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November 14, 2025 22 mins

Gianna and McCabe drop by the After Show

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I don't have headphones for you, McKay, but you can
still join the after show. Can't play a talk back.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Oh, I don't wear headphones anyway.

Speaker 1 (00:06):
You should you work in radio? No for me, you
really should anyway. McKay welcome, and Johnna is here is too.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
We have both of you. Hey for the after show.

Speaker 1 (00:17):
Oh my god, I was planning on this being a
solo podcast or I just like yuck it up about
whatever I want to think.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Friday, it was like a six minute episode of just
you pondering, just.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
Me talking about different things in life, you know, because
I think I'm human.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Yeah, and that's really beautiful.

Speaker 4 (00:33):
Thank you, it's nice. I haven't seen you since your
voice let out earlier this week. Really hard to listen
to it.

Speaker 5 (00:39):
Dare I say it was funny?

Speaker 2 (00:41):
I said, I was so funny.

Speaker 4 (00:42):
I was waiting for one of you guys to scream
at him because like it sounded like you were going
through puberty.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
I know, I know, like, yeah, I can't even do it.
It was so funny, I know. But as in radio
radio land, what do you do? What do you do
when your voice goes out?

Speaker 2 (00:57):
You're lucky you had two continent.

Speaker 5 (01:00):
Yes, I mean, I told you I went to speech
therapy because I got a little poll up. So I
learned tricks and stuff that I'm supposed to do every
single day that I don't do.

Speaker 3 (01:08):
How did you know you had a pull up?

Speaker 5 (01:10):
I became raspier and raspier and raspier. And then Frankie
had his major pull up thing that he had to
get surgery, so he was off the air for a while.

Speaker 4 (01:21):
You have to remember the context of when this was too,
Like a year and a half ago, Gianna was going
out every night getting destroyed single. We were doing this
Saturday night show for like a year. Oh my god,
Oh my god. Gianna would scream all weekend and then
coming into a show and you couldn't hear her because
she was screaming at the bar.

Speaker 5 (01:39):
I'd be like, and her ex boyfriend and my ex boyfriend,
he was shit.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
Those were the days.

Speaker 5 (01:45):
Those were the days. Yeah, I would go out of
a party, I would do karaoke, I would scream. Even now,
I try not to go out anymore because of it.
And when I do, I always lose my voice because
you're talking at a bar over music and alcohols destroys
your vocal cords. Between dehydration and acid. It's a lot.
I learned a lot in speech therapy. It was actually
really what did I hard to provide speech therapy? It

(02:07):
was like genuinely they.

Speaker 4 (02:09):
Did once for somebody I worked with because their voice
was going so bad, and they were like such an
important part of the show. Like they paid for speech
therapy and like actual medical treatment because they were such
a valuable.

Speaker 2 (02:21):
Part of the show.

Speaker 5 (02:22):
Oh my god.

Speaker 2 (02:22):
Yeah, I should have done.

Speaker 3 (02:23):
Met with your They should.

Speaker 1 (02:25):
It was a production person here years ago, and she
was a professional voice actress, and when I was getting
my start in radio and starting to be on the air,
she gave me a hot tip was to read the
newspaper out loud, and that's what I did at home.
I would buy the newspaper to learn how to talk. Yeah, yeah,
read it out loud to my wife.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
You know.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
I also had a vicious Boston accent. You still a
little bit?

Speaker 3 (02:46):
Well, I hide it, I dude. I know.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
When I first got on the air, right, Gianna, It
was on Jammin and the host there I read a
commercial as practice. He goes, this is awful, your boss.
An accent is ridiculous. No, no one will buy that product.

Speaker 4 (03:02):
Yeah, it's different for a commercial, I know, professional, Yeah,
but today it's like we want you to be you.
I know, every once in a while it comes out
and it's like, oh, yeah, it's so funny.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
I know.

Speaker 1 (03:13):
I actually want to start talking how I talk in
my regular, regular, regular, That's how I talk regularly, regular,
that's you.

Speaker 5 (03:22):
Know, you should talk real because I also have access
to the talkbacks, and someone left one the other day.
Oh when my dad Eddie was on the show, and
somebody said, why, out of all of you, Gianna's dad
is the only one that had a Boston accent. I'm
listening to a Boston morning show and all of your
speaking way too properly or something like that, And same thing.

(03:42):
I had a bad accent when I was a child,
and when I started to want to be in the
entertainment industry, my mom was like, oh, then you have
to pronounce your rs or else you're not going to
get hired.

Speaker 3 (03:53):
Yeah, I'm going to switch it up. I'm just saying
I'm just going to go I'll do it right now.

Speaker 5 (03:56):
I'm going to do the fake Boston and I fake
my accent, make six figures from it.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
Did you guys talk about that on the show.

Speaker 5 (04:04):
Should thank god we didn't.

Speaker 4 (04:06):
There's this video Boston Magazine posted from the event they
did with all the big Boston influencers.

Speaker 5 (04:11):
I didn't get invited.

Speaker 4 (04:12):
Yes, I didn't either, and I'm obviously number one, but
they did. The reporter did a question of, hey, how
much do you make as a Boston influencer, And everyone
was saying like, oh, I make six figures.

Speaker 2 (04:23):
I do brand deals for eight K video.

Speaker 4 (04:25):
Somebody like said like a ten K video or something
like that, and I'm like, there's no way.

Speaker 5 (04:32):
No, it's true because I met no and Boston influencer
and his wife was bragging about his brand deal, saying
exact numbers. And then another Boston influencer, for whatever reason,
put me on his private story and posted screenshots of
his emails being like blessed, blessed.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
I'm like, shut the fuck up, I want to know
who that is.

Speaker 5 (04:54):
I'll give you a guess on this podcast.

Speaker 4 (04:57):
On I'm sure you know who's getting canceled. We their help,
But I have heard that is true.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (05:03):
I think everybody who gets asked that question adds a
little extra on top of it. And then yeah, exactly,
and they're probably five American government.

Speaker 5 (05:13):
Yeah, they're not they're not paying. They're all ten ninety nine.
They're not paying however much they're supposed to pay, which
actually sucks because if you think about it, you make
all this money and then at the end of the
year they really get foxed.

Speaker 3 (05:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (05:25):
You know what pisses me off though, is that these
people have all love. I have two thousand followers, but
they don't have that many followers.

Speaker 5 (05:32):
One had less like me and makes more than me.

Speaker 2 (05:34):
Yeah, and it makes no sense.

Speaker 4 (05:35):
Why are you as a brand wasting your thousands of
dollars on these micro influencers when you could spend the
same amount of money at a big media outlet and
get a really good return and there's built in influencers
that come with it.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
Now, that's actually a good point, right, because you could
spend that money and you could get it onto the radio,
onto our streaming and have an influenzer.

Speaker 3 (06:00):
It's like a three and one.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
It's a good point. I get it.

Speaker 4 (06:02):
There's also positives of like that micro thing too, because
like I'm sure like Matt Sheer has a really specific audience,
and if the product is like maps or some ship
I bet his people would love that. Oh yeah, you know,
so if you want a specific thing, that's great, But
I don't know anyway.

Speaker 5 (06:20):
Matt Sheer was the only real one in that video too.
He goes, unlike all these people, I actually have a.

Speaker 2 (06:24):
Boss, I have a real life and a job.

Speaker 5 (06:28):
I'm his biggest fan.

Speaker 4 (06:30):
I'm not talking shit. I'm the people. They have lives,
and they're all really great people. Every single one of
these events I've gone to you with has been interesting
because there's two types of them. There's the really great people.

Speaker 5 (06:42):
And then they're not so great.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
Well, that's like that in anything, right, there's good and
this bad in this room?

Speaker 3 (06:47):
It's just how wait, who's bad in this room?

Speaker 5 (06:49):
Do you want? A fistfight? Is a mood today and
mccaybe and I have been a little weird because when
I started dating Jake, like, I stopped hanging out with
macab as much, so he set mackay tells everyone that.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
Him and I are divorced, all right, because you guys
were best I.

Speaker 4 (07:04):
Referred to as my dear wife, right because we spent
so much time.

Speaker 5 (07:08):
I still am your wife.

Speaker 2 (07:09):
You're not. You're married to Drake.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
Drake Drake how's the highlight of them? Yeah, but you
do approve of Drake, right?

Speaker 2 (07:15):
I love him.

Speaker 4 (07:16):
He's actually one of the best people I've ever met.
He's beautiful, gorgeous and committed to everything he does to
the max. Like genuine best find that she could ever
have found.

Speaker 5 (07:28):
Right, Yeah, I don't even like I was What did
I do to deserve this? Man? It's crazy?

Speaker 2 (07:34):
Did that bitch steal her from me? Yes?

Speaker 3 (07:38):
Wow? That being dr I didn't know you. You're in
a mood today, Okay, can I ask you a question? Mkay?

Speaker 1 (07:44):
This is from the people I had you on last time,
and we did not discuss how you got your name,
your radio name, and they wanted to know that.

Speaker 2 (07:54):
I feel like we talked about that once on the show.
It was just.

Speaker 4 (07:59):
My first pete, first boss gave me a name. Like
that was a thing in radio. Back in the day.
There was like a country station in the building, the
one hundred point nine, the Big Pig, So everyone had.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
The Big Pig.

Speaker 4 (08:10):
The Big Pig doesn't exist anymore. Everyone had pig names,
Like there was Crispy Bacon, there was like pork something.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (08:15):
This was a real radio station.

Speaker 4 (08:17):
It's like the froggies out there that have like Jeff
Hunter Hump not humper, what Hopper like Jeff Hopper or
something like that.

Speaker 3 (08:26):
You know a froggy from like Elvis Duran.

Speaker 4 (08:28):
No, No like stations named Froggy one oh one like
the Office. Yeah, I grew up with kissing jam AnyWho
So yeah, you grew up with normal radio Yes in
big towns yea. But bosses would give you names back then.
And when I got my first job, my boss gave
me the name Brody, which I did, looking back, look
like a brody.

Speaker 2 (08:48):
Don't. Don't fucking say it what.

Speaker 5 (08:51):
I could totally see you as a brody right now.

Speaker 4 (08:54):
Yes, Brody is like, no offense to all the Brody's
out there, but that's like a It literally is bro
in the name bro bro Yeah, Brody, listen.

Speaker 5 (09:02):
I'm on a show called The v Bros. Don't I
don't know.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Right, We've had discussions about you're not necessarily a bro exactly.

Speaker 4 (09:08):
I hated it so much so the first chance I
had when I got another show in another market, I
changed my name. My best friend in high school was
Matt McCabe. I'm like, that's a good radio name, So
I took it, and I became Mike McCabe.

Speaker 5 (09:24):
I love that story.

Speaker 3 (09:26):
But you just go by McCabe though, Yeah, because your
real name is Mike.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
First name is Mike, My real name is Michael. Yeah,
so Mike McCabe, right, whatever.

Speaker 1 (09:34):
Yeah, I thought your name is just easier to say.
I thought your name was Mike McCabe when I met you.
Everyone does, yeah it is. But now you're like prince exactly.
You just have one name that's like, yeah, I guess.

Speaker 5 (09:46):
But it's my real name. That's not even your real name, McCabe.
But that's not even like your name at all.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
Right, have you been to McCabe's house. What's that like?

Speaker 5 (09:56):
It's so cute, it's so like South End, South End.
I remember, this is a whole other story. When McCabe
got that apartment because he was living down the street
from the radio station in Melrose, he hated life, he
hated the apartment. I've toured that place when I was
looking at apartments. I know why you hated it. I've
been there too. But South End is so McCabe, right,

(10:18):
I mean it's so gay.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
It's so it's not gay.

Speaker 5 (10:21):
No, it's pretty gay, but it's pretty good it's not.
It's a typical like single gay man apartment with his
cat pow. It's so organized, it's always clean.

Speaker 3 (10:31):
Yeah, he's he strikes me as a clean freak.

Speaker 4 (10:34):
He is not a clean freak. But I like things
to look good, like I like to feel comfortable. If
something's out of place, I feel like shit like like
that's why I don't work in the main studio because
it's like a house. I can't focus if it's not clean.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
I'm the same way now, I am a freaking trash.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
This is becoming therapy.

Speaker 5 (10:53):
It is therapy. But McCay has a really cool thing
in his apartment. It's like an old radio, right or
what is it?

Speaker 2 (11:00):
This big Yeah?

Speaker 4 (11:01):
I found it on Facebook marketplace, this big console like
you know they would make huge like record player radio
things and they made them into furniture. It's this big
r C a record player slash a MFM radio and
it's beautiful mid century.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
But what is it? Oh it's not, it's not. Is
it furniture?

Speaker 2 (11:19):
Yeah, it's like your TV stand, but oh put the
TV on.

Speaker 4 (11:22):
It got inside of it is a turntable in a
radio and it weighs about eight thousand pounds.

Speaker 5 (11:28):
Mind you. There's no elevator in his and he's on.

Speaker 3 (11:31):
The fifth fith how'd you get it up?

Speaker 2 (11:34):
Me?

Speaker 4 (11:35):
My friend Sean and lou Rizzo, who's I love the
local record label Rap.

Speaker 2 (11:41):
We bring it up the stairs.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
Now he works with Shine Down Now yeah he works.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
Oh yeah, he's in management now yeah, Shin Down.

Speaker 3 (11:47):
He's the man.

Speaker 2 (11:48):
He's my neighbor. He lives a block away from me,
he does.

Speaker 3 (11:50):
I didn't know that. Are you in a brownstone?

Speaker 4 (11:54):
Uh no, I'm actually in the like one building in
the South End. That's not that it's it's like it looks.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
Like one, but it's it's okay building.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
Do you go to club cafe?

Speaker 2 (12:05):
No?

Speaker 3 (12:06):
Okay, what is club cafe?

Speaker 5 (12:07):
I want to go.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
It's just a gay bar.

Speaker 3 (12:09):
Like.

Speaker 4 (12:10):
But the thing about club cafe is, I don't it's
just not my scene anymore. It's really for younger people. Yeah,
but you're young. I'm like, I'm twenty nine. It's for
like the college kids. Oh okay, you know yeah.

Speaker 3 (12:23):
Wait. The mayor of the South then goes to club cafe?
H so was he like?

Speaker 2 (12:27):
What do they probably shouldn't be going to?

Speaker 3 (12:29):
Okay? What do they call that? Cruising? Is it.

Speaker 2 (12:31):
No, I hope maybe he is.

Speaker 4 (12:33):
Actually they've made it very hard to cruise at club cafe.
They have like bathroom security.

Speaker 5 (12:38):
Now, wait, what what is cruising?

Speaker 2 (12:40):
Cruising?

Speaker 5 (12:40):
Stupid? Is say it?

Speaker 2 (12:43):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (12:44):
I don't know how to give an examples, like an example,
an example. I went to pe Town for the first
time this summer billion and I yes, so gay. Yes,
the gayest place I've ever been, but one of my
favorite places. So we were taking a petty cab back
to the hotel at night time down the main and
the driver of the pedal bike kid was from Austria,

(13:04):
so he's giving us a tour kind of and he
all of a sudden he stops in between these two
houses and there's an alleyway that goes to the beach,
and he stops and he goes, you know what's down there?
I go no, He goes, that's dick doc. And I
got my wife goes TikTok. He goes, no, dick, dick doc.
He goes, do me a favor, don't ever go down there,

(13:24):
but google it. Yeah, so we did. And what it is,
Dick Doc. It's at nighttime under the docks there. Yeah,
it's a place for you know, gay men to go
and hook up with each other and cruise. They cruise
each other and it's a real place. It has a
location on Google Maps.

Speaker 3 (13:40):
Gean it.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
You can look it up.

Speaker 1 (13:41):
Yeah, there's a documentary and YouTube about it. Yeah, Dick Doc.
Do you know about Dick Doc.

Speaker 2 (13:46):
I've heard of it.

Speaker 1 (13:46):
I didn't know it was this storied, Yes, very much so.
But that's where you go to like cruise, which basically
just means hook up.

Speaker 4 (13:52):
Yeah, it's finding a partner without really like saying it. Yes,
I'm walking down the sh street. I look you up
and down, and you look me up and down the
right way, and you're like, oh, okay, let's go hook up.

Speaker 5 (14:07):
Okay, all right. I love that, do you?

Speaker 1 (14:10):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (14:10):
I do. I asked McCabe to put me on Pride
Radio and he wouldn't because you're not gay. But I
love you.

Speaker 3 (14:16):
Wait, hold on, hold on for the listening audience.

Speaker 4 (14:22):
I program the the gay station for iHeart.

Speaker 2 (14:25):
We have a like a network.

Speaker 3 (14:26):
A hell of a hell of an endorsement there.

Speaker 4 (14:28):
It's awesome. You should stream it on the iHeart app.
It's actually a really fun playlist is like Lady Gaga,
y Gaga, ari all of the trending gay artists and throwbacks, right,
a lot of good dance music.

Speaker 2 (14:41):
You play Madonna, it's so.

Speaker 5 (14:43):
Good, like I. I listened to it on the iHeart app.
It's really good and the cave is so good at it.
But yeah, I asked him to let me be like
mother g.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
But here's the thing.

Speaker 4 (14:53):
You'd be great of it, and you'd fit perfect on there,
except for the fact that it's a product made by
the community for the community.

Speaker 5 (15:00):
Oh yeah, yeah, But I love the community. I am
an ally.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
Through and as am I you are, You're a very
big ally.

Speaker 3 (15:08):
My uncle died of AIDS. He was gay. He died
in nineteen ninety. I was very I don't remember him.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
He was very young, but he came out as gay
in the late seventies and it was so taboo here
in Boston. He moved to New York and he was
into the disco era, and he caught HIV, you know,
from you know another man. Yeah, and he came back
and he got very sick and he died very quickly.
So in the early nineties they had this I don't
know if you remember this, McKay. You weren't born, but

(15:34):
the white in Washington. They had this big AIDS benefit
where these quilts were made by you know family, very famous. Yeah,
and we made one our family, we all got together
and made this quote my uncle Bill.

Speaker 3 (15:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
So at a young age, I remember being like, you know,
seven or eight years old and my mother explaining to
me what homosexuality was and what AIDS was.

Speaker 3 (15:54):
So I was I knew at a very young age.
I was never wearing at output.

Speaker 4 (15:57):
It's crazy that Yeah, that era the worst pandemic.

Speaker 2 (16:01):
Yeah that no one ever talks about.

Speaker 4 (16:03):
Oh my god, thousands and thousands of men lost and
not a lot of care on miixing it for a
very long time.

Speaker 3 (16:11):
Now I know. And now you can live with it forever.
Yeah right, magic John.

Speaker 2 (16:15):
Yeah you can. You can exist like a normal person.

Speaker 5 (16:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (16:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (16:18):
There's a lot of like remedies, not remedies, but treatment,
you know, like life saving miracle drugs.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
And don't they have something you can take if you
are gonna maybe partake in those yes, activities. It's called
something right, does it? It's it's something you can take
to that will prevent you.

Speaker 4 (16:35):
From getting There's a drug called prep that's it, Yeah,
monthly pill or there's like an injection.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
Yeah, every six months. So is it?

Speaker 3 (16:45):
Is it?

Speaker 2 (16:47):
Everyone takes it?

Speaker 1 (16:48):
Okay, okay, yeah, this is this is quite the after show.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
This is crazy love. I have a meeting at eleven o'clock.

Speaker 5 (17:01):
About what right now? Oh my god, you have five minutes.

Speaker 3 (17:04):
You know what it is. It's a gay radio meeting.
We're not invited.

Speaker 5 (17:08):
We're not invited.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
We're too straight on.

Speaker 1 (17:10):
Oh okay, yeah, yeah, big things coming. All right, guys,
all right, thank you McCabe. All right, well okay then
all right he just walked out.

Speaker 5 (17:17):
Why are you gay? You know that guy?

Speaker 1 (17:19):
Okay, so hold on, hold on, hold on. So as
his bestie home or bestie.

Speaker 3 (17:23):
Yeah, he gets a little moody sometimes, yes, yeah, what
is that little stress?

Speaker 5 (17:28):
Yeah, you know he's gay.

Speaker 3 (17:30):
It's the gratitude. There's a gratitude he does.

Speaker 5 (17:33):
Of course he does.

Speaker 3 (17:34):
He just came in swinging.

Speaker 5 (17:36):
Oh my god. Yeah, you should trust me. I've been
through it with yeah, like he's only ever been mad
at me. One time. He yelled at me one time.

Speaker 1 (17:43):
He no mckaye yelled, not Yeah, I've never heard him yell.

Speaker 5 (17:47):
But you know what I mean. He was stern with me,
and that to me was his version of yelling at
Frankie's wedding. I was so obliterated. I like, wouldn't leave,
and I'm like, I'm gonna go, you know, I'm gonna say,
I'm gonna I don't know, And he was like, you motherfucker.
Like he was like getting this uber I called the uber,
like we're leaving now.

Speaker 3 (18:06):
Yeah, you deserve that.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
I was like, yeah, if he was sober, I mean,
if you were sober, and I couldn't imagine you do
anything that would make him that mad.

Speaker 5 (18:14):
I was so annoying.

Speaker 3 (18:15):
Yeah, you were drinking.

Speaker 5 (18:16):
Yeah, annoying.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
Early a couple of minutes ago, you were talking about
losing your voice because you were going out all the
time and all that. I just want to point out that,
you know, I don't drink anymore, so I don't.

Speaker 3 (18:25):
Really go to those places.

Speaker 1 (18:26):
But recently I went to do you watch It's always
Doney in Philadelphia?

Speaker 5 (18:30):
I've only watched a few episodes.

Speaker 3 (18:32):
I never really watched it. I did a little bit,
but early years ago.

Speaker 1 (18:36):
Anyway, one of the guys was in Boston for a
weekend like last month, and so I went to go
meet him with my friend who's a super fan. Yeah,
and we were in several different bars in Boston and
I'm like, we're trying to talk to each other, We're screaming,
and it's exhausting.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
It's the worst.

Speaker 5 (18:50):
It's exhausting.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
I mean it's worse because I wasn't drinking, so obviously
if you're drinking, it doesn't seem as bad.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
Yeah, but I'm like yelling in his ear and he's
not hearing me. By the end of the night, I'm like, oh,
this is exhausting.

Speaker 2 (19:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (19:02):
My vocal coach literally told me to not go out,
like they were like, if you're gonna go out, don't talk. Yeah,
and if you need to talk to somebody, get right
up in their ear, Like, do not yell over the music,
no matter what you do. Because your vocal cords working
in radio, that's your instrument, right. It's like, you know

(19:25):
Ariana Grande, her vocal cords are literally her money maker.
So that's why it's so important genuinely to protect them.
I actually have usually look into this. It's like a
mouth nebulizer, So when you're driving the work I used
to do, I need to do it more. There's just
like a saline solution and you just nebulize and you
just breathe and out for ten minutes. It goes on.

Speaker 3 (19:45):
What does it do add moisture?

Speaker 5 (19:46):
Moisture. It's very important, especially when you're waking up that early.

Speaker 3 (19:50):
You're probably like, yeah, you know, because I don't do
any vocal warm.

Speaker 5 (19:54):
Up and you should. And I know it's easier said
than done, but I need to do it too. I
don't do it anymore. And cool downs when you're done.

Speaker 3 (20:02):
We have to cool down too.

Speaker 5 (20:04):
I learned all of this, like it's exactly.

Speaker 3 (20:06):
What's a cool down? Consist of same.

Speaker 5 (20:08):
As the warm up those lip trills the Bible, but
you have lips, you can do it.

Speaker 3 (20:15):
Spit everywhere, just spit everywhere. I can't. I can't whistle either.
I can't do that.

Speaker 5 (20:21):
And you know what's important. That's all with the front
of your mouth, and that's important for speaking properly. It
needs to be like at the front of your mouth,
not the back when you're constricting your vocal cords. I
still don't speak properly, even though I know all this.

Speaker 3 (20:34):
In fun, I should go to one of these things,
one of these.

Speaker 5 (20:37):
My insurance covered it, so you should look into it.
And I think she operated on Steven Tyler. Oh, because
he got his vocal cord surgery here, so Andrews Yes, yes,
because I feel like she alluded to it without saying it, Hippa.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
Yeah, and Adele Adele Is also did yes, and and
and this is I don't know if this is true not,
but the weekend was spotted here remember this in September.
Oh yeah, he was at Wilson Farms. Yes, yeah, and
someone said it could have been that he was being seen,
you know, for just a voice thing'll come here.

Speaker 5 (21:13):
Yeah, because it's the best place to be. You should
really look into it.

Speaker 3 (21:17):
Sam Smith, Yes, I think he'd also was.

Speaker 5 (21:19):
There too, because when you get the surgery, it's scary.
It's very scary.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
Yeah, I bet.

Speaker 1 (21:24):
All right, Well, two things I'm gonna do today on
this Friday, I'm gonna call your people, and I'm gonna
listen to gay radio.

Speaker 5 (21:30):
Yeah, radio radio, baby.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
That's what I'm gonna do. All right.

Speaker 1 (21:33):
Well, Gianna, it's been fun. It's been a fun week.
Thank you for joining the show and the after show.

Speaker 5 (21:38):
Thank you for having me.

Speaker 3 (21:39):
We appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (21:40):
And yeah, listen, if Lisa is out again, we know
we can depend on you to step in. I would
love to and if you're ever in early, like early,
I mean like by ten am, you can join the
after show.

Speaker 5 (21:50):
Oh my god. Really yeah, I'm gonna cry again.

Speaker 3 (21:53):
Oh my god. Here we go with the cry.

Speaker 5 (21:54):
Oh God.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
All right, after show, Army, thank you. How about this
a twenty two minute podcast on a Friday. It's a
fucking Miracle by say funk Fu. Yes, Bye bye
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