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December 17, 2024 • 16 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Killy Nash. Hey there, it's tomorrow show.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Today.

Speaker 1 (00:04):
Tomorrow will be Wednesday, hump Day, one week from Christmas Day,
gift day. Get your shopping done. I know we're going
to give you an opportunity to stuff your stockings with
some Keith Urban Tickets.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Metaya. We've tried to use that one yesterday didn't work.
We never were able to publish it, apparently, and so
we found out how valuable the blog post is to
you people, because I think we took three calls and
nobody was even close, no, and then the calls just
died off. So Jonathan scrambled to come up with his

(00:34):
own question.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
Had to come up with a Christmas movie question, because
everybody loves to Christmas movies, all right, So tomorrow we
will it is populated, so we will be using the
what you're talking about word of the day. All I
get to do is know the answer. Tomorrow morning, get
six thirty U and Keith Herbin Tickets.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
Metanoya means to change one's mind and have a new perspective.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
An epiphany, as it were, using the season, all right,
So we got that coming down, and then I'm excited
to hear about this girl who does emergency? Is he
emergency backscratching?

Speaker 2 (01:06):
No, No, it's just a service. She had this vision.
She said she was recently divorced, she's raising three kids
on her own, and she's struggling, and one of the
things that she'd always enjoyed in life was having her backscratched.
And she said when she was a kid, she used

(01:27):
to try to trick her aunts and uncles into scratching
her back, and then her cousins, and as an adult,
she would regularly pay her kids like five bucks to
scratch her back while they watched television. Okay, And she said,
so one night, I'm thinking about do other people would
they pay to have their backs? And so she said,

(01:48):
I wonder if I just kind of marketed myself as
a professional backscratcher. And she started picking up clients where
this is basically in the Miami area. And over the years,
this thing has exploded. She's now got like thirty employees.
She's franchising the things, and she herself is personally on tour.

(02:13):
If you look at her site, she has like in
the next few weeks and months, she'll be in Philly,
New York, La, San Diego, and Houston. And she stays
for a week at a time. It's one hundred and
thirty dollars for an hour if you want her to
come scratch your back. And I don't think I would
ever pay one hundred and thirty dollars.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
Now. I had to go watch the video because I thought,
like sometimes and Sally loves to have a bad scratch.
That's the kind of scratching that this girl does. It's
like a soft, gentle massage kind of scratch. But you know,
when you're out or when you suddenly have like it's
like an insect bite, you got to itch right there
in your back. You need somebody to scratch it real quick.

(02:50):
That's like a scratch scratch. That's not what this is.

Speaker 2 (02:53):
No, this is a an hour long and she says
it releases indorphins like serotonin and balance your energy field.
I know you've been quite concerned about your energy field lately, John,
So perhaps maybe book a session here with Tony George
is her name.

Speaker 1 (03:09):
Well, she's got the three inch long nails.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
Yep, she gets those manicured weekly, I guess, And uh
it's I look, should we franchise it? If she's franchising
these things around the country. Now, who's willing. I don't
think anybody's willing for you and I to come scratch
their back.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
Nobody doesn't like to have their bad scratched. But would
you be willing? I mean, and it doesn't I mean,
she's not I don't want. I don't want to talk
negatively about her. But she's not what you would consider
an attractive person. She's not a head turner. She's not
ugly per se. So this has nothing to do with
like guys are booking it to get like a hot
chick in their hotel room. Uh.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
This is more along the lines of and it seems
like most of the clients are women. So I'm guessing
we'd have to hire a woman to do this, Jonathan,
scratch people's backs. Would you be willing? I feel like
I'm in an auction. Would you be willing to pay
fifty dollars an hour? That's that's more than half off
what she charges.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
A couple of things kind of mind. Number one massage therapist.
This is a great idea. Sally and I had gone
to a massage therapist and Roley who was great, and
but she was she would even tell you late in
the day because she was getting older, that her hands
were starting to wear out for the day. It was

(04:27):
going to be as deep as it would have been
earlier in the day if you got a session. And
so if you are a massage therapist, or if your
massage therapist is getting older, they can't really get the
typical deep See this, this isn't a deep massage. This
is very soft.

Speaker 2 (04:43):
Well, she's basically just rubbing, like running her nails across
your skin. And she does. And when they say backscratch her,
that's really I guess where it started, but it appears
like from the video that the clients get down to
their underwear, they lay on a massage table and they
do like the back of your legs, you shut your arms,
all of that. And in this one there's two women

(05:04):
working on you, so it's like a pit crew and
that's good.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
And then the other thing that comes to mind. I
heard Sally describing this a while back. I'm gonna say,
like six months ago with a backscratching. This mother had
a middle school child. I can't I don't know if
it's a boy or girl, wouldn't matter, but she said
that the child is not as open as he or

(05:29):
she used to be and I just can't get them
to talk. And Sally said, daar, what you do. Do
you have some kind of routine where they go to
bed at line? She said, yeah, I always go in
and I talked to him for a few minutes and
he won't talk. And Sally said, have him roll over
and then just start scratching their back and talking to him.

(05:51):
And the backscratching just relaxes them. And she said, don't
don't ask a whole lot of questions, to start scratching
their back and they will lay there and talk to
you because he don't want you to stop. And the
woman called her back and said, that worked. I mean
the kid just started opening up and talking about some
issues at school or whatever. The back scratching has an

(06:15):
effect on your body.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
Sarahtonin is a hell of a drug, isn't it though?
So yeah, I don't know. Maybe we should open up
our own that she is. I guess franchising this out.
We'll talk to you guys if you think that's a
great business opportunity for us or not. I'm also confused
Jonathan as to what is the what is the requirement
to get into the Library of Congress National Film Registry.

(06:37):
They announced twenty five more films going in today, and
there's a bunch of girls, or excuse me, a bunch
of movies from like the twenties. They even got one
from eighteen ninety five, So I get that maybe some
of these older films that I've never heard of should
be in there. But then they start bringing in like,
here's one that I think is culturally relevant, two of
them Beverly Hills cop from eighty four, Dirty Dancing from

(06:59):
eighty seven, and Congratulations. Then there's movies like, I guess
it's culturally relevant, like Spy Kids from two thousand and one.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
I don't even remember that one.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
Yeah, my kid was like in that age group, so
we went to all the Spy Kids back in the day.
The Social Network in twenty ten, that's the Justin Timberlake
movie about Mark Zuckerberg. And then you get movies like
are we literally going to use tax dollars to preserve
Star Trek two? Wrath of Khan that was one of

(07:32):
the better ones. How about Texas Chainsaw Massacre? I love
that movie nineteen seventy four. Were you a big fan
of the year previous Ganja and Hesse No, how about
where's the how about up in Smoke nineteen seventy eight,
Chichen Chong the America? This is, this is, this is

(07:52):
what the American taxpayer is paying to preserve. It would
be a loss to culture if we lost the Chiechen Chong.

Speaker 1 (08:02):
They were good movies.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
Maybe you got a movie, what is the What is
a culturally relevant movie from the last say, five ten years?
Is there anything that you can think of that future
generations should see that kind of encaptures our time right now?

Speaker 1 (08:18):
The Patriot that's not from our time right now? No,
but it came out recently. I'm trying to think of
something else it's newer, that would be a slice of
life out of Americana.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
Yeah, that's a tough question that you can come of.

Speaker 1 (08:32):
That is a great question.

Speaker 2 (08:33):
Now, Or what do you think they're going to put in?

Speaker 1 (08:35):
Mean Girls?

Speaker 2 (08:38):
Even that one is like twenty years old now right?
I just saw it.

Speaker 1 (08:42):
Here's a confession for you. The other night, I think
it was Thursday night, where babysitting little Thomas and Sally
was she had something on television. I s wanted in
the set down and it was Mean Girls. I'd never
seen this movie, and I said, I believe this movie
is called Mean Girls, and she said it is. I've
never seen it. So we watched Mean Girls.

Speaker 2 (09:04):
What'd you think of it?

Speaker 1 (09:05):
I can't believe I watched that movie. Oh it was
as stupid as I thought it would.

Speaker 2 (09:10):
Be, just as stupid as I had maddened.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
True, very true. I'm not a girl.

Speaker 2 (09:14):
So maybe like Despicable Me, would be a movie that
kind of captures where we're at as far as technology was, like,
you know, and again we're going back. Gosh, that movie's
almost ten years old now. Despicable to me, I would think. So,
I don't know the Spider Man series. I'm just trying
to think of movies that would be popular that would

(09:34):
somehow capture what's going on in the world today, at
least in America.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
M Okay, that's good. I'm going to ponder this one,
all right. So we got that time of the year
when I get to coach up in a lot of
movies I've never seen. Now, I didn't have Mean Girls
on my bingo car, but I've already got that one
checked off.

Speaker 2 (09:52):
Do not watch the Red one. I think it's called
with dck one. It was a ANGELA wanted to watch
that I was like, why the reviews have been horrific
on this. She's like, well, it's free, it's on whatever.
It was on Prime or Netflix or whatever. And she
only made it about thirty minutes and then she was like,
shut it off.

Speaker 1 (10:12):
This is it. It is so prime because we're watching
some black and white movie. And Sally's not a big
Catherine Hepburn fan, and she was in this movie. So
we're watched because it was on TCM. Sally likes DCM. Sure,
and she said, well so. And so one of her
friends says she's watching a great movie called Red One.
I said, you would not like that movie. I'm not
even starting it. I've already seen the preview Kelly and

(10:34):
now watched the trailer for that in the studio when
it was first announced, Like, this is the most stupid
movie that'll ever come out at Christmas time.

Speaker 2 (10:43):
Well, it's hard to top a lot of these lights.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
I wanted the movie. Text her friend back and say,
how did you like Red One? Let's see what her
review is.

Speaker 2 (10:53):
I I would say, don't watch it. It's you know,
it's rare. Like I used to feel really ripped off
if I paid to go to a movie and then
it sucked. Like oftentimes I'll start watching a movie and
I'll say to myself, well, they gave it a shot,
it sucks and I'm getting out of it.

Speaker 1 (11:11):
What is that worst movie you ever paid to see? Oh?
I don't remember, but I'm going to say Dune.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
But I was just by my point being, it's rare
for me to watch a movie that's on TV for
free and still feel like I was robbed. And I
feel like Red One literally robbed me, like I lost
a half hour of my life. And I don't even
feel like they gave it a best effort. I feel
like they just schlocked it together, threw some big names

(11:37):
in it, and a ridiculous storyline.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
Probably didn't write a script until they got on the set,
you know.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
And interesting. This is another interesting little backstory here. The
Rock is divorced from his first wife. They are business
partners though, and so she is the executive producer of
the movie, and she's an executive producer on just about
anything that The Rock does. Her brother wrote this movie.

Speaker 1 (12:02):
Oh yeah, I believe it.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
And so I don't know what kind of experience that
guy has writing movies, but I would say to my wife,
she didn't think it was as weird as I did.
I was like, I find it like if I was
the Rock's wife, which is a weird predicament to put
myself in. But if I was married to the Rock
right now, I don't think i'd like it that his
closest business associate is his ex wife and her name

(12:25):
is I think Danny. So every day he's like, well,
I'm going over to Danny's house. No, you're married to me.
You'll never believe what Danny said. I don't want to
know what Danny said.

Speaker 1 (12:38):
I did find one movie I want to watch anybody
seeing Midway The newer version is Ben Affleck in that
I don't think so okay. I saw a list of
the people. The only reason I said Sally will watch
that is because on the screenshot of the movie, I
thought I saw Dennis Quaid.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
Oh that's her. Guy's the guy.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
She'll watch anything with Dennis Quaid in it. So, and
I wanted the start of the started the yet, but
I gotta know my movies to watch list for the
holiday season.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
Did you guys watch the Reagan movie?

Speaker 1 (13:05):
Uh? Not? The We watched several Reagan documentaries leading up
to watching the Reagan movie.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
Because that's him, right, he's playing Reagan. Yes, yeah, I'm
surprised already.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
Well, we've seen three documentaries so far. I'm Ronald Reagan.
Now we're getting ready for the movie.

Speaker 2 (13:22):
The people who are Reagan heights say it's a great movie.

Speaker 1 (13:25):
It's kind of like watching Four Versus Ferrari. If you
haven't seen that movie, it's a great movie.

Speaker 2 (13:30):
I enjoyed it.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
Matt Damon, Now do yourself a favor before you watch
the movie, and watch the documentaries on the movie before
you watch the movie.

Speaker 2 (13:39):
Did that movie end with them showing like actual film
or photographs of the people and then it was like,
oh my gosh, look at how they got them to
look just like them or talk like him. Yes, it
was kind of creepy.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
And I was talking about somebody that the other day,
about how casting people go out of their way sometimes
to find somebody You wouldn't even know that they look
like them, but when you go back and look and see,
you go, wow, they look like a lot like them.
Remember the movie Cinderella. Man, Oh yeah, yeah, who's that?
That's Russell Crowe. Yes, another one of Sally's favorites. If

(14:11):
you because the movie is way too violent for Sally
to like it, but she'll watch Russell Crowe. So if
you go back and look at the guy who is
the Arts Nemesis boxer at the end of the movie,
his name was Max Baher. Oh yeah, if that name
is familiar, that is the grandfather of Max Behar, who
was Jethrow on the Beverly Hillbillies, Which is why I

(14:31):
went to look him up, because I'm like, this guy
has to be related. How many people would be known
would be named Max Behar. But if you see the
picture of the guy on his Wikipedia page, he looks
just like, I mean, identical to the character, to the
actor who played the part in the movie.

Speaker 2 (14:48):
I identical the movie. Have you seen Hillbilly LG yet?

Speaker 1 (14:54):
Yes? I saw that when it first came out.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
That movie. When they show the photographs of the jd
Vance family, and I think there might even been a
home video in there at some point, those people are
like creepy Close. Yes, Glenn Close. Is I identical to
his grandmother.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
And she did a great movie in that job. Yeah,
and I mean a great job in that movie.

Speaker 2 (15:19):
Amy Adams and even like the people that they cast
to play jd Vance at different stages of his life.
I thought that, like when you saw the kid who
when he was like ten years old or whatever on
the bicycle. Yeah, and then they showed you like what
Jdvance looked like. You're like, oh my gosh, that's like
a creepy uncanny how much they look alike it was.

Speaker 1 (15:42):
That's a good movie too, if you haven't seen it.
That's a good movie. There's a movie that ought to
be on the list that you mentioned earlier.

Speaker 2 (15:50):
Oh you mean save that one?

Speaker 1 (15:51):
Yeah, Trump will take care of that. Hey, what's going
on in your neighbhood? We should talk about lettlet's known
reach out to us on social media. I'll say all
that tomorrow on English. Wow, I just screwed all that up,
but I'm not backing up. I can't recreate no reason.
Straighten out. You know what I meant.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
That's what it is. We knew what you meant.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
And then if you want to email us, I'll get
this part right. I am Rush at ninety seven five
w COS dot com.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
And I'm Nash at ninety seven five WCS dot com.

Speaker 1 (16:18):
Now the number to call. We start talking, you start talking,
and you start winning, and use the same number. We
can only afford one. It's eight oh three ninety seven
eight nine two six seven eight oh three nine seven
eight w cos tomorrow in the morning rush
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