Of you don't allow it to consume your life and
it's not, you know, like fear mongering, then then it's.

Speaker 6 (21:03):
Good because I I've said this before. I had the
aura ring and I was I would wear it on
and off, and it didn't matter how healthy I was
living my life, prioritizing sleep, doing whatever. It would spit
out a score of like sixty, and I'm like, man,
I felt like I slept well last night and my
ring is telling me something, so there's nothing I could do.
I was trying everything so that it was just stressing
me out every day and make.

Speaker 5 (21:23):
It makes me feel worse.

Speaker 6 (21:24):
Oh my god, it was terrible.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
Yeah, every day you were talking about what your score was.

Speaker 8 (21:27):
Yeah, and that's the danger if you do this and
then you go to the bathroom, and it tells you
like Jack.

Speaker 6 (21:39):
Can't do anything right.

Speaker 4 (21:41):
But if you got an A plus, yeah, yeah, everybody
come check this out right.

Speaker 6 (21:49):
Plays a little song song when you get an A plus. Yeah, yeah,
a little song for sure.

Speaker 4 (21:57):
Turner the best, I feel so good, rhyme and show.

Speaker 6 (22:04):
And then if it was bad, it was a really bad.
It's like out of a horror movie.

Speaker 7 (22:14):
This could be just like a ringtone style though, yeah,
you know what I mean, Like, it can't be like
a like a normal one. No, yeah, the normal attorney.
You don't think estate is selling the rights to the Yeah.

Speaker 6 (22:29):
A lot of regular people. She could make a lot
of money.

Speaker 8 (22:31):
I'm gonna say, if they decided they're gonna sell it
and there's not gonna be do this, they're not.

Speaker 6 (22:36):
They're should be a little speaker attached.

Speaker 8 (22:37):
Sure, I don't hate this, but they would say, you
know what, we've got some other offers.

Speaker 5 (22:41):
We're not gonna put it on the after.

Speaker 4 (22:43):
You went to the bathroom, you'd walk in with a
spring in your step.

Speaker 8 (22:45):
If this probably Turner's estate, you say, no, we're gonna
go with another product.

Speaker 7 (22:51):
Maybe you're the George Coleman of poop.

Speaker 2 (22:54):
You know, I got my Tina.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
Turner podcast with smaller Jenny Brady.

Speaker 6 (23:05):
Landscapers rank as the fittest trades people, according to a
survey of one thousand trade workers examining physical activity, diet,
and exercise lifting.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
It really is.

Speaker 7 (23:15):
I remember we had a friend who did landscaping for
one summer and just jacked.

Speaker 5 (23:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
Oh yeah jacked from that.

Speaker 6 (23:21):
Well, because you're just non stop.

Speaker 5 (23:22):
Stop wheelbarrows and lifting. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (23:24):
Box the study fell landscaper turned over sun define.

Speaker 4 (23:36):
Job, dave you need a lemonade? Well, they walked.

Speaker 6 (23:47):
Twelve hundred and seventy four steps daily and exercise one
hundred and fourteen minutes weekly outside of work hours. Plumbers
place second with thirty two points, showing the highest self
perceived fitness at eighty percent.

Speaker 4 (23:58):
My son is a plumber, and my god, he's getting
more and more jacked.

Speaker 5 (24:03):
Every Plumbers typically you think that.

Speaker 4 (24:08):
Well, yeah, I mean, but he's doing it like he'll
go to a site and have to crack up a
concrete basement floor for eight hours, bring bags of concrete upstairs. Yeah,
for eight hours without even touching a pipe. That's day one.
Ye know.

Speaker 6 (24:24):
Okay, that's interesting. That's a great point. While they're number two,
and carpenters finished third with twenty five points, averaging about
eleven thousand daily steps and lifting sixteen heavy items per day.

Speaker 2 (24:34):
Yeah, now, I.

Speaker 7 (24:35):
Also know a lot of like of all of these
people that hacked arts all day and yeah.

Speaker 2 (24:38):
We aren't so healthy too, to their face.

Speaker 6 (24:47):
And uh, okay, where bricklayers lift the most heavy items daily?
Yet twenty guess yes exactly, but ranked fifth overall due
to lower scores and other categories. The research revealed eighty
eight percent of trades people consider the work physically demanding. However,
seventy one percent report job related injuries like back problems,
affecting fifty two percent of worker.

Speaker 4 (25:06):
We used to build a lot of homes my my family,
my dad and I, and we had but six or
seven homes, and we'd always get a bricklayer, and the
guy said, your career is done by about forty forty five.
You cannot go beyond that. Your you're wrecked.

Speaker 6 (25:21):
I can only imagine how demanding it is on your body,
which is why they say it's so important for somebody
like a landscape or brick layer to work out outside.

Speaker 4 (25:29):
Of work too.

Speaker 5 (25:30):
You know, the different muscles.

Speaker 6 (25:32):
Too, exactly to support the rest of your body. Right, Yeah.

Speaker 4 (25:35):
I just yesterday I had to say goodbye for the
season to my long guy.

Speaker 8 (25:39):
Oh he's doing sure, he's looking forward to the off season.

Speaker 2 (25:44):
Yeah, and how does that work? Do you give him
like a hug?

Speaker 4 (25:46):
No, I didn't give him a hug, but I got
a little emotional.

Speaker 8 (25:51):
Guy.

Speaker 4 (25:52):
He's a great Yeah. Yeah, he's coming back, I think.

Speaker 7 (25:56):
But he was like a long guy from your old place.

Speaker 5 (25:59):
Guy knew Yeah, so you know, so this is actually
a new relationship.

Speaker 4 (26:02):
It's a new relationship. Maybe that's why I feel so attached.

Speaker 8 (26:06):
But you didn't move that long ago. So he wasn't
even with you for like even a fourth season.

Speaker 2 (26:11):
Find a good long gap, you know?

Speaker 6 (26:13):
You know, right?

Speaker 5 (26:14):
Is that what's going on in one of those situations.

Speaker 4 (26:16):
I mean he would show up and he go, look,
you got some crab grass happening here. Let me get
on that immediately, and it was gone like the next
I'm never embraced. I should have went to the back.

Speaker 6 (26:30):
Of his truck and give him a little backrop.

Speaker 5 (26:33):
Yeah, I should look at him like I look at landscapers.

Speaker 6 (26:43):
So now, what does he do in the off season?
Snow removal well, he mainly does.

Speaker 4 (26:49):
I don't even know how I found him now, to
be honest with you, but he mainly does commercial sites
like office buildings and stuff like that that he cuts normally,
and so he's doing some residential stuff and around him.
And i'd recommend him if.

Speaker 6 (27:01):
You're in my area for we If he can get
rid of crabgrass, what else can.

Speaker 4 (27:06):
He do a day like I'm talking like within a week,
we look like a golf course. Awesome. I don't know
what he did. I hope he loaded with chemicals.

Speaker 5 (27:16):
Did put his little legs up?

Speaker 4 (27:18):
No, no crabs?

Speaker 5 (27:20):
He said, it looked like a golf course. Wow, that
would have been nice. Bunkers some bunkers and that's nice.

Speaker 4 (27:28):
You've turned off Dave. The lemonade guys.

Speaker 1 (27:34):
To go.

Speaker 4 (27:35):
You think you're flirting.

Speaker 2 (27:38):
There's a paper cup of lemonade on crad.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
With Maller Rush, Jenny and Brady.

Speaker 2 (27:47):
Now it's time for Ghost.

Speaker 7 (27:51):
Or Roast on the Morning Hot Tub with Maller Rush,
Jenny and Brady.

Speaker 4 (27:59):
I love all right, all right, well let's bring some
new listeners up to speed. But this game is is
we have somebody on the banana phone who has a
ghost story. Now, it could be real, it may have happened,
we don't know, or it could be all made up
and they're gonna roast Jenny Live on the Arrow by
saying that it's fake.

Speaker 8 (28:20):
Yeah, line is, we know what Jenny's gonna think, right,
Jenny has to make her prediction.

Speaker 4 (28:24):
Is it a ghost story or a roast and true transparency?
RUSSI and I also don't know the end. We don't.
Brady's the only one who's lined up our person on
the banana phone, so he knows. Yeah, so he's gonna
sort of sit back and listen on this one who
is on the banana phone.

Speaker 7 (28:41):
Before we bring Rachel on, I will say that Jenny's
all time record at this game thirty and twenty six.

Speaker 2 (28:47):
He's got thirty times.

Speaker 8 (28:50):
Believe many times, says Jenny guest ghost rather than roast.

Speaker 7 (28:54):
Almost every time, almost every single time. Yeah, Rachel on
the line.

Speaker 6 (28:59):
Let's bring hi guys.

Speaker 4 (29:01):
Hi, Hi, Rachel.

Speaker 9 (29:03):
I love you guys. I'm so excited to talk to you.

Speaker 4 (29:06):
We're very happy that you're here today. All right, so
we're gonna let you set the mood. We'll give you
about a minute or so, Rachel to get your story
out and uh, go ahead, tell Jenny your ghost story.

Speaker 9 (29:19):
All right, Jenny. So when I was younger, my grandparents
lived in this really creepy house. My grandparents are the
sweetest people, but every time I would go there, it
would always be a little bit eerie because as soon
as you stuck in the house, instantly just felt uneasy.

(29:41):
It there was a lot of weird things about that house.
You know, it didn't it didn't keep heat well, it
always seemed cool, and it was just you just felt weird,
almost like there was an energy, kind of heavy weighing
on you. It was the weirdest feeling. And keep in mind,
I'm in my third now and I can remember that
feeling like it was yesterday, and a lot of weird

(30:07):
stuff happened. So me and my family are convinced that
that house was haunted. So, just to give you some examples,
my sister a couple of times woke up to hearing
people walking around and then she'd get up and check
and there was nobody there. And my mom one time
saw somebody walking into the study and there was nobody there.

(30:29):
So a lot of just really creepy things happened in
this house. Okay, So one night, I got up in
the middle of the night, probably around one o'clock, and
I just I just had this really bad feeling. So
my parents were sleeping in the basement, and I went
to go and see them, and so I'm walking towards

(30:50):
the basement, and the basement was always just it's just
a crazy place. So anyways, I'm looking downstairs and it's
completely dark, can't see anything, and all of a sudden,
I see my mom's face, but it was an angry face.
I'm standing there and I go, mom, Mom, and it's

(31:13):
not saying anything, and then all of a sudden it
starts getting closer. In that instant, I could just feel
that something wasn't right. So I screamed at the top
of my lungs and I ran into my grandparents' room
crying because I didn't know what was going on. And
I said, you know, like I could see Mom down
the stairs and she just had this angry look on

(31:33):
her face. And then my grandparents told me, well, your
parents aren't home, they're still out.

Speaker 6 (31:42):
So and I.

Speaker 9 (31:44):
Remember that face today like it was yesterday. I mean,
I see my mom every day, but obviously it wasn't
my mom's I have been a believer.

Speaker 5 (31:54):
Yeah it was.

Speaker 9 (31:56):
That's never happened to me yet.

Speaker 5 (31:57):
No, Jenny. Of course, at that point you had to
ask some follow up the questions.

Speaker 6 (32:02):
Anything you want, Okay, Now, how long did your grandparents
stay in that house? Is the house still in your
family or your you know what's happening?

Speaker 8 (32:09):
Not anymore?

Speaker 9 (32:10):
They had it pretty much since I was born to
about thirteen.

Speaker 6 (32:13):
Okay. Okay, did your grandmar how old were you when
this happened. This happened when I was six six okay,
And did your grandparents ever discuss or talk about any
of their experiences?

Speaker 9 (32:26):
No, there was some weird things like they always had
issues with the heat and things that were just odd. Okay,
but my grandparents were never really.

Speaker 6 (32:36):
Yeah, okay, okay, fair enough.

Speaker 4 (32:38):
Funny way, we.

Speaker 8 (32:39):
Got a text and right at the point that Rachel
was mentioning the house wasn't well insulated, someone said, Jenny's
already thinking ghosts.

Speaker 5 (32:49):
Correct, all.

Speaker 4 (32:53):
You have no more questions.

Speaker 6 (32:54):
I don't think so. No, I absolutely this is a
ghost story. It's real.

Speaker 2 (33:01):
You're saying this is real, for real story for sure.

Speaker 4 (33:10):
Okay, So Jenny says, ghost story. Do you believe you
didn't have any other questions.

Speaker 5 (33:17):
Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 6 (33:18):
I don't when I know, I know.

Speaker 5 (33:21):
You absolutely do.

Speaker 4 (33:22):
Sure it was your butt tingling?

Speaker 6 (33:24):
No, I didn't have a butt tingle, but I didn't
ask my butt that's rush.

Speaker 4 (33:29):
What do you think you you don't know the answer.

Speaker 5 (33:31):
I don't know the answer, very very specific.

Speaker 8 (33:35):
But I find it weird to see a ghost of
the name interface of somebody who is still I find
that weird.

Speaker 4 (33:45):
But also six right, so you're so you gotta.

Speaker 8 (33:48):
Wonder what's going on. I'm gonna say this. I'm going
to say this for Rachel happened. I'll go with ghost
on this one.

Speaker 4 (33:53):
Okay, oh boy, But part of me is like Rachel's
a really good actor. Yeah yeah, and I never know,
like if it's Brady's friend. And I want to really
believe Rachel on this one. So I'm gonna say it's
a ghost.

Speaker 2 (34:13):
Everybody's saying ghost.

Speaker 4 (34:15):
So now, Rachel, you have to swear on a stack
of bibles here whether it's true or false. I'm gonna
ask you the question. Then you just let it out. Okay, ready,
is it? Is it a ghost or a roast story?
It is a she's a good actress.

Speaker 6 (34:45):
That was really good. Well done.

Speaker 7 (34:46):
Yeah, that's so satisfying.

Speaker 4 (34:50):
So now, who's Rachel. Rachel? That is so good, so.

Speaker 6 (35:00):
Specific, the details, you know, the little things you sprinkled
in there. Keep in mind, I'm in my thirties. I
still remember this. I said memory day. Man, you got me.

Speaker 2 (35:11):
Get very close to fifty to fifty.

Speaker 4 (35:13):
Rachel, how much did you plan ahead for that story
and how much was on the fly?

Speaker 9 (35:20):
I did a little bit of planning, but a little bit.

Speaker 6 (35:22):
All right, Okay, well done, good story.

Speaker 4 (35:26):
Congratulations you got Jenny. And happy Halloween.

Speaker 9 (35:30):
Thank you, Happy Halloween.

Speaker 6 (35:32):
Oh I love it. Go through roast his back.

Speaker 4 (35:36):
I think we'll play one more time.

Speaker 2 (35:38):
We'll see wheel, We'll see what happens.

Speaker 5 (35:40):
There's a lot of spaces on the wheel as well.

Speaker 4 (35:43):
We could also just put all the wedges to that
if you want.

Speaker 6 (35:45):
I would love to do that. Please, guys, I love this.

Speaker 2 (35:48):
I love it enough wedges, unlimited wedges. I'll get chiseling.

Speaker 1 (35:56):
The podcast with Moller rush Jenny.

Speaker 7 (36:00):
Because sometimes the headline is better than the story. This
is reckless speculation, leaving responsible journalism to the other guys
with the morning.

Speaker 4 (36:10):
Hot Okay, well, it's a little different approach today.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
What's going on.

Speaker 4 (36:15):
Normally we get really goofy with our reckless speculation. Yeah,
I really want to know what you guys think went
down here.

Speaker 5 (36:22):
I mean we could read the story and actually get
the information.

Speaker 2 (36:26):
That's so much worse.

Speaker 7 (36:27):
Yeah, I guess we could copy and paste the link
into chatch and get that.

Speaker 5 (36:33):
Let's just speculate.

Speaker 4 (36:35):
Yeah, a man in New Mexico claims he went to
a bathroom in a wal Mart and sat on two
syringes with a pink liquid inside. Tests on the liquid
or inconclusive. It's also unclear why the man would use
to toilet in a wal Mart without paying attention to where.

Speaker 2 (36:54):
That's the craziest.

Speaker 6 (36:55):
How do you miss that? Well, maybe he was in
a real rush, you.

Speaker 8 (36:58):
Know, or do you just feel like I remember with
a finger in the Wendy's chili or whatever it was
that they put it in themselves.

Speaker 4 (37:06):
Speculation.

Speaker 8 (37:06):
I feel like this guy did this this on the purpose,
just so he could suit Walmart.

Speaker 2 (37:11):
So how do you sit on it exactly?

Speaker 7 (37:13):
Unless maybe it's like behind where you attach the toilet
seat and sort of like like how sneak attack and almost.

Speaker 6 (37:19):
Is his butt? Then you know, well, if he if
he managed to get poked by it, and it was
way at the back. Yeah, it's at the back.

Speaker 4 (37:28):
You guys, sit down, don't you look?

Speaker 5 (37:29):
I think.

Speaker 6 (37:31):
Especially I'm going to speculate that he had some bad
chili and okay, really was in a rush, you know,
didn't have time and a big butt. Yes, it was
that Walmart chili in the eye and it expired and then.

Speaker 2 (37:52):
He had crazy wow.

Speaker 5 (37:55):
Okay, wow.

Speaker 6 (37:57):
Speculation.

Speaker 2 (37:58):
I just want to talk about the guy that Jenny
thinks he is the least of his concerns of cold.

Speaker 6 (38:05):
Walls, room temperature.

Speaker 2 (38:06):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 7 (38:08):
Maybe maybe this is like something super nefarious, maybe someone
I just don't understand how you would well like attach
it there, how you have it where no one would
would notice? And like you said, who's going to a
public bathroom and not at least looking if there's like
if the seat is like you're in silvery sky, you know,

(38:28):
yeah hover.

Speaker 6 (38:29):
Yeah, I have to have some pretty strong leg.

Speaker 4 (38:32):
Yeah, thank you.

Speaker 5 (38:36):
Yeah, I guess.

Speaker 2 (38:38):
Yeah, you haven't hovered in a public.

Speaker 5 (38:41):
I understand that.

Speaker 8 (38:42):
I just this this strikes me as being Yeah, I
don't think somebody.

Speaker 4 (38:46):
I don't think girls hover as much as guys do.

Speaker 2 (38:48):
I don't think girls hover more often than girls.

Speaker 6 (38:50):
It depends on the bathroom. Yeah, and you do you
scan the seat.

Speaker 4 (38:54):
Yeah, but I don't think. Maybe I'm wrong, but just
good to sit more than guys, I know, but I
don't want to get graphic. I don't know if a
lot of girls sky like hover yeah number two, maybe.

Speaker 6 (39:07):
I don't think most people do.

Speaker 2 (39:09):
I think the public bathrooms sometimes. I mean, if that's
if that's the only.

Speaker 6 (39:13):
Option, well then you're just I see what you're doing
is scanning the seat for for p or anything weird
and if it's if it's not good syringes. Yeah, and
if it's not good, you go to a different stall.
That's what I would do.

Speaker 2 (39:23):
Yeah, there's no other you look like, if.

Speaker 4 (39:29):
You come out of one's on then go in.

Speaker 8 (39:31):
Everybody that they're like, I would understand that, Yeah, you
would just wait.

Speaker 6 (39:37):
Yeah, just wait.

Speaker 4 (39:39):
If I'm in there, not with Jenny, but like let's
say Rush it comes out of one stall and then
he goes into the next stall. I myself then wait
for the second stall.

Speaker 8 (39:48):
I don't go into the wouldn toilet paper cover it?
If somebody is leaving the stall, I'm not going in, No,
because I think, Okay, well there's a reason and I
don't want to see it.

Speaker 4 (39:57):
So yeah, would you go to a third stall?

Speaker 6 (40:01):
Yeah? Probably think I've gone to a fourth Yeah. If
you get like a hockey game and like for example,
you know it's thousands of people, like, you've got twenty options.
I'm not stopping to find a clean seat.

Speaker 2 (40:14):
Yeah, well you're you're not going to sell on someone
else's nest.

Speaker 6 (40:17):
No, as if.

Speaker 2 (40:20):
You're building a nest, undo your nest.

Speaker 6 (40:22):
Yes, you don't.

Speaker 5 (40:23):
Flush your nest, right, actually leave their nest.

Speaker 2 (40:27):
Yeah, you've never seen a nest.

Speaker 4 (40:29):
If Jenny's going to her fourth stall, yeah, does it
also not look like Jenny's going to stollen ping over
the seats, I wouldn't.

Speaker 5 (40:37):
Have stopped that.

Speaker 6 (40:39):
Yeah, well I'm peeing quickly then, I guess because it's
just a quick glance and you're out. You know, the
door is barely closed.

Speaker 2 (40:45):
Here has a wild suggestion.

Speaker 7 (40:47):
They say, when it's like really dirty, lock the door,
then pass underneath so no one else goes in the
dirty one.

Speaker 6 (40:53):
Crawl No, No, I mean I guess you could do
to the paper hand nests. You don't have to touch
the ground.

Speaker 5 (41:03):
Yeah, But I mean if you're thinking, hey, this is gross.
I know what I'll do. Crawl in the bathroom.

Speaker 7 (41:07):
Floor, your employee has to crawl back under and then
yet that also hand nests, and then suddenly it's Charlie's
you look like a crazy Yeah, but you're you hope
the stall next door is empty, But if it's.

Speaker 4 (41:24):
Not, I'd rather syringe eye.

Speaker 2 (41:32):
That's what happened.

Speaker 4 (41:35):
There's speculation.

Speaker 1 (41:38):
The Hot podcast with Lawler, Rush, Jenny and Brady.

Speaker 6 (41:43):
There are things that pretty much everyone would acknowledge us
awesome right like, but some stuff isn't as universal, and
people on line are listing the things they just don't
get the appeal of at all. Okay, so let's see
if you guys just don't get the appeal of these things.
They include social spaces where the music is too loud
to talk to any.

Speaker 4 (42:01):
Don't don't get it, okay, I like yelling at people.

Speaker 5 (42:04):
I don't like you're.

Speaker 6 (42:04):
Only getting half the conversation. You're not really engaged.

Speaker 8 (42:07):
You can't you spend so much time just nodding thinking
you followed.

Speaker 7 (42:12):
Along, maybe even at like a like a bar, though
you know, don't be too.

Speaker 6 (42:16):
Loud, no, like you want to be able to converse.

Speaker 4 (42:19):
If you're dancing and stuff. I got I get that.
But just like a pub win singer on talking.

Speaker 6 (42:23):
Yeah exactly, Yeah I have music just yeah exactly. Being
mean just to seem cool, Well yeah, who thinks that,
I know, no.

Speaker 2 (42:32):
Likes it is cool?

Speaker 5 (42:35):
You want to be mean?

Speaker 6 (42:37):
Sports betting, well, hey, now I may not get it.

Speaker 7 (42:41):
It depends now if you're you know, be in the market. Yeah,
I mean problem I five bucks here and there.

Speaker 8 (42:46):
Yeah, I mean for some people that's how they they
stay interested in the sport.

Speaker 5 (42:50):
Yeah, I don't. I don't really do that.

Speaker 8 (42:52):
I mean I generally stay interested, like I find with
like fantasy football, for example, I care more about games
that my teams aren't when you know I'm doing that,
and that's that's betting, and that's sports betting. So like
I get the idea of it, but I.

Speaker 2 (43:06):
Do get it.

Speaker 7 (43:06):
Like if you're if you're watching sports with your friends
and you really don't care.

Speaker 2 (43:10):
If you don't care, a couple of bucks and it's
kind of interesting.

Speaker 6 (43:14):
That's how I enjoy any sport that I'm not really
that into is by betting. Uh, strip clubs also on
the list. Yeah, I don't understand that.

Speaker 4 (43:21):
I can't remember the last time. While yeah, I would
even argue, I don't even are there any even open
around anymore?

Speaker 5 (43:28):
Oh yeah, I'm sure.

Speaker 4 (43:29):
Yeah, because back in the day there was like many,
there are many. It was a thing, right, I think
I would have said in our area there was probably
ten strip joints. We oh yeah, really, well if you
count on like over the side.

Speaker 6 (43:42):
Okay, yeah, okay, okay.

Speaker 4 (43:45):
Would you like me to name the moment?

Speaker 6 (43:49):
I know, the one that I think you're talking about,
only because it had the weirdest name that just sounded so.

Speaker 4 (43:54):
Which one?

Speaker 6 (43:55):
I know what you're What's what I'm talking about? Yeah?
That one? Oh yeah, like it just sounded so.

Speaker 4 (44:04):
But that's not how it spelled.

Speaker 6 (44:05):
No, no, no, no, no, oh I didn't know that.

Speaker 4 (44:08):
Yeah French.

Speaker 5 (44:09):
Yeah, I can't understand why you were thinking. But it
wasn't that. No, no, no, no, it wasn't. It wasn't derogatory.

Speaker 4 (44:15):
There wasn't a character on the sign that like a pig.

Speaker 9 (44:20):
Really, yeah, it's better, Yeah, that's.

Speaker 5 (44:26):
That wouldn't be nice.

Speaker 6 (44:29):
Worshiping a celebrity, like, yeah, worshiping is different.

Speaker 4 (44:33):
We're in the thick of swift. He's worshiping tailor now.

Speaker 6 (44:37):
Also, don't don't shoot the messenger here. Taylor Swift also
made the list. Someone said, no hate at all. I
just don't get the hype for music is so bland
and repetitive. That said, she's a great performer and business
woman to his own.

Speaker 7 (44:49):
Sure, I think it's also fun to be like caught
up in something and to have a community and to
when it's like largely a positive community.

Speaker 2 (44:55):
I think that's sure. That's also fun.

Speaker 6 (44:57):
This is a stupid list. Somebody said, Reality to TV,
how dare you? And how dare you?

Speaker 2 (45:03):
With this one?

Speaker 6 (45:04):
Competitive eating competitions? I get sucked down on TikTok.

Speaker 7 (45:10):
Tina Katina eats kilos, Jenny, you could have given me
five hundred guesses what you're going to bring up?

Speaker 2 (45:16):
Something less competitive eating?

Speaker 4 (45:19):
Competitive eating?

Speaker 2 (45:20):
Do you watch?

Speaker 6 (45:21):
I watched Shoots I think is her name, and Katina
Anda's boyfriend Randy, Oh yeah, and it's all like time.
It just blows my mind. I get right and through
all your still you can get on the train. I
look at that and I go, how are you enjoying
that the whole time? Like I kind of hate watching
for sustenance trendy water bottles also on the list, and

(45:46):
leaving the house that made me laughed. Overrated I get it.

Speaker 4 (45:51):
Yeah, is it leaving? Is that overrated?

Speaker 6 (45:55):
Yes, there's a.

Speaker 2 (45:57):
Whole world out there once in a while.

Speaker 5 (46:00):
Home is underrated.

Speaker 4 (46:01):
I can say that, but truly it would be awful
to stay home all the time.

Speaker 2 (46:05):
At that point, it's prison.

Speaker 6 (46:08):
Well, how confused your prison?

Speaker 2 (46:12):
Thank you just heard.

Speaker 3 (46:13):
Tell a friend friend, They can listen to the Hot
Tough Podcast with Maller, Rush, Jenny and Brady Wherever podcasts
are found.

Speaker 1 (46:19):
Follow the Gang on socials for more fun at Maller
Maller at One True Rush and Hot Flash Jenny, and
at Brady Jones Radio.

Speaker 3 (46:27):
The Hot Tough Podcast a part of the sting Ray
podcast Network
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