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November 15, 2025 122 mins

We uncover dating lies, debate small talk, and learn the origin of “Hello Lady.” Plus, Nate lost feeling in his leg, Gandhi lost patience with bagel complaints, and we found out single women might just have it figured out.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scarce.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
Meet the man who tells the same joke over and
shut the hell up. Hello, I make love to that
cro cheese sandwich. Wait, hold on, uh do you say.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Penis Elvista Wran in the morning show?

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Who had glory and she has the best job in
the world. She's a miracle.

Speaker 4 (00:36):
Order.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
Let's remind everybody for Glorie to talk about florid.

Speaker 5 (00:41):
Hello.

Speaker 2 (00:42):
Hello, Okay, tell everyone what you do for a living,
because it's fascinating, we think.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
Okay, So I go in with the surgeon and I
recover organs, mostly kidneys, but I do lungs, I do liver,
I do heart and kidneys.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Wow, wow, okay, this is important stuff. What do you think, CONDI?

Speaker 6 (01:01):
So, when you say you recover them, are you the
person that's transporting them somewhere else? Are you actually going
in there and getting them out?

Speaker 7 (01:08):
I do both.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
I go in there, I get them out and with
the kidneys, then I clean them, canulate them, put them
on a pump, and I take them back to my
office and I find them a home.

Speaker 6 (01:18):
Oh okay, I have a question.

Speaker 8 (01:20):
I have a question how long? Like I heard that
it has to be like a quick process, like it
has to get on ice really quick some of these organs,
Like how quick is this process of getting it into
somebody else?

Speaker 7 (01:31):
Okay, so.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
Heart, lungs, liver, they will all have a home before
we go into the r so they all know where
they are going, because those will have to be placed
within eight hours of coming out of a body.

Speaker 8 (01:48):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
The kidneys, however, we put them on a pump and
they can last up to twenty four hours and they
do not have a home when they are retrieved because
they are so sized, specific the kidneys, so we wait
until we take those out so that we can measure them,
canulate them, see how well they're pumping, and then we

(02:11):
find them a home.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
Wow, never knew any of this.

Speaker 9 (02:14):
So this is why it's important to always have a
Yetti cooler in the garage.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Right.

Speaker 7 (02:19):
You know, I keep one in the trunk of my
car for emergencies.

Speaker 9 (02:23):
So I must assume that if you have up to
eight hours to get most of those organs moved and
in the recipient, there's obviously there's a major network of
communication going on here.

Speaker 2 (02:34):
Right.

Speaker 7 (02:36):
It's a whole team.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
It's it's a whole team working together because I'm in Indiana,
but Let's say that I have a donor whose heart
perfectly matches a recipient in Texas.

Speaker 7 (02:51):
We have to be in cohoo with Texas, get.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
Them up here in time, and then we have to
wait until that reci the end is basically on the
table and they're ready for that heart.

Speaker 7 (03:04):
Don't call us and say, okay, we're two hours out.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
Then we know that we can take that heart out,
get it on the cooler, get it on the plane,
and get it back to Texas.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
Well, let me ask you this.

Speaker 9 (03:14):
If you have someone coming in let's say from Newark
Airport and it's delayed four hours or I'm sure it
doesn't work that way. I mean, have you ever had
to lose an organ because they just didn't make it
in time?

Speaker 7 (03:25):
We do not, because we have private jets.

Speaker 2 (03:28):
Oh wow, scary, scary. You should donate a kidney you
get to fly on private jet.

Speaker 8 (03:37):
Do you give the organs names, like if you take
somebody's you know, like heart out, do you name it
like Larry the Heart or something.

Speaker 7 (03:45):
We do not, but we should do that. Maybe we'll.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
Danielle always with the very deep probing scientific questions. Ex
little stick of the time. My name is Larry the
heart full of questions.

Speaker 6 (04:01):
Yes, okay, so I have a couple. So one, the
patient always flies to you and you never fly the
organ to the patient.

Speaker 1 (04:08):
No, no, we we will go wherever we are needed.
So let's say that we have a heart here, wherever
the heart is going, that heart team will fly here,
get the heart, and then fly the heart back to
their hospital.

Speaker 6 (04:23):
Okay. And then my other question was, are people just
ready to have surgery at that moment? Like I thought before,
you had some pretty major surgeries. You're not supposed to
eat for a certain amount of time, and there's certain
things you have to prep your body for. But if
you get a heart, you get a heart, do they
just go right?

Speaker 1 (04:40):
And so if you're on the top of that heart list,
you're you already know and most of the people that
are getting the heart are already in the hospital.

Speaker 7 (04:50):
Okay, so they're they're already on the antibiotics and doing
all the things that.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
They need to do. I can't imagine what it would
be like to be sitting there and you're not in
the hospital. But the phone ring said, okay, get down
here now, Yeah, okay, go time. You have your whole
bag packed, which is what they do.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
For kidneys, because kidneys can be like that because, like
I said, they don't have a home. So when they
find a home, they'll call the recipient.

Speaker 7 (05:13):
Saying, hey, we have this kidney, would you like would
you like to come in?

Speaker 1 (05:17):
And they'll say yes, sure, So then they'll drive to
the hospital and get them all prepped and ready.

Speaker 2 (05:23):
This is incredible. By the way, we're talking to Laurie
who we who want a contest from her. That's how
she went a contest with us brother and now we
know one of those fascinating people on earth. This is
just a blessing.

Speaker 10 (05:35):
Yeah, Nate, what do you have for I have so
many questions for you, so o so okay, the first
one I have is is, uh so the family the
recipient family and the family of the donor.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
Do you connect the two of them? Do you like.

Speaker 7 (05:54):
They want to because they're they're believe it or not.

Speaker 1 (05:57):
Are some recipient families who do not want to know
anything about the donor, and there are some that want
to know everything about the donor. So that is a
whole separate group from what I do. But they are
our breathement and aftercare program. They connect those people. But
they write letters back and forth to each other through

(06:17):
our network, so we don't say, hey, this is their address,
this is where they live. You write a letter, you
give it to us, we give it to them, and
then eventually if those people want to meet, they absolutely can.

Speaker 11 (06:28):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
Okay, that's fascinating.

Speaker 10 (06:30):
Second question, so you went back to school at the
age of forty because you decided this was something important
in your life that you.

Speaker 2 (06:36):
Needed to do for you.

Speaker 10 (06:38):
How difficult was going back to school at forty and
what did you leave as a career to do this.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Let me tell you how difficult was my first communications
class I had to take.

Speaker 7 (06:54):
They were like, Okay, we're going to make powerpoints and
we're going to do this, and we're using Google Docs
and all of these things.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
I turned to the senior in high school that.

Speaker 7 (07:03):
Was sitting beside me, and I was like, what is that?
I don't know what that is. I'll help you. I
had no idea what I was doing. It was a mess.
It was a mess.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
I have a question, what Well, she hasn't answered the
question yet. Yeah, but that is.

Speaker 10 (07:20):
Such determination that you had to say, I'm going to
do this.

Speaker 2 (07:25):
My god, you're such an inspiration. I know. I love that.
But what what career did you leave? What career did
you leave to do this?

Speaker 7 (07:32):
I worked for an optalmologist. Okay, I was a receptionist
in an opstalmologist office.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
Wow, look at that. Wow, Yeah, amazing.

Speaker 1 (07:41):
So when my husband passed away, what inspired me to
do this was I received a letter from the lady
who received my husband's heart. And I can't tell you
how many times I read that letter to at least
two hundred times.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
I read that say, I mean, what did it say?
Just the headlines that really stick out.

Speaker 7 (08:01):
It was just like, thank you so much. This was
such an unselfish thing for you to do.

Speaker 1 (08:08):
You went through this horrible tragedy but still had compassion
to help me. And now I am able to my
grandchildren grow up. I was able to watch my daughter
get married. I was able to do all.

Speaker 7 (08:21):
Of these things because of your husband.

Speaker 8 (08:23):
Wow, that's incredible.

Speaker 7 (08:25):
Yeah. And I was like, oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
And so I decided right then and there that I
didn't know how, I didn't know what, I didn't know
what it was going to entail, but donation was going
to be a part of my life in some way.

Speaker 2 (08:41):
I cannot imagine what it's like to have a doctor
look you in the eye and say you're at the
end of your life unless and hear that, unless someone
has an organ to keep you alive. Now, what we're gonna.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
Say the very tragic parts of the story that I
left out was my husband and I were together for
eight years and we never talked about getting married. We
were just happy, we were dating, we were you know,
we lived together.

Speaker 7 (09:11):
We were just happy whatever. And on a Tuesday he
looked at me and he said, what are we doing
this weekend? And I said I don't think we have
any plans. And he said, let's get married. And I
was like what, And he said, let's get married. So
we flew to Destin. We got married on the beach,
just the two of us, and sixteen days later he

(09:32):
passed away.

Speaker 2 (09:33):
Oh so God.

Speaker 7 (09:35):
Yeah, so we were only married for.

Speaker 1 (09:37):
Sixteen days, but that was definitely God telling him to
take care of me.

Speaker 6 (09:42):
I'm so sorry to Wow.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
Your story is beyond fascinating.

Speaker 9 (09:48):
You have so many different layers of storytelling and things
to learn, just scary.

Speaker 2 (09:54):
You had a question for Laurie.

Speaker 12 (09:55):
Yeah, I was just wondering if there was ever a
situation where somebody was waiting for like something liver for instance,
and then then all of a sudden the liver comes
out of the other person and you're like, ooh, yeah,
we can't use this because maybe the person like had
a life of like you know, drinking too much or something.
Has there been an organ where you guys are like
you got your hopes up to be able to use it,
It's like.

Speaker 2 (10:15):
Yeah, I can't.

Speaker 7 (10:17):
Absolutely absolutely.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
We had some lungs just a few weeks ago that
we do cat scans and bronx and all of the
testing beforehand, nothing showed up on the test, and then
we got in and there was a nodule on the
lung that turned out to be a cancerous nodule. Before
we can't use any of the organs.

Speaker 2 (10:34):
Then I guess, I guess my liver won't work. I'm
not going to remove myself from the liver list. Gandhi,
what do you have for for LORI?

Speaker 6 (10:47):
Okay? I think it's a question that that is the
biggest urban legend, maybe of all time. Is it true
that if you have organ donator or donation on your
license you're an organ donor that doctors will let you
die so that they can get your organs.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
No, this is so funny that people think that you
you come into the yard, they don't look at your
license and go yeah, put him over and you know
I don't left.

Speaker 7 (11:11):
He's gonna go to organ donations.

Speaker 6 (11:12):
I just wanted to debunk that one because we hear
it all the time.

Speaker 2 (11:18):
No, I'll tell you what. We have people texting in not.

Speaker 7 (11:21):
Even know that you are an organ donor. Good you're
on events and way after.

Speaker 9 (11:26):
Because the rumor out there is it's a possibility. People
were texting us saying you should ask Laurie.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
About whether or not well.

Speaker 9 (11:34):
People are watching their watch while I slowly suffocate so
they could take.

Speaker 13 (11:38):
My organs rightly through my wallet.

Speaker 2 (11:41):
So this has been amazing, is not true? Speaking with
you and I don't do you guys agree? I mean,
this is just amazing.

Speaker 8 (11:48):
This is amazing levels.

Speaker 2 (11:52):
We could go on and on.

Speaker 9 (11:53):
Thank you so much for your time and God bless you.
And if ever you need a liver, don't don't don't
come run into me.

Speaker 7 (12:04):
We're gonna take your heart elbow all.

Speaker 2 (12:06):
Right, my heart it's golden.

Speaker 6 (12:08):
You're not gonna find it. Let me tell you.

Speaker 2 (12:10):
Shut up. We love you, Laurie. Thank you for listening
to us. Have a great day.

Speaker 7 (12:16):
Thank you, Thanks guys, you show.

Speaker 2 (12:20):
I'm gonna play hooky.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
Goodbye, Elvis Duran and the Morning Show. This is Elvis
Duran and the Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
All right.

Speaker 9 (12:36):
So I don't know if you follow us on Twitter.
I know I'm more of an Instagram guy. No, I
don't know, because my Instagram numbers keep growing because people
are into it and I keep feeding and.

Speaker 2 (12:44):
I keep putting stuff on there. Twitter not so much.

Speaker 8 (12:46):
I don't want just to get information out quickly. I
feel like, I tell.

Speaker 9 (12:50):
You what, there's something about Twitter that sounds better when
you say, who's tweeting that tweet?

Speaker 2 (12:55):
Oh yeah, what are you gonna do? Who's gramming that? Instagram?
It's now time for who's tweeting that tweet? Tweet tweeted,
tweetedly tweet.

Speaker 6 (13:13):
I am a little more reckless on Twitter than I
am on Instagram. Yeah yeah, like way fewer followers, So
I feel like I can get away with more crap
over there.

Speaker 9 (13:23):
Okay, Oh, let's play who tweeted that tweet? We'll have
that contest them on the phone any minute. Now, means
while we'll listen to this nice music. Oh look, we
have a victim, I mean a contestant. We say good
morning to Lindsay.

Speaker 14 (13:40):
Hi, Lindsay, good morning, Well, good morning.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
Welcome to who tweeted that tweet? Do you follow us
on Twitter at all? I do? Oh, then you may
have an edge.

Speaker 9 (13:51):
Okay, So we're going to play with the Twitter accounts
of Elvis durand Daniel Monaro, Gondhy, Scary and Froggy. All right,
if you get two out of three correct, then you
will win the grand prize.

Speaker 2 (14:02):
What is the grand copy of Elves Duran? Where do
I begin the hard to book? Wait? Wait, who's paying
for that one? Absolutely you can have that Scary? You
gonna sign it for me? Okay? Who tweeted that tweet?
Ready at the airport?

Speaker 9 (14:19):
Okay, here's tweet number one at the airport. To my left,
an Indian chemical engineer discussing distillation design. To my right,
a Turkish astrophysicist talking about stellar dynamics.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
In the middle me sending nudes. America is doomed. Who
tweeted that tweet?

Speaker 15 (14:36):
Ooh, I'm gonna have to say.

Speaker 9 (14:43):
Scary scary can't even spell astrophysicist.

Speaker 8 (14:51):
If he sends out nudes, We're in trouble.

Speaker 9 (14:52):
Yeah, that would that would have been at Baby Hot
Sauce meaning Gandhi. Here's another one who tweeted this tweet
happy hashtag National Shrimp Day.

Speaker 2 (15:03):
Daddy's gonna eat until he passes out.

Speaker 13 (15:05):
I have a guest who.

Speaker 16 (15:06):
Said that, I'm gonna say you Elvis shrimp Daddy.

Speaker 8 (15:15):
He's the only person that calls himself daddy.

Speaker 4 (15:17):
One more to go.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
You gotta get this right. Okay. One more for the
wind who tweeted this tweet.

Speaker 9 (15:22):
Okay, just saw someone take ice out of the fresh fruit,
display the ice that keeps the fruit cold, and she
ate the ice?

Speaker 2 (15:28):
Yucky who said that.

Speaker 15 (15:31):
That I think was scary?

Speaker 2 (15:39):
Well thanks, Hold on one second, he walk away empty handed.

Speaker 5 (15:46):
No sing is for you?

Speaker 2 (15:48):
Send her something? What line? Whatever line that was?

Speaker 1 (15:50):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (15:51):
Do we have more people to play? Okay, let's go.

Speaker 9 (15:54):
Talk to Whitney High Whitney Hie. Welcome to who tweeted
the tweet. Do you follow us on Twitter?

Speaker 17 (16:01):
I sure do?

Speaker 2 (16:01):
All right, let's see if you know what you're talking
about here?

Speaker 9 (16:03):
All right, one may have slipped past you who tweeted
this tweet correction. I said vanilla is the worst flavor
birthday cake. Is no flavor at all. Who tweeted that tweet?

Speaker 2 (16:18):
Was it Elvis, Danielle, Gandhi scary or Froggy?

Speaker 15 (16:22):
I think it was Froggy.

Speaker 2 (16:24):
No beam sauce.

Speaker 18 (16:28):
I love birthday cake.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
That's a flavor. That's Gandhi. Okay, well, okay, you have
two more to get, right, Okay, here we go.

Speaker 9 (16:33):
Who said this? Who tweeted this tweet? I love Florida?

Speaker 16 (16:40):
Oh that would be Froggy.

Speaker 4 (16:41):
I love.

Speaker 9 (16:44):
All right, you have to get this one for the
wind ready? Who tweeted this tweet? If you have a
little girl, I'm sure you know at American girl. I
don't have girls, but I used to go with my
friends and their daughters. I can't wait to take my
niece Ella there. It's an amazing experience. Who tweeted that tweet.

Speaker 16 (17:01):
I'm gonna say, Danielle, that's right.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
You got it. You want what does she get?

Speaker 12 (17:09):
You got the coffee of Elvis Durant's hardcover book, Elvis Durant.

Speaker 9 (17:15):
I'm signed, Yeah, signed, We're gonna pre sign it now.
I'll come over to your house and sign it for you.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
Luck, here's a bonus one. Okay, here's a bonus one.
Just for the hell of it. Who tweeted this tweet?
How does the rock p he dwains his Johnson?

Speaker 15 (17:31):
Oh man, I think that might have been scary.

Speaker 2 (17:40):
Comic genius Elvis Durant, who stole that from someone else?

Speaker 9 (17:43):
Hey, Whitney, thanks for playing. Thanks for listening to us
every day. Okay, thank you all right, Hold on one second.

Speaker 3 (17:48):
Don't answer the phone, Elvis Duran, The Elvis Duran phone tapping.

Speaker 2 (17:52):
What's it all about? Daniel?

Speaker 8 (17:53):
So Ron is phone tapping his wife Nikki. They've been
having a problem with their son, Tyler at school, so
they have set up a me with Tyler's teacher, and
I'm basically posing as the teacher calling in just to
get back to them about, you know, our meeting and
stuff like that.

Speaker 2 (18:08):
Well to be bad about this. Was listening to Today's
Here We Go.

Speaker 8 (18:14):
Yes, Hiah, this is missus Nay Yes Hi, how are you?
I'm calling about your son?

Speaker 4 (18:20):
Yeah, there was an incident the other day after school.
M h They know is that Tyler had told you
that he had to leave.

Speaker 8 (18:29):
Yeah, but it wasn't time for the kids to leave yet,
so I wasn't ready to dismiss him.

Speaker 4 (18:33):
Did the bell rang?

Speaker 8 (18:35):
Yeah, the bell had rang, but I still needed everybody
to sit in their seats and wait, wait for I
didn't really need a reason. I mean, I'm the teacher,
so if I tell them to do something, they're supposed
to listen.

Speaker 4 (18:44):
And I'm his mother, and if I tell him he
needs to leave after school because he needs to do something,
I don't really need a reason for that. I'm his mother.

Speaker 8 (18:50):
Yeah, but while he's under my care, I'm kind.

Speaker 19 (18:53):
Of like his mother the pro Did you just say
you his mother?

Speaker 8 (18:56):
Well, when he's under my care and he's in my school,
I mean, I'm kind of his mother his mother. Do
you do you understand what kind of problems your son
has caused in this school that none of the teachers
like him.

Speaker 4 (19:07):
Excuse me.

Speaker 8 (19:08):
Originally he said something like he had to go potty
or something, and I said, well, you can't go until
I let you go.

Speaker 4 (19:13):
My son said he had to go potty, Well he.

Speaker 8 (19:15):
Had to go to the bathroom.

Speaker 14 (19:16):
Well what says it?

Speaker 4 (19:17):
Did he say he had to go to the potty
or did he say he had to go to the bathroom?
He said he had just told me that other teachers
do not like my son. He just told me that
all the teachers in the school have problems with my son.
And you just told me that you're his mother when
he's in school. And I have never had a teacher
be so disrespectful to me on the phone. I've never
I am mortified and you should be ashamed of yourself.

Speaker 19 (19:35):
Do you remember there and say to me?

Speaker 8 (19:37):
The hell do you think you will apologize for that?

Speaker 20 (19:40):
My child died to me?

Speaker 8 (19:41):
I told you I was sorry you. Does Tyler have
any potty issues or someone? Does he have bathroom issues?
Like he has to go because he can't hold it?
You know they have diapers for that, right?

Speaker 4 (19:56):
You know that, lady.

Speaker 6 (19:58):
I will say you.

Speaker 4 (19:59):
In front of the I'm not because I have never
in my life tell it someone so ignor in a
shall goodbye?

Speaker 6 (20:05):
Why don't you speak to me?

Speaker 8 (20:06):
Hello?

Speaker 19 (20:07):
All right?

Speaker 8 (20:08):
Well you're gonna call her a work just to say hi.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
Well, I would call her on her cell phone. Hello, Yo, I've.

Speaker 4 (20:15):
Just got into a battle with missus Burmannel that says,
I am telling you I am gonna go to that school.

Speaker 1 (20:21):
I'm gonna rip her up school and I'm gonna.

Speaker 4 (20:23):
Beat her as she's like, apparently are wasting everybody's time
because nobody in the school likes your son. I don't understand.

Speaker 21 (20:30):
Maybe they have a problem with Tyler.

Speaker 12 (20:31):
Maybe Tyler's just becoming an issue for him.

Speaker 15 (20:33):
I don't know what you don't understand.

Speaker 4 (20:35):
I just had a teacher that I sat in there
because she wrote some books emails to me, and everybody
agreed with me.

Speaker 8 (20:42):
And now you're gonna stand here and.

Speaker 20 (20:43):
Say to me, well, maybe Kyler.

Speaker 7 (20:44):
Has a problem.

Speaker 21 (20:45):
Well, I don't understand. I mean, you know, if Tayla
was told to stay, then Tyler should stay.

Speaker 22 (20:50):
Let me just explain something to you, right, doub woman
is not She actually had.

Speaker 4 (20:55):
The audacity to say to Day does Tyler have potty issues?

Speaker 15 (21:00):
He asked me, Sniper Ron.

Speaker 8 (21:06):
That's funny, that's funny.

Speaker 23 (21:07):
That's that's really terrible.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
I need to offense.

Speaker 10 (21:10):
I'm gonna what is it?

Speaker 8 (21:11):
Why don't you just lose it with me?

Speaker 5 (21:12):
Then? Who?

Speaker 8 (21:14):
This is actually Danielle Minarrow from Elvis Duran in the
Morning Show, and we just can't talk.

Speaker 19 (21:19):
We got you, you.

Speaker 1 (21:26):
Can get it.

Speaker 5 (21:26):
Somebody like me, I could end up in jail.

Speaker 6 (21:31):
People like crazy.

Speaker 7 (21:33):
So why isn't you.

Speaker 19 (21:34):
All thank you?

Speaker 14 (21:36):
Like you right now?

Speaker 6 (21:38):
Sorry?

Speaker 1 (21:38):
I'm sorry, freaking drank.

Speaker 19 (21:41):
The Elvis Duran phone tap.

Speaker 24 (21:44):
This phone table was pre recorded permission granted by all participates.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
The Elvis Duran phone tap only on Elvis Duran in
the Morning Show.

Speaker 19 (21:56):
This is Elvis Duran in the Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (22:01):
If someone asks you out on a date, you're like, oh, yes, score,
I'm going out with him. Yeah, we're going to a
Aipaci is trying.

Speaker 8 (22:10):
I would be okay.

Speaker 2 (22:11):
I love habach No, I love abachi. But if it's
your first date, you can't communicate.

Speaker 6 (22:18):
You know what.

Speaker 8 (22:18):
I think it's a good idea. You know why, because
you can see if he can hang with other people
that he doesn't know, and you see how he acts
in that situation.

Speaker 9 (22:25):
I don't even know what sign you are. I will
take me to a restaurant. I go and ask you
who you voted for.

Speaker 8 (22:30):
Oh no, don't ask me. Don't ask anybody that.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
Another bad date Chinese buffet, don't do it. Don't do it.
Oh okay, Other other bad date places, first.

Speaker 11 (22:39):
Dates, movies.

Speaker 8 (22:40):
I don't think movies is a good first date.

Speaker 2 (22:42):
You can't talk motels?

Speaker 8 (22:46):
Yeah, not good?

Speaker 25 (22:47):
Uh Hello, Kim, Hello, Elvis, how's it hanging.

Speaker 26 (22:54):
Hey, it's going good. It's going good. So I'm sitting
here listening to you guys and wondering. So whenever I
go to her box, he grilled and they start throwing
the shrimp, I am. I think I purposely don't catch
it because I'm terrified I'm going to catch it and
it's going to go straight down my throat and I'm
going to choke.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
What you duck under the table? What do you do?

Speaker 26 (23:11):
I just I think I kind of like tilt my
head and let it like purposely hit me in the face.

Speaker 2 (23:20):
I would love to be there for that, Kim. It's
a date you and I were going to, Benny Hannah.

Speaker 26 (23:26):
Yes, I would love that.

Speaker 20 (23:28):
I would love that.

Speaker 9 (23:28):
I'm gonna tell the ship throw it right at her
man get her.

Speaker 2 (23:33):
Good, get that shrimp to stick in her nose home
all right? Well, no, I guess you know.

Speaker 9 (23:38):
Look, I'm the same way. You know, I was awful
in Little League as a kid. When I saw that
ball comeing towards my face, I just let it hit it.
They were slapping balls on my face all the time.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
They feel you. But the thing is is, I know
I'm terrified I can't catch especially with my mouth. Kim,
Thank you for listening to it.

Speaker 26 (24:00):
I also wanted to tell you, so, my husband is
in law enforcement, and so I just wanted to thank
you and everybody else on the show for always showing
your love and support for everybody in law enforcement.

Speaker 27 (24:09):
I means so much.

Speaker 2 (24:10):
Us without doubt. Yeah, seriously, we come in here and
talk about throwing shrimp in people's faces. They are autill
putting their lives on the line. We're so this is
so insignificant. Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 16 (24:21):
Well, it's not much.

Speaker 20 (24:22):
We listened to it.

Speaker 26 (24:23):
We listened to it separately and then get to talk
about talk about your show together. So we love it.

Speaker 9 (24:27):
Please tell your husband we said hello and thank you
and thank you because you know what you're in it too.
You know what you're the husbands and wives and partners
and families of people in law enforcement.

Speaker 2 (24:37):
You are serving as well, and so thank you so much.

Speaker 26 (24:40):
Yes, thank you, guys, have a good one.

Speaker 2 (24:41):
Thank you. And where's Lindsay? Oh my gosh, she's been
on hold all this time? Lindsay, Hi, Linda, I feel awful.
Are you crying because I kept you on hold for
so long?

Speaker 20 (24:54):
No, I'm very excited to be on the air.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
We're going to switch gears. Okay, so, Lindsey is what
twenty six years old? Yeah, and you're moving back in
with your parents?

Speaker 1 (25:08):
Yeah?

Speaker 20 (25:09):
I think so.

Speaker 9 (25:10):
First of all, I gotta say I'm jealous. I wish
my parents were still with us. Yeah, I'm ready to
move back I now.

Speaker 8 (25:15):
My mom's been staying with me for like three or
four days, and I told her to move in. I said,
could you just move in here place?

Speaker 2 (25:21):
But lindsay, every story is different. Let me hear yours.
Why are you moving back in with your parents at
twenty six years old?

Speaker 20 (25:27):
So I have a lot of student loan debt, and
if I'm move in with my parents, I can use
the money sending to students cut faster, so.

Speaker 2 (25:35):
You can pay off your loans faster.

Speaker 8 (25:36):
It's a good idea to me. So sounds good.

Speaker 2 (25:39):
Does anyone object to this? Does anyone think this is
Do any of your friends give you hell because you're
moving back in with your mom and dad?

Speaker 23 (25:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 20 (25:47):
A lot of my friends tell me that my safe
life will go away.

Speaker 9 (25:50):
Okay, ooh no, Now I had lots of sex when
my in my parents' house.

Speaker 8 (25:54):
Okay, let's not.

Speaker 2 (25:56):
I mean it was even in their bed, But that's
when they were out of town.

Speaker 8 (25:58):
Oh my god, lindsay, don't do that. Don't do so.

Speaker 9 (26:02):
Probably won't do that, But lindsay, now do you have
the relationship with your parents which will allow you to
maybe spend some nights away from the house and they'll
be okay with that?

Speaker 20 (26:11):
Yeah, I could do that. They probably would have noticed,
to be honest, they go away pretty.

Speaker 8 (26:14):
Frequently, and I mean you are twenty six. I would
think at twenty six they'd be like, you know, the
rules are a little less crazy and strict, but there
were still.

Speaker 20 (26:23):
All over the place that I can go stay with
them and they wouldn't even question it.

Speaker 23 (26:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (26:26):
Right now, speaking of rules, now, have you and your
parents discussed the rules that will still be in.

Speaker 2 (26:31):
Play when you move back in?

Speaker 20 (26:33):
No, you have not yet.

Speaker 2 (26:35):
Do you think that's going to come up?

Speaker 20 (26:37):
I hope not.

Speaker 8 (26:38):
No, at twenty six, you're gonna give your kid rules.
I mean, I no curfew or anything.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
I don't know, but you know that if anyone's living
in your house there, I mean there needs to be understanding.
Like roommates at college have rules, and you know, like
maybe she.

Speaker 8 (26:52):
Can contribute to like the food and the fridge, and
like you know, help with the laundry and stuff like that.
I mean those kind of.

Speaker 18 (26:58):
Rules, some chores, you know, like what's expected of you
while you're there, exactly, like you gotta rub daddy's feet.

Speaker 2 (27:06):
No, no, I'm kidding. So you know.

Speaker 9 (27:09):
I was reading an article the other day online about
this very topic about people around your age range who
are moving back in with their parents. It's not unusual
at all, and sometimes the parents actually love it. They
love having their kids close. Have you heard from your
parents about whether they're excited about you coming back or what?

Speaker 20 (27:28):
Yeah, my dad's been begging me to do it for
a few months.

Speaker 8 (27:31):
Yeah, I mean it makes sense.

Speaker 20 (27:32):
You walk me too.

Speaker 8 (27:33):
If you can save up and they're gonna let you
do it, you might as well. Why not?

Speaker 2 (27:38):
Good point, you know, So don't feel like you're doing
something icky or unusual, first of.

Speaker 9 (27:45):
All, And secondly, hey, you're doing it, take advantage of it.
And how long do you think you'll be there?

Speaker 20 (27:49):
Probably a year or two?

Speaker 2 (27:51):
All right, okay, do it. Save up that money.

Speaker 8 (27:53):
And just remember to help and contribute, that's all.

Speaker 2 (27:56):
It's scary lived at home until he was twenty six
years old. Yeah, I did it back.

Speaker 12 (28:00):
I never moved out, and everybody at nineteen twenty twenty
one were like, why don't you get to your own place?
And I'm like, I'm saving, I'm saving, I'm saving. And yeah,
and finally twenty six I left the nest.

Speaker 2 (28:08):
He went out and bought that shiny BMW.

Speaker 20 (28:12):
And now it feels weird to move back.

Speaker 9 (28:15):
I know it's got to feel weird. I think we'll
get used to it. And you know what, it's not permanent.
So keep in mind, lindsay, if you get in there
and it's not working out, you can find a way
to move back out.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
You'll find a way. But you're gonna be good. Don't don't,
don't worry about it.

Speaker 20 (28:28):
You there's many feel so much better about this. Thank you.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
You're gonna be great. Real love it. Fine, stay in
touch if you need something, let us know.

Speaker 7 (28:35):
Okay, thank you, all right, thank you.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
Yeah, I'm moving back in. If I could, I would, yep,
I would.

Speaker 8 (28:40):
I miss my mom, And I tell you I wouldn't
have moved out as early as I did, but I
did because of the hours we kept and how far
they had moved, because they moved from the Bronx to Upstate.

Speaker 2 (28:50):
Plus you wanted to live in Sin with your boyfriend.

Speaker 19 (28:52):
I didn't know.

Speaker 8 (28:52):
I didn't live with him at first. I wasn't living
in Sin with him when I moved.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
Down here living in Sin with other men. You don't
even remember the names.

Speaker 9 (28:58):
Oh my gosh, hello Chelsea, And that's okay, I'm envious.

Speaker 16 (29:02):
Good Good morning guys, by Chelsea.

Speaker 9 (29:05):
So you moved in with your parents after you got
married and moved back with your parents.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
What was that like?

Speaker 17 (29:10):
So we actually got married last month and we sold
our house and we moved back in with my mom
last week.

Speaker 2 (29:16):
No, was it a financial thing or what was it?

Speaker 17 (29:20):
So we're looking for a new home and the way
things lined.

Speaker 16 (29:22):
Up, we needed to sell our house first.

Speaker 17 (29:24):
Yep, and that home actually ended up falling through. So
now we're at my mom's. We don't have a new
home yet, so we're not sure how long we're going
to be there. But she's awesome. Everything is going okay.
We just have two dogs and she has a dog,
so it's been kind of like a mini.

Speaker 2 (29:42):
Zoo, all right, So it's like a little circus going on.

Speaker 9 (29:43):
But the good news is you're all living together, but
you all know that you're going to be leaving eventually.

Speaker 17 (29:49):
Yeah, yeah, yes, there's an end in sight. But you know,
we feel lucky to have that opportunity for sure. All right,
but I do think eventually I'm going to be like,
oh man, I just want to go.

Speaker 2 (30:01):
Okay, but wait wait were there rules put into place
when you guys moved in?

Speaker 17 (30:08):
No, no, my mom's at them.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
Right Chelsea. Yeah, well you get out of that house,
move run for your life. Thanks for listening to us.
Uh yeah, I want to hear about the rules when
you move back in.

Speaker 8 (30:19):
Can you imagine thou shout not blind have sex in
my bed?

Speaker 2 (30:22):
Yeah, there is that number one. Hi Dory, Hello, hellow lady.
So you were forty five and you moved back in
with your parents, and they gave you all sorts of rules,
Like what kind of rules did they give you?

Speaker 15 (30:36):
You cannot fall asleep while the TV's on. I was
threatened that if I did it, because I got caught
one time, and if I did, they were going to
take the cable box.

Speaker 9 (30:49):
Oh my god, you're forty five years old and you're
taking your TV privileges away from you.

Speaker 15 (30:56):
I got busted on the doggy cam because they were
on a cruise and this thing goes and they woke
me up with the doggie cam.

Speaker 9 (31:06):
No wait, now, why is it so bad that you
fall asleep with the TV on? What's the deal there?

Speaker 15 (31:12):
It wastes electricity?

Speaker 8 (31:14):
Oh my god, so many people fall asleep with the
TV on. A lot of people can't sleep without the
TV being on.

Speaker 15 (31:20):
Yeah, no, that's no.

Speaker 9 (31:21):
No, but your mom and dad are from They're from
that generation where you know, waste not, want not, And
I get that, nothing wrong with that. But the fact
that they're watching you on a doggye cam. Wait, doesn't
the doggy cam use electricity? Let's unplug that bitch to
sing all electricity.

Speaker 2 (31:35):
Doggie cam is using? So dorry. How long do you
plan on staying at your parents' place?

Speaker 7 (31:40):
Oh?

Speaker 15 (31:40):
No, no, no, no, I'm going now that was just
for a short period.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
Yeah, but I love the rules, the rules.

Speaker 15 (31:47):
Oh wait, you cannot use yellow shampoo in the bathtub.

Speaker 2 (31:52):
Why can't you use a yellow shampoo in your parents' bathtub?

Speaker 4 (31:56):
It?

Speaker 15 (31:57):
No, it might, it might stain it. I guess, I
don't know.

Speaker 8 (32:01):
Wow, they got a lot.

Speaker 2 (32:02):
I don't blame you run my life. I will thank
you for listening, Dory, No problem, we will someone just
sent a text. When they moved in with your parents,
they had to get put back on the chore chart.

Speaker 6 (32:16):
Do you get a gold star? You do if you do.

Speaker 9 (32:19):
All your chores And question Danielle, when you move back
in with your parents, do they make you back up
to the to the wall and put a little pencil
above your head to see how.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
Your growth is? How tall you're this you're shorter than
you were in high school. You're going down. That's when
it's time to move out.

Speaker 27 (32:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (32:37):
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you'd want to hang out with.

Speaker 8 (32:44):
Oh well no, I.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
Just like to be in my bed and gossip all day.
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Speaker 3 (33:06):
Now, mister Ran in the Morning Show. This is Elvis
Duran in the Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (33:19):
I want to talk about this story, Gandhi. Yes, you
give the story as quickly if you would.

Speaker 6 (33:23):
It says that unmarried women are healthier and happier than
everyone else.

Speaker 2 (33:27):
In the world. Okay, now, why is this according.

Speaker 6 (33:29):
To this source, because they can focus on their goals,
they take more risks at work, they don't have the
feelings of guilt being weighed down by family members and
what they need to do for society. They're just living
their lives the way that they want to live them,
all right.

Speaker 2 (33:42):
Of course, keep in mind Gandhi is a single female.

Speaker 13 (33:45):
Yes, I am all right.

Speaker 6 (33:46):
I enjoy this research all right.

Speaker 27 (33:48):
Now.

Speaker 2 (33:48):
By the way, now keep in mind, research doesn't say
this is the way it is that you just have
to know it's you know, it doesn't. It doesn't apply
to every single person like Danielle, for instance, you seem
to be very very happy with two children.

Speaker 8 (34:02):
I wouldn't give it up for the world exactly.

Speaker 13 (34:04):
But you know, because you're stuck.

Speaker 2 (34:06):
They Le's face it, you're stuck.

Speaker 8 (34:07):
There are moments where you know, you get upset, but
the pros outweigh the cons in my in my book
at least, and I would not give it up for
the world.

Speaker 6 (34:17):
I'm exactly opposite, like when I have friends over all
the time and I come home, I'm like, oh you're here.
Get out all this to myself.

Speaker 2 (34:24):
Okay, keep in mind, this is one research project.

Speaker 9 (34:26):
We're not pointing fingers and saying anyone is better or
worse than anyone else.

Speaker 2 (34:30):
Let's just get that out of the way, right. I
don't want to hear any bitch in and moaning. Let's
just look at the research and let's comment on it.

Speaker 9 (34:36):
Right again, this is a report about a research study
from a professor that says.

Speaker 6 (34:41):
That single women are the happiest group of people on
the planet.

Speaker 9 (34:45):
Okay, what they did, obviously, is they did the pros
and cons. Obviously the pros outweighed the cons more for
single women than it did for any other subsets. Right,
married women or men or single men, like all of us,
this is this is just a female thing.

Speaker 2 (35:01):
This isn't every one thing. Who's the happiest person you're
saying according to this research study? Right, single women.

Speaker 6 (35:08):
Yes, according to the research study, because you are more
likely to take risks at work and follow your dreams,
fulfill the things that you wanted to get done in
your life. It says that you're healthier and you live longer.

Speaker 2 (35:18):
Now do they talk about the age of women, because
I'm thinking if you're if let's say you're in your
late thirties or early forties, it may not apply to you
as much as it would a twenty two year old woman.

Speaker 6 (35:28):
This does not have an age group.

Speaker 2 (35:30):
Huh. Yeah, all right, single and happy, single and happy,
and Danielle seems healthy. She's got guns. Yeah, you got
some guns.

Speaker 8 (35:38):
Huh. I'm working on it.

Speaker 2 (35:39):
You do you take good care of yourself?

Speaker 1 (35:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 22 (35:41):
I try?

Speaker 2 (35:42):
You love your kids? I do you love your husband?
I can't imagine in life without Oh no, no, okay,
and then nor should you.

Speaker 19 (35:47):
No?

Speaker 8 (35:48):
All right, So with that, but I feel like I
take sometimes more risks because I have them, like with
certain things, because I want to get to that next
goal so that I can provide for them a little
bit more.

Speaker 6 (36:00):
Do you know what I mean?

Speaker 2 (36:01):
Financial risk?

Speaker 8 (36:01):
So sometimes I feel like I, Yeah, so you're.

Speaker 9 (36:04):
Not pulling risks on your kids, like not letting them
eat off the floor.

Speaker 8 (36:08):
Now they do that on their own, right boys?

Speaker 2 (36:11):
All right, kids, let's go lick the at keep head.

Speaker 8 (36:14):
Oh never, when my son lick the banister at the
at the subway station. That wasn't good.

Speaker 2 (36:20):
Yeah, anyway, so scary things. This sort of applies to
guys too. Yeah, you know what, I know, single guys
versus guys who were in Right.

Speaker 12 (36:27):
The survey was for women, But I'm happier than a
pig and dung right now that I don't have to
that's gross.

Speaker 2 (36:32):
Go away, you know.

Speaker 9 (36:32):
If you're gonna use lines like that, just go away happy. Well,
the survey is not for women, it's for everyone again, yes, okay,
And it actually says opposite of what you just said.

Speaker 6 (36:42):
It said men are far far happier in a relationship.

Speaker 2 (36:45):
I read that the other day too.

Speaker 9 (36:47):
But guys need to be tethered, they need to be ground.

Speaker 19 (36:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (36:51):
Wow, I actually think that's true because if you look
at you know, couples who get older and one of
them passes away, it seems like women just kind of
enjoy it, say single do whatever. Guys get married.

Speaker 2 (36:59):
Again in like a day, right, they needed maybe less? Yeah,
they need to be in that relationship. They need someone
to help them get through the day. Hey, Paige, how
are you doing?

Speaker 16 (37:09):
I'm great? How are you?

Speaker 23 (37:10):
Guys?

Speaker 2 (37:10):
We're doing well? So you've never you're you've never been
happy being single?

Speaker 16 (37:15):
No, I mean I am grown up, so my parents
got divorced and I was like two or three, and
they it was pretty it was pretty bad. So growing up,
I've always wanted to have that happy ever after, I
guess never really felt right being single. But everybody I
dated was kind of awful too, So you know, hey,
that's but you know, the guy that I ended up marrying,

(37:37):
I mean he has he just gets me, you know,
and every time I'm with him, I'm just I'm just
very excited.

Speaker 2 (37:44):
Wow.

Speaker 16 (37:44):
So I just feel like I've finally, you know, finally
found my happiness.

Speaker 22 (37:48):
You know.

Speaker 2 (37:48):
Good and congratulations.

Speaker 9 (37:49):
That's awesome and great for you and anyone else who's
experiencing the same thing.

Speaker 2 (37:54):
But keep in mind, this is a this is hard
for some people to get. I know you do, though.

Speaker 9 (37:59):
It's a we're not talking about everyone. We know that
it doesn't apply to everyone, right, But they're.

Speaker 2 (38:05):
Saying as a whole, being a single female, you have
a better chance at happiness than you do in all
the other sectors according to this study. That makes sense.

Speaker 16 (38:17):
Now, No, I absolutely get that. Like, my best friend
is single and she has no desire to get married ever,
and I mean she's happy.

Speaker 8 (38:24):
So who everybody's different.

Speaker 2 (38:26):
Yeah, Like Gandhi friendstance.

Speaker 6 (38:27):
Yeah, it's just never been something that's on my list.
And I will say I was in a relationship for
a long time and when we broke up, I did
start doing all of the things. I started to take
more risks and care more about myself, and I am
happier now than I ever was before.

Speaker 9 (38:40):
So here's my question for everyone, including you, Paige. If
we can learn from this study about how females who
are unmarried and single with no kids are the happiest,
how can we find the things that cause them to
be happy and apply them to our lives if we
have kids, or if you're getting married, or we have

(39:01):
a boyfriend or a girlfriend.

Speaker 2 (39:02):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 13 (39:03):
I think there's something to be learned about balance.

Speaker 2 (39:06):
The risk taking a page. Thank you for.

Speaker 16 (39:08):
Listening to us, No problem, have a great day, guys.

Speaker 6 (39:10):
I think that the balance is don't forget yourself, because
I think a lot of times when people get married
and they have kids, that you fall into making them
one hundred percent your life and your priorities, and you
forget about yourself, which maybe is what makes you unhappy.
So if you don't and you continue to do things
like Danielle is, and follow your dreams and take the risks,
maybe you still stay happy.

Speaker 8 (39:28):
I always say that if you don't take care of yourself,
it's very hard for you to take care of somebody else. Yeah,
so you cannot neglect yourself. Sometimes it's not easy because
obviously what they're well being and taking care of them
and taking care of your husband or your wife or
whatever that has to come you know first. And you know,
when we go on a trip, I make sure they're
all taken care of before I pack myself or before

(39:49):
I take care of what I need. I make sure that,
you know. But that's just the way that think.

Speaker 2 (39:53):
Of it this way. So think of it this way.

Speaker 9 (39:56):
You get married, and then those voices in your head
like oh my god, did I say something that made
them mad? Or oh my god, I better do it
this way otherwise I'm going to get hell from them
because and maybe I don't want to go do that,
even though I really love to go do that with
my friends.

Speaker 2 (40:12):
Because it'll cause a problem at home. When you start
getting into those inner conversations, I think that's the slippery slope.

Speaker 9 (40:19):
You stop being yourself. You're with someone who's not allowing
you to be yourself. Yes, and maybe partially your fault.
You're not communicating to them.

Speaker 2 (40:26):
Hey, I love you, but you need to understand if
you don't let me be me and take my chances
and take my risks, then I'm not going to be
good for you.

Speaker 6 (40:36):
Oh that's so important.

Speaker 8 (40:37):
And also you fell in love with this me, so
why would I change this me to you know what
I mean? Like it is all about compromise, of course,
but you know this is the person you wanted to
be with, so why would you want to change that past?

Speaker 2 (40:51):
Exactly? You got to be you? So what you said
Gandhi is so important. You've got to continue to be
you if you want a relationship to work, right.

Speaker 18 (41:00):
Uh yeah, Frog, you and Danielle kind of touched on it.
You you kind of lose the person that you were
that this person met that made them want to change
their life and be with you and fall in love,
and then you don't become that person any longer because
you're trying so hard to please them that you've lost
you to tend you to be you?

Speaker 11 (41:17):
Is?

Speaker 12 (41:18):
It's true though, I think if you're looking for a
balance for married women, that the balance is you need
time away with the girls.

Speaker 2 (41:25):
I need time away with the girls. All right, So gosh,
you know what, Okay, think about it. You're in a
relationship that you've been dating this person for a couple
of years now. There's something missing that you miss from
being single, even though you're happy being with them. We
just figured it out. You just had an epiphany. It
was like, oh my god, I need to be more independent,
but I can still be in a relationship.

Speaker 13 (41:46):
Don't myself.

Speaker 9 (41:47):
It's about balance. Don't lose yourself, right, Yes, yes, I'm
looking at you. Yes, yes, straight and eight and a
phone call just come in, Yes I do.

Speaker 2 (41:54):
Here we go. We love phone calls. Well, someone's on
that line. Hello, Sarah, what's going on?

Speaker 22 (42:01):
Hello?

Speaker 25 (42:02):
I was just listening, and I have to say that
I'm actually much happier and being married my husband. I
had been gathered since for about married for three years,
and at lea's kind of more adventures actually being married
than I ever wasn't how single way because.

Speaker 2 (42:16):
It gives you the confidence to go out there and
live your life because you have a partner.

Speaker 25 (42:20):
Oh yeah, he encourages me to be myself.

Speaker 16 (42:22):
You always wants to go like, let's go somewhere.

Speaker 25 (42:24):
We doesn't been it before and it's more fun.

Speaker 2 (42:27):
All right, there you go. See, but you're still you.

Speaker 25 (42:31):
Oh, absolutely, don't give up on you before.

Speaker 2 (42:34):
Yeah, you know what, Every once in a while you
got to look at your boyfriend, your girlfriend, or your husband,
your wife and say, you know what? You You're here
because I'm excellent. You know what I'm saying. Good morning.

Speaker 19 (42:55):
Elvis Terram in the Morning show.

Speaker 2 (42:57):
Oh, here comes engineer Jeff jet What her?

Speaker 28 (43:01):
He's finally telling me that there's a problem that's been
going on for fifteen minutes.

Speaker 14 (43:05):
What have you been.

Speaker 2 (43:05):
Monitoring a situation?

Speaker 8 (43:07):
You just spit my eye?

Speaker 2 (43:09):
Okay, everyone, just what monitoring situation is going on.

Speaker 12 (43:13):
Your screen that allows you to go to commercials blanked
out so we may be talking for the next hour
and a half.

Speaker 2 (43:19):
Oh cool, I'm all for it. I don't see a
problem with that.

Speaker 9 (43:22):
I can go to a phone call. Hello is this
I can't read your writing. Everything's just failing today. Kanesia Hiknesha.
I didn't want to say your name wrong.

Speaker 2 (43:33):
Hi, how are you? What's going on?

Speaker 13 (43:35):
I'm good?

Speaker 20 (43:35):
How are you?

Speaker 2 (43:36):
So? You used to be a substitute teacher?

Speaker 25 (43:38):
Yeah?

Speaker 16 (43:39):
I did when I was in college.

Speaker 2 (43:41):
Now, was that one of the worst jobs ever?

Speaker 10 (43:44):
No?

Speaker 17 (43:44):
Actually, I'm a teacher now, so I did it just
to get my feel for things, to make sure that
that's what.

Speaker 16 (43:49):
I wanted to do.

Speaker 2 (43:50):
Oh that's good.

Speaker 9 (43:51):
So you could you sort of test drove your your job, yep,
before you bought in. But when you're a substitute, you
know you're going in under the worst of circumstances because
they have zero.

Speaker 2 (44:01):
Respect for you.

Speaker 16 (44:03):
Yeah, exactly. But any day that they don't kill each other,
that's a good day.

Speaker 26 (44:07):
So when I would go in, I would tell them
I don't care what you do.

Speaker 17 (44:11):
Just stay quiet and don't kill each other.

Speaker 2 (44:13):
Okay, so it's true. You really weren't there to teach
that day. You're just there to keep them under control
pretty much.

Speaker 17 (44:22):
I just wanted to make sure they all stayed alive,
you know.

Speaker 2 (44:25):
And did you lose any of them?

Speaker 16 (44:28):
No, I haven't, So I think I did pretty well here.

Speaker 9 (44:31):
For I must assume that now that you're officially a teacher,
it's a little different than just keeping them alive.

Speaker 16 (44:39):
Yeah, it's a little different. They still somewhat treat me
like a suit. My first year, they treated me like
a suit.

Speaker 2 (44:46):
Yeah, you know, kids are just the worst.

Speaker 9 (44:48):
Because I still am one, I can say that a right, Keisha,
thank you for listening. You know, we love our teachers.
Thank you for what you do for a living. We
appreciate your You're getting in.

Speaker 29 (44:57):
There all right, have a great day, guys, you too.

Speaker 2 (44:59):
Thank you. Hello, Amy, Amy, you had to sub. You
had to sub for a Chinese language class.

Speaker 25 (45:05):
I did.

Speaker 2 (45:07):
How much teaching did you do that day?

Speaker 22 (45:10):
Well?

Speaker 29 (45:11):
Luckily I was terrified when they called me to sub
for that. I was like, this is going to be
the worst day ever. But luckily the plans that she
left only involved doing origami, so it.

Speaker 19 (45:20):
Was terrible Japanese.

Speaker 9 (45:23):
That's Japanese, I thought it was, isn't Maybe it's Chinese too,
that's like that up.

Speaker 2 (45:30):
So they were actually doing origami in the Chinese class.

Speaker 29 (45:34):
Yeah, that was what she left. So that's what we did.

Speaker 9 (45:37):
Okay, But wait a minute, So, uh, which Chinese language
was it? I mean, aren't there like seven hundred of them?
I mean there's a lot of them, you know.

Speaker 29 (45:46):
I honestly have no idea. And it was it was
actually at the school my children go to, and at
the time they started it in fourth grade. So I
don't even know, and they don't have it anymore, unfortunately.

Speaker 2 (45:58):
Probably because they were doing it or gami in a Chinese.

Speaker 9 (46:01):
Class that was supposed to be next door at the
Japanese class.

Speaker 2 (46:08):
It's like rolling sushi rolls down there at the Chinese
class exactly. I don't know, right, all.

Speaker 9 (46:14):
Right, well, any thank you for listening, and thanks for
surviving your substitute teacher days.

Speaker 29 (46:20):
Oh yeah, thank you.

Speaker 2 (46:21):
Thanks for listening.

Speaker 9 (46:21):
Hello Aubrey, Okay, uh we have what are you a teacher?

Speaker 29 (46:28):
I am?

Speaker 16 (46:28):
And you know what's funny.

Speaker 26 (46:29):
I called you because it's my first year teaching, and
I was really really excited because it was the first.

Speaker 16 (46:34):
Day of school.

Speaker 29 (46:36):
And now I have bad news for.

Speaker 25 (46:37):
How it's going.

Speaker 2 (46:38):
How's it going?

Speaker 29 (46:40):
I had strapped twice and I had the flu, So now.

Speaker 26 (46:46):
That it's flues that I'm having everyone wipe everything down.

Speaker 9 (46:50):
Are you like Froggy in the studio with his lifeole wipes.

Speaker 23 (46:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 20 (46:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 29 (46:55):
You open a cabinet and I've got sock in life
sol pretty much, and I'm just throwing away the pencils.

Speaker 22 (47:00):
I'm wiping down the table.

Speaker 26 (47:02):
I feel like Gandhi.

Speaker 25 (47:04):
I'm like, just don't don't come too close to me.

Speaker 26 (47:07):
That's right, I'll break because I'm not having it happen again.

Speaker 9 (47:12):
So do we know with certainty that this does help
when you light all things, when you wipe things down.

Speaker 2 (47:18):
Yeah, it says right on it. Well, okay, it says it.

Speaker 9 (47:22):
The company that's charging you for this item is saying
it's right.

Speaker 2 (47:26):
On the top.

Speaker 18 (47:26):
It says kills cold and flu viruses. And there's a
little three next to it, which I don't know what
that means.

Speaker 8 (47:31):
I want to kill the viruses that it doesn't kill
because there's that's the only ninety nine points whatever.

Speaker 2 (47:36):
Yeah, I'm with my look, I'll get that one percent.

Speaker 9 (47:39):
Yeah all right, Well, I'm so sorry to hear that
your your first year teaching has been so sickening. But
I'll just keep wiping stuff down. And you know, we
love our teachers. We're supporting you.

Speaker 2 (47:49):
Okay, all right, thanks, I love you too. Elvis.

Speaker 18 (47:52):
It says right here kills influenza A on hard non
poorous services.

Speaker 2 (47:57):
Intend.

Speaker 9 (47:57):
I know, I know, but it's the company you're paying
is saying that. I mean, it's the same as this
radio station we say we do twenty minutes commercial free.
Now it's like eighteen you know what I'm saying. I mean,
we're not always honest about this.

Speaker 2 (48:09):
Let's be honest. Consider the source. Okay, what do you
want to think about the honesty going on?

Speaker 19 (48:16):
Don't answer the phone? Elvis Duran, the Elvis Duran phone tapp.

Speaker 2 (48:20):
All right, Garrett, Yes, whip it out? Well, excuse me?

Speaker 1 (48:24):
No?

Speaker 28 (48:24):
No, do the phone tap all right? Yes, Paul wants
the phone tap. His friend to Amy. So, Amy had
to get some dental work done the other day and
asked her friend Paul to pay some unpaid parking tickets
for her because she had to get this work done.
So I'm gonna call from the DMV saying, hey, Amy,
you didn't pay those tickets.

Speaker 2 (48:39):
So we have dental work and unpaid tickets. Let's what
could possibly happen. Let's see what happens.

Speaker 28 (48:44):
Hi, I'm looking for an Amy.

Speaker 2 (48:48):
Yes, this is Amy.

Speaker 28 (48:50):
Hi, this is Adam Scott at the DMV. We are
just going over some records and we see that there
was a few parking tickets in the speeding ticket due
yesterday and we still.

Speaker 2 (49:02):
Have not received any payment paid them.

Speaker 28 (49:06):
I was just to let you know that we're putting
you on notice that we will be having to revoke
your driver's license along.

Speaker 1 (49:11):
With I've gant my son.

Speaker 15 (49:15):
Did the check.

Speaker 7 (49:17):
Well, okay, check and the paperwork.

Speaker 2 (49:19):
No need to lie to us. We are normal people here.

Speaker 22 (49:22):
You can't do that.

Speaker 7 (49:23):
I have to get to work.

Speaker 1 (49:24):
You don't understand. My son he paid, He took the
check and he dropped it off for me, and.

Speaker 4 (49:29):
He told me that he did it and it's paid.

Speaker 1 (49:32):
Like, you can't take my license?

Speaker 14 (49:34):
How am I going to get to work?

Speaker 28 (49:35):
Well, ma'am, there is public there is public transportation.

Speaker 30 (49:39):
I'm not taking the bus to work.

Speaker 20 (49:41):
Everybody else.

Speaker 1 (49:42):
The bus smells like three hours to work.

Speaker 23 (49:45):
I'm yeah, ma'am, And I paid the stupid thing.

Speaker 2 (49:48):
All we hear that all this time.

Speaker 28 (49:49):
Man, Now, if you would like to set a court
date and argue the bill, that we could set that
up right now for you.

Speaker 20 (49:54):
I don't have.

Speaker 6 (49:55):
Time to go to court.

Speaker 22 (49:56):
I have to go to work to make up the
money I had to hey for the steward ticket. I
can't do it all right, So you guys made the mistake.

Speaker 23 (50:05):
You find it in your system?

Speaker 2 (50:06):
Are you drunk right now?

Speaker 22 (50:08):
I like the gennis?

Speaker 1 (50:10):
Will you people?

Speaker 2 (50:12):
Can you spell your name for me?

Speaker 7 (50:14):
What am what?

Speaker 6 (50:16):
What the hell is your problem?

Speaker 2 (50:17):
All right?

Speaker 28 (50:18):
I was just making sure. That's one of the drunk
tests we do over the phone to make sure that
Paul you there.

Speaker 2 (50:25):
Yeah, I hung up on her. Now, this is what
we're gonna do.

Speaker 28 (50:27):
We're gonna call her back and you're gonna tell her
that you forgot to drop off the money for the
tickets yesterday.

Speaker 2 (50:33):
All right, all right, all right, hold on.

Speaker 7 (50:38):
Hello Aamie.

Speaker 22 (50:40):
Hi.

Speaker 2 (50:41):
Are you drunk? No, I'm not.

Speaker 7 (50:45):
I have the wisdom called this woman.

Speaker 30 (50:47):
Okay, uh, clap in my mouse.

Speaker 15 (50:51):
Okay, DMV call me and send the tickets, have them paid.

Speaker 14 (50:56):
And I just told them that you paid it right now.

Speaker 21 (51:00):
Yeah, I was gonna go down there this afternoon and pay.

Speaker 2 (51:02):
It paid yesterday.

Speaker 22 (51:06):
I told you I want to be drunk off lice.

Speaker 2 (51:12):
Are you sure you're not drunk?

Speaker 18 (51:13):
You sound like your mother right now?

Speaker 28 (51:16):
Amy, Amy, Hey, Amy, my name is Gareth and Elvistran
in the morning show. You just got phone tapped by
your best friend, Paul.

Speaker 20 (51:31):
Did you pay it?

Speaker 25 (51:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (51:33):
Yeah, I did.

Speaker 1 (51:34):
Everything's fine.

Speaker 19 (51:37):
Elvis Duran phone tap.

Speaker 24 (51:40):
This phone table was pre recorded permission granted by all
participation the.

Speaker 3 (51:44):
Elvis Terran phone tap only on Elvis Duran in the
Morning Show.

Speaker 19 (51:57):
Elvis Duran in the Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (52:00):
So, I don't know if you remember we had that
conversation about people who have listened to us for fifteen
twenty years. I'm wondering, well, is anyone new?

Speaker 9 (52:08):
And then we put the call out there and we
had lots of texts and calls from people who have
just started listening to our show.

Speaker 2 (52:13):
Thank god, we've got new meat. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 23 (52:17):
Meat.

Speaker 9 (52:18):
So let's roll back into that. Let's talk to Nicole
from Cincinnati. She's been listening for about a year and
a half. A year and a half with us to Cole's.
That's a long time in dog years.

Speaker 22 (52:30):
That's a very long time in dog years. And I
made it through the six months pump and I'm still here.

Speaker 19 (52:36):
Oh wow.

Speaker 2 (52:37):
Because we always say it takes six months and then
we'll run you away.

Speaker 9 (52:41):
Or you'll stay. So you stayed and we appreciate that.
So Nicole loves our show. She wants to get some answers.
Though you have questions, Well, I.

Speaker 7 (52:51):
Do have questions.

Speaker 2 (52:54):
Okay, go ahead.

Speaker 7 (52:55):
I have a very important question.

Speaker 22 (52:57):
I have a very important question that I think a
lot of us knew these need to know, and that
is where does hello Lady come from?

Speaker 2 (53:04):
Oh I'm glad you asked that, because we have to
stop assuming people have been listening for years and years
and know what hello Lady means. So we've got to
remind everyone from time to time, and thanks to Nicole,
we're gonna do it.

Speaker 9 (53:17):
So we used to have a friend of ours. His
name is Uncle Johnny. He is no one's uncle, but
he's everyone's uncle. You know the type of uncle I'm
talking about, right?

Speaker 2 (53:27):
Oh yeah, okay, Yeah, he's an old well, he was
an old old friend and he worked in the gay
bars in New York City for years and years since
nineteen sixties. He's met almost every celebrity that has come
and gone over the last fifteen thousand decades. And he's
just a storied guy. How else do we explain Uncle

(53:48):
Johnny who wants to tackle that.

Speaker 6 (53:49):
He's like living history. Yeah, well, he was like living.

Speaker 10 (53:52):
History and like a human muppet.

Speaker 12 (53:56):
He was kind of character but almost like a forest
jump in that he got to experience life to the fullest.

Speaker 6 (54:03):
Oh yeah, but not.

Speaker 9 (54:04):
Doub And obviously you're you're catching on that he's no
longer with us alive. Anyway, he would come in and
make drinks for us, and he would screw it up
and he would turn on the blender and shoot cocktails
at the ceiling.

Speaker 8 (54:15):
And it was just he was thirty fingers in the blender.

Speaker 2 (54:18):
That was making thirty fingers in the blending. He was
just a fun guy. We loved Uncle Johnny, and my
husband and Alex and I. We would travel the world
with him and he would stay with us and we
just had a lot of fun with Uncle Johnny. Well,
he used to say, hallow lady. Anytime someone would try
to cut us off in traffic. He would scream at
the driver in front of us, holly lady, or if
anyone said something rude, he'd go, hello lady. He just

(54:39):
became part of our vernacular, right, I mean we use
hollo lady time really for the show.

Speaker 9 (54:44):
Yeah, yeah, so we we still say hello lady. We
still have recordings of him on our show saying hello lady.
Uncle Johnny passed away. God when was that.

Speaker 2 (54:54):
That's maybe a third of twenty twenty four. He was
our good friend. But he lives on. He lives on,
Hello lady. So there you go. That's Hello lady. I
wish you would have known him.

Speaker 22 (55:06):
I love it. Yeah, Kott, I did get to hear
some clippings and a lot of talk of Uncle Johnny,
so I kind of thought it had something to do
with him, but wasn't too certain.

Speaker 23 (55:17):
So thank you.

Speaker 9 (55:18):
Well, you know, and again I'm glad that you brought
this up because we need to be better at re
explaining and reintroducing.

Speaker 2 (55:23):
Who he is. Even though he's no longer with us,
He really truly never leaves. That's just Uncle Johnny, all right,
So what else do you want to know?

Speaker 22 (55:33):
Okay? Another question I have is I know that the
show had its birthday coming up. So who all has
been there though for the long haul? Or when did
folks start coming in?

Speaker 2 (55:48):
Wow? Okay, it's a long history.

Speaker 9 (55:51):
So I was hosting the Morning Show co hosting the
Morning Show twenty nine years ago when we started it,
and Danielle was in turn know, you were working here,
I was working, and then in Scotty B who works
in Master Control, he was here working at our station,
and Scary was here too and answering phones things like that,

(56:13):
and for some reason they're still here.

Speaker 12 (56:17):
You're not going to shake us ouf as Sorry, they
never left, and let's see who came on next.

Speaker 2 (56:23):
What's the chronological order of arrival.

Speaker 11 (56:26):
Then it was Froggy.

Speaker 9 (56:27):
Yeah, Froggy right, who works in Florida, And you're wondering
how that works.

Speaker 2 (56:32):
Yeah, he's in Jacksonville. You know, he used to work
at Y one hundred in Miami where we took over
the morning show. Then he moved to Jacksonville and now
we're on there. But he's always just been a part
of the part of the family. We just don't want
him to ever leave us. Or maybe he's contractually bound
to a Froggy.

Speaker 12 (56:52):
And then you have Garrett and Sam.

Speaker 2 (56:55):
Right, and then Coaster boyd Josh came in Josh and
then Nate when Nate was before Josh, who came first? Nater, Josh, Nate, Josh, Josh.
That was two thousand and seven.

Speaker 31 (57:08):
Then he came from Cleveland, and then Sam Andrew and
then Me. I think, yeah, right, Andrew used to be
my assistant, but he couldn't really master that, so we
promoted him.

Speaker 2 (57:20):
We promoted.

Speaker 6 (57:22):
That's a good way to treat somebody who can't do
their first job.

Speaker 31 (57:26):
And then and then and then Diamond, yeah, and Deanna
and I mean we have a lot of people working here.

Speaker 9 (57:33):
So that's it all started with Danielle, Scary, Scotty and.

Speaker 14 (57:37):
Me love it.

Speaker 7 (57:38):
That's awesome.

Speaker 2 (57:40):
Hmmmm. And and now you were also wondering about Froggy
working from Florida. He also now is the afternoon guy
and program director of our sister station, which is a
country station in Jacksonville. So he continues to be a
part of our show. I don't know where he is now.
He just ran out of the room. He should be
here anyway, sometimes a part of our show.

Speaker 9 (58:01):
Any other questions you're asking great questions.

Speaker 22 (58:05):
No, I don't think not nothing I can think of anymore.

Speaker 7 (58:08):
Yeah, I have one, I.

Speaker 32 (58:10):
Think wow, Okay, okay, So the whole the thing you
guys do or we do, because I've just started doing
it like some sort of you know, cult member, the
Piscataway thing.

Speaker 2 (58:25):
Which way is piscat Scataway? Is that a way? Was
that just like, oh it rhymes I'm just gonna do it. No,
that's that's an old New York phrase.

Speaker 33 (58:35):
And it was because I want it that way from
the Backstreet Boys. Yeah, that's how it was a parody song.
It was Piscataway? Is that a way? That's where that came.

Speaker 2 (58:45):
But actually, piscataway is that a way? Is an old
old phrase. It's It's been around much longer than the
Backstreet Boys, hasn't it. Yes, I heard that when I
was a kid, like like Vaudeville slapstick, people would say
scataway is that a way?

Speaker 8 (59:00):
And piscataways in New Jersey nicologies. In case you were
wondering where it was, Yeah, I was wondering you.

Speaker 22 (59:06):
I had no idea.

Speaker 10 (59:07):
And then the other question I have is the John Denver.
Thank God I'm a country boy because Gandhi. I mean,
I love that song. I've always loved that song. But
where did that come from? You just start playing it
and everybody sings along and everybody feels so good.

Speaker 8 (59:22):
We just started playing songs and then we just kind
of kept playing them. That's where it's just.

Speaker 2 (59:27):
Some song that we wouldn't play it otherwise you won't
hear that anywhere else. It's an exclusive.

Speaker 12 (59:31):
I feel like in the beginning of the show, we
used to always start with something really outrageous and out
of the field, so that song was in rotation.

Speaker 6 (59:40):
Yeah, I had not heard that until I came here,
and then everyone was singing along and I thought I
am an alien.

Speaker 2 (59:48):
Wow. Yeah, We've got a lot of weird stuff going
on here. Some of it can be explained, some of
it not. So there you go. So that's it. That's
all there is.

Speaker 6 (59:58):
Oh can I ask her one question?

Speaker 2 (01:00:00):
Oh sure?

Speaker 6 (01:00:00):
Okay, as a new listener, what's your favorite part? What
do you like that we're doing that we could do
more for you?

Speaker 22 (01:00:07):
Oh? I just love the banter. It's my favorite. I get.
I'm like, they're putting a song on, no go back,
keep talking.

Speaker 2 (01:00:16):
Banter, Like what are we bantering about? Just I really
don't land on a lot of solid things. We just
kind of move around quickly, right.

Speaker 6 (01:00:24):
Yeah, we do.

Speaker 22 (01:00:26):
There's a lot of buhle, Yeah, you're well part yeah
about going off on tangents when I mean we're like
squirrel and then we're on to the next thing that
I love it.

Speaker 2 (01:00:40):
There you go listen.

Speaker 9 (01:00:41):
I'm glad you called in a good reminder that you know,
we were getting new listeners all the time, and if
we have these old inside jokes where they seem like
inside jokes, we need to make sure everyone knows what
they mean. So we got a lot of work ahead
of us.

Speaker 2 (01:00:52):
Thanks. To you, Nicole. I appreciate it very much.

Speaker 22 (01:00:55):
Oh no, thank you guys. You guys are the best.

Speaker 7 (01:00:57):
I love you so much.

Speaker 22 (01:00:58):
Even though I'm new, you make my day.

Speaker 2 (01:01:03):
Year and a half is a long time for this mess.
So you're done, You're doing okay? Thank you Here for Nicole.

Speaker 3 (01:01:12):
Elvis Duran clap if you think she should suffer Elis
Dan in the Morning Show Elvis Duran and the Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (01:01:26):
Ben is he here? Oh there's it? In turn Ben
Ben goes to Pace University. So what classes you taking?
Anything interesting?

Speaker 11 (01:01:36):
I'm actually, well, this one's not interesting, but science one
oh one is my hardest class this semester because I
am awful at science.

Speaker 2 (01:01:43):
Wow, Gandhi would love to help you in es as
science freak.

Speaker 11 (01:01:47):
That would be perfect because it's my weakest, weakest quality
bringing in I have. It's a remote class and I
got a lab kit.

Speaker 8 (01:01:56):
Oh my god, it's not Wait, so you need to
do stuff at home at home.

Speaker 11 (01:02:01):
It's like rocks in.

Speaker 2 (01:02:02):
A box, blow up your kitchen.

Speaker 11 (01:02:06):
The rest of the classes are great, but that one.

Speaker 9 (01:02:09):
So which one of your classes has the professor that
is encouraging swear words to be used in the everyday
conversations in the room.

Speaker 11 (01:02:18):
Yeah, so that class I dropped. But it was a
management class and it was also online. It was a
zoom and the first day the professor's doing the syllabus
and he's like, yeah, and one thing about my class
is that I really just want to encourage you guys
to swear and be comfortable in that way, and then
proceeded to play like a ten minute video about why
that's important.

Speaker 2 (01:02:39):
Well, why is it? What did you learn from that video?

Speaker 11 (01:02:41):
That he wants to be the cool professor is what
I learned, And.

Speaker 6 (01:02:45):
He wasn't Why did you drop the class?

Speaker 11 (01:02:47):
Because I have to come here wednesdays. I was going
to drop it anyways, But I you.

Speaker 8 (01:02:52):
Know what I have to say that if you do
let people just speak like they normally speak and drop
a curse every now and then you do feel more
comfortable because you're yourself and if that's how you are,
then you know what I mean.

Speaker 6 (01:03:05):
Like, so that kind of.

Speaker 8 (01:03:05):
Makes sense to me. He wants to kind of create
that atmosphere.

Speaker 11 (01:03:09):
I agree, except for when you go into an interview
or something like that in a professional space and now
you've been like programmed to not have that type of
code switching behavior. I feel like that could get you
into some sticks.

Speaker 8 (01:03:25):
Help me tell you not to do that.

Speaker 2 (01:03:27):
You didn't.

Speaker 9 (01:03:27):
Well, okay, you're in a professional space right now, and
you can feel free say say whatever. Say which what's
your favorite curse word?

Speaker 11 (01:03:35):
Oh my god, I don't know if I have one.
I feel like the most like yeah, but.

Speaker 2 (01:03:41):
I mean, do you feel comfortable in this space? The
reason I'm asking is because in this business, we have
our own rules. Okay, I see your point, though. If
you feel that in a college setting, that is preparing
you for all the possibilities in the world outside college
and in businesses and oh.

Speaker 11 (01:04:02):
Right, I mean here obviously it can be a more
relaxed and you're supposed to be yourself. That's kind of
the point. Yeah, but that's not every workplace, and I'm
sure plenty of workplaces wouldn't want you to speak in
that way. So, and I would never say that to
a professor.

Speaker 6 (01:04:20):
Yeah right, we'll all be fired immediately. If we were
not here, it would happen day one, every single person
out the door.

Speaker 12 (01:04:27):
We like, but that was appropriate my other job maybe,
And allowing yourself to do that, it also teaches you
restraint in the times that you need to be in
the professional setting. So maybe that's part of the lesson,
right because as you said before, you're not going to
go into an interview that way, So maybe that trains
you for the future for those situations.

Speaker 2 (01:04:45):
I don't know. Really good point, Ben, Did you notice
that as soon as it was announced that you're clear
to curse, that people started using curse words or where
they's just still restrained restrain.

Speaker 11 (01:04:56):
It was a zoom class, so nobody's talking anyway.

Speaker 13 (01:05:01):
What's the point then, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:05:04):
I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:05:05):
And that ten minute video that you guys watched outside
of you learning that he wants to be the cool professor,
did you what was the information as far as why
it's important.

Speaker 11 (01:05:13):
Well, it was actually a little bit interesting. It was
talking about how if somebody is doing a difficult task,
for example, like if you were to do a cold plunge,
somebody who's silent and like holding it all in won't
last as long as somebody that's like cursing and like
letting out like how difficult it is the last long?

Speaker 2 (01:05:32):
That's why you do it?

Speaker 8 (01:05:32):
Dang, Yeah, why I did? That's why I curse.

Speaker 11 (01:05:34):
Yeah, that was one of the things. Same with like exercising.
If you're like running and you're cursing about how tired
you are, then you'll run longer.

Speaker 8 (01:05:42):
See, I thought it was the opposite. I thought, when
you like, you know, don't do those things you you
want you when you put negative energy into the to
the you know, atmosphere, it's not a good thing, Like
it makes you do things less.

Speaker 4 (01:05:54):
No.

Speaker 6 (01:05:55):
I read that if you sub your toe, you're supposed
to be like fh. Really yeah, let it all out,
because you bottle it just makes it hurt more.

Speaker 2 (01:06:02):
I also there I equate this to the conversation.

Speaker 12 (01:06:04):
We were having the other day where you you, like
the grunting at the gym, you know, you're letting it off, Like.

Speaker 2 (01:06:12):
How would you know that? No time I've seen you
with the jim you didn't even leave the locker room.

Speaker 12 (01:06:20):
I'm a student, I'm observing. Yes, So it's almost like
you're getting it all out.

Speaker 8 (01:06:25):
Do you have to take the class again or no?

Speaker 11 (01:06:28):
I can take some variation of it, not necessarily that
specific one. And I don't want to be on zoom
for three hours and try to learn it doesn't work.

Speaker 9 (01:06:37):
Yeah, Hey, how is your experience here?

Speaker 2 (01:06:40):
As an intern on our show so far, anything you
want to.

Speaker 8 (01:06:44):
He's got a fabulous coat today, by the way, not
that that has anything to do in his internship, but
I'm just saying.

Speaker 2 (01:06:49):
When you say it's fabulous, I mean is it? Is
it moving the meter at all? I mean, are you
Are you liking this your coat?

Speaker 11 (01:06:59):
No, It's been really really fun, and I think the
most important part has been meeting everyone and getting to
know kind of the dynamics. And I'm feeling very lucky
to be surrounded by this type of group that is
very kind and supportive.

Speaker 2 (01:07:19):
Anyway, well, there are any more questions from Ben?

Speaker 6 (01:07:21):
Yeah, what do you like the most about the dynamic here?

Speaker 2 (01:07:24):
I like that.

Speaker 11 (01:07:26):
I mean, I guess this goes against literally what we've
been talking about the entire time, but it is very
comfortable and people can be themselves. And if you have
like a question, nobody's looking at you, like why are
you asking that? Everyone's just trying to get you to
feel comfortable.

Speaker 2 (01:07:41):
And yeah, I got a question. What other classes you're taking?

Speaker 11 (01:07:48):
I am taking Advanced Topics in Film, I am taking
Spanish two, and I am taking Television Field Production.

Speaker 2 (01:08:00):
Wow. Okay, okay, go back to the first what topics? What?
What was that?

Speaker 11 (01:08:05):
Advanced topics in film? It's the last requirement I need
for my film major.

Speaker 2 (01:08:10):
What is that cover?

Speaker 6 (01:08:14):
He looks excited.

Speaker 11 (01:08:16):
So each section of that course is a different advanced topic.
And our advanced topic is experimental film, which is a
little I okay, I'm not I just don't know.

Speaker 8 (01:08:30):
What's experimental.

Speaker 11 (01:08:31):
You want to know what it is. It is taking
the physical film, like the celluloid film, and like drawing
on it, like it's basically film without the camera, so
then you projected and like an image does show up?

Speaker 2 (01:08:47):
You're paying for this?

Speaker 8 (01:08:49):
Is this a class?

Speaker 6 (01:08:49):
Why is this a clam class?

Speaker 2 (01:08:51):
I don't know.

Speaker 11 (01:08:51):
I don't know why this is. I don't know why
this is the advanced topic because nobody in that room
is wants to do that as a career.

Speaker 2 (01:08:59):
But there's got to be a point behind why it's there.
I'm wondering who put it there and why.

Speaker 11 (01:09:04):
Somebody asked in my class literally last week he was
like what what are they?

Speaker 2 (01:09:09):
Like?

Speaker 11 (01:09:09):
Literally, what are these?

Speaker 8 (01:09:10):
Why are we doing?

Speaker 2 (01:09:11):
What are we doing?

Speaker 11 (01:09:11):
She was like, well, maybe you'll find out by the
end of the court.

Speaker 2 (01:09:21):
Where's that going in life?

Speaker 6 (01:09:24):
Have it made man, they have really good there. You
go get college paid for. Sometimes that's not the end game.

Speaker 2 (01:09:31):
Well you don't know that.

Speaker 8 (01:09:32):
Well, if I want to want a Starbucks, that's game
for me.

Speaker 2 (01:09:35):
All right, Okay, you know, maybe the answers will show
themselves before the end. I don't know keeps all right,
Well that was great.

Speaker 9 (01:09:46):
Now we know Ben Ben's okay with us cursing here,
but not in the zoom class.

Speaker 2 (01:09:51):
Okay, everyone, you.

Speaker 3 (01:09:58):
Love the Morning Show. It's a good idea to follow
our socials.

Speaker 19 (01:10:02):
Do you know what's good for me?

Speaker 3 (01:10:05):
Elvis Durand's show, follow them to Elvis d ran in
the Morning Show, Elvis Dan, Elvis duran in the Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (01:10:20):
I was reading today somewhere about how many of you
know people who don't have friends of the opposite sex?

Speaker 6 (01:10:30):
Oh, I know some, I know a few, right, Yeah, And.

Speaker 9 (01:10:34):
Usually if you're in a relationship anyway, people get all
hot and bothered and all lathered up. If you have
people of opposite sex, yes, because they don't want you
to hanging out with.

Speaker 5 (01:10:44):
People forbid it, which I think is so wild.

Speaker 6 (01:10:46):
I can't even imagine. I think it's so important to
have friends of the opposite sex.

Speaker 2 (01:10:49):
But do you think it's weird not to have friends
of the opposite sex?

Speaker 6 (01:10:53):
Very weird?

Speaker 5 (01:10:53):
I do too, Yeah, and I think too.

Speaker 6 (01:10:56):
I mean, like I have dated guys that say they
have zero friends who are girls, and I feel like
you can tell just the way that they interact with you,
and do like I love dating guys who have sisters,
right because they just have a different, you know, perspective
on everything. They grew up with girls. They know how
to deal with them. And I think the same thing
about guys who have girlfriends. You have to have some friends,
get to know them. We're totally different.

Speaker 2 (01:11:16):
Men and right, o Daniel, do you have friends who
are guy friends?

Speaker 19 (01:11:21):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (01:11:21):
Of course, right, But Froggie's my best guy friend.

Speaker 2 (01:11:24):
Oh yeah, I don't think of him as a guy.

Speaker 8 (01:11:27):
And we slept in the same room together, like just
me and front exactly.

Speaker 2 (01:11:31):
But I mean, do you have any friends, any girlfriends
who just have no opposite sex friends? No?

Speaker 8 (01:11:37):
No, I don't think so.

Speaker 19 (01:11:38):
I have.

Speaker 8 (01:11:38):
I have friends that don't have girlfriends that they just
hang out with guys.

Speaker 2 (01:11:42):
Oh really that's the opposite.

Speaker 8 (01:11:44):
Yeah, I have those, But that says a lot about them,
Like in my head, it's like they go I don't
get along with girls, and I'm like.

Speaker 6 (01:11:51):
Yeah, if you eliminate one sex either way, it's kind
of strange. Yeah, it's weird. I mean half the population
is the opposite sex. You gotta get out there, get
to know them.

Speaker 8 (01:12:00):
That's a red flag for me.

Speaker 2 (01:12:01):
Well, it's a red flag, I mean at most. I mean, but.

Speaker 9 (01:12:05):
I wonder if these friends of ours who don't have
opposite sex friends at all, if they even realize it.

Speaker 2 (01:12:12):
It's just the way their life is rolling. It's just
where they are in life. Or maybe they're in a
relationship that won't let it happen. I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:12:18):
I think a lot of times relationships don't let it
happen too. I mean again, I've been there where I
have a lot of very good guy friends and it
has bothered in the past people that I've been dating
who said I don't want you to hang out with
that person, and I think it ruins things.

Speaker 5 (01:12:31):
Yeah, why would you not want to hang out with.

Speaker 2 (01:12:33):
Yeah, let's let's get to the bottom of that. Why
am I not allowed to hang out with a Hello? Hello? Yeah,
let's think that through. Good morning, Laney, how you doing.

Speaker 23 (01:12:41):
Good morning, I'm fabulous, Well.

Speaker 2 (01:12:43):
And you are fabulous. I can feel the fab Hey,
so you say that you're in your your very best
friend is a guy. You've been best friend for thirty
years and now you know you're married. How did you
set this up with your husband? Is he cool with
you having a best friend who's a guy.

Speaker 23 (01:13:01):
Yeah, Well, when we first initially started talking, I let
him know, you know, my best friend is a man.

Speaker 22 (01:13:07):
We met in tenth grade.

Speaker 23 (01:13:08):
This is not something that's going to change, and he
said he was okay with it.

Speaker 7 (01:13:13):
But I was a little bit reserved, of course.

Speaker 23 (01:13:15):
So then when we actually met in person and things
started going well, I just said, like, this is seriously
not an option, Like, my friend is not going anywhere,
and he seems to be okay with it. It's not
been an issue. We're now together five years and my
best friend is my daughter's godfather, and life goes on.

Speaker 9 (01:13:33):
So you actually told your husband actually on your date,
this would be the last date with you if you
cannot accept the fa fact I have a best friend
who's a guy.

Speaker 23 (01:13:42):
Good that's right, because I was in relationships in the
past where it was an issue after the fact, and
I needed it to not be an issue right from
the beginning, so I could to hear that.

Speaker 2 (01:13:52):
All right, good for you, Laney.

Speaker 9 (01:13:53):
Yeah, we've had a lot of text from people saying
if my husband had a best friend who was a woman,
I could not handle that.

Speaker 2 (01:14:00):
So I wonder why there's something in and I have.

Speaker 23 (01:14:03):
Had this conversation and I have told him that I
don't think it would be an issue on my end,
but of course, until you're in the situation, it's really
hard to know.

Speaker 2 (01:14:12):
All Right, Well, thank you lady. You and your best
friend of thirty years have a great one. Yeah, I
don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:14:18):
I don't think it would bother me at all if
Brandon had a best friend that was a girl.

Speaker 8 (01:14:22):
Okay, as long as you knew it was totally platonic,
because I have been in a situation where I thought
it was platonic and the other present want of writing
me a letter saying that they didn't want it to
be platonic, and that was a problem, and I had
to stop talking to them because it was getting too awkward.

Speaker 2 (01:14:39):
Well, Daniel, I thought you were going to talk about it. Oh, sorry,
you're so busted.

Speaker 19 (01:14:45):
Don't answer the phone. Elvis Durand. The Elvis Durand phone
tap take.

Speaker 2 (01:14:50):
It away, Danielle, what's it all about.

Speaker 8 (01:14:51):
It's from Sabine And she said, my twin sister, Sandra
has been very generous with me. She shelled out a
lot of money to pay for my son's daycare tuition
when I was low on cash.

Speaker 5 (01:15:00):
He told me whenever I nan helped to just ask.

Speaker 8 (01:15:02):
So you got to call her, tell her I charged
a lot of money on her account without asking, and
see what she says.

Speaker 2 (01:15:08):
All right, let's listen in. Let's see what happens. Today's
phone tap.

Speaker 8 (01:15:12):
Hello, Hi, I'm looking for a Sandra please. Yeah, yes, Hi,
this is Lisa Stella from the Throne Bank. How are
you today?

Speaker 25 (01:15:19):
I'm good, Thank you.

Speaker 8 (01:15:20):
I'm just calling you to make sure you've approved the
seven thousand, eight hundred and forty eight dollars transaction from KinderCare.

Speaker 7 (01:15:27):
No, what did they charge seven eight hundred.

Speaker 8 (01:15:29):
And forty eight dollars. It looks like it's nine months
worth of tuition on what Apparently it says here you've
given permission before for two hundred and eighteen dollars to
be taken out, yes, and so now now it's saying
that they've also been given permission for seven thousand, eight hundred.

Speaker 23 (01:15:45):
No, it's actually for my sister's child, Okay, but I
had done it as a one time.

Speaker 14 (01:15:51):
Thing for her.

Speaker 34 (01:15:51):
That was it.

Speaker 23 (01:15:52):
Actually, I will call her right now.

Speaker 5 (01:15:54):
She is actually on the other line.

Speaker 8 (01:15:56):
Do you mind if I connect you?

Speaker 19 (01:15:58):
Okay, Sabine?

Speaker 8 (01:15:59):
Is that right? Yes, I'm gonna connect you too, and
then I'm going to foule some paperwork. So hold on
here she comes.

Speaker 6 (01:16:05):
Hello, Hey, SDRO.

Speaker 7 (01:16:07):
Yes, the bank just called me.

Speaker 23 (01:16:09):
Yeah, they're calling me too, and they said that can
the care charge seven thousand dollars on my account? You
were supposed to call me to tell me what it
was gonna be.

Speaker 20 (01:16:20):
Well, the other thing that's going on, I just forgot.

Speaker 2 (01:16:22):
Is it a big deal?

Speaker 14 (01:16:23):
Yeah? So I don't have seven thousand dollars on the account.

Speaker 1 (01:16:26):
Well, they didn't tell.

Speaker 12 (01:16:27):
Me it was gonna be seven thousand dollars.

Speaker 14 (01:16:28):
I don't have it.

Speaker 4 (01:16:29):
It's gonna put me at a negative.

Speaker 22 (01:16:31):
I can't do that, but that puts me in a
bad position with the school.

Speaker 14 (01:16:34):
I'm gonna call you back on your cell phone.

Speaker 4 (01:16:36):
Paga.

Speaker 2 (01:16:37):
I'm on my cell phone.

Speaker 5 (01:16:38):
And I need to talk to you directly.

Speaker 14 (01:16:40):
We're connected to the bank. I need to talk to
you the bank.

Speaker 8 (01:16:43):
It's okay.

Speaker 20 (01:16:44):
She left the line. Remember she said she was gonna.

Speaker 5 (01:16:46):
Leave us to talk.

Speaker 8 (01:16:46):
What's the big deal, Sabine, I need to call you back, Toadra,
I need to call them, Sabin.

Speaker 27 (01:16:52):
I have to call my bank.

Speaker 6 (01:16:53):
Give me that much room, Okay then fagr.

Speaker 20 (01:16:55):
Your bank is already on the line.

Speaker 22 (01:16:57):
Okay, I'll call you back. Hello.

Speaker 8 (01:16:59):
Yeah, Hi, I just wanted to see are we okay?
You authorize the transaction yet?

Speaker 14 (01:17:04):
No, we can't. I have to call the account I.

Speaker 1 (01:17:07):
Are authorizing it.

Speaker 23 (01:17:08):
No we're not.

Speaker 14 (01:17:09):
Hello, Sabin, I'm hanging up.

Speaker 6 (01:17:11):
Father, don't hang out.

Speaker 14 (01:17:13):
Go please, I'll call you back.

Speaker 4 (01:17:15):
I said, I don't know the stand what you don't
call you back?

Speaker 7 (01:17:19):
Well?

Speaker 20 (01:17:20):
I wanted to kind kid.

Speaker 4 (01:17:21):
The other day they said that they were gonna authorize
an extra payment author seven thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (01:17:27):
I don't love it.

Speaker 27 (01:17:28):
You know what you're supposed to call me to tell
me you.

Speaker 2 (01:17:30):
Were gonna make an unditional payment. I know, I didn't
expect them.

Speaker 4 (01:17:34):
They just said, tho thousand, seven thousand dollars for a month.

Speaker 6 (01:17:38):
What is it paying for you?

Speaker 2 (01:17:40):
She said, nine months?

Speaker 7 (01:17:41):
They wanted to clear.

Speaker 27 (01:17:43):
I can't believe what you're telling me I'm not kidding.

Speaker 1 (01:17:47):
I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:17:47):
I'm not happy, but I'll.

Speaker 12 (01:17:48):
Talk to them.

Speaker 6 (01:17:49):
You're not happy based on who mightn't do this to you,
you know, and you can't expect me to accept it.

Speaker 19 (01:17:55):
You know.

Speaker 13 (01:17:56):
I'm really upset because the way you're.

Speaker 8 (01:17:57):
Speaking to me, like I'm lying to the money I give.

Speaker 1 (01:18:01):
It to you.

Speaker 19 (01:18:02):
Hello.

Speaker 8 (01:18:03):
Yes, this is Danielle Manarro from Elvis Duran in the
Morning Show. And you got phone tapped.

Speaker 19 (01:18:10):
Okay, I got you.

Speaker 3 (01:18:19):
I'm Elvis Duran's phone tap.

Speaker 24 (01:18:24):
This phone table was pre recorded permission granted by all
participates the.

Speaker 3 (01:18:28):
Elvis Oran phone tap only on Elvis Duran in the
Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (01:18:36):
Come on, Wake Up, Wake Up, Elvis Duran in the
Morning Show. It was just the other day on the show,
we were talking about the weirdest.

Speaker 9 (01:18:44):
Places you've thrown up. I just woke up and realized
what we're talking about.

Speaker 2 (01:18:50):
It all started.

Speaker 9 (01:18:50):
We're talking about Danielle who threw up at next to
a grave site in the Bahamas.

Speaker 8 (01:18:57):
Yes, Anna Nicole Smith's grave in the Bahamas. Because I
had a migraine. It was the worst migraine ever, and
so I was at the gravesite. I think they handed
me a candy bag to actually throw up in.

Speaker 2 (01:19:07):
She vomited in the candy but it was so.

Speaker 8 (01:19:09):
It wasn't on her actual grain, which was good.

Speaker 14 (01:19:11):
Good.

Speaker 9 (01:19:11):
Look, we've all thrown up in different interesting places, you know,
the bathrooms and side of the road. Yeah, stuff like
in the bed, things like that. But what famous place
have you.

Speaker 2 (01:19:22):
Thrown Oh my goodness, we're really doing this, we're really
talking about.

Speaker 10 (01:19:25):
Its interesting though, because you think of all these tourist
attractions that everybody goes to, and the vast number of
people to go, somebody's got to vomit there at least
once a day.

Speaker 4 (01:19:35):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:19:35):
Some of these buildings, somebody's got to throw up there.
That's why they have they have drained in the floors.
I'm sure that closed it down. And then don't forget school,
you know what. That's when the janitor would bring the uh,
the wood shavings, sawdust, Nan and I witnessed someone throw
throwing up at Newark Airport, remember that, And that caused

(01:19:56):
a stir that was bad.

Speaker 6 (01:19:58):
It was La Guardia.

Speaker 2 (01:20:00):
My dad threw up shrimp parmesan on an airplane one time.

Speaker 8 (01:20:02):
Okay, smells lovely.

Speaker 9 (01:20:05):
Okay, but what famous place. Have you thrown up that?
Let's go talk to us Sarah. Sarah is calling from Wildwood,
New Jersey. Hey, Sarah, how's it going?

Speaker 6 (01:20:14):
Hey?

Speaker 19 (01:20:15):
How are you?

Speaker 2 (01:20:16):
We're doing great.

Speaker 9 (01:20:17):
So I don't know why we think this is going
to be interesting for anyone listening to the show. But
the question is where have you thrown up?

Speaker 2 (01:20:25):
Like? What different?

Speaker 7 (01:20:29):
So it was the Gettysburg Battlefield.

Speaker 9 (01:20:32):
Okay, it wasn't during an actual military battle. No, okay,
so years after So you were at Gettysburg just I
guess doing the tourist thing.

Speaker 13 (01:20:45):
Yes.

Speaker 30 (01:20:45):
So my husband and I we live about half an
hour away from there, and we decided for one of
our anniversaries.

Speaker 7 (01:20:51):
To go there walk around and they have a.

Speaker 30 (01:20:54):
Thing called a Psychloorama where you stand in the middle
and like they show you slides and it goes around
in a circle.

Speaker 7 (01:20:59):
And it bade me incredibly dizzy.

Speaker 19 (01:21:01):
It was the middle of July and.

Speaker 30 (01:21:03):
I started getting lightheaded, nauseous.

Speaker 7 (01:21:05):
So we went out to the car.

Speaker 30 (01:21:06):
We drove around for a little bit and we parked
in front of one of the big monuments and I
just yacked everywhere.

Speaker 2 (01:21:13):
Oh no, did the crowd watch?

Speaker 13 (01:21:16):
Oh, it was in front of tons of people.

Speaker 11 (01:21:18):
It was awful.

Speaker 19 (01:21:18):
It was so embarrassing.

Speaker 2 (01:21:22):
Lord, all right. The good thing is if you do
it at the guests her battlefield, no one there's going
to ever see you again.

Speaker 16 (01:21:28):
So it's like rights, no, absolutely not, and I have
not gone back since.

Speaker 2 (01:21:32):
Oh man, thanks, thank you for listening. We appreciate it. Sarah,
I have a great day. Okay, thank you too. All right,
I have Ashley in Fairfax to see if she actually
wants to talk about this with us in front of
millions of people. Hi, Ashley, how you doing?

Speaker 14 (01:21:48):
Hi?

Speaker 2 (01:21:48):
I'm good.

Speaker 6 (01:21:49):
How are you?

Speaker 2 (01:21:50):
We're doing okay? Talking about the famous places we've thrown up.

Speaker 23 (01:21:52):
Go.

Speaker 34 (01:21:54):
So, my son had thrown up on the monorail and
on our way to f Con and are very last
stop before we headed home.

Speaker 2 (01:22:04):
That's awful, and he gets.

Speaker 22 (01:22:06):
He gets motion sickness.

Speaker 8 (01:22:08):
So we thought it was just that.

Speaker 34 (01:22:10):
And all my daughter wanted to do was me, Donna
and Elsa.

Speaker 27 (01:22:14):
So as we are.

Speaker 34 (01:22:15):
Waiting in line for Anna and Elsa, my son all
of a sudden just looks over at us, bends over
and just vomits all over the floor.

Speaker 2 (01:22:25):
Special meet and great house.

Speaker 6 (01:22:27):
That's that mean?

Speaker 8 (01:22:27):
Greathouse? Right, it's an yep.

Speaker 34 (01:22:31):
Yep, like right before we got to them, and it
was horrifying.

Speaker 2 (01:22:37):
Well, here's the thing. You take your little kids ride
the rides and it's hot, and you're eating food and
you're full of sodium. They're gonna yea, They're gonna vomit eventually,
aren't they.

Speaker 19 (01:22:50):
Yes?

Speaker 34 (01:22:50):
And I will say everybody at Disney was absolutely wonderful.
They helped clean him up.

Speaker 22 (01:22:56):
They they were like, don't worry about it.

Speaker 6 (01:22:58):
They were great.

Speaker 34 (01:22:59):
My husband just cooped him up and just took him
right on through and I waited with my daughter to
go meet Anna and Elsa, and.

Speaker 6 (01:23:07):
Then he forgot to throw up in a bush.

Speaker 2 (01:23:09):
Oh god.

Speaker 8 (01:23:09):
I wonder how anyone else has ever thrown up on
Anna and Elsa well to.

Speaker 2 (01:23:14):
Say that on them, or maybe they threw up on
a tourist.

Speaker 9 (01:23:18):
But I bet, I bet out of all the places
in America, Disney World probably has the most vomit.

Speaker 6 (01:23:24):
Yeah for sure. Yeah, come my kids and rides.

Speaker 12 (01:23:27):
Oh yep, as one of your friends throw up on
Mission Space.

Speaker 2 (01:23:31):
Yes, no, Missions Space send people to the hospital. Yeah.
All right, Well, Ashley, thank you for listening to us.
Have a great day.

Speaker 8 (01:23:38):
Okay, thank you so much.

Speaker 11 (01:23:40):
Bye.

Speaker 9 (01:23:41):
We had had text from someone who actually threw up
at the Vatican. I wonder if it was an Assistine chapel.

Speaker 8 (01:23:49):
You know how many of these rollercoasters people throw up
on And what they do is is they take the
car and they hose it down and then it just comes.

Speaker 6 (01:23:56):
Right back around.

Speaker 8 (01:23:57):
And I've been there, where I go. Don't sit in
the wet one. Do not sit in the wet.

Speaker 5 (01:24:02):
Car when you do watch on a ride.

Speaker 8 (01:24:04):
Yeah, where's it go?

Speaker 6 (01:24:06):
Doesn't it fly back around?

Speaker 2 (01:24:08):
Oh god? Yeah, that happened to me once in a ride.
But it wasn't puke. It was my bloody nose all
over everyone behind its roller coaster. I waited for the
first car. You know, you have to wait in a
special n for the first car on the roller coaster.
I got it, and my nose started bleeding because my
nose bleeds all the time. And uh, I was going

(01:24:28):
to give up my first car, so I said, I
rode the ride and I spattered everyone. It's fabulous, Uh, Kate,
how you doing cake.

Speaker 7 (01:24:39):
The cookies?

Speaker 6 (01:24:40):
Oh my god?

Speaker 7 (01:24:41):
I threw up all over the.

Speaker 14 (01:24:43):
Vatican because I was so sick, which can't bode.

Speaker 1 (01:24:45):
Well for me because in the afterlife.

Speaker 7 (01:24:48):
What does that mean?

Speaker 14 (01:24:48):
I don't know where I'm gonna wind up.

Speaker 2 (01:24:50):
But also I'm.

Speaker 14 (01:24:51):
Jewish, so this is a whole other thing.

Speaker 1 (01:24:54):
So yeah, wow, Well where is the Vatican?

Speaker 2 (01:24:58):
Are you? You wren't to say teen Chapel?

Speaker 7 (01:25:00):
I was no, No in Rome?

Speaker 1 (01:25:03):
Where in the in the like?

Speaker 14 (01:25:05):
All throughout it just kept It was.

Speaker 8 (01:25:07):
Not a good situation.

Speaker 22 (01:25:08):
I thought it was going to get better all over
waiting online to get in.

Speaker 16 (01:25:13):
It was not good.

Speaker 8 (01:25:15):
But I wasn't about to miss it.

Speaker 9 (01:25:18):
But yeah, you could have turned back and gone back
to the hotel, but you decided I could have no.

Speaker 7 (01:25:22):
But I was with a group of people.

Speaker 14 (01:25:23):
They weren't gonna Yeah, I was sticking to it. I
was just I was committed to the Vatican.

Speaker 7 (01:25:29):
I was committed to being in Rome.

Speaker 14 (01:25:31):
It was It's what it was.

Speaker 2 (01:25:33):
Vomit or not, you're gonna enjoy it.

Speaker 6 (01:25:34):
Yeah, gandhi, Okay, So one, what caused the vomit.

Speaker 19 (01:25:39):
I had?

Speaker 14 (01:25:40):
I definitely had a virus.

Speaker 16 (01:25:41):
I was studying abroad and I definitely had a virus.

Speaker 22 (01:25:45):
I know it was bad, but I lost seven pounds.

Speaker 17 (01:25:48):
I was the lightest I've ever been in.

Speaker 19 (01:25:50):
My whole life.

Speaker 16 (01:25:50):
Wow, And I weighed myself and it was.

Speaker 22 (01:25:55):
In the not the metrics, so I had to convert it.

Speaker 14 (01:25:58):
And I was so excited the rest of the day
that carry me.

Speaker 13 (01:26:00):
Through the rest of the trip, So it was it
was worth it.

Speaker 6 (01:26:03):
Okay, story, Well, my next question was going to be
in general, how many times do you need to throw
up at a place before you leave it?

Speaker 14 (01:26:13):
Jeez?

Speaker 3 (01:26:15):
In that moment, I guess the limits didn't exist because
we were we were you know, I was a group
of people and I wasn't going anywhere.

Speaker 30 (01:26:23):
But probably probably one should do okay, but one should a.

Speaker 7 (01:26:29):
Normal circumstances, one should.

Speaker 13 (01:26:31):
I know that I didn't want to be selfish.

Speaker 10 (01:26:33):
You were incredibly selfish because you're vomiting and rule all
these other people's good time they're trying to see.

Speaker 25 (01:26:39):
No, no, I was.

Speaker 2 (01:26:41):
I was discreet about it.

Speaker 14 (01:26:42):
Well, I never thought I'd be talking about vomit with
you guys.

Speaker 23 (01:26:45):
This is.

Speaker 2 (01:26:47):
Do a show about vomit, so we're doing it.

Speaker 14 (01:26:49):
I know, this is this is nuts wow wow wow.

Speaker 1 (01:26:54):
But yeah, no, I was.

Speaker 7 (01:26:55):
Nobody else on the trip got sick.

Speaker 22 (01:26:57):
I think people gave it to me on the.

Speaker 16 (01:26:58):
Trip initially, so this is good.

Speaker 7 (01:27:01):
Yeah, this is I was.

Speaker 1 (01:27:02):
A grand finale, and we've.

Speaker 2 (01:27:05):
Learned a lot to do today. Can we move on?
I can't talk about vomit anymore?

Speaker 16 (01:27:09):
We can move on.

Speaker 1 (01:27:09):
I'm so sorry.

Speaker 14 (01:27:10):
I love you guys. You guys are the best.

Speaker 20 (01:27:12):
I listened every morning.

Speaker 2 (01:27:13):
No, we wanted you, we wanted you on with this.

Speaker 13 (01:27:16):
I'm so happy you called.

Speaker 20 (01:27:17):
I said, Holy, I said, can I curte?

Speaker 2 (01:27:19):
No no, no, you can't no, you can't cannot do
not say it.

Speaker 22 (01:27:23):
But we can know I won't, I said, Holy, Holy.

Speaker 7 (01:27:26):
The one hundred is calling now, Crowder, I'll be listening.
It's amazing.

Speaker 14 (01:27:30):
All right.

Speaker 2 (01:27:30):
I love you guys, love you more. All right, we
are we done with vomit. Thanks, you're especially done with vomit.
Have a nice day.

Speaker 3 (01:27:40):
I want to hear something slightly more unhinged in the
Morning show Elvister Rand's After Party, a podcast we record
daily when the Morning Show is finished. He is literally
pastry Elvister Rands After Party. Listen to the iHeart Radio
app or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 23 (01:28:02):
Show.

Speaker 19 (01:28:09):
I was in the morning show.

Speaker 9 (01:28:12):
So we have a little problem with Andrew Andrew. Can
we get Andrew and or Daniell call Andrew?

Speaker 2 (01:28:19):
Surely he heard that, and we had no sound proof
walls here. So who's gonna who's gonna tell him? Who's
gonna lead the intervention?

Speaker 19 (01:28:28):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (01:28:28):
I tried to. I tried to have an intervention with
him about this already and it was fruitless. And Nate just,
I think got a Charlie horse.

Speaker 2 (01:28:37):
Old man, old man, Nate got a Chari horse. Okay,
hold on, hold on, everyone, calm down, Nate, are you okay?
Oh my god, okay, Well, I didn't even know.

Speaker 6 (01:28:51):
White Diamond said she never wants to go places with
him because.

Speaker 2 (01:28:56):
Old man Nathan, you freak like an old house comes down.
Oh my god, he's knocking furniture. You the phone off?
Are you okay? Your foot asleep? Not my whole leg?
Do you think there's something deeper than okay?

Speaker 6 (01:29:19):
How long have you been sitting there?

Speaker 23 (01:29:20):
Man?

Speaker 6 (01:29:22):
Without movie?

Speaker 10 (01:29:23):
Should we call someone your I'm fine, I'm fine.

Speaker 2 (01:29:26):
I'm back now. I got that pins on needles thing.
You're the only way to make it feel better is
to hit it really hard. Yeah, Oh my god, I'm
gonna go. That happens when you sit on the toilet
for too long. You also get hemorrhoid issues. But then

(01:29:49):
when you get up and you start dragging your leg.
You're like, why am I? Well, why do I have
any feeling in my leg? And you also drag your
hemorrhoids on the floor. I've fallen over before, I have
fallen over.

Speaker 6 (01:29:59):
I'm a stud.

Speaker 8 (01:30:00):
This is never happened to me.

Speaker 6 (01:30:01):
The fact that it's scary is limping off a toilet,
And then Scotty and Nate are like, yeah, that's totally normal.
We limp off the toilet too.

Speaker 2 (01:30:06):
What is happening? Do you sit on the bull twenty minutes?

Speaker 5 (01:30:10):
Du if you're.

Speaker 2 (01:30:12):
There for an extended period of time, But dude, are
you constipated? Should we hire a tow truck to pull
that thing out of that?

Speaker 12 (01:30:19):
I'm opening now, I'm doing other things.

Speaker 2 (01:30:22):
Yeah, that's what I always.

Speaker 6 (01:30:23):
You bring a letter opener, No, I bring all.

Speaker 2 (01:30:25):
My mail to the toilet. I open up envelopes. I
open up envelopes too, toilet.

Speaker 8 (01:30:29):
I do too, because mail laying around your house as
fecal matter.

Speaker 2 (01:30:33):
Why are people still sitting envelope that's the whole thing.

Speaker 12 (01:30:37):
I let it pile up and then I'm like, I'm
taking it into the bathroom and open it up then,
because to me, it's a waste of time.

Speaker 2 (01:30:42):
To do that in other times, you understand what I'm saying.
You guys are weird so well is your foot of
white nights. It's still a little tingling. I've never had that.
It's still kind of a sleep.

Speaker 6 (01:30:52):
No, Diamond said, this is why she doesn't want to
travel with you, because you were on a train and
the same thing happened, and you like dragged yourself in
by your hands in that stadium.

Speaker 2 (01:30:59):
Yeah, mid stage. It's embarrassing. I'm sorry to distract from things,
and I'm sorry.

Speaker 9 (01:31:04):
We okay, it's all okay, all right, scary and scotti
b You've admitted to the world that your ass falls
asleep on toilets and you have to drag one leg
out like that feeling.

Speaker 2 (01:31:16):
Yes, happened to me too, though I know what he's
talking about. How long are you on the toilet? Toilettes?
Why are you going a toilet that long? I'm reading inactivity. Yeah,
don't you just go? You go do what you do
on a toilet, blush it and go. Got nothing to do? No,
I go, Yeah, I don't have anything. Is your life
that boring and slow that you find your daily fun
on a toilet? It's not fun. It's just I don't

(01:31:37):
have any I don't have anyone to answer to. I
live alone, and I'm not in the rush to go anywhere.
Why just look at it, Cory, Look at all the
places in your apartment you could go chairs, all right, Well,
God bless you. I think laying down on the floor
is more comfortable than sitting on a toilet, just saying
I'm sure you've been on there for like twenty thirty minutes.
It's in your life. I go to the toilet to

(01:31:57):
do what the toilet is used for it and then
I get off.

Speaker 8 (01:31:59):
If it's not come in, is not coming, get it
and do something else.

Speaker 4 (01:32:02):
It was.

Speaker 12 (01:32:03):
Just know that if you were there for thirty minutes
sitting sedentary, and then you get up, there's a very
good chance you'll get the pins and needles in your legs.

Speaker 2 (01:32:10):
You never know. I'll never know.

Speaker 6 (01:32:12):
That happened to us in the studio more often though.

Speaker 10 (01:32:14):
Yeah, well, I think it's the seeded you know, when
you're when you're really low.

Speaker 2 (01:32:21):
I really feel like he just pushed the button on
his shout. His ass is dragging the ground.

Speaker 10 (01:32:28):
So if you're like me, I'm like this with my phone.
So my elbows are cutting off the blood flow to
my calves. Okay, so I really feel like that does
something because I've had to hold onto the shower rail
before to stand up.

Speaker 6 (01:32:42):
I'm getting you a medical at bracelet an happen.

Speaker 2 (01:32:45):
Can we please take a brok? Can we please get
out of this?

Speaker 3 (01:32:47):
Please?

Speaker 2 (01:32:48):
We do need to pull an intervention on someone who
works with us. Andrew, Andrew, thank you for being here.
Thank you. Do you have any any idea at all
why we wanted you here with us?

Speaker 27 (01:33:00):
No, but it's an intervention. So now I'm wondering what
I need to be intervened about.

Speaker 11 (01:33:04):
He knows.

Speaker 6 (01:33:05):
He knows because I tried to intervention him about this already.

Speaker 2 (01:33:08):
Is there any way we could pull up your phone
to see your phone time with this video gaming you
got going on gardenscapes, isn't it?

Speaker 22 (01:33:16):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (01:33:16):
I know, tell the lie, Tell everyone loud and proud
what you're addicted to.

Speaker 13 (01:33:23):
It's a game on the mobile phone called and.

Speaker 8 (01:33:27):
What Do You Do On It?

Speaker 6 (01:33:28):
From the makers of Royal Royal Match?

Speaker 2 (01:33:30):
So this is embarrassing. I literally was playing it right
before we started.

Speaker 6 (01:33:35):
What do you do on this game?

Speaker 2 (01:33:36):
Okay? So it's really fun. Look at this.

Speaker 13 (01:33:38):
I built this beautiful garden.

Speaker 12 (01:33:40):
Look at that.

Speaker 2 (01:33:41):
I like that.

Speaker 13 (01:33:41):
I'm refurbishing the garden.

Speaker 27 (01:33:43):
I just put these new fountains in. Look at how
beautiful it is. We're throwing an orchestral party tonight, so
I'm just getting ready for it.

Speaker 2 (01:33:49):
Okay, so how long have you been playing garden Escapes.
It's been about a month of hardcore playing.

Speaker 13 (01:33:55):
And it's like a match puzzle game.

Speaker 27 (01:33:58):
So the problem is, and you know this, Elvis, we
share a love of casino games together, specifically slot machines.
So when you start making the puzzles, they start lighting
up and you get extras and bonuses, and it makes
noises in the phone vibrates, and you're like fun, Yes.

Speaker 2 (01:34:10):
It's fun. But we find that you are always playing.
I mean it is always I'm not exaggerated, yeah, I
mean it's it's a dictative impacting your performance. Okay, well
that's the question.

Speaker 9 (01:34:23):
Should you be thinking about cutting back if it's not
impacting your performance?

Speaker 2 (01:34:27):
Probably not. But once you pass that point where your
performance is impacted, which Nate is saying, you're not really
getting your jobs done.

Speaker 10 (01:34:36):
I know this because when I come up to Andrew
and I want to talk to him about X, Y
or Z. He's on his phone and I go hey, Andrew,
and then he immediately does this.

Speaker 2 (01:34:46):
Yes, he slams his phone down upside down so we
can't see what he's doing. We know what you're doing.
That's an addiction. Yeah, it's not that you can't hide it.

Speaker 4 (01:34:54):
Pal.

Speaker 27 (01:34:55):
I've watched a lot of interventions, so now I'm just
seeing it from the other side, and you know, I'm
realizing I'm doing the classic intervention steps.

Speaker 2 (01:35:01):
Okay, we'll hold on. Before an intervention, we need to
make sure he is going overboard with his usage for
this game.

Speaker 13 (01:35:07):
So you're saying I have to check that screen time,
go check it.

Speaker 2 (01:35:09):
It's gonna be so bad.

Speaker 6 (01:35:10):
It's a pointment intervention where all of us share with
him how his Gardenscape addiction has negatively impacted us.

Speaker 2 (01:35:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:35:17):
Yeah, I would like to go first.

Speaker 9 (01:35:19):
Scary A scary has really bad breath. Don't let it
get too close.

Speaker 2 (01:35:23):
I can smell that.

Speaker 13 (01:35:25):
Thank you, You're scary.

Speaker 9 (01:35:26):
It's really bad. Don't don't get that close to him.
He already has problems with this video game issue.

Speaker 2 (01:35:31):
Where do I go to screen time?

Speaker 13 (01:35:32):
Oh no, my phone is broken.

Speaker 2 (01:35:34):
Short screen time. Oh that's smart.

Speaker 27 (01:35:37):
Yeah, Oh gosh, you know the phones are so difficult
these days.

Speaker 2 (01:35:42):
Let's see. Oh god, what is the screen? Ten hours
twenty seven minutes? Okay, love that?

Speaker 27 (01:35:49):
Oh god, Garden Escapes is yeah, Garden Scapes is a
solid six hours.

Speaker 13 (01:35:53):
Oh I didn't know what that bad? And you know
you knew, No, I just do you.

Speaker 2 (01:36:00):
I just didn't see it. One quarter of your day
playing garden Skates.

Speaker 6 (01:36:05):
Just trying to build the orchestral scene.

Speaker 2 (01:36:06):
I got to feel like it should start playing that.
It sounds like if he likes it, I would like
it too. I did not realize.

Speaker 8 (01:36:11):
These times of games I've had. We've had issues in
my house about this. Years ago. There was one where
you like build an entire like I don't know city,
and isn't it like the like the SIM session? And
I went to sleep and I woke up and my
husband was still in the bed playing the same game
all to the night.

Speaker 2 (01:36:29):
I'm like, what do you How many hours.

Speaker 8 (01:36:30):
It was a lot? Must have been asleep seven eight hours?
Are you there was a problem. Yeah, And he realized
it and he's like, I gotta stop, So he stopped
playing it. But that was years ago.

Speaker 2 (01:36:40):
I got a question.

Speaker 8 (01:36:41):
It happens.

Speaker 2 (01:36:42):
I want to break down the psyche for a second.

Speaker 12 (01:36:44):
What is the joy and that you get out of
or the gratification that comes with successfully building a garden
on a screen that's virtually.

Speaker 2 (01:36:53):
All sorts of things? Yeah, I mean you're you're actually
creating something that's not real, but it's very real on
the screen.

Speaker 27 (01:37:01):
And the puzzle portion of it is really addicting.

Speaker 2 (01:37:03):
And also there's creativity.

Speaker 27 (01:37:05):
Yes, okay, thank you Elvis. Yes, creativity.

Speaker 11 (01:37:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:37:10):
Oh, there's so many problems. I would like to share
soon how his Garden Scapes has negatively impacted my life.
But Andrew is a child's game developer's dream because he
walks by something shiny with colors and he's there in
two seconds. It's a kiosk at a mall. He's there.
It's a game where like the Claw game that you
never win, Andrew will spend thirty dollars on it. The

(01:37:31):
man has a problem. Yeah, and I say this because
Andrew and I do a lot of stuff together outside
of work. He has canceled plans because he got distracted
playing Garden Scaping.

Speaker 2 (01:37:41):
Is this true?

Speaker 27 (01:37:42):
It was like one time, but yeah, he shown up.

Speaker 6 (01:37:47):
Late to things because he's like, I'm sorry, I got
distracted playing garden Scapes, And he he uses this as
though that's a genuine excuse to have not done the
thing he was supposed to do. So that, Andrew, is
how your garden scape addiction has negatively impacted me.

Speaker 27 (01:38:00):
I didn't get off at the right stop on the
train either, because I was playing really yeah, like two
solid stuff.

Speaker 9 (01:38:06):
So let me ask the ultimate question, and please and
answer honestly. Yes, have you ever lied to cover up
the fact that you were busy playing garden Scapes when
you should.

Speaker 2 (01:38:16):
Have been doing something else? No? No, I will say,
don't you lie to me?

Speaker 6 (01:38:21):
Okay, I mean, isn't it kind of why if he
hides the phone every time somebody wants.

Speaker 2 (01:38:27):
If you slave your phone down upside down so no
one can see the screen, that means you are sort
of hiding.

Speaker 8 (01:38:31):
That means you're doing something you're ashamed of too.

Speaker 27 (01:38:33):
Is this my rock bottom? It's my rock bottom? I
gotta get rid of garden Scapes?

Speaker 2 (01:38:37):
No, no, see, how can we can't just control it?

Speaker 27 (01:38:40):
Because it's bright and shiny and then you just there's
no end to it.

Speaker 12 (01:38:43):
Vibrates, Yeah, and it's just us all the things, it's
just rewards.

Speaker 6 (01:38:47):
He gets rewarded for his matches.

Speaker 2 (01:38:49):
So you know their job is done. They created this
monster which is doing its job.

Speaker 27 (01:38:54):
I said to myself, I was going to build the garden,
because there's several other levels outside of this one. I
want to old day make this mansion have the most
beautiful garden, and then i'd be done with it. But
now I'm just thinking I should quit and just get
ahead of it this way.

Speaker 2 (01:39:07):
Wait, there's enough. There's a mansion.

Speaker 27 (01:39:09):
Yes, it's you're building a beautiful garden mansion.

Speaker 8 (01:39:13):
Oh, I one that I think would get Gandhi addicted.
Spencer's playing it in Jurassic Park one and he and
he gets dinosaurs and he has to take care of them,
and I can't tell you how many dinosaurs out now
in his world. And he gets like, I gotta feed them.
I gotta whatever that would get you.

Speaker 2 (01:39:31):
Jurassic Park one.

Speaker 8 (01:39:32):
I think, I don't know what it's called, Jurassic World,
Jurassic something.

Speaker 11 (01:39:35):
I don't know.

Speaker 12 (01:39:35):
Okay, so does gardenscapes have in app purchases?

Speaker 27 (01:39:38):
Yeah, but I don't do those.

Speaker 2 (01:39:39):
I was gonna say, how much money you spending on
the extra.

Speaker 13 (01:39:42):
I would never spend money on a game like that.

Speaker 2 (01:39:45):
I know my limit.

Speaker 6 (01:39:45):
Okay, good?

Speaker 2 (01:39:46):
Should we get him a sponsor? Seriously?

Speaker 10 (01:39:49):
Is there somebody that's gone through this that knows the
ups and downs.

Speaker 6 (01:39:54):
Of that he can call them?

Speaker 4 (01:39:56):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (01:39:56):
Seriously, there can you someone? I don't know. I think
I can't. I don't know.

Speaker 27 (01:40:03):
I think I don't need a sponsor. I'll be fine.

Speaker 2 (01:40:05):
I can do this. You can go cold turkey. Yeah,
I can go cold. I will delete it right now.
I could do it. I don't think you should delete it.
You need to control it. Wouldn't that be more satisfying?

Speaker 6 (01:40:17):
Can't you just limit yourself in the.

Speaker 2 (01:40:18):
Time deleting your a quitter? All right? Well, can we
just keep an eye on this?

Speaker 27 (01:40:27):
And maybe yeah, I promise I won't play garden Escapes
in the workplace anymore.

Speaker 2 (01:40:34):
I think you can just do it less.

Speaker 27 (01:40:35):
And it's hard to do it less because then if
you get like an electric showdown, then all of a sudden, yes,
and it'll reward you every time that you stay away. Yes,
if I take like two days off, I come back
and it's like, oh, you got bonus puzzles, and then
you got bonus lives and all this other stuff, and
then all of a sudden it's like, oh well, two
hours of my time got to meet my matches.

Speaker 2 (01:40:55):
They really have you addicted? Yes, you really are.

Speaker 13 (01:40:58):
Don't you have a game that you play all the time?

Speaker 6 (01:40:59):
To shut the hell up?

Speaker 5 (01:41:03):
I talked about it.

Speaker 6 (01:41:03):
I don't play it nearly as much as this. I'm
obsessed with Russell. I wish other people would play it
with me. It's a word game. It's good for your brain.

Speaker 2 (01:41:10):
We see word games are good for your brain. There
is an argument for that. But still limit your time
on the phone.

Speaker 6 (01:41:15):
I would say max at Russell, I'll be thirty minutes
a day, max. But I want to play it every day.
I got I gotta get my.

Speaker 27 (01:41:21):
Russelet your neighbors that banged on your wall and told
you to shut up.

Speaker 6 (01:41:24):
That was years ago, Andrew. I was collecting coins that loud, Yeah, yeah,
I had. I had the volume all the way up.
And it was mornings, you know, like I wake up early, early,
And then I was playing my Russell and I was
collecting the coins and I got a bang on the wall.
And Andrew apparently has the memory of an elephant. Just
hold onto these things. For so long. Yes, it was

(01:41:44):
a problem.

Speaker 2 (01:41:45):
I trying to distract from his own addiction.

Speaker 1 (01:41:47):
I see.

Speaker 2 (01:41:48):
I'll tell you what. Let's keep an eye on gardenscapes. Yes,
with you and Russell, with you, young lady.

Speaker 6 (01:41:55):
I'm a team.

Speaker 9 (01:41:55):
Let's continue to monitor this place. Yeah, yeah, and thank you,
thank you. You can do it, Andrew.

Speaker 2 (01:42:00):
If you can just limit your time on your garden scapes,
it'll be a good thing for everyone.

Speaker 27 (01:42:05):
This has been an eye opening experience for me. This
steals like my rock bottom. If I'm getting interventioned, I mean,
if you want to check me into a ninety day program,
I'm fine with that.

Speaker 2 (01:42:15):
I heard.

Speaker 8 (01:42:19):
Some suggestions where he wants to go program.

Speaker 2 (01:42:23):
I'm sure we'll say bar Yeah, good luck in God.
I love you guys.

Speaker 19 (01:42:30):
Morning Elvis Durant.

Speaker 2 (01:42:32):
Dear God, what's this woman doing?

Speaker 19 (01:42:35):
And the morning show?

Speaker 3 (01:42:38):
Elvis duran in the morning show.

Speaker 9 (01:42:41):
I want to bring something up, and I don't want
anyone to get mad at me, especially maybe Danielle. Can
we stop saying the word yay?

Speaker 8 (01:42:53):
Are you crazy?

Speaker 5 (01:42:54):
I'm serious.

Speaker 9 (01:42:57):
It's getting to the point where I'm using it too
too much. I actually will end text.

Speaker 2 (01:43:02):
Messages with yay or they'll go, hey, I'm gonna come
over and pick you up at noon, so begin to
have a great lunch. I'll go yay.

Speaker 19 (01:43:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:43:09):
And then a friend of mine the other day I said,
I'm so sick of everyone around me just going yay.
That's their response to everything. Could you be more original?
I'm like, well, when a listener.

Speaker 8 (01:43:20):
Called and they get an they win a contest, that's
my first reaction. I'm like, yeah, ya, I don't know,
I get excited.

Speaker 9 (01:43:25):
Listen how you say it? Though a lot of times
we say yay and we go yay or yay like
really quiet.

Speaker 2 (01:43:33):
Yeah, you should be like.

Speaker 5 (01:43:34):
Yeah, okay, okay.

Speaker 2 (01:43:36):
I had yea.

Speaker 12 (01:43:37):
The pre existing words like Friday, I go friday.

Speaker 2 (01:43:42):
Yeah, I'm going to run you over in my truck. Yeah,
run you river. But you know it is yay. We
we use it way too much.

Speaker 9 (01:43:50):
It's snuck in there, yay has snuck in there and
is taking up so much space, froggy, what about you?

Speaker 2 (01:43:56):
Yay?

Speaker 18 (01:43:57):
Like yeah, but I'm looking up now there are other
words to use in place of yea.

Speaker 2 (01:44:00):
And none of them okay, good? What are they?

Speaker 5 (01:44:03):
Whoopund sarcastic to me?

Speaker 8 (01:44:06):
And that's like a nineteen sixties.

Speaker 2 (01:44:09):
But that's my point, though, Gandhi.

Speaker 9 (01:44:10):
My point is a lot of people will say yay
and it doesn't sound like it's really from a good place.

Speaker 2 (01:44:14):
It sounds like you whippee or whatever.

Speaker 6 (01:44:16):
Its more you're saying more that Instead of banning the
word yay, we should just add way more enthusiasm to
it every time we use it, yeah or not.

Speaker 2 (01:44:24):
Sometimes Danielle will say She'll go, I suppot to say
something yay.

Speaker 10 (01:44:31):
Yay.

Speaker 33 (01:44:31):
We'll see, like in a text message, if you do
yay without an exclamation point, it kind of like you're
being a jerk. If you do yay with an exclamation point,
then it seems like you're really happy about it.

Speaker 2 (01:44:41):
We've totally effed up the word yay. Well what about
the word about as please? Okay, hold on, but hold on.
Froggy has more words. What are they?

Speaker 18 (01:44:48):
Yip b hoor rah yip by who rah who rang hey, hold.

Speaker 2 (01:44:53):
On now horrah hoorrah No.

Speaker 18 (01:44:57):
Raw Rad's one three cheers him and then somebody else
yells hooray. No, these are terrible. Yeah, I'm talking yay.
It's sounding better everything.

Speaker 6 (01:45:06):
I'm gonna start saying three cheers on the air and
someone calls instead of congratulations Kay, Three cheers.

Speaker 2 (01:45:12):
Okay, what could you say rather than ya?

Speaker 6 (01:45:14):
So I say, well, that's awesome or that's great.

Speaker 2 (01:45:22):
There really is no appropriate What Froggy just said sounds good,
that's awesome, okay, I love that.

Speaker 18 (01:45:29):
Or oh you're speaking, I love that. I'll tell you
something that Lisa hates the word. She hates when people
say I love that for you. She thinks that means
I hate that. She thinks that means it that person
hates it, but they.

Speaker 2 (01:45:41):
Like it for you. I'm like, that's THET means.

Speaker 6 (01:45:44):
Sometimes I say it and I mean it that way. Yeah, yeah,
I love that for you.

Speaker 12 (01:45:48):
But he gets it done with one syllable. If you
think about it, the others have more than one syllable.

Speaker 2 (01:45:53):
Why do you need to get it done with one syllable.
That's like resident saying okay, you say kay.

Speaker 11 (01:45:58):
Which is horrible.

Speaker 2 (01:45:59):
Oh that's okay, I think I think. Yeah, he's turning
into k no, turning into it. Just okay. If you're
gonna say yeah, let's promise each other, let's not yay.
Let's be like really yes, yay, wow God.

Speaker 6 (01:46:18):
Three cheers, three cheers.

Speaker 27 (01:46:21):
Hurry the next time somebody wins something, I'm gonna say
three three cheers, all right, hooray, way all right?

Speaker 2 (01:46:31):
Or you know, will be every one's welcome work.

Speaker 33 (01:46:34):
Would you think that hiphip is a generational thing? Like
if I said hip hip to my kids, they wouldn't
know what comes after that?

Speaker 2 (01:46:38):
Good. That's the funny part.

Speaker 33 (01:46:41):
You never you never understand that you don't don't answer.

Speaker 19 (01:46:45):
The phone Elvis Duran, the Elvis Duran phone tap.

Speaker 9 (01:46:48):
All right, today's phone tap from Scary Please welcome to
the stage.

Speaker 12 (01:46:52):
Scary, right, So Marisol will email those and she wanted
to play a phone tap on her husband, Neil. There's
very little street parking where they live, so Neil has
been storing his car for sale in a nearby empty
abandoned lot. So I'm gonna call Neil and pretend this
empty lot that he's been storing his truck in is
actually owned by me.

Speaker 2 (01:47:11):
All Right, Scary, we'll see what happened.

Speaker 14 (01:47:15):
You've enjoying the music while your party is reached, Neil.

Speaker 2 (01:47:25):
Yes, Hey, daring man, this is Fred has everything?

Speaker 21 (01:47:28):
Oh Fred from where.

Speaker 12 (01:47:30):
Fred Sandford I owned that abandoned empty lot?

Speaker 21 (01:47:34):
Yeah, yeah, you know the lot that you.

Speaker 12 (01:47:36):
Used without permission when you put your car in there
to try and sell it.

Speaker 21 (01:47:40):
Okay, yeah, well I'm.

Speaker 12 (01:47:42):
Calling because you owe me for the five days of
rent that you stored your truck there.

Speaker 2 (01:47:47):
I'm you just took it upon yourself to park your
car there.

Speaker 21 (01:47:52):
I mean, I know that's empty lots.

Speaker 7 (01:47:54):
There's nothing there.

Speaker 2 (01:47:55):
I mean does lots.

Speaker 21 (01:47:56):
That's for too million years. I saw bark trucks over
their best after day.

Speaker 7 (01:48:00):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:48:00):
No, I understand where you're coming from.

Speaker 12 (01:48:02):
You wanted to sell your car, so you parked it
there for five days, and I own that lot.

Speaker 2 (01:48:08):
That's my that's my lot.

Speaker 21 (01:48:10):
The thing it is, like, I say, that empty lot,
you know, living this empty for almost six years, and
now you have the parker still be a van over there,
which it doesn't bother me, you know, if you want
to judge around the first day I was parked us
in Neil. Listen, get this, gotta pay me a rent.

Speaker 2 (01:48:24):
Do you ever play the game Monopoly?

Speaker 23 (01:48:26):
I don't.

Speaker 21 (01:48:27):
I don't play the game.

Speaker 12 (01:48:28):
It's a board game Monopoly, you know, Like if you're
the thimble or the shoe, you land on a property,
you have to pay the rent that's due to that
person who owns the property, so I own that lot.

Speaker 2 (01:48:39):
You parked your van there, Now you owe me rent?

Speaker 21 (01:48:41):
Okay, say you send them to the bill. Okay for
whatever your name is?

Speaker 2 (01:48:44):
All right now, No, you did not land on free parking.

Speaker 21 (01:48:47):
You send me the bill and then we're going to
see Okay, send them the bill.

Speaker 14 (01:48:50):
Hello, please enjoy the music while your party is reached.

Speaker 2 (01:48:59):
Oh hello, hey uncle penny bags, I'm driving to your house.

Speaker 21 (01:49:03):
Well listen, listen. If they have come of the house,
I'm gonna break your neck. Okay, you hung up on me,
don't you?

Speaker 2 (01:49:08):
Don't you find Let.

Speaker 21 (01:49:09):
Me find out the house. I told you send them
with the bill. I don't hold this number because I'm
gonna cut the police.

Speaker 2 (01:49:14):
I want to finish my conversation with you.

Speaker 13 (01:49:16):
Son of a picture.

Speaker 2 (01:49:17):
I told you tend the bill.

Speaker 21 (01:49:19):
Don't call this number. And because the cat finds you around,
I break your neck because first I'm gonna call the police.
By perrafsman, I'm gonna call the police.

Speaker 12 (01:49:26):
What happens when you land on my property and monopoly?
You do not pay, You go directly to jail. You
do not pass go, you do not collect two hundred dollars.

Speaker 21 (01:49:34):
Listen, listen. You prove I would a new property.

Speaker 2 (01:49:36):
Okay, picture you prove it I did. Yeah, I took
pictures every day. Okay, you take me to court.

Speaker 12 (01:49:42):
I want my four hundred dollars. Are you gonna pay
me if I come see you?

Speaker 2 (01:49:45):
Right now?

Speaker 21 (01:49:45):
You are coming to see me? Okay, you want to
come to see me.

Speaker 13 (01:49:48):
I meet you by the truck.

Speaker 2 (01:49:49):
I meet you by the ATM machine?

Speaker 21 (01:49:51):
Where which machine? Which machine?

Speaker 2 (01:49:53):
You meet me? Over here?

Speaker 21 (01:49:55):
I saw here and I show you?

Speaker 17 (01:49:57):
What do you want to do?

Speaker 21 (01:49:59):
What the we can know?

Speaker 14 (01:50:00):
It?

Speaker 21 (01:50:01):
You getting good out of here?

Speaker 2 (01:50:02):
Boo?

Speaker 1 (01:50:03):
Okay he listen, listen, I can't need you right strawbody
Neill by by school and then we talk.

Speaker 12 (01:50:10):
That won't be necessary, Neil, because you've been phone tapped.

Speaker 21 (01:50:14):
Son of a gun?

Speaker 2 (01:50:15):
You what?

Speaker 21 (01:50:17):
What? What was that?

Speaker 2 (01:50:18):
Neil? This is scary Jones from Elvis Daran in the
Morning Show.

Speaker 21 (01:50:21):
Oh my god, you got me good?

Speaker 2 (01:50:24):
You got me good? There you go. I wasn't dancing
Queen on my phone. It was very sensitive, right, I
love dancing.

Speaker 19 (01:50:35):
Queen Elvis Duran's phone tap.

Speaker 24 (01:50:39):
This phone table was pre recorded permission granted by all participates.

Speaker 3 (01:50:43):
The Elvis dan phone tap only on Elvis Duran in
the Morning Show, Elvis Duran in the Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (01:51:00):
By now bye popular Demand, welcome back our old friend.
Let me speak to the manager. Oh all right, let
me speak to the manager. I'm the manager. I guess yes,
you know. I don't like this responsibility. But okay, so.

Speaker 9 (01:51:17):
We actually have an internal Let me speak to the manager.
Maybe you should go to HR with this problem.

Speaker 6 (01:51:22):
Gandhi, You know I may because I have brought this
up repeatedly, and today's last straw, and I'm not taking
it anymore.

Speaker 2 (01:51:28):
What's going on?

Speaker 6 (01:51:29):
All right? We are very fortunate and we get a
bagel delivery maybe once a week, sometimes more than once
a week. Yeah, the bagels are incredible, and everybody is
obsessed with the everything bagel, so people try to grab it.
And I have watched with my own two eyes. People
grab the bagel, cut into it, and the seeds go
flying everywhere, and not one person, with the exception of me,

(01:51:52):
cleans it up. I present to you exhibit A that
is what it looks like outside right now. Oh my god,
encounter that is outside our studio. That represents us, and
I believe Andrew has answers as to who it is
that does this. I've seen with my own two eyes
a couple of people Andrew the siege are playing.

Speaker 2 (01:52:12):
It looks like the bottom of a birdcake.

Speaker 19 (01:52:14):
It does.

Speaker 6 (01:52:14):
But who has the audacity to leave it there and
walk away? Andrew?

Speaker 2 (01:52:18):
I ask, hold on, hold on, hold on, before you
enter it. Can we all write down on a sheet
of paper who we think it is? Okay, okay, I
just wrote down the name. Okay, all right, I.

Speaker 6 (01:52:30):
Have a couple of names. I have a couple of names.

Speaker 2 (01:52:33):
All right, Danielle, if you recorded your answer, okay, scary Nate,
if you recorded your answer, Okay, go right ahead.

Speaker 27 (01:52:44):
Okay, it is scary, It is Scottie, it is Nate.

Speaker 6 (01:52:54):
Look, I got two out of the three rights. I
got two out of the three.

Speaker 8 (01:52:58):
Scary, Scotty, scary.

Speaker 10 (01:53:00):
I'll tell you, okay, I'm going to dispute that.

Speaker 2 (01:53:08):
Do you know how I know it's not me? Because
how's that cut? My bagel?

Speaker 27 (01:53:11):
And that's the problem. You're man handling the bagel and
the seeds. Everything is going everywhere.

Speaker 2 (01:53:16):
Oh my god, how you man handle a bagel? I'll
show you, show you a bear and the honeypot.

Speaker 13 (01:53:24):
You're just like.

Speaker 2 (01:53:28):
Erroneous Okay, now, wait to say, now, how have you
narrowed it down to these three people, Scary, Nate and
Scottie again?

Speaker 13 (01:53:37):
All three of them man handle the bagels.

Speaker 2 (01:53:39):
Can I defend myself?

Speaker 10 (01:53:40):
No?

Speaker 33 (01:53:41):
Can I defend myself? I did it the very first
time these bagels came up. I cut it out there.
There were no plates there, so I did it on
a napkin, and yes, some seeds went on the table.
Gandhi reprimanded me, and I never did it again after that.
I always bring it in here and do it on
a plate. Now, so I only did it once.

Speaker 27 (01:53:56):
Yes, I provide the plates, I provide the knives. Whatever
happens between that and what goes on on the table,
I don't know. But it is wild to me.

Speaker 13 (01:54:06):
How bad it looks like?

Speaker 8 (01:54:08):
Insane?

Speaker 5 (01:54:08):
Okay?

Speaker 6 (01:54:09):
Okay, By the way, there are seeds in every one
of the cream cheeses because somebody is having a bagel party,
flying stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:54:17):
Okay, Oh my god, I love a party, but the flinging.
I am a former grill sergeant. Okay, I for years
old cut bagels. Hold on, hold on, what do you
mean you're a former grill sergeant. I used to work
at a beach club in the summer. And I used
to slice deli meats. I used to make sandwiches. I
used to do all kinds of burgers and stuff in

(01:54:38):
the morning. Bagels, and I know how to cut. How
do you achieve the level of sergeant? And I ended
up started a jerk and now it's sergeant. Please continue.
So I know how to cut a bit, privates.

Speaker 12 (01:54:57):
Okay, you take the bagel and I put I take
get I put it into a plate, and then I cut.

Speaker 2 (01:55:03):
I put my my hands over the bagel. I cup it,
and the knife is underneath slicing its way through. That
means second half of your cupped, your cupped bagel.

Speaker 12 (01:55:13):
All of this, it's the one I touch, is the
one I take. I don't man handle bagels like Nate.
I'm telling you that I do everything in the plate.
All my seeds go to the plate.

Speaker 6 (01:55:29):
Okay, a lie, I have watched you scatter it everywhere?
Are you a baby bird?

Speaker 27 (01:55:34):
And I would like to say that's maybe your first bagel.
You're doing the cup your grill sergeant technique. But the
second and third bagel, no, that is a full man handle.

Speaker 2 (01:55:44):
All right, So question gandhi, have you seen scary spewing
his seed all over the bagel table.

Speaker 6 (01:55:50):
I have seen Scary spew the seed everywhere, into the
cran cheese, on the floor, everything. It is disgraceful. And
I say so, you guys know me, I say something
every time, I'm like, who do you think you are?
And this guy just walks away. But it is disgusting
out there right now. We should be embarrassed.

Speaker 2 (01:56:07):
May I try to, May I try to make some
sense of this?

Speaker 9 (01:56:09):
Yeah, in fairness, And I know I've I've dropped a
lot of seats for everything bagels are.

Speaker 2 (01:56:15):
Really there's no way to do it without a mess.
The key is to clean up the mess. When you're done,
You're gonna cause a mess, but you got to clean
it up. And I've been guilty of that too. From
now on, I swear mother, Gandhi, yes, I will clean
up my everything bagel remnants.

Speaker 6 (01:56:31):
I swear very nice of you.

Speaker 2 (01:56:33):
But can we have that swearing from Nate and Scottie?
And yes, it's yes or no. The seeds are the
best part. I try to preserve the seeds.

Speaker 10 (01:56:41):
So if you say I'm man handling you are you
are wrong. You are dead wrong, because I'm trying to
preserve the best part of the bagel.

Speaker 9 (01:56:50):
You know, you could easily say yes, I will clean
up it myself, and we can be over the argument.

Speaker 6 (01:56:54):
The lady doth protest too much.

Speaker 2 (01:56:57):
I put it on the plate, and then what I
do I smear. I shmear the cream.

Speaker 10 (01:57:01):
Cheese on each bite and then I dip it in
the debris.

Speaker 2 (01:57:06):
That's what you need to do. You know. I have
a suggestion.

Speaker 33 (01:57:09):
I used to be a bagel baker and server at
an actual bagel place.

Speaker 2 (01:57:12):
Never but never never a girl sergeant, No, I was never.
I was never promoted to sergeant.

Speaker 33 (01:57:17):
But when I worked there, we made everything cream cheese,
so we mixed all the stuff into the cream cheese.
So why don't you, Scott, get Plaine bagels and get
everything cream cheese.

Speaker 2 (01:57:27):
Well, now we know how you make it. You take
the crap off the floor and throw it in there.

Speaker 12 (01:57:31):
Yeah, and if I may piggyback what Scotty said, I
have a huge can of everything seasoning. It's called bagel
seasoning everything. So why don't we just get the Plaine bagels.
As Scotty said, put our cream cheese on a bite,
or the seasoning on the cream cheese.

Speaker 2 (01:57:47):
You already have enough. You already have enough.

Speaker 9 (01:57:49):
Everything stuff in there. That's the problem. It's everywhere, even focus.

Speaker 12 (01:57:53):
It a lot neater if we got plain bangles as Scotty.

Speaker 27 (01:57:56):
Just wouldn't because the little container, you'd be dumping it
all over the table.

Speaker 9 (01:58:00):
And also they put some sort of lack car on
those bagels to hold onto that everything.

Speaker 2 (01:58:04):
Goodness, Yes, every.

Speaker 6 (01:58:06):
Single time I see this disaster outside, I will clean
it up for the most part. But today I was
just incensed, and I thought, does no one care about
Karen and Hector, our lovely, amazing cleaning staff that probably
thinks we are monsters? Yeah, no one care.

Speaker 2 (01:58:19):
We are we are monsters. Can we all agree to
do better? Yet they do better?

Speaker 9 (01:58:32):
So we hopped in a truck and we drove two
and a half hours out to Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

Speaker 2 (01:58:37):
We met the best people, the nicest people. But I
could have sworn I heard Gandhi. I was like, listening
into your conversations. You're having the weirdest conversations with these people,
Like what were you doing well?

Speaker 6 (01:58:50):
You cannot trust me with small talk. I don't know
how to do it. It's a weird thing. I hear
the rest of you doing it, and I think, oh,
that's how that goes. Nate is amazing with small talk.
Just talk about anything. I'm here for a good conversation, right,
So I always start with tell me a secret, and
then if they don't tell me a secret, I say,
tell me why you got fired from your last job.

Speaker 9 (01:59:13):
These questions come out of nowhere. You're like, hey, I'm nice,
nice to meet you. Yeah, I'm Gandhi, thanks for listening. Hey,
so why were you fired from your last job?

Speaker 2 (01:59:20):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (01:59:20):
Exactly like that. Basically, I'm not again, they've already talked
about the weather, and you know, they listened to the
show and that's nice, and they did that with all
of you. So then by the time it comes to me,
I'm like, let's really get to it here. And somebody said,
you are so strange, but this is a great conversation.

Speaker 2 (01:59:38):
When you start asking about how they got fired.

Speaker 8 (01:59:41):
And there they also trust us because they feel like
we're they're family, and so I think they're more app
to open up about things like that to us.

Speaker 9 (01:59:51):
If we ask so Gandhi, yes, Gandhi, do you have
like okay, other than how did you get fired from
your last job, tell me a secret?

Speaker 2 (01:59:57):
What other? What other?

Speaker 1 (01:59:58):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:59:59):
Like ice breaking questions do you have?

Speaker 6 (02:00:02):
Okay, so I will ask people, if they're together, how
do you guys know each other? That's an easy one
because then you always hear a story of you know,
whatever it is. And there are some really weird things
that come out of that too. And this one, I
asked a lot of people, how did you get introduced
to our show? I just I want to know more? Yeah, deep,
And there are a lot of really interesting answers. A
lot of people said, well, I kind of didn't like

(02:00:23):
you guys when you first started, but my best friend
loved you, so here I am now and I love
you too. And it's just an interesting trip through their lives.
And I think that you find out a lot of
stuff about people or you scare them away and then
you don't have to have a conversation at all. Yeah,
either way. When when.

Speaker 2 (02:00:44):
Hey what producer Sam? Oh, huh, you have an issue
with Gandhi and her small talk?

Speaker 6 (02:00:49):
It's more stuff. I'm just scarred for life because Gandhi
and her lack of small talk is exactly how I
found out my fiance had a threesome. Oh yeah, she
and I found that information out together same time, because
that was her ice breaking question.

Speaker 2 (02:01:00):
What was the conversation?

Speaker 6 (02:01:02):
Well, we were all having the conversation in the car
that was kind of boring me, and then I just said,
you got any secrets anyone to have a threesome? And
his answer was no, yes, twice, that's a sixth Wait why?
I said, wait? Did you what the hell?

Speaker 2 (02:01:22):
First of all?

Speaker 6 (02:01:22):
Second of all, did you forget? He goes, well, no,
I just thought maybe this wasn't the time to tell you,
But then I immediately fell badly about lying. Sam's reaction
was so funny. I think she everyone wanted to tuck
and roll out of the car. She said, what do
you mean? What do you mean? Twice you said no?
Then twice?

Speaker 19 (02:01:37):
What?

Speaker 2 (02:01:38):
Oh my god, Gandhi, yeah.

Speaker 6 (02:01:41):
Get out of the car and leave them alone in there.

Speaker 2 (02:01:43):
See her for the rest. So Gandhi did what we
call farting on the elevator and getting.

Speaker 19 (02:01:46):
Off the Mercedes Benz interview lounge.

Speaker 2 (02:01:50):
What Taylor Swift, you're dancing through the lightning strikes opal light?
Also if you're a size queen father figures an selection
fu o fat.

Speaker 7 (02:02:00):
The figures a great I love.

Speaker 2 (02:02:03):
That despite wintry conditions in heavy traffic, the holidays have
to go on. That's why Mercedes Benz SUVs come equipped
with the latest safety technology to keep your festive plans
on track. Discover the incredible offers for yourself at the
Mercedes Benz Holiday Love Celebration.

Speaker 19 (02:02:20):
Help mister Ran in the morning show.

Speaker 2 (02:02:23):
All right, shows do and let's get out of here
until next time. Say peace out, everybody, Peace out, everybody.

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Elvis Duran

Elvis Duran

Danielle Monaro

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Skeery Jones

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Froggy

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Garrett

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Medha Gandhi

Medha Gandhi

Nate Marino

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