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May 4, 2021 16 mins

Elvis wanted to know how Nate do with yesterday's show. If everyone were to host the show, what would it be like!

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
What would you talk about on your on your podcasting show,
the fifteen Minute Morning Show Podcast. Hi, guys, Hello, thanks
for filling in yesterday and doing an excellent job. I

(00:23):
think I should take more days off. I was ever
keeps you happy and in a good mood. I was
loving all five seconds of the show I listened to yesterday.
It was great. Oh my gosh, I'm in a great
mood today. Excellent. So anyway, thank you for hosting Straight
and A. So do you guys want to talk to
straight and about any constructive criticism he may need to hear. Oh,
I actually gave Gandhi gave me some good I actually

(00:46):
would appreciate any critiques, not that I'm gonna be doing
this along. What did Gandhi give you as advice? She said,
I would like the record to reflect I was asked first.
It wasn't like I just came out like hey dated
like ajut so you know what your problem is. No,
I thought he did a great job. Because Gandhi's worked

(01:09):
with other shows. I kind of wanted her opinion because she's,
you know, sat in on other jocks and stuff like that. Becuse,
I think you did a great job. Your flu is perfect.
Is this a compliment? Sandwich? If I have to say anything,
I'd say more energy or owning slash opening the brakes,
you're very calming. I like jarring people. That's avery good

(01:29):
advice because listening back, I listened back for a second,
I hate listening to my own voice. I'm like, yeah,
I do sound a little low key, don't I. Well,
I think he's just so calm. You're very calm because
you have to be to keep the rest of us
in check for most of the time. So when you
open the brakes, he's very calm. And I always thought
that when you open the brakes you kind of have
to hit with energy to get people awake and know

(01:49):
that you're back and that kind of thing. Aside from that,
I think he does a great job. You're like a
four out of ten, Like coming out of the brakes
on everybody ask for criticism, and as soon as I
give criticism, no, I think I think you're a little
sing songy sometimes. Really here people, Okay, So the difference

(02:15):
between me on the show when Elvis is hosting is
I'm trying I'm more of a character, right, but when
you're the host, you kind of have to be the
straight guy, no offense, Elvis um and and let other
people play off of you. Right right, So even though
you do you are good at doing both, Elvis, it's

(02:36):
you kind of have to just let other people be
the comic relief characters and Pope fun at them. And also,
remember yesterday you use the word lovely three times. It
just breaks tough man. It's it's I haven't hosted in
however long, and I think he just didn't want to

(02:56):
insult people because last time he insulted someone, so this
time he was like, you're a little insulting. I think
I think he did great and I did listen more
than five seconds, and I thought everyone sounded like you're
having a lot of fun. And that's because I've asked
Elvis before. After I host, I'm like, hey, so I
need your opinion, and you're like, I don't know, just
do it. That's really my advice. Just I mean, here's

(03:21):
the it's so you make it look so easy that
you can't even explain it because it's so second nature.
It's like breathing. You'd be like, I don't know, you
just read you know, hey, just do it. I don't know.
Thank you for enough but it would be silly for
me to try to tell you what I think you
should do, because I want you to do what you
want to do, because that's what makes you unique. And

(03:43):
that's the thing about the show. Everyone on the show
has a unique personality, has their own point of view,
and sometimes we don't always agree, but it's needed, you know. So, Froggy,
for instance, if you're hosting the show today, what would
what would you do? Like? What kind of show would
you host? Well? I mean, I love the games that
we play. I love the nostalgian games, like when we
played the nineties game or the nineties music, stuff like that.

(04:04):
And then I love when we talk about just when
we talked a few minutes ago about the names that
we call each other. I love stuff like that. It's fun,
it's real life, and it's relatable and people can talk
about it later on in the day because it's real
life stuff that's happening to people. I love the stuff
like that that we do. Right, I was talking to
Froggy yesterday, by the way, and before you know what,
we got off the phone. It was forty minutes like

(04:25):
we we like almost hosted our own sports podcast yesterday
over the phone and before and I was like, where
did forty minutes go? Like I was just talking to
Froggy like it was nothing. It felt like two minutes.
I would love to play golf of bonding. Now that
we're doing this, this is a lot better your relationship
as friends. Yeah, Gandhi's now a golfer. Yeah. I don't
know about all that. It took me a long time

(04:45):
to figure out how to actually make contact with the ball.
But now that I figured it out, it's over. Now
I'm going to be great in my house. Does Lisa
want to you know? Well she said before, like, well
maybe I could learn, And I'm like, that's it's a okay,
Like it's it's long and it's this. I'm like, you know,
it's not really Now I'm saying you like to say, well,

(05:06):
Brandon's got the patients to teach Gannie. Why I can't
IM like, oh, oh okay, but you to tell Lisa this.
It wasn't Brandon that had the patients to teach me.
It's me being super irritating and when I cannot do something,
I make him take me until I can figure it out.
Because I was watching everyone else at the ball, like wait,
a minute. How come they can all do it and
I can't do it? So I wanted to do it myself.

(05:26):
Look to know that I could and it works. It
does look easy, It's not easy at all. Third thing
you've learned over quarantine, golf, painting and guitar um. Yeah,
I mean their works in progress, all of it. I
haven't learned any of it. I'm learning, but yeah, working
on it. I love that. You know, at some point

(05:48):
we take it from me some point, At some point
you give up learning things and you have to force yourself.
You do you your drive to learn new things for
some reason to evaporates sometimes if you're not careful, and
so I have to force myself. You can go read
up on things, to set time aside to read or
listen to a book or whatever, because otherwise I just
sit there and I don't know what I would do.

(06:08):
I would just sit there and then into space. I
think some people think like if I haven't done it
by now, if I haven't learned it by now, I'm
not going to be able to learn it. Or I
you know, I don't have the patience, which you really
do if you think about it, and you really can
still learn it. I have an idea, Daniel. You made
me think of something. Why don't we all take on
a challenge and learn something new? Okay. It could be

(06:29):
a language, it could be a guitar, it could be
a trumpet, it could be you know, uh, oral sex.
Who wants to way too fast for that? I'll be Okay.

(06:52):
When's the last time you learn something new and you're like, wow,
this is great. I'm so happy I did this. I'll
get back to you on that, okay. Okay, to be fair,
I would have to be back to you on that
as well. I think it's something you sometimes have to
force yourself to do. You gotta like, Okay, I'm gonna

(07:14):
learn how to change the times. I feel like I
just did that with the kids with playing ball, Like
I never like go out and play baseball and know
how to catch and pitch and all that stuff. And
Spencer was teaching me, and I'm like, oh my gosh,
I'm actually catching the ball. I caught more balls than
I dropped. This is amazing, Like maybe this is something

(07:34):
I could have done. Maybe I could have played softball.
Like all these things go in my head and I
get excited. Now shot up Froggy. You know, I didn't
mean have you caught more balls? Or dropping? Have you
done more? Of you guys make it so dirty. Froggy

(07:55):
is usually the first person to make it dirty. Yeah,
or I think we all the dirty thought, but Froggy
responds to the correct correct So I apologize. I'm sorry, Danielle,
and my son is standing actually right next to me.
Froggy's talking about me dropping balls. Don't listen. It was
more catching balls than dropping whatever. Stupid. So is this

(08:17):
a really video? The kind of show you like? Frog?
Just us sitting around, just bullshitting? Is that what it is?
I do because I think it's fun. I think it
shows off, like you said earlier, we each have an
individual personality. None of us are the same, and it
shows off our individual personalities. But there's little pieces of
our personality. They're all very similar as well. It's Danielle

(08:38):
and I. As much as Danielle likes to call me
slap nuts and tell me to shut the funk up
all the time, Danielle and not hear a lot of like, man,
let me tell you that's it's it's very scary. It's
very scary, you know. I find each one of you
very interesting and unique. As I've said before, the person
who I'll never quite figure out. This person is that

(09:01):
that painting on the wall it's always kind of crooked
and you straighten it up and you turned back around.
Is Scotty b Yeah. Art. No, I think it's a
compliment when I just said about you, but it does
anyone agree? Definitely is very unique in division. Whatever he
says something, I'm like shocked. I'm like, oh my gosh,

(09:22):
I didn't know that, or I can't believe he just
said that. Like always always weird things I just happened
to be over my life. I mean, I don't feel
like I'm different than anyone else. Well, I think that
the things haven't necessarily happened to you as much as
you've made them happen, which does kind of make you
the sideways picture on the wall. You do sort of
walk out in front of the moving bush. It's interestingly,

(09:47):
I love it. Though most of the stuff you've done
we can't even talk about. And about a lot of
stuff you have done, you know, there's a few we can't.
They stopped making that syrup light and you'll get the

(10:10):
whole story. Give me a dollar I'll give you the
whole story, cheap tell he didn't give it. Damn great
story time, Froggy. We have five minutes left. Oh shoot,
really fabulous, Froggy would be your new favorite story. That's

(10:30):
all I'm gonna say. Oh, I've heard the story. I'm
just not going to do that to him. But why
does he bring that ship up? Like? Why do you
bring it up? If you don't want someone to say,
what's syrup? And then you want us to ask like tease?
That's all right because everyone in the room knows the
syrup story at the story. Yes, it is your own ending.

(10:52):
I don't think the syrup story. No, it's better off,
better off. I'm pretty sure you do. Got it on
this podcast, we've done the story. I'm not part of
the syrup story. You're not. And that painting on the

(11:21):
wall it's always crooked is scotty b and I served
it up as a very very high compliment. Well don't
straighten me out, please, Well, no one will be able
to do that. You know what's funny I was is
I think of all of us, the nine of us
that are in this room, I still think that one
of the most not strange, but somebody with the best

(11:44):
stories ever is Uncle Johnny. Like, if you sit down
with and have him tell you stories, he can tell
you some stuff that is it is better than any
story time you've ever heard from anybody ever, absolutely, because
he just he has he has that magical way of
telling the story for And secondly, he has been around
so many years he is he's been in positions that

(12:04):
none of us will ever ever be in a lot
of people have been around many years, but John But
there's a difference. And I learned this saying when I
was after I had my aneurism. There's a difference in
breathing and living. Uncle Johnny lived. He's been here a
lot of years, yes, but let me tell you, he
has packed a ton of entertainment into those years that
he's been here. To have him tell you is unreal.

(12:25):
I don't know if you remember this, but when we
were in Miami one day, you and I and Uncle
Johnny were at the Fountain Blue at nine o'clock in
the morning at a cabana for about an hour and
a half waiting for everybody to show up. I guess
we got the time wrong. And Johnny just sat there
spitballing stories that I had never heard before, and Froggy

(12:45):
and I were just in hysterics laughter for the hour.
Remember that in that same trip in Miami, actually Lisa
went with Uncle Johnny somewhere. They went somewhere for a
couple of hours, and when she got back to the room,
she was NonStop telling me she had the best time.
This story, this story, this story, this, you couldn't believe it.
I love being around a national treasure. We love maybe

(13:07):
write a book. I mean, if he ever thought about
writing a book. We tried that. Uh, and you know,
I just needed someone he needs to sit down and
tell his stories to. I got Monday, figured out the
podcast figured out next week. It's tell the story with
Uncle Johnny. So he'll tell us all the story for
fifteen minutes and podcast done. That's a great idea. Will
be at your house. Yeah, we'll have We'll have Uncle

(13:28):
Johnny on the podcast if we just got to get
him to sign on, and that takes an hour. Any
of the thoughts we want to purge and get out
and they open any concepts anyone would like to investigate
or study. I think Nate did a great job yesterday
and I'm very I know, I know he did. I

(13:49):
don't have to listen to Nate anymore. I know he
does a great job. And his hair looks good now.
His hair out on one thing. Okay, So when he
is telling the story about how he found out you
wanted the day off, he told us that you called him.
But when he said the story, he said, yeah, I
was called me. He said, hello, handsome, I had something

(14:10):
to tell you, like he needed to throw in the
part where you said hello handsome. It was not necessary
to tell the story, but I just had to threaten yes,
it was necessary to Nate. Is that really well? The
text said your first Texas high handsome and maybe you
were buttering me up to take up what's that scary?

(14:39):
When we signed off yesterday, I told Nate, I said,
I gotta say it just and this is frightening. But
it seems so effortless. And I think we got into
this examination of just the way we all approach this show.
There's something that he said for that as opposed to
like somebody who has prep in their hands, and they're saying,

(14:59):
all right, so now we're gonna talk about this, and
I'm gonna say this and you're gonna say that, like,
nobody has ever done that on this show. Everyone. I
think that makes us better people. I don't know. Come
to in our own horn again. We are great. Left
the show. You create a very comfortable environment. It's a
very it's being a natural. Being natural on this show

(15:21):
is easy, and it's very very hard to do for
other people. Well, we've been told we're doing it wrong
all these years. Well, you know, I think they're professionals.
All the professionals are saying, you know what, they don't
get it. Yes, I remember a couple of weeks ago
you called me and you said, hey, funny man, you're
so smart. Just be yourself. That was a dream you had,

(15:45):
right if I'm brilliant. I got a text that said,
don't tell Nate I find you more handsome. But hey,
do you mind doing this favor for me? So that's
how we started the text. Sorry, I can sit here
and just hunk our own. I actually the text last night,

(16:06):
and he insulted me. So I'm just being real. I
sent you this. Okay, read this. It says I'm seriously
the nicest and meanest person you'll ever meet. Now funk
off and have a great day. You're only half of that.

(16:28):
Suld like to get a text back from him, tell
us it took it took hours, but I got one.
I gotta go, we gotta go, we gotta go. Have
a beautiful day. The fifteen Minute Morning Show

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Hosts And Creators

Elvis Duran

Elvis Duran

Danielle Monaro

Danielle Monaro

Skeery Jones

Skeery Jones

Froggy

Froggy

Garrett

Garrett

Medha Gandhi

Medha Gandhi

Nate Marino

Nate Marino

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