Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, everybody, welcome into the after show. Justin Winnie. Here
it is Wednesday, and Winnie, as I look outside the
window of the studio, I see blue skies. It's a
nice day and lots of wind. There are trees outside
our studio, and you can tell if it's windy, obviously
when they're moving from side to side like they are
right now.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
I see that going on over there.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
See here's the thing I was telling my wife about this.
I love the warm weather, but when it gets late September,
I'm kind of done with the hot weather. I want cool,
like hoodie weather. And what happens is it gets warm
in my house. I'm on the second floor, and then
I have to turn the AC on. And I'm not
a big ac guy. It messes with my sinuses.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
It's funny that you say that, because I'm on the
four floor, you know, in my apartment, and I'm still
now running the AC. Likes just sixty five because it
gets so hot up there.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
Sixty five. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
My boyfriend, I think, is like gonna freeze to death.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
Like it's like a fucking ice cube.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
I know. He's like, Winnie, it's like freezing in hand.
I'm like, I can't. I'm so hot.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
Let me guess, when you sleep, you wrap the entire
blanket around your whole body, and that can't and we cuddle.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Yeah, and then I'll wear it. And then he goes,
I don't why you're wearing sweatshirt because you're gonna take
it off. And then an hour into sleeping, I get up.
I'm so hot, and I take my sweatshirt off and
then I crank the acy. It's it's this mental illness.
But I can't sleep if it's hot. But then I'm
too cold. But this is the time of year, like
during like the actual winter, I don't even have to
put the heat on. It gets so warm up there.
(01:27):
But you're fine, like you're at a nice temperature right
now in this like you know, fake summer. I'm still hot,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
If you own your own house, yeah, you wouldn't be
putting at sixty five.
Speaker 2 (01:39):
Well I sixty eight, But I still have to pay
for it.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
You pay your electric Yeah, oh you do?
Speaker 2 (01:44):
Yeah, Oh my god, my bill is a fucking really hot. Okay,
all right, but I always justified that I don't use
any heat during the winter, so my winter bills like
so low right. I actually now do the national grid.
You can do like an average of what it is
per year. So I pay like I used to pay
like eighty in the winter and like two hundred in
the in the summer. Now I pay like one forty
(02:05):
all year, like average out because I was like it
was such a big difference from like winter. I was like, oh,
this is great. You're spending like, you know, eighty bucks
on electric, and then I go to the summer it's
like two fifty.
Speaker 1 (02:14):
I'm like, what the fuck we should actually do that
our electric bill in the summer is you would you
would die?
Speaker 2 (02:20):
You should? You should do it. It's a I mean
I never did it at first because I'm a single,
you know person. I didn't need a budget like that,
you know, in the sense of like, oh I need
to know exactly what I'm paying for utilities every month.
But after a while, I was like, damn, this does
make a difference when you're used to paying eighty and
then it jumps to two fifty. Yeah, it's crazy, but
do you you must pay like five hundred a month?
Speaker 1 (02:39):
Yeah, ny goes up to like eight hundred.
Speaker 2 (02:41):
Yeah, I believe.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
Well, because we have the central air the pool, the
hot tub, the sauna, and the other. The other thing
is that we have two households, two full kitchens, and shoot.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
Are they on one? Are they on one thing? Are you?
Speaker 1 (02:51):
Yeah? It's all on one.
Speaker 2 (02:52):
Oh so it's not like nanny has one any one.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
But you know Nana is they would naughty work when
she's retired now, but she from home and retire. Yeah,
she retired.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
Oh she gave up after they fired her.
Speaker 1 (03:04):
Yeah, well they laid her off and then you know,
Nana cooks all day.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
Yeah, it's not to be hot down there.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
No, down there is cool. Okay, upstairs it's hot, yeah
because the heat.
Speaker 2 (03:17):
Right living in the basement, it's always nice and chill
cool now there.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
Yeah, so that's a heavy electric bill. But it's gonna
be a nice stretch of weather. And I bring it
up because this weekend is gonna be warm. You close
the pool, Oh we close it early September. We don't
have a heater.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
Yeah, but you wouldn't, but you don't wait to see
if you have like an eighty degree day.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
No, you know why, I could. I could do it.
But what happens is at nighttime when it cools. Even
when it's hot, now at night it cools and the
water cools down, and it doesn't stay hot long enough
to heat the water back up, so's.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
A small window of warmth from like you know.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
Yeah, like Lisa, she almost a pool in fucking March
and closes it in November.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
Yeah, she really stretches it.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Yeah, because she has a heater and she can turn
the heat around when she wants to go. I don'tkay,
I do ice baths, So that's true. What happens is
nobody swims in it, and I still have to do
the upkeep and pay for the chemicals, get and clean it.
And then when things start falling, I should ask Lista
that although she's probably has pool cleaners, Like the trees,
the leaves start falling every day. You look at it,
(04:17):
it's full of leaves.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
Oh yeah, yeah, because she has a very tree backyard,
like tree filled backyard, but not necessarily right around the pool,
like kind of around the pool. The's really not much
trees right there. Yeah. Still blow, Yeah, that's true.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
They still blow this weekend when he I'm going to
see the smashing Machine.
Speaker 2 (04:33):
Yeah. I didn't know who Mark was until today.
Speaker 1 (04:36):
Yeah, he was a UFC legend early when UFC first started,
like in the nineties. He was like a legend, and
his story is your typical story of like he was
a superstar and then he did a bunch of steroids,
gone on painkillers, became a drug addict. You know, woman,
all that stuff.
Speaker 2 (04:53):
The opposite you were a drug addict and now you're
a superstar.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
Yeah, oh thank you. Yeah, but it's it's actually a
really cool story. Now he's in recovery, Okay, so it's
actually really cool. I listened to his interview. It was
really good. His whole life story. But this guy is
a monster. So I'm really looking forward to seeing the
Rocks performance. So that's good. I'll have a broad date
on Friday night with no Mike. I'm gonna ask zeb
today if he wants to go though.
Speaker 2 (05:15):
I think he would like that type of movie.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
Yeah he would. I'm going to see him today for
a leg workouts. Oh fun, So that's good.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
On one of your four gyms that you belong to.
Speaker 1 (05:24):
I belonged to three gyms.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
I have not worked out in so long because I've been.
Speaker 1 (05:28):
Saying, oh yeah, you get back into it.
Speaker 2 (05:29):
I do, I will, I will. I think I'm gonna
start next week. Just because they don't they because it's
still on my I don't really don't want to sweat,
it's on my scalp, and like, you know what I mean,
I'm just like, I don't know, I'm just like still,
I've seen my dad today too, I've barely seen him.
Speaker 1 (05:42):
You gotta wear a mask or something.
Speaker 2 (05:43):
No, I'm just not like hugging him. Oh yeah, stay
in the distance. Yeah yeah, because obviously he's you know,
he's been home for like a couple of days now
since you know, surgery. Yeah, and he's obviously miz. But
I went. I went and saw him over the weekend,
and I didn't hug him. I just liked them for
a little bit. But I kind of hung out in
the kitchen with my mom and like he was in
(06:04):
the living room.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
You can get like a megaphone like Taylor Swift had
into her promo video and just talk.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
To him that I don't even need one with my
loud voice. My parents house was small, so anyways, but yeah,
I did wanted to do that today.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
Oh wait, do you ever go back to your parents'
house and think about how small it is? Yes, and
how big it was it seemed when you were younger,
it never seemed.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
Bank to me because I shared a room with two
girls my parents house. Fun fact, they bought it from
my mom's dad and his brother when their mom passed
away because it was her house. So it's been in
my house for one hundred it's been in my family
for over one hundred years. My grandfather grew up in
that house, so my parents bought it as like a
starter home and then they just never left. So yeah,
(06:47):
so's it's always it's a sense of comfort. I love
their home, but it's small, and they always said they
didn't want to be house poor, so I didn't have
my own room, but I had a car, Like do
you want a car or do you want your own room?
Do you want to go to college or do you
want your own room? So that was kind of like
the trade off so me but so funny that room
that we shared when three of us, it's felt small,
(07:08):
but I got it before I moved out. When I
was here my early twenties, I was the one in
it because my little sister had the smaller room. And
I'm like, this room is huge for one person, but
for three now for my sister has it because she
lives at home. She has like a sitting area, a
TV area, then her bed in her closet. It's right,
but when you're there with two other girls, it feels
like the smallest room in the world. You're on top
(07:29):
of each other. But yeah, no, I love going on.
My parents only live like seven minutes from me. I
love going their house. That always feels like home.
Speaker 1 (07:35):
Do you ever go there and eat their food? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (07:36):
Yeah, Oh my god, what's their's is mine? And they
never and they never really come to They come to
my house occasionally, but there's no need to. I just
go to their house.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
They food shop extra for their children or they are
two children that don't live there.
Speaker 2 (07:47):
No, so three of us don't live there because my brother,
you know. But my brother, my older sister, and then
me don't live there. My little sister four us. Yeah yeah,
my little sister could move out, but she's just been
saving to buy a house, like she has saved so
much money.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
My brother too, Yes, she.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
Saved so much money. But anyways, so they always have
I mean obviously my niece is too. The house always
has food, but not as good as it used to
be like when they had us, like all living there,
like sometimes I'm like, you got nothing, Like, they don't
have as good as snacks that used to. Did you
notice about your parents? My parents don't eat like they
used to. My mother's a picker now she doesn't really
eat a lot like they. I'm like, my sister goes, Yeah,
(08:24):
we never have food. My sister buys food for herself
and like my you know, my parents always have enough,
but it's not like what it.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
Used to be because they were buying food for their kids.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
Yeah, so they always have snacks for my nieces and stuff.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
And they realized after the kids were gone, when they
went shopping at the supermarket, Wow, I could save a
lot of money.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
Clothes and I'm went grocery shopping on Sunday.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
I'm gonna say no, okay, so we're just two of us, right,
we don't have kids.
Speaker 2 (08:49):
It's just us, right, And I said to him he
normally pays, but I was like, all pay because I
knew it was going to be a small batch because
I was sick all before, so I wasn't really cooking.
We were like getting takeout, so we had plenty of food.
So we're just picking up. We pick up two bags
of groceries and I was like, oh my, it's gonna
be thirty bucks. Like I normally spend like one hundred,
you know, seventy five. It was fifty seven dollars and
(09:10):
I don't even know what we got. That was fifty
seven dollars. And I was just like and then he's like, no,
let me pay. I was like, no, no, no, I want
to pay. And I was like, fuck, I shouldn't pay
because I was like, why was it fifty seven dollars?
It's expensive, like and that was market basket, which is
the cheapest option. And I got like, I got coal, brew,
I got like milk I got, we got like a pizza,
(09:31):
frozen pizza, we got, we got fruit, like, we didn't
get much, and I was really annoyed. We didn't even
meet or anything because I had it all frozen because
we went shop. We got no meat, we got no
real like things of substance.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
Yeah, you sound like my wife. This was hard this weekend.
I said to her, God forbid, when you when you
pass away, when that time comes on your tombstone, it's
gonna say, it's gonna say. But I didn't even get
that much because every time.
Speaker 2 (09:56):
She also, I spent fifty a week.
Speaker 1 (09:58):
Yeah, every time we go in the she did it again,
and I said, oh my god, you say that every
single time and she goes. I just remember like her
first our first apartment, she would go to market basket
and spend one hundred bucks and it would be enough
for the week. Yeah, and now I know we have
kids too, you know, it's like two three hundred bucks
and it's not even that much stuff.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
Yeah, no, I was so. I was just literally so
annoyed because our I mean, we have food in the
house right now, but ours we're not stacked, like we
got food, but we're not We're not overly stacked. And
I was just like, we literally are spending so much
money on food.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Yeah, it's expensive, man, I.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
Mean things that were literally seven eight dollars were used
to be like two or three dollars.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
Yeah. Cigarettes are ten dollars a pack or more. Isn't
that crazy?
Speaker 2 (10:38):
It's not Moronnie smokes howunty packs?
Speaker 1 (10:40):
She I don't know, maybe a pack a day, I
don't know.
Speaker 2 (10:43):
So that's that's like eighty bucks a week.
Speaker 1 (10:46):
Yeah, well yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah yeah, she gets me.
In New hampshire's not as expensive. Yeah, but it's still
it's crazy. I remember when cigarettes were like three dollars.
My mom used to write me a note and I
go down the store to uh to buy them. I
told you that about my first job with the snitch.
Remember that, Yes, yes.
Speaker 2 (11:04):
Yes, you did tell me that.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
I do. Remember this woman at my aunt worked at
my mine's friend worked for the public health department. And
I looked old for twelve, so she would pay me
to go out with her and walk in the stores
and try to buy cigarettes. Right, and if they did
sell them to me, who was twelve, she would go
in and write them a citation. But yeah, they were
like three or five bucks, and then they kept going up,
up and up. So I always wonder this, if you're
out and about on the street, running around and you
(11:26):
ask someone for a cigarette, do they give it? Well,
you are a buck, I judge a book. Yeah, that's
what I would do. Well, they used to have Lucy's
at the store. Lucy's were loose cigarettes that you could buy.
Oh really, they called them lucies.
Speaker 2 (11:37):
Wait, obviously you never really talked about your cigarette smoking
because you always talk about you drug addiction. But did
you smoke cigarettes that much?
Speaker 1 (11:45):
Yeah? I was a heavy smoker all the way up
until I was I could two thousand and twenty six.
Speaker 2 (11:51):
Wait twenty seven, Wait you wait? You smoked cigarettes when
you were clean?
Speaker 1 (11:56):
For yeah? Yeah, for a year. I stopped swiming two
thousand and nine.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
Okay, because I never knew you to smoke cigarette.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
I mean I I I vape for a little while.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
No. What happened was I wanted to quit and I
didn't think I could. So then in two thousand and nine,
I quit, and Jen still smoked. I quit for six months,
and I wanted to smoke so bad. I had the
obsession and I fought it for six months. And then
there was a snowstorm at my little room that I rented,
and it was Jen and I's big blizzard, and she
was smoking, and I was like, it looks so good,
it smells so good. Let me get one. And I
(12:26):
took one and I lit it and I took a
couple drags and I inhaled the smoke, and when I
tell you, I could feel the poison in my body.
It was the strangest thing. And I was so disgusted
with how I felt. I put the cigarette out and
I said, I'm never going to smoke again, and I
never smoked.
Speaker 2 (12:42):
One yea smoking cigarettes.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
So she smoked probably smoked in twenty thirteen or fourteen.
She quit with the vape so she started vaping. And
then we were on vacation on a beach and she
was vaping. She had just quit some strawberry cheesecake and
she was just hitting it and it smelled so good,
and I was like, let me get a hit.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
Wait a question. When you were actively like doing hard drugs,
did you not smoke cigarettes as much?
Speaker 1 (13:07):
No? I smoked.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
Oh okay, So I didn't know you like smoked heavier
after you were clean.
Speaker 1 (13:12):
Yeah, probably, you know, but you know, I didn't really
have money to buy cigarettes all the time. I used
to go to Malden Courthouse and they had the ashtray
full of sand. Yeah, and so when they'd have breaks,
the lawyers would come out or you know, people would
come out. They'd take a couple drags and they would
put the cigarette out. But it wasn't like an ashtray
where it were like smushed. It would just keep the
cigarette hole and just put it out. Yeah right, yeah, yeah.
(13:33):
So I would roll up there and I'd wait and
then when they all go inside I'd go up there
and I'd take all the snipes out.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
Was my thing was that you only had twenty bucks,
you'd much rather spend it on drugs and cigarettes.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
Right, Yeah, But I had a hustle that they caught
on to eventually. So if I had fifty dollars for
say a gram of dope, coke or dope, whatever I
was getting, right, I would short them the five dollars.
I'd say to the dealer, Hey, I only have forty
five so I can get cigarettes, because there was nothing
better than getting high and then having They.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
Always smit, they always took the forty five, or they.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
Started to catch on eventually where they would say no, no, no, no, no,
it was.
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Only forty five.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
Yeah. Well, no, it could be like I had. If
I was copping for other people, it could be like
two hundred dollars, I give them one ninety five. I
was always five woll discount. Yeah yeah, but they figured out.
Speaker 2 (14:21):
Turn customer, I'd give you. I'd give you a nice
little discount too.
Speaker 1 (14:24):
Yeah. And then my dad smoked too, so I would
steal his cigarettes and then uh yeah, I mean.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
I never grew up around smokers, so yeah, no, my house,
my grandfather. My dad's dad smoked, but he moved. Long
story short, he got in a fight with somebody at
the old at the seniors they had my grandmas would
be in senior housing, the elderly house. Senior housing not
like not you know, not like an argic home, but
like you know, they all had their own apartments. You know,
(14:51):
it's like you know, low income housing for seniors. And
from my Sito got to stay. But my Jito had
to go and he went back to Lebanon because he
had nowhere else to go. So I really grow up
with him that much. So he was the only person
I knew that like smoked like in my immediate circle.
But my parents don't. My grandparents did, in my aunts
and uncles did. One of my uncles did, but not rarely.
But but yeah, people I saw all the time no interesting
(15:12):
and also don't drink. That's why I don't think I
really was curious. Yeah, you know, because again my grandfather
was an alcoholic, so my dad didn't really drink like that.
Like my dad has like a beer at like a
wedding or like you know, but like we never had
alcohol in the house. Yeah, if we go out, he
has to have a tough week or a tough month
to be I want a beer, like when we go
out to eat.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
Well, he's normal.
Speaker 2 (15:33):
Yeah, yeah, I guess.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
By the way, it is October first, which is could
be sober October.
Speaker 3 (15:38):
Good morning, morning crew, it's Lucy here, Justin. I just
wanted to give you a quick shout out because say
is October first, and I am participating in my first
sober October. There's a lot of benefits other than quitting
alcohol that you can get from sober October, and I'm
(15:58):
looking forward to finding where this journey leads me. So
thank you Justin for being such an inspiration.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Have a great day, all that's cool. You can do
sober October. You can also do dry January, just for
the normal folks that want to just see you. Know,
you'll feel better. You're one hundred percent will.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
You say that. I don't think I've ever drank enough
to know how much better you can feel. But people
that drink regularly say they stop drinking for like a month,
they feel different, They feel more live, they feel more cognizant.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
Alcoholis is really really not good for you. Yeah, you
know what I mean. That's why that's why things like, okay,
you know I like to justify things. That's what I do.
It's in my nature. It's it's human nature, right, I
call it a justification justice. Oh it's like I do
the nicotine pouches, which I like to do, you know,
and people are like, oh, that's gross. Moll the fuck
(16:46):
are you going out on the weekends and drinking alcohol,
which is literally like poison in your body? I mean
nicotine alcohol. I'm gonna choose nicotine, not alcohol. Anyway. Alcohol.
When I started with my coach that I had, I
sent them on my information. He sent me the whole
plan and it said at the very bottom it said,
I'm not going to tell you can't drink alcohol. He's like,
(17:07):
but I will tell you if you yeah, no, no, no.
He didn't know that. It was sober nothing. He didn't
even know who I was. That nothing. He goes, I'm
not going to tell you can't drink alcohol. You're an adult.
But I will tell you if you choose to drink
alcohol in any capacity, it will one d hold you
back from your goals. That's what he said. I thought
that was interesting, And what he means probably is the
calories from it. I mean you could drink like a tickey.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
A lot of people drink kila and water on a
fitness journey.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
Which you could do that. Yeah, you could do that.
Speaker 2 (17:32):
That's a very low calorie, right, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Although my dad was drinking a nickelob.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
Ultroy, like ninety five calories.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
It's lower calorie. He's like, cool, this is pretty good.
Speaker 3 (17:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (17:42):
But even if they're under their ninety calories or eighty calories,
if you have four or five, that's five hundred calories.
Speaker 1 (17:46):
Well, there you go.
Speaker 2 (17:47):
You know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (17:48):
Yeah, there you go.
Speaker 2 (17:49):
But talk I love a nice coke.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
Yeah, sells the water. I was talking to Freddy, the
guy from Wyndham High School.
Speaker 2 (17:55):
By the way, what what's his restaurant.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
It's the Meridian Food Market. It's a deli like Mediterranean.
It's Italian. Oh, Italian, yeah, and East Boston. He's coming tomorrow.
I don't know if he's coming. He's going to send
a food drop for us. Yeah forgiving a shout out
to Wyndham High. But I was talking to Freddy and
he lives in Wyndham. And afterwards he's like, oh my god,
thank you so much. This is so great. He goes,
we got to meet up. You're in Salem and get
a drink together, and I don't even correct him, like yeah,
(18:19):
no problem. And then he must have been with his
wife or something and he was like, oh, oh no, no, no,
I have a drink and you have celica water and
I'm like, yeah, with a line, that's fine. Alcohol doesn't
bother me at all? Is alcohol in my house right now?
In the fridge? Oh well non, he likes to drink. Yeah,
and then people her family comes over. You know, my
dad have a beer hair in there. It doesn't bother me.
Speaker 2 (18:39):
Yeah, no, it doesn't. It doesn't seem like it's something
a trigger you.
Speaker 1 (18:42):
Now if you took some cocaine or some heroin or
some pills.
Speaker 2 (18:46):
But speaking of that, you know how I watched High
Town while I was watching this. Okay, the amount of
one lesbian scenes and the amount a coke that was
done in that show is insane. Is that like pe
Town in general? Is that like cops in general? Is
that lesbians? I don't fucking know. But it was the
girl literally just.
Speaker 1 (19:03):
Was it cocaine or was it meth cocaine?
Speaker 2 (19:06):
Then she scared us off when she started.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
Doing crack because she's gay lesbian. She's gays me. Okay,
I'm just saying in the gay male, I don't know
about the female, but in the male gay community, crystal
meth is huge. Why because it's really good for sex.
I don't get you going, just get well that's poppers.
Oh yeah, but math is very It's I told you
(19:30):
that story before. I had this like short dealings with
the with the gay community in Boston with drugs. Did
I ever tell you this?
Speaker 3 (19:36):
Then?
Speaker 2 (19:36):
They wanted to suck your dick?
Speaker 1 (19:38):
No, no, no, no. I had this like connection with these
gay gay kids where I was like getting them drugs,
and the person that hooked me up with them, he
was the middleman. And after a couple of times he
said to me one day, he goes, I'm just gonna
give you them to you. You can just meet with them.
I don't want to meet with them anymore. And I go,
you don't want to make money, and he goes, no,
it's just they're very different. And I didn't know what
(20:00):
he meant, you know what I mean. So then I
started meeting up with them and it was these like
in Boston, these you know, they were these gay kids
that had a lot of money and They sold a
lot of drugs, yeah, okay, and a lot of crystal meth, ecstasy,
things like that. And after a while I was meeting them,
I thought it was a little bit weird. I'd meet
them in hotels. I go to their house and I
saw it was actually my cousin who introduced me. I
(20:22):
saw him again and I go, what's the deal with
these these these kids? Man? And he goes, the problem
with them is that they like to smoke crystal meth,
and that's okay. But after they stay up for two
or three days or more, things start getting very weird.
They get like schizophrenic. And I was like, oh, okay.
And then one day I went to their house to
sell them some stuff and it happened they had It
(20:44):
was several people in there. They had been up for
three or four days, and it was like a horror movie.
They were like talking to themselves. There was a girl
on the floor like having a conversation with like a
fucking doll. There there were barbies hanging from the ceiling
that were like mutilated. Did they weren't making any sense there.
It was the I can't even describe it was so bad.
(21:04):
I'll just say it knew them being gay. It was
just that they were doing like they were doing too
much metha. There was nothing he being gay. But what
I learned is, uh, you know, anyone can do crystal meth,
but in the gay community of I guess drug addicts,
crystal meth is very very popular, you know what I mean.
So I actually, you know what you probably remember this,
but early two thousands, there was a doctor in Boston
(21:26):
and Cambridge who left the patient on the table mid
surgery cut open. He left him left the hospital to
go to the ATM to deposit money because he order
to check to his drug dealer and it was gonna
it was gonna not go through. Yeah, he got in trouble,
he got arrested, lost his license and everything. I knew
that guy. He was a gay dude. He was a
meth addict.
Speaker 2 (21:47):
The surgeon.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
Yeah, what happened to him, I don't know. I sold
him drugs one day. Yeah that's that crazy. Wow. Yeah.
So that's why I ask about that show High Town,
because I was wondering if cochers it's a really good show.
Speaker 2 (22:01):
No no, no, no, really really good show. But oh plus
so I started way word, you should watch that too.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
Oh yeah, Tony Co.
Speaker 2 (22:08):
Yeah, it's really good. I think on my episode three. Yeah,
I'm about to start four.
Speaker 1 (22:12):
I gotta watch Believers on the ESPN Plus app. Do
I have that?
Speaker 2 (22:17):
I don't know. Shit, Well, they'm only a free trial
or something you can get. I watch the Celtics on
the ESPN app for free during during the playoffs?
Speaker 1 (22:27):
Oh what do you do? Free trial?
Speaker 2 (22:28):
No? They like they certain times. I don't know how
it works, like if you like just sign in with
like your you know, Exfinity. I don't even have a cable,
but if I signed on my Wi Fi my house.
Speaker 1 (22:38):
It works.
Speaker 2 (22:38):
I don't know why.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
All right, I'll check it out, check it out, try
it well, ghost socks, I'll be watching tonight they can
finish the series with the Yankees. I'll be watching it.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
I mean, I think they really need to win yesterday. Yeah,
moment it was on their sign.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
Since they started the wildcod round a couple of years ago,
they've had sixteen rounds, and fourteen of the last sixteen
that won the first game won the entire series. Okay,
so that's good news for us, all right, And then
I don't forget Taylor takeover stocks tomorrow for all the
Swifties out there. We'll be giving out passes to the
Liberty Hotel party VIP Friday night and the movie screening
(23:11):
on Saturday, and talking all things Taylor, Are you pumped?
Speaker 2 (23:14):
I'm so excited? Are you ready for it?
Speaker 1 (23:17):
I mean, I'm not a big swifty, but it's a
cultural moment. That's where I look at it.
Speaker 2 (23:20):
I always say everyone things, I respect her as an artist,
as a businesswoman. You know, she has some really good songs.
Like you know, when I was younger, you know, she
came on the scene and like I so basically my
whole life, she's been a pop star. She's cool, she's chill.
I don't get like the cult falling shit. But I
really don't get that. And everyone says, oh, you know,
I say the Jones brothers or something like that, But
(23:42):
I'm like, I also like know them for their faults.
I also don't think everything they do is amazing. I
also don't follow everything they do. Yeah, because I'm now
thirty two years around and I have my own life,
so I guess there's just like levels to it. But
I respect if you're a swifty. I respected my sister's
a psycho Swifty. Yeah, she's gotten to Europe to see
her so yeah, no, I mean I respect, I do
like some of her music. I just don't like get
(24:02):
into too much of the hype I guess of it.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
Well, yeah, all like the inside stuff is that's like
a real.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
Swift I couldn't sit there and like and like debate
how many times how many polka dots wrong dress? That's crazy,
you know what I mean? Like, there's so like that
level of that is crazy to me when I know
all of your like forty two at children like now Swifties,
I mean Swifties are from they're five to forty five.
Like if you even liked her when you were younger,
when you came out, you're now in your mid to
(24:30):
late thirties, right, don't you have other things but to
count the polka dot number dresses on her dress? I
don't know, like shit like that.
Speaker 1 (24:36):
I don't know, I know, And it keeps them going,
keeps them happy.
Speaker 2 (24:38):
So I love you guys, We love you Swifty.
Speaker 1 (24:40):
Yeah it we'll be celebrating tomorrow, so join us. Well, yeah,
by bye