Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Kdw B, Good morning.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
It is a humpby Wednesday, and Carson my Boy is
flying home tonight. He's coming home a little bit early
from the David Kushner tour. The tour is kind of
cut short, but everything's fine. David has anxiety and and
it's and he's just tough and he struggled with He's
such a good performer, but he just couldn't keep doing
(00:23):
the show. So Carson flying a little whole little bit
or I don't know if I bragged he or not.
Carson my Boy is tour manager. Yeah, David Kushner.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Oh yeah, I said, seene escorting him and like through
the shows and stuff in the crowd.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Yeah, it's funny because, yeah, there's video of Carson, like
who's fight, all of five foot six escorting David Kushner
through the crowd, Like Carson some ninja going to take
up somebody who's going to try to like attack David Kushner.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
But it was just so very cool.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
Then he comes home and he's gonna be managing an
act named Willow.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
She's a country star.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
Yeah, and it's gonna be a different story because it's
a US tour and they have a van, so they're
not flying or going on a tour bus. They got
a van in carsions to the van driver.
Speaker 4 (01:05):
Wow, the last time he's the fans.
Speaker 5 (01:08):
When was the last time he did like an American tour.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
David Kushner just a few minutes ago, Like yeah, mid
like fall something like that, I think, or midwinter. I
lost track, But yeah, he's doing really well.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
I tell you guys, saw what happened. Well, my sister
called me yesterday. Yeah, my sister's fourteen, Brie. You met
her when she came here last summer.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
Sweet girl. She would say all that you know better
than I do.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
No, but she she facetimes me, and she's getting ready
to go out to eat with my mom and my
grandma and stuff, because I told you the other day
with my mom's birthday, and so she's getting dressed, so
I'm assuming they're about to go somewhere fancy, like I
don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
She tells me that they ended up going to Olive.
Speaker 3 (01:46):
Garden, and I was just like, okay, but she's fourteen,
and I had to sit and think, you know what
at fourteen as a teenager period, Olive Garden probably was
like exquisite fancy fine Dindy. Oh yeah, it was like
because the mints, the breadsticks all top tier of Olive Garden.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
It's a little bit like when you come in, it's
kind of got that old Italian kind of a bistro
ish kind of a play kind of a vibe. Yeah,
when you're there, your family, It's true. So she was
all excited. She went to Olive Garden and that's the
height of fine dining. She was doing her makeup and stuff.
Speaker 3 (02:25):
And then, like I didn't find out till later when
my mom called me on their way back and she
was like, yeah, we just went to Olive Garden. I
was like, oh, okay, but like Olive Garden, I wouldn't
put Red Lobster in that category.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
What When I was a kid, Red Lobster was like
if it was somebody's birthday or anniversary, we were going
to Red Lobster, So put on a clean shirt or
leave on your church clothes.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
Yeah, we'd go.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
We'd go on a Sunday and if you if you
know what I'm talking about, you know, yes, you'd get
home from church. You'd maybe like you know, like get
a couple of things together, feed the cat, whatever, and
then you'd head out to Red Lobster in your church clothes,
your nice shoes, and your nice pants that you don't
wear the rest of the week.
Speaker 3 (03:01):
You got me thinking about those Cheddarbay biscuits delicious.
Speaker 4 (03:04):
I've never been to Red Lobster, not a once in
my lift.
Speaker 5 (03:08):
Yeah, I just like it wasn't presented to me, and
like my family never went to Olive Garden, but like,
I've been to all.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Of that dining to you.
Speaker 2 (03:17):
So when it was like a nice like mom and
Dad's anniversary or mom's thirty fifth birthday or whatever it was,
what did you do?
Speaker 4 (03:24):
We we didn't go. We didn't do fine dining like
we were.
Speaker 5 (03:27):
It's funny because when we were kids, we were regulars
at the VFW because they had great burgers, and my
mom had like a series of friends that she would
bring and then me and my sister would go and
we would just like draw the entire time and see
at the end of the table. So it made it
seem like we were at our own table and we
would just get burgers and beer battered fries, and that's
(03:50):
what we ate like every Friday.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
Let me ask you a question. Your first fancy fancy dinner.
I remember mine, and I'll tell you really quick. My
girlfriend lived in Las Vegas, was Kathy, the prostitute, and
we went to the Golden Nugget downtown when Steve Wynn
still owned the Golden Nugget, and she took me to
a place where I didn't understand that everything was ala
cart yeah, and.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
So I'm like, oh, what is it come with?
Speaker 2 (04:14):
And he's like and the waiter kind of grabbed the
menu and he's like this and this and this and this,
and I was I felt so embarrassed. But I looked
over Steve when was there having dinner with George Hamilton.
Speaker 4 (04:23):
Oh my god.
Speaker 2 (04:24):
And it was my first fancy dinner ever. I was
twenty one or twenty two years old. Yeah, I hated it.
I was not in the mood for a fancy, fancy dinner.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
Can I throw another one in the like the what
we thought was fine dining in Golden Corral. I also
thought like that was the finest of buffets because we
would go there Sundays in between church service. Yeah, and
we'd be like, so have our church clothes on. I'd
be like, yeah, I'm gonna go order my own steak.
I don't need you, mom, I've.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
Got it on my own, even to a place called
Furs Cafeteria also because they had a piano player, but
it was a cafeteria style. I always got salisbury stay
and mashed potatoes with brown gravy. Now that's your first
fine dining experience.
Speaker 5 (05:04):
Probably we went to Chicago once on like a couple
of days like vacation, and my mom like treated us
to a fancy dinner. I was probably like thirteen. We
had caviaar and calamari. I remember that specifically. Think about
that a couple of things. And what was was red
lobster fine dining when you were a kid? Number one
was Olive Garden fine dining? What about Golden Corral? And
(05:27):
what was your first fansy dinner? I mean, if you
grew up any diner or why is a good for you,
you probably went to fancy dinner since you could remember.
But if you grew up somewhere like normal, like Plymouth
or can and Over somewhere like that, you probably didn't
go to a fancy dinner until it was your your
grandparents' fiftieth anniversary and you went somewhere really fancy.
Speaker 2 (05:49):
Send me a text, let me know we'ld be back
in a second of the day Ryan Show. We get
Dave's Dirt coming up. We're gonna fill you in on
things that are going on, and we will also be
on texting if you needed to text anything at Katie
WB one five, three, nine to one.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
Hey, you gotta go over the brackets really quick. This
is important stuff.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
The adult diapers are out of the running, beaten by
the enema. So what you're going away, You're staring at
your radio and you're going, what the hell are they
talking about? Basically, we did brackets of embarrassing things to
purchase were on day number three. Things have changed. We've
had some said products move up and some drop out.
Speaker 3 (06:27):
Yeah, so we have a yesterday, we'll do the results
from yesterday. Laxatives was versus Headlight's treatment. Somehow Headlight's treatment one,
is that really real? That's what I'm so confused about
the way.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
Yeah, I would think laxatives would win.
Speaker 3 (06:41):
But okay, all right, but Headlight's treatment even like the
first day it passed, it passed granny panties. Yeah, yeah,
I don't understand that either, because anybody can get lights.
I feel like granny panties is something you're just like
more ashamed, Like sorry, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (06:54):
If I was working at Target and a checker and like,
you know, Bailey came through or some woman came through
wearing buying granny panties, I wouldn't care. It's like you're
buying underpants. I don't care. So maybe that's why I
don't know.
Speaker 3 (07:04):
Alf's treatment beat blaxatives, and then adult diapers versus enema,
and the enema one that was a close film Plan
B versus Preparation H, and the prep H took the win.
And then lastly adult toys blue condoms out of the park.
Speaker 4 (07:20):
I have a feeling I know what's going to be
at the end.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
So what do you know? Go ahead and say what
do you think is gonna be?
Speaker 5 (07:26):
It just seems that adult toys are really it's like
to be the king, queen or queen or you know,
monarch unidentified, the monarch of the entire brackets.
Speaker 1 (07:37):
So now we're down to the last four.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
We are doing Headline's treatment versus an enema that was
gonna be tough and.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
Just say it, and Preparation H versus adult toys. Right,
adult toys probably will come out the winner. I'm gonna
give you two tips. Number one, if you have Preparation
eight suppositories, if you use them, I'm sorry about that.
It's very common. Keep them in your fridge. They feel
better when you win shirt them if they're cold. I'm
just saying, I'm just putting it out. I was wondering
that feel better going in cold. I was gonna ask
(08:06):
you that, So I'm glad. Let me just write that.
Speaker 1 (08:10):
In going in Cold.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Also, how embarrassing can it be when they sell adult
toys in the condo mile at Target?
Speaker 4 (08:18):
I've never seen that, He keeps saying that, I've never ever.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
Seen CVS pharmacy.
Speaker 2 (08:22):
They have like a little this and that and a
little near kind of a thing there in the island Target.
Speaker 5 (08:28):
Why are you opening the boxes and trying them out?
Speaker 2 (08:31):
Make sure they're not sure? I feel a certain responsibility
to do that.
Speaker 4 (08:34):
They're like, sir, we have to ask you again, please leave.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
Let's do the dirt.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
Wait, the dirt cannot Dave's dirt on Katie w B.
Celebrity losing their hair, and this is something that you know,
celebrities can afford great hair replacement. Your brother probably cannot.
So if your brother is like thirty years old losing
his hair. You know, he probably wears a You know,
the world's most common hair piece is a ball cap.
Speaker 1 (09:01):
Yeah, I don't know if you knew that.
Speaker 4 (09:02):
Oh I knew this, But is.
Speaker 2 (09:04):
The world's most common hair piece, and it's very common.
There's a lot of bald guys, and there's a lot
of guys who own it. There's a lot of guys.
The best thing is short and neat. That's what I've
heard of, the guys losing their hair short and neat. Yes,
compensating by leaving it long is not the best look.
Speaker 5 (09:19):
I agree, And so many dudes grow out their hair
super long because they're like, well, I'm losing it.
Speaker 4 (09:23):
Well, it looks thinner when it's long, bro.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Yeah it does. Yeah, way.
Speaker 2 (09:27):
Justin Bieber has not been seen by a photographer without
a hat for years. Usually there's a hoodie or a beanie.
But the other day he was out without a hat
and he had a full head of buzzed hair, so
very short, buzzed hair with the hairline right up there
where it should be when you're like fifteen years old.
So a plastic surgeon says that the thirty one year
(09:49):
old Bieber secretly corrected a receding hairline with transplant plugs.
So they take them from a donor part of your
hair if you're like back of your hair where it
still grows, and they sew that up. They take a
little pencil eraser sized or sometimes much smaller size, little plug,
they pull it out, they put it in the front
(10:10):
of your head and then it grows out.
Speaker 3 (10:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (10:13):
I think that Jason to Russia had it, and you know,
he's very open about it and he's got more hair now.
Speaker 5 (10:20):
Well, I had a cousin who had that done too
when he started losing his hair. But then the bad
part was that he continued losing his hair, but then
the plug stayed.
Speaker 4 (10:29):
So then like he still was losing his hair, and
it just was like, what's the point you got?
Speaker 2 (10:35):
Yeah, you got to go to a great, not a
good plastic surgeon. Because here's the thing about plastic surgery
that you might not know. Any doctor can do plastic surgery.
I'll say it again, any doctor, medical doctor can do
plastic surgery. That means your foot doctor, your pediatrician can
do plastic surgery.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
My dentist, I don't think a dentist game.
Speaker 2 (10:56):
But that's a good question. Thank you, Betley said, back down.
But you want to go to somebody who's done a
buch of bress lifts. You want to do somebody a
bunch of eyelid lifts?
Speaker 4 (11:06):
How about my veterinarian.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
Yeah you can go to the veterinarian. Sure you can. Yeah, okay.
Speaker 2 (11:14):
Ben Afflex got a kid who's thirteen wanted a pair
a six thousand dollars to your air Jordan one sneakers.
My boy, Ben Afflex said, you have to mow a
lot of lawns. His little kids said, but we got
a lot of money. Ben Affleck responded, I'm the one
with the money. You're broke. Apparently they went to a
sneaker convention and the thirteen year old said, ben Affleck,
(11:37):
that's what he calls him. Can you buy me these shoes?
And he said, you just like those because you're they're expensive.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
So I thought this was kind of funny.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
Tsa Is weighed in on the airport theory trend that
you can show up fifteen minutes before a flight.
Speaker 1 (11:52):
Let me see what they say.
Speaker 4 (11:53):
I absolutely could not do it. Fifteen Minutescessari a trick
to doing it.
Speaker 3 (11:56):
We're actually here three hours early, right, now, so we're
just we're just waiting.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
I would be anxious about it.
Speaker 5 (12:02):
Yeah, I don't think I could do it in fifteen minutes.
Speaker 4 (12:04):
But I'm always up for a challenge.
Speaker 5 (12:06):
I'm pretty tardy most of the time anyway, So you know,
why not try to rush.
Speaker 4 (12:11):
It a little more, pushed it a little bit more
and see if I couldn't make it to my gate
in fifteen minutes.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
That makes no sense.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
Why would you induce more anxiety in trying to make
catch a flight.
Speaker 1 (12:21):
I don't know. I have really no idea.
Speaker 2 (12:23):
I get there at least an hour, and it's like
peak travel season. I get I don't mind getting the airport.
There's all kinds of things to do. They got like
a little gift shop. They got FLM chocolates. Do you
buy Bose products? You can look at the uh the
lip kit machines from Kylie.
Speaker 5 (12:38):
Yeah, you can get a giant margarita at one of
the multiple Mexican restaurants in there.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (12:44):
I don't create. I always show up like two hours early.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
Shame, don't mind.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
That is dirt brought to you by sixty one two
injured Heimer and Lambers in Jewry Law. And we'll be
back in a second with something that Bailey can't do.
She has tried over and over and she cannot do it.
Can you do it?
Speaker 4 (13:03):
We'll do that.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
Coming up in a second Texas Anything on your Mind
at KDB one one on one point three kd W b.
Speaker 1 (13:12):
U oh, Laudie.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
We got a lot to talk about on you can't
make this stuff up. But first of all, I would
let you know that we're gonna be at Dave and
Busters coming up on Friday night. My boy Carson's coming
along us. He loves David Buster. Yeah, Carson Carson before him.
Speaker 4 (13:34):
Yeah, I met him at the fair. We ate pork
chops together, did you.
Speaker 5 (13:38):
I started at one side of the pork chop and
he started on the other side of the pork chop
and then we met in the men.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
Now you're making stuff up. Really, we're gonna be a
David Busters here in South Dale.
Speaker 1 (13:47):
Come.
Speaker 2 (13:47):
They have a big grand opening and it's a grand
reopening with new games and there's food and there's drinks,
and we're all gonna be there just part of their
big grand opening day. There's a big day going on
the whole day, but we're there to from four until
six and we would love to see you there. I
love David Buster seriously. All Right, here we go. What
(14:09):
names make the most money? There are actual some studies
that say if you have a certain name, you're gonna
be associated with wealth. Oh, Skeeter did not make.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
No, Skeeter did not make the list.
Speaker 2 (14:25):
For men, here the top five names associated with wealth
Andrew show Jenny's Andrew number one, Sam is number two,
Alex is three, Christopher at four, and Darren is at
number five. Darren seems a little unusual, but okay, I
(14:45):
didn't do the survey. Well, what are the women rich names?
Anna is number one? Okay, Maria number two, Laura at
number three, number four rich woman's name Helen, and number
five is Sarah.
Speaker 4 (15:01):
Anyone naming their daughter Helen in twenty twenty five?
Speaker 1 (15:03):
It's funny because old names are coming back.
Speaker 4 (15:05):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (15:06):
I'm gonna guarantee you that somebody listening right now has
got a daughter and knows a daughter named Helen Ophelia.
I don't know about that one.
Speaker 4 (15:13):
Yeah, but my.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Alison's two got two girls.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
Ava, which is an old name and is also.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
An old name, and there's a fodel.
Speaker 2 (15:27):
Ava's like Yeah, it's been around for a long time
because there were so many names like Brionna and Madison
that were new in the nineties. There's tons of adult
women that are now thirty is years old. They're Madison
and Brianna. So old names are coming back. I'm sure
there's a Helen.
Speaker 5 (15:42):
There's probably a Helen. I do know a Maria that
is pretty successful. No, yeah, so there you good. Good
to know the one. There's a bunch of fun stories today.
Did you know that Southwest is? This is not a
fun story, but I want to let you know Southwest
is Now they used to be like, your bag's are
on for free. Now they're going to charge you because
(16:03):
everybody else is doing it. So they're gonna make about
five about five billion dollars a year I think on
bag fees. Now, that sounds like a lot, so I'll
double check that one. I always just go with like
the whatever I get for free is all I pay for.
So if I get one carry on item for free,
I bring one carry on item. If all I get
(16:24):
is a backpack, I put all of my crap in
a backpack.
Speaker 4 (16:27):
Yep, I will not pay for a bag period.
Speaker 2 (16:30):
You are frugal is what we say heavy birthday or
not birthday, but it's National Girl Scout Day today.
Speaker 1 (16:39):
Shout out the Girl Scouts.
Speaker 2 (16:40):
If I was in charge of marketing for the Girl Scouts,
I would play down the cookie sales because too many
people don't know anything about Girl Scouts except cookie sales.
But they know that boy Scouts and Scouting it's just
now called scouting. Those kids and girls are now in
Scouting too. They're repelling, they're rafting, their climbing mountains, they're
building robots, they're doing all kinds of cool stuff. That's
(17:04):
why so many girls want to be in Scouts, because
they want to go hike and camp and repel and
cliff dive.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
Maybe not cliff diving.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
Yeah, but if I was in charge of marketing for
Girl Scouts, I'd be like, let's downplay the cookie sales
and show the girls rafting and repelling and things like that,
because they do all that. But did you know that, No,
you don't really know that because they emphasize cookie sales
so much.
Speaker 5 (17:23):
Maybe they should change the name so they'll have Scouts.
Those are the people who you know cliff dive, and
then they'll have Cookie Scouts.
Speaker 4 (17:31):
They'll have the cookie salesmen.
Speaker 5 (17:32):
It'll turn into like a decup program like business.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
I get that's their whole fund raisor thing, but I
think that I don't know how I want charge of marketing. Well,
they raise a lot of money and do at what
age will you go, I can't take it anymore? Forty
two years old is when you will finally say I
can't take it anymore.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
You'll be burnt out at your job.
Speaker 3 (17:54):
I was gonna say, in terms of job or body aching. Yeah,
just dealing with my kids.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
Basically, it's kind of a it's like an all around
kind of a thing. But they say you start experiencing
burnout for for some of us before they are thirty
years old. I got burnt out on radio probably when
I was about thirty four or.
Speaker 4 (18:15):
So, and it just keeps on going.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
No, it's fine now, but I got burnout. And I
actually went to a career coach and they give you
like an aptitude test, and I think the number one
thing it said that I could do was be a
chemical engineer for a gas company, really school like Exxon
or something like that. Yeah, And I said, well, that
doesn't sound like me at all. So I stuck with
it and I got through and it worked out fine.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
Weird.
Speaker 5 (18:39):
That's like a test they give you when you're in
high school, like an aptitude career test.
Speaker 4 (18:42):
Yeah, interesting?
Speaker 1 (18:44):
Or sure?
Speaker 3 (18:44):
Can I read the sex message somebody? Yeah, somebody said
my aunt uncle just had a baby girl. They named
her Helen because we were talking about old people named Yeah,
I just don't feel like Ellen. I mean Helen, Cornelius, Ernest.
People just aren't being named these things anymore.
Speaker 2 (18:58):
Well, I think there's I'm probably cutting not Ernest or Cornelius.
Helen is like a very graceful So it's kind of.
Speaker 5 (19:06):
Like quirky to name your kid an old person name.
I'd rather have my kid named Harold than like Harold.
Speaker 2 (19:12):
Also, yeah, clean, I like that. Maybe, thank you guys.
It is time now. Jenny's been on Reddit stilling in
for Jenny today.
Speaker 5 (19:29):
Hey, okay, I have a question here that all of
these redditors answered. What's a stereotypical millennial thing that you
on ironically love? Because Jenny and I are both millennials,
so I want to celebrate us a little bit here.
Maybe you want to celebrate these things too. First, of all,
side parts in your hair, I will never get rid
of my side part, mostly because I have a bump
on my head and that's where.
Speaker 1 (19:49):
My is this you, Bailey, that's me.
Speaker 4 (19:52):
That's me saying that you.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
Have your head.
Speaker 5 (19:56):
I have a bump on my head, and so my
hair naturally parts at the bump, so I will have
a right there.
Speaker 4 (20:02):
This is it right here? You can see it from
the side.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
Can I'm going to be one hundred percent honest with you.
I look at you all morning. Yeah, I've never noticed
a bump on your head.
Speaker 4 (20:10):
I have a bump on my head.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
I don't want to touch it. Yeah, it looks greasy.
What else?
Speaker 4 (20:17):
Skinny jeans?
Speaker 5 (20:18):
Which I like personally sorting yourself and asking people for
their Harry Potter Hogwarts houses. Apparently that is a stereotypical
millennial thing, which I agree.
Speaker 4 (20:28):
But what house are you? And Dave?
Speaker 2 (20:30):
I don't care, But I will say we went to
Universal a year or so ago, and Carson went back
and they gave him a little study to tell him
which house he was going to be in.
Speaker 4 (20:41):
What do you get?
Speaker 1 (20:41):
I don't remember?
Speaker 4 (20:42):
What the heck? How do you remember? Hogwarts isn't a house.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
I don't care. I'm a snotherin Harry Potter is not
my thing. I respect it, but I don't care same.
Speaker 5 (20:51):
Okay, well geeze, okay, I'm using emoji's is apparently very
millennial thing.
Speaker 1 (20:55):
By sure thing's millennials love and won't give up.
Speaker 4 (20:57):
Yes that we on ironically lovey Uh.
Speaker 5 (21:00):
This person said you can pry lol out of my
cold dead hands.
Speaker 4 (21:05):
I agree. I say Loo all the time. Avocado toast.
If you haven't.
Speaker 5 (21:09):
Tried avocado toast, you haven't lived.
Speaker 4 (21:12):
What it's delicious.
Speaker 5 (21:13):
Have you tried it?
Speaker 1 (21:14):
It's good. I'm not saying it's not good.
Speaker 3 (21:16):
It's just I feel like one of those things that
people say they ate just to say that they ate it. Well, Oh,
I had avocado toasted brunch today and.
Speaker 2 (21:22):
You had to take a picture of it and post
it on Instagram after it before you eat.
Speaker 4 (21:26):
Yeah, because it's beautiful to look at.
Speaker 5 (21:28):
Sending gifts back and forth as a main form of
communication very much. Meme coffee treats, namely pumpkin spice.
Speaker 4 (21:36):
I know how you guys feel.
Speaker 5 (21:36):
About pumpkins spice, but I do love my little coffee treat.
Speaker 4 (21:40):
Ug Boots and classic ug Boots. I love that those
are coming back.
Speaker 5 (21:44):
The youths really do like an UG boot, but I
couldn't afford an UG boots, so I had like the
fake knockoff brand from Walmart.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
We gave away Chuka boots on the show one Choka boot.
There was like a ten dollars version of UG boots,
no knock them.
Speaker 3 (21:59):
I've got like a knock off pair from Walmart once,
and every time I wore them out, people were like, oh,
like your ugs, and I was like, they're not They're
not uggs.
Speaker 5 (22:06):
I'm glad that you think they are. This person, I
don't know if I agree with this one. They said,
I still have a separate MP three player. I don't
use Spotify. I hate having to listen to ads when
I'm enjoying music, so they have a separate MP three player,
or like, I don't remember the last time I used
my iPod.
Speaker 4 (22:22):
I can't imagine using my iPod.
Speaker 3 (22:24):
Remember LimeWire or like, yes, you have to connect your
iPod to iTunes to put the songs on manually.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
Yes, what a time.
Speaker 5 (22:31):
I liked LimeWire, except sometimes your song would take like
eight hours to download and then it would go like.
Speaker 4 (22:38):
Cash darn.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
It is also illegal.
Speaker 4 (22:42):
I'm a pirate.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Oh that was a dream.
Speaker 4 (22:43):
I had never mind.
Speaker 5 (22:45):
I never used it using millennial gray as a color
in all of your design. Low key, she's not here.
I'm gonna drag Jenny. She does love a millennial gray?
Speaker 3 (22:56):
What is that?
Speaker 5 (22:57):
It's like using gray just like in your design, like
in your home or like beige, beige and gray is
very millennial.
Speaker 4 (23:03):
It's such a neutral color, like it goes with everything.
Speaker 5 (23:05):
Yeah, your home is kind of millennial gray and favor
I've seen pictures.
Speaker 1 (23:10):
Can I throw one out there?
Speaker 4 (23:11):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (23:12):
Jean jackets.
Speaker 3 (23:13):
Yeah, does that go along with like millennial trends because
I don't feel like people wear geen.
Speaker 4 (23:16):
Jackets a lot these days.
Speaker 5 (23:18):
Yeah, you're right, they don't really wear jean jackets anymore.
Speaker 3 (23:20):
I'm a big denim Like, I'll do a geene jacket
is some skinny jeans and be like, is this is
this swaggy?
Speaker 4 (23:27):
Is this so waggy?
Speaker 1 (23:28):
That's what millennials say, right.
Speaker 4 (23:30):
That's not sure about that.
Speaker 5 (23:32):
Someone else said wine, mom culture, we love our wine.
And then Disney adults. I don't think Disney adults is
a bad thing.
Speaker 4 (23:40):
Let me live.
Speaker 2 (23:41):
I would love to be a Disney adult. I just
don't have time for it.
Speaker 1 (23:43):
So wrap up.
Speaker 5 (23:44):
Yeah, okay, I'll leave you with one last thing. Yes,
pet worship. My cat is my everything, and I don't
care if you care things.
Speaker 2 (23:53):
Millennials will not give up, give up, dead hands. We'll
be back in a minute on Katie WDB. Let's do
what's going on with you. We got a bunch of
text messages. Somebody said, my toddler is named Eleanor and
I love it. And then another name that's old that's
coming back is Scarlet Nice and they said I've worked
at a childcare center. We've got three baby Scarlets Nice.
(24:17):
And we'll be right back on KDWB. We've got some games,
We've got some giveaways. You're never more than thirty minutes
away from one of your last chances at Kendrick and Sizza.
That's coming up on KDWB. Stay right here.