Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
What would you talk about on your on your podcasts show, Hey,
Scott start Yeah, I mean you have something pressing on
(00:25):
your mind? Well I do. I have a question. How
believable is it when somebody says I didn't see your text?
I think it's a load of bullshit because you always
see a text. You may not respond to it right away,
But how do you not see it? As someone gets
a lot of texts during the day, I can tell
you sometimes I like glance over ship and then it
(00:46):
just becomes a blue dot that's all the way down
and it's off of the top fold of my page.
So yes, come in right, No, No, okay. So like
sometimes if I'm having a conversation with you, let's say, Scotty,
and it's open to art text, and then you reply
and I am not looking at my phone and then
I just like X out of it and go to
something else. The text came through, but I didn't get
(01:07):
the notification because it was open in the conversation, and
then I miss it. That happens a little red number
on the texting, but he won't show see if you
like Reddy. What she's saying is is that if you've
got the screen open on the text message and you
text me, it doesn't show up as a badge and
the screens already open. But like, let's say I lay
the phone down, I look away and it locks and
(01:28):
then and then I then I get another notification I
opened that up. I never see that you texted me.
I've had that happen a couple of times, but that's
in this case because I texted Nate on Saturday morning.
Oh he doesn't check text message. And last night, you know,
I asked him if he was coming in today because
he hadn't been feeling well, and he's like, oh, sorry,
I never saw your text. And I don't believe it
(01:49):
because I actually hold on, hold on, let the man
come defend himself. No, I think Nate actively ignores us.
There's that you don't have that problem, and you want
podcast up with this question. Yeah, I just I just said.
I don't know how believable it is when somebody says
I didn't see your text and I got it. I
didn't see. I do it all the time. I don't
(02:09):
see if I put the phone on the other side
of the room. Sometimes my watch even goes off and
I ignore it because I'm doing something else, and then
I forget to check it, and then later on I go,
oh my gosh, that's right, somebody texted me. Let me
go along. It's generally generally somebody doesn't see your text
when you're asking them to do something or something like that.
That's when they don't see it. Well, Scotty, there's a
difference between I didn't see your text and I didn't
(02:31):
see that you texted. In other words, people can see
you texted but then not read it, which case they
didn't see your text. It's no different than my alarm
didn't go off, Yes it did. You shut it off
and went back to sleep and forgot on Thursday. Hold on,
on Thursday morning, we had a blackout on the street
and alarm Okay, well that counts then No. But when
it's just a regular day and your alarm is always
(02:52):
said it didn't not go off, don't use your phone
for your alarm. Yeah, exact, clearly, not scary, that's why
I did wake up. Well, maybe you should use that.
I mean, it's technology because you're getting more sleep with
the way I got to sleep. And by the way,
scary use a house phone, So you really shouldn't talk
my house phone is only a backup. Yeah, you make
(03:15):
everybody call you on your house phone, because do me
a favorite call me on my house phone during the day,
my battery gets drained during the morning show. I come home,
I put my phone on my charger, and everybody else
should call me on my But even so, you call
scariest house phone and gets transferred to a cell phone anyway,
So that's right. What he makes you call the landline.
And you know what, half the time I'm on the phone, everybody,
(03:39):
he took one. He comparing apples and bananas to Scary
said use technology. Scary said technology to help. Gandhi backed
me up here, Gandhi tuned out when you guys started yelling.
I'm not sure whoever, Alyn boy, go ahead and stop
your video. There we go. That's fine. You can go first. Oh,
(04:04):
now it's brought this to a screeture. Technically, a landline
is technology, but we're talking about trying to wake yourself
up using an alarm. Yeah, the phone doesn't work for me.
I'm a I'm a heavy sleeper, so I need I
need for Alexa to go off with with loud in music.
I have a thing under my pillow that vibrates. That's
how that's how I get up in the morning. What's
(04:26):
under your pillow? It's a thing that goes from the
alarm clock. It's a round disc and it vibrates morning. No,
I do not. I'm not laying in a pool of water.
I would choke myself with it. I wouldn't be I'd
be I'd be sitting on the pillow every time the
alarm went off. Does anybody Nobody knows? What does everybody have,
(04:50):
with the exception of Brody, use their phones for as alarms? Yes, yeah,
my old BlackBerry that still works. Yeah, the alarm works. Yeah, okay,
I use my Apple Watch did too, and just and
makes no noise for the person sleeping next to you.
Do you guys do five minute intervals of the alarm
for like like a half hour's time. Now I do
(05:11):
fifteen and fifteen once and I jump up. Oh wow.
I have a few separate alarms and they all sound differently,
so I know based on the sound of my alarm
how late it's getting. That's cool. That's oh. It drives
Brandon insane. He's like, I don't I don't understand this.
Get out of it. But let me ask you, Scottie,
if if if I wasn't or if I was able
(05:33):
to eat solid food on Saturday, what what would we
have done and where would we have gone for dinner? Oh?
I don't know. We were just looking for a place
to have dinner Saturday night, so we figured we'd come
drive up to you and have dinner. You know. Oh
that's what got ignored. An invite. Yeah, it wasn't really. Yeah, No,
he didn't invite him, don't know. No, Scotty just asked
for where to go, that's all. He didn't take that
it was coming. No, no, no no, I said, if you
(05:53):
guys are doing anything tonight, would be happy to drive
up and have dinner if you guys want to go somewhere,
if you're feeling okay, you know. But I just feel
I felt like he just didn't want to, so he said,
I never saw he was sick. Yeah, I'm sorry he
did not want to be in my company. I was
on I'm on the toilet, and then I would have
been like, all right, yeah, but did you want me
to text you that. I've tried to actively not text
(06:15):
people when I'm on the toilet now, just because so
many people get grossed out by thank you. So nobody
needs to know. Nobody wants. I don't mind if you
tell me you're on the toilet, but I don't need proof.
Like you know, Greg, Greg Tea worked here, he would
send proof that he was. I don't need that. I
don't need I believe you. That's one of those areas
that I just need to know. I just need to know.
Did you actually see it on Saturday morning? You know what,
(06:37):
I honestly don't remember when I saw it. To be
brutally honest, he was sick, he had a stroke. Give
the man a break, Okay, I'm just curious. Yeah, I
don't remember when I said all right, because I just
feel like it's not a valid excuse. I would never
say I didn't see your text, because I mean I
saw it. I just didn't want to respond to you
at that point. But anything after this, though, Nate, you
can't use that excuse like the next one. You can't
(06:59):
be like I didn't see it, like because he's gonna
be like, all right, that's b s. But there are
plenty of texts that you don't see, Like I didn't
see a text from somebody asking me a question that
I definitely would have wanted to answer. So I don't
know how I missed that text. I think it was
because we were just having a conversation. Then I navigate
away from it and that text came in. So when
I saw it, I was like, shit, I got to
(07:19):
get back to Also, sometimes you're busy doing something right
and you see it and you're like, oh, I'll get
back to that later, and then later comes and you're like, oh, funk,
I never got back to that. That's not I didn't
see it. That's right. I agree with you there. I've
been there too, But you saw it. He's not gonna
let it go, okay, So let me rephrase that I
saw it, but I didn't want to reply to you
(07:40):
at that moment. Thank you. That's okay. I have a question,
then you guys can help me answer. So someone tweeted
something stupid at me. Right, we talked about what it was.
I could say it. I should I say what it is?
It's nothing, that's that bad, all right. We were talking
about Disney and I said, Disney is really expensive and
hopefully someday I'll be able to afford it and go
(08:01):
do it. Some idiot tweets at me, Bill Hill, you
can't afford it. Google says that your net worth is
a million dollars and you make a hundred thousand dollars
a year, which is just stupid on so many levels.
So I replied to that tweet and said, you idiot,
I make way more than that, which is a joke.
We're just messing around it with a joke. Absolutely, yeah,
(08:24):
But I think a lot of people don't understand that
I'm joking, and now they think that I'm the one
being an asshole. A lot of people don't understand sarcasm days,
especially over text. It doesn't sarcasm doesn't translate over over text,
or it doesn't and it doesn't translate to actually younger generations.
They don't understand it. So if it's someone that's twenty
(08:46):
years old fighting with you, they don't understand what sarcasm is.
It's it's really is a lost thing that articles on
this because even people that avidly listen to this show
not know that we're just messing around. I don't know everything,
but obviously, Andy, I mean, you read that in a
certain way, right, like I make way more than that.
I make way more than that. But even even if
(09:09):
God made way more than that. Right. People don't know,
like if you have student loans, if you support your family,
it doesn't mean you have the disposable income. You could
make fifty dollars to have no expenses because your parents
pay for everything, and then go to Disney World. You
don't have anybody. It's nobody's business. Things to me was
(09:31):
just funny, just because the net worth thing, we all
know how stupid that is and how far off that
is from like anything. And then the salary so far
off from anything too. It was just like, what is this?
Thank you for hitting me with your stupid facts from
the internet. It is a great point when you dissect it.
You're right. If you made five hundred thousand dollars a
year and your and your bills are four seven thousand dollars,
you ain't going to Disney. Yeah, and let me tell you,
(09:53):
and scared you might feel this too as a single
person with no children. Man, the government comes for us,
come to get their money. No idea, Nate too. Yeah,
but even if you think about the front, like Gandhi
would really have to play a front, So she's going
to not go to Disney World her entire life, then
(10:14):
make millions upon millions of dollars and then come on
air and say, you know, I can't afford it, Like
the the idea of that is just insane, though I
would totally do that. What are you talking about? I
want Disney to bring me out for free. I'm so poor,
I make no money. Well, I will not argue with
the fact that Disney is fucking expensive. It's so expensive
(10:35):
it's insane. I mean my parents, my parents went down
there and you know, they were telling me the price
of the tickets now, and I'm like, are you kidding me?
Because I remember when they were like, maybe what like
seventy day are cheaper. But what makes it craziest? You
think about how crowded it is on every I mean,
(10:56):
I don't care if you go on Monday and it's
forty degrees outside it is it's and just schools in it.
It's still slammed. So they made it cheaper, it would
be even busier. Number one, But number two, I don't understand.
Like I see when we were there on Friday, I
saw a family man and a woman and they had
six kids with them. Six get in. What do they do?
(11:17):
Did they rob a bank on the way in like,
how did they six to a movie? Right? What's your discount?
What's the Florida discount? Um? I think right now you
can get a Florida resident rate. I think it's a
hundred and thirty nine dollars a day. That's not even
a But that's why. This is why I say, if
you've never been to Disney and it's your first time,
(11:38):
it's not worth paying the money because there's so many
things that you still cannot do that you normally would
have been able to do pre pandemic. How much is
it go ahead and scary? My question is how much
is it if you're not a Florida resident because I
don't know these things. I'm looking right now. So the
Florida resident, they have Disney weekday tickets right now. You
can get two days for one four nine two days,
(12:00):
so Copper that is one park. You can go two days.
You can go to two different parks. Now you can
get if your afford a resident, you can get annual
passes which are cheaper. Does a kid count as a person,
Like what's the ticket? Like, where's the cut off of
(12:23):
like a discount for kids? I don't think there is
These kids like wearing the trench coats standing on. It's
not going to have the same experience. They can go
on a lot of stuff cut in half. A standard
theme park take up a seat. A standard theme park
ticket has no park copper options or anything. Is one
(12:45):
oh nine per per person per day, um person per day.
Also added Genie bus now, which is an add on.
There's fifteen per person exactly, so you could buy a
park copper which is already fifty dollars more, and then
you add on Genie plus when you want to get
that on top of it to be the speed Past,
but that they don't have that anymore. The Fast Past
(13:06):
is no more and that does not include some rides,
So do not include space the rides that you want
right or seven dwarves my train. You're gonna need another
millionaire job. This is crazy. I just googled Scottie bes
net Worth by the way, eighteen million. It says, maybe
that's my head is different differently. I'm not inspired to
(13:35):
go to Disney anymore. At the beginning of this, I
would go anyway. I'll play any amount of money. It's ridiculous.
But they get me coming and going and line for
two and a half hours. How many rides am I
gonna get on it? That's the that's the thing. I mean,
there are things you can buy and do, but it
all costs money. There's a way to beat the system,
like you gotta map it out. You can't just be like, oh,
(13:57):
I'm just gonna walk and stand online for two hours.
It's gonna do that. Then you didn't think it through,
or like a broken or something front in the boot.
The boot that doesn't work anymore? Oh yeah, it does.
It doesn't ye it does. You go to the front
of the line and then they tell you to come
back with the fast past time and they let you
use it anymore. You plus, now I'll meet Universal. It
(14:23):
still works there. Yeah, but Universal is tough because the
little kids can't do too much. In Universal, they can
do some. I don't have any little kids, anybody. I'm
just speaking in past Disney. I don't need to Disney.
I'll be there. I don't care. Charge me what you want.
I'm coming anyway. All right? Are we doing? Fifteen minute
(14:55):
morning show