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July 30, 2024 • 27 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly Nash, Good morning Tomorrow Show. Today Tomorrow is
the last day of July. Getting over the hump on Wednesday,
and then we head into we'll be sliding into a
big weekend.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
That's the tax free weekend. A lot of people be shopping.
I gotta be at the soccer event. Yes, right, I
hope it's not too crazy. You got me a little
nervous now talking about all the pregame activities going on.
I'm playing and I'm having dinner. I got a reservation
at four point thirty in the Vista, and I figured, well,
we should be done by six at the latest. That'll
give me ninety minutes to get over to the stadium

(00:34):
park and then walk into the arena or you know,
Williams Brice Stadium. But now you got me thinking it's
gonna be it could it could take me more than that.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
I got a feeling that it's well, it's gonna be typical. See,
you're gonna be going front of the vista front you.
You'll be fine in an hour and a half. Okay,
pack a lot of patience.

Speaker 2 (00:52):
My friend, and go to the bathroom before the bathroom
before you'll leave. Well, I remember one time I was
going down to the game, and I was coming from
the station, which the station we're on Graystone Boulevard to
Williams Brice. If there's no traffic, What is that about?
It Maybe a twelve minute drive something like that. And
I'm supposed to be there an hour? Was it an

(01:14):
hour or two hours? I forget what, But the thing
is for the pregame festivities. No, I'm supposed to be
there is three hours, three hours before kickoff. That's when
I'm supposed to be at the WVOC tent. And so
I left like forty five minutes before that to go
the twelve minute drive, and I missed it by like

(01:36):
an hour. Yeah, Like it was like an hour and
forty five minutes to go from Greystone to there. It
was unbelievable. But we had a train situation that day.

Speaker 1 (01:44):
Always crazy, always all right, So we get all that
coming in on Saturday. Now, let's talk about some of
the things we can talk about tomorrow morning.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
Well, we got a guy who I don't know. Have
you ever done anything on marketplace? Okay, So for those
of you who haven't done it, it's kind of like
what Craigslist used to be back in the day. If
you ever dealt with Craigslist, you can buy and sell
things there. This is a Facebook application, right yeah. Marketplace
is a Facebook thing, and you know, look, this happens

(02:17):
all the time where you put something up and nobody
has any interest in it. I think they keep it
up for like a week, and then if you want
to relist it, you can relist it. And I don't
think it costs you anything to list it. I believe though,
that they're if you want it to be promoted, oh
then you got to It's like it's like you got
to give them something like five percent of the sales
price or whatever. But most of the time, I would say,

(02:42):
nobody's going to pay what you're asking for it.

Speaker 1 (02:45):
So whatever you do the marketplace, you can get a deal.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Yeah, so whatever you're you're selling, Like and I've gone
up and I've had things that are brand new with
tags on it, never used or worn, and it'll show
you that I paid whatever fifty dollars for this item. Okay,
that's and I bought it two years ago and we
never used it. For whatever reason, I'm asking half of

(03:11):
that twenty five dollars thinking you're getting a great vit
Like it's still the store right now. For fifty brand new,
you get a brand new. This is like the store's
running a half off sale and they'll come back and say,
what if I gave you eighteen, They'll just pull up
some random number. So if you want to get into
like a negotiation thing, I hate those things, I usually

(03:31):
just say not accepted, moving on now. I don't even counteroffer.
But this guy did counterofer. He had a pair of
shorts that he bought. I don't know if he got
bigger or smaller, but he never wore him. And he
said he kind of forgot he had him, okay, And
then he pulled them out of the draw you know,
drawer or closet or wherever they were hidden, and he

(03:51):
sees the tag still on him and he's like, oh,
I don't that's not my size anymore. He brings it
to marketplace. The only person interested is somebody trying to
lowball them, and the guy keeps coming back with the
low ball offer, and that things are up there for
like a week and there's nothing else happening, there's no
other activity. So he finally says, fine, you can have

(04:12):
him at whatever the price is. Well, ten minutes later,
he gets a text message from his friend, and his
friend said, hey, man, I saw those shorts. I like
those shorts. If they're still available, you know, i'd love
to buy him. Now he's offering full price. He's offering
what you know what I asked for? Yeah, so what

(04:35):
let's just say it was, you know, originally the shorts
for sixty SA and now he's selling them for thirty
and this guy's offering him eighteen. Well, the friend's gonna
pay me thirty. He's in my neighborhood. He looks right
up the street, right down the street Saturday, and I'd
be doing him a favor. And I don't know this guy. Yeah,
so he's He responded back to the guy on Marketplace

(04:59):
and said, oh, you know what, I made a mistake.
These are already spoken for. Sorry, and the guy is
like blowing them up now.

Speaker 1 (05:05):
No, no, no, you can't be no backsies, no vaccines,
no backsies.

Speaker 2 (05:10):
Come on now. He feels kind of bad about it.
What should he should? He feel bad? Should to conduct here?
Like he said from Marketplace, It's like first DIBs, I
called Dibbs. He did call Dibbs. We had a great
country song about that when you called DIBs, It's over right,
that's it. I called DIBs. I called shotgun. That's where
I'm sitting shotgun.

Speaker 1 (05:30):
Isn't that a seinn Feld episode? It already called dibbs?

Speaker 2 (05:34):
So what do you do? Okay? That's good? Or how
do you make this?

Speaker 1 (05:38):
We're gonna hear from one of Rustern regulars on this one.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
And we also have on the Morning Rush blog Jonathan
right now, a result of a TikTok question. I found
this fascinating. They basically just asked you, have you left
your nine to five career and what did you do differently?
Do you and do you enjoy it? Was it a
good move? Because a lot of people we talked about

(06:01):
this the other day, the great resignation of twenty twenty
one and twenty twenty two coming might be coming back
again according to some analysts. But you know a lot
of people two three years ago left the corporate workforce
and started their own things. Do you like your own thing?
Is it working out like you'd hoped? Well, there's a
whole bunch of answers, like this woman said, I'm a

(06:22):
commercial fisherwoman now in Alaska. Love it? Three weeks or
three months of really hard work and then I play
the rest of the year.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
I know a girl that did that. She worked on
a fishing boat and and worked on a fishing boat.
And you're out for like sixty.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
Days, you don't come back. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
Now when you get back, you get a big fat paycheck.
And you could either come back in two weeks we're
gonna set sail again. Or you could sign up, you know,
to go back out with us. You can sign up
whenever you want to go back out.

Speaker 2 (06:55):
Yeah, I mean, I mean, if you're again, that has
to be a work of passion. I would if you're
going to loan Corporate America, your h VAC climate controlled office,
you're reserved parking space, and then you're going to go
say I'm moving to Alaska to get on a fishing thing.
Is that seems insane? I would hate it. I'd be

(07:16):
miserable out there.

Speaker 1 (07:17):
Well, this girl said she did it because she had
run up so much credit card debt from shopping. Okay,
this was her penance.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
I was I saying, you don't really need a lot
of fancy clothes. No, but we're on a fishing boat. No.

Speaker 1 (07:28):
I think she literally took like four pairs of blue
jeans and some shirts, and that's it. And they give
you your boots and everything else. And you don't get
off the boat. You can't go shopping. All you do
is work, and you work a twelve hour shift and
you sleep for twelve Yeah.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
I hope your new guccis aren't ruined by the blood
and guts.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
Yeah you are, Yeah, and you're living with it. And
it was guys and girls on the boat, most of
the guys.

Speaker 2 (07:49):
That's what she says. She's a fisherwoman and that's that's
all you do.

Speaker 1 (07:52):
So you don't shop, you don't spend money, you save money.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
Other jobs that people have taken. I'm now a waitress
at a diner and I make triple what I did
working in healthcare. I don't know what part of healthcare care.
I don't know if she could have been a nurse,
could have been whatever. This person said, I quit my
job as a teacher. Uh, and I wrote I wanted
to do cartoons. I wrote ten episodes of The Mickey

(08:19):
Mouse Funhouse, and I also have a few others that
are now airing on Disney Junior.

Speaker 1 (08:24):
Good for her.

Speaker 2 (08:26):
Let's see this person said, I quit my job as
an accountant. I became a flight attendant and I loved
it seeing the world. And I've done so well so
far that they've already given me a scholarship. I'm working
now towards becoming an airline pilot. Wow. I didn't know
that you could go from never flying a plane to

(08:47):
suddenly I'm a pilot. The math and everything else. We
have heard that there's a pilot shortage as well. This
person says, I quit my job to start my own
cleaning business and I love it. I make more than
I ever made in corporate America. I couldn't be happier.
This person's that I became a paranormal investigator and a

(09:07):
ghost tour business owner. That could be done in Charleston, Right,
that's a good place for that. Yeah, this lady says,
me and my husband both quit our jobs and bought
a bread route. We have to get up way before
the sun and we deliver bread all over our community
and we love it.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
You know, people that are willing to get up early,
you do have an advantage because not a whole lot
of people like working on that side of the clock.

Speaker 2 (09:31):
You and I do, well. I don't enjoy it, allow
me to do it. I can't do a morning show
in the afternoon. They wouldn't allow it. Well, I do
not do that.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
Oh we asked repeatedly, We ask about every six months.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
That'll say enough. It would be so much easier. The
show would be so much fun.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
It's interesting because you just went through a list of people.
You had some that were artistic, some that were writers.
You know, those are obviously niche positions, but you were
talking about people doing bread routes and waitresses.

Speaker 2 (09:59):
So it's not just cling young businesses.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
Yes, it's not like you quit your job and you
opened up your photography shop in your garage.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
Because maybe we did that. Maybe it did. Maybe. I mean,
I'm just interested. There's got to be some people in
the Midlands this has done this. What what are you doing?
I'm always thinking about this is funny. I'll admitted on
the podcast. I don't think i'd admitted on the radio.
But since about nineteen ninety six ninety seven, when they
deregulated radio, and we've seen massive layoffs in our industry

(10:29):
almost annually since ninety six. I mean, it's it's incredible
that what is that twenty seven years ago something like that,
The great downsizing of radio began, and every year I think.

Speaker 1 (10:42):
Well, this could be the year, this could be the year,
this could be the end of the ride.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
What am I gonna do if I got fired right now?
Right now? What am I gonna do? Yeah? What I mean?
There's no other radio job. It's I'm going to be
back on the radio. I have to go do something else.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
I keep talking myself in and out of jobs for
the One of the first things I thought is I
want to go be a painter.

Speaker 2 (11:05):
Not not artistically. I want to paint rooms.

Speaker 1 (11:08):
Okay, people pay an unbelievable amount of money for you
to come into their house.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
And paint if you're good. I mean I've had some
people who are not so good, and I was like,
guess what, I'm good. You're not getting all that money
in Yeah, this sucks. Look at it. I can see
the brushstrokes and everything. It's a mess.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
And what was it Murphy Brown? Was it Murphy Brown?
The TV show? Member?

Speaker 2 (11:28):
Now I remember the show.

Speaker 1 (11:29):
The painter was always in her house.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Oh yeah, I think he lived there, didn't he? You
thought he lived there with the beard, right, Yeah? He
was always there painting something. Yeah, Well, maybe being a painter.
That's a great job.

Speaker 1 (11:44):
I want to go be a house appraiser.

Speaker 2 (11:47):
Angela's got battles with those people all the time. Oh,
I'm sure she can't believe some of these. She's she's
pretty sure there's a conspiracy right now amongst the appraisers
to drive the market down. Oh, whatever you can get
as a sales price, they get the sales price. And
it's like, She's like, all my real estate friends are
having the same problem around the Midlands where the appraiser

(12:10):
comes in and goes, nah, it's ten thousand under that,
so then they can't get approved for financing or whatever.
And they're like, but the house down the street sold
for that and they're like, yeah, but that was last month.
The houses are cheaper now than they were last month.
That's right, No, they're not.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
But the guy comes out, he's got the electronic measuring device. Yeah,
so he measures the outside of your house. It takes
him what five minutes. Then he goes inside and he
goes to the you know, give him the guided tour, okay,
and then he goes back and cranks out his cops
off his computer.

Speaker 2 (12:43):
Yeh.

Speaker 1 (12:44):
He takes a bunch of pictures while he's walking around.
You load it all up. You got a house appraisal,
it's like five hundred bucks a pop.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
But then you got you still got to deal with
the brokers who are calling complaining. Yeah, and they're like,
you know, talking to your boss and then sometimes and no, no, no,
they talk to your boss. Oh you're not an independent contractor.
You got to work for an agency. And then they
distribute the jobs. And then those people, if they get
enough complaints about you, then you don't go back out. Gotcha.
It's like, oh, this guy's a problem. He over appraises

(13:15):
or he underappraises.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
Yeah, I don't want to hear from people, so that's
probably not a good choice.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
What's a good job to not hear? Why? I mean,
you're fishermen. Could you go on a deep sea fishing thing?

Speaker 1 (13:25):
Was?

Speaker 2 (13:26):
It was in Carolina, Georgia that area.

Speaker 1 (13:29):
I was at Pauley's Island and I went down to
Georgetown and I said, hey, I'm on vacation. I want
to work on the boat for the day. Oh okay,
And they said, well, we get these kind of requests
all the time and we will do it. But here's
the problem. For whatever reason, I forgot what it was.
They're having to go all the way up off the
shore of North Carolina for sure. Yeah, so the boat

(13:52):
would be gone solid two and a half three days.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
Cool, I'm not going, But what if that was your job?
Would you be cool with that? I'm going shrimping for
three days? Yeah, I'd be good with that. I'm okay
with three days. None of these jobs. I don't want
to do any of these jobs. You're talking about shrimping.
I don't want to be on a boat. I don't
want to be painting. I literally don't want to do
anything other than what I'm doing. This sucks. Have to

(14:18):
be like a YouTube com.

Speaker 1 (14:20):
Do something else, Plainly, I would have already gone and
done it. But if they just came in and said
you're out, okay, now, I want to get.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
Today, That's what I'm saying. I mean, there's literally nothing
else that I'm interested in, not even not interested in.
I'm not I don't think I'm qualified for anything else.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
I also thought about this too. Sally and I actually
had this conversation because we saw a husband and wife
and they were driving a semi truck. Okay, so they
traveled the country together, and I was reading about married
couples who drive a semi. Oh, and there are a
lot of companies that will bend over backwards to give

(14:58):
you routes to go places you want to go.

Speaker 2 (15:01):
Really, the wife teams, they prefer those.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
Yeah, you get the payload there. You want to schedule
a couple of days off to do your thing while
you're out near the Grand Tetons, Okay, and then you'll
pick up your next payload here and you've got to
bring it back to Jersey or whatever.

Speaker 2 (15:17):
Angela would never go for it, but I would like that.
I would be interested in seeing the country. That'd be
very cool.

Speaker 1 (15:22):
I think you know what elseide mind, I could drive
a big truck like that Sally couldn't drive.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
Though. That's the thing. When I was a record guy,
meaning I would hype up records to radio stations, I
often compared myself to a political lobbyist, because you would
do whatever it took to get the person in charge
to make the decision you wanted them to make. And
that's so maybe I could be like a political lobbyist.

(15:50):
That would be a good job for me. Although I
have morals now that I didn't have previous.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
Late nights and strip clubs, and.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
Well, that's what I'm saying. I would be like a
pro life cocaine broke. No, no, I'm saying the lobby
that I'd be working for would be like the pro
life Lobby or you know whatever, the Empowerment to Christian's
Lobby or something like that.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
So we're not going to be bringing the records back
in the day.

Speaker 2 (16:14):
The kind of records I was pitching. Well, anyway, those
are some good I'd be interested in hearing what y'all
have left your company to do. Uh, we already talked
about selling the shorts to your friends. I don't know.
I guess I've covered most of the stuff we're going
to get to today.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
Sally was talking about because now she'll see like an
RV and she'll say, that's what we need to be doing.
She wants to r V and I'm like, I'd rather
drive the truck. If I'm going to drive across the country,
I get paid to get there.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
You know, like Angela and I would not be able
to do anything that's not luxurious. I'll say that, how's
that she's not going in an RV. She's not gonna Oh,
don't get me wrong.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
I think solely after doing the the the semi thing
for a couple of months, Sally would.

Speaker 2 (16:59):
Say, yeah, so, but I'm wondering maybe we could come
up with a like five we're a four and five
star hotel reviewers. See. She'd be into that, like, together,
we'll go to your four star and maybe it'll become
a five star when we're there. That's right, depending on
how you treat us, this suddenly became a five star property.

(17:20):
This is a very value and it'd be like in uh,
what was like Ocean's thirteen or whatever. That's right, when
the guy was coming to review al Pacinos, but they
were they thought it was the other guy, and then
they give the other guy. The guy who was the
actual reviewer got all the crappy food and whatnot. I
did me to go a couple of years ago.

Speaker 1 (17:37):
I believe we were must have been in Polly's aland
Mearls Inlet somewhere like that, and she was a travel influencer. Golly,
how do you I remember looking her up and I'm like,
she's got a long way to go because she didn't
have it like.

Speaker 2 (17:55):
Followers. Oh so maybe she was still maybe she was
getting like a free room. Yeah, you come here, we'll
give you the Thursday night free and you pay for
the Friday, Saturday and check out Sunday and that would
be fine with us. No, we're not paying you to
come here. Yeah, and we're so And by the way,
on a side note, you've heard of this guy, mister Beast.

(18:18):
All right, So my son was telling me about he's
into all the YouTube stuff. There was something where one
of the characters on The Mister Beast Show, who's a
big YouTube guy, was accused of trying to groom younger
like thirteen year olds for sexual indoctrination. And eventually, I

(18:41):
guess last week, mister Beast made the decision to permanently
separate from this individual who was like one of his
best friends growing up from like middle school. So that
person is no longer on the Mister Beast Show. And
my son is so enthralled with like he's like trying
to get me to be excited about that stuff. And
I'm like, I don't know who any of these people
are and I don't care, but I just for giggles

(19:05):
looked up what does mister Beast make a year? What
do you think mister Beast? According to CNBC, mister Beast
the last.

Speaker 1 (19:18):
He's gonna be making a lot of rip bystery the NBC.
So he's making a million five.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
Oh, get ready to crap your pants. CNBC says, over
the last three years he has averaged seven hundred million
a year. Wow, he's twenty five years old. Seven hundred
million dollars. And they were talking about he's got two

(19:43):
hundred and forty million subscribers on YouTube. Yes, and so
if he does a shout out in the video, if
he does any shout out, hey, I want to thank
my friends at Verizon for this great phone. Anyway, that's
two million dollars that they have to pay him for
the shout out. And he'll do two or three shoutouts
of video and that's all you're getting. Thanks to my

(20:05):
friends of Horizon for this cool phone. And hey, bick,
you got a heck of a pen here. And you
know what, I'm really enjoying. I'm really satisfying my thirst
with this heavy and water. That's six million dollars. I
just know. Goodness gracious, by the way, that kid is
kind of inspiring to me. I call him a kid.
He's mister mister Bee. I read about him a little

(20:28):
bit a couple of months ago. I don't remember exactly
where he's from, but he's from somewhere I think in
North Carolina, like the Wilmington area, and he was like,
I think he was maybe going to Coastal Carolina or
East caro ECU or one of those types of schools
he was going there. And he was just like, I
really think that this YouTube things about to catch on

(20:50):
my content. If I could devote more time to my content,
I believe I could become successful at this. And so
he broke his mother's heart and quit college as an
eighteen year old. And the first year he made like
a million dollars, and then he made like ten million.
Then he made like one hundred million, and now he's

(21:13):
but he says, amazingly enough, he says, I don't have
a lot of that money. He says, most of the money,
probably ninety percent of it, I reinvest into the videos.
So when you see a video like the reason his
videos are so popular, he's gonna like take like five

(21:34):
you know supercars that cost a million dollars each. We're
gonna drive, We're gonna we're gonna push him off a
cliff and see which one makes the biggest explosion or
something stupid like that. He was doing one where he
was paying people ten thousand dollars a day to live
in a grocery store. So you have everything you need here.
It's all here. There's nothing. He's got the bathroom, you

(21:54):
got a shower, toilet, paper, food, eat whatever you want,
Do whatever you want. I'm paying you ten grand a day.
Who can make it the longest that that promotion ended
up costing him like nine million dollars because people are like,
I've been here now for one hundred days. Oh my gosh,

(22:14):
that's ten thousand hours. You know, I'm killing it. I'm
a millionaire now. It's great.

Speaker 1 (22:20):
I gotta go back and let this guy's videos up.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
I haven't in a long time.

Speaker 1 (22:23):
Yeah, So you know, it's like the old man said,
I think his name was u Jug Bizarre. Jug Bizarre
said his first name is jug Jug.

Speaker 2 (22:35):
That's not a nickname, No, that's his that was his
god given name. Did God give it to him or
I'm a parent.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
I don't know if that was his real name or not.
They called him jug Jug Bizarre from Batesburg, South Carolina said,
I'm working man, ain't got time to make money. Jeb
Gizard never had a full time job. Of my knowledge,
he made a lot of money, always had a pocket
full of cash.

Speaker 2 (22:56):
What was Jug doing? Hust on the streets of.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
And you know, people come, some guy pull up Jux.
That's nice truck. You want to sell it? Thought about it.
I'll give you five grand for it right now. Okay,
they pulled five grand out of his pocket. He did
have a used car dealership.

Speaker 2 (23:15):
Okay, so that's what he was doing, and he.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
Would but he'd buy anything, houses, boats, because he would
buy at a good price and sell it make money.
My grandmother, I don't know if that's all he did.
If you knew Jug bizarre, somebody can correct me on that,
but I think that that was the quote that he
lived by.

Speaker 2 (23:33):
My grandmother and her second husband owned an antique store
up in Vermont, and I was always impressed. Again it's
the seventies that he always had the thickest wad of
cash on him and I in my mind, it was
like he was like a game show host. Do you
remember back in the day that I don't think they

(23:54):
still do this. I don't watch any game shows anymore,
but they would pull out like Bob Barker be like,
all right, just won twelve hundred dollars, and he would
just start counting out those hundred dollars bills. There you go,
and he'd get and the crowd to get all crazy,
and then he'd still fold it up and had more
money to put in his pocket. I remember as a kid,
like I would save like every birthday gift I got, like,
you know, they would give you ten dollars in a

(24:16):
car or twenty whatever. I had this like paper bag
in my room, and I think I'd got up to
like maybe three or four hundred dollars at one point,
most of it being like fives and tens and twenties
or whatever. And I would act like I was a
game show host, and I would just put that wad
in my pocket and look at myself in the mirror,
and I'd pull it out and go, let mean, I
lick my thumb, let me give you out there there's
a twenty thirty, forty fifth. You know. It's like, man,

(24:38):
it would be so cool. But he always said he
didn't have a lot of money. He was walking around
with maybe three thousand dollars cash on him. Yeah, but
he was like, I ain't got nothing in a bank.
I just need that three thousand dollars or whatever it was.
I don't know the figure, because if we see a deal, sure,
somebody's like a yard sale and they're like the spot. Yeah,
they're not gonna runy, they're not gonna take a check. Now,

(25:00):
nobody's had a credit card machine in the seventies, way
before VEMBA. Yeah. So if I'm trying to buy a
table that I think I could sell that table for
three hundred and they're selling it for eighty five. Right now,
I got to put down eighty five bucks, immediately, get
it back to the shop, strip it, refinish it, get
it out on the floor as soon as possible, because
if it's sitting in the shop, it ain't making money.

(25:22):
You got to get it on the floor. And I
was just like, but when we go to breakfast, he
had no problems. He wants the arm, what he wants
to let me go. He keep the change. I saw
the guy I said keep the change the other day
to somebody at a gas station. I haven't heard keep
the change in a while. Do people still say that
or is that a dying phrase?

Speaker 1 (25:41):
I think they just keep it anyway. I found out
they didn't give me change. You didn't want that bag,
did That's what the girl said to me when I
got my coffee. She hit him over coffee and she said,
you didn't want your change.

Speaker 2 (25:54):
Did you? I don't know.

Speaker 1 (25:55):
I gave you ten and I had to think of
what did they came for. I gave her a okay, no,
you can keep it, but you know you didn't want
your change. Don't make change and make coffee. What's going
on in your neighborhood? What are you thinking about? What
did you sell a marketplace or what did you withhold?

(26:15):
And did you catch hell for it? You got a
better deal. Look, it's market place, then, the first word
that told you market This is a place where we
do business.

Speaker 2 (26:25):
So I don't think he can go back. I'm just
being honest with you. I don't think he can go
back and sell it to his friend. Now. It's fate book.
You're not friends, that's true, I'm not. It's not called
friend book in the friends square. We're in the market exactly,
friend place. This is marketplace.

Speaker 1 (26:41):
Reach out to us on social media, show us your
pants you got for sale.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
Maybe we'll buy him. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
We'll make an offer, Hey, get rich. That's right, Kelly,
you counterout cat.

Speaker 2 (26:53):
That's right, lit my thumb and go to work for you.

Speaker 1 (26:56):
To keep it change.

Speaker 2 (27:01):
Hey.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
You can also email us at rush at ninety seventy
five to win your co s.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
And dot com and I'm Nash at ninety seven five
w CUS dot com.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
Tomorrow. We started talking, you started talking. We land at
the delay. We're making change up here at nine seven
eight nine two six seven eight oh three nine seven
eight w co O s
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