Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
And welcome to the Minnesota good Bye. This one is
really interesting and to start off because it's all about emails,
and if you're new here, we basically read emails and
it's always fun for us because we never know what
you're going to write about, and there really is no
topic that's off limits. We'll talk about relationships or scandals,
(00:21):
or personal lives or nerf balls. And if you get
that joke, you are a longtime listener of the Minnesota
Goodbye and the Dave Ryan Show. This one says on
the Minnesota Goodbye. This week, Dave rightfully took credit for
the quote make Susan famous, make Christy famous, make Jake famous.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Bit.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
It got me thinking about situations in my life where
others have taken credit for the ideas and work that
I've done. It is bothersome when people do this and
why do they do this. I work in healthcare, so
a lot of times I see the direct results of
the work that I do and no one trying to
take credit for that. But outside of work, I'm involved
in an organization with my kids school a parent, there
(01:01):
is taken credit for like three really good ideas of
mine and I am just shook a. She says, how
can somebody honestly take credit for someone else's idea believing
it was theirs? I am sure this happens a lot
in radio, with your bits that gets pitched and launched
too success on the radio. I hate that I have
been too chicken to say, hey, that's my idea. But
(01:23):
when the principal asked this other parent who came up
with the idea, which was my idea? The parent said
in front of me, oh, I guess I'm not sure.
I think it was my idea. Mostly my jaw dropped.
I didn't want to be rude and say it was me,
it was my idea of mine, But what a graceful
way to acknowledge and take recognition. But what is a
graceful way to acknowledge and to take recognition for the
(01:44):
work that you do without coming across as arrogant like
you're bragging? And in the words of Juanita, that shit
pissed me the fuck off. I totally know what you mean,
because if we sat in a meeting and like, you know,
I took credit for Bailey's idea and Rich is like,
you know, like, oh great job, Dave, you would feel
like a jerk to go wait, that was my idea.
(02:06):
It would seem petty and childish.
Speaker 3 (02:08):
Yeah right, I mean in a meeting setting for sure,
Like oh well, never mind.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
I guess I have had people take and get credit
for my ideas so frequently that it's just become a
part of my job. I'll give you one example. The
twenty years ago, I came up with the idea for
the Ugly Kids billboard, and the Ugly Kid's Billboard was
a great campaign. It popped into my mind. Sometimes I
(02:32):
get ideas that I don't even try to come up
with it. They pop like popcorn in my mind and
I'm like, oh wow, that's a cool idea, as if
somebody else came up with it and stuck it in
my head. So we did this ugly Kid's billboard thing,
and a station in I want to say Milwaukee stole it.
Totally unique idea, totally my creation, and it was stolen
(02:53):
all over the country. And I didn't make anything off
of that, but a station in Milwaukee did it, and
they got written up in a magazine for what a
fabulous idea.
Speaker 4 (03:04):
They had come up within.
Speaker 1 (03:05):
There was a station in Grand Fork, remember the the
Vampire crock pot meatballs thing. Yes, okay, we did this
ten years or so ago. We all agreed. Fallon and
Steve were on the show. We were going to dress
up for Halloween and bring in food. So I come in.
I went to Party City. I spent like eighty ninety
bucks on Halloween vampire teeth and makeup, and I got
up early and I did the makeup and I brought
(03:26):
in a crock pot full of Simmis meatballs. I walk
in and the video is still online on YouTube. Oh funny,
and I walk in them er my vampire laugh yeah,
and Steve and Fallen were like, you dumb ass. We
were just joking. We were and I'm like, that's not
a joke. We agreed to make snacks and dress up.
(03:46):
And they're like, you're stupid. You're stupid, and it's funny
and people really like it. And I laugh at it,
not too you. It's funny now. I get it's funny,
but a station and I don't want to point them
out too much. But they not only stole it, but
they they faked it and they did it. I mean,
word for fucking word, and they put it on their video,
(04:07):
they put it on Facebook and their listeners are like, oh,
that's so funny, genius, that's great. And I saw it
and I was pissed, and I wrote to them and
I said, you know, guys, not only did you steal it,
you faked it. That's really shitty. And they wrote back
and said.
Speaker 2 (04:26):
Yeah, yeah, God can't believe you're being such a stick
of the mud. Flattery is the Imitation's the most sincere
form of flattery. And I'm like, fuck you, guys. And
I didn't say that, but I was really annoyed. It's like,
come up with your own shit, and don't come up,
don't steal somebody else's shit and then take credit for it.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
So it's kind of part of it. And then there
was one other and I'm gonna just finish it with
this because I think that people, if you sit in
a room and one person comes up with an idea,
you were there and you might not remember who who
came up with it.
Speaker 4 (05:01):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
And I've done that with you before Tube.
Speaker 4 (05:04):
I'm smiling.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
No. I feel like in general, I might have I
don't have like ideas for things necessarily, but I'll just
make a comment or tell a story that you'll be like, hey,
let's do something with that and then it turns into something.
Speaker 4 (05:18):
But I wouldn't say like I came up with anything.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
But I think you've come up with things before. And honestly,
I'll be like, who came up with that idea? Like,
you know, paper tube Tuesday, who came up with that?
Speaker 4 (05:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (05:26):
Me, No I didn't, it wasn't me. That's a running bit.
I love paper Tube Tuesday. It's my favorite day of
the week.
Speaker 5 (05:32):
I feel like you can tell who who's doing it
in a malicious way and who's genuinely just forgetting, Because Dave,
I'm gonna be honest, you do forget a lot of
times who came up with something, and then I'll tell
you or like you'll be like, oh, Bailey came up
with this, and then Bailey will be like, oh no,
Jenny's actually did, or vice versa, and like it's just
because you forget, and I don't think you're doing.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
It to try to make reddit.
Speaker 5 (05:54):
Youll never It's like, so I feel like, you know
the difference between someone who's doing it for their own
benefit and on purpose and someone who's just like doesn't
honestly remember it.
Speaker 1 (06:03):
And I totally trust I don't have a great memory.
So if you say no, you didn't come up with that.
I came up with that, or Bailey did, I'll be like,
oh cool, Yeah, And I'm not going to sit there
and argue about it. Yeah, but ideas are just I mean,
ideas in our business are kind of our currency, and
that in my deep, rich voice kind of my currency.
Speaker 5 (06:25):
Can we talk about the pickle? The pickle prints.
Speaker 4 (06:31):
He's not at the Minnesota Renaissance.
Speaker 5 (06:34):
I know he's not. He's in New York City.
Speaker 4 (06:35):
Yeah, but there's okay, there's news. Do you want you
want to tell about it?
Speaker 1 (06:38):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (06:38):
You go ahead, because I've only just stumbled upon his TikTok.
Speaker 3 (06:42):
So this guy is really famous on TikTok. He is
one of the pickle vendors at the New York Renaissance
festival that really put pickle vendors on the map, which
is so funny to me.
Speaker 4 (06:53):
But he has this super deep.
Speaker 5 (06:56):
Oh my gosh, just a beautiful voice.
Speaker 3 (06:58):
Very deep voice, and he's called the pickle Priest and
that's what it was. Yeah, And if you buy a
pickle from him, he like says a prayer over it and.
Speaker 5 (07:06):
Like a whole bit of like putting it in a
little baggy. He pretends to like lick it, like steal
it and stuff, and then he like, has you do
weird things with your arms as he does some kind
of I don't know seance looking to it. It's so funny.
Speaker 4 (07:21):
It's really funny.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (07:23):
I think in general too, Like once he showed up,
then every other pickle vendor they're like, oh, well, I
need to have some kind of bit in order to
you know, get TikTok famous and make a bunch of money,
which makes sense. And so now there are pickle vendors
at the Minnesota State Fair who are trying to like sorry,
Minnesota Renaissance Festival, that are trying to do their own
(07:44):
like bit, yeah, so that they can also you know,
be somebody, because I've seen some Minnesota Renaissance Festival pickle
vendors on there, and I like, I mean back in
the day, way back when all the pickle vendors all
they got like the only thing they were known for
was for being hot, Like they were all really hot.
My friend Jordan used to be a pickle vender and
he would do it without his shirt on and would
have like a line of girls waiting to buy a
(08:06):
pickle from Jordan, and they get to be salacious at you,
so they're like, I want to take.
Speaker 4 (08:09):
A bite of my pickle. Yeah, and they say shit
like that all the time.
Speaker 3 (08:14):
But now they're just like regular dudes, so they have
to like come up with special things in order to
you know, make some money.
Speaker 5 (08:21):
If you want to see it, he's on TikTok. The
pickle priest y is.
Speaker 3 (08:25):
Really deep voice like yours, Dave, but deeper actually.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
Really Yes, yeah, that is kind of deeper.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
I think if you speak that deeply, you're trying to
speak that deeply, because I don't know that anybody has
a voice the character. I get it. Yeah, I mean cool.
I mean you know he's put pickle vendors on the map.
Speaker 4 (08:42):
He certainly is.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
I am all for it. Uh. This is from Allison.
She says, good morning. I was listening to yesterday's podcast,
which I think she means Monday's because this is a
day old. And somebody was asking about whether you knew
how many people listen to your show versus other shows.
I am a media buyer for an agency, and here's
a website that I used to look at general ratings
for stations in a market to get an idea of
(09:03):
what stations to buy advertising on. Now, this is a
very specific one.
Speaker 2 (09:08):
It is.
Speaker 1 (09:11):
People that are over the age of six, so everybody,
everybody Monday through Sunday, meaning the entire week, six in
the morning till midnight. They don't measure in the middle
of the night because the number of people that listen
in the middle of the night is honestly negligible. Yeah.
So the number one station in town, no surprise, they're
(09:31):
on fire is kthan they are number one. They've been
number one for quite some time, and they do especially
well during the fall because of the vikings. Yes, okay,
so kan and they're a great station. I mean they
are the only station like them in town, and they
have such a great staff. Everybody on that show everyday
in the station is like unique and talented and it's admirable.
(09:53):
Second place is the Christian Top forty Christian CHR that
means Contemporary Hit Radio. Their number two. Now we are
down here at one, two, three, number six, but that
is nobody buys in specific like broad demos like I
(10:13):
want to advertise my cars to twelve year olds, so
they don't do that, and they also don't want to advertise, like,
I don't know, title insurance to twenty two year olds.
So instead you'll buy the station that's number one in
the demo that you're targeting. For example, if you are
I don't know, if you sell cars, you're probably going
(10:33):
to target the twenty five to fifty four years old demographic.
Then we're like number two or number three. You're number
sometimes even number one, but then they split it up
into women and men. Also. Yeah, so we are number
six overall with the station in everybody, but if you
narrow it down to just the morning show, I think
(10:55):
we're number one or number two in a lot of
the demographics.
Speaker 4 (10:59):
Cool, So tell your friends.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
As far as the podcast, I truly don't have numbers
on the podcast. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (11:06):
I don't even know how.
Speaker 1 (11:07):
I think we do. Really, I think we do really well.
Speaker 5 (11:10):
You'll be able to look something I was gonna say it.
I think I can't now, but I just don't know
the accuracy of it, to be honest.
Speaker 4 (11:18):
Yeah, now, I don't know. I'd have to look into it.
Speaker 5 (11:21):
It's kind of well, you read another email, I'll do
some have it well.
Speaker 3 (11:26):
This is from the data from August nineteenth, twenty twenty
five to today for the Minnesota Goodbye. How many network downloads
we've had is eighty two thousand, seven hundred and nineteen
in a month.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
How many say that again?
Speaker 4 (11:41):
Eighty two thousand, seven hundred and nineteen a month in
a month.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
That is, listens to the podcast, downloads downloads downloads. Does
that also count as streaming because when I listen to
the podcast, I don't necessarily download it.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
Stream So I assume because as you're listening to it here,
let me look, ok to seven nineteen divided by thirty
days in a month, it's twenty seven hundred and fifty
seven a day if every if all of those people
are downloading every single day.
Speaker 5 (12:10):
Okay, a decent amount. Honestly, if you're like above God,
there's some weird statistic that you're in the top ten
percent of podcasts if you get a certain amount of views.
We're definitely in the top ten percent of podcasts because
there's so many people out there that do podcasts and
two people listen to them.
Speaker 1 (12:24):
No, it's very true, and I think that's what we
talked about podcast yesterday. I forget exactly what we were saying,
but I think that I read somewhere that most podcasts
have a total of one episode because they do it,
they realize that nobody listened, so then they don't do
it again.
Speaker 5 (12:39):
Yeah. It says like, if you give four hundred about
four hundred and fifty average downloads in the first seven
days after a release of an episode, you're in the
top ten percent.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
Of all the podcasts that were four.
Speaker 5 (12:48):
Hundred and fifty average downloads in the first seven days.
So in the first week you're in the top. And
Bailey just broke it down that we get like two
thousand some a day a day.
Speaker 3 (12:57):
Oh good, yeah, thank you, and I this is a
fun little fact here. Even within the last month, the
Christmas Wish podcast has even gotten twenty eight downloads for
Christmas Wish the last month of summertime.
Speaker 1 (13:11):
How about Nick the Stoner. Can you look at the
Nick the stone now, I can.
Speaker 3 (13:14):
Look at like War of the Roses, okay specifically, and
then like our podcast, like the Dave Ryan Show podcast
has gotten just a butt ton.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
Okay, good, So we appreciate that. It's funny because you know,
radio has changed so much. It used to be a
transmitter and your car radio or your kitchen radio or
your alarm clock radio, and now there is still all
of that is still valid. But there's so many people
who listen on their own time. You can listen to
this podcast in the middle of the night next Tuesday
(13:43):
or next summer. And there are people who go back
and listen to every available Minnesota Goodbye podcast and I
love to hear that. That is so much fun. This
is a longer email from Ashley, and she's given me
several different topics and I can ask about a couple here,
but before I do, I want to ask something. This
can wait for a minute. You spoke to a bunch
(14:04):
of women conference podcast influencers yesterday, Jenny.
Speaker 5 (14:07):
Well, they're all like financial advisors or work at insurance
or some kind of financial background, so they all work
under gradient financial. So I spoke at this women's conference
yesterday and it was really fun. The crowd was very engaging.
My friend is she works with gradients, so she's the
one who got me involved in it, and she kind
of hosted it as the interviewer and I think she
(14:29):
did a fantastic job. But yeah, I mean it was fun.
It wasn't just about podcasting. It was just kind of
speaking to women and like they work in a male
dominated industry, and I also work in a more male
dominated industry. Like radio is definitely more male oriented. I
know it's changed a lot in the years, but it
was just like speaking to women, and like, how did
I become comfortable with my voice on the radio and
(14:52):
how did I like talk? I don't know, Like there's
so many different things we cover. We talked about social media,
and you know, so many people are scared to get
on their Instagram stories and do a video, and it's like,
how do you get past that? Like they don't want
to record themselves doing a video. And one girl was funny,
she said, I asked her, I go, why do you
not want to do that? And she goes, because I
(15:13):
think it's cringe watching people out in public taking videos
of themselves. And I go, that's cool. But I just
worked with the galleria and made a bunch of money
on a real eye filmed because I was taking a
video myself and that was a partnership I did because
of social media and I just made money off of that.
Is that cringey? You know? Like, I don't think that's
cringey that I just made money.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
I see your point, though, like when I did the
hike up Pike's Peak. I would stop every year and
there and at the bottom of the trailer at the top,
and I would make a video going, oh man, Carson,
we made it. And then there were people around, I mean,
dozens of tourists that could watch me, going, who's this
dickhead who's over here making a video? Goad? But and
(15:53):
I don't like it because I do feel like, you know,
I don't want people to see that. I feel stupid,
but it's part of what I have to do, so
I had to get past that. I still don't like it.
I do think though, the first time you hear your
voice recorded, you go, that's what I sound like. And
the first time you might see yourself on video, you go, oh,
(16:14):
I look terrible. Oh you can see my birthmark or
you can see my blackheads or my large pores or whatever,
and so you think you look terrible. But I think
you and I had a discussion earlier. People compare themselves
to the gorgeous, twenty five year old, flawless skin influencers
and go, I don't look like that. How do I
fit into this picture?
Speaker 4 (16:35):
Great?
Speaker 5 (16:35):
I think just societal standards makes you feel like you
have to have this and this and this done to
make yourself be like beauty, beautiful, And then you look
at your face every single day and you see every
single flaw about yourself, but nobody else notices those things.
Like I don't know, there's so many things about me myself,
Like I look at my body and it's whatever, that's
a whole different story. But it's like somebody else might
(16:56):
look at me and be like, while you're in great shape,
But to me, I'm like, that's wrong, that's wrong. I
don't like that whatever. And it's like you're your own
biggest critic of how you look and how you present yourself.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
Well, I do think, and let's be flat out honest,
a lot of beautiful young Instagram influencers got popular because
they are pleasing to look at. And that might sound like, no,
she's super talented and she's ambitious, yes, but I think
it's really helped that she is or he is very
pleasing to look at all. Right, moving on to where
(17:32):
did I find it here? Ashley? Now, Ashley wrote a
whole bunch, but I'm going to read some parts of it.
Jenny talking about having babies and how you're getting older
and blah blah blah, Jenny, you still have so much
time social media and certain brunch spots are a thief
of joy on the weekends. I want a family and kids.
It'll happen, just like a job interview. You're most successful
(17:54):
when opportunity meets preparedness. Okay, I love that, because opportunity
meets preparedness because you'll get an opportunity, but if you're
not prepared, then you'll lose the opportunity. And you could
be prepared, but you might have to wait for the opportunity.
And it sounds like you're a recent healing journey. You're
getting yourself out there. Hearing you tear up, I teared up,
(18:15):
and I thought back to a time few years ago
when I didn't think I was going to have a
baby either. I was in a similar situation. Broke up
with a long term partner five years ago, met my
husband the next year. We got married in twenty twenty four,
bought a house, and had twins. Wow, he's out there,
and then he is out there, and I hope he
loves dogs as much as you do. I know yourself
and Bailey aren't the biggest fans of dating apps. I
(18:37):
met my husband on Bumble. I did do the paid version.
I had so many bad dates. First one back in
the dating scene had no teeth. Oh no, Had I
done a FaceTime date with that person, I would have
known right away and never met up with him in
real life. Ten out of ten recommend FaceTime dates for
yourself and Bailey. I know it sounds stupid, but if
(18:58):
there's a chemistry, you can already tell on the FaceTime call,
and if there's not, you didn't waste the time of
getting all ready to go out on a date. I
never heard it of FaceTime dates. That's kind of a
good idea.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
Well, my thing is is that I am I'm fun
to talk to and I'm good at having a conversation.
So I could get into a FaceTime date and it
would seem like it's going well because I can get
along with anybody. That's my problem with any dating, FaceTime
or otherwise, is that I'm like, oh, we're having a
good time.
Speaker 4 (19:27):
Are we having a good time? Or am I just
fun to be around?
Speaker 5 (19:29):
I don't know, but can't you tell the difference between
if you're having fun because of you versus you're having
fun because of the person on the other side, because
if they're.
Speaker 3 (19:36):
Good I think, if they're good at conversation though, too,
then it's it's harder to do, like, oh, are we
both just fun interesting people but we're not actually compatible
or like it's not there's no spark or anything. But
we're both fun, interesting people that have a decent time together.
So then is this are we should we be together?
(19:57):
It's like a weird I don't know, it's hard to
explain it, but I feel like it happens to me
all time.
Speaker 5 (20:01):
I have learned about myself that, like, I pretty much
don't like a lot of people right off the bat,
and I cannot write them off right away because the
last relationship I was in, I wasn't interested in that
person whatsoever for months. It took me like a long
time to feel a romantic relationship. So I have to
keep that in mind now that I'm out back in
the world dating and stuff, that I'm not probably going
(20:24):
to feel that immediate like love lust. Well maybe lust,
but I'm not probably going to feel that. Like I
have to get to know a person very well till
I start to really feel like I like them, and
that requires dating.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
No, I think there's a lot of people who go God,
I'm really glad I'm not singlet dating has changed so
much from when I dated, but we didn't have apps
back then. I can't even imagine.
Speaker 4 (20:51):
I just wish they didn't.
Speaker 3 (20:52):
I wish apps didn't exist at all, because I feel
like of the dating pool of like men who are
available to date, they're all on the apps. And I
would love to meet somebody at a singles event that
I go to.
Speaker 4 (21:05):
I go to a lot of them. I am a
patron in my community.
Speaker 3 (21:08):
I would love to meet someone in real life, and
they're all on the apps at home, and I just
want them to go outside once. Just go outside and
try and meet somebody in real life so that I
can meet you.
Speaker 4 (21:16):
Please.
Speaker 5 (21:18):
Have you talked to anyone on your hand since you
started it?
Speaker 3 (21:21):
Like a couple of weeks, I have had two messages
to my account. One had a one word that all
he said was yes, oh to a picture of mine?
And then one said what radio station do you work for?
Speaker 4 (21:32):
So that's it?
Speaker 1 (21:33):
And that's all.
Speaker 5 (21:34):
That's all. You liked anyone's stuff?
Speaker 3 (21:36):
I have?
Speaker 4 (21:36):
I have liked stuff. Honestly. I need to ask my
friend Katie Cap because she's my sense I don't get.
Speaker 3 (21:42):
How it works.
Speaker 5 (21:42):
Yeah, I don't get it either.
Speaker 4 (21:43):
I don't know how I so dave you people.
Speaker 5 (21:46):
You can look at someone's profile and you can heart
a specific thing on their profile. Like if Bailey was like,
my perfect Saturday looks like this, I wake up my
pet cap and I bah blah blah blah. Someone could
like heart that. But then like, that's not a conversation
or an opener. It's like, oh there they hearted that, right.
It's like liking someone's Instagram phone and.
Speaker 4 (22:03):
Once you heart it, they go like they go away,
It goes away.
Speaker 5 (22:06):
No, I don't think it does.
Speaker 4 (22:07):
Well, then I don't know how to.
Speaker 5 (22:09):
I'll look at it and i'll see because I figure
very very brief mind.
Speaker 3 (22:13):
I don't get it. But I just opened it up
and I do have an unread message. Oh yeah, okay, okay,
well what did he say? Okay, so this is a
guy on his profile he talked about how love is
Blind reached out to him asking for him to apply
for Minnesota season, but he chickened down and didn't do it.
And so I responded with that, saying should what it
(22:34):
could a because you have to respond to something in
their profile, and then he said, I'll have to tell
you about it sometime. The contract they ask you to
sign is crazy. Netflix basically owns your nil in perpetuity.
I'm not sure what that means. And then you basically yeah,
but then I have something about speech on my profile
and he said he coached duo for in Prairie High
School from twenty sixteen to twenty eighteen and he misses
(22:56):
it so much he's thinking about going back to judge
next year.
Speaker 5 (23:00):
So we'll talk about it. Because you did you responded
to something on his profile first, I did, and so
you know you already have some common interest.
Speaker 4 (23:08):
Yes, his name is he is Indian, he's thirty one.
He works in it.
Speaker 5 (23:15):
Oh, he can fix your computer anytime you need help.
Speaker 4 (23:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
By the way, nil, name, image, likeness, Oh okay. So
that means they can use your name, your image, and
your likeness anywhere anyhow they want to, in perpetuity, and
they can probably portray you anyway they want to. And
I think that's one of the things that people have
said about reality shows is like, look, I'm not a jerk,
but like Survivor portrayed me as a jerk, or Love
(23:41):
is Blind portrayed me as a jerk.
Speaker 5 (23:44):
That they can't go out and explain that half the
time because they can't talk shit about Netflix. That's usually
they like literally will get fined because there's lots of
lawsuits for Love is Blind of people being like, hey,
you I do it anyway.
Speaker 3 (23:59):
I just feel like, what an opportunity. It's a once
in a lifetime opportunity.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
I want to miss. Why people do it is like
because they want to be a little bit famous and
have a great story to tell and a little bit adventure.
Speaker 3 (24:10):
Lie.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
Hey, thanks for all the emails. We got to wrap
it up, but we'd love to come back tomorrow and
do this again, so please send emails. We always love
opening the emails and seeing what you want to talk about.
Anything at all is fair game. Ryan Show at KDWB
dot com