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April 23, 2024 11 mins
Today on Valentine Overtime: Get the scoop on what the "dump" button is, and hear what movies the gang consider to be their all time favorites.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:01):
Valentine in the Morning presents the showfor the show Valentine over Time. All
right, Tuesday episode of Valentine overTime. What's up everyone? I went
bobbing in the studio. Lives aregood today. We got Valentine here,
the big Guy. Sorry, Ihad to do it. Jill is here

(00:23):
every time. It's the Big GutRyan. We got Aaron Michael Pullman on
Microsoft Teams. But Laura missing today. Coachella has taken her and will not
give her back. But hey,we're back with you for another week.
I only have one note to hitfrom the show. Within the last day.
I was told today to write downthe note Cameltoe because it came up

(00:44):
on the air. That's all yougot for today's show, is that?
Well? I have a question forthe podcast. Sometimes we recap some stuff
from the show and this is somebodysomebody said something and Jill and I had
a slight disagreement on this one,and it's it's fine that respect, because
people do have disagreements. I feltlike, camo, it's not an appropriate
term for usage on air. Itwasn't said by us. We were talking
about misheard lyrics right right, andsomebody thought they heard pigeon tow or something.

(01:08):
And then the girl goes, mymom thought it was cameltoe, and
I was like, oh, dearGod. And this was a grown woman
saying that her mom thought the misheardlyric was like cameltoe or something. And
I was like, oh, itmade me a little like I tightened up
a little bit. We moved onright away. We did didn't make a
big deal about it, but Idid to go. And I feel like,
this is good like radio behind thescenes, right, and we have

(01:29):
a dump button. You're right,John, We have a dump button that
if you hit it, it getsrid of say the last like thirty seconds
of audio because we're on a delay, and it's there for people who say
a dirty word on the air orsomething, right, which brings me back
to a great story. I'll tellyou later on about dirty words, but
just camelto to me, baby gobecause I feel like, if you're an
eight year old kid in the backof the car listening to our show,
do I want you then turning toyour mom or dad driving you to school,

(01:53):
going mommy, daddy, what's blahblah blah? Right? And that
got me. Jill said it wasn'ta big deal. It's a common phrase
because at first I was like,oh, well, that's not a bad
word, Like in my mind,I was just thinking bad word. But
then how did you explain it thatway? I was like, Okay,
I understand what you're saying, butI didn't see it as like, oh,
that's dirty or that's a bad wordin any way. You just thought

(02:14):
it like lady parts, they're differentthan male parts. Your clothes are too
tight down there where in your lap? Hold on? Hazel asked me,
Like, Hazel's a girl too?Oh you what a boy? Asked me,
Well, I'm just saying it couldbe a boy in the backseat as
well, going, what kid,you just say, oh, some female,
some girls if their clothes are tootight in their lap, it looks

(02:39):
like the hoof of a camel.No, don't say that. That's bad.
That's really bad when you put itlike that, Yeah, that's not
good. Perhaps that was right.Yeah, but I do take your position,
Jill, like I feel the samethat It's like, maybe it's not
the most fun thing to stay onthere, Like you wouldn't want to talk
about throwing up all the time orvomiting or maybe a webby entirely different,

(03:00):
but nobody. But I mean,like, they're not terms you necessarily want
to spend a lot of time on. But I wouldn't say it's a bad
word. It's a weggie in thefront, right, it's a front weggie.
So you could have a kid reachingdown trying to give it to you.
What you can give somebody a weggietoo, you get someone a cameltoon.
You're talking about a Melvin Melvin.That's if you pull an what's when

(03:21):
you pull it from the back,that's a wedgie. Well that's what I'm
talking about. But can a Melvinresult in camelton? Man? That's an
effect here. And do you seewhy I was curious about maybe not airing
it or getting it. At first, I was like, but it's not
dirty. But I understand now whyyou were weary of because then the kid
asked a question to get down thatroad. Yes, And I think John,

(03:42):
like to your point you were like, oh, it was like this
or like that or whatever, Andthis isn't meant to like, uh,
come out the wrong way. Butit's different when you have kids, right,
And I think it's different as yourkid ages Like I might say something
now because my kid's sixteen years oldthat maybe I wouldn't have said on the
air when he was eight. Right. You kind of grow through life,
and you grow through your own personalseasons of change. But I have to
be cognizant of that because I mightsay something calling at home that I probably

(04:08):
shouldn't say in the air, youknow, and back when it was eight,
I wouldn't have said on the airbecause I wouldn't have said it to
the eight year old at my house. Right. So we change all the
time, But the vibe of ourshow has always been a very family centric
show. God bless so sorry,so sorry, God bless you. Thank
you. Because the family centric show, you have to try and maintain that

(04:30):
line and not fluctuate to left andright so much. And that's a tough
one because I think you're right.If if a kid was around me and
then they asked me what a cameltoewas and their parents weren't around, oh
gosh, you don't have to explainit to a kid all. I don't
think I could have been a talkthat you have to have with the kid
you while your parent's on here.It looks like I'm the one who has
to tell you is super awkward.Don't do it the way I did because

(04:50):
I regret the way I explained it, and that made me think, you
know, maybe it isn't okay.Yeah, well where were you guys this
morning when I had my finger onthe dump button and each and every one
of you go, that's fine,totally fine, totally fine. You handled
it well, we didn't know,ye, Well, now we know,
well, live radio would have thetime to sit around and like contemplate,
you had thirty seconds. You hadthirty seconds to make a decision do we

(05:14):
launch or not? That was ourlaunch window right there, and we had
thirty seconds to decide as a show. The important part is that we made
a decision though, you know,we decided to be acted on. Okay,
sometimes we can be wrong. Wego backwards or forwards. Are left
right, but you can't stay hereright while we're here. You said you
had a dirty word story, andI feel like you teased it. So,
yeah, I did a dirty wordstory. It's about to delay there.

(05:35):
So radio system didn't always have those, right, but they started getting
them in recent years and stuff likethat, and they only work now.
This is really pull them back toCourtney. They only work for like maybe
two tops three dirty words, becausethere's a certain amount of delay that these
machines use, right, and it'sthirty seconds. So we hit it and

(05:56):
the last fifteen seconds go away.Somebody else calls up says dirty word.
We hit it again, the lastfifteen seconds go away. Then the computer
system starts building that delay back up. This is really behind the scenes.
I'm sorry about this, but theyhave to build a lay back up and
they find little spaces of audio withinour conversations to suck it in to build
a delay, and it takes afew minutes to do that. So in

(06:18):
Dallas there was a sports station,and my buddies and I used to like
to call in after the Dallas Cowboysgames and talk on the sports show,
and we'd try and get a dirtyword in right. And the three of
us would be sitting in a tomThumb parking lot and we'd all of our
cars next to each other, listening, and we'd call up. We'd get
on the line thumbs up. Ifyou're on the line, thumbs up,

(06:39):
you're on the line, thumbs up. And then whoever got on first would
say a dirty word, so theguy would hit the dump button and the
word to go away. The nextguy would get on say a dirty word,
the guy would hit the button andit would go away. Now they're
live, so whatever you say nextis live. So the third person always
had to have the dirtiest word tosay because they couldn't dump it then,
but they had to take calls.There a live call in sports talk show.

(07:02):
We had so much fun doing that. Are we teaching people how to
game the system here? Oh?Oh no, because if we have one
dirty word, we're going to break. I went on a fast question here.
How much time do we have leftto me? Now you get like
three minutes? Okay, cool?Give me one of your absolute favorite movies,
absolute favorite, one of your absolutefavorite movies you can watch all the

(07:26):
time. Never Get So Old.The Day After Tomorrow is one that I
always watch. I'm a bit ofan environmentalist and climatologist, and I just
think it's really good special effects andeverything. The movie I would have said
years ago, Dead Post Society reallygot to me at the Robin Williams and
just watching those kids go through thatschool, watching the tragedy of what happens
at that school, the impact ofthe teacher and the lives of the children

(07:47):
and the way society looked at thingsback then and just kicked this guy out
because they didn't like the way hetaught and liked the way he interacted with
the students. Dead Posts is alwaysthere, and the last one I'll give
you are well. Gettysburg is aphenomenal movie. But what's the one with
the Black Union troops? Glory?Glory? I don't think it's the last

(08:09):
one. Glory is phenomenal. Thisgentleman who's he's husband, who Sarah Jessica
Parker, she speaks me right.So Matthew Broderick is a Union commander,
Union captain of an all black regimentright during the Civil War Union and they're

(08:31):
making this charge in this Confederate strongholdon a beach, and this gunpowder and
the flames and the bullets and thecannons and it's all in the air and
they're making a charge and just beforethat you saw the seagulls fly by before
the battle starts. Everything they makethe charge, so many people die,
and then one of the final scenesis just a still calm beach with the

(08:54):
seagulls flying by again, And itmade me think that mankind has so many
any moments like that where they're justfighting each other and the rest of the
world just doesn't care, and theygo, do your thing. We're gonna
be here after you. And itwas just it was really weird, just
like all these guys fighting and deadon the beach. Well you know how
the war ends, dead in thebeach, and then the seagulls just like

(09:16):
the calmness and serenity of the worldcomes into play again, going on,
Yeah, it's very strange. Let'sgo Michael Pollman next out there on the
Microsoft Teams interwet, Hello, good. I like Star Wars. Yeah,
classic, it's fun, nice easyshow books, Jill over to you that
thing you do one of my favoritemovies of all time. I love that

(09:39):
one. Yeah, that is agreat movie and a good song, Brian
No Country for Old Men. That'sprobably my favorite. Home. Once I
staid watching that movie, I can'tstop. It's just so engrossing. And
the guy goes around and he shootspeople in the head with a little like
blaster thing and yeah, Aaron,come on, know, I'd say Terminator

(10:01):
too, all time favorite? WhyTerminator too? Well? I grew up
being a huge Arnold fan. Iloved action movies as a kid, and
the waitlifter at all me. Yeah, I don't know what the child look
like maybe one day, but theaction scenes, the special effects. They
say it's the best sequel of alltime in regards to sci fi and action,

(10:24):
and with what we're seeing in AItoday, it's kind of And James
Cameron, the director, always hadsome sort of commentary here and there about
environmentalism or technology or corporate power,and that movie you see something different every
time than Arnold Rules. And I'mgoing to close out with yes man,
Jim Carrey love that movie so auditionelso great in it, and you need

(10:46):
to say yes to life a moviechange. Really it did. Yeah,
hold on, I want to throwin Nodding Hill just first, quick Dot
Hill. That's one of the bestrom coms out there, honestly, and
just the idea that it gives youwith Julie Roberts sitting at the dinner table
with the young lady whose legs don'twork. She's sitting at dinner table and
they all think Julie Roberts has thisgreat golden life and she gives this wonderful

(11:09):
speech about being famous and the problemsof being famous. It's like, you
know, at some point, maybein a not so distant future, I'll
look like that girl that looks likesomebody that used to be famous for a
little while and like, oh goodwhatever, and she goes, I've been
hungry since like nineteen eighty five becauseshe has to try and fit into this
mold that society creates for movie star. It's fantastic. Maybe final thoughts,

(11:33):
Well, there's also one of thegreat suit here great where he goes,
I work for Horse and Famous Babiesare coming out tomorrow morning on Valentine in
the morning. Let's see you there. I am off the stage. You
know what else is really good?Are we still on there? I mean,
he could end the podcast, butI just keep talking. Well,

(11:54):
the mics are still on. Technically, they're not editing anything right now.
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