Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, getting started with the Minnesota Goodbye for for Friday,
here we go. This is from Christa. She sers. She's
from Spring Valley, Wisconsin. By the way, Oh, insert obligatory
long time listener first time writers statement here. I wanted
to write in for a while, but finally what made
me do it was you bringing up Susan's contacts all
over the bathroom. My wife, Susan wears contacts daily disposables,
(00:24):
and she tries to throw them in the trash, but
I find them everywhere from near the trash to on
this There was one stuck to the toilet seat the
other day because apparently she's on the toilet and decides
to take them off and drop them in the toilet.
I've got no problem with that, but she misses and
I find them on the floor, and it's just kind
(00:44):
of like finding crumbs or finding a dirty clean axe,
you know what I mean, near the bathroom trash or whatever.
And I've told her, I said, that really annoys me
that you don't get it in the trash can. And
if so, he said, oh, it really annoys me that
you don't get your you know whatever, like Kleenex into
the trash can. I'd be like, oh, well, I mean,
(01:06):
I guess I could make a better effort, and she'll
be like, I did throw it in the trash can.
I'm like, what, it grew legs and it hopped down.
So it becomes a constant argument. Not constant, but irritation. Yeah,
that drop them carefully into the trash, so you know
they got in there. I don't. She just flicks them
towards the trash. What anyway, what finally made me do
(01:28):
that was your experience. I had an experience with a
college roommate. In college. We shared a bunk bed. I
had the bottom, she had the top bunk, and she
would take out her daily contacts every night and allege
that she put them in her little clip on bedside table.
But I'd constantly find them in my bed, on my pillow,
under my sheets, around our whole apartment, stuck to the
bottom of my feet. Talk about yuck. It always drove
(01:49):
me nuts and was a running joke between us. I
didn't want to taint our friendship too much, as we're
still great friends of this day, but it was definitely
a daily annoyance at the time. Made me think of
another colleg bunk bed memory. I had the top bunk
in a different roommate, and I kept an empty wrapping
paper tube in my bunk that we lovingly named the
(02:10):
bopping stick, so I could bop my roommate below me
when she'd get too rascally or when she was sleepwalking
or talking. It was all in good fun and not
a malicious thing by any means. Ah, the joys of
shared sleeping arrangement days. Finally, I want to say that
I always enjoyed hearing when Rebecca, the caf and Hefer
nutritionist writes in I'm a dairy farmer and a photographer,
(02:31):
and I'm happy to know there are other agricultural people
who listen to the podcast besides my brother Ben and I.
I don't know if one email qualifies me as a
staff writer, but if so, my address is below, Well,
of course it does. I'm going to take a picture
of your address right now.
Speaker 2 (02:46):
I want a bopping stick for my cat.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
Well, all you need is a gift wrap role.
Speaker 2 (02:51):
I know I need to repurpose one because he likes
to come in.
Speaker 3 (02:54):
I mean, he's not a person who gets wiley or
sleep box, but he likes to sit near my bed,
sit down and stare at me and meow. But he
knows because he's smart, so he sits right out of
my reach.
Speaker 4 (03:06):
When she said in her email, Wiley, is that what
she used? I thought like she was hooking up with someone.
I thought that's what she meant.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
She Uh, why hell there?
Speaker 2 (03:15):
Shush? I said, shush, I'm trying to sleep.
Speaker 1 (03:18):
Thank you, Christa. I love that you listen with the cows.
Appreciate that so much. Next one, have not pre read
this one? Hey, y'all, hey as one, Nita would say.
Speaker 3 (03:28):
So.
Speaker 1 (03:28):
After listening to yesterday's show and Bailey's saying she live
with a guy for three years, it leaves me with
this question, how in the hell did you hold in
your gas for three years? Maybe you kept going to
the bathroom to release when needed. That had to be
the worst. I think the Minnesota Goodbye because we ask
people why you like the Minnesota Goodbye because it does really,
really well, she says. I think the Minnesota Goodbye is
(03:48):
love for many reasons. One reason I believe is because
we get to ask these questions to you all and
get them answered so quickly. There's other podcasters I want
to reach out to, but we'll probably never get a response.
Thanks for letting us be heard and keep being awesome,
and Jenna, please be safe in your upcoming travels. Love y'all.
Staff writer, Janelle, You're leaving for where's it Moab, Utah
(04:14):
this weekend?
Speaker 4 (04:14):
Yeah, I'm going to Moab, super pumped. No, I'm going
to Morocco. I leave tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
Yes, Morocco, which is like I wouldn't even think to
go to Morocco. I'd be like, Oh, let's go to
the cliche places. Let's go to Munich, Let's go to France.
Why Morocco Because.
Speaker 5 (04:29):
A flight deal came in.
Speaker 4 (04:30):
I have like a subscription to this flight company and
they send you flight deals and it literally the round
trip flight to Morocco was three hundred dollars and I
had vacation to use in November and it worked for
me to go, so I decided to go.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
So what attracts you to Morocco?
Speaker 5 (04:45):
Well, I mean, I've.
Speaker 4 (04:46):
Always wanted to go there. I love going to places
that have a different culture than ours. It is very
intriguing to me. Also, just everything about it. I mean
the architecture. I'm excited to see that they're called like
Medina or I think it's Medina. I get confused because
we have Medina here in Minnesota. There's Medina or medinas
and suits, and it's where you can go buy like
(05:07):
these really beautiful things. It's not like, well, I don't
want to offend anyone, but it's not like going to
like Chinatown in New York.
Speaker 3 (05:14):
Right.
Speaker 5 (05:14):
Yeah, it's like.
Speaker 4 (05:15):
Gorgeous leather products because it's made in Morocco, because they
have their tanneries there and stuff like that. So I'm
just excited to see different culture. And I'm not normally
like a museum person, but i do plan on going
to a lot of the like museums and palaces and
stuff like that to see all that stuff.
Speaker 5 (05:29):
Too cool? Are you gonna?
Speaker 2 (05:30):
I just googled Morocco.
Speaker 3 (05:31):
There's like this whole entire street that's all like blue.
Speaker 4 (05:34):
Yes, I'm going to That's a city called chef shown
and so yes, I'm gonna go there for a couple
of days.
Speaker 5 (05:39):
I'm so excited. Called the blue city.
Speaker 1 (05:43):
All right.
Speaker 3 (05:43):
Next one, wait to answer the question how did I
hold in all of Yes? Yeah, wait the answers you
fart quietly, so it doesn't you know, flap and.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Or are you just wait until you're flapping. Yeah, yeah,
spread your cheeks like a party favorite.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
Yeah, wouldn't go like you know, you'd know, you'd trust
it to be quiet. I don't think he ever heard
me fart ever once, Okay, but I did hear him
fart once because it was an accident, and I was like, oh,
so embarrassed.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
It was hilarious, that's cute.
Speaker 5 (06:14):
Did you call him off for it?
Speaker 3 (06:16):
Oh? Yes, And it was right in front of me
in my roommate and we just laughed and laughed and laughed,
and he was clearly embarrassed when he should have laughed
it off, and he didn't.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
But I remember the first time a girl beside my
sister ever farted in front of me. It was Cricket.
I was probably eighteen or nineteen. She was probably nineteen
or twenty, and she was showing me how she used
to be a cheerleader in high school and she could
do the split. So I can still picture it. I
know the exact apartment, the exact spot, which way we
were both facing. I was sitting in a chair at
her table. I can do the splitz. Oh really yeah,
(06:47):
And I still remember she laughed and it was so
funny and I was probably embarrassed because I'd never heard
a girl fart before, but it was like she handled
it really well.
Speaker 3 (06:57):
There was this boy in my ninth grade class and Wagner,
Oh gosh, you're just named dust. But we were doing
class outside because it was like the spring, it was
nice out, and he was like to me and my
friend Megan, he was like, do you guys want to
see the most impossible push up? And we're like, yeah,
let's see the most impossible push up. So he like
lay his face down on the ground, puts his hands
(07:17):
out with the like Christmas tree, and goes to push
himself off and just rips a big one. Oh no,
he was so anyway, it's not that funny if you
weren't there, but no, it is.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
I get it is so embarrassing because he was trying
to show off.
Speaker 3 (07:28):
I was like, yeah, check out this push up, World's
most impossible push up and then farted. And I always
want to tell him that story, but we really don't
have the avenue to be like, Hey, Aaron Wagner.
Speaker 5 (07:37):
I know you have a lot.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
You just told it here on the radio.
Speaker 5 (07:40):
Was so funny.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
Next one, hey, guys, I was listening to an older episode,
you were talking about things you inherited from your parents. Dave,
you had brought up a roll top desk from your dad.
It sparked this email because I find myself in an
uncommon position. My wife passed away last summer pause for
obligatory I'm so sorry, thank you. At the time, our
son was five. Both of her parents had also passed,
(08:05):
So I find myself with a lot of stuff. I'm
not sure if it's something my son would want. There
are some things that we have, like two enormous deer
heads and a bunch of stuff from Notre Dame where
she was a legacy that seemed like a no brainer.
I'll hold onto them till he's fifteen or sixteen into
something he wants. Great. If he doesn't, I'll get rid
of it. But there are also so many things I
don't know if it's worth holding on to, especially since
(08:27):
I don't know the stories of everything. I mean, how
attached is he going to be to something from someone
he has never met, as her parents passed before he
was born, if she is not around to tell the
story of it and the importance of whatever it is.
There's also another side of me, says I can't get
rid of it because I do want him to have
some stuff from his mom and grandparents. I don't know,
just food for thought. Appreciate you all. That's from Tim. Tim.
(08:50):
I totally agree, and I think if you don't know
the story about something, it becomes kind of worthless. There
is an old baby doll that we have that is
probably the size of your hand. It's got a ceramic
face and you can tell it's very old. At one
time I knew who it belonged to, either my mom
or Susan's mom or my grandmother. I don't know who
(09:16):
it belonged to. I've forgotten and nobody in my family
seems to remember. But it was definitely an old, treasured doll.
But without the story of who it belonged to, it
doesn't mean as much, so it will sadly probably be
thrown away, even though it's probably one hundred years old.
(09:36):
When my dad died, I found on his desk a
gold heart paperweight, and it looked like it was homemade
and it must have meant something to him. But I
don't know where it came from, whether he made it,
and I will probably end up throwing it away. There's
certain things like my dad's World War Two military medals.
They're priceless, and I will definitely hand those down. But
(09:59):
I think that I'll give you one more story. Is
my dad blue glassware for the Air Force Academy, and
so he would make in his spare time little vases
and little wineglasses, and he would give these out to everybody.
He would make pennies in a bottle and give them
to kids, And so I've got dozens of them. My
kids don't want all of them, so I will throw
(10:21):
nearly all of them away, which makes me sad, But
I guess I've honored this stuff by keeping it this long,
so it's not like Dad gave it to me. I
threw it away a week later. I have honored this
stuff and his effort and his gift by keeping it
this long. That's how I will justify throwing things away.
Speaker 5 (10:39):
How pretty is this glassware? Do I want to any
of it?
Speaker 1 (10:42):
No? No, It's not something you would see at a
gift shop or anything. It's just pretty impressive. It's kind
of like if you made a I don't know if
you made if you prostage, or if you painted a picture,
would it belong in the louver No, but it was nice.
So oh, Tim, good conundrum and good luck. I think
(11:04):
some kids want things and some don't. My dad got
some books from his grandmother when he was like four, five, six,
and seven, and she would write to Freddy as my
dad's name, Fred Merry Christmas from Grandma. And so these
books are literally one hundred years old.
Speaker 5 (11:19):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
I knew I couldn't throw those away. I gave them
to Alison because I didn't want. You know, if I
died suddenly and Alison came to the house, she wouldn't
even know to look.
Speaker 3 (11:29):
For those, yeah, right, or she wouldn't know. I mean, yeah,
she's I'm sure she knows her grandpa's name is Fred.
Speaker 1 (11:35):
But she probably wouldn't look inside the book, right. Yeah,
she would just see an old, old book and throw
it in the trash. But these are precious. These are
one hundred years old from her great great grandmother.
Speaker 4 (11:46):
I don't feel like my parents have many things from
their parents when I think about it. But my dad
is a order so I know I will be getting
many many things from him, but not like sentimental things.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
Just like Bill's nor.
Speaker 5 (12:00):
Well, yeah, my sisters and I do talk about that.
Speaker 4 (12:02):
We probably will be financially responsible for him at some point.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
But yeah, yeah, I'll have that with Donna. I'm sure
probably Donna and other sisters. I will be responsible for
any incurred cost when they are gone unless I go first.
Next one in Minnesota Goodbye is my favorite podcast, says Samantha.
Thank you. We weren't looking for, like, you know, like
for you to stroke us, but we were just saying,
why do people like the Minnesota Goodbye podcast? So we're
(12:28):
curious what you came up with. Number one, The episodes
come out daily. I'm caught up on my five or
so normal podcasts that I listen to that come out weekly.
I love that the Minnesota Goodbye the Morning Show and
Fallon and Colt are out every day at least three
to four hours of listening. Do Falon and Colt have
an after the show podcast?
Speaker 5 (12:45):
Not after the show? They just podcast their show? Like
what we do with that?
Speaker 1 (12:48):
I see? Okay, the topic is ever changing. Number two.
I like to have something playing all the time when
I'm working, cleaning, et cetera. And if I zone out,
I'm not missing something that I would like in a
true like a true podcast that totally makes sense. If
you miss like all of what I say for the
next three minutes, no big deal, true crime. You might
miss a key little piece number three with the topics
(13:11):
ever changing. The podcast never has a specific theme. It's
more of a talk show. But one thing I always
skip over for the Morning Show is no phone screen
or Friday. I just don't enjoy it. It's just chaotic.
One other question I do have is about the boards
between the Morning Show and Fallon and Cold. Each has
their set sounds that are used between Jenny's mom intro
(13:32):
song and Fallon and Cold. Have the Hide your Kids,
Hide your Wife? How does that work? Because you mentioned
the other day Bailey's song was taken off a board.
Hope that makes sense. Have a great weekend, Samantha. Basically,
it's a computer screen, and it's multiple screens that have
little buttons, a little electronic buttons on them, and they'll
be like, you know, Jenny in the Morning Zoo or
(13:54):
Hija Kids, Hide your Wife or Amy Bbobby or whatever.
They have a different set of buttons button, yes, yeah, yeah,
And there's I mean infinite combinations of sets of buttons.
Speaker 2 (14:06):
Yes, there's tons of part.
Speaker 1 (14:07):
We probably have forty sets of buttons each one four
by six, so that's twenty four times thirty. Some of
them we never even use.
Speaker 3 (14:16):
Yeah, and back in the day, David, when you were,
you know, just starting those, all those buttons were on
a physical board.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
No, they were on what we call the cart cart,
which was short for cartridge, and it looked like an
eight track tape. It was not an eight track tape,
but to the untrained diet looked just like an eight
track tape, if you know what that looks like. And
each one would have a song or a little tiny
element of like hija kids, hidja wife, And I had
(14:45):
tons of those. I had a rack that I would
roll in every morning. It carried probably two hundred different carts,
and you would plug them into a little machine and
you would push the button and it would loop around,
would say hijia kids, hid your wife or whatever, and
it would loop around and stop the beginning.
Speaker 2 (15:01):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
So then you could take it out of the machine,
and when you put it back in, you could grab
one out of the corner of your eye, out of
the rack and stick it in and go hide your kids,
hide your wife.
Speaker 3 (15:09):
You really had to like plan out exactly what sounds
you wanted all the time, right.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Not really, because you would that was spontaneity. Was carts
made it spontaneous, yea, because you could pull it out
of the rack, stick it in the machine and touch
the button and it would play it pretty much just
like we do with these.
Speaker 4 (15:28):
Okay, there's like a little bit of time. So yeah,
like how ours are just automatically sitting here at all times.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
Right, crue and here there's an infinite number of little
We used to call them drop ins, and I used
to use them all the time. I would come on
and I would there was a a I had a
little kid who would go six o'clock baby, six o'clock,
and I don't know what it was from, but I'd
be like, Hi, it's Dave Ryan and the Dave Ryan
Show and it's six o'clock, and I'd hit it six
(15:53):
o'clock baby, six o'clock and that was funny. Yeah. And
then I had another one that said it was a
textan going do you have any Texas two step records?
And so I'd be like, Hey, if you want to
call in with the request, call me now, and then
I'd play this guy, do you have any Texas two
step records? And I'd be like, no, silly, we don't
play that call in and request, So I call them
(16:16):
drop in.
Speaker 4 (16:16):
Yeah, okay, really quickly the six o'clock one. Did you
do that for the morning show or a night show?
Speaker 1 (16:21):
The morning show?
Speaker 4 (16:22):
Oh wow, that feels more like night show vibe to
me right now.
Speaker 5 (16:26):
Maybe something we would do during the more.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
Honestly, that was my stick when I first got into
morning radio. That was what set me apart from everybody
else who read little corny jokes. And I wish I
could remember more of these, but I had hundreds of
these little voices that and I can't remember any of
(16:49):
them off the top of my head.
Speaker 3 (16:50):
Funny because I feel like that's when if people make
fun of radio shows, they use like the little sound
effects to make fun of them.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
So it'd be like, hey, we're spanking the bandit.
Speaker 3 (17:01):
You know.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
See That's funny because at one point in the mid eighties,
I had a slide whistle and my partner had a
squeaky dog biscuit, and so it'd be like, Hey, it's
Dave and Tom in the morning Zoo, and I'd get
the slide whistle, I goru and then he'd goes squeak
as queak as queak a oh, and we had the
bicycle horn two hunk a honk a honk a honkah,
(17:22):
and that what you got to remember. That was new
and funny at the time, and it was time. It
was zany and wacky, and we were the Morning Zoo
when Morning Zoo was a new cool concept. Now it's cliina,
cliche and stupid, and we make fun of it. And
I don't think any show calls itself the Morning Zoo anymore.
(17:43):
But I was on a Morning Zoo in Columbus, Ohio
that was wildly successful. We had a twenty chair. Now
for comparison, right now Katie WGB probably has a six share.
We had a twenty share, and that it's what worked
back then. All right, moving on, Hi, says Hayley. Want
(18:05):
to say, Dave, You've been a huge part of my
life for basically my whole life. Thank you. You're my
radio dad. And KATIEWB is not KATIEWB without Dave Ryan,
So thanks for all that you do. Well. Thanks. I
wanted to add to the Gary Spivey topic. My ex
went to see him when we broke up years ago.
He told them, you could see us getting back together
(18:26):
in the future. Haha, Boy was he wrong. Sorry. Gary
still a great guy and has a great gift, but
nobody is perfect. Thank you everybody. Hope you had a
great day. And I totally understand that. I don't think
that you know that any psychic is going to be
right the entire time, And some people don't believe they're
right any of the other time. And some people treat
Gary like a religion and and you know, for whatever reason,
(18:50):
I don't. I don't treat Gary as I treat him
as like a friend and a little bit of a novelty.
But I did ask him about something a couple of
weeks ago, and he was here, Yeah would.
Speaker 5 (19:01):
You ask Yeah, da won't tell us none.
Speaker 1 (19:03):
Ya Yeah, about love and life and romance and and
and well.
Speaker 5 (19:11):
What would you asking? Where the g spot was?
Speaker 1 (19:13):
Yeah it's under the left arm pit, that's what he said. Yeah,
that's what I said. Yeah, but we agree the spots
under the left arm pit. So I'm with Susan last
night and I'm just a dig And yeah, I'm a
dig and under that left arm pit. Yeah, nothing happened.
Oh next one, don't say my name. I love the
Minnesota Goodbye and the Regular Show. You guys are my
home away from home, my comfort and constant at every
(19:35):
point of my life, when I was alone in college
or now when I'm home alone with my baby. You
guys don't understand how much you mean to me. That
almost makes me cry a little bit. I just love
you all. The only bad thing about the Minnesota Goodbye
is it's not long enough, because I could listen to
you twenty four to seven, but I know you have lives.
I just appreciate you so much. That means more to
(19:56):
me than you know.
Speaker 4 (19:57):
I wonder if people see when we do longer episodes
that they're like excited or they're like, I don't have
enough time for this today, Like I expect it to
only be fifteen and then all of a sudden it's
twenty five.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
We would do longer, but a lot of the time
we run out of emails. Yeah, I mean, really, that's
kind of what limits it. But sometimes we stumble across
something that doesn't you know, we talk about it and
it doesn't need an email. But thank you, Alex, I
really appreciate that. One I look at a podcast sometimes
I've been listening to one of it's a radio podcast
called Chachi Loves Everybody, and each episode is about an
hour and fifteen minutes, which I think is about a
(20:28):
half an hour too long. When I look at a podcast,
I really want it to be like I can listen
to it on my drive in and my drive home.
But an hour and fifteen minutes, then it's going to
take three drive right.
Speaker 5 (20:40):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
So, and I love the podcast. By the way, Chachi,
if you hear this, don't get me wrong. It's a
great podcast. I just wish it were shorter. Okay, next one,
I believe we have time. Random topic to discuss. This
is from our friend Rinita. Maybe a bit of a
morbid topic, but it's something I actually think about, probably
(21:02):
more than I should. When Aaron Moran, who is Jony
on Happy Days, passed away, so many people talked about
how rough her life was like she's remembered as living
a hard life, and that is what people discussed after
her passing. I would absolutely hate to be remembered like that.
My life has been very hard, with an awful divorce,
a daughter with cancer, being let go from my job
(21:23):
because of my daughter's cancer, and so many hard things.
But no way in hell is that what I want
people to think about when I die. I want to
be remembered as bringing a bright light, a positive person
who brought joy to other people when my own world
was dark. Have you ever thought about what people might
say about you after your passing? What would you not
want to be remembered for and what do you hope
(21:45):
people will say about you? I have not really thought
about that one.
Speaker 2 (21:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
I'm picturing all the people that worked on the Morning
Show over the years, everybody from Chrisco to fall into whatever,
coming and sobbing around my casket talking about you know
how much I changed their lives.
Speaker 2 (22:00):
Oh yeah, that's probable.
Speaker 3 (22:02):
I always joke that I want people to remember that
when they were in plays, I would bring them flowers
so sweet.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
That's I joke about it all the time.
Speaker 3 (22:12):
But then I just want them to be like, oh yeah,
every time I was in a play, Bailey would always
come and she would bring me flowers. I went to
go see my friend Sarah singing in a choir yesterday
and I was like, oh, I don't want to keep you, Like,
do you have other people here? She's like, no, You're
the only one who ever shows up. But I pride
myself on that I will come and support you. Okay,
that's all I want to be known for. I don't
(22:32):
care about anything else. Maybe say that it was funny ones.
I don't know that'd be nice.
Speaker 4 (22:36):
I think I just want to be known for the
person who, like you can come to with anything, because
I am that person with like pretty much my entire family.
I know things about my family members that nobody else
knows besides.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
Me, like tell me what.
Speaker 5 (22:48):
Nope, I can't.
Speaker 4 (22:50):
And I'm just happy that I'm that person that I'm
like that quote unquote safe space for them.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
So, continuing with the email, lastly, do you have any
apps aspects of your funeral planned out? I think I
want Don't Look Back by Boston to play at my funeral.
So if you don't Look Back a New Day's Break
and it's been so long since I've felt this way
then and probably one of my favorite songs of all time.
(23:17):
My friend is supposed to sing Angels in Waiting at
my funeral, and I want an elaborate headstone, and it's
to be a celebration of life I've lived, not a
morning of them having to continue life without me. Oh,
and I saw a gravesite decorate for Halloween. Last month,
I told my kiddos bare minimum, they got to bring
me Halloween flowers showing off my uniqueness at the cemetery. Yes,
(23:38):
love y'all from NITA, don't forget to donate blood and
plateless and join m NMDP and donate stem cells or
bone marrow. Sign up to save lives this Christmas. Her
daughter has been very sick for a while. And I
will tell you I visited them both in the hospital,
and the cancer and the treatment and the pain and
the misery never comes up. It's all about, Hey, when
(24:00):
I get out, I really want to go to Benny Hanna,
or hey, look we set a train set up in
my hospital room.
Speaker 5 (24:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (24:05):
And I took a ukulele over to her daughter. Why
can't I remember her name? Aunt Bella? Thank you God?
And when I taught her a little bit of ukulele
and I hung out for an hour or two and
it was just and they were just so positive and
it never came about how miserable and sick they were.
Here alone in the hospital on a Saturday night when
(24:26):
all of Bella's friends are out smoking weed and getting laid.
Here's you know, Bella in the hospital.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
But she never had her hair pink though, so now
she has cool pink hair.
Speaker 1 (24:34):
I don't know that's her real hair. I think it's
a wig.
Speaker 2 (24:36):
Well she's like got she like shaved it. Oh, now
it's pink.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
Yeah, Okay, I guess I haven't seen the picture of
her lately. She is so cool. I mean, if I
ever get that sick, I hope my spirit is as
positive as Bella'syeah, because she's a very sweet girl that
is going to do it for the Minnesota Goodbye. What
did we miss? Is there anything that you are passing
along to your kids or anything that mom and dad said, here,
take this and you don't know what to do with it.
(25:00):
Whatever you want to talk about. We love the Minnesota Goodbye.
It's probably our favorite part of the day. Send your
email into Ryan's show at KDWB dot com. And if
we missed your email today, it's only because we ran
out of time.