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May 22, 2025 • 41 mins
Dave has something, do you? Also Vont stirs the pot over bar soap, and more!
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Right, it is Katie WV. On the day of Brian
in the morning, show go Wolves Wolves in Game two
Oklahoma City tonight. You know the Wolves they have a chance.
They have a chance if the team, if the Oklahoma
City team bus won't start and they can't make it
to the arena, the Wolves have a chance.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Yeah, So so gloss at them and hopefully, you know,
somebody makes their bus breakdown.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
Yeah, let's hope. So we were at CUB the other day.
It's really interesting. We met so many fun people out
of CUB and I remember one in particular. I remember
all I remember every single one of them, but there
was one in particular that said something that Jenny and
I were like, really.

Speaker 2 (00:35):
She said, don't ever room with your best friend in college.
And so she went on to go and tell us
how she went to Saint Thomas and by like the
second month, the best friends, like their whole life.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
Hated each other.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
Oh each other, not friends anymore like to this day.
I mean, you learn a lot about people when you
have to share a ten by ten foot cube, which
is what dorms are.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
They're tiny. And honestly, I agree with her because I.

Speaker 2 (01:03):
Made that mistake of not She wasn't my best best friend,
but she was one of my very close friends.

Speaker 1 (01:08):
And the excited like, oh, hey, so excited, I go,
my friend is going to.

Speaker 2 (01:12):
Be awesome, And then you learn that, like if someone
is super neurotic about certain things and then suddenly you
can't find something because they put it away and they
didn't tell you, and you're not even that messy, all
of a sudden, there's a lot of tension. And then
there's just the fact that, like you don't know each
other's lifestyles and you're a dorm room is so tiny
to share that with someone who you're close with, it's

(01:34):
like someone you're not close with who's a stranger. You
can kind of just like ignore each other and leave
each other alone, which sounds weird because you're sharing a room,
but like to go from best friends to then like
hating each other. I wish I wouldn't have roomed with
my friend. We we were not friends for a couple
of years. By like senior year of college, we mended
that relationship back around, yes, and I mean we chat

(01:55):
every once around we're not really friends anymore, but uh,
I wish I would have roomed with a random person
myself because I do not think roomin with your best
friend in college is good. And also like college is
where you start meeting new people, and I think you
get in a little bit.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
Of a crutch when you have your friend right there.

Speaker 1 (02:11):
Yeah, that's a good point. You don't have to go out.
You can stay there in your room or go with
your friends somewhere.

Speaker 4 (02:15):
I think even I mean even beyond college. Like I
moved in with friends from college right out of college,
and so we had like a three bedroom apartment, and
one of them we were I was still really close
with her, she was great, loved her. The other one,
I was like, I don't understand how I was ever
friends with you, because living with her like ruined that
friendship entirely. The second we moved out, Like the last

(02:36):
day we moved out, I never saw her again.

Speaker 3 (02:39):
So I've still never seen her.

Speaker 1 (02:40):
But you were friends when you moved in.

Speaker 4 (02:42):
We were friends when we moved in, and then we
were no longer. What broke you to apart? I think
it's it turns into because I ended up living with
the other one for like six more years, so it
turns into like a pick your battle situation, and one
of them I could like forgive a lot of the
annoying things that she did to me, because I'm sure
I annoyed her as well. But the other one, it

(03:03):
was like everything she did was so obnoxious or disrespectful
or just like clueless, and I couldn't forgive it.

Speaker 3 (03:12):
So I was like, I don't like this person.

Speaker 1 (03:14):
Example, just that she would like, you know, leave.

Speaker 4 (03:16):
Dishes everywhere, and she was like, you guys, I'm gonna
need the big bedroom because I need that space and.

Speaker 3 (03:23):
We're like.

Speaker 4 (03:25):
Everybody else right, mean exactly, and she just it made
it seem like it was her apartment that we were
living in all the time and it was not fun
to live with her. So yeah, the second like we
moved out, and she moved out early because she's like,
you guys, I need to leave, Like I need to
leave so I can't do any of the cleaning, Like
are you kidding me? So I never saw her again,

(03:45):
and I still have never seen her.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
No loss.

Speaker 4 (03:48):
So but yeah, I mean it's it really is like
which ones can you forgive?

Speaker 3 (03:53):
Like the quirks can you forgive?

Speaker 1 (03:55):
I had a different experience.

Speaker 5 (03:56):
I did room with a friend, and I'm a person
that just I like my own space. But I would
rather room with somebody that I know as opposed to
that don't know. Because even though yes, after time, this
friend that I room with had you know, bad habits,
that hadn't like or slept till noon, or always had
people in the dorm smoking weed, at least it's easier
for me to have a conversation with my friend than
it is a stranger.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
Because that's stranger.

Speaker 5 (04:16):
You can be like, no, screw you, like I don't
know you, I don't care about you, and this is weirder,
or it's harder to get used to somebody that you
don't know, is weirder habits.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
Having never had a college You guys all had a
college roommate, So I never went to a college where
you had a roommate. But don't people usually when they
have a roommate, they don't know. They'll be like, yeah,
we've been best friends since we were roommates in college.
So a lot of the time a stranger will become
your best friend. I mean, is that only in the movie?

Speaker 3 (04:43):
No, I think that that's very true.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
I mean I lived with seven girls in college, and
two of the girls had lived together ever since their
freshman year because they were random roommates, and then they
remained friends and were roommates all four years of college
and stuff. So I do think that some people, Yeah,
you get a random roomate and then you become best
friends or you just live with them for a year
and then you move on with your life.

Speaker 4 (05:04):
Yeah that was me. I lived with mine for a
year and I moved on with my life. And then
I was an RA so I had my own room,
so I only had a random roommate.

Speaker 1 (05:11):
Ever. Yeah, I remember my daughter Beth, she was at
the U and she got a roommate that she didn't know.
And I remember I went to visit Beth in a
room or whatever it was, and there were dirty dishes
in the sink that wasn't meant to wash dishes in.
It was a wash your face, wash your hands kind
of a sink, and there was like old noodles and

(05:32):
dirty dishes in the sink. And She's like, Yep, that's her,
that's what she does. Carson worked a room with three
other guys at Berkeley in Boston, and he's still best
friends with one of the guys, lost touch with the
other two. Were they all randomly bar did he know
that random totally.

Speaker 6 (05:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (05:49):
I never really think that's a recommendation.

Speaker 4 (05:51):
If like you're going into college to leave the comfort
of having a friend, Like if you have a friend
who's going to the same college, like, yeah, you room
with that person, but like try to room with somebody else,
because then both of you will have a new person
and you'll be four instead of two.

Speaker 5 (06:06):
Yeah that's cool, but I'm still against it. I just
I don't like random people that I don't know. There
was me, it was me and my friend that we
roomed with, and then two other people because we didn't
like a sweet And there was one guy that we
didn't know from a can of paint and he.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
Such an old people saying. He used to leave.

Speaker 5 (06:23):
Like raw onions just all around the refrigerator, Like would
take a bite of a whole on apple. Yeah it's
like an apple, then just throw it in the refrigerator
and with dirty all the pots and pants, and I'd
be like, no, this guy has to go.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
Wow, it's crazy.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
I mean, once my roommate and I started having issues,
I just started rooming with a uf M football team,
so it worked out.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
Couldn't tell me. I can't tell if that was a
joker nut. I don't think it was. It could have
been so rare. It is, Katie w It's a we're
live in case you're wondering. It is eight oh five,
it is Thursday morning. I admit it. I will admit. Oh, really,

(07:07):
I admit I have one. I've got one. Do you
use it every day? Probably had one for ten or
more years. I have one. My wife has one. Some
people like that. I don't have one, and I'm proud
of it. I don't care what you think of me.

(07:28):
I have one. Do you have one?

Speaker 3 (07:31):
I don't have one, but I could use one.

Speaker 1 (07:36):
Let me ask you a question. Yeah, does your mama
Ronda have one?

Speaker 6 (07:38):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (07:38):
Yes, Okay, my mama Ronda has one. My sister has one.

Speaker 1 (07:42):
Oh and your sister's young.

Speaker 3 (07:43):
She is young, thirty five.

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Jenny, admit it? Do you have one?

Speaker 3 (07:49):
I do have one?

Speaker 1 (07:52):
Do you and you're only thirty five?

Speaker 3 (07:55):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (07:57):
I'll bet they're probably nineteen year olds that have them.

Speaker 5 (07:59):
I'm surprised because I'm twenty three and I don't.

Speaker 1 (08:02):
You don't have one. I do not have one. I
didn't have one when I was twenty three. Either didn't
need it.

Speaker 5 (08:06):
I don't see myself having one for I don't know
for a while.

Speaker 1 (08:10):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
Yeah, I mean some of my friends recently got one,
so I like it.

Speaker 3 (08:15):
Yeah, yeah, they do.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
Yeah, it's helpful. Do you ever see it?

Speaker 2 (08:19):
I mean they don't usually have They don't usually have
an outline to come.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
Over their house. No, well, I have one, yeah, and
I am not ashamed to admit it. You and Susan
have one. Susan has a bigger one than I do.

Speaker 4 (08:34):
Really, we have a text message thinking what you're talking about?

Speaker 3 (08:39):
Do you want me to tell you?

Speaker 1 (08:40):
Sure?

Speaker 3 (08:41):
They say, is this David's wig confection?

Speaker 1 (08:44):
Are you wearing a wig? It looks like a wig
because it fits funny, it fits like a bad wig,
like if you were in a theater production. They're like, yeah,
you you're bald. You need to wear a wig. It
is not a wig.

Speaker 3 (08:55):
No, okay, it's not a wig.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
No, what do you think it is? Do you have
one one? Do you want to find out? I want
to find out. If you want to find out, let's
guess first. Let's have some guesses.

Speaker 3 (09:08):
There's a couple coming in on that.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
What do you think it is? I have one and
I fully admit it. Yeah, and I feel that if
you need one, you should get one. Susan has a
bigger one than I do. Bailey kind of wants one.

Speaker 3 (09:19):
I could use one. I could use one.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
Jenny has one, Vaught does not. Bailey's mama has one.

Speaker 3 (09:24):
Oh yes, and my sister has one as well.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
Okay. Is it an electric toothbrush? No? Is it an iron? No?

Speaker 3 (09:35):
I don't have either of those. But I do have this.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
I don't retirement fund No four a one K, no
foot massager, no spap.

Speaker 3 (09:47):
You could use one.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
I could use one.

Speaker 3 (09:49):
I probably need one too.

Speaker 1 (09:50):
I do want to see pap. No, that's not it. No,
I admit I have one.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
Someone said a bad day, Well, Bailey has a b dat.

Speaker 3 (09:57):
Can't be that.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
I love it.

Speaker 3 (09:58):
I recommend it. Dave does have a bit.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
I have the day you gave it to me from
a birthday a couple of years ago. Yeah, yeah, I
like it. Yeah. Hair brush. No squatty potty, I do
have a squatty potty. I'll be honest with you. I
never use it.

Speaker 3 (10:12):
Can happen?

Speaker 1 (10:13):
Do you really want.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
My use because I have a situation.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
I don't really, I don't know landline? No, there a gun.
No kindle, a kindle. I do have a kindle. I
freely admit that I have a kindle.

Speaker 3 (10:33):
It's an iPhone.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
No, I get an iPhone. You do not. But people
are trying to put together the clues because you don't
have one, Bailey, you don't have an iPhone. Don't and
you don't have one of these items either.

Speaker 3 (10:43):
But you know who also doesn't have an iPhone?

Speaker 1 (10:45):
My mom? Your mom does not.

Speaker 5 (10:46):
No, but I said I don't have one, and I
do have an iPhone iPhone. I just don't see a
purpose for me having this not now.

Speaker 1 (10:53):
No, you really don't need one. There would be no
literally no use for having so. Basically, if you just
turn your radio on. I admitted that I have one
of these. Bailey does not. But you kind of want one.

Speaker 3 (11:04):
You could use one.

Speaker 1 (11:06):
Jenny has one, My wife has one that's bigger than mine. Yeah,
meaning it costs more.

Speaker 3 (11:11):
Some of my friends have one too, not all of them,
does the few of them?

Speaker 1 (11:16):
Address book No, an Apple Watch No. And this is
I will be honest with you. It's not something that
you would be it's not something you'd be proud of.
It's a little bit embarrassing. It is not really embarrassing.
But it's a little bit embarrassing. I'll give you. I'll
tell you what. If you want to find out what

(11:38):
it is, you can go on Instagram Dave Ryan Show
and there is a picture of it. But you have
to make me a deal. You have to answer the
poll do you have one or not? And if you can't,
go on Instagram, I'll tell you what it is next
on katwbkd w B. I admit it. I have one.

(12:00):
I mean, I admit it freely. Man. I'm not embarrassed
about it. Our lives are kind of an open book.
I'm a little bit you know, it's embarrassing to have one.
You don't bring it up at conversation. Vant does not
have one. I say a lot of young people do
not have one. But I'm gonna just say probably some day.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
I think it depends on how you were raised.

Speaker 1 (12:20):
How you're brought up. Okay, Jenny has one, Bailey doesn't
have one but wants one. My wife has one that's
bigger than mine, and your mom, mom or rot. Do
you think Cindy has one?

Speaker 3 (12:30):
Ah, she should, but I don't think she does.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
She should a lot of guesses everything from a face
and nose hair trimmer, hearing ade. No, somebody says I
have the biggest one of all. Okay, it's not any
kind of an adult toy. This says my wife had
a hockey injury that required her to have one, and

(12:54):
I have to admit we like it. Somebody did figure
it out, several people did. If you wanted to find
out exactly what it is, you could have gone to
our Instagram story Dave Ryan Show. But I'll tell you
right now it is. You ready. It is a pill holder,
a weekly pill holder, and I got one probably, I

(13:16):
don't know, ten years ago, something like that. I'm like,
because I was taking like three pills a day. I'm
up to five now. But one is a bottom and supplement,
so it's good and you just stock it up every Sunday.
Fill up the little things there. Now, Susan takes a
boatload of pills, so her pills would not fit in
my little one. She got a bigger one than I do. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (13:38):
Yeah, Well this person who texted in saying that they
have one, and it's not just weekly, it's monthly.

Speaker 1 (13:42):
Yeah, a month one. Yeah, it's probably like a sheet
of paper, Oh it is, but thick. Yeah yeah, dang,
Jenny has one.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
I do. I got I got it from my probiotics
and magnesium and all that good stuff that you got
to start taking as you get older.

Speaker 1 (13:56):
And I do not have one, No, because you are
you know, at twenty three years old. Guys are like,
I'm healthy. I'm fine. I don't need nothing. Strong and
healthy as a horse. Yep. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (14:06):
I used to think it was cool when I was
a younger. I don't know why. But just Sunday, Monday, Tuesday,
just organizing, organizing it. I was like, one day, Wow, d.

Speaker 1 (14:14):
Go online or send me a take do this just
for fun. Let me know your gender, your age, and
whether you have one or not. And I'm gonna bet
you there are probably twenty two year old women ye
that have a pill organizer.

Speaker 4 (14:27):
And I mean though also it's likely that you wouldn't
use one until you're later in life. When you do,
you know, have joint issues and you need to take
a pill for that, and yep, et cetera, et cetera.

Speaker 3 (14:37):
Like I could use one.

Speaker 4 (14:38):
I take a lot of vitamins, but I just keep
them in the bottle they came in and just pour
them ount in my hand in the morning.

Speaker 1 (14:44):
This makes it really easy because now you have one. Poor,
you have one. Poor, You flip the little lid. You'll
you tap it into your hand, throw them back in
your mouth and swallow it. Toss them back. Yep. This
text says my dog has a pill organizer.

Speaker 3 (14:59):
Dogs need it.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
Yeah, let me know, send me a text, Let me
know how old you are, your gender. I don't think
it really matters, but I'm a little bit curious. And
then whether you have one or not, and it's okay
to not, it's okay if you don't have one, you're
still cool. Yeah, let's have fun. Stir the pot. He
does it every day at least once, whether the mics
are on or no. Well, yeah, right, what's on your mind?

Speaker 5 (15:22):
Bar soap does not come anywhere close to liquid like
body wash. Liquid body wash is superior than bar soap.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
Okay, so you use the squirt squirt, squirt, you squirt
it onto a wash cloth.

Speaker 5 (15:34):
I use a it's like a body scrubbers because I'm bougie,
but like a loofa or something whatever, whatever you squirt
it on.

Speaker 1 (15:39):
I'm just saying body washed.

Speaker 5 (15:41):
You squirt is much more superior than having a rub
a bar of I don't know Irish spring or dove
all over your body.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
Okay, I don't disagree, but I don't use a body
wash because it never lathers the way I want it to. Well,
I use my Irish Spring and it lathers up just fine.

Speaker 5 (15:55):
I feel like because it's a liquid and you get soap,
I feel like that's why it lathers you better.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
Well, you a bar soap just straight to the body
type of person, Yeah, okay, yeah, and then you do
get a little more.

Speaker 1 (16:04):
Sudsy sudsy that way. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (16:07):
Well, I disagree with you, Von, because I love bar soap.
I feel like once you get onto the bar soap scene,
you can't get off of it. And now anywhere I go,
I pick up bar soap and I smell it, and
I always end up buying one bar soap. I just
for some reason, I feel like the scent is condensed
in a bar soap, and that it also like moisturizes

(16:28):
versus like a liquid soap, which I feel like strips
my skin of moisture.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
Well, a liquid that when you put it on a
little terry cloth washcloth, it'll kind of strip the exfoliate
a little bit. You know what. I mean or like
Bonn's got a loof or a scrubber. Yeah, what do
you mean? It condenses the smell, baby, what do you mean?

Speaker 4 (16:44):
I don't because it's all like in a brick, so
like the scent of the soap is like trapped in
this brick versus the liquid.

Speaker 1 (16:53):
I don't know why. I just like. I just like
bar soap.

Speaker 4 (16:56):
I use bar soap almost exclusively.

Speaker 5 (16:58):
Don't you want the smells to be all over you,
to be a fresh aroma, a smell like lavender body water?

Speaker 4 (17:03):
Well, I still take I take the bar soap and
I put it on like one of them African nets sponges,
and then it it lathers really well because and then too,
like you get it all over the place. Sometimes with
like the liquid, it doesn't lather the way I want
it to use bar so.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
It does not. Yes, and I don't like it when
you go to a hotel and anymore they have shampoo,
conditioner and body wash hanging on a bottle on the
side of the tub. I like it.

Speaker 5 (17:28):
But bar soap at hotels specifically gets wasted a lot
of time. Let's say you staying at a hotel one
two nights, you don't use that whole thing of soap.

Speaker 3 (17:37):
Go to say.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
He takes his helme, try dry it off in a
wash rag, and then I wrap it in a paper
towel or clean axe, and I put it in my
little toiletry skit and I take it home.

Speaker 5 (17:48):
But people that don't do that, it's so much more
wasteful because if you just have the like the liquid,
the body wash or shampoo conditioner, just leave it in
the bottle.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
The next person comes squirted at a hotel. You're right, Yeah,
you're right, it's far more.

Speaker 5 (17:59):
I feel like you just get lathered up more with
the with the liquid.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
I feel that way too, But I mean I'm a
loofa body wash girl.

Speaker 3 (18:06):
My loofa has seen better days.

Speaker 4 (18:08):
Though.

Speaker 1 (18:08):
Let me tell you, Ah, so you're on my side,
it's turned brown. It's no longer yellow. It's brown on
one side.

Speaker 3 (18:15):
What once was.

Speaker 2 (18:16):
A circular lufa is now a rectangle of just twelve
feet long.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
Basically, help me, yes, help me, And aren't bars of soap?

Speaker 5 (18:25):
I mean, I know it's soap, so it's clean, but
like if you rub it on your body directly, isn't
that a little bit more dirty? Like what if you're
sharing with people in the house.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
Well you got to be. I wouldn't share one with
Carson or Alison Susan. I don't care.

Speaker 4 (18:37):
And also, like I always think too with liquid soap,
if you're going through that quickly, you're throwing out all
of these like plastic bottles versus a bar soap, is
just that's it.

Speaker 3 (18:47):
It's once it's gone, it's gone. It just disappears.

Speaker 1 (18:50):
It's wrapped in plastic.

Speaker 4 (18:52):
Oh the ones that I borro aren't they're like wrapped
in a tiny piece of paper.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
I get the fancy bougie bar soap. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (18:59):
Text messages and somebody said bar soap is way more
eco friendly to true. Somebody else said vonn out here
killing the earth with all his body soap containers.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
Yeah, it's just so illustrious.

Speaker 5 (19:09):
And then some of the best smells like I don't
think old spice has let's take your first control.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (19:16):
I stole that joke from Jenny yesterday and he laughed
better today out there.

Speaker 1 (19:20):
She did not laugh yesterday, says it.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
Yeah, just like I set up a joke yesterday for
our big meeting today and Dave's like, oh, yeah, I'm
gonna steal that I am.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
That's my joke.

Speaker 3 (19:30):
I literally just said that, and you're like it doesn't matter.

Speaker 5 (19:34):
Yeah, gosh, so yeah, starting the pot, I said body
body wash, like the liquid is far more superior than
any type of bar of soap.

Speaker 1 (19:42):
Okay, let's get back to the pill boxes. Yeah, there's
a lot of people who admit that they have not one,
but two pill boxes. Janita is fifty three, She's got
two pill boxes. I just got one. I'm forty four.
I got a bad shoulder. I got a pill organizer.
I'm sixty five years old. Here, I am twenty three female,

(20:02):
and I've got a pill organizer. So working with female. Yes,
I've got a pill organizer. My twenty one year old
son has one, and my fifteen year old daughters has one.
Helps us. No, we took our meds for the day.
And that's true because you can be like, did I
take my medge the day? Yeah, Hey, look at your
pill box and you go, oh yeah.

Speaker 4 (20:21):
I think if it was really important for me to
take medication, I would need one so that I can
like visibly see, Okay, it's Monday, the Monday one is open.
That means I've taken them versus mine or just you know,
chewable vitamins.

Speaker 3 (20:34):
And if I miss a day, I miss a day,
it's not the end of the world.

Speaker 1 (20:37):
Oh, give it some time. You'll be on some anti
cholesterol troup before you know it. Yes, the way you eat,
I'm surprised you're not already on a cholesterol something that
unclugs your veins from chocolate. Like, yeah, Bailey, to have
a cholesterol it's.

Speaker 4 (20:49):
Chocolate feels better when my heart has to pump really hard,
my veins work burns more calories.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
Yeah it's true. Yeah, all right, we'll be back in
a second. Speaking of health, there is a new trend
this summer that when they're calling it a blank girl summer,
the blank is a food. It is a food that
you don't like, but it's trending on TikTok, so everybody's
thinking about doing it. I'll tell you about it next
on katiewb. You can forget about strawberries and tomatoes this summer.

(21:19):
It's all about sardines. Yep, sardine hard pass. Here's why then,
tiny fish in a tin or trending all over TikTok,
and not just as recession food. Yeah, they are growing
in popularity as a healthy and affordable food. But the
sardine esthetic is swimming right into fashion. Think beaded sardine bags,

(21:42):
sardine print dresses, and earrings shaped like little sardine.

Speaker 3 (21:45):
Can Okay, that's funny.

Speaker 1 (21:47):
Doesn't stop there though. Home decor is also sardine theme,
from pillows and blankies to serving plates. It's all about
the Mediterranean vibe. You guys. You know I'm big into
the Mediterranean vibe. Verachy, simple and salty. Sardines are delicious
if you don't think too hard about what you're eating.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
I would try one. I've never eaten. What are they
just little fish?

Speaker 1 (22:07):
They're a little fish. They're actually called sardines, yeah, I think. Yeah.
And they're at the bottom of the food chain. So
they're very healthy because they haven't got a lot of
mercury and lead and toxins in them because they're at
the bottom of the food chain. So eat sardines. They're
full of protein, healthy protein, healthy fats. They're fish, and
you can put on everything from a cracker making. You
can make a sardine sub. A sardine sub sandwich is

(22:29):
sub up with sardines.

Speaker 4 (22:31):
If I'm a whale and I'm like swimming in the
ocean and I open my mouth.

Speaker 3 (22:35):
Are those all the little bitty fish that that would.

Speaker 1 (22:39):
They take a mouthful of kelp and then they spit
it out through their teeth. Obacco, Well, they trap it
like a filter. Okay, Yeah, they trap the kelp in
there and then they swallow the kelp in there. Yeah.
But sardines are the bottom of the food chain, very healthy,
very trendy, and fashionable.

Speaker 4 (22:54):
I would try one and a beaded sardine bag.

Speaker 3 (22:58):
That's high comedy. I love that.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
That's like a sardine can.

Speaker 2 (23:02):
That's like prominent fast fashion. That's something that will maybe
not with you, Bailey, because you are that person that
like still uses things that like whatever. But this is
the thing that people are going to buy a machine
or whatever it's called, and they're going to use it
for a summer and then it's going to end up
in a landfill by the wintertime.

Speaker 3 (23:19):
I don't like that. Wrong, I don't like it.

Speaker 1 (23:20):
You're not wrong. That's why I'm not a big fashion person,
because that is what most of fashion does, is you
wear it for a season, then throw it away and
and it's send the landfill.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
So instead of hot girls summer. Are they calling it
on TikTok Sardine girl Summer?

Speaker 1 (23:34):
Sure?

Speaker 2 (23:34):
Are ye doesn't really roll off the tongue very well,
but it's hilarious.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
If you've never tried a sardine, try one.

Speaker 2 (23:43):
I've only tried it because you've made me do it
for a bit before I do it for a bit.

Speaker 1 (23:47):
Yeah, what do you think?

Speaker 3 (23:49):
I think it was?

Speaker 2 (23:49):
Okay, very fishy, very very very fishy.

Speaker 1 (23:53):
Guess they're fishy and they're oily, but I would I would, Yes.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
The oil part I think actually was a little more
overwhelming than the fishiness.

Speaker 4 (24:00):
See, i'd be concerned because aren't you eating like their
spine and all their like bones and stuff.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
I think so. Yeah, but it's all very very tender.

Speaker 3 (24:09):
Okay, so they soften the bones.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
Before you, Yeah, I think so.

Speaker 3 (24:14):
I feel like a giant situation.

Speaker 1 (24:16):
Yeah, they're they're not. They're nobody's favorite food, but they're
a nice little snack once in a while, all right.
That is, you can't make this stuff up. On one
A one point three kd WB, Dave's Dirt's coming up
in a little bit, and so hang out for that one.
We got everything from the Diddy trial to h what else.

(24:36):
Miley Cyrus is talking about why she's got such a
raspy voice and how she could get it fixed, but
she doesn't want to. Probably a good call. It's all
here on kd WB, the Twin Cities number one hit
music station. Give us a little preset set as a
preset on the iHeart app.

Speaker 6 (25:00):
All.

Speaker 1 (25:00):
I'd like to apologize because I was. Oh, I would
like to apologize. I said something on the air minute ago,
and I was, I was sounded out, I was rare,
I was rue. Say it for me. I was wrong.

(25:24):
Turns out that whales don't eat kelp, it's krill. You
wouldn't believe the number of people doesn't know that number
of people who texted in and remember from tenth grade
science class. You don't remember anything else from tenth grade
science class. But here you are. Oh, Dave was Let
me text Dave and point out that he made mss

(25:48):
mss Miss Moss and.

Speaker 3 (25:52):
Final Lac Wisconsin.

Speaker 2 (25:53):
What I learned that whales eat our three dollars meal
deals from holiday stations.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
Do tell Really, that's that's what It's crazy.

Speaker 2 (26:01):
They can get a Johnsonville Hot Dog, Broader Hot Snack
and Freedom Lays or a Polar Popper coffee for just
three dollars.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
So that's what they told us in Wisconsin.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
Those public schools in Wisconsin. My boy Carson and I
went and saw Centers Sound the other night. Really really good,
great movie it is. It starts out like, what's this
movie all about? Oh, this is a good movie. Then
it switches gears entirely to a vampire movie and it
is the most brilliant twist of a plot ever and

(26:31):
it's so good. Today he wants to go see Final Destination,
which I'm like, I already saw it, but I would
see it again.

Speaker 3 (26:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
I had a black son and a white son the
same age, totally different, and vont and I were most
of the way back, but there was a row behind
us or two and behind us was a row of
I thought they were teenage girls. You thought they were
adult women. I thought they were adult women. But they
were definite. They spoken up.

Speaker 5 (26:58):
They spoke two languages, English and then whatever there's language was.
And so when they first they came into the theater
late and it was like a good twenty twenty five minutes.

Speaker 1 (27:06):
Missed the opening sequence late, which in any movie is.

Speaker 5 (27:09):
Important, but specifically in Final destination sets up the rest
of the movie. Yes, But so then they come behind
us and we hear I hear them talking. They're speaking,
you know, back and forth, English to whatever, and I, okay,
you're trying to maybe figure out your seat, get situated. Cool,
you can talk for a second. But the movie's going
on and on and they're still talking, and it's like
at a they're not yelling, but it's at like a

(27:30):
regular volume of like speaking, and me and Dave just
didn't look at each other, but we kind of like understood, like, Okay, yeah,
this is gonna keep going.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
I saw you turn around and give them a look
at one time.

Speaker 5 (27:39):
I did, yeah, because I wanted to see, like what
the situation is. Is there a kid behind with them?
Maybe maybe that's the past I'll give them.

Speaker 3 (27:45):
But no, you look behind, You're like, can I take
these ladies?

Speaker 6 (27:48):
Like?

Speaker 1 (27:48):
Yeah, can I take them?

Speaker 5 (27:49):
Can I grab both of them by the head and
just clomp them together.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
And stop talking? At movies? I feel like there's basic
movie etiquette. I tter if they were they they spoke
a different language, so they maybe from They may be
from a country where they don't go to see a
lot of movies, and they don't understand that. In America,
we basically there is a societal norm of being quite
in a movie.

Speaker 5 (28:10):
You're a darkroom where there's nobody else is talking, So
I would pick up a clue.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
I've learned never to say anything to people who talk
loud in a movie because I've done it before, and
instantly I feel like such a jerk. Really, I shush no,
because number one, you never know what kind of attitude
you're gonna get back. Did you disrespect me? Did you
disrespect me? Don't you disrespect me? Old man? So I don't,

(28:37):
But the few times that I have, God, I remember
one time is at a movie with Carson in Colorado. He
was probably ten or fourteen, and there was a couple
behind us talking, and it was during the previews the trailers,
and they were talking just as loud as I'm talking
right now. And I turned around and I said, are
you two going to talk the entire movie? And they

(28:58):
sat silent for a minute. I goes no, and I
said good, And I felt like such an ass. They
were probably a couple out on a date being friendly.
They were probably a little bit nervous, not realizing, so
I just don't say anything, but.

Speaker 5 (29:14):
You shouldn't feel like an ass. That's like you're asking
them hopeful.

Speaker 2 (29:17):
The way you went about it, I guess, yes, I
guess maybe I think there's a way you can say
something without being like.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
Really aggressive about it.

Speaker 5 (29:25):
Yes, maybe it was the way he said it, But
you shouldn't feel like an ass for asking somebody to
do the basic thing that you are not supposed to
do at a place that's like the dentist being like,
are you going to open your mouth?

Speaker 1 (29:33):
You're supposed to do that at the dentist. I can't
be mad at you for saying that. Yeah, but I
just don't because and I did it once. I was
seeing a movie years ago, and it was the Tim
Allen Space movie so that I don't remember the name
of it, but it was a comedy and there was
a row of girls right in front of us that
would purposely, they're probably fourteen, whenever something mildly funny would happen,

(29:55):
they would all purposely laugh really loud ah, just to
be annoying. Yeah, And I said, all right, girls, that's enough.
And Alison and Susan were like, why did you do that?
And I'm just like, oh, no, I feel stupid. Now
I feel bad, So I've learned to shut my pie hole.

(30:18):
Oh and just I don't want to feel bad. I
don't want to start anything.

Speaker 4 (30:22):
Well, okay, I like this doesn't really happen to me
at movies, but I see a lot of theater productions,
and some people also treat it the same way as
this movie theater thing, where they're like, I'm at home,
I can talk full volume, or they get like super drunk,
and then they'll respond to the things that are happening
on stage or you know, movie theater, same kind of vibe.
And I if I was sitting next to these people,

(30:45):
I would say something, even though you know there could
be retaliation. But somebody who's talking in a play or
in a movie is impacting everyone else in that movie.

Speaker 1 (30:54):
Doesn't matter, I know. I think people feel that they
there's definitely an attitude of I'll do whatever I want
to do mm hmmm, which isn't mean no people are
told that you do you, you do what you want
to do. Don't let people tell you what you can
and cannot do. We fill people's heads with that all
the time, and some people misinterpret that to mean it

(31:17):
doesn't matter. If it bothers other people. I don't care
if you shave your head or like, you know, put
a tattoo of a skull on top of your head,
I don't care. Yeah, it doesn't affect me, but this
but does, But this does. And I think that's where
people get confused and they feel like they are I
hate to use the word entitled. These young entitled youth,
they just feel like you know that. I think that

(31:40):
they just think that they can do whatever they want.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
I think it's a lack of self awareness on top
of some people are entitled. I'm not going to go
ahead and say that every single person that goes into
a movie theater and is kind of talking as an
entitled human. I think they just don't understand the volume
of their voices. Because I know plenty of people in
my life that are very good people, but they talk
so damn loud it drives me insane.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
Is that somebody on the phone who his name is Cephas, Cephas.

Speaker 6 (32:07):
Good morning, good morning, good morning.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
What did you want to say about the girls in
the movie theater and talking and all that.

Speaker 6 (32:15):
Yeah, I mean, I'm from West Africa, specifically liber Area.
I'm not sure where they were from. However, in most
African countries, you go to the movies and it is
a normous to talk. You will want to talk. Your neighbors,
your seat mate want to talk to you about the movie.
And it doesn't matter if the movie is ongoing or not.
I mean people with reaction there. I've never been to

(32:39):
a movie where it's just dead silent, like nobody want
to go back to this. So it's a normal thing
to do. And I'm sure even when I came to
the US for the first time, I didn't know that
I have. I was told, hey, you don't talk at
the movies. I'm like, oh, well this is this is
not fun. But no one one thing to do. And
that's what I missed. I'll show you that's what I
missed about watching movie in West Africa or in Africa.

(33:01):
She ta in Liberia, because you talk to people around you,
you know, strangers, you meet them, and it's just fun.
You know, the reaction. Everybody's screaming, yelly and talking and
anticipating what's gonna happen next. It just makes the movie
so much fun.

Speaker 1 (33:14):
See now that. But don't you miss the dialogue cephas
When you're watching a movie you're let's say you and
me and Vont go to Final Destination and you're chat
and chat and chatting away. Vont and I are giving
you the stink guy and going, Lord, shut the app
because we can't hear the movie. Don't you want to
hear the movie? Cephas?

Speaker 6 (33:34):
We here in the US, Yeah, but you know, back
for anything in Liberia, I mean you you can't still
hear it, and you won't want to talk to your
seed mid thing to anticipate what's gonna happen next. Oh,
I think they're gonna, you know, jump off to bad
and everybody's just like, well, let's see what's happening, and
then when it happens, everybody whoa And you.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
Know, oh, you would kiss mephas you and you and I.
I was gonna ask you to a movie. You and
I never go into a movie, Dave. You know what's
gonna happen next. She's gonna get crushed by the garbage disposal.

Speaker 3 (34:07):
Cephus, you would also.

Speaker 1 (34:08):
Annoy me at the movie fun and more fun than
so there is a cultural difference then, So it is
a cultural yeah.

Speaker 3 (34:15):
I would say that, And at first I was like, Cephas, no,
I'm not about that. You need to be quiet.

Speaker 2 (34:20):
But if you and I went to a movie together,
I would allow you to speak to me during the
entire movie with that sexy accent.

Speaker 1 (34:26):
But here's the thing now, saying just she just got
hit on by a seventeen year old boy who said,
you want to cuddle, And he looks like he's in
high school. He's got the backwards baseball cap. Jenny's old
enough to be his sister, his mom. So I would say,
slide into Jenny's d MS and maybe take her out
to a movie. Yeah, they do. They do the popcorn

(34:51):
bag trick in West Africa.

Speaker 6 (34:53):
No no, no, no, no, okay, scene there you take
your home cooked mule and you know, little my mom
used to prepare my food from home like a lunch bag,
like you going to work. Yeah, movie for like eight
hour a day, you know, just pack it up and
I go in there and I'm there, you know, watching
all the movies. You know, three. This shows three to
four movies at a time. You pay what, for instance,

(35:14):
ten dollars and it's three movies. They'll put the poster
out the door like, hey we got four movies going
up today. It's like pretty much all day, so my
mom will go to work, pack my lunch, and I
go to the movies for like from eleven AM to
I seem you need to.

Speaker 1 (35:27):
Take this guy summer. Jenny's a big eater. Sefa, you
don't even maybe I don't make up some tater tot
hot dish. Bring the whole cast roll dish into the movie, Jenny.
It sounds like he's a big eater too. Yeah, I
love that, right.

Speaker 3 (35:43):
Did you want to explain the popcorn bake.

Speaker 1 (35:44):
Trick or I'm gonna send you a ven diagram? Yeah,
it was fun talking to you. Thanks for calling the show.

Speaker 6 (35:52):
Thank you guys, have a good night.

Speaker 1 (35:54):
Called back now.

Speaker 3 (35:55):
He has a beautiful voice though that accent.

Speaker 1 (35:58):
Oh Jenny single and you're over the age of seventeen
years old, Jenny would share like a DM.

Speaker 2 (36:03):
Eight, I would say no, please over twenty eight. I
need your brain to be fully developed and even some
life experience that.

Speaker 1 (36:10):
Thank you overrated all the show, Buz news you need
and some me don't. Dave's Dirt On Katie w B
Miley Cyrus talks about why she has a raspy voice.

Speaker 7 (36:20):
I had Reikie's edema. It's abuse of the vocal cords,
so my voice always sounded like this. So I have
this very large poll up on my vocal cord, which
has given me a lot of the tone and the
texture that has made me who I am. But I
do have this Reikie's edemon, and I have this large
pole up on my chords, and I'm not willing to
sever it because the chance of waking up from a

(36:44):
surgery and not sounding like myself is a probability.

Speaker 1 (36:47):
We talked about earlier how Barbaris Streisan's got kind of
a weird, weird shaped nose, but she never wanted to
have it fixed because she was worried that her voice
would not sound the same.

Speaker 3 (36:56):
Makes sense.

Speaker 1 (36:57):
Miley Cyrus makes the dirt two times today because she's
talking about filming a music video in the forest, and
then she's talking to Harrison Ford. I guess he's at
the next table in the studio or something I don't know,
and she's telling Harrison Ford about the plans to make
the movie in the forest, and Harrison Ford talked her.

Speaker 5 (37:12):
Out of it.

Speaker 7 (37:13):
He goes, yeah, you really want to go and set
up in a forest and do what? Like He's like
what He's like you're gonna bring a crew, you gout.
He's like, looks expensive. And I came back to the
chail and I was like, guys, we're not performing in
the forest anymore.

Speaker 3 (37:25):
Harrison Ford made a lot of sense.

Speaker 1 (37:28):
Joey Fatone is now a spokesperson for Red Lobster.

Speaker 3 (37:32):
Three courses for just nineteen ninety nine. That is a
big deal.

Speaker 1 (37:34):
Your uncle Joey was a big deal in nineteen ninety nine.

Speaker 5 (37:36):
Oh boy, how about we just enjoyed the shrip, the
new three course Shrimpston six, super Salad, trimp Ad and
Tria Bontrey for just nineteen ninety nine only.

Speaker 1 (37:46):
Had Red Lobster.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
So Scissor Sissor, I love her, Scissor, I love Scissor.
I love Scissor so much, but her siblings Scissor. Yeah,
she's been touring with Kendrick Lamar and she's been doing
all these concerts and she actually convinced a young fan
to not do drugs during her show.

Speaker 3 (38:02):
The other day.

Speaker 2 (38:03):
Apparently she negotiated with the fan to ditch a canister
of nitrous oxide, which aka means doing whippets in exchange
for a photo.

Speaker 3 (38:12):
So she posted a photo of the super.

Speaker 2 (38:15):
Or super whippet canister which contains all kinds of illustrations
and all that stuff, and then took the photo and
then took it away from the person so that they
would not do whippets during her concerts the other day.
So she's like, she's like my Officer Olsen, who was
my DARE program leader.

Speaker 1 (38:29):
He was so hot ago and forth with the high
school boy.

Speaker 2 (38:38):
He also, I am not damming back and forth in
my dms all the time, and I look at them
and I laugh and I ignore. So anyways, Officer Olson
he also attended my church, so I got double of
him Sundays.

Speaker 3 (38:53):
And on Wednesdays when you'd come into my elementary.

Speaker 1 (38:56):
School, craillod him.

Speaker 2 (38:59):
He the one you're well, I was only in fifth grade,
so unfortunately, I don't think that that was gonna happen.

Speaker 3 (39:07):
But you know, once I became of age.

Speaker 1 (39:08):
All right, Moving on.

Speaker 4 (39:09):
He was talking about movies a lot, and obviously we
had the Minecraft movie, We've got the Barbie movie. Yesterday
we were there was news about the whacka Mole movie.
Well there's a skibbety toilet movie in the words jeez,
from none other than Michael Bay, which makes no sense
to me, because Michael Bay does like all the Transformers movies,
lots of big explosions. If you've never seen the Skibbity

(39:32):
toilet like video on YouTube, it is very weird, but
it's like super megaviral.

Speaker 3 (39:38):
Lots of kids like it.

Speaker 4 (39:39):
It's only eleven seconds on YouTube, but it's just this
guy's head sticking out of a toilet and singing. I
have no idea how they're going to turn that into
a movie, but I'm sure they just want to, you know,
get on the train of like making toys and games
into movies and that's going to be the new Yeah,
and memes and that's gonna be the new thing. Uh.

Speaker 1 (39:57):
Speaking of movies, the new Mission Impossible, The Final Reckoning
is opening this weekend. I think some shows are movie
theaters screen them tonight. Leelo and Stitch opens this weekend.
And the last rodeo did you did you see? Jelly
Roll went to the movies at Mall of America.

Speaker 3 (40:14):
Yesterday because heyman, Post.

Speaker 5 (40:15):
Malone played at US Bank Well Tuesday night, and so
not even twelve hours ago, Mall of America said, hey,
jelly Roll, a quick stop at Mall of America to
catch the movie theater there. What do you think he
watched the Final Destination Jelly roll seems like the badass
that watch that.

Speaker 1 (40:29):
I would think that he's like, would think that is stupid.
I'm gonna go, mmm, he saw and stitch? Yeah, hit
no sinners, probably we know what he saw? We don't know, right, did?

Speaker 3 (40:40):
Dang it? That's a bummer.

Speaker 1 (40:41):
Well more dirt.

Speaker 5 (40:42):
Kim Kardashian just finished her law program, not law school,
she didn't go to law school, but her law program
she started six years ago. It's called a Law Office
study program. And she held a ceremony for herself in
the backyard. I saw pictures on her Instagram. But now
since she completed the program, if she wants to practice
law officially, she's gonna have to pass the bar exam.

Speaker 1 (41:00):
And who knows, we might get lawyer Kim in a
couple of years.

Speaker 3 (41:02):
I'd be dope. She'd wear really good outfits to court.

Speaker 1 (41:05):
Would have been very, very intelligent. But the bar exam
is exceedingly challenging, and.

Speaker 4 (41:11):
She would have like eight cameras on her while she
took it, get it from every angle totally.

Speaker 1 (41:15):
Would That's the dirt brought to you by six one
two injured, Heimer and Lammer's injury law
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